1945 University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWS PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Thursday, Nov. 1, 1945 43rd Year No.28 Lawrence Kansas Lawrence, Kansas N. in- ring the chi- In- r in at en- his ary the ted old U.S. was al- ar- with in om, a, wn. car aid But utch ked ! News... of the World 4,000 Bus Employes Join Wage Strike Washington. (UP)—Some 4,000 Greyhound bus employees joined the ranks of striking wage earners today, as the nation's top labor leaders announced they would use the new government wage-price policy to break up a log-jam of disputes holding up reconversion. The walkout halted operations of some 1,000 buses—enough to accommodate 40,000 persons a day. London. (UP)—Britian's Labot government announced today that it was prepared to take over British civil aviation on a world-wide basis and the empire communications system of cables and wireless. Munich. (UP)—A secret list of more than 200 American Nazis has been discovered along with the sketch of a swastika flag designed to fly over the United States in 1951. it was disclosed today. The list was unearthed from more than 22 tons of Nazi party files. U.S. Smokers Had Wartime Fag-Jag Washington. (UP) Americans are smoking 50 per cent more cigarettes than before the war the agriculture department reported today. department. Report During the first eight months of 1945, civilians lighted cigarettes at the yearly average of two packs a week for every man, woman and child. That period covered the war's greatest shortage in popular brands. Washington. (UP)—The multimillion dollar fortune of Emperor Hirohito will be used to pay Japanese reparations to the allies, Edwin W. Pauley, head of the American reparations commission said today. Jerusalem. (UP)—Jewish extremists cut Palestine railways at 50 places from Dan to Beersheba, wrecked trains and blew up police boats in a series of coordinated attacks last night and early today. RAF Fighter Planes Machine-gun Natives Batavia. (UP)—RAF fighter airplanes machine-gunned Indonesian extremists today for the first time, clearing the way for outnumbered British troops to recapture most of the interior strong point of Melang. US Navy Transports Chinese Troops In Batavia, representatives of the Dutch government and the unrecognized Indonesian republic began informal talks to end hostilities and reach a political agreement. Moscow. (UP)—Foreign Commissar V. M. Molotov last night rejected a request by the Anglo-American press association in Moscow that Russia abandon censorship of press dispatches to the United States and Great Britain. Marriage Can Be Difficult Malden, Mass. (UP)-Wesley D. Medaris of Malden walked into City Hall to obtain a marriage license, but walked out again in custody of a policeman who arrested him for non-support of three children by a former marriage. New Students At Convo Tonight A convocation for all new students will be at 7:30 tonight in Fraser hall, Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, announced today. Attendance will be required. Speaking for the University, Chancellor Deane W. Malott will welcome the students. Mary J CoX, All-Student Council president will greet them on behalf of the students. Dean Werner and Capt. Chester A. Kunz, N.R.O.T.C. commander, will give short talks. short talks. Tickets for parties to be given by faculty members for new students will be distributed at the convocation. Each faculty member will entertain 15 students tomorrow night. The evening will be spent playing cards, singing, or whatever the group wishes to do, Dean Werner said. Refreshments will be served. 136 New Veterans Register Today Students in the 12-week term registered today in the basement of Frank Strong hall. One hundred and thirty-six new veterans were among registrants, Dr. Leonard H. Axe, director of the K.U. Veterans bureau, announced. K.O. Veterans Bldg. Of this number, 70 per cent are new students; 80 per cent have served overseas; 33 per cent are married; and 40 per cent of the married veterans have children. These figures are approximately the same as statistics on the other 300 veterans already enrolled at the University, Dr. Axe said. Ex-Army Captain Joins Hospital Staff Dr. Monti L. Belch, former army captain, will assume duties Saturday as half-time physician at the Watkins Memorial hospital. kills medicinal animals. A graduate of the School of Medicine in 1940, he was chief medical officer at the North American Aviation plant in Kansas City until he entered the army in September, 1942. He served two years in the Aleutian islands and the European theater. Dr. Belot will have an office downtown. His wife and son are with him in Lawrence. The first issue of the Jayhawker, student magazine, will appear about Nov. 20, Hanna Hedrick, editor-in-chief, announced today. First Jayhawker Off Press About Nov. 20, Hedrick Says Students may obtain their copy at the Union book exchange, and subscriptions may still be purchased in the Jayhawker office, Miss Hedrick explained. French club will meet at 3:30 p.m. Wednesday in room 113, Frank Strong holl. Miss Mattie Crumrine, club sponsor, said today. French Club Plans Meeting Tau Sigma To Pledge 20 Tau Sigma pleading ceremonies for 20 girls will be held in Robinson gym at 7:45 p.m. Tuesday, Miss Gloria Smith, advisor, said today, Patricia Power is a new pledge. We Support Chiang Forces, WedemeyerSays Chungking. (UP)China's undeclared civil war spread to the Manchurian border today. Communist outposts in the shadow of the great wall temporarily halted central government forces in the first frontier skirmish. Richard W. Johnston, veteran United Press Pacific war correspondent, reported from the frontier that thousands of Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek's government troops were massing for an all-out assault on the frontier defenses after the first rebuff. The government forces, landed at the North China port of Chinwangtao, were armed with American flame-throwers, bazookas, mortars, field guns, and machine guns. Spread of fighting to the Manchurian border added a grave new note to internal strife in China. Civil war between nationalists and Communists already was raging in 11 other provinces, and informed sources feared 2,000,000 troops 1,000,000 on each side—soon may be fighting. fighting. At Honolulu, Lt. Gen. Albert C. Wedemeyer, American commander for China, reiterated that the United States would continue to support Chiang and the central government. Such support, however, did not include the use of American soldiers or facilities against the Communists he said. The American's mission in China was solely to assist Chiang in repatriating 4,000,000 Japanese troops. Union Addition Plans Presented to Group 100pS. Should Chiang ask American aid in moving his troops for a direct assault against the Communists, Wedemeyer said, the request would be politely refused. Architect's studies including a bowling alley and an enlarged soda fountain with space for dancing in the proposed addition to the Union building were presented to the Union operating committee yesterday, Miss Hermina Zipple, secretary, said today. are included in the tentative plans Committee members present were Miss Zipple; Karl Klooz, bursar; Henry Wenner, dean of student affairs; Jack Miller, alumnus; and six students representing the All-Student Council. Additional ballroom space, enlargement of the lounge and cafeteria, and more meeting rooms also are included in the tentative plans. Operation Aiding Fight Against Communists Delays Return of American Sailors By RICHARD W. JOHNSTON (United Press Staff Correspondent) Barbey warned that if the United States assume responsibility completing this entire transportation operation, "it may be fully a year before the boys get home." Halloween Goblins 'Snuck' In For a Night of Spoofing Spooking Aboard Adm. Barbey's Flagship off Chinwangtao, North China. (UP)—A fourth flotilla of U.S. navy transports arrived today carrying Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek's troops to this danger spot of China's civil war. New contingents of Chungking I questioned Vice Adm. Daniel E. Barbey, commander of this naval force, regarding discontent, and he held out some hope for an early return to the United States. freeing American ports. Approximately 100 LST's and an undesignated number of Liberty ships are engaged in this transport operation. Adm. Barbey, who sees virtually eye to eye with his seamen, proposed that the LST's be assigned to the Japanese for repatriation, and the Liberty ships be assigned to Chinese not only for the distribution of troops but to assist Chinese foreign trade. forces will join thousands of other American-equipped soldiers massed along the Manchurian border opposite Communist troops, who have sworn to resist penetration of the frontier. Adm. Barbey suggested that U.S ships now engaged in transporting Chinese troops and repatriating Japanese be manned and operated by Chinese and Japanese nationals, thus freeing American personnel. Communism 'Merely A Goal,' Pares Says "All Russians take it for granted that they have not achieved communism yet," Sir Bernard explained. "They want economic security and believe communism will enable them to reach that ideal." Meantime widespread discontent developed among 50,000 homesick U.S. sailors who have been engaged in transporting Chinese troops and repatriating Japanese to and from North China. "Communism is a goal for Russia as much as Christianity is a goal for us," Sir Bernard Pares, English authority on Russia, told a group of students and faculty members in the Union lounge yesterday afternoon. Jayhawk Halloween goblins haunted the campus last night, leaving silent evidence of their presence. afternoon. Sir Bernard, presented by the Forums board, answered questions on Russia, George Caldwell, Forums board chairman, introduced the speaker. Football tackling dummies in Memorial stadium were uprooted but Uncle Jimmy Green, frequent victim of pranksters, is undecorated this afternoon. Chi Omega's dressed in the dark today, after pranksters found the main electrical switch about 1:20 this morning. Study ended abruptly at that time. Cars in front of the house were decorated with soaped windows and "For Sale" signs. Smashed bottles and tin cans adorned the porches of sorority houses, while a sign on one house inquired. "Have you changed your oil yet?" Pledges were busy this morning removing a variety of long, narrow paper which was interwoven among trees and bushes in their front yards. Coeds to Sign For Lincoln Trip "All women who plan to attend the football game in Nebraska Saturday, even though they may not be away overnight, must sign out at this office before 5 p.m. Friday." Miss Marie Miller, assistant adviser of women, announced today. Women will be asked their means of transportation, the hour of leaving and probable time of return whether they are going in a private automobile and the name of the driver, Miss Miller said. Pep Groups Charter Busses to Lincoln College juniors and seniors should register at the College office Monday through Wednesday for the English proficiency examination to be given Saturday, Nov. 10. Mrs. Robert Calderwood, head of the writing laboratory, announced today. Students failing to register may not take the examination. Jay James and Ku Ku's, pep organizations, have chartered two 37-passenger busses to Lincoln for the Kansas-Nebraska football game Saturday. Earl Falkenstien, athletic association secretary, announced today. Students to Register For English Exam The organizations will leave Lawrence early Saturday morning and return late Saturday night. Vacancies on busses may be filled by any University student, Mr. Falkenstien said. 'Nihilate Nebraska' Will Be Rally Cry Tomorrow Morning 'Nihilate Nebraska will be the cry of Jayhawkers when they rally in front of Robinson gymnasium at 10:20 a.m. tomorrow. Since the examination, open to juniors and seniors, is given only once each semester, and since passing it is a requirement for graduation, all juniors are strongly advised to take it as soon as possible, she said. Upperclassmen who fail the exam will be required to take it again. If they fall a second time they must enroll in a refresher course, "English 10." course, English 10. The examination is a test of simple expository writing. WEATHER Kansas—Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow. Cooler tonight southeast and extreme east. Low temperatures near 40 extreme west to 45 to 50 east. Warmer tomorrow west and north central. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE KANSAS NOVEMBER 1, 1945 University DAILY KANSAN Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Association, National Editorial Association, and the represented by the National Advertising Company, 420 Madison Avenue, New York City. Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage), Published in Lawrence, University, school year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second class Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS STAFF MARY TURKINGton Managing Editor ELEANOR ALBRIGHT Asst. Managing Editor LOREN KING Telegraph editor LOREN KING OBRER News editor MARY MARGARET GAYNOR Social Editor PAT PENNEY Sports Editor BILLIE HAMILTON Feature Editor JANE ANDERSON Military Editor CLEO NOIRS Research Editor CLEO NOIRS Assst. Sports Editor MARGARET WENSKI Asst. Sports Editor JOAN VEATCH Campus Editor EDITORIAL STAFF DOLORES SULZMAN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Editor-in-Chief MARY MORRILL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . FRANKLIN FEARING . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ORVILLE ROBERTS . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . BUSINESS STAFF NANCY TOMLISON ... Business Manager BETTY BEACH ... Advertising Manager Discussion on sharing the atomic bomb secret with other nations points up a trend in national thinking that is as treacherous as prewar isolationism. Again?--even have a real model set up for their party last Friday. This equipment, when the lever is pushed down, not only performs customarily, but also releases a long, loud HONK! Since the end of hostilities, hastened by the atomic bomb, the United States has come to regard the atomic discovery as a triumph of American victory. In the glow of national pride, the warnings that other nations will inevitably make the same discovery have been ignored by many. And again the old pattern of American thought takes shape: For 20 Armistice days after World War I, we paraded with planes, artillery, helmets, guns, and strategy which was unchanged since the Argonne. Then war was upon us again. We had to change enough to catch up with the advances made by the adversary we defeated 20 years before. Given a little time we did a good job of it. A victory is won; we take credit for winning it, give 15 rahs for our side, and lean back to rest on our laurels while other nations move forward. Now in the flush of another victory, the old idea returns. Loyal patriots proclaim that American technique, mass production, military genius, science, et al, made the taukumph over Fascism possible. To most these words fall as words of well-earned praise—not as the seeds of a fulling race idea. Shall we, having contributed warwinning power to the world, retire and wait for it to be developed and turned on us?. What we must realize is that when our body of knowledge is increased—by science, research, or whatever means—the body of knowledge is increased for the whole world. What we find out today can be worked out in a reasonably short time by others who are interested and willing to try. If we insist upon a national schedule of three years of regression, chances of avoiding another war are slim. Knowledge cannot be confined to boundaries or spheres of influence. Isolation of information will constitute more than a feeling of bad faith, it will be an act of war. If nations cannot live together in confidence, if they cannot trust one another in discussion and examination of individual progress, then the end cannot be other than war. Rock Chalk Talk Taking no chances on pranksters "Halloweening" around their house, Phi Psi activees have established a perpetual pledge guard. No matter what time you pass the place, day or night, some pledge is standing watch. By MARILYN STEINERT Life's like that! Halloween has added some new tricks this year—or some old tricks have been improved. At least the Gamma Phi's have had their share of pranks pulled on them. Last Monday when they tried to get out of the house, they ran into concrete slabs placed against the door. Tuesday the trees in front of their house were adorned with strips of white paper. And now the Robinson Gym sign is planted on their lawn-perhaps to lead the new R. O.T.C.'s astray. You should have one. The newest thing in modernized facilities has been perfected by the Phi Si's. They OFFICIAL BULLETIN University of Kansas Thursday, Nov. 1 All University women students who plan to attend the University of Kansas-Nebraska football game at Lincoln, Saturday, Nov. 3, should sign out in the office of the adviser of women, 121. Frank Strong hall by 5 p.m., Friday—Elizabeth Meguiar, adviser of women. Notices must be typewritten and must he in Public Relations office, faxed to 516-725-9200, then later than 9:30 am on day of publication. No phone messages accepted. College juniors: The proficiency examination in English composition will be given at 8:30 a.m., Nov. 10. If you plan to take it at this time, you must register in the College office, room 229, Frank Strong, on Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday, Nov. 5, 6, 7. You may not take the examination without registration—Natalie Calderwood, chairman, proficiency committee. ** - * * The Christian Science University organization will meet at 7 tonight in the Kansas room of the Union—Jean Kindel, Clerk. *** All students enrolled in Western Civilization are invited to attend the first in the series of forum meetings, 7:30 to 9 tonight in Frank Strong auditorium. Dean Nelson will be guest moderator and there will be student speakers and discussion. William Dandiver. LaPaz, capital of Bolivia, was founded by the Spaniards in 1548. VARSITY END# TONITE IDA LUPINO "PILLOW TO POST" FRIDAY and SATURDAY 2 FEATURES "SUNSET" CARSON "BANDITS OF THE BADLANDS" and FRANK JENKS "The Missing Corpse" and Chapter Three "JUNGLE QUEEN" FRIDAY and SATURDAY Student affairs get a big boost from Dean Werner. Recently he took up the cause of the unattached campus women. After informing several veterans of the academic opportunities at K.U., he added, "And we have lots of beautiful women up here—I'll be glad to help you on phone numbers." Chow with the Chancellor_Sevenal new nevy Rotsie's were feeling their way around the campus early yesterday morning, apparently in search of breakfast. They came to a halt somewhere along Lilac Lane. "Well," one said, "we've been every place else, let's try this shack." And they started up the Malott driveway. SUNDAY — 3 Days GENE AUTREY "UNDER FIESTA STARS" and "A Sporting Chance" Maj. James T. Ferguson, Jr., who received the M.D. degree from KU, in 1938, has been awarded the bronze star medal by the commanding general of the 31st infantry division on Mindanao, Philippine islands. Maj. Ferguson is the division psychiatrist. Ferguson Wins Bronze Star Mrs. Gerald Miller has been temporarily appointed to the KU Nursery staff, Mrs. Edwin Stene, supervisor, announced today. Mrs. Miller is replacing Mrs. Floyd Krehbiel, '45, who has resigned. WANT ADS WANTED—Riders traveling between Topeka and Lawrence daily or weekend. Address inquires to S. J. Johanson, P.O. Box 661, Lawrence or call Topeka 3-6568 NOTICE—Akorn Gro. Open evenings 7 p. m. to 11 p. m. Mon thun Sat. all day Sunday. Hamburgers, hot dogs and cheese .05, coffee $.04. 420 Ind. Delivery Tues. night only phone 744. LOST—A black gabardine coat. Finder, or anyone knowing about coat, please call 290. Reward. LOST—Pair of red-rimmed pixie glass near bus stop by Pi Beta Phi house or on K.U. bus route Tuesday. One rim is broken. Finder please call Jane Anderson at 1324R. Reward. NOTICE—Will person who picked up my bilfoil please return contents other than money to the Daily Kansan office. Delia Reed. NOTICE—The "Gamble Goal WSSF Dance" will be postponed indefinitely. ROOM FOR RENT—Single or double for boys. Phone 1796M, 1808 Vermont. Gustafson the "COLLEGE JEWELER" 911 Mass. St. Students' Jewelry Store 41 Years at the Jayhawker ENDS TONITE FRIDAY SATURDAY RETURN ENGAGEMENT The F.B.I.'s mysterious thrill-packed story of the atomic bomb! BING CROSBY - BOB HOPE "Hollywood Victory Coravon" THE HOUSE ON 92ND STREET You Will Want to See Them Again-and Again! NOTHING COULD KEEP THEM APART. The world said: "You must not love!" But they had to! wonderful together --the V Prof. has I burn Mono Greer GARSON IN MGM's Gregory PECK The VALLEY OF DECISION DONALD with LIONEL CRISP • BARRYMORE Preston FOSTER • Marsha HUNT SUNDAY X-TRA= NAVY TOPS PENN in lost 25 seconds HEDY LAMARR - ROBERT WALKER "HER HIGHNESS and the BELLBOY" * Call KU 25 with your news. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. Phone 425 HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Garage and Cab Co. 922 Mass. Phone 12 FOR THAT COKE DATE Remember ELDRIDGE PHARMACY Phone 999 701 Mass. One of those rare movies that push your heartstrings, tickle your funnybone! GRANADA The Picture that may change Your Life! The Cheaters starring JOSEPH SCHILDKRAUT A REPUBLIC PICTURE NOW ENDS SATURDAY ADDED—DONALD DUCK Billie Ona Ruth BURKE - MUNSON - TERRY CARTOON - Sports - News Owl Show Sat. 11:45 and SUNDAY 4 Days A Howluva Lot of Laughs! NOV Absolutely the Best Comedy in town Presented just for fun by EDWARD SMALL DENNIS O'KEEFE HELEN WALKER JUNE HAVOC EDDIE "Rochester" ANDERSON GAIL PATRICK MISCHA AUER Directed by ALLAN DWAN in "BREWSTER'S MILLIONS" Story J. W. The at 3 na J with ort Mrs. orie ment thera eir spi y toff Willi the t Alpha Mr ing A Ple Rowl Barb man. Do Dame Tuese Pi pledge Chi P mm Mis nch Beta Tuese Chan Alph EXTRA! NEW MARCH OF TIME Whee Pro cholo or S Delt's Del nour Thes NOVEMBER 1/1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE --- 18 SOCIALLY SPEAKING Mary Margaret Gaynor, Society Editor J. Women Give Tea Today The University Women's club met at 3 p.m. today in Myers hall. Noran Jean Lutz opened the program with several vocal solos. After a short business meeting conducted by Mrs. Deane W. Malott, Miss Marorie Whitney of the design department introduced four occupational therapy students, who discussed their summer's work at different hospitals. The women were Chester Shirley, Winifred Louis, Jean toffatt, and Jeanice Allen. Mrs. William D. Paden was chairman of the tea committee. Alpha Chi Entertains Pledges have elected Mary Lou Rowlett secretary of their class and Barbara Vanderpool, social chairman. Mrs. Carl Winson, Wichita, is visiting Alpha Chi Omega this week. Donald Dyche, A/S, of Notre Dame, was a guest of the chapter Tuesday. Pi Beta Phi and Chi Omega pledges were guests of the Alpha Chi pledge class at a party Tuesday. Lambda Phi Has Guests Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes was a oncheon guest at the Gamma Phi Beta house Tuesday. Dinner guests Tuesday was Miss Jean Quaney, Chanute. Wheeler Leaves for Selma Prof. R. H. Wheeler, of the psychology department, left yesterday or Selma, Ala, to visit his daughter and son-in-law, Lt. and Mrs. C. Perkins, Jr. Lt. Newell Collins, Jr., who has been a guest at the Wheeler home, will accompany Prof. Wheeler. Mrs. Wheeler, who has been visiting in Selma, will return to Lawrence with her husband Monday. Delt's Are Guests Delta Tau Delta was guest at anour dance given by Kappa Alpha Theta last night. Theta Is Oldest National Sorority This is another of a series of articles by the Daily Kansan to acquaint the campus with the various organized houses, their members, officers, and history. Kappa Alpha Theta has the distinction of being the first Greek letter fraternity for women. It was founded as a Greek letter fraternity Jan. 27, 1870, at Asbury college, later called De Pauw university, at Green Castle, Ind. This national organization today has 66 active chapters, 56 alumnae chapters, and 80 alumnae clubs. The sorority's flower is the pansy; its colors, black and gold; and its pin, the kite. A national magazine, Kappa Alpha Theta, is published quarterly. It was first issued in 1885. Mrs. Lee Bird Barrow from the Michigan university chapter was sent to Lawrence to found a new chapter of Kappa Alpha Theta at the University. On March 18, 1881, exactly 12 women were initiated and became the charter members of Kappa chapter here. A turquoise pin that was presented to the chapter by Miss Cora E. Pearson, is worn each year by the chapter member who makes the most improvement in her scholastic standing. The first chapter house was built in 1889. The present home at 1433 Tennessee street is the chapter's sixth home. It was built in 1937. Beverly. Stucker, vice-president; Joanna Wagstaff, secretary; Winifred Ice, corresponding secretary; Jean Fergus, treasurer; Barbara Haffner, social chairman; Sarah Frances Phipps, song leader, and Martha Yingling, rush captain. Mrs. Clarke Mandigo is the chapter's housemother. This is her second year with the group. Jean O'Connor is president of the chapter. Other officers include: Mary Alford, Mariette Bennett, Sue Blessington, Martha Bonebrake, Gladys Blue, Marilyn Carlson, Doris Doane, Marjorie Fadler, Mary Elizabeth Faulders, Frances Lawrence, Other members of the active chapter include: Come to Us for FRIENDLY RELIABLE SERVICE FRITZ Co. Cities Service Products PHONE 4 14 East 8th JEAN O'CONNOR 1 Norma Lutz, Frances Maloney, Kathryn Maloney, Virginia Neal, Eileen O'Connor, Kathryn O'Leary, Kate Roberts, Anne Scott, Marilyn Smart, Dineen Somers, Nancy Tomlinson, Virginia Thompson, Rebecca Vallette, Joan Veatch, Elaine Wells, Virginia Winter, and Alice Wright. Eighteen women were pledged by Eighteen women were pledged by the chapter this year. The pledges are: Martha Abel, Marnie Brown, Margaret Eberhardt, Jean Francisco, Joan Joseph, Virginia Joseph, Shirley Leitch, Kathelen McBride, Mary Kay Paige, Patricia Patchen, Joan Puckett, Dorothy Shields, Lee Sproull, Virginia Tolle, Patricia Tomlinson, Sally Winterscheidt, Mary Patricia Yingling, and Patricia Zachman. For Her— a distinctive gift PLATINE 20 PARFUMS DE PARIS Especially created for you, the precious blonde... to wear for precious moments—to enhance your oveliness to the fullest—Dana's fabulous, Frenchborn fragrance, Platine. One drop, it is said, will make you the most ravishing thing in life. Perfume $3.25 and $22.50. Also, cologne $4. All prices plus tax. Also, cologne $4. All prices plus tax. parfum PLATINE by Dana COSMETIC DEPT. Weaver's Phone 636 901 Mass parfum parfum PLATINE Dana Modern Choir To Organize Again Phone 636 901 Mass. The modern Choir, a former popular campus musical organization, will be revived this fall and will make special public appearances under the sponsorship of the Union Activities committee, Alberta Cornwell. Activities president, announced today. No qualifications other than an appreciation of music and a desire to sing modern songs, are necessary for those interested in membership, Miss Cornwell said. Rosemary Harding, Union administration chairman, will have charge of the group, but a director not necessarily a Fine Arts student is needed to lead the singing, according to Miss Cornwell. Choir and director applications may be submitted at the Union Activities office in the Union, Friday. Probably the record ride in the pony express was made by Robert Haslam, known as "Pony Bob," who rode 120 miles in Nevada in eight hours and 10 minutes. Kappa Phi to Meet Mrs. Holter, a Japanese prisoner for three and one-half years in Santo Tomas, Manila, will be the guest speaker at a meeting of Kappa Phi at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the First Methodist church. Mr. and Mrs. Holter were in seminary in Manila at the time of their capture. Mary Beth Burns will have charge of the worship service. Hostesses will be Helen Ames, Arlene Andrew, Marjorie Austin, Susan Badgley, Josephine Barney, and Clara Beth Bauer. A pledge meeting will follow. EARRINGS Latest Styles Roberts Jewelry and Gifts CURLEE CLOTHES Curlee Topcoats Warmth without uncomfortbale weight because of the all-wool fabrics. Smartly styled and expertly tailored to help you look your best. $19^{50} & $36^{50} Gibbs Clothing Co. 811 MASS. ST. PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 1, 1945 T IN THE HUDDLE with PAT PENNEY HUSK THE HUSKERS Dick "Speedy" Bertuzzi, who spent the first two days of the week in the hospital with bad ankles, has not been in the lineup practice all week, and probably will miss any action against the Nebraska Huskers. Meet Your Team. "Stan" Dickey goes in for his hobby in a big way. There is nothing he would rather do than travel, and at present can boast having been in every state but six. The navy got him before he could visit the others. Stan came to K.U. in 1944 but missed out on football last year because of a broken foot—and 32 days in bed. He played fullback one year at Wichita North High school. Even as a freshman, he started his travels and attended Greeley High school at Greeley, Colo. the next semester where he lettered in basketball one year at the forward position. In preparation for the Huske battle Saturday, Coach Henry Shenk has emphasized teaching old tricks to new Jayhawkers, who will replace crippled veteran regulars now on the shelf. Center Wayne Hird, remaining regular from last season, has been hobbling around on a bad knee all week, and may be in the pivot position against Nebraska, but it is doubtful that he will be in the starting lineup. Every summer, he catches for the American Legion Baseball club in Wichita. In the Jayhawk lineup, he is substitute right or left tackle. The Oklahoma City Shore Patrol is on the beam so far as Stan is concerned as he recalls being picked up four times in one night for being out of uniform. Stan was caled down because his coat was unfastened and one shoe string untied. He is a junior majoring in mechanical engineering. Meet Your Team. He used to be on the right end of a P-51 and now is on the right end of the Jayhawker HACK THE HUSKERS 40 football team Max Kennedy who served in the Army Air Corps for three years as a fighter pilot in the vicinity of the Aleutians, received his discharge less than two months ago, just in time to enroll at K.U. He Kennedy attended Lawrence Memorial High school and played halfback during his sophomore year. A back injury prevented him from further football playing during high school and the same injury knocked him out of the line last week. He lettered in basketball his senior year in high school, and was captain of his high school golf team for three years. At Trinidad State Junior college he lettered one year at end. Weinrich, Allen Rogers To Play at Nelson Gallery Two soloist pianists, Gorgia Weinrich and Allen Rogers, School of Fine Arts students, will appear at 3:30 p. m. Sunday in the Atkins auditorium of the Nelson Gallery of Art in Kansas City. This 185-pound K. U. end is no cream puff, but he surely goes for lemon meringue pie in a big way. This is Kennedy's first year as a pre-engineering student at Kansas. He is a pledge of Sigma Chi fraternity. Washburn Grid Trio Joins Jayhawk 11 Three new Washburn V-12 trainees have joined the Jayhawker eleven, bringing the total of new men on the squad up to six in the past week. The new trainees include Joe Rigg, 180-pound end from Springfield; Sidney Gilchrist, 170-pound flankman from Salt Lake City; and Francis Lyons, 198-pound tackle from Springfield. IWW, A.O. Pi, Kappa Win Volleyball Games The IWW team walked away with the volleyball game against Miller last night, 61 to 11. Loretta Phillips made nine points and Kathie McClanahan 10, for IWW. Alpha Omicron Pi beat Locksley 19 to 24, with Elsie Lemon scoring 12 points for the A.O.Pi's. Margaret Vander Smissen made some good set-ups along with Joan Lippleman for Locksley. Kappa Kappa Gamma beat the Alpha Chi's 35 to 12. Mary Morrill made 12 points and Maxine Gunsolly made some good set-ups for KKG. Patricia Elledge and Vivian Grimes were outstanding for the Alpha Chi's. Kappa Alpha Theta won by forfeit from Jolliffe. Tonight's volleyball games will be played between Corbin vs. Delta Gamma; IND vs. Chi Omega; Tipperary vs. Gamma Phi Beat; Alpha Delta Pi vs. Piet Bhi. The first real settlement at what is now the city of Sydney, Australia, was established Jan. 26, 1788. Hurrying Harolds Run at Nebraska The Jayhawker's Hurrying Harolds are expected to pace the twomile run at the half time of the Nebraska-K.U. football game in Lincoln, Saturday. Harold Moore and Harold Hinchee took first and second places respectively against Iowa State in Lawrence and Oklahoma at Norman this season. The undefeated Kansans are headed for the championship, if there is no slip-up at Lincoln. Moore ran 9:24 over a 1.9 mile lay-out at Oklahoma. Other runners of the Kansas thinclads, coached by Ray Kanehl, include William Johnson, John Law, and Robert Laptad. Women's Hockey Team Meets Ottawa Here Today K. U.'s hockey team met Ottawa university here at 4:30 p.m. today. The K.U. players were Edith Boehmer, Violet Conard, Mary Jean Hoffman, Lucile Land, Marjorie Free, Donna Mueller, Georgia Westmoreland, Julia Fox, Harriet Conor, Jane Topping, Maxine Gunsolly, Marjorie Kinder, Joan Lippelman, and Wilma Bown. Dyche Shows Jap Bird A Bird of Paradise, whose haven was a Japanese home on a South Pacific island, has been loaned to the Dyche Museum of Natural History for display, by Norman Fritz, KU alumnus, who captured and mounted the bird. You'll want some new warm Clothes—Sweaters, Coats, Wool Socks, Gloves, Mufflers, Kansas Sweat Shirts, Top Coat, Suit. Glad to show you— Get Ready for Nebraska! If your goin to the Game Library Exhibits Brown Souvenirs Bought that Bond? Do it now. CARLS GOOD CLOTHES A pike like those Brown gave slaves to aid in their insurrection is displayed. Also on exhibition is a piece of wood from Brown's cabin in Lynn county. The cabin was near Mound City. Souvenirs from the days of John Brown, Kansas figure of slavery days, are now featured in the display case on the second floor of Watson library. All items are from the library's Lawrence room. The articles will be on display for about two weeks, Miss Mildred Hershey, reference librarian, said today. Two photographs of John Brown are included. Amos Lawrence, requested Brown to have a picture taken because "someday you may be famous." Quack Club Pledges 11; To Meet in Robinson Tonight These women should meet in Robinson gymnasium at 7:30 tonight club officials said. Quack club has pledged 11 new members, Ruthanne Bletch, Harriet Connor, Frances Chubb, Marjorie Dinsmore, Jeanne Gorbutt, Ia Mae Junod, Carolyn Keith, Martha Keplinger, Raquel Ridge, Mary Tomlinson, and Mary Alice White. Call KU 25 with your news. A Real Chance For a Young Couple! 'Get Down to Masses, Sutton Recommends Here is a good opportunity for a young couple who want to work, and one or both go to K.U. A five-room house, heat, light, and meals included in plan. If interested call Mr. Rowe, 259 days, or 1528 evenings. MR. IVAN ROWE 745 Alabama "It is the supreme opportunity and the supreme duty of educators to get down to the masses," Dr. Willis Alexander Sutton, educator and plight ospher, said in his talk on "The Battle for America" last night in Fraser theater. "We must get down to the facts and speak to people." Dr. Sutton explained. "We must know what people are thinking and doing, rather than keeping to ourselves." The educator predicted that the period of reconstruction will be far worse than the war, and he pointed to threatened civil war in China, reconstruction problems in France, and difficulties between labor and industry in the United States. Military Science Building, 9:00-12:00 JOHNNY BEACH'S ORCHESTRA VARSITY DANCE $1.25 Stag or Drag (tax included) Welcome, New Students SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3 Featuring PENNEY'S J. G.. PENNEY SO., INC. $ 4^{98} \& $ 5^{90} Marathon FUR FELTS SUPREME QUALITY FUR FELT HATS Sound, forward looking styles. Well made-inside and outside. Smart fur felts & (3) TACOMA Let Us Check Your Car Regularly Morgan-Mack Moter Co. 609 MASS. PHONE 277 University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Friday, November 2, 1945 43rd Year No. 29 Lawrence, Kansas and get bills sold the in ects on that mer the far need re-ice, and News . . . of the World Fleet Carries Chinese To Manchurian Ports Chungking (UP)—American seventh fleet units have reached the Manchurian ports of Yingkow and Hulutao with three Chinese armies which began landing immediately, central government military sources reported today. Mounting hostilities were reported from all sectors of the undeclared war between Chinese Communists and the forces of Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek. New Orleans. (UP)—Andrew J. Higgins scrapped a 25 million dollar reconversion program today and sent 3,000 striking employees to look for jobs some place else. He cited a CIO-AFL jurisdictional dispute and the "pernicious Wagner labor act" as causes for his inability to keep the plants in production. Gary, Ind. (UP)—Crooner Frank Sinatra's singing sent Gary's bobby soxers into suchels of delight, but his oratory didn't send them back to school. Sinatra Unsuccessful Against Race Strike Eight hundred white students at Froebel high school are striking in protest against enrollment of negroes at the学校at a mass meeting yesterday, the swoon crooner asked Gary's students to return to their classes at once. But today the strike situation was unchanged. Washington. (UP)—Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower believes that the United States should not attempt to maintain instant military readiness to "fight the whole world," according to testimony released today by the senate military affairs committee Hitler Shot Himself Officials Decide Lueneburg. (UP)—Allied authorities announced today they had concluded that Adolf Hitler shot himself to death last April 30 soon after marrying Eva Braun, who took poison at the same time, and their bodies were cremated outside Berlin's besieged Chancellery. British army headquarters issued the statement which was credited to Allied Control commission intelligence, indicating the Americans and Russians concurred. Washington, (UP)—Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower has returned to the United States or shortly will arrive here, the United Press was told today by a usually reliable source. Eisenhower is widely boomed to succeed Gen. George C. Marshall as chief of staff. There are also reports that he will continue in his job in Germany or accept some other foreign assignment. Falzone had been on trial by the state statute on a charge of soliciting a $1,500 bribe for his aid in passage of a beauty parlor bill. Jefferson City, Mo. (UP)—The resignation of Joseph A. Falzone, from the Missouri senate was today in the hands of Lieut. Gov. Walter N. Davis. Gridders Set To Break Jinx At Nebraska Two ancient foes will meet in their 42nd annual football skirmish when Kansas battles the Nebraska Cormhuskers at 2 p. m. tomorrow in Lincoln. The Jayhawkers have not won in Lincoln since 1916. Accompanied by Coach Henry Shenk and Trainer Dean Nesmith, 33 gridders left Lawrence at 1 p. m. today for the Cornhusker country. They are scheduled to arrive in Lincoln at 9:35 tonight. Both clubs will be seeking their first conference triumph. The winless Huskers have improved steadily throughout the season and will be primed to avenge last season's 20-0 lacing. Odds favored a Husker triumph early in the week when LeRoy Robison, best offensive fullback for the Jayhawkers, was counted out for the season with a broken collarbone. Center Wayne Hird, sidelined by a twisted knee, may be ready for action and three transfers from Washburn may offset Robison's loss. Leroy Harmon, 210-pound full-back, will give the Jayhawkers a definite lift in the passing and punting departments along with a new level of blocking efficiency. The six-foot husky bowled over ends and tackles in the week's scrimmage sessions to help pave the way for (continued to page four) Sparks Cause Fire On A.O. Pi Roof A spark from a chimney set the wood shingle roof of the Alpha Omicron Pi house on fire at 12:30 p.m. today. This blaze was the second in the neighborhood of 12th and Louisiana streets in two days. Last night firemen were summoned to extinguish a fire at the Cottage. Two men were looking at the smoke coming from the roof of the A.O. Pi house where two chapter members walked home at noon. The women also noticed the smoke and dashed into the house to call the fire department. Several shingles were aflaame as firemen arrived. No serious damage was done. Firemen turned the hose on the entire roof to prevent sparks from catching the roof afire again. WEATHER Lt. William B. Judah, Jr., has been transferred to the University N.R.O.T.C., Capt. Chester A. Kunz announced today. Lt. Judah, who will teach courses in navigation this semester, comes from the Notre Dame midshipman's school where he was an instructor. Prairie Acre Burns "Prairie acre," a plot of virgin prairie land behind Watkins hospital, was burned off today by buildings and grounds because the dry prairie grass is a dangerous fire hazard. Kansas: Clear to partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow. Cooler tonight, except little change in temperature extreme west. Low temperatures 35 to 40 east. Warmer tomorrow. Lt. Judah Joins Staff Goes to Army THAD MARSH Thad Marsh. Lawrence College senior, will be inducted into the army at Ft. Leavenworth Monday. Marsh, a Summerfield scholar and president of P.S.G.L. has been editor-in-chief of the Daily Kansan this fall. Elected by the Kansan board last spring, he served until army service made his resignation necessary this week. Houses to Present Homecoming Skits Organized houses will compete Thursday with skits or individual talent acts for the Homecoming celebration, Eugenia Heworth, chairman of the Homecoming committee, announced today. Winning acts will be presented at the intermission floor show of the Homecoming Varsity, Nov. 17, and either at the South Park rally after the Nightshirt parade or on the stage of the Granada theater, Nov. 16. Miss Hepworth said. Homecoming day Jay Janes will supervise alumni registration at the Memorial Union during the morning. At the game alumni will park their cars according to class years. After the breakfast dance, from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m., in the Memorial Union lounge, students will parade downtown. It's Fine to Roll Eyes at Cashier (Yeah--$50 Fine) Houston, Tex. (UP)—An ex-soldier was fined $50 today for standin outside a cafe window and rolling his eyes at the cashier. He argued in court that he just gave her a very soft wolf whistle, and then he added, "if wolf whistles are against the law the jails would be full of servicemen—especially sailors and marines." An old Houston ordinance forbids a man wiggling his body, winking, rolling his eyes, whistling or staring at a woman. Yes, suh, in Texas the men treat their women folk with respect. Those holes you see here and there across the campus are not the result of some gopher on a spree. In each hole will soon reside a tree. Trees Will Add Color to Campus Arthur Berger, '25, landscape architect with offices in Dallas, Texas, and Toledo, Ohio, has planned the placing of the trees to gain the best possible effect from the colors. More than 1,000 flowering crab and shades from delicate white to brilliant red were purchased from the senior class gift of 1945. The trees are of Oriental strain, not subject to the cedar rust fungus which attacks Kansas crab trees. The fruit is colorful. "Apple blossom time in Normandy will be nothing to spring on Mt. Oread," Mrs. J. H. Nelson, chairman of the campus planning committee, said today. Mrs. Nelson and Mrs. Deane W. Malott have accompanied Mr. Berger to inspect the holes now ready for the trees. Originally the trees were to have been planted only in the recreation area near Potter lake and around the dance pavilion, but enough trees have been purchased to decorate almost every corner of the campus. The exchange has become an unofficial K.U. information bureau. Inquiries range from, "Why is the flag flying upside down?" to "Where can I get a ticket to the concert?" to "How long is that number going to be busy?" 'Hello' Girl Answers Millions of ?? On University Phone Exchange Originally the switchboard operated from 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. In August, 1943, with the advent of army and navy trainees, 24-hour service was begun. Assisted at noon by Mrs. Laura Roper, Mrs. Neustifter handles the day shift, while Mrs. Georgia White is on duty from 4 p. m. to midnight. Mrs. Bess Foster, on the 'graveyard' shift, seldom has more than two or three calls. Information Bureau "K.U." The voice which has said this several million times the past 16 years is that of Mrs. Mary Neustifter, supervisor of the K. U. switchboard. The K. U. telephone exchange was established in 1907, in the basement of Fraser hall. In 1929, it was moved to its present location, on the second floor of the Buildings and Grounds building, behind Fowler shops. Here Mrs. Neustefier and her assistants handle from 1,200 to 1,800 calls daily, with special events such as football games and final examinations boosting the total to 2,200. O "Many Lawrence persons call for information they can't find anywhere else," Mrs. Neustifter said today. Ask for Department "Callers can help us give efficient service," she commented, "by asking for specific departments, if they are sure of the department names. Often someone asks for a number which we know will not answer, and we could switch the call to another telephone in the same department." "It complicates our job when they ask for specific rooms," Mrs. Neustift added. One-fourth of KU.'s 288 phones are in Frank Strong hall. The most frequently called numbers, Mrs. Neustifter has found, are those of the "Shack" and the Buildings and Grounds building. Atomic Bomb Secret Out Scientist Says Chicago. (UP)—The "secret" of the atomic bomb already is out and two European nations beyond the Anglo-American combine are in possession of its production knowhow, a topflight U.S. scientist has disclosed. Harold C. Urey, Nobel prize winner, said last night that France and Denmark share with the United States; England and Canada extensive knowledge of the bomb's development and production. Urey, whose nuclear research played a vital role in the atomic energy field, said that Niels Bohr, a Dane, "knows more about the atom bomb than I do." He also named French scientist Pierre Auger, who with Rohr was a member of the British commission which participated in critical research. Both men, Urey said, were given a coordinated picture of the project denied American scientists. Enrollment Nears 3,800 University enrollment neared 3,800 today with the addition of 364 new students enrolled in the 12-week winter. term. There are 144 new men in N.R.O. T.C., making a total of 383 men in that unit and in the V-12 programs. Designed for veterans discharged too late to enter the fall semester, the 12-week term attracted 150 former servicemen. There are now 370 veterans on the campus. New students enrolled in the 12-week term will be guests of faculty members in their homes tonight, Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, said today. Enrollment in the School of Business was larger than expected. Dean Frank T. Stockton said today, and new sections in several business courses have been added to handle the increase. George Babb, who received his bachelor and master of arts degrees from the University, will teach a new Accounting I course. 12-Week Students Visit Faculty Tonight Tickets were distributed at the new student convocation last night. Groups of 15 will be entertained by the Rev. Harold G. Barr, instructor in religion; E. E. Bayles, associate professor of education; Allen Crafton, professor of speech; G. W. Bradshaw, associate professor of civil engineering; Dr. Calvin VanderWerf, assistant professor of chemistry; Gilbert Ulmer, assistant dean of the College; and Paul D. Haney, assistant professor of sanitary engineering. Kenneth Perry Improves The condition of Kenneth Perry, Wichita, junior in the School of Engineering and Architecture, is improved, attendents at the Watkins Memorial hospital reported today. Perry is suffering a heart ailment. Civilization Students Meet The first of a series of meetings for students enrolled in Western Civilization was held last night in Frank Strong auditorium. PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 1, 1945 1 IN THE HUDDLE with PAT PENNEY HUSK THE HUSKERS Dick "Speedy" Bertuzzi, who spent the first two days of the week in the hospital with bad ankles, has not been in the lineup practice all week, and probably will miss any action against the Nebraska Huskers. In preparation for the Husker battle Saturday, Coach Henry Shenk has emphasized teaching old tricks to new Jayhawkers, who will replace crippled veteran regulars now on the shelf. Meet Your Team. "Stan" Dickey goes in for his hobby in a big way. There is nothing he would rather do than travel, and at present can boast having been in every state but six. The navy got him before he could visit the others. Stan came to K.U. in 1944 but missed out on football last year because of a broken foot—and 32 days in bed. He played fullback one year at Wichita North High school. Even as a freshman, he started his travels and attended Greeley High school at Greeley, Colo. the next semester where he lettered in basketball one year at the forward position. Center Wayne Hird, remaining regular from last season, has been hobbling around on a bad knee all week, and may be in the pivot position against Nebraska, but it is doubtful that he will be in the starting lineup. Every summer, he catches for the American Legion Baseball club in Wichita. In the Jayhawk lineup, he is substitute right or left tackle. The Oklahoma City Shore Patrol is on the beam so far as Stan is concerned as he recalls being picked up four times in one night for being out of uniform. Stan was caled down because his coat was unfastened and one shoe string untied. He is a junior majoring in mechanical engineering. HACK THE HUSKERS Meet Your Team. He used to be on the right end of a P-51 and now is on the right end of the Jayhawker 40 football team Max Kennedy who served in the Army Air Corps for three years as a fighter pilot in the vicinity of the Aleutians, received his discharge less than two months ago, just in time to enroll at K.U. He Kennedy attended Lawrence Memorial High school and played halfback during his sophomore year. A back injury prevented him from further football playing during high school and the same injury knocked him out of the line last week. He lettered in basketball his senior year in high school, and was captain of his high school golf team for three years. At Trinidad State Junior college he lettered one year at end. This 185-pound K. U. end is no cream puff, but he surely goes for lemon meringue pie in a big way. This is Kennedy's first year as a pre-engineering student at Kansas. He is a pledge of Sigma Chi fraternity. Weinrich, Allen Rogers To Play at Nelson Gallery Two soloist pianists, Gorgia Weinrich and Allen Rogers, School of Fine Arts students, will appear at 3:30 p. m. Sunday in the Atkins auditorium of the Nelson Gallery of Art in Kansas City. Washburn Grid Trio Joins Jayhawk 11 Three new Washburn V-12 trainees have joined the Jayhawker eleven, bringing the total of new men on the squad up to six in the past week. The new trainees include Joe Rigg, 180-pound end from Springfield; Sidney Gilchrist, 170-pound flankman from Salt Lake City; and Francis Lyons, 198-pound tackle from Springfield. IWW, A.O. Pi, Kappa Win Volleyball Games The IWW team walked away with the volleyball game against Miller last night, 61 to 11. Loretta Phillips made nine points and Kathleen McClanahan 10, for IWW. Alpha Omicron Pi beat Locksley 19 to 24, with Elsie Lemon scoring 12 points for the A.O.Pi's. Margaret Vander Smissen made some good set-ups along with Joan Lippleman for Locksley. Kappa Kappa Gamma beat the Alpha Chi's 35 to 12. Mary Morrill made 12 points and Maxine Gunsolly made some good set-ups for KKG. Patricia Elledge and Vivian Grimes were outstanding for the Alpha Chi's. Tonight's volleyball games will be played between Corbin vs. Delta Gamma; IND vs. Chi Omega; Tipperary vs. Gamma Phi Beat; Alpha Delta Pi vs. Pbeta Phi. Kappa Alpha Theta won by forfeit from Jolliffe. The first real settlement at what is now the city of Sydney, Australia, was established Jan. 26, 1788. Hurrying Harolds Run at Nebraska The Jayhawker's Hurrying Harolds are expected to pace the two-mile run at the half time of the Nebraska-K.U. football game in Lincoln, Saturday. Harold Moore and Harold Hinchee took first and second places respectively against Iowa State in Lawrence and Oklahoma at Norman this season. The undefeated Kansans are headed for the championship, if there is no slip-up at Lincoln. Moore ran 9:24 over a 1.9 mile layout at Oklahoma. Other runners of the Kansas thinclads, coached by Ray Kanehl, include William Johnson, John Law, and Robert Laptad. Women's Hockey Team Meets Ottawa Here Today KU.'s hockey team met Ottawa university here at 4:30 p.m. today. here at 4:30 p.m. today. The K.U. players were Edith Boehmer, Violet Conard, Mary Jean Hoffman, Lucile Land, Marjorie Free, Donna Mueller, Georgia West- moreland, Julia Fox, Harriet Connor, Jane Topping, Maxine Gunselly, Marjorie Kinder, Joan Lippelman, and Wilma Bown. Dyche Shows Jap Bird A Bird of Paradise, whose haven was a Japanese home on a South Pacific island, has been loaned to the Dyche Museum of Natural History for display, by Norman Fritz, KU alumnus, who captured and mounted the bird. Get Ready for Nebraska! If your goin to the Game You'll want some new warm Clothes—Sweaters, Coats, Wool Socks, Gloves, Mufflers, Kansas Sweat Shirts, Top Coat, Suit, Glad to show you— Bought that Bond? Do it now. CARLS GOOD CLOTHES A pike like those Brown gave slaves to aid in their insurrection is displayed. Also on exhibition is a piece of wood from Brown's cabin in Lynn county. The cabin was near Mound City. Souvenirs from the days of John Brown, Kansas figure of slavery days, are now featured in the display case on the second floor of Watson library. Two photographs of John Brown are included. Amos Lawrence, requested Brown to have a picture taken because "someday you may be famous." All items are from the library's Lawrence room. The articles will be on display for about two weeks, Miss Mildred Hershey, reference librarian, said today. Library Exhibits Brown Souvenirs Quack Club Pledges 11; To Meet in Robinson Tonight Quack club has pledged 11 new members, Ruthanne Betch, Harriet Connor, Frances Chubb, Marjorie Dinsmore, Jeanne Gorbutt, Ia Mae Junod, Carolyn Keith, Marta Keplinger, Raquel Mary, Mary Tomlinson, and Mary Alice White. These women should meet in Robinson gymnasium at 7:30 tonight club officials said. Call KU 25 with your news. 'Get Down to Masses, Sutton Recommends "It is the supreme opportunity and the supreme duty of educators to get down to the masses," Dr. Willis Alexander Sutton, educator and phil osopher, said in his talk on "The Battle for America" last night in Fraser theater. The educator predicted that the period of reconstruction will be far worse than the war, and he pointed to threatened civil war in China, reconstruction problems in France, and difficulties between labor and industry in the United States. A Real Chance For a Young Couple! Here is a good opportunity for a young couple who want to work, and one or both go to K.U. A five-room house, heat, light, and ample included in plan. If interested please Rowe, 259 days, or 1528 evenings. SUPREME QUALITY FUR FELT HATS Sound, forward looking styles. Well made—inside and outside. Smart fur felts $ 4^{98} & $ 5^{90} "We must get down to the facts and speak to people," Dr. Sutton explained. "We must know what people are thinking and doing, rather than keeping to ourselves." MR. IVAN ROWE 745 Alabama $1.25 Stag or Drag (tax included) PENNEY'S J. G.. PENNEY, SO., ING. Featuring Welcome, New Students JOHNNY BEACH'S ORCHESTRA Military Science Building, 9:00-12:00 Marathon FUR FELTS VARSITY DANCE SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3 100 Let Us Check Your Car Regularly Morgan-Mack Moter Co. 609 MASS. PHONE 277 University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Friday, November 2, 1945 43rd Year No. 29 Lawrence, Kansas and get rid of his he in ects on that her the star need e- ce, and News . . . of the World Fleet Carries Chinese To Manchurian Ports Chungking (UP)—American seventh fleet units have reached the Manchurian ports of Yingkow and Hulutao with three Chinese armies which began landing immediately, central government military sources reported today. Mounting hostilities were reported from all sectors of the undeclared war between Chinese Communists and the forces of Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek. New Orleans. (UP)—Andrew J. Higgins scrapped a 25 million dollar reconversion program today and sent 3,000 striking employees to look for jobs some place else. He cited a CIO-AFL jurisdictional dispute and the "pernicious Wagner labor act" as causes for his inability to keep the plants in production. Sinatra Unsuccessful Against Race Strike Gary, Ind. (UP)-Crooner Frank Sinatra's singing sent Gary's bobby soxers into squeals of delight, but his oratory didn't send them back to school. Eight hundred white students at Freebel high school are striking in protest against enrollment of negroes at the school at a mass meeting yesterday, the swoon crooner asked Gary's students to return to their classes at once. But today the strike situation was unchanged. Washington. (UP)—Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower believes that the United States should not attempt to maintain instant military readiness to "fight the whole world," according to testimony released today by the senate military affairs committee. Hitler Shot Himself Officials Decide Luenerburg. (UP)—Allied authorities announced today they had concluded that Adolf Hitler shot himself to death last April 30 soon after marrying Eva Braun, who took poison at the same time, and their bodies were cremated outside Berlin's besieged Chancellery. British army headquarters issued the statement which was credited to Allied Control commission intelligence, indicating the Americans and Russians concurred. Washington. (UP)—Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower has returned to the United States or shortly will arrive here, the United Press was told today by a usually reliable source. Eisenhower is widely boomed to succeed Gen. George C. Marshall as chief of staff. There are also reports that he will continue in his job in Germany or accept some other foreign assignment. Jefferson City, Mo. (UP)—The resignation of Joseph A. Falzone, from the Missouri senate was today in the hands of Lieut. Gov. Walter N. Davis. Falzone had been on trial by the state senate on a charge of soliciting a $1,500 bribe for his aid in passage of a beauty parlor bill. Gridders Set To Break Jinx At Nebraska Two ancient foes will meet in their 42nd annual football skirmish when Kansas battles the Nebraska Cornhuskers at 2 p. m. tomorrow in Lincoln. The Jayhawkers have not won in Lincoln since 1916. Accompanied by Coach Henry Shenk and Trainer Dean Nesmith, 33 gridders left Lawrence at 1 p.m. today for the Cornhusker country. They are scheduled to arrive in Lincoln at 9:35 tonight. Both clubs will be seeking their first conference triumph. The winless Huskers have improved steadily throughout the season and will be primed to avenge last season's 20-0 facing. Odds favored a Husker triumph early in the week when LeRoy Robison, best offensive fullback for the Jayhawks, was counted out for the season with a broken collar bone. Center Wayne Hird, sidelined by a twisted knee, may be ready for action and three transfers from Washburn may offset Robison's loss. Leroy Harmon, 210-pound fullback, will give the Jayhawkers a definite lift in the passing and punting departments along with a new level of blocking efficiency. The six-foot husky bowled over ends and tackles in the week's scrimmage sessions to help pave the way for (continued to page four) Sparks Cause Fire On A.O. Pi Roof A spark from a chimney set the wood shingle roof of the Alpha Omicron Pi house on fire at 12:30 p.m. today. This blaze was the second in the neighborhood of 12th and Louisiana streets in two days. Last night firemen were summoned to extinguish a fire at the Cottage. Two men were looking at the smoke coming from the roof of the A.O. Pi house where two chapter members walked home at noon. The women also noticed the smoke and dashed into the house to call the fire department. Several shingles were afame as firemen arrived. No serious damage was done. Firemen turned the hose on the entire roof to prevent sparks from catching the roof afire again. "Prairie acre," a plot of virgin prairie land behind Watkins hospital, was burned off today by buildings and grounds because the dry prairie grass is a dangerous fire hazard. Prairie Acre Burns WEATHER Lt. William B. Judah, Jr., has been transferred to the University N.R.O.T.C., Capt. Chester A. Kunz announced today. Lt. Judah, who will teach courses in navigation this semester, comes from the Notre Dame midshipman's school where he was an instructor. Lt. Judah Joins Staff Kansas: Clear to partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow. Cooler tonight, except little change in temperature extreme west. Low temperatures 35 to 40 east. Warmer tomorrow. Goes to Army A. M. Thad Marsh. Lawrence College senior, will be inducted into the army at Ft. Leavenworth Monday. THAD MARSH Houses to Present Homecoming Skits Marsh, a Summerfield scholar and president of P.S.G.L. has been editor-in-chief of the Daily Kansan this fall. Elected by the Kansan board last spring, he served until army service made his resignation necessary this week. Organized houses will compete Thursday with skits or individual talent acts for the Homecoming celebration, Eugenia Heworth, chairman of the Homecoming committee, announced today. Winning acts will be presented at the intermission floor show of the Homecoming Varsity, Nov. 17, and either at the South Park rally after the Nightshirt parade or on the stage of the Granada theater, Nov. 16. Miss Hepworth said. Homecoming day Jay Janes will supervise alumni registration at the Memorial Union during the morning. At the game alumni will park their cars according to class years. After the breakfast dance, from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m., in the Memorial Union lounge, students will parade downtown. Houston, Tex. (UP)—An ex-soldier was fined $50 today for standing outside a cafe window and rolling his eyes at the cashier. It's Fine to Roll Eyes at Cashier (Yeah--$50 Fine) He argued in court that he just gave her a very soft wolf whistle, and then he added, "if wolf whistles are against the law the jails would be full of servicemen—especially sailors and marines." An old Houston ordinance forbids a man wiggling his body, winking, rolling his eyes, whistling or staring at a woman. Yes, suh, in Texas the men treat their women folk with respect. Those holes you see here and there across the campus are not the result of some gopher on a spree. In each hole will soon reside a tree. Arthur Berger, "25, landscape architect with offices in Dallas, Texas, and Toledo, Ohio, has planned the placing of the trees to gain the best possible effect from the colors. More than 1,000 flowering crab and shades from delicate white to brilliant red were purchased from the senior class gift of 1945. The trees are of Oriental strain, not subject to the cedar rust fungus which attacks Kansas crab trees. The fruit is colorful. "Apple blossom time in Normandy will be nothing to spring on Mt. Oread," Mrs. J. H. Nelson, chairman of the campus planning committee, said today. Mrs. Nelson and Mrs. Deane W. Malotts have accompanied Mr. Berger to inspect the holes now ready for the trees. Originally the trees were to have been planted only in the recreation area near Potter lake and around the dance pavilion, but enough trees have been purchased to decorate almost every corner of the campus. Trees Will Add Color to Campus The exchange has become an unofficial K.U. information bureau. Inquiries range from, "Why is the flag flying upside down?" to "Where can I get a ticket to the concert?" to "How long is that number going to be busy?" 'Hello' Girl Answers Millions of ?? On University Phone Exchange Originally the switchboard operated from 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. In August, 1943, with the advent of army and navy trainees, 24-hour service was begun. Assisted at noon by Mrs. Laura Roper, Mrs. Neustefter handles the day shift, while Mrs. Georgia White is on duty from 4 p. m. to midnight. Mrs. Bess Foster, on the "graveyard" shift, seldom has more than two or three calls. "K.U." Information Bureau The voice which has said this several million times the past 16 years is that of Mrs. Mary Neustifter, supervisor of the K. U. switchboard. The K. U. telephone exchange was established in 1907, in the basement of Fraser hall. In 1929 it was moved to its present location, on the second floor of the Buildings and Grounds building, behind Fowler shops. Here Mrs. Neustifter and her assistants handle from 1,200 to 1,800 calls daily, with special events such as football games and final examinations boosting the total to 2,200. "Many Lawrence persons call for information they can't find anywhere else," Mrs. Neustifter said today. "Callers can help us give efficient service," she commented, "by asking for specific departments, if they are sure of the department names. Often someone asks for a number which we know will not answer, and we could switch the call to another telephone in the same department." Ask for Department "It complicates our job when they ask for specifie rooms," Mrs. Neustifter added. One-fourth of K.U.'s 298 phones are in Frank Strong hall. The most frequently called numbers, Mrs. Neustifter has found, are those of the "Shack" and the Buildings and Grounds building. Atomic Bomb Secret Out Scientist Says Chicago. (UP)—The "secret" of the atomic bomb already is out and two European nations beyond the Anglo-American combine are in possession of its production know-how, a topflight U.S. scientist has disclosed. Urey, whose nuclear research played a vital role in the atomic energy field, said that Niels Bohr, a Dane, "knows more about the atom bomb than I do." Harold C. Urey, Nobel prize winner, said last night that France and Denmark share with the United States; England and Canada extensive knowledge of the bomb's development and production. He also named French scientist Pierre Auger, who with Rohs was a member of the British commission which participated in critical research. Both men, Urey said, were given a coordinated picture of the project denied American scientists. Enrollment Nears 3,800 University enrollment neared 3,800 today with the addition of 364 new students enrolled in the 12-week winter term. Designed for veterans discharged too late to enter the fall semester, the 12-week term attracted 150 former servicemen. There are now 370 veterans on the campus. There are 144 new men in N.R.O. T.C., making a total of 383 men in that unit and in the V-12 programs. Enrollment in the School of Business was larger than expected, Dean Frank T. Stockton said today, and new sections in several business courses have been added to handle the increase. George Babb, who received his bachelor and master of arts degrees from the University, will teach a new Accounting I course. 12-Week Students Visit Faculty Tonight New students enrolled in the 12-week term will be guests of faculty members in their homes tonight, Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, said today. Tickets were distributed at the new student convocation last night, Groups of 15 will be entertained by the Rev. Harold G. Barr, instructor in religion; E. E. Bayles, associate professor of education; Allen Crafton, professor of speech; G. W. Bradshaw, associate professor of civil engineering; Dr. Calvin VanderWerf, assistant professor of chemistry; Gilbert Ulmer, assistant dean of the College; and Paul D. Haney, assistant professor of sanitary engineering. Kenneth Perry Improves The condition of Kenneth Perry, Wichita, junior in the School of Engineering and Architecture, is improved, attendents at the Watkins Memorial hospital reported today. Perry is suffering a heart ailment. Civilization Students Meet The first of a series of meetings for students enrolled in Western Civilization was held last night in Frank Strong auditorium. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE KANSAS NOVEMBER 2,1945 DAILY KANSAN Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Association, National Editorial Association, and the Represented by the National Advertising Company, 420 Madison Ave., New York City. TEL: 0123456789 Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Law school year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second class master段17, 1910, at the Post Office at Kansas, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. MARY TURTINGTON Managing Editor ELEANOR ALBERTRY Asst. Managing Editor LOREN KING Telegrapher Editr DINNEN GORDER Sports Editor MARY MARGARET GAYNOR Services Editor PAT PENNEY Sports Editor BILLIE HAMILTON Sports Editor JANE ANDERSON Military Editr CLEO NORRIS Research Editr MARSHAL WENSKI Asst. Sports Editor MARGARET WENKSI Asst. Sports Editor JOAN VATCH Campus Editor EDITORIAL STAFF NEWS STAFF BUSINESS STAFF DOLORES SUZMAN ... Editor-in-Chief MARY MORGILL ... FRANKLIN FEARING } Editorial Associates OVILLE ROBERTS } NANCY TOMLINSON ... Business Manager BETTY BEACH ... Advertising Manager Any Year Now--timers out of bed and witnessed a command performance staged by the oldsters. Good taste and censorship prevents correspondents from securing more details on this epoch-making threat to our existing social order. Fifty thousand war-weary sailors who, since V-J day, have been engaged in transporting Chinese troops and repatriating Japanese to and from North China have something to look forward to—another year of transporting Chinese and repatriating Japanese. Where is the Navy department? Where are the brass hats and gold braids who issue the cheerful home-coming reports? Maybe "just another year" in the life of a salty seaman doesn't mean a lot to the big boys who will put their feet under their own table on Thanksgiving day. Or maybe a forgotten fleet of fifty thousand home-sick men, putting in time transporting troops to fight in a war not our own, is the result of a lot of incompetent bungling administration. The navy boys and their commander, Adm. Daniel E. Barbey, figured, without much difficulty, that the United States ships engaged in transporting and repatriating could be manned largely by Chinese and Japanese nationals. How long will it take the boys in Washington to "brain out" something as good? Kansan Open Letters Dear Indiana U.: THE DAILY KANSAN Our loss is your gain. Professor Ashton was one of our best. THE DAILY KANSAN Dear Navy Rottsie's: Welcome to K.U. THE DAILY KANSAN Nice going on the William Allen White radio show. Dear Terry Herriott: THE DAILY KANSAN Dear Whoever is in charge: Some instruction to speakers on the use of the microphone in Hoch would help the audience, too. It wasn't Sir Bernard's British accent alone that made him hard to understand. THE DAILY KANSAN THE DAILY Dear Friday: Thank God it is. THE DAILY KANSAN Criticisms of Gen. Dwight Eisenhower and his treatment of the Germans have begun. A few months ago we gave General Eisenhower an unprecedented welcome in this country. Are we people who must have a flag waving and a band playing to keep faith with a soldier who has done and is doing an excellent job? Rock Rock Chalk Talk The American Way of Life. A corpse emerging from a barrel, spooks in corners, jack-o-lantern, and special torture chambers were feature events of a spine-chilling show at Henley house. However, the honor guest of the affair, Dr. Evelyn Misra of India, merely laughed off the terrifying display since the cadavers were stuffed pillows and sheets rather than some overworked K.U. student. After an hour and a half of a typical American Halloween celebration, Dr. Misra parted with the comment, "Now I've seen everything." By GEORGE CALDWELL Special delivery. A regular delivery of milk and medicine every noon has been added to the schedule of Dragon Lady of the Gamma Phi house, Jane Atwood. Why? The Sig Alphas have been making the daily deliveries because of a fatherly concern, on the part of "Peaches" Daugherty, for Miss Atwood's health. Mutiny on the bounty. K.U. frehmen and new students who are weary of domination by upper-classmen now may consult the new girls at Jolliffe hall to obtain blueprints for revolution. The pattern for future upheavals was set by the Fosterites at 3 o'clock one morning. The newcomers yanked the old- ** Letters to the Editor Cui-threat politics might have hit the K.U. campus again. University Daily Kansan Dear Editor: Investigation shows that the Greek political parties, Pachacamac and the unnamed women's Greek party, were the official sources of the news story, "Fresh Political Mixer Replaces Midweek," that appeared in the October 31 issue of the Daily Kansan. (b) According to University regulations a scheduled midweek will at all times take precedence over any other social event in the Union or elsewhere on the campus. Therefore no political mixer or meeting could ever replace a midweek unless scheduled without the permission and authoriation required by the W.E.C. SUNDAY thru Tuesday 2 FEATURES GENE AUTREY VARSITY (a) There was no midweek scheduled for October 31. It was, then, incorrect and misleading to say the mixer was to "replace" the midweek, and it appeared to attach undue importance to the rally. (c) The news story implies that the Student Union, intended for the use of all students, was to find itself TODAY — Ends Saturday "Under Fiesta Stars" and JOHN O'MALLEY TODAY — Ends Saturday "SUNSET" CARSON "Bandits of the Badlands" FRANK JENKS "The Missing Corpse" and Chapter Three "JUNGLE QUEEN" "Sporting Chance" 南 赤 向 It could happen to you. When a waiter approached Jean Murray, Kappa, and a friend to collect for grilled groceries consumed, both girls discovered they were without funds. The waiter, just call him great-heart, settled for an I.O.U. since most of the dishes were washed. How to Get a Buzz. Margie Nigus, not very heavily clad, was dramatically demonstrating the way in which she had posed for a portrait for the benefit of Foster hall friends. In the audience was an uninvited bee who caused Margie to act even more dramatic when she started to occupy the chair in which Mr. Bee was enthroned. You figure it out. Cleo Norris, aspiring headline writer, brought this one to Editing class the other day: SWAN'S ATTACK BUFFA-LOES MULES. Prof. Elmer Beth commited that it seemed a little "fowled" up and he didn't care for such horse-play. ** ** Bell Writes Article For Mathematics Journal P. O. Bell, professor of mathematics, has had published in the August, 1945, bulletin of the American Mathematical society, a research paper "Metric Properties of a Class of Quadratic Differential Forms." The paper is based on a work done on Euclidean applications of the projective differential geometry. housing a Greek political mixer at the expense of an all-University dance—that would be unfair discrimination. Editor's Note: The Daily Kansan published the above-mentioned story in good faith. Was this story an example of machine politics or merely negligence and oversight? The answer to this question can come only through the future activities of the Greek parties. William Vandiver. Vi's Gift Shop Hotel Eldridge OFFICIAL BULLETIN for the early Christmas shoppers at New Items in Stationery and Birds in Ceramics University of Kansas Friday, Nov. 2 Noticees must be typewritten and must be in Public Relations office, but not later than 9:30 a.m. on day of publication. No phone messages accepted. Any Independents who are Ku Ku's and who are interested in going to Lincoln, call Mike Kuklenski at 957. The bus which we have chartered will leave Saturday morning in front of Frank Strong—Michael J. Kuklenski. There will be a meeting of all Dramatics Workshop members at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday in the English room of the Union.-Virginia Urban, president. Juniors in the College: The proficiency examination in English composition will be given at 8:30 a.m., Nov. 10. If you plan to take it at this time, you must register in the College office, room 229, Frank Strong, on Monday, Tuesday or Wednesday, Nov. 5, 6, 7. You will not be qualified to take the examination without registration—Natalie Calderwood, chairman, proficiency committee. ★ ★ ★ LOST—Pair of red-rimmed pixie glass near bus stop by Pi Beta Phi house or on K.U. bus route Tuesday. One rim is broken. Finder please call Jane Anderson at 1324R. Reward. WANT ADS NOTICE-Will person who picked up my bilfold please return contents other than money to the Daily Kansan office. Delia Reed. All University women students who plan to attend the University of Kansas-Nebraska football game at Lincoln Sat., Nov. 3, should sign out in the office of the adviser of women, 121 Frank Strong hall, by 5 p.m. today—Elizabeth Meguier, adviser of women. ROOM FOR RENT—Single or double for boys. Phone 1796M, 1808 Vermont. LOST—A brown zipper billfold. Finder may keep money and billfold, but please return picture and miscellaneous cards, to Vera Hodges. phone 2303. FOR RENT—Rooms for boys at 413 W. 14th St. Also one front double room with twin beds at 1404 La. Call KU 25 with your news. --- EARRINGS Latest Styles Roberts Jewelry and Gifts Independent Freshmen: Remember These Names: Duane Adsit Alice Jane Peterson Margaret Van der Smissen Will Noble Jeanne Cockrehan Remember This Date: With You Monday Night - - - 7:15 Union Lounge CIDER - - DANCING - - DONUTS Remember to Vote Tuesday Call KU 25 with your news. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. Phone 425 HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Garage and Cab Co. 922 Mass. Phone 12 FOR THAT COKE DATE Remember ELDRIDGE PHARMACY Phone 999 701 Mass. NOW ENDS SATURDAY GRANADA One of those rare movies that push your heartstrings, tickle your funnybone! The Picture that may change Your Life! The Cheaters dorning JOSEPH SCHILDKRAUT REPUBLIC PICTURE ADDED—DONALD DUCK Billie Ona Ruth BURKE - MUNSON - TERRY CARTOON - Sports - News Owl Show Sat. 11:45 A Howluva Lot of Laughs! Absolutely the Best Comedy in town Presented just for fun by EDWARD SMALL DENNIS O'KEEFE HELEN WALKER JUNE HAVOC EDDIE "Rochester" ANDERSON GAIL PATRICK MISCHA AUER Directed by ALLAN DWAN in BREWSTER'S MILLIONS" Absolutely the Best Comedy in town Directed by AILAN DWAN in BREWSTER'S MILLIONS NEW MARCH OF TIME NOVEMBER 2, 1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREED 60 SOCIALLY SPEAKING Mary Margaret Goynor, Society Editor Henley Gives Party Guests at a Halloween party Wednesday night at Henley house were: Evelyn Misa, Joan Joy, Joan Veatch, Lorna Green, Eylen Ford, Julia Ann Casad, Sheila Guise, Emalouise Britton, Dorothy Park, Jean Gardiner, Alberta White, Virginia Parry, Mariette Bennett, Maxine Jones, Mary Turkington, Barbara Roberts, Dorothy Hoover, Jeanne Blanchard, Lola McCracken, and Miss Martha Peterson. Milton Gordon, Philadelphia, was a guest at dinner Wednesday night. Watkins hall residents were guests at a Halloween party Wednesday night at Miller hall. Miller Hall Entertains Sir Bernard Pares was a guest at Miller hall Wednesday. Watkins Has Hour Dance An hour dance was given by Watkins hall Wednesday. Craftons Visit Kappa's Mr. and Mrs. Allen Crafton and Mrs. Dan Huebert were dinner guests of Kappa Kappa Gamma Wednesday night. Pledges entertained the Tau Kappa Epsilon pledge class at an hour dance Tuesday night. Let's Go to CHURCH. Trinity Lutheran Church Morning worship. 11 a.m. Trinity Episcopal Church Holy communion, 8 a.m.; church school 9:30 a.m. Mornign worship 11 a.m. First Christian Church College class, Foster room, 9:30 a.m., Fellowship in the Church"; morning worship and communion; 10:45 a.m. St. John's Catholic Church "And He Gave Some to the Pastors," forum for college students at Myers hall, 5 to 7 p.m. St. John's Catholic Church Masses at 8,10,and 11:30 a.m. University class, 9:45 a.m., "2 Pattern for Society," Morning worship, 11 a.m.; "Leo Tolstoy and the Continuing Christian Movement," at 1124 Mississippi; "Missions in China." First Presbyterian Church Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.; worship service, 11 a.m.; vesper service, 5 p.m. at 1221 Oread. Church of St. John the Apostle. Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.; worship service, 10:45 a.m.; youth group, 6:30 p.m.; vespers, 7:30 p.m. Plymouth Congregational Church Morning worship, 11 a.m.; fireside forum, 4:30 - 6 p.m., Parish house. First Methodist Church University class, 9:45 a.m.; "Religious Uncertainties and Creative Living;" Morning worship, 10:50 a.m. "The Capacity for Pain," Wesley Foundation fellowship, 6 p.m., "What Resources for Effective Christian Living Does University Life Offer?" Men Needed For Vacation Work A number of men more than 17 years old will be needed to load and unload mail sacks and parcels at Union station, Kansas City, Mo. Pay rate will be $73 \frac{1}{2} cents an hour, according to Dean Werner. Men under 21 are required to furnish a minor's release from parents or guardian. Minor's release forms will be furnished by the Kansas City Terminal Railway company. BARS and STRIPES William Gray Promoted William G. Gray, who attended the University before entering the armed forces in 1942, has been promoted to a staff sergeant. He is with the air forces in Italy. Sgt. Gray was sent overseas in August, 1943, and was transferred to the 36th air depot group, where he is a pharmaceutical technician in the medical section. The 36th group has completed its third year of continuous foreign service and will support the occupational army air force in Italy. Capt. Fey Visits Campus Capt. William Fey, flew into Lawrence in his own plane last week, visited on the campus for a few hours, and flew on to his home in Marion. Capt. Fey is a navy flier and has just been discharged from military service. He served in England, Africa, Sicily, in South America and the Caribbean sea, did patrol duty along the Atlantic coast, and followed the navy and army advance up the Pacific ocean from Australia to New Guinea, the Philippines, and on to Iwo Jima. Sgt. Ward Awaits Ride Sgt. George Arthur Ward, a student at the University in 1941-42, has written from Kunming, China, that he is waiting for a ride over the Hump to Calcutta and then home to the United States. Sgt. Ward has received a citation from Generalissimo Chiang Kai-shek for his work in training a Chinese combat command in communication. Pyt. Kelley Now On Luzon Pvt. Stanley Kelley, Jr., is '44-45, has arrived at the sixth replacement depot, Luzon. He was inducted in February, 1945, and left the United States in August. Carol Gene English in France Carol Gene English, who received her master's degree from the University in 1943, is working in the Red Cross club service in Aix-en-Provence of Southern France. She is in the Calais staging area and makes frequent visits to Marseille and the Riveria. Wyoming Trip Nets Museum Specimens The fat ones lose and the thin ones gain. The formula—one truck, one car, one cook, and a summer session field trip conducted by the University museum of natural history. This summer's trip covered Wyoming, and netted 1,200 specimens, numerous photographs, and several hundred pages of field notes for the museum. The party of seven, led by Dr. E. R. Hall, and Prof. A. B. Leonard, camped three to five days at a time, keeping the following daily schedule. Up one-half hour before sunrise to take animals out of traps before the sun strikes them. Weigh the material on returning to camp. Skin animals between breakfast and lunch, and after lunch until 4 p.m. Write field notes until 5:30. Replace traps—100 for each man—and hunt bats and nocturnal animals until dark. Then dine and retire. Train Trains Five Students Dawn to Dark Schedule Participants in the trip were Bernardo Villa, Henry W. Setzer, James H. Honey, graduate students; and Dr. Hall's sons, Hubert H. Hall, College freshman, and Benjamin Hall, Lawrence High school student. The object of the trip was to collect specimens and study techniques of collection and preservation. Wyoming was selected because it includes each of the five life zones. Its vertebrate fauna is the least known in western United States. Up and Coming A Calendar of Campus Events Tomorrow Union Activities dance, 2 to 4 pm. Union lounge Phi Delta Theta party, 7 to 9 p.m., at the Kappa Alpha Theta chapter house. Logna Alpha Epsilon party, 8 p.m. to midnight, chapter house. Alpha Delta Pi openhouse, 9 p.m. to midnight, chapter house. Varsity dance, 9 p.m. to midnight. Independent dance and political rally, 7 to 8:15 p.m., Union lounge. Wednesday Military Science building. Monday Midweek, 7:30 to 9 p.m., Union lounge. Wednesday lounge. ON THE CAMPUS Tonight and Tomorrow Jayhawk—"Valley of Decision." Granda—"The Cheaters." Varsity—"Bandits and the Badlands," and "The Missing Corpse." Sunday Jayhawker—"Her Highness and the Bellov." Granada—"Brewster's Million's" Varsity—"Under Fiesta Stars" and "Sporting Chance." Chemists to Hear Willard A group from the department of chemistry will attend a meeting of the Kansas City Section of the American Chemical Society at the University of Kansas City, Friday night. Dr. H. H. Willard professor of chemistry at the university of Michigan, will give an address on new analytical methods. In 1873 at least five million buffaloes were slaughtered. "Carrier War," the story of task force 58 of the United States Pacific fleet by O. O. Jensen. "The Future of Japan," by W. C. Johnstone. NEW at the LIBRARY "Europe Now," by H. V, Kaltenborn. "The Governing of Men," general principles and recommendations based on experience at a Japanese relocation camp, by A. H. Leighton. The Seven Keys to Getting and Holding a Job," by G. J. Lyons. loving a .000... "Baby Flat- top," by McCracken. "They Hop and Crawl," by P. A. Morris. "Shall We Scrap Our Merchant Marine?" by A. D. Rathbone. "The Future of Industrial Research," by Standard Oil development company. "The Art of Being a Successful Business Girl," by Torson. "The Townsman," a Kansas Story. by J. Sedges. "Contemporary Spanish Poetry," by E. L. Turnbull. "Justice in Transportation." an ex- pose of monopoly control, by A. C. Wiprud. Wahl, Stoland Return From Pittsburgh Meeting Dr. H, R. Wahl, dean of the School of Medicine, and Dr. O, O. Stoland, secretary, returned today from Pittsburgh, Pa., where they attended a meeting of the Association of American Medical Colleges. Topics considered were the improvement of curriculum, visual education in teaching medical subjects, and army and navy program reconversion, Dr. Stoland said. White Mufflers Dress Gloves Lined Gloves Wool Gloves Ski Socks Athletic Socks The buffaloes were the first trail makers in the West. It's not too early to think about Christmas Select your Gifts, now while you can get em---- T Shirts Shirts Sweat Shirts sweaters Wool Top Leafers Slippers Gehardine Robes Gabardine Robes Sport Shirts Twill Shirts Flannel Shirts Arrow Neckties Knit Neckties Hickok Jewelry Pioneer Braces, Belts Glad to show you! Buy That Victory Bond Tomorrow— CARLS GOOD CLOTHES Imitation Alligator $4.00 Have yours in black or brown You'll like how snugly they ..how light they are on foot ...w" platforms, wear-tested so A HAYNES & KEENE 819 MASS. PHONE 524 Women to Meet New V-12's At Tea Dance Tomorrow All University women are invited to a tea dance at the Union lounge, from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday, to meet new navy V-12s, Joan Woodward, social chairman of Union activities, announced today. Women will wear sweaters and skirts. THE MOST HONORED WATCH ON THE CAMPUS Longines THE WORLD'S MOST HONORED WATCH WINNER OF 10 WORLD'S FAIR GRAND PRIZES, 28 GOLD MEDALS AND MORE HONORS FOR ACCURACY THAN ANY OTHER TIMEPIECE DENVER CITY OF DENVER CUPID'S OWN Laura Lee MISS SENIOR OF LOUISVILLE Original Junior Laura Lee BIG LES MÉTIRE BOSTON, MALEUS Original Junior He'll take you to heart in enipid's latest fashion! A full shirt, whittled waist, notched neck and cuffs... of cashmere-type jersey, sizes 9 to 15. ADELANE'S 823 MASS. PHONE 554 PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 2,1945 COTTON IN THE HUDDLE with PAT PENNEY Predictors say the Kansas - Nebraska game will be the most exciting Big Six game this weekend. Other Big Six tussles Saturday are: Oklahoma vs. T.C.U. at Norman. Kansas State vs. Iowa State at Ames. Missouri vs. Michigan State at E. Lansing. Guest prognosticator this week is LeRoy Robison, who will miss his first game of the season tomorrow because of injuries. "Bobby" picks Kansas, Iowa State, Oklahoma, and Michigan State as winners in this round. Other seers in this guessing game, Coach Shenk, "Ernie" Quigley, and your editor, agree with Robby's predictions. HUSK THE HUSKERS Kansas will not be without a cheering section at Lincoln tomorrow. Busses sponsored by the Jay Janes and the Ku Ku's will take about 70 Jayhawkers to the land of the Cornhuskers. Station WOW, Omaha, will broadcast the game beginning at 2 p.m. tomorrow. Jap Plane Missed NROTC Captain By Just a Foot There were some close calls, but he brought his ships home undamaged, with the loss of only one man in almost two years convoy duty in the Pacific. That's the enviable record of Capt. Chester A. Kunz, commander of the University N.R.O.T.C. unit. Captain Kunz, a veteran of 23 years in the navy, came here to take command just two months after his return from 100,000 miles of escort duty. His division of six destroyer escorts is credited with at least eight Jap planes and two submarines. In all this action, from Guam to Iwo Jima to Okinawa, Captain Kunz lost one man. A gunner's mate, standing by his station, was killed when struck by the wing tip of a Jap suicide plane. The Jap missed the ship and plunged into the ocean. In another attack, a Japanese torpedo bomber turned suicide plane dove on Captain Kunz's flagship. The plane missed the ship's bridge by a foot, and hit the water five feet from the hull, the captain declared. Commanding six destroyer escorts shuttling back and forth across the Pacific is no easy job, but the Captain said his hardest job was that of protecting San Francisco bay the week before Pearl Harbor. Three destroyers were ordered to allow only ships identified as friendly into the key. It counts simple, but the dense fog, coupled with the facts that the old destroyer couldn't use the radio and that none of the merchant ships knew they had to be identified, really made it difficult. The captain said that one ship nearly ran aground, and a navy tanker almost was blown out of the water during the week. The navy commander was graduated from Annapolis in 1926. He was on the rifle team and participated in football and wrestling while in school. Commissioned an ensign, he remained in the navy two years seeing service in the second Nicaraguan campaign. He took a commission in the organized reserve until 1940, when he went on active duty as a lieutenant. His home is in Overland Park. AD Pi Beats Pi Phi's, 34-29 The Alpha Delta Pi's won a torrid volleyball game with the Pi Phi's last night, to squeeze out a 34-29 victory. Nine points behind the Pi Phi's at the half, the ADPI trio of Lucille Land, Elizabeth Schindling, and Bobette Sellers started a set-up routine which the Pi Phi's could not overtake. Corbin hall took Delta Gamma for a 38-21 win. Edith Boehmer, Marie Horseman, Margery Stubbs, and Coral Park were star players for Corbin hall. Chi Omega beat IND's 44-19 and Gamma Phi Beta beat Tipperary hall 46-35. The Gamma Phi's used substitutes most of the game. Hockey Team Whips Ottawa, 2-0 The K. U. women's hockey team defeated Ottawa University, 2-0 here Thursday. Violet Conard dribbed the ball down the sideline into the Ottawa goal twice, with the consistent help of Mariorie Free, forward. Edith "Speedy" Boehmer played the picture of her nickname by keeping the ball on the move in the wing position. The few times the Ottawa team brought the ball near the K. U. goal, Joan Lippleman, goalie, knocked it out of the danger zone. Evans Carries On For Superbombers Colorado Springs, Colo. (UP)—Ray Evans, Jayhawker '41-42 football star held top honors for the leading ball carrier of the Second Air Force Superbombers with an average of five yards each time he carried the ball. The former All-Big Six halfback has occupied the spotlight since the injury of Frankie Sinkwich. Evans has netted 285 yards in 57 attempts from scrimmage in the six games the team has played this year. SLEEP IS EASY WHEN YOU DRINK MILK BEFORE RE-TIRING. Milk & Ice Cream Co. Lawrence Sanitary 5. (1) 72÷48=1.5 (2) 96÷36=3 (3) 108÷60=1.8 (4) 120÷80=1.5 JUST RECEIVED a few more of those Florescent Lamps The result of the four days we have had to do this will be shown Saturday. Milford Collins, who played most of the Wichita game, will get the starting assignment. Although he lacks Robison's speed, I am confident he will do his best. Lawrence Typewriter Exchange The squad suffered a body blow last week when LeRoy Robison, dependable fullback, received a broken collar bone which will keep him out of football for the rest of the season. Our biggest problem has been developing replacements for Robison from new boys who have reported this week. This week it is Nebraska. No longer does the K.U. football team have to face the tremendous psychological handicap of not having beaten Nebraska since 1916. But it has been 29 years since Kansas has defeated Nebraska at Lincoln! We hope to turn the trick by beating the Cornhuskers this year —at Lincoln. Wayne Hird and Dick Bertuzzi, our other cripples, should be able to play some this Saturday, although they are not in the best shape. Max Kennedy, one of the ends who started in the Wichita game, will be unable to make the trip due to injuries. The rest of the squad is in good shape. We Have the Stuff To Win, Shenk Says By HENRY SHENK Head Football Coach 735 Mass. Street Lawrence, Kansas "Potsy Clark," my old coach, will have his boys keyed high for this game, but we are going to "shoot the works" against Nebraska. We want a win. Nebraska is rated a favorite but we have the stuff to beat them if we have the will to win. It should be a great game with victory going to the team that makes its breaks. B-29's Fly Nonstop Japan to Washington Washington. (UP)—Four B-29's completed the first non-stop 6,544-mile flight from Japan to Washington last night, and today the air forces are planning a new test for the super-bomber-an assault on the British-held nonstop distance record, 7,158 miles. (continued from page one) his more speedy secondary mates. Jack Rader, hard-driving, 160-pounder, has flashed more drive than any regular halfback on quick-opening thrusts and wide reverses off Coach Shenk's standard single-wing. Bob Ulrich will see plenty of action in relieving regulators Dave Schmidt and Norm Pumphrey. Gridders Set To Break Jinx The Jayhawkers may present a revised lineup by kickoff time Saturday. Probable starters will include Norm Pumphrey and Dave Schmidt at ends; Duke Burn and Bob Moore, tackles; John Dickerson and Frank Burke, guards; and Tex Langford, center. Marxmiller is slated to take over for the battered Bertucci at right half and Charles Conroy will open instead of George Gear at quarterback. Milford Collins, Robison's 23-year-old understudy, will start at fullback, with Patte at tailback. This crew averages 181 pounds in the line, five pounds less than the Nebraska front wall weight standard. It scales 175 pounds in the backfield. The Cornhuskers have scored only one touchdown in three Big Six games. Other Jayhawkers who will make the trip include John Armstrong, end; Rusty Baltis, center; Bobby Burch, tackle; Lawrence Channell, guard; Albert Chase, end; Neal Cramer, quarterback; Dud Day, guard; Bob Dvorak, end; Herb Foster, quarterback, Robert Gove, guard; Pat Green, fullback; James Irwin, guard; Don Jarrrett, tackle; Stan Jervis, halfback; Duane McCarter, guard; Dale Morrow, halfback; Joe Samet, tackle; and Ben Wilson, touch. Swarthout, Gaston to Give Teaching Demonstrations Dean D. M. Swarthout and Dr. E. Thayer Gaston, of the School of Fine Arts, will be on the program of the Kansas Music Education association Friday and Saturday in conjunction with the state teachers meeting at he University of Wichita. Dean Swarthout will direct a choral demonstration at 3:30 p. m. STUDENTS!! PHONOGRAPH PLAYERS ARE IN STOCK NOW! Quantity Limited So Get Yours NOW! New 5-tube superhetrodyne radios are also in. These are splendid radios with Beam power output and equals 7-tube operation in other sets. We have new tubes for your radio. We can give you speedy service on all your radio repair work Thanks for your business. Phone 138. Complete Stock of Fresh Portable Radio Batteries. ED BOWMAN BOWMAN RADIO SHOP, 944 Mass. St., and F. M. TELECTRAD SHOP, 900 Mass. St. Humidifiers Installed Humidifiers have been installed in Spooner-Thayer museum in order to supply the necessary moisture in the air which helps to preserve the objects in the museum. Last year the excessive dryness of the air caused several paintings and carvings to crack and chip, Mrs. M. Garet Warner, museum curator, sax today. Some eagles live 100 years. A Real Chance For a Young Couple! Here is a good opportunity for a young couple who want to work, and one or both go to K.U. A five-room house, heat, light, and meals include in plan. If interested can call 259 days, or 1528 evenings. MR. IVAN ROWE 745 Alabama TODAY at the Jayhawker AND SATURDAY Bu RETURN ENGAGEMENT! You will want to see them again and again! They're so wonderful together Tu trav toda Gre;ena ... in a love that dares everything! W man con dus get dus met tria X-TRA—Navy tops Penn 14 to 7 in last 25 seconds of game. To GARSON Gregory PECK "The VALLEY of DECISION" STARTS THURS. Two gals and a guy in a King-sized romance! HEDY LAMARR ROBERT WALKER JUNE ALLYSON in M-G-M's "Her Highness and the Bellboy" U said Greesom mer cluo Uni and OH! WHAT FUN! OH! WHAT BLISS! Bob, as a bashful bellhop, teaches a queen to be a hepcat in a rowdy exciting American way! B1 O of da ste ne SUNDAY University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Monday, November 5, 1945 43rd Year No. 30 Lawrence, Kansas News . . . of the World Bus Strike Spreads To Kansas, Missouri Tula, Okla. (UP)—Hundreds of travelers were stranded temporarily today as the strike of Southwestern Greyhound bus drivers and maintenance men spread to other states. Union spokesmen at Kansas City, said today that the Southwestern Greyhound walkout would affect some 1,500 drivers and maintenance men in eight southwestern states including Kansas and Missouri. The Union is demanding wage increases and improved working conditions. Washington. (UP)—President Truman, opening the labor-management conference, declared today that industry and the working people must get together and end current industrial strife, saying that government wartime controls over industrial relations soon will be ended. British Tighten Lid On Tense Near East Jerusalem. (UP)—The coastal area of Palestine was under a dusk-to-dawn curfew today as British forces stepped up precautions against any new violence by Jewish extremist Dispatches from Egypt said Cairo was quiet today after several days of Anti-Jewish demonstrations by Arab extremists. Washington. (UP)—The Supreme Court today refused to review the Government's wartime seizure of Montgomery Ward properties. It dismissed the case as "moot" since the properties have been returned to the company. Washington. (UP) —The wind played tricks on Lt. Gen. Jimmy Doolittle yesterday and prevented him from setting a new, non-stop transcontinental flying record. Flying in his B-29 superfortress and averaging about 350 miles an hour, he fell short by a minute and nine seconds of breaking the record set by the Lockheed constellation in April, 1944. Batavia. (UP)—A British communique said the situation throughout Java was tense today following a new outbreak of shooting in Batavia and rumors of Indonesian preparations for fresh attacks in Soerabaja. Kansas City Greets General Wainwright Kansas City. (UP)—Bunting flew overhead on Kansas City streets today as the city went all out to greet another war hero—the 'hero of Bataan' Gen. Jonathan M. Wainwright, who arrived at 3 p.m. today. A celebration was being prepared for Wainwright that equalled that given Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower in his homecoming last summer. Saligon, French Indo-China. (UP) —Annamites have renewed attacks on British and French troops west, north and south of Saligon, it was reported today. Heavy fighting broke out last night west of Cholen which is now offlimits for all British troops except officers on duty. Manile. (UP)—Lengthy cross-examination failed today to shake the testimony of two Filipino collaborators that Gen. Tomoyuki Yamashita personally ordered the sack of Manila and slaughter of its inhabitants. Is the Situation Better Than After World War I? How Close Are We To World Peace? Is the world closer to international peace today than it was two or three months after World War I? Armed with this question, Daily Kansan reporters have been interviewing representatives of nine University departments and schools the past week. They queried a philosopher, a political scientist, a psychologist, the chancellor, a sociologist, a chemist, lawyer, an historian, and an engineer. lawyer, an historian, and an enginer Seven of the nine answered "Yes." Two, the historian and the engineer, answered "No." The seven who believed we are closer to world peace today than after a similar period following the Armistice which ended World War I, based their reasons on five main points: ONE. This time, the main centers of aggression will be incapacitated. TWO. This time, there is an effective international machinery set up to maintain peace. THREE. This time, there is the atomic bomb. FOUR. This time, the troubles and disagreements are small compared with the dispute about the League of Nations and Wilson's 14 Points. the world's problems. The two who believed we were closer to world peace in 1919 than we are today based their reasons on four main points: of Nations and Wilson. This time, we are more realistic, more aware of the world's problems. ONE. The current United Nations organization offers less hope for peace than the League of Nations did. TWO. The economic and industrial ruin caused by World War II is so much deeper and farther-reaching than the 1914-18 devastation. THREE. The atomic bomb makes even small nations potential aggressors capable of blotting out an entire country. FOUR. Russia is holding up the peace. *** Reporters who participated in this survey were Jean Murray, LaVone Craig, Marian Thomson, Neal Sheehan, Lelia Strayhorn, Catherine Osgood, Barbara Ewing, Annabelle Saylor, and Paul Conrad. The answers they received follow. - * * The philosopher interviewed was Prof. E. H. Hollands. "I think the world is nearer peace now than after the first world war in two respects," he said. "Whether these two will balance all the other items that must be considered, I'm not sure." be considered. "One thing that wasn't completely done at the of the last war was the incapacitating for war of two of the main centers of aggression. So far as we can see now, Germany and Japan will not be able to make war for a long time to come. "The other accomplishment is the setting up of the United Nations organization, including the United States, which at least provides some of the machinery for cooperative maintenance of peace. Kansas: Fair to partly cloudy and continued mild tonight, low temperatures 45 to 55. Tomorrow partly cloudy and becoming colder by afternoon except extreme southeast. Much colder northwest and north central. "But unless we make effective use of the United Nations, it won't be anything more than a paper U.S. Troops Aid Chiang, Reds Say WEATHER BULLETIN Washington. (UP)—The White House announced today that President Truman received word this morning from Lt. Gen. Albert C. Wedemeyer, commanding American forces in China, that "there have been no clashes between Chinese Communists and the Marines." North China's second largest mine, at Tsaochang in southern Shantung, has been surrounded for 85 days by Communists, he said. Communications Minister Yu Fei-Peng, however, revealed that U.S. marines were accompanying each coal train traveling from North China's largest coal mine at Kailan southwest to Tientsin. Marines also garrison the mine, he said. (continued to page three) scribed by the Communist newspaper New China Daily, which joined Radio Yenan in making the charge, said that American troops helped the Central government's armies capture two Communist-held villages in northeast China near the Manchurian border. Chungking. (UP) — Communist sources charged today that American forces were fighting in China's undeclared civil war on the side of the central government, but a government spokesman said the accusation was groundless. churchian border. Information Minister K. C. Wu of the Chungkwing government categorically denied the charges. was groundless. American correspondents returning from North China denied that American troops had entered the civil war and said they had heard no reports of such fighting as described by the Communist quarters. What Do You Think? Editor's Note: These have been the samplings of the opinions of a small portion of the faculty. What do students believe on this subject? The Daily Kansan will welcome letters giving student views on the subject and will print them as soon as practical. Address your letters to World Peace Survey Editor, and limit them to 100 words, please. Corbin President Represents Dorms Helen Stark, 20-year-old College senior, is the Inter-Dormitory Council representative to the All Student Council. She is a member of the Council's finance committee. HELEN STARK Helen is majoring in bacteriology and is secretary-treasurer of the Bacteriology club. She also is president of Corbin hall. She came to the University from her home in Sabetha as a freshman in 1942. A brother, Bob, was graduated from the University's School of Medicine last year. Her sister, Marjorie, is a freshman this year, majoring is, 1928 30 to Decorate For Homecoming Thirty organized houses will compete for three cups awarded for Homecoming decorations, with the theme Jayhawkers vs. K-State Wildcats, Jean McIntyre, decorations committee chairman, said today. Decorations will be judged Nov. 16 and 17, on originality, cleverness, beauty, and appropriateness. Houses competing are: Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Omicron Pi, Battenfeld hall, Carruth hall, Chi Omega, Corbin hall, Delta Gamma, Delta Tau Delta, Delta Upsilon, Foster hall, Gamma Phi Beta, Harmon Co-op, Hopkins hall, Kappa Alpha Theta, Kappa Kappa Gamma. Kappa Gamma Loksley hall, Miller hall, Phi Delta Theta, Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa Pi, Psi Beta Pi, Ricker hall, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Chi, Sigma Kappa, Tau Kappa Epsilon, Tipperary hall, Watkins hall, Wright place. WSSF Drive Ends With $2,400 Total "The World Student Service Fund drive ended officially Friday with $2,400 collected, but pledges still are being solicited," Jeanne Blanchard, chairman, announced today. With the drive's office in the Memorial Union closed, pledges may be paid at Henley house, Miss Blanchard said. cheard said. "Many pledges have not been paid," she added. Student Speakers Will Meet Tomorrow Students interested in any forensic or extra-curricular speaking activity will meet at 8 p.m. Tuesday in the little theater of the Green hall, Prof. E. C. Buchler, of the speech and drama department, announced today. Freshmen to Vote For Councilmen, Officers Tuesday Voting will be from 7:30 a.m. to 5 p.m. Freshmen may vote at whichever place is most convenient. Miss Templeton added. Freshmen will elect class officers and All-Student Council representatives tomorrow at polls set up in the basements of Fraser hall and Frank Strong hall, Jean Templeton, chairman of the A.S.C. elections committee, said today. All freshmen wishing to vote are to bring their activity books for identification, Miss Templeton said. The candidates are Men students are to vote for a man representative and women are to vote for a woman representative. For class officers, students may vote for either a man or a woman. Complete voting instructions will be posted in the booths. The candidates are President: George Gear, Pachacamac, mac, and Boyd Duane Adsit, P.S. G.L. Vice-president—Joanne Cockreham, Independent, and Patricia Elledge, Greek women's party. Secretary-treasurer—Duke Burt, Pachacamae, and Margaret Elisabeth Van der Smissen, Independent. All-Student Council representatives—Alice Jane Moore and Frank Davis, Greek women's party and Pachacamae. Busses Offer Service To West Hills, Sunflower Village Regular bus service for West Hills and 12th street and to Sunflower Village began today. The new West Hills bus, running in addition to the K.U. bus, goes from the campus to West Hills, back through the campus, along Oread to 12th street, and turns at 12th and Ohio streets, joining the K.U. route at 11th and Tennessee streets. A commercial bus line provides transportation from Sunflower Village, home of some University student veterans, to Lawrence, leaving Sunflower at 7:45, 8:15 and 10:30 a.m., and 12:30, 6:45, and 11:15 p.m. The Independent and P.S.G.L. parties will sponsor a dance from 7 to 8.15 tonight in the Union lounge to introduce their candidates for the freshman election tomorrow, William Vandiver, secretary of the P.S.G.L., said today. am, and 12:00 Return trips to the village are scheduled at 3:05, 5:45, and 10:15 p.m. Parties Will Sponsor Political Rally-Dance Mary Jo Cox, president of the All-Student Council, will speak, and Rosemary Harding, independent political chairman, will introduce the women candidates. Vandiver will introduce the men candidates. Two short skits and dancing will Two short skits and dancing will make up the entertainment, Vandiver said. Men's Glee Club Tryouts Offered Throughout Week Tryouts for the Men's Glee club will be at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday and Thursday, and at 10 a.m. Saturday, in 132 Frank Strong hall, D. M. Swarthowr, dean of the School of Fine Arts, announced today. Five Bits, hits and College credit will be given for membership after one semester, Dean Swarthout said. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE KANSAS NOVEMBER 5.1945 University DAILY KANSAN Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Association, National Editorial Association, and the Association of Advertising Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York City. Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Law and Journal school year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Kin, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS STAFF MARY TURKINGham Managing Editor ELEANOR ALBRIGHT Asst. Managing Editor LOREN KING Telegraph Editor ROBIN ROBERTS Order Editor MARY MARGARET GAYNOR. Society Editor PAT PENNEY Sports Editor BILLIE HAMILTON Feature Editor JANE ANDERSON Military Editor BOLO NORMIS Research Editor BRIDGES HALL Assistant Editor MARGARET WENSKI Asst. Sports Editor JOAN VEATCH Campus Editor EDITORIAL STAFF DOLORES SULZMAN ... Editor-in-Chief MARY MORGILL FRANKLIN FARING ... Editorial Associates ORVILLE ROBERTS BUSINESS STAFF NANCY TOMLSON ... Business Manager BETTY BEACH ... Advertising Manager Policy Problem The outbreak of the civil war in North China has handed the United States foreign policy an urgent challenge. Potentially a dangerous source of friction between the United States and Russia, this Chinese situation now has advanced to a stage where extreme care must be taken by the United States in all phases of policy in China. The presence of U.S. troops in Tientsin, Pieping, and other North China ports is considered as a type of intervention by the Communists. Russia, although pledged by treaty to support Chiang materially and morally, could construe any U.S. move to alleviate matters as an abridgment of Big Three agreements, and could call for definite "hands off" action. Our present action in China surely cannot be reflecting the views of our State department which cannot conceivably desire U.S. support of one Chinese faction against the other. Closer harmony between the state department and the U.S. army officials would improve or at least coordinate our action in China. Chiang's Kuomintang government is the logical group to settle China's difficulties, and it is now strong enough to effect an internal reformation. Quite possibly civil war is the only way out of the toxic political situation existing there today. For instance: If the United States should deem it necessary to assume an unofficial trusteeship in China, Russia would be the first object in view of our vigorous complaints against Russian influences in the Balkans. By withdrawing allsemblances of organized intervention in the war and by pledging ourselves to uphold that Chinese government which is capable of restoring a permanent order, the United States can best aid in effecting a settlement. A compromise coalition government is implausible and inadequate as a means of restoring China to her rightful place among nations. permanence and stability are not often produced by insecure compromise. China's prestige and future strength depend on her own ability to reestablish domestic equilibrium now.-F.F. Representative Clarence Brown of Ohio is offering an amendment to a bill which requests $55,000,000 for UNRRA. His amendment would ban the use of funds in any country which does not give free access to the news and does not have freedom of the press. This step would give the press a chance to do its share in preventing another war. Rock Chalk Talk Some deal . . . When Earl Crawford was stuck for the weekend with monitoring campused Phi Psi pledges he collected his wits and stooped to strategy. He called several girls for dates. When they inquired as to plans for the affair, he answered, "Help me keep study hall!" By CATHY PILLER Two alike . . . Bert Morris, Phi Delt, was crushed when he discovered someone else had a sweater just like his newest. He thought he had perfected a scheme of determining when his friend would wear what sweater. It worked. Then something slipped up and both boys blossomed out the same day in like sweaters . . . talk about women wanting exclusive styles. Big Mistake . . . Coming back to school last weekend, a Corbin hall gal got on a car headed for Chicago instead of the one that switched off OFFICIAL BULLETIN University of Kansas Nov. 5,1945 Notices must be typewritten and must be in Public Relations office, Ft. Strong, not later than 8:30 a.m. on Friday. No communication. No phone messages accepted. Inter-Fraternity Council meeting at 8 tonight, Pine room of the Union. W.K. Jenson, president. - . * . * Le Cercle Francais se reuuni mercredi a trois heures et demie dans 113 Frank Strong. Tous ceux qui s'interessent en français sont invites. — Mary Schitler, Secretaire. There will be a meeting of au Dramatics Workshop members at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday, in the English room of the Union-Virginia Urban, president. Juniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences: The Proficiency Examination in English Composition will be given at 8:30 a.m. Saturday. If you plan to take it at this time, you must register in the college office, room 229, Frank Strong, today. Just to be Near . . . Since K.U.'s ladies keep hours, a fraternity group did their best to make a picnic complete by holding it near the place housing the most women, Corbin hall. Post-War Plea. . . . An exchange advertisement reads: Being aware that it is indelicate to advertise for a husband, I refrain from doing so; but if any gentleman should be inclined to advertise for a wife, I will answer it without delay. Mission Accomplished . . . Two K.U. girls were talking about a mutual friend also at K.U. One said "I hear she's going to marry him (her O.A.O.) in February." The said the other, "Well, then what's the sense of her going to College now?" to smaller towns. She found out before she reached Chicago. tomorrow, or Wednesday. You will not be qualified to take the examination without registration—Natalie Calderwood, chairman, Proficiency Committee. All-Student Council will meet at 7:15 Tuesday in the Pine room of the Union--Mary Joe Cox, president. ** *** Snow Zoology Club will meet at 7:30 p.m., Thursday, room 206. Snow. Dr. Hobart Smith will speak on "Adaptations of the Poisonous Snakes." --for EARRINGS Latest Styles Roberts Jewelry and Gifts Independent FRESHMEN P. S.G.L.-INDEPENDENT RALLY Tonite - 7:15 - Union Lounge DANCING Lots of Cider and Donuts Meet your candidates for Freshman Class Officers VOTE TOMORROW Duane Adsit ___President Joanne Cocreham ___Vice President Elizabeth Van Der Smissen___Secretary-Treasurer Wilbur Noble___Men's Candidate forA.S.C. Alice Jane Peterson___Women's Candidate for A.S.C. Jean Templeton Heads Council Election Committee JEAN TEMPLETON Jean Templeton, representative from district III to the All Student Council, is 22 years old, a Fine Arts senior, and is majoring in public school music. She is chairman of the election committee and on the smoking committee. 1947 Jean lives in Logan, and is a member of the A Cappella choir and the Inter-Deurne council. She hates charte-ress, likes rainy Sundays, collects classical records, plays tennis and swims (both very badly, she adds), and says "Who knows?" to questions about her future plans. Her father and mother both attended K.U. Jean belongs to Sigma Alpha Iota, national music sorority. "I'm not related to Alec Templeton—unfortunately," she says, "but I met him last spring and think he is perfectly charming." WANT ADS LOST—Pair of red-rimmed pixie glass near bus stop by Pi Beta Phi house or on K.U. bus route Tuesday. One rim is broken. Finder please call Jane Anderson at 1324R. Reward. NOTICE—Will person who picked up my bifold please return contents other than money to the Daily Kansan office. Delia Reed. ROOM FOR RENT—Single or double for boys. Phone 1796M, 1808 Vermont. Call KU 25 with your news. WANTED—1941 or 40, 6-passenger lub coupe, good condition. Please contact Jerry Yogoda, 2470W or Kansan office. FOR RENT—Rooms for boys at 413 W. 14th St. Also one front double room with twin beds at 1140 La. LOST—A brown zipper billfold. Finder may keep money and billfold, but please return picture and miscellaneous cards, to Vera Hodges, phone 2303. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. Phone 425 HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Garage and Cab Co. 922 Mass. Phone 12 Remember FOR THAT COKE DATE COSMETIC DEPT. ELDRIDGE PHARMACY Phone 999 701 Mass. Weaver's FACE POWDER TABU BY Dana 21 Dana, creator of TABU, now offers an exquisite new face powder laden with TABU perfume to give your beauty a third dimension that is entirely new. The shades? They're the ones you love. 1. 75 (tux extra) TABU Dama Dama TABU Dama NO V val rar tor res opp wo NOVEMBER 5, 1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE World Nearer Peace Now Than in 1919, Survey Shows Today's Troubles Comparatively Small, Seven Faculty Members Declare (continued from page one) organization. War creates nothing of value. It at best removes some hindrances to good living. If the victorious nations don't assume the responsibilities of making use of this opportunity, the result may be worse than ever before. "The American people are more awake and informed as to what is going on in the rest of the world. Consequently they are more aware of the dangers, and their disposition is to be more pessimistic. However, after the last war many young men active in writing at that time were very gloomy in their thought about American life and life in general. "We are getting the same reactions in many persons who want to forget about the war and go on in their usual way, which is very unfortunate." The political scientist interviewed was Prof. W.E. Sandelius. "The world is closer to world peace now than two or three months after World War I because of the terrible alternative, the atomic bomb," he declared. *** "I do not say this peace will be permanent," he said, "but I do believe it will last a long, long time. The psychologist was Prof. Raymond H. Wheeler, who agreed the world is closer to peace today. "The troubles and confusion within nations and among nations today are small compared with the disagreements which existed in 1919 over the League of Nations and Wilson's 14 points." "Definitely not," Dr. Wheeler replied. Was the failure of the London ministers' conference, which ended in a stalemate, significant in predicting the success of furture international relations? "There is only one more nation left for us to fight-Russia," he declared. "It will be a long time before Russia would be willing to face another war, and sacrifice millions of men. The same holds true for other nations." "We don't need to worry about war today." Chancellor Deane W. Malott declared international peace is closer now and pointed out that the world today is "much more realistic" than after World War I. "Back then, we were smug and indifferent," he said. "We thought we had just won the war to end all wars." Today, new wars and new weapons have created a greater awareness in the average man of the problems confronting the world, the chancellor declared. "The present United Nations organization," he said, "is for many reasons much more effective than the League of Nations was. One of the main reasons is that we are in it." Recognition of forces and the fact that major nations must take the major responsibility are essential in forming a world-peace, the chancellor stated. And the United Nations organization has taken care of this. *** "There are arguments against this belief," Chancellor Malott admitted, "such as the great difficulty of knowing how to get along with Russia. Despite this and other arguments, the world is closer to international peace than it was shortly after World War I. "I think there is a fair chance now for world peace," he said. The sociologist interviewed was Prof. Seba Eldvidge, who answered "Yes" to the question. Peace, he added, will depend upon a number of things, of which the most important is the determined effort on the part of United States and Russia to understand each other. "We judge Russia by our institutions and culture patterns; Russia does the same," Professor Eldridge commented. "Neither is absolutely right or absolutely wrong. "We know from actual happenings following the last World War that there was no assurance of peace. Especially with the onset of the depression, European countries and Japan developed a war drive. "In looking back, we recall the fact that the world was not ready and did not work out an organization for peace." Robert Taft, Jr., chemistry instructor, was the sixth faculty member agreeing we are closer to world peace today than in 1919. "Whether we keep that peace now lepends on world leadership," Mr. Taft warned. After the last war, he recalled, the United States entered Russia with men and supplies and fought the revolutionary forces. Today we are uneasy because Russia has emerged from the war a stronger nation and other world powers are not so strong, he said. Yet the Russian people are slowly recognizing greater democracy in their government, especially in the local government, and with the right world leadership they will not want another war, Mr. Taft added. "All mations must recognize fundamental democracy in world trade and political relations with one another in order to maintain world harmony," he said. Mr. Taft thinks it will be only a matter fo months before the atomic bomb secret is known to the world "Science has never recognized boundaries," he said. "A discovery made by one country is soon made by others. So leadership rather than atomic power is the secret of world peace." 1. world is closer to peace today. Prof. Robert McNair Davis, School of Law, also agreed the world is closer to peace today. "I think so because the proposed league of the United Nations has a better organization than the League of Nations had," he explained. "We are in a better position now than after the first World war because the United States already has adhered to the charter. "I think some members of the United Nations are unduly suspicious of Russia. There aren't any people on earth who desire peace more than the Russian people. "The American people are not nearly so isolationist as they were at the end of World War I. They are more determined now to gain world peace." The historian interviewed was Prof. W. W. Davis, and he was emphatic in his belief that the world was closer to peace in 1919 than it is today. "The world is nearer war now than at any time during the year following the World War I Aristice, even nearer war than it was in 1938," he maintained. "There will be no peace treaty for months, maybe years to come." - * * "Many persons hope that a League of Nations will lead the world," he said, "but as organized at present, it cannot preserve peace if any of the five so-called powers uses its veto. "There is evidence that national governments today have broken certain fundamental principles of right and wrong, and have substituted in their place force in political expediency," he added. "We went to war to prevent a rise in Europe of a political organization which threatened world domination by conquest. We have finished this phase of the war with raising to power a more dangerous threat." Greece have been desolated by gunfire and explosives. "In 1919 one-fifth of France, Belgium, Poland, a small portion of Italy, Rumania, and Austria- Hungary were damaged by gunfire and explosives," Professor Davis said. "Today one-third of France, all of Italy, Belgium, Holland, Germany, Poland, Ukraine and White Russia, and Austria, and much of Czechoslovakia, Hungary, Yugoslavia, and "All important cities and railway systems of west and central Europe have been damaged. Crops cannot be planted in one-half of western Europe; Germany has been destroyed industrially; more than 10 million Europeans have moved from former homes, and all prisoners of war are condemned to slavery in certain states. Outside Russia, in Europe today there are only five established governments, all of minor states. "Today France is split by impending civil war within the country, and serious rebellion in Asiatic colonies. "The Indian problem is leading to civil war there. "In Persia, Russia refuses to evacuate northern provinces which produce 90 per cent of the Persians' food," Professor Davis said. "Because of this policy, Britain refuses to withdraw troops from the oil field districts of the south. If Britain lets large numbers of Jews go into Palestine, she faces war with 75 million Moslems within her empire and in northern Africa and Egypt. "China is split by civil war. Some months ago she practically gave Russia control of Manchuria, economic key to China. *** "From Manchuria China gets much of her iron, coal, and food. Japan has been destroyed as a world power. Her industries are gone, her cities have been destroyed. Starvation this winter and next spring is inevitable. "In French Indo China serious war is raging between the French and Anamites, and the seven million natives of the Dutch East Indies are engaged in a bloody struggle to expel all white people from their islands." *** The other person interviewed who agreed that the world was closer to peace in 1919 than now was Prof. E. D. Hay, of the mechanical engineering department. Russia is holding up the peace. "After the first world war, we were the balkers," he said. "Now "The urgency for peace is many times greater than after the last war. I felt then that we hadn't reached Utopia, but the general situation then was much better than now. "Things looked good in 1943, but then peace began to fall apart. "The atomic bomb is hardly a secret now, and it wouldn't take one of the Big Three to blot out an entire nation." Russia asks for territory to which she has no right, he declared, and then agrees to drop the claim in exchange for something she really wants. "The San Francisco conference bogged down more than the League of Nations," Professor Hay concluded. Call KU 25 with your news. THE MOST HONORED WATCH ON THE CAMPUS Longines THE WORLD'S MOST HONORED WATCH WINNER OF 10 WORLD'S FAIR GRAND PRIZES, 28 GOLD MEDALS AND MORE HONORS FOR ACCURACY THAN ANY OTHER TIMEPIECE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA E PLURIBUS UNUM --- IF It'll Seem MORE like Christmas --a fruit cake from Drake's You send that serviceman PHONE 61 DRAKE BAKERY 901 MASS. N.E. Looks like Newdoesn't it? I just had it cleaned by Independent! INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS Phone 432 740 Vermont Phone 432 PAGE FOUR NOVEMBER 5,1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS I IN THE HUDDLE with PAT PENNEY A spirited group of Kansas students made Cornhusker fans sit up and take notice by their school spirit in Lincoln, Saturday. The rooter, mostly Ku Kul's and Jay Janes who had chartered busses to the game, yelled louder and longer than any group we've seen at any home game. The Kansas student body, which specializes in demonstrating great spirit during basketball season, when K.U. is winning, ould take a lesson from this little group, which made the team know it had plenty of backing—even in that discouraging first half. MASSACRE MARQUETTE Nebraska notes; LeRoy Robison, K.U.'s injured veteran fullback, watched the Husker tilt from the press box, where he was spotting for a radio commentator. Robbie saw his teammates make a valiant second-half comeback in a game which they had dedicated to him. . . Members of the football squad attended the Homecoming dance on the Nebraska campus before traintime Saturday night. . . Nebraska roots staged a colorful Homecoming show throughout the game. With colored cards, the cheering section formed "Hi, Grads," made a big Jayhawker and an "N" for Nebraska, and formed a gold discharge button, which received applause from the stands. The Nebraska cheering section and cheerleaders were on both sides of the field. . . "Tex" Langford, game captain, was carried out of the game in the second quarter but was back in at his center post at the second half kick-off. Tex leaped high in the air to make a neat interception of a Husker forward in the first half. . . Three of the four Husker touchdowns were made on spectacular break-aways of 69, 62, and 56 yards. MASSACRE MARQUETTE The Pickographers' percentage went down this weekend, with our campus experts choosing only two winners out of four. The prognostiators were off the beam in picking the Oklahoma Sooners to beat Texas Christian and on the Cornhusker tilt, with the home team. These leave Missouri and Oklahoma still tied for the Big Six lead, both teams having lost to non-conference foes. The T.C.U. game was Oklahoma's second loss to a Southwest conference team this fall. The Sooners fell to Texas, 12-7. Jayhawks Act Too Late to End 29-Year Jinx A spirited second-half rally by the University of Kansas was not enough to halt the victory-starved Nebraska Cornhuskus, who humbled their ancient foes, 27-13, in Lincoln, Saturday. The Jayhawkers stood gaping the first half, while Nebraska put on a solo act in windswept Memorial stadium, scoring in each of the first two quarters. It looked like a romp for the Cornhuskers, with the Jayhawkers showing no offensive and little defensive talent that first half. Schmidt Scores Kansas' surprise scoring thrusts began late in the third quarter, with the dismayed Cornhuskers watching the Jayhawkers march goalward from the K.U. 5-yard stripe in 17 plays. It was Dave Schmidt, Milwaukee V-12, playing his usual consistently good game, who scored on a beautiful fourth down end around sweep. End Norm Pumphrey's place-kick was low. The Jayhawkers tallied again four minutes later. Moving 77 yards in seven plays, they set up a second touchdown by an aerial netting 23 yards from George Gear to Harlan Harmon, and a 24-yard dash by Frank Pattee through the left side of the Husker forward wall. Pattee's parade looked like a touchdown, but he was forced out on the 1-foot line. Gear went over on a quarterback sneak, and this time Pumphrey's kick was good, to make it Nebraska 14. K.U. 13. Huskers Revive While Jayhawk rooters chanted "Just two more" the Huskers came out of their stupor, to score one play after the kickoff. Phil Young, freshman ball-toter, sprinted 62 yards to put the Huskers in a safer lead, 200-13. Kansas started a desperate last-quarter aerial attack, seeing a chance to tie the Huskers, but one of the passes ended in the alien arms of Art Bauer, who raced 56 yards to the Kansas 1-foot line, where he was forced out by Harmon. Phil Young scored again on a line plunge and the kick was good, making a final count of 27-13. The game ended a few plays later on a Nebraska interception. Jayhawk backers were pleased to see their team come out of the slump in which it has been since the Oklahoma lacing a few weeks ago. The main regret is that the coma ended too late. New Records Now Available: Fishin for the Moon Are These Really Mine? VAUGHN MONROE Waitin' for the Train to Come In JOHNNY Fishin' for the Moon LONG BENNY GOODMAN I've Got Rhythm The Man I Love Bell Music Company Bell $ \circ $ SOCIALLY SPEAKING Mary Margaret Gaynor, Society Editor Jolliffe Entertains Miss Donna May Bower, Stanley, was a luncheon guest at Jolliffe hall Friday. Visitors at the hall Thursday were Lt. James Betts, Oberlin; Mrs. E. C. Henry, Bonner Springs; and Mrs. Roy Wheat, Kansas City. Guests Dine with Theta's Dinner guests at the Kappa Alpha Theta house Wednesday were Mrs. C. B. Francisco, Kansas City; Duane Kline, Baxter Springs; and Jack Dill, Dodge City. Mrs. C. G. Leitch, Kansas City was a guest of the chapter Thursday, Martha Goodrich and Barbara Day were guests at dinner Thursday night. Tau Kappa Epsilon has announced the pledging of Elton Closser, Kansas City, Mo. Closser Pledges, T.K.F. Pi Phi Initiates Four Pi Beta Phi has announced the initiation of Joy Godbehere, Jo Ann McCrystal, Dorothy Dahlin, and Carolyn Brown. Dinner guests at the chapter house Thursday were Regina McGeorge, Mary Lou Redmond, Jane Williams, and Jerre Lyons. Nelson Visits Pi Bete's Dr. C. F. Nelson was a Thursday night dinner guest of Phi Beta Pi. Five Visit Tipperary Miss Elizabeth Meguiar, Miss Magie Miller, Lennie Moe, Marilyn Smith, and Mrs. Nina Smith, Kansas City, were dinner guests Thursday at Tipperary. The "Hurrying Harolds" of Kansas, Harold Moore and Harold Hinchee, raced across the finish line in first and third place positions. Dean Kratz, Nebraska middle distance star, claimed the second place position. The undefeated Jayhawkers lost to an undefeated Cornhusker cross-country team, 24-31, at Lincoln Saturday. Thinclads Lose To Nebraska, Too Other runners according to positions received were Don Yocum, Nebraska, Wayne Rhoads, Nebraska; Tom Whipple, Nebraska; Stanley Martin, Nebraska; William Johnson, Kansas; John Law, Kansas; Robert Laptad, Kansas. One out of every seven admirals in the United States navy is under 50 years of age, and the average for the 273 is 56.4 years. S. K.'s Give Hour Dance * * * The Sigma Kappa pledge class entertained the Tau Kappa Epsilon pledges at an hour dance Wednesday night. Miss Nellie Barnes was a dinner guest at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house Thursday night. Barnes Visits Kappa's * * * D.G.'s Are Hostesses Delta Gamma dinner guests Thursday night were Mattie Helen Woodard, Mary Branigan, Jean Bell, Joanne Stewart, and Prof. and Mrs. Waldemar Geltch. Gamma Phi's Give Dinner Joan Woodward, Alberta Cornwell, Prof. and Mrs. John Blocker, and Dorothy and Lorita Higgenbottom were dinner guests of Gamma Phi Beta Thursday. at the Jayhawk ALL WEEK! The romance of two gals and a guy that tops even "Two Girls and a Sailor"...and you know that was swell entertainment! A Liten for the love song - "Honey" Robert Hedy Robert LAMARR·WALKER JUNE ALLYSON IN METRO-GOLDWYN MAYER'S "Her Highness and the LISTEN, ANGEL PUSS, A BABE WITH A FACE AND CHASSIS LIKE YOURS HAS TO BE CAREFUL! THE WEDDING OF MARY AND JOHN Bellboy CARL ESMOND AGNES MOOREHEAD “RAGS” RAGLAND SPECIAL NEWS FLASH NAVY DAY IN NEW YORK Call KU 25 with your news. Mighty Sea and Air Power in Review on Hudson VARSITY TODAY — Ends Tuesday 2 Features GENE AUTRY SMILEY BURNETTE "Under Fiesta Stars" and JOHN O'MALLEY "Sporting Chance" Wednesday - Thursday HUMPHREY BOGART ALEXIS SMITH The Big Suspense Thrill of the Year "CONFLICT" GRANADA NOW con cha in 1 mil ene pow mo ENDS WEDNESDAY Absolutely the Best Comedy in town Directed by N. DWAN w pre ers lab wh to a ] tio Presented just for fun by EDWARD SMALL DENNIS O'KEEFE HELEN WALKER JUNE HAVOC EDDIE "Rochoster" ANDERSON GAIL PATRICK MISCHA AUER M I pop sul Pa yer tic W in "BREWSTER'S MILLIONS" NEW MARCH OF TIME "18 MILLION ORPHANS" Color Cartoon - News THURSDAY DAYS If You Have a Weak Heart Don't See . . . DOUBLE Shriek and Shudder HORROR SHOW THURSDAY 3 DAYS —The Shrick— BORIS KARLOFF Ka na co in ex att "The Body Snatcher" and Shudder "The Brighton STRANGLER" JOHN LODER COMING SUNDAY "KISS and TELL" University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Tuesday, November 6, 1945 43rd Year No. 31 Lawrence, Kansas 1. News of the World Molotov Disputes Western Policies London... (UP)—Soviet foreign commissar V. M. Molotov today charged that policies being advocated in the west on such matters as large military establishments and atomic energy are "directed against other powers" and have "nothing in common" with keeping the peace. Washington. (UP)—John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers, wen his first test in the national labor-management conference today when he succeeded in sending back to the conference's rules committee a proposal concerning the composition of an executive committee. New York. (UP)—Jerome Kern, popular musical comedy composer, suffered a cerebral hemorrhage on Park Avenue shortly after noon yesterday and was reported in critical condition at City hospital. Kaiser Asks Steel Be Decentralized Washington. (UP) - Henry J. Kaiser, west coast shipbuilding magnate, asked congress today to encourage decentralization of the steel industry as a precaution against extensive damage by atomic bomb attacks. Pearl Harbor. (UP)—Fleet Admiral Wester W. Nimitz stated today that he is opposed to a single department of national defense, because it would "endanger victory for the United States in case of war." United States in a war In Tokyo a supreme headquarters spokesman said today that Gen. Douglas MacArthur was also against the army-navy merger. The four companies controlled 40 per cent of Japan's economy. Tokyo. (UP)—The Japanese government decreed today the dissolution of Japan's four biggest family holding companies—in compliance with a directive from Gen Douglas MacArthur. Majority to Right In Hungarian Vote Budapest, (UP)—The conservative Small Holders' party appeared today to have won control, with at least 50 per cent of the seats, of the new Hungarian National assembly in Soviet-dominated eastern Europe's first free elections since its liberation. The left-wing Social-Democrats ran second with 25 to 30 per cent and the Communists third with 15 to 20 per cent. Nuernberg. (UP)—The man whom Hitler entrusted with the job of conditioning' the minds of German boys and girls to war and world mastery now believes that Germany's youth will forget Nazi teachings in time and become peace-minded. He is Count Baldur Von Shirach, former head of the Hitler youth movement and boss of Nazi Youth education. Washington. (UP)—The House went through the requisite legal mumbo-jumbo today to approve a $100 payment to Rastus L. Davis, a farmer of Winona, Tex., for the loss of 300 watermelons. It seems that his melon patch was only 500 yards from an army post, Camp Fannin, where 200 melon rinds were found just inside the fence. 'Soviet Army Aids China Reds' BY RICHARD W. JOHNSTON United Press Staff Correspondent Aboard Admiral Barbey's flagship, off the North China Coast. (UP)—The Red army has thwarted American plans to land Chinese Nationalist forces at the Manchurian port of Yingkow by abandoning it to Chinese Communists. Chinese Nationalists charged that the Soviet garrison, contrary to an agreement signed with the Central government pulled out of Yingkow five days ahead of schedule to permit Chinese Communist troops to fortify it against a Nationalist landing. On the basis of the agreement, Vice Admiral Daniel E. Barbay had arranged for American ships to land Nationalist units with the understanding that the movement would be unopposed. be unopposed. Barber already has refused to land Chinese troops from his ships at Communist-held Chefoo and Huiatao because of the possibility that American lives would be in danger. The Russians have forbidden a Chinese landing at Dairen, and it was not known whether any other suitable ports remain. Chinense Communists first entered Manchuria to help the Red army liberate the territory from Japan. Meanwhile in Chungking, Communists demands that the United States "cease participation in the Chinese civil war" and the government countered with a charge that the Communists were striving to create a breach between Russia and America. Allies Reveal Italian Armistice Terms Washington. (UP)—The Allies today made public the long-suppressed Italian armistice terms under which Marshal Pietro Badgilio surrendered unconditionally in the fall of 1943 and turned over Italy lock, stock and barrel to the Allies. Military — To surrender, disarm and place completely in the hands of the Allied authorities all land, sea and air forces. In practice Italian forces were used "to the maximum useful extent" in the service of the United Nations. The original armistice terms called union Italy to comply as follows: Merchant Marine—To be placed completely at Allied disposal. This was done but in practice these ships were "primarily employed in the Italian interest." Communications—All meth o ds placed completely under Allied control. Military Government—Authority for the Allies to occupy and govern any areas necessary. any areas need Resources and Services -All made available to the Allies but in practice local goods and services were used WEATHER (continued to page four) Kansas—Increasing cloudiness and continued mild tonight. Low tonight 35 to 40 northwest, to 60 southeast. Cloudy tomorrow, scattered showers and cooler north and west. Caroline Morris Fine Arts Councilman Majors In Her Hobby A. W. K. Caroline Morris is the dark-haired, dark-eyed representative to the All Student Council from the School of Fine Arts. CAROLINE MORRIS Caroline finds her time well filled with Council business, as she is a member of the traditions committee, the auditing committee, and the Union Operating board. This 19-year-old junior from Topeka is majoring in public school music. She hasn't made definite plans for the future although she would like to teach. Caroline came to the University as a freshman in 1943. Although music is her major, she says it is, her hobby also. Besides belonging to the Council, she is a member of Sigma Kappa sorority, Jay Janes, Mu Phi Epsilon, WYCA, and The Women's glee club. Student Directory Available Thursday The new student directory will be available to all students Thursday morning at the registrar's office, Marjorie Pollock, editor, announced today. Students may obtain the directory, which has a light green cover and contains 16 more pages than the 1944-45 edition, by showing their activity cards or fee cards. Additional copies will cost 25 cents. In addition to the editor, the directory staff has included Ann Alexander, assistant editor; Anne Young, business manager; and Nancy Goering, advertising manager. Work on Chapel A Alvin Carlson, Topeka stone mason, perches on the steeple of Danforth chapel to give finishing touches to a stone cross. We're Sorry Through a typographical error, the complete list of candidates for All-Student Council representatives in today's freshman elections was not printed in Monday's Daily Kansan. The candidates are Alice Jane Peterson and Wilbur Noble, representing the Independent-P.S. G.L. parties, and Mary Jean Moore and Frank Davis, representing the Greek Women's party and Pachacamac. The Daily Kansan regrets this typographical omission. New Course Trains Managers Classes in Industrial Management, a new 4-year course offered to engineering and business students, are now being offered for the first time. Dean Frank T. Stockton, of the School of Business, announced today. The course is designed to give engineering students a combination program with a knowledge of business and management, and business students a familiarity with factory operations. Study Economics, Business Students receiving degrees in Industrial Management will have had 50 or more hours in economies and business subjects, and a minimum of 29 hours in engineering subjects in addition to chemistry, physics, and 24 hours of electives. physics, then Students transfer to the School of Business in their junior year, Dean Stockton explained. In addition to basic business school subjects they enroll in three courses of applied mechanics, four in the mechanical engineering department, one shop practice course and a course in metallurgy. Industrialists Seek Graduates "Industrialists who were shown the program in outline form are asking for graduates from the industrial management curriculum," Dean Stockton asserted. Other changes in the School of Business have been made to meet the demands of returning veterans. Curricula have been improved in the marketing, finance and personnel courses, and modifications have been made in the accounting programs. Judging Begins On House Skits Tomorrow Skits and stunts submitted by organized houses for Homecoming will be judged tomorrow and Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the Green hall little theater, Eugenia Hepworth, chairman of the Homecoming committee, said today. Independent houses will present their skits tomorrow, with sororities and fraternities performing Thursday. The judging committee, which includes Dean Henry Werner, Fred Ellisworth, Elaine Wells, Joan Harris, Howard Joseph, Michael Kukenski, Alberta Cornwell, and Patricia Penney, will choose skits to be presented at the South park rally after the Nightshirt parade, Nov. 16. Speakers at the rally will be Carl "Sandy" Windsor, "22, University cheerleader in 1922; Ernest Quigley, and Henry Shenk. Edgar Williams, secretary of K-club, will be master of ceremonies. Ex-Cheerleader To Speak Presented during intermission at the Homecoming varsity, Nov. 17, will be the Homecoming queens, the winning skit, and the awards to the winners of the house decorations contest. 15 Members on Committee Homecoming committee members include; Gucivale Daum, K-Club; Betty Jo O'Neal, Jay Janes; Michael Kuklenski, Ku Kui's, E. C. Quigley, athletic director; Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary; Henry Werner, dean of student affairs; Russell L. Wiley, band director; George Hedrick, Lawrence Chamber of Commerce; Alberta Cornwell, head cheerleader; Fred Montgomery, visual education bureau; F. C. Allen, physical education director; Jean McIntire, Sewall Macferran, Los Thompson, and Caroline Morris, All-Student Council members. Tri-Delta Joins Council Louise McIntire and Patricia Kienker, Delta Delta Delta representatives, met with the Pan-Hellenic council for the first time today, at the regular monthly meeting of the group, Jane Miller, president, said. Attention Please, Dean Lawson: This Story Is for You (and $5) Dean Paul B. Lawson visited the Daily Kansan the other day. He was checking into the number of times the Kansan intends to let the incorrect use of the word "species" into print this year. The dean, being a learned scientist as well as an expert administrator, knew all this, of course, and would mutter "How long, oh, Lord, how Just as a bit of background, it might be mentioned that during the past year, gremlins and type lice have combined nefariously to misspell and misuse "species" in the Kansas. It all came about because some writer decided that with the "s" on the end, "species" was a plural word, and to make it singular, all a guy had to do was drop the final "s." What the writer didn't know was that "species" is a singular word, despite its ending. long" every time "species" was mis-speclled in our paper. spelled in our paper. "I'll tell you what I'll do," he told Kansan editors during the visit the other day. "I'd like to see the Kansan spell 'species' right, and I'd like to see it use 'species' correctly." "I in fact, I'd like that so much. I will give the Kansan $5 if it can use 'species' right and spell 'species' correctly just 12 times this school year." The $5, the dean pointed out, could go for popcorn and cokes, "or other things." It's a deal, dean. The Kansan will use "species" right, and will spell "species" correctly, a dozen times this school year. In fact, if you'll count the number of times "species" is used and spelled right in this article, we think you'll find it just an even dozen. Or—should we say—just $5 worth? PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE KANSAS NOVEMBER 6, 1945 --- DAILY KANSAN Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Association, National Editorial Association, and the presently represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York City. Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence add 1% semester postage) until enrolled during the semester, except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under of March 2, 1879. NEWS STAFF 2 MAN MARY MORRILL FRANKLIN FLEARING Editor-in-Chief Editorial Associates MARY TURKINGTON Managing Editor ELEANOR ALBERTRY Asst. Managing Editor LOREN KING Telegraph Editor MARIE MARTIN Orderer MARY MARGARET GAYNOLN Society Editor PAT PENNEY Sports Editor BILLI HAMILTON Feature Editor JANE ANDERSON Military Editor LEO NORIE Researcher BLAKE BINGS Asst. Sports Editor MARGARET WENSKI Asst. Sports Editor JOAN VEATCH Campus Editor EDITORIAL STAFF BUSINESS STAFF NANCY TOMLINSON ... Business Manager BETTY BEACH ... Advertising Manager Dear Editor: University Daily Kansan Depar Editors Letters to the Editor Truly an amazing sight met my eyes as I walked from Lindley hall to Fraser last Friday. Parked cars lined both sides of University drive, and two out of three had red parking tickets. I saw the gentleman who was checking the cars and approached him. He told me that he had already given 75 tickets and there would be more than 100 when he finished. It seems disgraceful that so many students utterly disregard parking rules. Although the offense may seem trivial, it is breaking the law, I do not blame the offenders. The way parking rules are set up now many students trump up excuses, give wrong addresses, fake physical disabilities—anything to get a permit. The permit keeps them from being bothered with tickets. The parking commission should enforce its tickets. The police downtown aren't just kidding when they give tickets. Why shouldn't violations be punished on the campus? The over-all effect of 100 cars parked on the campus with red ticket stuck on them is bad. Something is wrong with a parking system that necessitates such a condition! If closer investigation were made before granting the parking privilege and a ticket really meant that students must pay a fine, perhaps the problem could be corrected. Sincerely V. L. S. Repeat Performance Rep. Marion T. Bennett, Missouri, reported that Congress spent 210% hours last session answering roll calls. This led to a discussion of the uncomfortable congressional seats and then to a discourse on chairs in general. For this we have a Congress. The Pony Express had nearly 200 stations between St. Joseph, Mo., and Sacramento, placed about 20 miles apart. The labor-management conference which began this morning in Washington is similar to one convened by President Wilson on Oct. 6, 1919. Then as now, peace in industrial relations was the goal; the issue was higher wages. The steel strike in 1919 compares with the strikes and strike threats of today. Collective bargaining was recommended then; it is recommended now. Will we find the answer this time? Rock Chalk Talk Round Town—The big noise in the Jayhawker balcony Sunday was none other than baritone Dave Schmidt, an important end of the football squad, reacting to the part where the "Bellboy" was giving "Her Highness" Hedy the American brushoff. —Regular Theta Sunday morning funny-paper services were held in the Hawk this week ala jeans and malts. —Sammy Harris, Phi Delt, has returned to Hill classes and dances and Kappas this semester. —Genia Hepworth and Bob Buechel, Committees, Inc., take turns dictating their business letters to each other, though Genia gets the worst end of the deal since she can type. *** By JOAN HARRIS Ah, sweet revenge!—It all began when Jean Kauffman, Alpha Delta Pi, presented a Phi Bete frosh with a Father's day remembrance last spring. For months, "father Phi" meditated on a plan fiendish enough to settle the score, but it was not until last Friday that he Terry Norton called Jeannie to the door, saying that there was a great big surprise for her on the doorstep, and with visions of convertibles, captains, and fur coats in her mind, Jeannie sped to the door. There ensued a healthy scream—but who wouldn't, what with a mule trying to lick the poor girl in the face. Enclosing a picture of three Greek girls as a remembrance, the society explained it as a "small token of our gratitude of what you have done for Greece during the war." The society wants letters explaining student life in the United States, methods of study, hobbies, and other subjects of interest. Would you like to receive a letter from Athens, Greece? University students in Athens would like to hear from you. Letters sent to Greek sudents should be addressed to Miss M. Ragoussi. Athens University, Psychological Laboratory. 57.-Solonos Street.-57. Athens, Greece. Wanta' New Pen-Pal? Here's the Greek Way Ashburn Writes Lyrics for Musical The Society of Friends of American Studies in Greece wants to sponsor this exchange of letters. The society's aim is to "increase the interest of those who have studied in the United States and others for the purpose of spreading here American ideals and ethical values." Pvt. Ronnie Ashburn, who attended K.U. in 1935-39, is writing lyrics for musical production in an army theatrical training school. He also has a part in the play, "Heart's Desire," to be given soon. Columbus, Ohio. (UP)—Cpl. Le land H. Kinsell of Columbia isn't missing any bets. 'Get Me a Blonde,' G.J. Writes Finsell made his wishes known in a letter to a Columbus newspaper. He wrote that he had been overseas 23 months and that in all that time he didn't have even one date with "a genuine American girl." When he steps off the platform at the train depot here "the home-sick soldier" wants to be met and kissed by "a real live American girl." She must be a blonde with blue eyes, five feet four and weigh 110 pounds. And just to make sure that his homecoming would be different, the corporal said that he would send the newspaper a wire from his port of disembarkation, stating the exact date and time of his arrival in Columbus. An open poem to sorority actives— "Oh give us rules, lots of rules go to campus rides, lots of Rides under campus skies above, But don't fence us in, We'll wear hats and hose and the we'll wear nats and hose and the heels that we abhor, But don't we us in. "We will sit in the dorm in the evenin' hours Dreamin' of the freedom that used to be ours, Lock us up forever, but we ask you Powers, Don't fence us in We want to ride in cars when the spring commences. Guzzle beer and liquor 'til we lose our senses. Cause we can't stand Gastapos and we can't stand fences, Don't fence us in, Oh! no! Actives don't you fence us in." Oh, he swings through the air—Terry Norton was having troubles herself last week. She found herself locked out of her room on a navy liberty night, and with only two hours to get ready! On the suggestion of her roommate, Jeanne Preston, Terry called out the fire department, which drove over, siren et al, to help the fair damsels. Only by swinging on a rope from third floor, climbing through Terry's window and breaking down the door, did our hero solve the situation and save the day for the navy. Indianapolis (UP) — Department store customers are having their inning again now that the war is over. One told off an Indianapolis department store delivery man who cut aeros her lawn recently: "I've been patient for three years now, but the war's over. Young man, you just walk around by the walk," she shouted. The delivery man was 45, but he obeyed. The Customer's Right Again Airlines are required to furnish their planes with enough oil and fuel to fly 45 minutes in addition to the time necessary for the flight to the next scheduled stop. OFFICIAL BULLETIN Notices must be typewritten and must be in Public Relations office, emergency room, not later than 2:30 am on day of service. No phone messages accepted. University of Kansas Nov. 6, 1945 Pre-nursing club will meet at 7:30 Thursday night in Watkins Memorial hospital nurses home. - * * Bridge club will meet at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday in the English room of the Union. Anyone interested in playing bridge is invited.-Mary Longenecker, chairman. ** ** Tau Sigma pledging services will be held tonight in Robinson gymnasium. Actives will meet at 7:30 and pledges at 7:45. Pledges are asked to bring their dues in full or partial payment—Jo Ann Power, president. Snow Zoology club will meet at 7:30 Thursday night in Snow hall, Room 206. Dr. Hobart Smith will speak on "Adaptations of the Poisonous Snakes."—Muriel Stember, president. Le Cercle Francais se reuinaire mercedre a trois heures et demie dans 113 Frank Strong. Tous ceux qui s'intéressent on francais sont invites. -Mary Schnitzler, secretaire. ✿ ✿ ✿ --- Juniors in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences: The Proficiency Examination in English Composition will be given Saturday at 8:30 a.m. If you plan to take it, you must register in the College Office, room 229, Frank Strong hall, today or tomorrow. You will not be qualified to take the examination without registration. —Natalie Calderwood, chairman, Proficiency Committee. *** All-Student Council will meet at 7:15 tonight in the Pine room of the Union building—Mary Jo Cox, president. \* \* \* Psychological----9 a.m. Students who missed any previous entrance examinations may make them up Saturday in Hoch auditorium. Aptitude—2 p.m. A. H. Turney. Nails of Beauty Zeanne NAIL ENAMEL ELDRIDGE PHARMACY 701 MASS. PHONE 999 PREPARE FOR WINTER DRIVING MORGAN-MACK MOTOR CO. 609 MASS. PHONE 277 Students Register For English Exam This Week College juniors and seniors register today through Wednesday at the College office for the English proficiency examination to be given Saturday. Students not registering on these days may not take the exam Saturday, the only time it will be offered this semester. The examination presents a list of subjects from which the student chooses topics to write as directed. WANT ADS LOST — A brown zipper billfold Finder may keep money and bill- fold, but please return picture and miscellaneous cards, to Vera Hodges, phone 2303. LOST—Pair of red-rimmed pixie glass near bus stop by Pi Beta Phi house or on K.U. bus route Tuesday. One rim is broken. Finder please call Jane Anderson at 1324R. Reward. FOR RENT—Rooms for boys at 413 W. 14th St. Also one front double room with twin beds at 1140 La. WANTED—1941 or 40, 6-passenger club coupe, good condition. Please contact Jerry Yogoda, 2470W or Kansan office. LOST—Sterling silver identification bracelet somewhere on the campus Friday. Name engraved on front John G. Keyzens. Reward. Please call Betty Anne Pratt 860. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Garage and Cab Co. Phone 922 Mass. Fine Diamonds Latest Styles Roberts Jewelry and Gifts Gift Gloves by ALBERT RICHARD They fit better . . look better . . wear better because they're ActionFit!* *Am exclusive Albert Richard taines, feature which includes perfect fit and finger-freedom. Wide selection of comfort, breathful, soft, long- wearing leathers. $2.50 to $5.00 ALBERT RICHARD Action-Fit* Sportswear featured at OBER'S 1945 NOVEMBER 6;1945 PAGE THREE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS a a SOCIALLY SPEAKING Mary Margaret Gaynor, Society Edita Oakes Is Guest Mrs. Eva Oakes was guest of honor at a buffet dinner Sunday night at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house. Other guests were: Jane Hayes, Jean Brown, Norma Whitaker, Geralee Kreider Patricia Williams, Jane Gillespie, Mary Varner, Barbara Varner, Mary Breed, Betty Ball, Jo Ellen Hall, Barbara Ford, Rose Nell Curtis, Joyce Mahin, Iris Lee Schull, Madeline McClure, Jean Cunningham, Ann Alexander, Patricia Strang, Beryle Hinds, Burnett Replogle, Harriet Harlow, Donna Mueller, Ruth Ann Bettlock, and Barbara Howard. Sigma Alpha Epsilon has announced the pledging of Donald Ferguson, McPherson; J. B. Blunk, Santa Monica, Calif; Thomas Nicklin, Chanute; Kelles Wheat, Kansas City; William Mayer, Kansas City, Mo.; Lon Huer, St. Louis, Mo.; and Donald Stockdale, Kansas City A "yell-in" will be held for these new pledges Wednesday. Yost Visits Jolliffe Miss Frances Yost, Topeka, was a weekend guest at Jolliffe hall. Mrs. Joseph Canning and John Canning, Plevna, were dinner guests at the hall Sunday. A. D. Pi's Entertain Sunday dinner guests at the Alpha Delta Pi house were Jack Coleman, Russ Blaser, William Fowler, Ens. Lee Myers, Iola; Lt. Robert Carsey, Merrville, La., and Robert Stubbs, Kansas City, Mo. Guests Visit A. O. Pi Mrs. George Willenberg, Ralph Praeger, Winifred Slagton, Claflin; Geraldine Gentry, Stockton; Gweneth Praeger, Kansas City, Mo., were weekend guests at the Alpha Omicron Pi house. Mr. and Mrs. L, List Kansas City, Mo., and Lt. Mark Hahn, Hutchinson, were dinner guests Sunday. Gamma Phi Is Hostess Six Visit Watkins Gamma Phi Beta entertained William Sharp, Tommie Thompson, James Dilmore, Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Hendrickson, and Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Dengel at dinner Sunday. Weekend guests at Watkins hall were Miss Elizabeth Jean Nelson, Miss Barbara Cracker, Kansas City; Miss Betty Edmonds, Blue Mound; Miss Mary Rush Young, Wichita; Miss Evelyn Shonburg, Osage City; and Miss Carolyn Anderson, Manhattan. Kenneth Knuth, Nashville; Thomas Tucker, Osage City; and Mrs. Ruth Mott, Burlington, were dinner guests at the hall Sunday. Visitors to Pi Phi House Weekend guests of Pi Beta Phi were Miss Martha Lou Cable, Miss Shirley McGinnis, Kansas City; Miss SLEEP IS EASY WHEN YOU DRINK MILK BEFORE RE-TIRING. Milk & Ice Cream Co. Lawrence Sanitary Colorful Mums Brighten Frank Strong Lobby Floral displays in the lobby of Frank Strong hall, a pre-war feature of the buildings and grounds department, has returned. Yesterday James Reiter, K.U.'s gardner, placed a colorful display of hardy pompom chrysanthemums in bright yellowls and reds in the center of the lobby. The mums were grown on a plot 150 by 50 ft. below the hill on the south side of the campus, where plantings were made late last spring. The large yellow football game variety of mum is grown in the greenhouse, as well as other pompom types, and used to decorate University offices during the year. Betty Jeanne Grant, Wichita, Miss Carolyn Morrison, Coffeville. Mr. and Mrs. S. A. White, Mr. and Mrs. D. S. Lawler, Kansas City; Frank Howard; Pvt. William Bingham, and Pvt. Thomas Wilson, Camp Crowder, Mo., were dinner guests Sunday. Pledges will entertain the Kappa Alpha Theta pledge class at a tea today, and will give an hour dance tonight for Phi Delta Theta pledges. Theta's Give Dinner Sunday dinner guests at the Kappa Alpha Theta house were Miss Mara Peterson, Thorton Cooke, Gene Alfred, Russel Baulders, Garland Weed, William Jenson, Don Org, Charles Robertson, Ralph Fleagle, and Wenton Winter. Lt. E. D. Land was a guest at dinner Saturday night. Six Dine With D.G.'s Mr. and Mrs. D. S. Shaw, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Nixon, Medicine Lodge; and Mr. and Mrs. Jack Baker, Blue Springs, Mo., were dinner guests Sunday at the Delta Gamma house. Anderson Is Welcomed Faculty members of the history department honored a new staff member, Prof. G. L. Anderson and his wife at an informal dinner Saturday night at the Hearth. Other guests were Prof. and Mrs. C. C. Crawford, Prof. and Mrs. D. L. Patterson, Prof. and Mrs. J. C. Malin, Prof. and Mrs. F. E. Melvin, Prof. and Mrs. W. W. Davis, Capt. and Mrs. Newton Krunddieck, and Capt. Charles Realey. Low heels and sweaters have improved the posture of the American college woman. OH, MY ACHING BACK How to Stay Out of the Hospital The sensible shoes worn today are more conducive to good posture than were the spike heels of not long ago. And, to do the most for a sweater, many women have made a conscious effort to stand erect. Maintenance of good posture is a continual struggle until it becomes a habit. The dividends are less fatigue, improved body function, and a carriage, to speak collegiately, that is of the hubba hubba classification. "The reclining-sit" position assumed in classes, the "gorilla slouch" taken by many athletes., and the "sailor slump," necessitated, some say, to hold up the navy-style trousers, are incorrect "stands" common on the K.U. campus. The idea that good posture cures all digestive ailments by changing the position of the digestive organs is a hoax. A normal digestive apparatus functions whether you stand erect or on all fours. Good posture does not materially change the position of the stomach or bowels. pout. Poor posture is not entirely incompatible with normal physiological functions. Consider the cow. But whoever heard a sailor whistle at a cow? A conscious effort to stand and sit erect and some physical exercise does, however, help maintain proper pull on the extensor muscles—the ones that straighten the legs and back and hold in the belt-line. Poor posture causes below standard muscle tone and unnecessary strain on normal muscles, resulting in greater fatigue. --Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson. Goerke Pledges A.O.Pi Alpha Omicron Pi has announced the pledging of Frances Goerke, Kansas City. The A. O. Pi pledges entertained members of the pledge classes of Delta Gamma, Alpha Delta Pi, and Gamma Phi at an informal tea Wednesday. Although it is the oldest continent geologically, Australia was the last to be occupied by white men. STUDENTS!! PHONOGRAPH PLAYERS New 5-tube superhetrodyne radios are also in. These are splendid radios with Beam power output and equals 7-tube operation in other sets. We have new tubes for your radio. We can give you speedy service on all your radio repair work Thanks for your business. Phone 138. Quantity Limited So Get Yours NOW! ARE IN STOCK NOW! Complete Stock of Fresh Portable Radio Batteries. ED BOWMAN BOWMAN RADIO SHOP, 944 Mass. St., and F. M. TELECTRAD SHOP, 900 Mass. St. Murphy Replaces Hudson As Watkins Pharmacist Jim G. Murphy began duties Thursday as full-time pharmacist at the Watkins Memorial hospital, replacing Cecil Hudson who is in business in Oskaloosa. Murphy, graduate of the School of Pharmacy in 1941, enlisted in the navy in June, 1942, and served in the South and Southwest Pacific. He was discharged October 5 as a chief pharmacist's mate. His wife, the former Burrie Dalton, K.U. graduate in 1940, and son are with him in Lawrence. Police Restrain Golfer Indianapolis. (UP)—David Bogue of Speedway City probably will give up golf balls—even pre-war ones—the next time he loses them in the water hole. The last time he lost two, he dived for them wearing shorts and water goggles. A crowd gathered before police arrived and ordered him out of the water. He refused to leave without the precious pellets. But after facing charges of vagrancy, disorderly conduct and trespassing in court, Bogue learned his lesson. Special Showing CHRISTMAS NECKTIES —New Colors —New Patterns —New Weaves $1.50 —it will pay you to start your Christmas Gift buying Now—this is a good Suggestion Glad to show you CARLS GOOD CLOTHES Q at the Jayhawker at the ayhawker NOW ALL WEEK BREAKING ANOTHER ATTENDANCE RECORD IT'S ALL IN FUN! L HEDY ROBERT LAMARR·WALKER JUNE ALLYSON IN M-G-M'S "Her Highness and the Bellboy" Call KU 25 with your news. IN THE NEWS The Navy in Review Navy Tops Penn 14 to 7 SUNDAY THE MIGHTIEST OF ALL SEA PICTURES! in Glorious TECHNICOLOR SKO RADIO V THE SPANISH MAIN JIMAL HENREID PAULUEN O'NARA WALTER SLEZAK WITH BINNE SARINGS • JOHN EMERY FRANK BOPZAAGE PRODUCTION VARSITY ENDS TODAY 2 Features GENE AUTRY SMILEY BURNETTE "Under Fiesta Stars" and JOHN O'MALLEY "Sporting Chance" Wednesday - Thursday "CONFLICT" HUMPHREY BOGART ALEXIS SMITH The Big Suspense Thrill of the Year NOW GRANADA Absolutely the Best Comedy in town Directed by N DWAN ENDS WEDNESDAY Presented just for fun by EDWARD SMALL EDWARD SMALL DENNIS O'KEEFE HELEN WALKER JUNE HAVOC EDDIE "Rochester" ANDERSON GAIL PATRICK MISCHA AUER NEW MARCH OF TIME "18 MILLION ORPHANS" Color Cartoon - News BREWSTER'S MILLIONS THURSDAY 3 DAYS If You Have a Weak Heart Don't See ... DOUBLE Shriek and Shudder HORROR SHOW —The Shriek— BORIS KARLOFF "The Body Snatcher" —and Shudder— "The Brighton STRANGLER" JOHN LODER COMING SUNDAY "KISS and TELL" PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 6,1945 IN THE HUDDLE with with PAT PENNEY Robbie is runner-up with 37 points to Jack Venable of Oklahoma, who has scored 42 points. LeRoy Robison, K.U.'s injured fullback, still holds second place in Big Six scoring, even though he hasn't played ball for two weeks. Kansas has dropped to fifth spot in the Big Six ranks. It's a fight between the Jayhawkers and the Kansas State Wildcats for the cellar position, neither team having won a Big Six tilt. Kansas ranks over K-State by virtue of its tie with Iowa State and its two conference losses to three for K-State. MASSACRE MARQUETTE Dick Howard and Gene Phelps of Iowa State are tied with 30 points; Howard Hawkins of Oklahoma is in fourth place with 24 points; and Leonard Brown of Missouri fifth with 19 points. MASSACRE MARQUETTE Dave Schmidt, speedy Jayhawk end, is tied for sixth spot with two Iowa State, and one Missouri player, with 18 points. Meet your team. "California, here I come!" is the cry of Herb Foster, Jayhawk quarterback, whenever vacation rolls around. But he's actually a confirmed Jay-hawker after living in Kansas for five years. Herb went to Toneka TOLUENE High school, where he was out for football and track. Once he almost went out of this world when he walked off the top of a freight car into space. He wasn't hurt—just slightly cold for a while. After entering the V-12 program he was stationed at Pittsburg State Teachers college for one year, and has been at K.U. since July. Foster "Gunner," as he has been called since those memorable high school days, loves waffles smothered in maple syrup. This six-footer is now in navy rotisie and will complete his studies in architectural engineering at K.U. Meet your team. He is pledged to Kappa Sigma fraternity. MASSACRE MARQUETTE Even though Donald Jarrett tips the scales at 205 pounds, he has been known as "Bones" since early high school days. A Columbus high school, the Jayhawker tackle lettered two years in football and two in track. He entered the V-12 program at K.U. in July of 1944, to major in civil engineering. S. HOLMES "Bones" spends Jarrett his summer vacations in Columbus kepeing in training by helping folks on the farm. Although he is too modest to admit that he is an expert at canning, he agrees that he can sample sirloin steaks and chocolate cake like an expert. Jarrett is in N.R.O.T.C. Volunteers Plan Projects Volunteers for work at the Old Folks Convalescent home will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Handcraft room in Frank Strong hall to work on possible projects to be used with Minnie Macs Communion in structor of occupational therapy, announced today. Now the Gridders Can See the Light The K.U. football squad won't be in the dark any more. six highpowered lights have been erected on the practice field, so that football practice sessions will not have to be cut short because of dark. The lights were borrowed from the city of Lawrence, and the wiring and poles purchased from the Sunflower Ordnance works, E. C. Quigley, athletic director, said today. L. E. Anderson, University organist, will开 a series of oxygen vespers at 4 p.m. Sunday in Hoch auditorium. The recital will be open to the public. Organ Vespers in Hoch Sunday "Gray Wolf, Mustafa Kemal:" an intimate study of a dictator, by H. C. Armstrong. "Big Democracy," by P. H Appleby, NEW at the LIBRARY "The Development of Public Services in Western Europe, 1660-1930," by Sir E. Barker. "History of Psychology, from the Standpoint of a Thomist," by R. E. Brennan "The Forces that Shape Our Future," by C. Eagleton. "Greece and Britain," by S. Casson. "Social Therapy, and Introductory Study," by M. B. Hale. "Freudianism and the Literary Mind," by F. J. Hoffman. by the occupation forces "only when military necessity demanded." (continued from page one) Allies Reveal Armistice Terms Finances—The armistice called for Italy to bear Allied occupation costs, but in practice this proved impossible because of Italy's prostrate economic position. Foreign Trade-Prohibited by armistice terms but now allowed with the non-enemy world and subject to trade control measures against enemy interests. War Criminals-The Italian government was ordered to catch and surrender Mussolini and other chief Fascists to United Nations. Legislation—The armistice ordered the Italian government to legislate measures needed to execute surrender document. Control Machinery—The armistice set up the Allied Control commission which was changed to Allied commission and is now limited "consultation with and advice to the ministers of the Italian government." Penalties—The armistice allowed the United Nations to penalize violation of the armistice by such measures as extension of areas of military occupation or air or other punitive action. Loyalty to Allied Cause—The armistice ordered Italian government and people to abstain from action detrimental to Allies and to carry out promptly and efficiently all orders given by the United Nations. SINGLE MAIN STREET NOTICE Check and Double-check NOTICE This is not merely a friendly gesture. Each man makes a careful visual inspection of the other's train while it passes. Then he signals that all is well or that he has spotted some defect. This is just one phase of a continuous "check and double check" system. All Union Pacific Have you ever noticed that whenever two trains pass, freight or passenger, a trainman will signal, with hand or lantern, to the trainman at the rear of the other train? trains are thoroughly inspected before leaving terminal points . . all station agents check each train as it passes. Even track crews, along the right of way, are alert to spot any sign of trouble. Thus, Union Pacific trains are checked time and time again as they transport passengers and freight over the Strategic Middle Route, uniting the East with the mid-West and the Pacific coast. THE PROGRESSIVE UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD THE STRATEGIC MIDDLE ROUTE UNITING THE EAST WITH THE PACIFIC COAST WASH MOUNTAIN IDAHO GREGON WYOMING HESRASKA Nevada UTAH COLORADO KANSAS UNION PACIFIC The ar- m- ernment a action o carry all or- tions. University DAILY KANSAN * Wednesday, Nov. 7, 1945 43rd Year No. 32 Lawrence Kansas STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS News... of the World U.S. Military Meets, Marines May Leave BULLETIN Chungking, Nov. 7. (UP)—Lt. Gen. A. C. Wedemeyer told correspondents in Peiping today that American forces may begin evacuation of North China by mid-November. Chungking. (UP)—As Chinese Communists claimed their first major victory in the Chinese civil war today, a hurried meeting of top American military commanders in Peiping heightened speculation that the United States may be about to withdraw its 50,000 marines from North China to avoid involvement. The Communist armies are reported to have won a victory over 100,000 central government troops along the Hopei-Shanshi-Honan provincial border area of North China, west of Communist-dominated Stantung Peninsula. O'Dwyer Wins in N.Y. CIO Loses in Detroit New York. (UP)—The New York Democratic party was returned to power today after 12 years as the nation's largest city elected William O'Dwyer mayor with a majority of a quarter-million votes over his two major opponents. At the same time, in the nation's second most significant mayoral race, in Detroit, CIO leader Richard T. Frankenstein was defeated by the incumbent, nominally Republican, Mayor Edward J. Jefferies. Cairo. (UP)—British headquarters announced today that 74 Jews were killed and about 300 casualties caused at Tripoli in violent anti-Jewish rioting blamed on irresponsible Arab mobs. Muncie, Ind. (UP)—The defendant in city court readily admitted being intoxicated the night before. But, he had a novel defense for the other charge—breaking a beer bottle over a cousin's tavern patron's head. "He's my first cousin," he told the judge. Stalin Absent From Red Ceremony Moscow. (UP)—Surprise and disappointment swept Moscow today as Generalissimo Stalin failed to appear at the formal ceremonies marking the 28th anniversary of the Red revolution. In Stalin's absence, his review of the year's achievements was read by Foreign Commissar Molotov and the Generalissimo's traditional Order of the Day to the Red army was signed by Marshall Alexander Vasilevsky, acting for Stalin. There was no official explanation for Stalin's non-appearance. Detroit. (UP)—Strike balloting by Ford United Auto workers started 6 a.m. in 37 cities throughout the nation, the regional national labor relations board announced today. London. (UP)—Winston Churchill expressed hope in the House of Commons today that Britain would not bring pressure on the United States to reveal all the Atom bomb secrets to Russia. 'Little Black Book Holds a New List Houston, Tex. (UP)—Girls collect a lot of things but police said they held one today with a new record. The 19-year-old girl was found in a park with a bus driver. A sweet, young thing, the police decided she's been led astray and took her to the station for a fatherly talk. fatherly talk. There she showed them her little book with the heading: "Bus Drivers I Have Known." Then followed 51 names with corresponding phone numbers and routes. RAF Jet Plane Sets Record Herne Bay, Eng. (UP)—A Royal Air Force jet propelled plane, piloted by Eric Greenwood, chief test pilot for the Gloster Aviation company, set a new world's speed record of 606 miles an hour today, shortly after another pilot had raised the mark to 602 miles an hour. Greenwood made the 606-mile average in his "Yellow Meteor" in four official runs over the Horne Bay course, hitting a high of 612 miles an hour on one. He broke the record within an hour after his friend group Captain Hugh Wilson had streaked another jet-propelled ship "Britannia" over the same course for a record of 602 miles an hour. miles an hour. Both pilots flew the course in conformity with rules of the Federation Aeronautique governing official speed tests for aircraft. The twin test flights broke the accepted record of German pilot Fritz Wendel, who flew a Messerschmitt at 481.4 miles an hour in 1939. Each pilot took his plane up about 400 feet, circled and sent it shooting past the towers and into the course at the required height of 100 feet. The runs appeared effortless with the comparative noiselessness of the jet power belaying the fact they were traveling 10 miles a minute. Behind the planes long pencils of vapor trailed from the twin-engined meteors. ___ Pre-Meds Must Sign Tomorrow for Test Pre-medical students must register and pay a 2-dollar fee at the guidance office before 5 p. m. tomorrow, if they plan to take the medical aptitude tests Dec. 14, Dr. A. H. Turney, head of the guidance bureau, said today. guidance to. The test is one of the requirements for admission to any medical school." Dr. Turney said. Charles Marshall, state architect will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow with the Union operating committee to discuss plans for enlarging the Union building. The place where tests are to be taken will be announced later. WEATHER To Discuss Enlarging Union Kansas—Mostly cloudy tonight and cooler southeast and extreme east tonight. Little change in temperature tomorrow. Scattered showers north and west tomorrow. Low tonight below 40 southeast and 35 to 40 elsewhere. Students Help Govern K.U. Malott Explains The administration and governing force of the University comes from the students as well as from the faculty and other sources of authority, Chancellor Deane W. Malott told the All Student Council last night. "Your part as a governing body is not that you may enjoy the University now and what it may give you now." Chancellor Malott said, "but that you may help build a university that will give future students a maximum of opportunities." The Council heard comments on the student book store, which it has proposed and which is now being investigated, and on the recreational problems of the University. "A survey of recreational needs and wants of the students will be made by a committee from the All Student Council with the help of E. R. Elbel, associate professor of physical education," Chancellor Mallott said. The council approved an appropriation of $100 for the WSSF fund upon recommendation of Wendell Nickell, chairman of the finance committee. Four new members of the All Student Council, William Sewell MacFerran, Lloyd Edgar Eisenhower, Charles Frederick Hall, and Shirley T. Corlett, were born in last night. 1. Cornett. Marvin Eugene Thompson, new chief justice, and James B. Graham, Clyde Edward Jacobs, Richard Wood Young, and Luther Buchele, new associate justices, took oath of office at last night's council meeting. Brown (and His Foot) Return to V-12 Unit Leonard Brown, V-12 senior, who went to the U.S. Naval hospital, Great Lakes, Ill., last month for specialized treatment of a broken foot, returned to the campus Friday. He is attending classes in the new V-12 semester. Chiapusso's Piano Recital Monday Jan Chiapusso, piano professor, will present his annual recital at 8 p. m. Monday in Fraser theater. The program will consist of selections by Brahms, Bach and Godwsky. Chiapusso's Plano Recital Monday Man Shortage Halts Dramatic Production Production of "The Yellow Jacket" has been canceled, Allen Craton, dramatic department head, announced today. The play was originally to have been presented Dec. 5, in Hoch auditorium. Professor Crafton gave the following statement to the Kansan: "We have had to cancel the production of 'The Yellow Jacket' for the same reason that has been defeating us for three years—we haven't enough men. Seven of them withdrew from the cast for one reason or another." Elbel to Assist With Veterans Dr. Laudon likes teaching geology Students Know Laudon As Prof Who 'Gets Around Tennis, hockey, and flying are some of his hobbies. He has played professional basketball. He's a member of the Jayhawk flying club, but says he can't hit the runway yet. He loves to hunt, fish, or look at the side of any hill. in Lawrence. Before going into the army, Major Elbel taught graduate and undergraduate courses in physical education theory, and was manager of the University's intramural program and of the Kansas Relays. Dr. Lowell Laudon, geology professor, is a busy man— leave. Major Elbel will have regular office hours and will be available for conferences with veterans on all problems. Chancellor Malott stated. The major's wife and three children, two of whom are University students, live in Lawrence. of the Kansas Reconna- tion Major Elbel has been working in the army air force convalesce training program, at Randolph Field, Texas. He previously was assistant training officer for the Headquarters Central Technical Training command, St. Louis, Mo., and was director of military training at Scott Field, Ill. He was born in Redwood Falls, Minn., and started to travel at an early age with his father, who was a lawyer. Double Penalties For Holiday Cuts Major E. R. Elbel, former associate professor of physical education at K.U., has returned to the University as assistant to Dr. Leonard Axe, director of the University's veterans bureau, Chancellor Deane W. Malott announced today. Double cuts will be given to students absent from their classes the day before and after Thanksgiving vacation and all other University holidays, the Chancellor's office announced today. Dr. Laudon travels every summer. He loves to travel -anywhere, just as long as he hasn't been there before. The Major, now on inactive duty after serving three years and eight months with the Army air corps technical command, will receive his discharge after a 60-day terminal leave. Besides hiking over rarely explored mountain passes in Alaska, exploring jungles in Central America, digging gold, taking pictures, and hunting fossils, he has, in his lifetime, been dean of men, and assistant registrar and he now teaches geology in the University. better than any other work, because it's fun he says to interest students in geology. Freshmen give him great pleasure. He has not always known he wanted to be a geologist. While a freshman in college, he wanted to be a lawyer, when a sophomore, a football coach, and then, when he was a junior he decided to become a geologist. Dr. Laudon received his bachelor's his master's and his doctor's degrees in geology from Iowa university in 1928, '29, and '30. Three previous years of college he spent at Iowa State Teacher's College. "At Iowa State there were 4,000 women to 400 men" Dr. Laudon exclaimed. Dr. and Mrs. Laudon were married in Iowa in 1930. They have three sons, who are 30 months, ten and 11 years old respectively. Mrs. Laudon does not accompany her husband on his trips. "Where we go," (continued to page four) Independents Win Four Places In Frosh Election Adsit Defeats Gear By Four Votes; All Margins Close Four Independent-P. S. G. L. and one Pachacamac - Greek women's party candidates were victorious in yesterday's freshman election, Jean Templeton, chairman of the elections committee, announced today. committee, and anne Duane Adsit, P.S.G.L. candidate for president, defeated George Gear, Pachacamac candidate, by the smallest majority recorded in the election, Adsit receiving 242 votes, and Gear, 238. and Gear, 238. Joanne Cockreham, Independent candidate for vice-president, defeated Patricia Ellledge, Greek women's candidate, 242 to 230. Margaret Elisabeth vanderSmissen, Independent, received 244 votes for secretary-treasurer, to 236 for Duke Burt, Pachacamac. Alice Jane Peterson, Independent candidate for All-Student Council, defeated Mary Jean Moore of the Greek women's party, 148 to 100. Frank Davis, only winning Pachacamac-Greek women's party candidate, defeated Wilbur Noble, P.S.G.L., 124 to 105. Votes were counted last night in the Pine room of the Union by the All-Student Council elections committee, and representatives of each of the campus political parties. Prof. E. O. Stene, council faculty adviser, supervised the counting. Flying Jayhawks Sprout Wings "Pop" Tipton, flight instructor at the airport, has weaned all little Jayhawkers. The Flying club is on its own now. After landing from their first solo, with comments varying from "I didn't even miss the instructor," to "I was rather disappointed," all ten members of the class admitted that it's more fun after you get used to it. Those who soled include Joy Howland, Evangeline Pratt, Riehard Wilhoit, Clyde Lunger, Kenneth Higdon, Prof. L. R. Laudon, Ann Newcomer and Sue Newcomer. The veteran of the group, Thomas Bailey, sooled late in the summer and has a total of 70 hours in the air. Shirley Cundiff is trailing him for top honors with 35 hours. Darwin Letter of 1882 Sent to Brewster A letter written by Charles R Darwin, world-famed for his theory on evolution, has been received by Prof. R Q. Brewster of the chemistry department. The letter will be placed with other valuable documents in Watson library, Professor Brewster said. rary, Professor J. Dated April 10, 1882, nine days before Darwin's death, the letter was written to the late Prof. F. E. Todd of the University. Darwin commented on an article written by Professor Todd and asked him to send seeds of several American plants for experimentation. The letter was sent to Professor Brewer by Professor Todd's son, Ernest, of El Dorado. Photostatic copies have been made and are available to scientists. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 7,1945 DAILY KANSAN University Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY.OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Association, National Editorial Association, and the Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Avenue, New York City. Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Law and Literature. School year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second class on Sept. 17, 1810, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS STAFF MARY TURKINGTON Managing Editor ELEANOR ALBERTON, *Assist.* Managing Editor LOREN KING Telegraph Editor ROGINA AN ORDER News Editor MARIAN GARNET GAYNON Sports Editor PAT PENNY Sports Editor BILLIAH HILTON Feature Editor JANE ANDERSON Military Editor CLEO NORMAN Research Editor MARTHA WENSKI Asst. Sports Editor JOAN VEATCH Campus Editor EDITORIAL STAFF DOLOMES SULZMAN ... *Editor-in-Chief* MARY MORRILL FRANKLIN FEARING } *Editorial Associates* OVILLE ROBERTS BUSINESS STAFF NANCY TOMILSON Business Manager BETTY BEACH Advertising Manager Nightshirters Most "typically K.U." of traditions to be re-established in this year's Homecoming celebration is the nightshirt parade, planned, after a two year lapse, for Friday night, Nov. 16. Led by the band and members of Jay James, KuKu's, and K-Club, the freshmen men, garbed in nightshirts and pajamas, and freshmen women will parade from the campus through downtown Lawrence, to South park. Upperclassmen will follow the procession to participate in the bonfire-rally in the park. Authorized movie "crashing" will follow. The parade, inaugurated in 1905, has been planned this year by the traditions committee of the All-Student Council. An outgrowth of too much spirit in the early part of the century, the first parade was termed "a great peace jubilee," and was presented the first year after class fights were abolished. In almost identical form the annual procession of nightshirt parades marched down K.U.'s history until wartime conditions caused the event to be cancelled in 1943. Now, on the thirtieth anniversary of the tradition, the nightshirters will march again.-D.G. Two hundred freshmen and sophomores swarmed the streets of Lawrence in their nightshirts, visited the opera house, and at midnight aroused Chancellor Frank Strong who, also in his nightshirt, addressed them. Letters to the Editor University Daily Kansan Dear Editor: For the first time in years a group of K.U. students chartered busses to attend an out of town game. Jay Janes, KuKu's, and other students went to Lincoln to the football game. The high point of the whole trip was the hospitality of the Cornhuskers. It was homecoming for them, and N.U. grads from all over the country were in Lincoln. But there were not too many "homecomers" to lessen the hospitality for the out-of-staters. The Nebraska band played our Alma Mater at the game, made a Jayhawker with cards at the half. In the victory parade after the game they played our song and led us in cheers. No one felt anything but friendly rivalry at any time. The good spirit was not limited to the Jayhawkers who were waiting for students. Townpeople picked up Jayhawkers who were waiting for cabs and busses and took them to Rock Chalk Talk By ANNE SCOTT What a pity Pattee. Returning from a province conference of Gamma Phi Beta in Columbia, Sunday, B. J. O'Neal, Mary Ann McClure, and Elaine Falkner were perturbed to find the train for Lawrence ready to pull out of Union station in K.C. B.J. was just a little nervous about her date, Frank Pattee, waiting "patiently" in Lawrence. Brighten the corner where you are is the motto of Sarah Stuber living at the Hearth. Sarah just loves bright colors so she purchased a bright yellow chilleen rug for her room. Oh where, or where could the Ku Ku's be was the question Saturday night as the Jay Jane bus groped its way from Holton back to Neta-waka looking for the lost Ku Ku bus. The Jay anes' bus driver was supposed to lead the Ku Ku driver back from Lincoln, but during the night they lost each other. While the Jay Janes hunted, their lost prop brothers snoozed drowsily on. Finally, Ku-Kuklenski came out of it all and noticed that the bus was passing Ray's on the way to K.C. This just wouldn't do, so the bus turned around and arrived in Lawrence an hour before the Jay Jane posse. Everything would have been dandy, if Stube hadn't put a green While Mary Ann stationed herself at the ticket window, Elaine and B.J. dashed to Gate 3 to study the situation. There they found that tickets could be bought on the train, so B.J. sedately yelled, "McClure, McClure, come here." The resulting echo was quite a shock to bystanders, especially to McClure who didn't know what it was all about. After all this rumpus, they missed the train, and patient Pattie waited until 10 p.m. for the still-blushing B.J. Washington. (UP)—Rep. Edward H. Rees (R., Kan.) today demanded an explanation of the reported "wanton destruction" of nearly-completed B-29's in Kansas while the army continues to build new planes in Seattle, Wash. We will have our homecoming in several weeks. Let's all put on our western hospitality along with our Jayhawker loyalty. Let's be sure that, win or lose, the K-State Wildcats have a good time in Lawence.-A. S. their destination. We got friendly words and smiles from everyone. Rees Protests B-29 Junking An alumni dinner will be held in Milwaukee, Friday, on the eve of the K.U.-Marquette football game. Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary, and the Kansas football coaches will be the principal speakers. The football team will be guests at the dinner. Rees told the house a constituent informed him that 16 nearly-finished B-29's at the Wichita-Boeing plant had been ordered "cut up with cutting torches and disposed of as junk." Another citizen of Wichita, he said, wrote that the local bond drive would not be a success if the policy continued. Terming the reported junking of the planes a "wanton disregard of the public's money," Rees said it was neither "expedient nor understandable." "Out in Seattle they are still making B-29's and will continue to do so until Jan. 1," he said. Alums Plan Football Dinner snake (don't get excited, it wasn't real) right in the middle of that nice yellow rug when the ladies sponsoring the dorm came to visit. It created quite a commotion. Marilyn McAllister got so excited when she first saw the snake that she fell from her top bunk. Turn about, you know. Yes, the Sigma Kappa pledges have taken their due revenge. Last Saturday, they aroused their actives at 2:30 am. and demanded a new deal. "We're tired of all these campuses, tired of entertaining you all the time. We're through with all restrictions." After this little speech, the pledges made the actives file down to the basement for a feed, but the high and mighties had to work for the repast. I'm forever blowing bubbles. Whether it's his second childhood or still his first, Sam Harris, Phi Delt, was caught blowing bubbles with his little bubble gun the other night. Carl Clark, returning from play practice, observed Sammy boy playfully blowing bubbles on the landing. While one did a can-can dance and Carolyn Morris gave a combination demonstration of a volley ball game, tap dance, and man-catching act, prexy Mavis Lukert sped all over the house imitating a P-38. Now Who's Crazy? Miller hall girls are preparing to entertain a "mixed group" this evening. To get acquainted with men living in unorganized houses, the social committee sent hour dance invitations to a list of rooming houses. It was the feminine voices calling the hall to accept the invitations that revealed that the list was for both men's and women's houses. OFFICIAL BULLETIN University of Kansas Wednesday, Nov. 7 Notices must be typewritten and must be in Public Relations office, 222A, Frampton, Strong, not later than 10 a.m. Please contact the Administrator. No phone messages accepted. The University Catholic club will have a discussion meeting from 7 to 8 o'clock tonight in the Officer's Club room of the Union building—Laura Schmid, president. Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, will meet at 6:45 p.m. Thursday. Nov. 8. in the Pine room of the Memorial Union building. Sidney North, national secretary, will be present. All members are asked to attend—R. W. Brown. --is said to have strong personal appeal among many union workers in the mass industries which he helped to organize in 1935-38. Snof Zoology club will meet Thursday, Nov. 8, at 7:30, in room 206, Snow hall Dr. Hobart Smith will speak on "Adaptations of the Poisonous Snakes." The Bridge club will meet at 4:30 Wednesday, Nov. 7, in the English room of the Union building. Anyone interested in playing bridge is invited.-Mary Longenecker. Pre-Nursing club will meet at 7:30 Thursday night, Nov. 8, in the Watkins Memorial Hospital nurse's home. *** *** Students who missed any previous entrance examinations may make them up on Saturday, Nov. 10 in Hoch auditorium. Psychological—9 a.m. Antitude-2 a.m. *** Aptitude—2 p.m. -A. H. Turney. —A. The Bacteriology club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday night in the English room of the Union. Bacteriology majors and anyone interested welcome. Members are asked to bring dues, 50 cents a semester. Civil War Rages Among Labor Men At Management Conference Washington (UP)—A bitter civil war was managed today among labor delegates to the national labor-management conference. The struggle temporarily overshadowed the main work of the conference-development of means to lessen industrial strife—and revealed a top-sided split among labor delegates. Standing alone in the labor camp was the CIO, which is staking its prestige at the conference on its fight to put the wage-price issue on the agenda. The cleavage became apparent yesterday when, with AFL support, the important conference executive committee was enlarged to give seats to Pres. John L. Lewis of the United Mine Workers and T. C. Cashen, representing the railway brotherhoods. The move climaxed a biter four-hour battle in which management representatives were silent but interested spectators. An angry exchange of words between Lewis, Murray, AFL Press. William Green and Cashen apparently forecast that the CIO was alone in its strategy to gain a hearing on the issue of wages and prices. Lewis, formerly in the AFL and reported soon to return, attacked Murray bitterly. Casen, who also beads a railway union affiliated with the AFL, deplored the CIO attempt to question his membership on the executive committee. Green led the AFL fight to win seats for Lewis and Cashen. Their remarks appeared aimed at putting a crimp in CIO prestige. The AFL has claimed that CIO unions are not strong enough financially to withstand any lengthy temporary mass unemployment brought about by strikes. Lewis has never concealed his dislike for the leaders of the CIO, which he founded and later left. He FOR RENT—Rooms for boys at 413 W. 14th St. Also one front double room with twin beds at 1140 La. WANT ADS WANTED—1941 or 40, 6-passenger club coupe, good condition. Please contact Jerry Yogoda, 2470W or Kansan office. LOST—A pair of glasses in the Library, plastic-rimmed, in leather case with name and address inside. Call Betty Stone, 1702 Mass., phone 1419R. LOST—Sterling silver identification bracelet somewhere on the campus Friday. Name engraved on front John G. Keyzens. Reward. Please call Betty Anne Pratt 860. LOST—Green billfold with initials M.B.S. Lost last Saturday between the Chi Omega house and the Union Pacific railroad station. Liberal reward. Call Marilyn Steinert, 731. FOUND—A Parker fountain pen. Owner may have same by identifying and paying for ad at Daily Kansas Office. LOST—A pair of pink plastic round rimmed glasses in a brown leather case. Finder please call Peggy Howard 267. LOST-Blue make-up kit with compact and Benrus watch inside last week. Please return to Daily Kansan Office. Wear! NOTICE—An excellent room and board job. For two men students. See the University Employment Office 228 Frank Strong. LOST—Cedar Blue Parker 51 pen Wednesday morning between the cottage and Student Union. Keep- sake. Jack Anderson, 1145 Indiana phone 1002. But Lewis has been equally contemptuous of Green's leadership of the AFL. Some observers wonder if he is seeking to use the conference as the stage on which to establish himself as leader of all American labor. The CIO insists that the conference must deal with the subject of wages and prices if it is to find a solution for current industrial unrest and establish long-range machinery for minimizing strife in labor-management relations. H. W. Prentis, jr., president of Armstrong Cork Co., Lancaster, Pa., and former National Association of Manufacturers president, told the delegates, however, that it is "vitally important" that discussion be kept within the limits of the agenda. They do not include wages and orices. Prentis charged that labor has tended in the last two or three years to extend collective bargaining into fields "that clearly trespass upon management functions." He said responsibilities of labor leadership have not been so clearly defined by law as those of business managers. "But they will be eventually," he said. "And the extent to which they are written into the law of the land will depend in no small measure on the outcome of the discussions at this conference." Long on wear NOV Q: Midy Stru Ph Helen Farri Cha teni Th will 9:30 Uni Phi Wilson Wear SOCKS by Wilson Brothers 45c up A wee Mo. the Kan M at a S.K It takes a lot of walking to make an impression on Wilson Brothers socks—which are knit to wear long and wash well. We have anklets and long socks in ribs and plains. New shades and weights. A fine choice, friend so make tracks for yours! M Man McI song soci elec Delt clud Gue M jori Wol t A M Dor Atwee Ober's Rec A nigh Cpl nCi NOVEMBER 7,1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE --who were married Friday in the First Methodist church of Eskridge. 000 SOCIALLY SPEAKING Mary Margaret Gaynor, Society Editor The Union Activities committee will sponsor a Midweek from 7 to 9:30 tonight in the lounge of the Union building. B Midweek Is Tonight Phi Psi's to Entertain Phi Kappa Psi will entertain Mrs. Helene Thomas Farrell, Miss Mary Farrell, Lawrence; and Mrs. W. K. Charles, Alexander, Va., at dinner tonight at the chapter house. Tau Kappa Epsilon has announced the pledging of Clement Strumillo, Kansas City. Strumillo Pledges T.K.E. A guest at the chapter house this week is Ralph Olson, Kansas City, Mo. - * * S. K. Pledges Are Hostesses The Sigma Kappa pledge class entertained Alpha Delta Pi pledges at a coke party Tuesday afternoon. Members of PT-7 will be guests at an hour dance tonight. Louise McIntire is the newly elected president of the Delta Delta pledge class. Other officers include: Tri Delta Peldges Elect Mary Eileen O'Brien, secretary; Mary Alice Martin, treasurer; Jean McIntire and Mary Ann Sawyer, co-song leaders; and Emily Alice Berry, social chairman. Guests Dine at Locksley Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Bedell, Mar- jorie Bedell, Augusta, and Willa Wolfe were dinner guests Sunday at Locksley hall. Air Visit Foster Hall Miss Joan Moser, Hiawatha; Miss Dorothy Cox, Miss Ada Lee Bowles, Atwood; and Charlotte Bartley were weekend guests at Foster hall. Reception Honors Newlyweds A reception was given Monday night at Wright place in honor of Cpl. and Mrs. James E. Parmiter, Brewster Nominated As Councilor Dr. R. Q. Brewster, chairman of the department of chemistry, has been nominated as one of 4 councilors-at-large of the American Chemical Society. Dr. Brewster has acted both as chairman and councilor of the local section of the ASC and is a member of the technical advisory committees of the Kansas Industrial Development Commission and the Kansas chamber of Commerce. Trial Manuscripts For Quill Club Due Nov. 16 Manuscripts for admission to Quill club should be submitted to Dr. John Hankins, 211 Fraser hall, by Nov. 16, Mary Marrill, chancellor, announced today. Mrs. Parminer is the former Marjorie Lee Skceen, daughter of C. W. Skeen of Eskridge. She is a junior in the School of Fine Arts. Selections may be either prose or poetry, Miss Merrill said. If a student's poems are short, several are required. Parmiter recently returned from the European theater of operations. He attended the University in 1942. If possible, three copies of each manuscript should be left with Dr. Hankins, she explained. Mrs. G. E. Lindquist, Lawrence, was a dinner guest Sunday at Honley house. Lindquist Visits Henley Rodgers-Patterson Wed The marriage of Muriel Rodgers to Pfc. Richard H. Patterson, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Patterson, Lawrence, has been announced by the bride's mother, Mrs. G. O. Rodgers, Lawrence. The ceremony took place Oct. 28, in the chapel at Waldron field, Corpus Christi, Texas. Mrs. Patterson is a junior in the School of Fine Arts and is a member of Delta Gamma. The bridegroom recently completed a V-12 marine reserve course and is now stationed at Corpus Christi. Dolores Custer Heads Committee For More Recreation [Name] DOLORES CUSTER Dolores Custer, 19-year-old sophomore from Wichita, is chairman of the committee to provide more student recreation on the campus and a member of the parking and social committees of the All-Student Council. She is the Pan-Hellenic council representative. She is house manager of Alpha Delta Pi, and her sorority's representative to the political party. She also is on the personnel committee of Y.W.C.A. Dolores likes to watch football and basketball games, dance, and read, lists writing letters as her hobby, and having none of her favorite dishes included in a meal as her pet peeve. She says her future plans depend upon the navy. Very few girls can recognize the whistle of more than six boys. HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Garage and Cab Co. 922 Mass. Phone 12 No Previous Singing Experience Necessary K. U. Mens Glee Club Kappa's to Receive Scholarship Cup At Tea Tuesday LAST TIME FOR TRYOUTS Wednesday, November 7 Members of Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority will be guests of the Pan-Hellenic council at a scholarship tea at 4:30 Tuesday in the Kansas room of the Union building, Jane Miller, president of the council, said today. Saturday, November 10 INTHE 4:30 p.m. SING! The Kappa's will be presented a scholarship cup for the third consecutive year. A house which receives the cup for four successive years is allowed to keep it permanently, Miss Miller added. 10:00 a.m. ROOM 132, FRANK STRONG A schedule of dates for the dinners was set up and will be announced by the various houses, Miss Miller said. Those who will attend the tea will include the Kappa chapter, members of the Pan-Hellenic council. five representatives from each sorority, sorority advisers, and members of the Pan-Hellenic alumni council. Plans for exchange dinners among sororities and dormitories on the campus were made yesterday afternoon at the meeting of the Pan-Hellenic council. FOR THAT COKE DATE Remember ELDRIDGE PHARMACY Phone 999 701 Mass. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. Phone 425 1025 Mass. NEW at the LIBRARY "If the Prospect Pleases; the West the Guidebooks Never Mention," by L Haystead. "British Far Eastern Policy," by G. E. Hubbard. "The Cultural Background of Personality," by R. Linton. "Tolstoy and His Wife;" by T. L. Polner. "Personal Mental Hygiene," by T. V. Moore. "Backgrounds of Conflict;" ideas and forms in world politics, by K. London. "American Romantic Painting;" by E. P. Richardson. "Patients Have Families," by H. B. Richardson. "The Plot against the Peace;" a warning to the nation, by M. Sayers. "Between Hitler and Mussooiim," memoirs of Ernst Rudiger prince Starhemberg, former vice-chancellor of Austria, by E. R. Starhemberg. "Vocational Education for a Changing World," by F. T. Struck. "Through Japanese Eyes," by O. D. Telisch. ... Fine Diamonds Latest Styles Roberts Jewelry and Gifts Now --- Another K.U. Bus Serving Campus, West Hills, Oread and 12th Streets TIMES ON NEW SCHEDULE Bus Leaves West Hills 15-35-55 minutes past hour Bus Leaves Downtown 5-25-45 minutes past hour Route and Schedule of other K.U. Bus Remains the Same as Before The Rapid Transit Co. YOUR LOCAL BUS SERVICE PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 7,1945 IN THE HUDDLE with PAT PENNEY Kansas has never defeated Marquette. The Jayhawkers' encounter with the *Zavanche* in Milwaukee Saturday will be the fourth game in an unsteady series which began in 1928. Marquette's clean sweep was made by a 7-0 score in 1928; 33-7 in 1941; and 14-0 in 1942. Kansas eyes will be focused on Milwaukee Saturday in hopes of prophesying the outcome of the Kansas-Kansas State annual classic, to be played here, Nov. 17. The K-Staters fell to the Avalanche to the noisy tune of 55-13 a few weeks ago, and the Jayhawkers' showing should have a hand in determining the betting odds, when the arch rivals meet weekend after next. MASSACRE MARQUETTE Meet your team If he only had the "wings of an angel." James Irwin would retreat at a moment's notice from his present home—the brig. Jim insists that his crime was very trivial—wearing khakis instead of navy blues—but that doesn't help his escape any. Virginia Irwin "Chunk" Irwin "five-foot" n i e inch guard from Dallas lays claim to membership in the exclusive "Texas Trio." The purpose of the organization, quote Jim, is to uplift organisation,quote Jim,is to uplift the spirits of the football team on long distance trips by singing "Texas" songs. This is "Chunk's" first and last year on the gridiron for the Jayhawker because he will graduate from the V-12 program in June. Sunset High school at Dallas saw Jim playing football one year, but probably remember him mostly for his French harp playing. This is his only hobby, says Jim, unless you would call getting into trouble a hobby, too. (He's regretting his week in the brig.) Jim is a member of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity and a major in civil engineering. MASSACRE MARQUETTE Jayhawk Jabber: Dave Schmidt, K.U.'s speedy right end, will be performing for the home folks when the Jayhawkers travel northward to Milwaukee. . . . Lou Viscelli, full-back on Marysville, Mo., Teachers' undecided eleven two years ago, has reported to Head Coach Henry Shenk and is helping to fill the gap left by LeRoy Robison's injury two weeks ago. . . . Tickets for the Kann-Missouri game in Kansas City. Now, 24, are getting harder to get daily. . . . Ernie Quigley, athletic director, is taking the Jayhawker traveling squad to see the Chicago Bears-Detroit Lions pro football game in Chicago, Sunday, on the way home from Marquette. . . Dan Chase, Robert Miller, and Ken Knuth, former V-12's and members if the '44 football squad, are among campus visitors this week. Women Score Victory Over Ottawa in Hockey KU.'s women hockey team defeated Ottawa university yesterday afternoon in a 2-0 game on the Ottawa field. In a game last week in Lawrence, KU. won by the same margin. Goals yesterday were made by Violet Conard and Mary Jean Hoffman. The Sunflower was designated the Kansas flower in 1903. Jayhawks Plan To Snow-Under The Avalanche The Kansas Jayhawkers are polishing their armor this week for Saturday's tussle with Tom Stidham's menacing Marquette Avalanche. Two early-week scrimmage sessions, lasting late into the fall evening under the newly erected lights on the practice field, have convinced the Jayhawkers that they can score their third non-conference victory over the Marquette aggregation. With two-thirds of their bell-bottoned ball-toters tested under fire and a hot offense still averaging two touchdowns a game, the Mt. Oread squad isn't conceding the Avalanche anything, when the two clubs meet in Milwaukee this weekend. The Marquette tilt, fourth in an off-and-on series that began in 1928, will be Kansas' final non-conference encounter and the fourth road show in a row. Kansas Shows Fire Despite the 27-13 loss to the Nebraska Cornhuskers, the Kansans flashed enough fire to spell danger for the rough and tough Hilltoppers. The youthful Jayhawkers, with only two men of voting age on the entire squad, have not been blanked since their initial appearance against T.C.U. The Kansans have scored 100 points. A flashy offensive, manned mostly by freshmen, will be aided by Leroy Harmon. 210-pound fullback, and Jack Rader, scatback, recent transfers from the Washburn navy unit. Harmon passed his initial test with a nifty 40-minute performance against the Cornhuskers. A sterling line-backer and hefty blocker. Harmon stamped himself as a valuable addition to the Jayhawker offense and defense. Good Halfbacks Rader played briefly against Nebraska, but ripped off a pair of five-yard gains in his only two ball-lugging tries. The addition of Rader makes three hard-running right halfbacks. Rex Marxmiller and Dick Bertuzzi having proved their worth in earlier performances. Marxmiller VARSITY TODAY ENDS THURSDAY Here's the Year's SUSPENSE SEMATION! Design Department Ranks High in U.S. SUSPENSE SENSATION! Will he kiss or will he kill MUMPHREY Bogart SYDNEY FATMAN ALEXIS SMITH · GREENSTREET WARNERS' conflict Will he kiss or will he kill Conflict Bogart Sydney Patman ALEXIS SMITH · GREENSTREET FRIDAY and SATURDAY JOHNNY MACK BROWN "LOST TRAIL" and RICHARD POWERS "Dangerous Intruder" Letter Goes to 28,000 Alums The textile design department of the University of Kansas ranks in the first eight of all art colleges in the United States according to a survey made by Mildred Spires, Newberry, Mich., Miss Marjorie Whitney, supervisor of the design department, announced today. The alumni news letter, edited by Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary, is being sent this week to 28,000 members of the association. Eastwood Paintings Exhibited The other ranking schools were: Moore Institute of Art, Philadelphia; New York School of Applied Design for Women, New York City; Parsons School of Design, New York City; Rhode Island School of Design, Providence, R.I. Rochester Institute, Department of Applied Arts, Rochester, N.Y.: Syracuse University College of Fine Arts, Syracuse, N. Y.; and Vesper George School of Arts, Boston, Mass. Fourteen paintings by Prof. Raymond J. Eastwood, of the drawing and painting department, will be exhibited Nov. 15 to Dec. 15 by the art department at Hays State college. Confronting KU. is the task of building a defense against Stidham's rugged T-formation and curing a rash of shoddy tackling which has plagued the club in its last three frays. After a slow start, the Avalanche won two of its three last games and tied Michigan State, which beat Missouri, 13-7, last weekend. Stidham's men flattened Kansas State, 55-13, two weeks ago. is currently on the sidelines with a leg injury. Keep Bomb Secret Groves Demands Speaking on "atomic power and world peace" in the 51st annual Town hall lecture series, Groves declared that the same misgivings about atomic power existed before the first bomb was dropped. These fears, based on man's "knowledge that existing conceptions of human welfare are inadequate for the preservation of peace," still exist, he said. New York. (UP)—The United States, as a "principal exponent and defender of democracy," must retain the atom bomb secret until the world can substitute a rule of intelligence, morals, and law for that of force, Maj. Gen. Leslie R. Groves, in charge of the bomb's development, said today. But, citing the American attitude, Groves asked: "Were we not in agreement with our allies that the United States—together with other peace-loving nations—had to remain strong and united with the other powers who would seek to prevent war and aggression? . . ." Laudon Is Prof Who 'Gets Around' ENDS TONITE Dennis O'Keefe - Rochester "BREWSTER'S MILLIONS" (continued from page one) Dr. Laudon said, "no woman could go." He came to the University from Tulsa university where he was dean of men for three years, assistant registrar for two years, and professor of geology, paleontology, and meteorology for six years. This adventuring professor of geology won't talk about himself—one GRANADA THURSDAY — 3 Horrorific Days WE DOUBLE DARE YOU TO SEE Double Shriek & Shudder LAST WORD IN SCREEN SHOCK SENSATION! The Shriek! FOUL TRAFFIC IN DEAD BODIES Graves Robbed! Corpses Carved! Dead Despoiled! The Shudder! Boris KARLOFF THE BODY SNATCHER in Robert Louis Stevenson's with BELA LUGOSI HALF MAD . . . HALF SANE! ALL KILLER! Stalking His Prey in Starking His Pray in Murky Shadows of Midnight! "THE BRIGHTON STRANGLER" JOHN LODER JUNE DUPREZ ALSO LATEST NEWS Owl Show Saturday & SUNDAY One Week AHEAD OF LOEWS MIDLAND IN KANSAS CITY! The Grandest Surprise Comedy Since "IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT" FILMED FROM THE GREAT BROADWAY PLAY! COLUMBIA PICTURES presents and Tell AWAY PLAY! A GEORGE ABBOTT PRODUCTION Play and Screenplay by F. HUGH HERBERT starring SHIRLEY TEMPLE as Cortise Archer has to hear about his experiences in class or from someone who has ac- companion him on one of his "little jaunts." John Leonard, assistant instructor in geology, who has accompanied Dr. Laudon on several trips, told of a typical summer excursion. In Alaska in 1938, he said a priest told Dr. Laudon that Chilicut pass had not been crossed since a landslide in the '90's. Dr. Laudon, with Tulsa university students John Leonard and Dan Ferray, crossed Chilicut pass! They were gone seven days, the last of which they ran out of food and got lost. The priest had informed them that they would know they were reaching civilization when they saw railroad tracks. Seven days passed and still no railroad tracks. By splitting up, they finally located train smoke and safely reached inhabited country. Dr. Laudon had started out on this trip with an extra 10 pound rock in his pack—courtesy John Leonard. For several summers Dr. Laudon has taught at the University geology field camp near Canon City, Colo. The rest of the summer he travels. Last summer he took only a "short trip" — 8,000 miles. Dr. Laudon and his friends have "ridden the rods" and can tell what tramp jungles are like. After such an experience, Dr. Laudon and Leonard reached San Francisco at night and searched for a place to pitch camp. They found an ideal spot, they thought. They awoke next morning in the city dump. 9 at the Jayhawker ALL WEEK NOW Bob, as a beshful bellhop, teaches a queen to be a hepcat in a rowdy exciting American way! OH! WHAT FUN! OH! WHAT BLISS! I no gals and a guy in a King sized romance! HEDY LAMARR ROBERT WALKER JUNE ALLYSON in M-G-M's "Her Highness and the Bellboy" SUNDAY Now in its third glorious record-breaking run, Kansas City Orpheum! THE MIGHTIEST OF ALL SEA PICTURES! in Gorgeous TECHNICOLOR! THE SPANISH MAIN STARRING PAUL MAUKEEN WALTER HENREID • O'HARA • SLEZAK University DAILY KANSAN Thursday, Nov. 8, 1945 STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Thursday, Nov. 8, 1945 43rd Year No. 33 Lawrence, Kansas News of the World NROTC May Be 'Little Annapolis' Washington. (UP)—Secretary of the Navy James V. Forrestal has approved a plan under which half the navy's future officer strength would be obtained elsewhere than from the traditional Naval Academy at Annapolis. It provides for three sources for officer personnel, including 14,000 candidates selected by state boards each year to be given four years of college training in 52 ROTC colleges at government expense. Washington. (UP)—British Prime Minister Clement Attlee will be invited to address a joint session of Congress next week, House speaker Sam Rayburn announced today. Attlee arrives here Saturday for atomic bomb control discussions with President Truman and Canadian Prime Minister W. L. MacKenzie King. To Release 50-Point Soldiers on Furlough Washington. (UP)—Speeding its plans to demobilize overseas veterans, the army has announced that enlisted men with 50 to 59 points now on furlough or temporary duty assignments will be discharged. signature will The War department also announced that U.S. soldiers who were held as prisoners of war for more than 60 days are now eligible for discharge no matter what their point scores may be. The order, it was estimated, will affect an estimated 25,000 former war prisoners. Helsinki. (UP) — The Finnish government today ordered the arrest of ex-President Risto Ryti and seven other former government officials accused of leading Finland into war against Russia. London. (UP)—Foreign secretary Ernest Bevin appealed to the great powers on behalf of the British government today to "put their cards on the table" in order to dissapate the uncertainty over the atomic bomb. Patterson Calls For 'Civilian' Soldiers Washington. (UP)—Secretary of War Robert P. Patterson said today that development of atomic bomb and the suddenness with which it can strike "nomously increased" the need for trained citizen soldiers capable of swift mobilization. He warned that in any future war "The United States will be the first target of attack." Washington. (UPI)—The Senate foreign relations committee today approved a bill giving the United States delegate on the United Nations security council specific authority to vote American troops into action to preserve the peace. Washington. (UP) The dams of the Tennessee valley, source of power for the atomic bomb project, were among the objectives of the eight Nazi saboteurs who landed in this country by U-boat in 1942, it was revealed today. Washington. (UP)—The United States favors scuttling the remainder of Germany's submarine fleet but is willing to divide the remnants of the Nazi surface fleet among the big three, if it was learned today. U.S. to Give Planes to China Chungking (UP)—All 3.000 American planes in the China theater will be transferred to the Chinese Nationalist government, the nationalist newspaper Ta Kung Pao said today as Communist charges of American intervention in China's undeclared civil war mounted. A Ta Kung Poa dispatch from Nanking cited Air Maj. Gen. Chou Chih-Jou, director of the Central government's air commission, as authority for the statement that all American planes from fighters to over-the-hump transport in this theater will come under Nationalist control. Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek's government, whose air force numbered only a few planes during the war, began an extensive program to train air crews Monday to take over the planes, the dispatch said. The Communist organ New China Daily, meantime, said two separate Chinese Communist commanders had sent protests to Lt. Gen. Albert Wedemeyer, American commander in China, against alleged American intervention in China's internal strife. Wedemeyer told newsmen in Chungking yesterday that American forces may begin the evacuation of North China by mid-November. He categorically denied charges that American troops were aiding Nationist forces in actual fighting. 'Show Rally Spirit,' Coach Urges Students School spirit is at a new low this year according to Coach Henry Shenk. "I honestly believe that if more students would get out to our pregame football rallies, our team would show a marked improvement," he said. Coach Shenk urged all students to attend the rally at the stadium at 4:15 p. m. tomorrow. The rally will be held at the east dressing room, and will be led by cheerleader Alberta Cornwell. The K. U. band will play. "Because so many of our games have been played away from home this season, there has been a marked lack of interest on the part of the students," Coach Shenk said. "If all the students will turn out for the rally tomorrow, we will see a 100 per cent improvement in the caliber of the teams performance." Kansas City. (UP)—The first real cold wave of the season whipped across this part of the Midwest today, knocking the mercury down from the balmy summer-like weather of yesterday toward the 20-degree mark. Immediately after the rally, the team will leave for Milwaukee where they will play Marquette Saturday. 15-Degree Temperature Forecast for Tomorrow terraces J. R. Lloyd, regional forecafter, said the cold front, backed by a strong high pressure system feeding off 24-below temperatures in Canada, would push the temperature in northwest Kansas and southeast Nebraska to about 15 tomorrow morning. LATEST! Wife of K.U. Sailor Found Dead in Hotel Mrs. Jack Dillard, 22, the wife of an NROTC student at the University, was found dead in her room at the Eldridge hotel shortly after noon today, police reported. Mrs. Dillard had been visiting her husband here, and it was he who discovered her body, hotel authorities said. Dillard was transferred to the KU. NROTC unit from Washburn university just a week ago. He lives in PT-6. ties said. She had registered with a home address of 1430 Penrose drive, Salt Lake City, Utah. Coroner C.B. Rumsey said Mrs. Dillard died of drowning. Her body was found in a bathtub, and there were no marks of violence, he said. 'Beat K-State Is Phone Greeting "Beat K—State" will be the telephone greeting of organized houses next week. All houses will be asked to answer telephone calls in this way, after identifying their houses, Eugenia Hepworth, chairman of the Homecoming committee, said today. Freshman men will wear "Beat K-State signs, to be distributed by KuKu's Wednesday. Kirk's went onstage. KuKu's will direct K.U. students to a reserved section on the 50-yard line at the Homecoming game in Memorial stadium, Nov. 17. Lawrence stores will be closed from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m., for the game. The 70-piece K-State band will play at the game. the game. George TiDona and his 11-piece band from Kansas City will play for the Homecoming varsity Saturday night. The band, which is composed largely of ex-service men, has two vocalists. Resident Students May Vote In City Election Nov.20 University students who have been residents of Kansas for six months and of Lawrence for 30 days and who can prove Lawrence to be their home are qualified to register for the special city election Nov.20, H.C. Fischer, city clerk announced today. Registration will be open at the city clerk's office in the city hall tonight and tomorrow night until 10 p.m. KU Med School 'Obsolete,' Dean Wahl Tells Missouri Lawrence. (UP)—The tempest stirred up in Missouri's legislative kettle by the testimony of K.U.'s medical school dean boiled back onto this campus today, with considerable off the record comments but little quotable material. Dr. H. R. Wahl, Star Light, Star Bright, We'll See Stars Tonight,Astronomers Sing for 21 years dean of the University's medical school, told Missouri legislators last night that he had found the split system of medical education—two years at Lawrence and two years at Kansas City, Kan.-impractical. Vacations Vary For Three Terms Dr. Wahl for his part said he was misquoted in his references to the man in charge of the small K.U. hospital located here. That man, Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, for 16 years Chancellor Deane W. Malott of the University said he had "no comment on anything" today but it was understood University authorities regretted the situation which had arisen. It was learned Wahl had testified before the Missouri committee with the knowledge of University officials. Thanksgiving and Christmas vacation dates for students enrolled in the 12, 16, and 18-weeks sessions will vary several days in length. Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, said today. today. Students enrolled in the 12 and 16-weeks sessions which began Nov. 1, will be granted only Thanksgiving day, Nov. 22. Eighteen-week students in the regular semester, will be dismissed after 12:20 p.m. Nov. 21 and will not return for classes until 8:30 a.m. Nov. 26, Mr. Nichols said. a.m. Nov. 20, 2016. Christmas vacations for all three sessions begins Dec. 22, after the 11:30 classes. Classes will convene at 8:30 a.m. Dec. 31 for students of the 12 and 16-week sessions and on Jan. 7, 1946, for 18-week students. "V-12 students cannot have a longer vacation and still meet navy requirements," Mr. Nichols explained. WEATHER KANSAS—Cloudy tonight, be- coming generally fair by tomorrow, afternoon. Much colder in southeast and extreme east tonight and to- morrow. Scattered light rain or snow tonight. Low temperatures tonight 20 to 25 northwest, to 35 southeast. That is the attraction which is drawing 33 students to the roof of Lindley hall this fall, for night classes in astronomy. Star gazing for credit. "We arrange the night classes to suit the students and, if possible, the weather," he explained. So far this fall the night classes have had good luck with clear skies, and have spent affirmed as authority in the beginning class is the largest enrollment for several years," Professor Storer said. the night periods locating constellations and gazing at the moon through the smaller of the University's two telescopes. (Sigh.) "It looks just like its picture!" "Is there really any cheese on it?" (Sigh). "Oh I wish Johnny had taken this class." (Sigh). So go the remarks during the night class sessions. Prof. N. W. Storer explained today that he has 32 students, five of whom are men, in his beginning astronomy class, and is teaching an exclusive one-woman class in advanced astronomy this semester. seer The professor is contemplating some changes in the night class. some changes in the images. "Thirty-two persons can't look through one telescope at the same time successfully," he admitted. The other telescope is resting, unassembled, in a Lindley storeroom. Another dome will be erected "sometime" to house the big 'scope. head of the school's health service and president of the American Student Health association, took issue with Wahl's remarks as reported from Jefferson City. "I said he was a good doctor but not a good teacher." Wahl said, "That he doesn't shine very much with students as a teacher." with students It was understood Canuteson called Wahl to demand an understanding of just what had occurred. Wahl declined to issue any statement but was understood to have explained the "misquoted" remarks fully to the man he hired 16 years ago. As quoted in the Kansas City Times this morning, Dr. Wahl had criticised the University of Kansas program of education for doctors as "obsolete." He said this in speaking to the University of Missouri curators, who are considering the establishment of the last two years of the Missouri medical course in Kansas City, away from the University campus. Dr. Wahl told the Daily Kansan today he was "misquoted" and "mis-interpreted" in many of his remarks to the Missourians. He had been quoted as advising against the entrance into the K.U. medical school of the son of one Missouri senator. "I did advise against his entrance," the dean explained to the Daily Kansas, "but that discussion was done very jocularly. There are a lot of factors against this particular boy coming to our school—one important thing is that he is an out-of-state resident and Kansas residents are given preference when we consider students for entrance." Dean Wahl was quoted as saying students admitted to the Watkins Memorial hospital on the campus here never had been used as subjects for clinical teaching. He was quoted as saying this was because medical officials in charge of the hospital in Lawrence were not good teachers. "That clinical material could be used with the right man in charge," the dean was quoted as saying. Today, he stated he meant this only as a comment on the teaching ability of Dr. Canuteson and the other doctors on the hospital staff here. "I think the hospital on the campus there is second to none in the country in student health service," Dr. Wahl told the Kansan. Dr. Canuteson has been head of the University health service since 1929. A graduate of the Universities of Wisconsin and Minnesota, he is president of the American Student Health Association, one of the top national honors accorded medical men in his work. cal men in his work. He is also vice-president of the Kansas Tuberculosis and Health association, executive council member of the Mississippi Valley conference on Tuberculosis, member of the Kansas Medical society tuberculosis committee, a fellow in the American Medical association, a member of the American Public Health association, and a member of Alpha Omega Alpha, distinguished honorary medical fraternity. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS NOVEMBER 8.1945 Universitv DAILY KANSAN Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Association, National Editorial Association, and the Associated College Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave. New York City Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence school year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered the second class September 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS STAFF MARY TURKINGTON Managing Editor ELEANOR ALBERTY Asst. Managing Editor LOREN KING Telegraph Editor BRIGIDNEY ORDER News Editor MICHAEL MARGARET GAYNON. Social Media Editor PAT PENNEY Sports Editor BILLIE HAMILTON Feature Editor JANE ANDERSON Military Editor CLEO NORRIS Research Editor LEO NORRIS Asst. Sports Editor MARGARET WENSKI Ast. Sports Editor JOAN VEATCH Campus Editor EDITORIAL STAFF DICLORE SWELZMAN Editor-in-Chief FRANKLIN FEARING Editorial Associates BUSINESS STAFF NANCY TOMLISON Business Manager BETTY BEACH Advertising Manager Talking Business With some classes still not adequately equipped with text books in the second month of school, the board of regents is being asked to reconsider its former decisions against a student book store on the campus. The regents have always been careful to avoid placing the University in a position to compete with private book dealers. Whether they will consider the current inconvenience reason enough to abandon this policy is a matter to be decided. They are being asked to do so. The proposed store would operate in one of two ways. Either books and supplies would be sold to students at local prices and profits would be distributed back to students at the end of the year in proportion to their purchases, or books would be sold to begin with at as near cost as possible. Under the direction of Wendell Nickell and Helen Howe, co-chairmen of the investigating committee, the A.S.C. has found that most large schools have their own book services. The committee has obtained data on 20 schools in which student book stores are operated successfully. Two principal advantages are repeatedly apparent in the reports from these schools: 1) The student book store works closely and conscientiously with faculty members to supply all texts needed at the beginning of each term. 2) As a general average, the student book stores net a 10 per cent saving for students on all books and supplies. —M.M. If last-day visitors and souvenir hunters on the U.S.S. Missouri today left enough of the victory vessel intact, it will go to Brooklyn for repairs so that it can withstand future home-front attacks. Rock Chalk Talk Rock By MARILYN STEINERT Come and Get Me. Dick Weekk, Sigma Nu, got his draft notice the other day asking him to please come and take a physical at Ft. Leavenworth this week. Being a good fellow as he is, he went to the Dean's office to get permission to be excused on the day of his physical; however the Dean and he did not quite see eye to eye, and Dick does not have permission to leave. Excuse Please. Due to a typographical error on the sports page, the Hutchinson "rump" was supposed to read Hutchinson "trump". Maybe this will explain why George Gear's face has been so red lately. I Was Pushed! Through the underground it has been learned that Dan Gardner, SAE, took a moonlight swim in Potter Lake, Monday night. What's your trouble, Dan? Up and Down! Let this be a warning don't ever dance or do calisthenics in the top bunk of a dorm bed unless you are, literally speaking, contemplating a downfall. It seems Mary Ellen Small and Donna Mueller, Delta Gammas, were trying this idea out when suddenly, "Ker-plunk", the upper bunk fell OFFICIAL BULLETIN University of Kansas Thursday, Nov. 8 Notices must be typewritten and must be in Public Relations office, but will not later than 9:30 a.m. on day of publication. No phone messages can be used. The Bacteriology club will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Englishr room of the Union building. Bacteriology majors and anyone else interested are welcome. Members are asked to bring dues, fifty cents per semester. The Jayhawk veterans will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Frank Strong auditorium, third floor of Frank Strong building—F. C. Eberhardt, president. Snow Zoology club will meet at 8:30 tonight in room 206 of Snow hall. Dr. Hobart Smith will speak on "Adaptations of the Poisonous Snakes." — Muriel Stember, president. Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, will meet at 6:45 tonight in the Pine room of the Union building. Sidney North, national secretary, will be present. All members are asked to attend.-R. W. Brown. University Christian Science organization will meet at 8 tonight in the Fine room of the Union building.—Jayne Johns, treasurer. There will be a meeting of Quack club at 7 tonight in Robinson gymnasium. Pledging services will be held. All members please be present. through and, mat the occupant of the lower, Pat Walsh, Delta Gamma. None of the girls was injured, but Pat hasn't felt the same since. Surprise! Veteran Harry McClure was forced to take a room in the city because the Phi Delt house was full; however, since he claims the Phi Delt house as his home he wanted to get a little storage space there. WINNER OF 10 WORLD'S FAIR GRAND PRIZES, 28 GOLD MEDALS AND MORE HONORS FOR ACCURACY THAN ANY OTHER TIMEPIECE Longines THE MOST HONGRED WATCH ON THE CAMPUS When Carl Clark and Harold Baker, brothers of Harry, strolled into their room last night they could have laid you 2-1 that it was a pawn shop—not home. Pre-Nursing club will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Watkins hospital nurses home. Jovial Harry had written home for his drums of which he has millions, and without telling a soul he placed all of the drums in every corner, closet, and empty space in Carl's and Harold's abode. While Harry enjoys a nice room in the city, Carl and Harold are singing, "On the Outside Looking In." Johnny on the Spot. During physics class the other day, the professor asked veteran Ralph Hedges, DTD, how he would find the wind speed if he were a pilot in a bomber. "I would find it by asking the navig..." "I would find it by asking the navigator," was the snappy comeback. Home Economics Club initiation and meeting from 7 to 8 tonight in room 110, Fraser. Any girl is eligible who has had one course in home economics in this university or any other.-Eleanor Brown, president. *** Psychological—9 a.m. Antitide—2 p.m. Students who missed any previous entrance examinations may make them up Saturday in Hoch auditorium. A. H. Turney, examiner. There will be a Y.M.-Y.W.C.A.- sponsored coffee hour at Henley house at 3:30 p.m. toromorrow, Myra Williamson, youth secretary for the Kansas Institute of International Relations, will be the guest speaker. All students are invited—Rosalie Erwin, president. The Y.W.C.A. will hold its Candlelight Recognition service at 7 p.m. tonight at the Trinity Lutheran church. This service is for all members and is designed especially to welcome new members. — Rosalie Erwin, president. Hibbard Investigates Mammoth Skull Dr. Claude W. Hibbard, curator of vertebrate paleontology at the museum of Natural History is directing the exacavation of a Columbian mammoth skull, on a farm near Holton, Kan. Estimating the age of the three-foot skull at between 10,000 and 500,000 years, Dr. Hibbard said it was deposited during an interglacial period. He hopes to recover the skull intact. WANT ADS NOTICE—Will the person who has the picture and receipts from my billfold, please send them to me? Vera Hodges, 1245 La. FOR SALE—Model A 1930 Ford 1200 Ohio. HELP WANTED—Two K.U. boys for sales work, 3 hours per evening. Call 1918 M between 5 to 6 p.m. FOR RENT—Rooms for boys at 413 W. 14th St. Also one front double room with twin beds at 1140 La. LOST—A small red leather purse in Library Tuesday, containing red billfold. Please return billfold and papers to Kansan office. Reward. LOST—Red billfold. Contents important to owner. Finder please call Jack Logan, 898. Reward. LOST—Sterling silver identification bracelet somewhere on the campus Friday. Name engraved on front John G. Keyzens. Reward. Please call Betty Anne Pratt 860. LOST—A pair of glasses in the Library, plastic-rimmed, in leather case with name and address inside. Call Betty Stone, 1702 Mass., phone 1419R. LOST—Green billfold with initials M.B.S. Lost last Saturday between the Chi Omega house and the Union Pacific railroad station. Liberal reward. Call Marilyn Steinert, 731. LOST—A pair of pink plastic round rimmed glasses in a brown leather case. Finder please call Peggy Howard 267. LOST-Blue make-up kit with compact and Benrus watch inside last week. Please return to Daily Kansan Office. Reward! NOTICE-An excellent room and board job. For two men students. See the University Employment Office 228 Frank Strong. Call KU 25 with your news. HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Garage and Cab Co. 922 Mass. Phone 12 FOR THAT COKE DATE Remember ELDRIDGE PHARMACY Phone 999 701 Mass. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. Phone 425 Gustafson the "COLLEGE JEWELER" 911 Mass. St. Students' Jewelry Store 41 Years "..he loves me!" Drink Coca-Cola BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY KANSAS CITY COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. 2540 West Pennway - Kansas City, Mo. NOVE Drink Coca-Cola SEULA PETROLE 156 R O.U.'s me guests pledge day n Bet Clure a Garventi souri. D.G.? A. D Geo lecte Caldv Portu to a the U Del meml dance The had for I Sigm Sig Tedg Texa En Okla Sund Robe Glen Kapp Kat womens of I we men quelh --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE NOVEMBER 8,1945 100 SOCIALLY SPEAKING Margaret Gaynor, Society Editor Members of Delta Upson were guests of the Gamma Phi Beta pledge class at an hour dance Tuesday night. D. U.'s Are Guests Betty Jo O'Neal, Mary Ann McClure, and Elaine Falconer attended Gamma Phi Beta weekend convention at the University of Missouri. Caldwell Heads Co-op George Caldwell is the newly elected president of Jayhawk Co-op. Caldwell, Carroll McCue and Jose Portuguez were chosen as delegates to a regional co-op conference at the University of Missouri. D. G.'s Give Hour Dance Delta Gamma pledges entertained members of Sigma Nu at an hour dance Tuesday night. A. D. Pi Pledges Entertain The Alpha Delta Pi pledge class had an hour dance Tuesday night for Delta Tau Delta pledges. Sigma Nu Has New Pledge Sigma Nu has announced the edging of Robert Coleman, Alpine, Texas. Ens. John Shackleford, Walters, Okla., visited the chapter house Sunday. Guests Monday night were Robert Miller, Oakland, Calif.; and Glenn St. Aubyn, Russell. Kappa Phi Pledges 13 Kappa Pm Pferges 15 Kappa Phi, Methodist sorority for women, has announced the pledging of Edna Carothers, Peggy Carry,amor Rotert, Janice Oehrie,Mariel Ploeger, Marion Bundy, Jacqueline Seddon, Jacquela Shaw, Foods III Class Serves Luncheon in Fraser The Home Economics Foods III class, supervised by Prof. Edna A. Hill, is now serving luncheon in the department's dining room to students, faculty members, and all University personnel. The meal is served for 50 cents a plate, at 12:30 p.m. and the next scheduled date for this week is Thursday. Reservations maybe made at KU. 22 or room 104 Fraser hall. This series of luncheons gives the students experience in buying, preparing, and serving the food and fulfills part of laboratory requirements for the course. Betty List, Margaret Hanchett, Betty Sneary, Opal Lee Von Achen, and Joan Young. The pledges will entertain active members at a party at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at the First Methodist church. Ginther—Winters Wed Miss Nola Ginther, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward E. Ginther, Atwood, and Jack V. Winters, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Winters, Ventura, Calif., were married in a double ring ceremony Oct. 13 at the First Methodist church in Ventura. *** The bride attended the University last year. She was a junior in the College. Mr. Winters was recently discharged from the army after serving three years in Australia and New Guinea. - * * Sleepy Hollow Has Guests Sunday dinner guests at Sleepy Hollow were Pfc. Calvin Cooley, Great Lakes; and Sgt. Stroh-meyer, Leavenworth, Barbara McCommas, El Dorado; Phyllis Hope, Topeka; and Barbara Hargis, Kansas City, Mo., were weekend guests. Miss Elizabeth Newcomb, Altamont was a guest Saturday night. Three new "finds" for Kansas or for particular localities of the state now supplement the research collection of the museum of natural history, Dr. E. R. Hall, museum director, has announced. 'Finds' Added To Dyche Collection Now Ready . . . George Rinker, former University student now in the air corps has contributed to the museum the first three-teed terrapin found west of the eastern tier of counties in Kansas. Now Ready... FRESHMAN CAPS and KU-KU EMBLEMS CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Dr. Hobart Smith, Dr. Claude Hibbard, and Everett Jamison recently captured in Cherokee county the first cave salamanders in Kansas. The cave salamander is prevalent in Missouri, Oklahoma, and Arkansas, but had not previously been found in this state. Dr. Donald F. Hoffmeister and Walter W. Dalquest recently found the first cotton rats ever observed north of the Kaw river. The northward advance of the rodent has been of national scientific interest, since it is destructive to wheat and corn, Dr. Hall said. CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES In addition to these "firsts" the museum has received a number of other contributions. Among them have been the largest bobcat on record, trapped in Nevada and presented by J. R. Alcorn, and two small animal skeletons from Mt. McKinley, Alaska, gifts of Dr. Adolph Murie. Come In for a CHECK-UP Before OLD MAN WINTER Catches You Napping Jones Pledges Alpha Chi Morgan-Mack Motor Co. 609 MASS. PHONE 277 Alpha Chi Omega has announced the pledging of Norma Lea Jones, McPherson. --- A Man from Kansas The Story of William Allen White By DAVID HINSHAW Just Published — $3.00 The Book Nook Opposite Granada Tel. 666 E. B. Stoluffer, dean of the Graduate school and chairman of the mathematics committee, attended the mathematics round table, part of the Kansas State Teachers' association meeting in Topeca, Friday. Among the University alumni present at the meeting were Martha Lou Cable, Ruth Herndon, and Bertha Cummins, graduates now teaching in Kansas schools. The average annual rainfall in southeast Kansas is 40 inches. Benkelman Was Co-Editor Of Prize-Winning Newspaper Bonnie Benkelman, Fine Arts freshman, was notified today that the St. Francis Community High school newspaper, on which she was co-editor, has been awarded All-American rating by the National Scholastic Press association for the ninth time. The paper, the Cheyenne Indian News, also has been notified by Quill and Scroll, Northwestern university, that it will receive the International Honor Award, highest ranking prize in high school newspaper work. PENNEY'S Compactness and Durability! Hangaway Garment Hanger $198 Here's the solution to your close t problems! Easy to fasten on to your closet door. It can be used extended, as a regular rack, then folded into a compact space-saving unit. Holds 10 regular hangers. LUCITE PICTURE FRAMES Size 8"x10" - - - - - - 1.49 BOUDOIR CHESTS - - - - 4.98 MAGAZINE RACKS - - - - 2.61 INTHE No Previous Singing Experience Necessary SING! K. U. Mens Glee Club Wednesday, November 7 LAST TIME FOR TRYOUTS Saturday, November 10 4:30 p.m. 10:00 a.m. ROOM 132, FRANK STRONG PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 8,194 A IN THE HUDDLE with PAT PENNEY Other transfers on deck include George Koulouskis, 26-year-old end from Kansas City; Ed Schuck, 175-pound tailback from Marysville; Ralph Gering, second-string right halfback from Purdue; Morton Gerenail, second-string tackle from Washburn; Frank Lyons, tackle transfer from Washburn; Bill Schneider, St. Louis fullback; and Harry Hoffman, third-string guard from Case. Ten new V-12 reinforceers from four schools will give the Jayhawkers the heaviest manpower load of the season when they face the Marquette Avalanche at Milwaukee Saturday. Leo Viccelli, 180-pounder from Marysville Teachers college, is the prize among the new arrivals. Other new hands who will see action at Milwaukee are Walter Garrison, 183-pound tackle, a regular from Washburn, and Syd Bennett, six-foot, four-inch, 180-pound end from Marysville Teachers. Although none of the new gang will perform at Marquette, they will definitely add a reinforcing block for the Jayhawkers' final two stints against K-State and Missouri U. MASSACRE MARQUETTE Meet your team. Another Oklahoma Sooner who places the Jayhawkers at the top is Bill Morrow. 19-year-old back from Blackwell, Okla, Bill, who transferred from Kansas State Teachers college at Pittsburgh in July, is playing his first season of football for K.U. At Pittsburg, he was a forward starter in basketball and 1 Wm. D. Morrov earned the letterman's card. Bill was graduated from Tulsa Central High school, where he played both basketball and baseball three years. He captained and lettered in both these sports during his senior year. During the summer months, he played on organized city baseball leagues for four years. Bill has been in the Navy V-12 program since July, 1944, and is majoring in math in the College. "Chubby" spreads 185 pounds and stretches to the 5-foot, 10-inch mark. Food preference goes to angel food cake without a second thought. British Lexicographer Praises Burnham He is a member of the Sigma Tau Gamma fraternity. Josephine Burnham, professor emeritus of the English department, was highly complimented in a recently published volume, Essays and Studies by Members of the English Association, in which Sir William Craigie, British lexicographer, said that Professor Burnham was "one of the few American scholars" who gave him real help in the compilation of the American supplement to the Oxford Dictionary. Latimer To Speak Professor Burnham aided Sir William in his research over a period of six years. The American supplement is a standard work on the history of the development of American English. Dr. H. B. Latimer, anatomy professor, will speak at the Prenursing club meeting at the nurses home at 7:30 tonight, according to Sarah Seothorn, program chairman. Phi Delts Lead In Intramural Touch Football Intramural touch football resumed this week on the lower intramural fields after a two-week vacation. The league-leading Phi Delta swept over a strong Sig Al team to the tune of 12-0, and Sigma Nu started off their first game of the season by walking over Carruth Hall, 24-0. In Division II, the strong Sigma Chi's beat a weaker Pi K.A. team by a 42-0 score. Kappa Sigma scored their first win of the season by up-setting the Delta, 6-2. A game Kappa Alpha Psi squad bowed to a heavier V-12 team by a 24-6 margin. Game Closed Play The best game Tuesday was played in Division I between the Sig Alphs and the Phi Delta. Strengthened by new members recently, the SAE team was out to stop the championship-minded Phi Delta. In the latter part of the second quarter, McShane threw a bullet pass to Baker, who skirted deep into SAE territory and just reached the goal line. The play was registered as a Phi Delt touchdown, though the decision was contested. The Sig Alphs drove deep into Phi Delt home ground, but were stopped by the able Phi Delt pass defense. Through another quarter, the pigskin was pushed back and forth across the 50-yard stripe. Johnny McShane, the sparkplug of the Phi Delt team, skirted around end and made a spectacular run to cross the goal line for the final score of the game in the last quarter. Unset in Division H The hotly fought upset by the Kappa Sigs over the Delta Tau Delta team was the highlight of the Division II games. Bill Haskell, Delt, scored a touchback for the Delts early in the third quarter after catching a Kappa Sig behind his own goal line. The Kappa Sigs came through with a touchdown in the last minutes of the fourth quarter to climax YW To Have Service For New Members The annual W.Y.W.C.A. candle-light recognition service for new members will be held at 7 tonight at the Trinity Lutheran church. Emalouise Britton is in charge of the service and Ruth Brown, Jeanne Blanchard, Mary Breed, Mariette Bennett, and Dixie Gilliland will assist her. the game with a 6-2 score favoring the Kappa Sigs. The scheduled game between Phi Kappa Psi and Battenfeld hall was cancelled. At the halfway mark, intramural football team standings are as follows: Division I Vision I Won Los Phi Delt ... 2 0 Phi Psi ... 1 0 Sigma Nu ... 1 0 Beta ... 2 1 D.U. ... 1 2 S.A.E. ... 1 2 Battenfeld ... 1 1 Carruth ... 0 3 Division II Phi Gam ... 3 0 V-12 ... 3 0 Sigma Chi ... 2 1 T.K.E. ... 1 1 Kappa Sig ... 1 1 Delts ... 0 2 Pi K.A. ... 0 2 K.A. Psi ... 0 3 Heirloom Sterling FROM GENERATION TO GENERATION Roberts Jewelry and Gifts Do You Know Wiley? B Sure, he's the lubrication man the best in the business! You'll find him at FRITZ Co. EIGHTH and NEW HAMPSHIRE -Let him lubricate your car and change that old oil to CITIES SERVICE KOOLMOTOR Phone 4 TIRE and BATTERY SERVICE Stadium Lights To Be Installed Plans are being made for the installation of an extensive lighting system in Memorial stadium, Ernest C. Quigley, director of athletics, announced today. Engineers are meeting to discuss the means of installing the lighting system. VARSITY TODAY ENDS THURSDAY Here's the Year's SUSPENSE SENSATION! Will he kiss or will he will Will he kiss or will he kill NUMPHREY Bogart SYDNEY FATMAN ALEXIS SMITH • GREENSTREET WARNERS' Conflict FRIDAY and SATURDAY JOHNNY MACK BROWN "LOST TRAIL" and RICHARD POWERS "Dangerous Intruder" Call KU 25 with your news. at the Jayhawker ALL WEEK NOW BREAKING ANOTHER ATTENDANCE RECORD IT'S ALL IN FUN! HEDY ROBERT LAMARR · WALKER JUNE ALLYSON IN M-G-M's "Her Highness and the Bellboy" THE MIGHTIEST OF ALL SEA PICTURES! in Gloria TECHNICAL! THE SPANISH MAIN PAUL MAURÉEN WALTER HENREID • O'HARA • SLEZA! ROMANCE AS YOU DREAM IT! ADVENTURE AS YOU LIKE IT! NOW SUNDAY ENDS SATURDAY GRANADA 2—TOP SHOCK-SENSATION HITS—2 Double Shriek & Shudder We Double-Dare You to See This IN MIDNIGHT'S MURKY SHADOWS HE STALKED HIS TRUSTING PREY! The Brighton Strangler JOHN INDER JANE DUPRYM MICHEL SY. ANGEL Directed by MAY WILSON Produced by NEMAN SCHULZ DARING SHUDDER SHOCK SENSATION! Barns KARLOFF THE BODY SNATCHER In Rohrt Louis Stevenson's and BELA LUGOSI ALSO LATEST NEWS SAT. OWL SHOW, 11:45 and SUNDAY ALL WEEK AHEAD OF LOEW'S MIDLAND, KANSAS CITY The Grandest Loaf and Love Comedy Surprise Since "IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT" B W Ho der 194 tion in. Filmed from Broadway's stage hit! COLUMBIA PICTURES presents KISS AND TELL A GEORGE ABBOTT PRODUCTION Play and Screnglay, by F. HUGH HERBERT starring SHIRLEY TEMPLE as CORLISS ARCHER with JEROME COURTLAND - WALTER ABE - ROBERT BENCHLEE FORMER BAIL - TOM TULLY University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Friday, November 9, 1945 43rd Year No. 34 Lawrence Kansas 194 News of the World Nation Gets 6 Billion Tax Cut for 1946 Washington. (UP) - The White House announced today that President Truman last night signed the 1946 income tax bill, giving the nation a $5,920,000,000 tax cut, the first in 16 years. The new measure becomes effective Jan. 1 and is not retroactive. Frankfurt. (UP)—Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower is leaving for the United States today or tomorrow, weather permitting, to appear before congressional committees, his headquarters announced today. Washington. (UP)—A state department spokesman today branded as "spurious and untrue" a report by a Chinese Nationalist newspaper that all 3,000 American planes in the Chinese theater will be transferred to the Chinese Nationalist government. Arm World Air Force With Atomic Bomb, Stassen Asks New York. (UP) — Former Gov. Harold E. Stassen of Minnesota proposes that world order be kept by a United Nations air force of five bomber squadrons based around the world and equipped with five atomic bombs to each squadron. Under his plan, the United States would manufacture the 25 bombs and then stop production. Manufacture of atomic bombs would then be a crime under amended United Nations law, but atomic research would be permitted by any scientist registered with the world organization. Washington. (UP) The White House emphasized today that the discussion Sunday between President Truman, Prime Minister Clement Attlee and Prime Minister W. L. MacKenzie King will deal "entirely with policy," and not with technical detail of atomic energy controls. Washington. (UP)—Gen. James H. Doolittle disclosed today that army air forces want a postway fleet of 5,000 combat planes ready for instant use, 400,000 officers and men plus an air national guard "as large as the states can stand." Stalin Still "Resting" Moscow Source Says London. (UP)—A Moscow dispatch to the London Daily Express said today that Premier Stalin still was vacationing at Sochi in the Caucasus. The dispatch gave no clue, however, as to the reason Stalin stayed away yesterday from Moscow's formal celebration of the anniversary of the Red revolution for the first time in many years. Washington. (UF)—The labor-management conference today successfully negotiated collective bargaining shanks which wrecked a similar parley after World War I. London. (UP)—Romanian police fired on crowds demonstrating in front of King Michael's palace in celebration of his 24th birthday yesterday, a dispatch from Bucharest said today. The police charged the crowd beat demonstrators with sticks, and tore up portraits of Michael with the answering shout: long live the Groza government! Chinese Reds Ask Home Rule Chungking. (UP)—A mass meeting at Yenan, Chinese Communist capital, demanded "full autonomy" for Communist land areas and charged that Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek's government is preparing to use American pursuit planes in China's undeclared civil war, the newspaper New China Daily said today. The Communist radio at Yenan appealed to President Trump today to halt America's "armed intervention" in the Chinese civil war and withdraw all forces from China. The appeal came as Lt. Gen. Albert C. Wedemeyer, American commander in China, instructed Marine Maj. Gen. Keller C. Rockey to investigate Communist charges that Marines were fighting with the Nationalist army against Communist troops in North China. A Communist front dispatch from that area said Nationalists' fifth division began a powerful attack on Shanhaikwan on the Communist-fortified Manchurian border last Sunday. Fighting still is raging, the dispatch said. More than 2,000 U.S. Marines are stationed at Chinwangtao, North China port only nine miles south of Shanhaikwan, which guards the main pass through the Great Wall of China into Manchuria. The official Nationalist Central News agency said representatives of Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek and the Communist government at Yenan have resumed peace talks after a six-day interruption. To Complete Chapel By Christmas, Bayles Predicts Danforth chapel will be completed by Christmas, C. G. Bayles, building and grounds superintendent, said today. The chapel will have a red tile roof, with false rafters showing inside. The cement floor has been laid and a tile floor will be assembled soon. Indirect lighting has been planned, and electrical service, heating, and water lines have been completed. Miss May Woick, Minneapolis, Minn., has been hired as a secretary for the R.O.T.C. unit here, Capt. John D. Bradley, R.O.T.C. commanding officer, announced today. ncer, announced today, Miss Wojik is a sister of Tech. Sgt. Mitchell C. Wojik, who has been on duty with the R.O.T.C. at the University since April, 1944. Of the 513 freshmen and sophomores with an unsatisfactory grade in the first four weeks, 435 have seen their advisers, Gilbert Ulmer, assistant dean of the College, announced special conferences will be arranged this weekend for those who have not come in. May Wojcik To Be ROTC Secretary Some Students to See Advisers This Weekend have not come in that Advisers found that an inventory of the way the student spends his time seemed helpful in many cases. Adjustments in schedules and more effective studying methods were suggested for some students. 'Tommie' Thompson Is an ASC Member With Varied Interests 1947 Helen Lois Thompson, better known as "Tomiek," is a College representative to the All-Student Council and is on Council committees for traditions, elections, committees, and the University calendar. TOMMIE THOMPSON This 21-year-old College junior from McPherson is majoring in sociology. She likes to paint, to sketch, to write, and do camp council work during the summer. She also likes tennis, swimming, hiking, and "trying to ice skate." ing to ice skate. She taught country school for a year and "had more fun coaching the boy's basketball team." boy's basketball "Tomnie" is president of Miller hall and of the Independents Organization, a member of I.S.A. council, Y.W.C.A. A Cappella choir, W.E.C. secretary, and a choir for the department of political science. Dorms Plan Dinners Dormitories will hold monthly exchange dinners during the rest of the school year, June Peterson, president of the Inter-Dorm council, announced today. nounced to the crowd. At a meeting this week, the council also made plans for future coke parties. Union Building Plans Favor South Wing Plans should be confined to developing a south wing of the Memorial Union building, the Union Operating committee concluded in a meeting last night. Space for bowling alleys, an air conditioning system, and an enlarged ballroom will be given first consideration. planned today Original plans for addition on the north had to be abandoned because they did not allow ballroom space, and this creates the problem of allowing for the service drive on the south, he added. Since state law limits the permitted debt to $300,000, it may not be possible to provide office space for all organizations who request it, Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, explained today. Committee members at the meeting were Karl Klooz, bursar; Miss Hermina Zipple, director of food service; Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the Alumni association; Leslie L. Waters, associate professor of economics, Ogden Jones member of the Alumni association; Dean Werner; Mary Jo Cox, Eugenia Hepworth, Helen Howe, and Billie Hamilton All Student Council representatives. Gridders in Milwaukee To Battle Marquette The Jayhawkers final non-conference fray of the season will be played with Marquette at Milwaukee tomorrow at 2 p.m. Although outweighed 14 pounds in the line, the Jayhawkers will present a tougher and better fortified front than at any time during the season. Kansas will line up without a single major injury this week. Scout Wayne Replogle returned from Milwaukee with the warning that Kansas will be forced to play its best game of the season even to come close to halting the powerful Milwaukee brigade. Eight Houses Win Skit Contest Eight skits, chosen last night from those submitted by 20 organized houses, will be presented during Homecoming festivities, Eugenia Hepworth, Homecoming committee chairman, announced today. Battenfeld hall, Chi Omega, and Delta Gamma will give their skits at the South Park. May after the Nightshirt parade, Nov. 16. The breakout dance at the Union, from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Nov. 17 will have acts by Alpha Omicron Pi, Phi Delta Theta, and Pi Beta Phi. At the Homecoming varsity intermission, skits will be presented by Kappa Kappa Gamma and Gammi Phi Beta. Three Are Added To Fine Arts Staff Three instructors have been added to the music department staff, D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts, announced today. The new teachers will assist with the unusually heavy private lesson schedule. Mrs. Beulah Chiapusso, wife of Jan Chiapusso, professor of piano, will teach voice. Mrs. Winifred Hill Gallup, '41, will teach piano. Leo Horacek, '41, has been added to the trumpet staff. Mr. Horacek, recently a fighter pilot in the naval air corps, is studying for a graduate degree. WEATHER Kansas: Fair tonight and Saturday. Somewhat warmer Saturday. Lowest temperatures tonight 20-30. $15 Pay Raises Proposed for 400 K.U. Vets A pay raise for about 400 veterans attending the University was an apparently good bet today. Among the bill's important proposals are these: The proposed raise arises from a bill passed by the U.S. senate to liberalize the loan and education provisions of the G.I.Bill of Rights. The measure has been sent to a conference with the House of Representatives, the United Press reported. possibility. The measure removes the 25-year age limit on education, and provides that any veteran may get college or vocational training under the G.I. bill. It also removes the requirement that the veteran must show that his education was interrupted by military service. military service. The pay a veteran would receive while attending school would be raised to $65 a month for a single man, and $90 a month for a veteran with dependents. Present rates are $50 and $75. It also extends to 35 years the present 20-year limit on loans for farms and businesses. The bill repeals a requirement in the present law that educational grants will be deducted from any future bonus. Dr. Leonard Axe, director of the University's veterans bureau, estimated today that at least 400 of the 470 veterans registered this semester terw would be affected by the proposed change. He predicted a sharp rise in veteran enrollment if the more advantageous provisions of this new bill are passed. Marjorie Free has been elected to Mortar Board, senior women's honor society, Eugenia Hepworth, president, announced today. A senior in the College, Miss Free is president of the Women's Athletic association, is a member of the Y.W.C.A. cabinet, and of Quack club. Last year she served on the All-Student Council, the Statewide Activities board, and Union activities. A member of Kappa Kappa Gamma, she is from Wichita. Marjorie Free Elected To Mortar Board Water, Water Everywhere, But Not Much In the Right Direction Water sprayed generously and students ducked in front of Frank Strong hall, as Chancellor Deane W. Malott and Dean Paul B. Lawson, of the College, fulfilled their obligation to wash a car, yesterday. The services of the two administrators were purchased by Alpha Omicron Pi for $65 at the recent W.S.S.F. auction. The chancellor and the dean denned bright plaid shirts and blue jeans for their work and succeeded in getting each other as wet as the ear. Students who heckled the industrious and illustrious pair were answered with sprays of water and appropriate comments. This car hasn't been washed for The mud-splattered automobile soon began to take on a brighter color and the chancellor observed that it must be blue. months," the chancellor wailed, "and the ash trays haven't been emptied since before the World's Fair." Water dripped from the brim of Dean Lawson's hat, and he shed his glasses for lack of windshield wipers and want of better visibility. the anthurium "I can't get this spot off," the chancellor groomed once, to which Dean Lawson replied grinningly, "Try a knife." Try a knife. "No, no, no!" the pair cried, when a passing student suggested they wax the car. "I'll be glad to simonize it," the chancellor reconsidered, "—for $300." UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE TWO NOVEMBER 9,1945 University DAILY KANSAN Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Association, National Editorial Association, and the by the National Advertising Represented 420 Madison Avenue, New York City. Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Law and Liberty, May 19, 1879. School year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS STAFF MARY TURKINGTON Managing Editor ELEANOR ALRIGHT Asst. Managing Editor LOREN KING Telegraph editor VIRGINIA VAN ORDER News editor MARRY MARTY GAYNOR Sports editor PAT PENNEX Sports editor BILLIE HAMILTON Features editor JANE ANDERSON Military editor CLEO NORIS Research editor MARGARET WENSKI Assistant Sports editor JOAN VEATCH Campus editor EDITORIAL STAFF DOLORES SULZMAN MARY MORRILL FRANKLIN Fearing ORVILLE ROETERS Editorial Associates ... Editor-in-Chief BUSINESS STAFF BUSINESS NANCY TOMLINSON BETTY BEACH ... Business Manager Advertising Manager There has been evident for some time a need for the encouragement of debate, discussion, and the various phases of speech activity, outside of the classroom, where the more purposeful students can get together, match wits, and tackle the problems of the day. Looking Ahead K. U. has to her credit a long and enviable record of forensic accomplishments in the inter-collegiate competitive field. But now that the war is over, aims and objectives have been re-appraised and the attempt is being made to bring essentially non-competitive extra-curricular speech to the front. To do this, there is being formed a Forensic League, designed to do for the department of speech and drama what the extension division does for the whole university. To be composed of a select number of students interested in speech activity, it will promote and help manage all inter-collegiate forensic undertakings and local contests and organize bureaus and teams within the league for civic and community drives and student welfare projects on the campus. This league, under the direction of the department of speech and drama, designed as the peace-time counterpart of the Victory speaking project, is a sound step in the University's "reconversion" program—O.R. Under the present parking system not all cars receiving red tags are subject to fine. Certainly not all of the drivers violating parking regulations are University students. Students Pay Fines If the violator doesn't bring his ticket to the office to pay the fine, he goes undetected and unfined until the office checks the license number given on the stub with the state license office to get his name. If the ticket holder is a student, the fine is recorded against him along with other fees and fines which must be paid before he is given credit for the semester's work. Faculty members are expected to obey University parking rules; visitors are not. Both are exempt from All-Student council parking fines. The campus patrolman has no way of knowing if a violator is student, faculty, or visitor. All of them get tickets, and all ticket stubs are turned in to the business office. Wyoming has not had a four-mill levy on real property taxation, the maximum under the law, since early 1830. Present rate is two mills on the dollar. Rock Chalk Talk By Geo. Cakdwell and Gracie Piros Rock It happens every time. Helen Rhoda Hoopes, professor of English, was hurrying down the street trying to get to the corner bus stop ahead of the bus. Fred, K.U. line driver, sopped the bus in the middle of the block, picked the lady up, and greeted her with, "I guess even college profs aren't above being 'picks-ups' now and then." And then the familiar Hoopes come-back: "You'd better not say that so loudly, young man. Someone's sure to put it in the paper." Fassing Glances—Frank Stalzer, Battenfeld, at an hour dance, shouting into a phone, "Okay. Mom, I'll be right home."—Frank Curry, also a Bat-boy, organizing a L.M.O.C for insignificant men—Nearly all the girls in Jolliffe hall putting the finishing touches on their daily dozen before hitting the hay—Visiting b.f. from Denver greeted at Harman co-op by co-ops freshly painted for a Halloween party. "Doc" Wheeler says—in golf don't keep your eye on the ball. At least when he was playing once he missed the ball seven times. He got set for the eighth. In position, his eye was taken by a leaf floating by. He hit the ball. Hold That Line!- A K.U. forward wall—KU Kus Ascraft, Nemec, Reinking, Hollis, Saell, Nichols, & Co., put up a goal-line defense against a throng of Nebraskans who were attempting to stage a pep rally in the Nebraska Union building last weekend. Blocking the entrance, the sturdy Jayhawkers didn't let their foes in until they paid tribute by rendering K.U.'s Alma Mammy. Dual Delivery—Beverly Good, fine arts junior, busy in her kitchen at Miller, was singing a tender German ballad. Suddenly the next phrase came from the store room, a la baritone voice. She sang. He sang. She sang. They sang. After the recital she found that the other half of the duet was rendered by grocer's delivery man. Doc in the crowd. When a physics class discovered, by means of a differential thermometer, that the professor had cold hands, one student remarked, "Cold hands, warm heart." Another muttered, "Warm heart nothing—poor circulation." Say It With Music—Foster girls were discussed the news cars they HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. OFFICIAL BULLETIN Noticees must be typewritten and must be in Public Relations office, 222A, Frank Strong, not later than May 31, 2014. No phone messages accepted. The University Housemothers association will meet at 2 p.m. Monday at Myers hall.-Carlotta S. Nellis, secretary. University of Kansas Friday, Nov. 9 Students who missed any previous entrance examinations may make them up on Saturday in Hoch auditorium. Psychological—9 a.m. Aptitude—2 p.m. Carruth hall invites any organized house to form a chess team of three to six players to play in a tournament between the two houses. Phone 164 and ask for John Earnest or Andress Kernick to make arrangements for the meet—Robert Tucker, president. Garage and Cab Co. -A. H. Turney. 922 Mass. Phone 12 would like to own—they would get 50 miles per gallon, have big comfortable seats, new rubber tires, and all at convenient prices. Taking her cue out of the hit parade, a Foster haller said, "Till buy that dream." WANT ADS NOTICE--Will the person who has the picture and receipts from my billfold, please send them to me? Vera Hodges, 1245 La. HELP WANTED—Two K.U. boys for sales work, 3 hours per evening. Call 1918 M between 5 to 6 p.m. FOR RENT—Rooms for boys at 413 W. 14th St. Also one front double room with twin beds at 1140 La. FOR SALE—Model A 1930 Ford, 1200 Ohio. LOST—A pair of glasses in the Library, plastic-rimmed, in leather case with name and address inside. Call Betty Stone, 1702 Mass., phone 1419R. LOST—Green billfold with initials M.B.S. Lost last Saturday between the Chi Omega house and the Union Pacific railroad station. Liberal reward. Call Marilyn Steinert, 731. LOST—A pair of pink plastic round rimmed glasses in a brown leather case. Finder please call Peggy Howard 267. LOST—Blue make-up kit with compact and Benrus watch inside last week. Please return to Daily Kansan Office. Reward! NOTICE—An excellent room and board job. For two men students. See the University Employment Office 228 Frank Strong. LOST—Small brown change purse contains $5 bill and some small change, Wednesday between 1101 Mississippi and Henley House, 4:30 p. m. Please call J. M. Peavy at 1043. LOST—Silver identification bracelet Wednesday the 7th with "Katheryn" inscribed on front and "Eugene" on the back. Like to have because it was a gift. Call Katherine Ward 860. Fine Diamonds Latest Styles Roberts Jewelry and Gifts 45 OUR FOOD HITS THE SPOT! You will like our STEAKS and DELICIOUS LUNCHES BILL'S GRILL William Pappas 1109 Mass. Across from the Courthouse... LOST — Brown leather jacket, marked Jim-T. Finder please call Jim Thompson—284. FOR RENT—Good Garage —at northeast edge of campus call 1454M. LOST—Red billfold. Contents important to owner. Finder please call Jackie Logan, 898. Reward. LOST—A small red leather purse in Library Tuesday, containing red billfold. Please return billfold and papers to Kansan office. Reward. LOST—A brown leather jacket on Football fields behind Robinson Gym. Thursday afternoon. Please call 503 or return to 1127 Ohio. Reward. LOST—Blue Eversharp pen Thursday. Finder please call 1789-J or leave it at the Kansan office. ANNOUNCEMENT — Opening of "Harry's House" for men. Double rooms (maybe single) plus full run of rest of house. $15. Drop by Friday or Saturday 1800 to 1900 or Sunday afternoon. 838 Illinois. LOST — Brown striped Shaeffer's Lifetime pen between Frank Strong and Shack. Call Bobie Ford, 898. WANTED—Experienced presser full or part time at once. Apply at the New York Cleaners 926 Mass., or phone 75. 1234567890 VALUE PLUS in these smart FALL OXFORDS The Value is important, of course, but the Style is equally important. Style and Value are combined along with comfort to give you an all-around satisfactory Shoe. See them. $595 By PORTAGE THE PORTA-PED $695 Gibbs Clothing Co. 811 MASS. ST. STUDENTS!! PHONOGRAPH PLAYERS ARE IN STOCK NOW! Quantity Limited So Get Yours NOW! New 5-tube superhetrodyne radios are also in. These are splendid radios with Beam power output and equals 7-tube operation in other sets. Complete Stock of Fresh Portable Radio Batteries. We have new tubes for your radio. We can give you speedy service on all your radio repair work. Thanks for your business. Phone 138. ED BOWMAN BOWMAN RADIO SHOP,944 Mass. St., and F.M.TELECTRAD SHOP,900 Mass. St. - UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 9,1945 PAGE THREE © 2015 SOCIALLY SPEAKING iMary Margaret Gaynor, Society Editor Beck-Hann Engaged Sigma Kappa has announced the engagement of Marilyn Beck, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Guy M. Beck, Kansas City, Mo., to Ens. G. Charles Hann, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Hann, Overland Park. The announcement was made and chocolates were passed at dinner Wednesday night at the Sigma Kappa chapter house. Miss Beck received an orchid corsage. Mrs. Mary Youngman, housemother, received a corsage of white chrysanthemums. Helen Todd, who made the announcement, and Sally Scotthorn, who assisted with the ceremony were presented white shrysanthemum corsages. Miss Beck is a junior in the School of Fine Arts. Lens. Hann was graduated from the University of Minnesota, and received his commission from the midshipman's school at Notre Dame. The wedding will take place in the spring. Gray Visits Kappa's Mrs. Lucien Gray, Topeka, is a guest this week at the Kappa Kappa Gamma chapter house. The Kappa pledge class entertained the Sigma Alpha Epsilon pledges at an hour dance Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Seward Jones were dinner guests of Chi Omega Wednesday. Pledges gave a coke party Tuesday afternoon for the Kappa Kappa Gamma pledge class. Ardrevs Visit Corbin Mr. and Mrs. P. B. Ardrey, Stafford, were weekend visitors at Corbin hall. ** 5. K.'s to Celebrate Founder's day will be celebrated by Sigma Kappa at the chapter house Sunday. Alumni will attend the banquet and program. Theta's Are Hostesses Bette Forbes was a dinner guest Wednesday at the Kappa Alpha Let's Go to CHURCH . . Trinity Lutheran Church Trinity Lutheran Church Morning worship, 11 a.m. Trinity Episcopal Church Holy communion, 8 a.m.; church school, 9:30 a.m.; morning worship, 11 a.m. St. John's Catholic Church Masses at 8,10. 11:30 a.m. The Newman club will give a breakfast in the basement of the church following 10 o'clock mass. First Methodist Church Student class, 9:45, a.m.; morning worship, 10:50 a.m.; Wesley Foundation, 6 p.m. Rtymouth Congregational Church Aymouth Congregational Church Morning worship, 11 a.m.; fireside forum, 4:30 to 6 p.m. at the parish house. Church of God Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.; morning worship, 10:45 a.m.; youth group, 6:30 p.m.; evening service, 7:30 p.m. First Christian Church College class, 9:30 a.m. "Wor-shipping in the Church." Morning worship, 10:45, "The Call of the Master," Forum, 5 to 7 p.m. at Myers hall. First Baptist Church 11.2.3.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1.1. Student discussion class, 9:45 a.m.", "The Chief Purpose of the Church", "Morning worship, 11 a.m.", "World Order.", "Youth Fellowship, 5:30 p.m.", "Armistice Day." First Presbyterian Church Morning worship, 11 a.m., "What makes a Nation Strong." Vesper club, 5 p.m., "Thanksgiving." First Church of Christ Sunday school 9:45 a.m., morning worship 11 a.m. Theta house. Miss Elizabeth Mequair, M.a. H. Little, and members of Phi Kappa Psi, were guests Tuesday night. Pan-Hellenic to Meet The Pan-Hellenic alumnae council will have a luncheon meeting at 1 p.m. Saturday at the Hearth, Mrs. Paul B. Lawson, chairman, announced today. Actives and pledges of Delta Delta Delta were guests of Sigma Alpha Epsilon at an hour dance Thursday night. Tri Delt's Are Guests Kappa Kappa Gamma pledge party, hay rack ride and barn dance, 9 p.m. to midnight. Delta Upsilon dance, 9 p.m. to midnight, chapter house. Alpha Chi Omega pledge dance, 9:30 to 11:30 p.m., chapter house. Tonight Tomorrow Up Corbin hall dance, 9 p.m. to midnight, at the hall. Up and Coming A Calendar of Campus Events Corbin hall dance, 9 p.m. to m. night, at the hall. Hopkins hall dance, 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. at the hall. Watkins hall openhouse, 9 p.m. to midnight, at the hall. Kappa Alpha Theta openhouse, 9 p.m. to midnight, Union build- ing. Delta Gamma openhouse 9 p.m. to midnight, chapter house. Ricker hall hay rack ride, 7 p.m. to midnight. Sigma Kappa dance, 9 p.m. to midnight, chapter house. Sleepy Hollow openhouse, 9 p.m. to midnight, at the hall. Foster hall openhouse, 9 p.m. to midnight, at the hall. Detroit. (UP)—Ford Motor Company employees across the country favor a walkout to enforce pay gain demands, returns from a strike ballot throughout the system showed today. Lawrence Sanitary The Blue Mill IS EASY WHEN YOU DRINK MILK BEFORE RETIRING. Milk & Ice Cream Co. We just received another shipment of zipper leather note books. Our Name Is Back on the Campus ZIPPER NOTE BOOKS Fine Foods Fountain Service Best of Service Ask Some of the Old Students Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 735 Mass. St. SLEEP Phone 548 40 "Queen of Hearts" by Janyth Roy by Janyth Roy Selected by the editors of Charm for their November issue-featured here exclusively this"sweetheart" of a hat in black felt with shimmering jet beads. 10.95 Lt. A. B. Copping, former commander of the University V-12 unit, Copping Leaves Lawrence Phone 646 901 Mass. Weaver Books for Gifts and for your own library Fiction, Biography, books on world affairs, Poetry, Art, Philosophy, Children's Books, Dictionaries, Cook Books, Rental Library. Come in and see us the next time you are downtown. The Book Nook 1021 Mass. Phone 666 left Lawrence yesterday for the Great Lakes separation center. He will go on inactive duty and return to his home in Berlin, N.Y. Hand Painted Cards Waste Baskets Boxes Bottles Trays VI'S GIFT SHOP Hotel Eldridge Welcome to Lawrence, New Students THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK Offers You COMPLETE BANKING SERVICE The First National Bank "THE STUDENT BANK SINCE 1877" Northeast Corner Eighth and Mass. Member F.D.I.C. CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES ARROW SHIRTS and TIES A!!! Larry's last lindy Larry's wilted collar and billow shirt are heading him straight for the stag line—permanently. You are looking at his first and last partner. Take a tip from Gertrude! Be a smooth dresser as well as a smooth dancer! Wear an Arrow, the shirt with the non-wilting collar and the Mitoga-fit which conforms to the lines of your body. Get your Arrows at your local Arrow dealer. If he doesn't have your favorite today, try him again later. ARROW SHIRTS and TIES UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS We Carry ARROW SHIRTS and TIES Ober's PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 9,1945 2 IN THE HUDDLE with PAT PENNEY Our Pickograph poll this week finds only one agreement on the outcome of tomorrow's football games. Scheduled Big Six games are: Kansas State vs. Nebraska at Manhattan. Kansas U. vs. Marquette at Milwaukee. Iowa State vs. Oklahoma at Norman. Oklahoma is a sure winner as picked by the four "experts." Tex Langford, our visiting prognosticator who was game captain last week, predicts a Nebraska victory over K-State as also does Coach Shenk and your editor. Ernie Quigley, athletic director predicts a K-State victory over the Cornhuskers who took the Jayhawkers for a ride last weekend at Lincoln. Your editor sees another black defeat for the Jayhawkers at Marquette. She is out-voted 3 to 1 by the head coach, athletic director, and a member of the team. (Also—she hopes she's wrong.) Meet Your Team. MASSACRE MARQUETTE let Your Team Harnessed up in football padding, he doesn't resemble an aquatic star. However, Stan Jervis, the little 9 3 Jervis 5-foot, 10-inch end from Gross Point, Mich., has been a life guard several years in the lake region. He also lettered two years in swimming in high school. Stan transferred Iast July from Dennison, Ohio, where he had been stationed one year. He played football it Gross Point High school two years, and lettered his senior year. "Streak" wishes he and his high school clarinet were on speaking terms, but says he's "not even hot on it now." Stan is in the N.R.O.T.C. program and is majoring in mechanical engineering. He is a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity. Large Selection of SKIRTS Complete Line of Sizes WOOL CREPE RAYON CREPE 100% WOOL Good Assortment of Styles Every Color to Choose From Adelane's Last week we had quite a ball game with the Nebraska Cornhuskers. One characteristic of this year's Kansas team evidenced in Lincoln—they never know when they are licked. Marquette's Plenty Tough, Shenk Says By HENRY SHENK Head Football Coach Many teams would have folded up when the other team was 14 points ahead at the half, but Kansas came back and made a great rally. With the exception of three slip ups, the Jayhawks played good defensive ball against the Cornhuskers and made 17 first downs to Nebraska's six. This Saturday, we play Marquette, one of the toughest teams on our schedule. Football veterans occupy nearly every position. Never has Kansas licked the Hilltop aggregation. We hope to change this record and put the game in the "win" column. But again, we will be outweighed at nearly every position. Marquette is noted for hard, rugged playing, but if we can match their viciousness, we will give a good account of ourselves in Milwaukee Saturday. With the exception of Robison, the Kansas team is in good shape for the Marquette game. Marxmiller and Bertuzzi have slight injuries, but should be able to play. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. Phone 425 YOUR COMPLETE YOUR COMPLETE ANSWER TO "friendliness of fit" ANSWER TO friendliness TAN CALF TAN CALF Aristocrats - - $6.85 Olympics - - - $6.00 JARMANS MILITARY One Strap - - $6.85 Kappa, Chi O, Theta, A.D. Pi Near Finals HAYNES & KEENE 819 Mass. Phone 524 Four teams are tied for first place as women's intramural volleyball nears the finals. Kappa Kappa Gamma, Alpha Delta Fi, Kappa Alpha Theta, and Chi Omega each have won four games. This tie will be played off at 8:15 p.m. Monday, with the finals at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Teams winning three games and losing one were Corbin hall, Alpha Chi Omega, Pi Beta Phi, and Watkins hall. The third place winners were Alpha Omicron Pi, Gamma Phi Beta, IWW, and Delta Gamma. Men's intramural handball singles will begin next week, Ray Kanehl, intramural coach, announced today. Playoffs will start Monday with 37 contestants. Handball Draws 37 Preliminary tryouts for the annual Campus Problem Speaking contest will be Nov. 29 in green hall, Miss Margaret Anderson and Prof. E, C. Buehler of the speech department announced today. Contestants should present a problem and solution pertinent to student and University life. Entrants will give four-minute speeches on the subject they plan on using in the finals Dec. 5. Seven to 11 finalists will be chosen. Speech Contest Trials Slated For Nov. 29 The contest was originated in 1925 and was held annually until two years ago when it was discontinued because of the war. Students interested should see Miss Anderson or Professor Buehler. Call KU 25 with your news. A CHRISTMAS GIFT For Pop, Mom, Daughter, Son "LOUNGING SLIPPERS" Wool Top, Leather Sales, Warm, Comfortable $2.95 Colors: Maroon, Red, Brown, Light Blue, Navy Sizes: Small, medium, large CARLS GOOD CLOTHES NOW GRANADA ENDS SATURDAY 2—TOP SHOCK SENSATION HITS—2 We Double-Dare You to See This . . . DOUBLE SHRIEK & SHUDDER SHOW Boris KARLOFF In Robert Louis Stevenson's The Body SNATCHER WITH BELA LUGOSI The BRIGHTON STRANGIER FROM LODER FROM DUPREZ MICHAEL ST. ANGEL 840 RADIO PICTURE The Shriek . . FOUL TRAFFIC The Shudder . . HALF MAD IN DEAD BODIES! HALF SANE . . ALL KILLER! (OWL SHOW SATURDAY 11:45) ALL WEEK CONTINUOUS SUNDAY FROM 1:00 Ahead of Loew's Midland, K.C.I. THE GRANDEST SURPRISE SMASH COMEDY HIT SINCE "IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT" . . . One You Must Not Miss! SMACK ACROSS YOUR HEART! Kiss and Tell COLUMBIA PICTURES presents A GEORGE ABBOTT PRODUCTION Play and Screenplay by F. HUGH HERBERT starring SHIRLEY TEMPLE as Corliss Archer with Jerome COURTLAND • Walter AGEL Robert BENCHLEY • Porter HALL • Tom TULLY FILMED FROM BROADWAYS No. 1 COMEDY STAGE SENSATION! FILMED FROM BROADWAYS No. 1 COMEDY STAGE SENSATION! ADDED—COLOR CARTOON - LATEST NEWS Indianapolis. (UP)—Under the heading of appropriate names comes the fact that a Mr. Belcher is employed at the Burpee store in Indianapolis. VARSITY Today and Saturday JOHNNY MACK BROWN "LOST TRAIL" and CHAS. ARNT "Dangerous Intruder" SUNDAY 3 Days EAST SIDE KIDS "COME OUT FIGHTING" and JAMES DUNN "CARIBBEAN MYSTERY" Dayhawker Q JUST ONE MORE DAY TODAY AND SATURDAY OH! WHAT FUN! OH! WHAT BLISS! Bob, as a bashful bellhop, teaches a queen to be a hepcat in a rowdy exciting American way! Two gals and a guy in a King sized romance! HEDY LAMARR ROBERT WALKER JUNE ALLYSON in M-G-M's "Her Highness and the Bellboy" Two gals and a guy in a King-sized romance! LAMARR ROBERT WALKER JUNE ALLYSON in M-G-M's "Her Highness and the Bellboy" X-TRA! FLASH! Notre Dame-Navy Foto-Finish SUNDAY ROMANCE AS YOU DREAM IT! ADVENTURE AS YOU LIKE IT! THE MIGHTIEST OF ALL SEA PICTURES! in Gorgeous TECHNICAL OR! THE SPANISH MAIN STARRING PAUL MAURREIN WALTER HENREID · O'HARA · SLEZAK University KANSAN DAILY STUDENT NEWS PAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Monday, Nov. 12, 1945 43rd Year No. 35 Lawrence Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Fight On,Oh Team,But Let Hostilities Cease After the Game! P e n h i n s b b t h S r c o f a st u s m Will Unele Jimmy Green be painted again this year by K-Staters? Will campus walks and buildings carry the almost traditional brightly painted messages the morning before the K-State game? These questions won't be answered until the Homecoming game, but if students of both schools abide by their peace pact, no such disturbances will occur. The pact was made in 1929 by the Student Councils of the two schools, following a series of minor atrocities committed by rabid, student football fans. Statues, dear to the hearts of the students of the respective schools, annually were daubed with paint, students' clothes were torn in skirmishes, and their heads were shaved if any were unfortunate enough to be caught by the "enemy." One year two bovine beauties, being groomed by the Aggies for the American Royal livestock show, were the object of University students who cut the K.U. initials into their well-groomed sides. The Aggies retaliated by attiring the young law student, standing by Uncle Jimmy Green in a K-State sweater, via the paint routine. In 1936 the peace pact proved inadequate and student counseilmen from both schools agreed that any offender would receive serious punishment from his own school. The first case was in 1937 when six In 1939 the pact proved entirely inadequate when fighting broke out on the football field after the game had ended and the Aggies had won 27-6. K-State students rushed to tear down the goal posts as K.U. students rushed to protect them . . . one K-Stater was carried Potter lake and tossed in. University students were fined $44.30 by the K.U. student supreme court. During the past two years, the pact has not been published and new students have carried on the work of their predecessors in forming marauding expeditions to the opposing school. "This year the All-Student Council wants to place the pact before the students and ask them to obey it." Mary Jo Cox, Council president, said today. The pact is as follows: The pact is as follows: An agreement entered into by the Men's Student Council of the University of Kansas, and the Student Council of Kansas Agricultural College, on behalf of their respective student bodies, to abolish forever all manner of school fights and pregame activities between the two schools. WHEREAS: These fights and activities have grown to such proportions in the last few years that the friendly relations of the two institutions are in danger; that unpleasant publicity results to each school; that there is serious danger of grave perty is damaged WHEREAS: To avoid such serious results the above named Men's Student Councils covenant and agree on the part of each institution that this shall constitute a formal treaty, calling to a close all such fights and activities, to be in effect henceforth and forever, and binding all Student Councils in the future to recognize and enforce the said treaty. and endure WHEREAS: If from time to time various members of either student body in violation attempt to carry on, or do carry on, such fights and activities, the Student Council of the institution the said students represent agrees to mete out serious punishment for such violations, that the dignity and intent of this document may be preserved. News of the World Chinese Differences to Go Before Council Chungking. (UP)The central government and the Chinese Communists agreed today to submit their political and military differences to the political consultative council which meets Nov. 20. which meets Nov. 20, 1945. The move to settle the dispute came as Gen. Chiang Kai-Shek appealed to Russia for permission to fly his armies into Manchuria, and as more than a million Communists and an even greater number of Nationalist troops were poised along the great wall of China. There was grave danger that the threatened civil war might explode at any moment. Washington. (UP)—An official navy statement today said that the U.S. Marines are in China to assist the Chinese national government to effect the surrender of Japanese forces and "not for any purpose connected with the conflict of the Nationalists and Communist elements there." New York. (UP)—Secretary of Commerce Henry A. Wallace today urged American financial aid to the United Kingdom as a step toward preventing "a costly trade war" throughout the world. Batavin. (UP)—The government of the unrecognized Indonesian republic has asked Russia to intervene in the Netherlands East Indies on behalf of the Indonesians, it was revealed today. The Federal Communications commission announced today that an estimated 60,000 amateur radio operators in this country will be allowed to resume full normal operations on Thursday. Washington. (UP)—The nation's "hams" will come back into their own next week. 'Show Boat' To Be Jerome Kern Memorial The radio amateurs went off the air shortly after Pearl Harbor New York. (UP)—The new production of "Show Boat" which will open at the Ziegfield theater Jan. 5 will be a memorial to Jerome Kern composer of this best-loved of all American musical shows, who died yesterday. San Diego, Calif. (UP)—A combination airplane-automobile will be on the market within a year. Consolidated Aircraft Co. engineer Norman V. Davidson said today. 'No Atom Bomb Yet for Russia' Washington. (UP)—The British government wants better evidence of Soviet cooperation with America and Britain before giving Russia access to atomic bomb secrets, a high authority reported today as the three-power atomic energy conference continued here. A continued training British Prime Minister Clement Atlee, according to this source, has proposed an international pool of war secrets, including the atomic bomb, with admission limited to those who give full cooperation to the United Nations organization and also put their own secret weapons into the world pool. into the world pool. President Truman, Attlee and Canadian Prime Minister W. L. Mackenzie King, representing the three powers which possess the bomb secret, conferred all yesterday afternoon aboard the presidential vacht. the president and Atlee resumed their talks briefly this morning but the conference appeared today to have made such extensive progress that further formal meetings were postponed temporarily to permit each nation to work out details. nation to work Tomorroy the British leader addresses a joint session of Congress. There was some speculation whether he would touch upon his plan for an international pool of new and secret weapons. Edison Greer, an instructor in the mathematics department from 1938-40, has returned to teach a class in algebra at the University, while working for his doctor of philosophy degree. Edison Greer Returns To Teach Algebra Course Newsman to Speak One hundred of the 1,000 crab apple trees donated by last year's senior class were planted Saturday by the Germer prisoners of war working on the campus, C. G. Bayles, superintendent of buildings and grounds, reported today. grounds, reported to the These were one half of the ship- ment received last week from Clev- land. The balance of the trees was shipped Saturday from Princeton, N.J. ___ The Officers' club room on third floor of the Union again has been turned over to the Union and is available for campus use. It is called the East room. 100 Crab Trees Planted RALPH HEINZEN Ralph Heinzen, former United Press director for France, will be the headline speaker on the annual Editors day program at the University Saturday, Prof. Elmer F. Beth, acting chairman of the journalism department, announced today. The department is sponsoring the annual meeting of the editors of Kansas dailies and weeklies, the Kansas Council of Teachers of Journalism, and the Kansas Press Women. The day's program includes a morning "shop talk" session, a Union luncheon, and the K.U.-K State football game. Heinzen will discuss "Problems of Peace." H. A. Meyer, publisher of the Independence Reporter and president of the Kansas Press association, will chairman a roundtable discussion, and Russell S. Bauer, Kansas City, vice-chairman of the regional War Labor board, will speak on "Labor Disputes and the Future." Labor Displays and During his 25 years of newspapering in Europe, Heinzen covered 27 peace conferences. Arrested by order of Pierre Laval, he was in the Baden Baden German prison camp for 16 months. His dispatches have appeared in the United Press news in the Daily Kansan. Prof. Hilden Gibson, of the department of political science, will speak on "The United States and the Soviet Union", at 7:30 p. m. to tomorrow, in Fraser theater, in the third of the University's "America at Peace" lecture series. Kansas: Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow. Slightly cooler tonight west and central. Low 30 to 35 northwest to 50 to 55 extreme southeast. Slightly cooler tomorrow cast. Gibson to Speak WEATHER New State Correspondents to Meet Tomorrow for Year's Instructions Carrie Arnold, Ashland; Anne Young, Concordia; Margaret Gruenthal, Glasco; Jaydine Stickler, Burlington; Frances Teis, Waverly; Ellen Burnette, Coldwater; Marian Craig, Protection; Orlin Downing, Wilmore; Marjorie Gardner, Arkansas City; Martha Smith, Burden; Elinor Albright, Winfield; Paul Watt, Arcadia; Richard Bertuzzi, Girard; Mary Turkington, McCune; Joan Veatch, Pittsburg; Frances Welty, Walnut. Newly appointed State-Wide Activities correspondents will meet tomorrow for instructions and suggestions for their year's work, Anne Scott, chairman of the State-Wide Activities commission, announced today. The meeting will be at 4:30 p.m. in room 102, Journalism, Miss Scott said. A partial list of the cor- respondents is as follows: Hortense Bedell, Augusta; Marjorie Cooper, El Dorado; Carolyn Nigg, Whitewater; Burnett Replogle, Cottonwood Falls; Luther Buchele, Cedar Vale; Eugene Casement, Sedan; Ione Stroup, Baxter Springs; Elizabeth Bradney, Columbus; Jay Gray, Galena; Ellie Hamilton, Weir; Isabelle Craft, Bird City; Bonnie Binkman, St. Francis. Joan Lippelman, Oberlin; Donis Onstott, Highland; Jane Williams, Eudora; Robert Bonebrake, Baldwin; Ida Bieber, Kinsley; Mary Zeller, Howard; Nancy Jelly, Moline, Haney Scott, Hays; Claude Williams, Ellsworth; Lois Temple Holyrood; Betty Rose Soukoup, Wilson; Sue Webster, Garden City; Arlene Andrews, Bloom; Sara Minnis, Bucklin; Robert McJones, Dodge City. Billie Jo Kent, Humboldt; Larry Simmons, Jola; Marian Sheldon, Garnett; Mary Joe Moxley, Atchison; Jo Shaw, Medicine Lodge; Cathy Piller, Great Bend; Lorraine Carpenter, Claflin; James Roark, Elenwood; Hal Davison, Fort Scott; Hope Burch, Bronson; Patricia Moser, Hiawatha; Dorothy Bruce, Horton; Bob Jane Parker, Robinson; Winifred Sawyer, Fairview. Mary Zollinger, Junction City; Lois Jamison, Quinter; Tom Mont- gomery, Hill City; Edgar Jarvis, Ulysses; Lucy Buess, Cimarron; Harriette Stanley, Montezuma; Rosa- (continued to page four) Felix Bermudez, University landscape labor foreman, suffered a broken leg Saturday when a car struck him as he was crossing a street in downtown Lawrence. Suffers Broken Leg He was taken to the Lawrence Memorial Hospital. Battle of Bands At Union Dance A "Battle of the Bands," with the V-12 band, the Johnny Beach band, and the Serenaders from Liberty Memorial High School will highlight the Homecoming breakfast dance from 9:30 to 11:30 a.m. Saturday, in the Memorial Union lounge, Eugenia Hepworth, Homecoming committee chairman, said today. Houses competing with "Kausas Jayhawk vs. K—State" decorations have been divided into two groups instead of three, as originally planned, Jean McIntyre, chairman of the decorations committee, said this morning. Phi Delta Theta, Pi Beta Phi, and Alpha Omicron Pi will present skis at the dance. Coffee and doughnuts will be sold. Houses will be judged Friday and Saturday. Cups given by the Jay James and the Ku Ku's will be presented to the winners at the Homecoming varsity Saturday night, by the Kansas game captain. Carruth hall, Delta Upsilon, Harmon Co-op, Hopkins hall, Ricker hall, Tau Kappa Epsilon, and Wright place. Group one, with houses from one to 30 members, includes: Houses in group two, with 30 to 50 members, are: Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Delta Pi, Alpha Omicron Pi, Battenfeld hall, Chi Omega, Corbin hall, Delta Tau Delta, Delta Gamma, Foster hall, Gamma Phi Beta, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Kappa Alpha Theta, Locke- ley hall, Miller hall, Phi Delta Theta. Phi Gamma Delta, Phi Kappa Psi, Pi Beta Phi, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Chi, Sigma Kappa, Tipperary hall and Watkins hall. "Any house which is decorating and is not included in either list should call me immediately," Miss McIntyre said. 340 Take Exam About 340 students took the late psychological and aptitude exams Saturday, Dr. A. H. Turney, head of the Guidance Bureau said today. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 12.1945 University DAILY KANSAN Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Association, National Editorial Association, and the Association represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave. New York City. Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, University school year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sep 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Chicago, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS STAFF MARY TURNINGKON Managing Editor ELEANOR ALBRIGHT Asst. Managing Editor LOREN KING Telegraph Editor DONGINA VAN ORDER News Editor MARCIA HAYNET GAYNOW Sports Editor PAT PENNX Sports Editor BILLIE HAMILTON Feature Editor JANE ANDERSON Military Editor CLEO NOBIRH Research Editor MARGARET WENSKI Asst. Telegraph Editor JOAN VEATCH Asst. Sports Editor Campus Editor EDITORIAL STAFF DOLDERS SULZMAN MARY MORRILL FRANKLIN FRARING ORVILLE ROEERTS Editor-in-Chief Editorial Associates All for Peace At 5 o 'clock on the morning of Nov. 11, 1918, in a dining car in the Compiegne Forest, two German delegates signed the armistice terms presented by General Ferninand Foch, supreme Allied commander. At 11 o'clock the same day hostilities were halted. All over the world news of the armistice was received with an outburst of unrestrained joy. The world was at peace, confronted with the task of binding up its wounds and removing the scars of conflict. The war had lasted 1,565 days; sixty million men had donned uniforms; nine million of these had been killed; twenty-two million were wounded; and about ten million lost their lives as a direct or indirect result of the war. Unlike the first armistice day of frenzied rejoicing over victory in the war that was to end all wars, each succeeding one has taken on a graver tone. The men who did not return cannot be forgotten by the survivors. The disabled veterans in hospitals all over the country serve as a constant reminder of a war won and a peace lost. Now, at the close of a greater and costlier war, Americans pay tribute to the brave who fought and died a generation ago for the same world peace we are struggling to establish today. Where Do We Stand? Whether the United States is "intervening" or "interfering" in China's internal affairs is a question that remains unanswered for the American public. The Chinese Communists say nay it is a military intervention. United States military and diplomatic authorities insist that the purpose is to facilitate the disarmament of Japanese troops in China and the deportation of the troops and Japanese civilians. This is the explanation given to account for the presence of United States marines in North China and the movement of the Chungking government troops northward to the Communist-dominated area by United States airplanes and ships. Secretary of State James F. Byrnes told a Washington press conference that the marine movement was a military matter, not political. If that is so, there must be two American policies in China—one political and one military. It would seem, then, that if they were coordinated and plainly stated, there would be a better prospect of getting the Chinese factions together, and less chance of a misunderstanding with Russia, whose interest in China is as great as the American. Rock Chalk Talk Caught in the act—Patty Cook, Chi Omega, has always had an ardent desire to slide down the banister in their house, so one evening last week she decided to follow through just as soon as all the fellows were out of the house. When the time came, she began her descent dressed for the occasion in a pretty baby pink nightgown. You can imagine poor Patty's embarrassment when, upon reaching the bottom, she became aware that the house was still full of males, who, because pu-lenty aware of her. What's on His Mind?? In physiology lab last week, Gene Moore needed a microscope which he couldn't get without first filling out a card supplied with the information: name, article desired, and the date. Gene filled out the first two requirements quickly, but when he came to DATE—he paused, wrinkled his brow, and wrote: occasionally. Revenge- If you see Gamma Phi pledges Caroline Merritt and Susan Wright stalking around the library with B.E. buns sometime, it's only a revengeful aftermath of one afternoon when the girls were sitting on the library steps with two Phi Gam pledges, and a lone pigeon flew over. By CATHY PILLER In Washington, President Truman, British Prime Minister Clement Attlee and Canadian Prime Minister W. L. Mackenzie King interrupted discussions on the atomic bomb to lay wreaths on the tomb of America's unknown soldier. In London, King George VI placed a wreath on a Whitehall monument honoring almost 1,500,000 English dead of the two world wars. Former Prime Minister Winston Churchill was present at the ceremony. Armistice Day Sees War in Far East, Rodeo in Tokyo, Vacation at Home The United States observed its first peace time Armistice Day since 1941 with Sunday services throughout the nation and the world for the dead of both world wars. Throughout the United States the observance extended through today with banks, stock exchanges, federal offices and many private businesses closed. More than 1,000 French and American soldiers paraded through the streets of Reims, scene of Germany's surrender in World War II. GI's in Japan marked the anniversary in Tokyo yesterday with a wild west rodeo in the Meiji baseball stadium. Special trains from all sections of the country brought thousands of soldiers to the show. More than 50,000 jammed into the stadium where GI brone busters went through the prescribed rodeo program of bulldogging, riding, and wild-cow milking. The flags of all the states flew over the stadium and the Fifth Airforce put on an air circus for the crowd. Observance in a world at peace of the 7th anniversary of the Armistice which ended the first world war was marred by fighting in Indo-China, Java, and Manchuria. (By United Press) He-man—In the same class last week the students were supposed to prick their fingers in order to get blood. Two girls sitting near Bert Morris, Phi Delt, were having a terrific time getting up nerve enough to do it, so Bert came to the rescue. He enjoyed it so much that he proceeded to pounce on several other nerveless students also. But, alas, when it came time to puncture his own hand, the fiendish look left his eyes, 'cause for once poor old Bert just couldn't do it. Fellas like them, too—If you have seen Tommy Sinclair, Phi Psi, driving around the campus in Gene Kittle's car loaded to the hilt with stuffed teddy bears, elephants, dogs, or other such lovable animals, it's not because he's again taken up old forgotten playthings; but only because Gene slipped away from the Phi Psi-Theta party last Tuesday night long enough to capture all the KATs bed dolls and is now using them to adorn the back seat of the auto. Throughout the European continent natives blanketed the graves of war dead with flowers. Thousands of persons filed past the bodies of 15 victims of World War II as they lay beside the tomb of France's Unknown Soldier at the Arc de Triomphe. No Holiday Here K. U. was not much affected by the Civil Service holiday proclaimed by Governor Andrew Schoeppel, in celebration of Armistice Day. Classes continued as usual, and all janitors worked. In some offices, such as buildings and grounds, skeleton crews were maintained for emergencies. Those staying on the job today in civil service positions, will have an extra day granted later. The 65-piece band from Kansa State college in Manhattan will participate in our homecoming ceremonies on Nov. 17, Prof. Russell L Wiley announced today. K-State Band to Play Professor Lionel Downey is director of the visiting band, he said. 922 Mass. Ready Now: Garage and Cab Co. HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Phone 12 LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. Phone 425 KU-KU EMBLEMS FRESHMAN CAPS KANSAS "T" and SWEATSHIRTS GET READY FOR THE GAME CARL'S GOOD CLOTHS OFFICIAL BULLETIN All-Student Council will meet at 7:15 p.m. Tuesday in the Pine room of the Umon building—Mary Jo Cox, president. University of Kansas Nov. 12, 1945 Cherealeading practice will be at 4:30 p. m. Thursday in stadium if weather permits, otherwise in Kansan room. Attendance required. Alberta Cornwell, Head Cheerleader. Representatives of winning skits meet in Union activities office 4:30 p. m. Tuesday for instruction—Alberta Cornwell, President, Union Activities. \* \* \* The Music Appreciation club will have its first meeting in the English room in the Union at 4:30 p. m. Tuesday. Refreshments will be served and a musical program has been planned. The world's largest exporter o coffee is Brazil. WANT ADS FOR SALE—A good slightly used Muskrat fur coat. About size 32-34. After 7 p.m. call 3217 or come to 1124 Emery Road for further information. NOTICE- Will the person who has the picture and receipts from my billfold, please send them to me? Vera Hodges, 1245 La. GIRL wanted—to share a double with Liberal Art freshman. Twin beds. At 1717 Ill or call 2680W. HELP WANTED—Two K.U. boys for sales work, 3 hours per evening. Call 1918 M between 5 to 6 p.m. ROOM FOR RENT Wanted, 4 boys for heated sleeping porch and study room. Three blocks from K.U. on bus line. 308 W. 16th St. ANNOUNCEMENT — Male roomers needed for "Happy Home for Homosapiens" $15. Gives use of half a room upstairs plus run of house, 838 Illinois. Call between 6 and 7 in the evening. LOST—Red bilifold. Contents important to owner. Finder please call Jackie Logan, 898. Reward. FOR SALE—Model A 1930 Ford, 1200 Ohio. LOST—Green billfold with initials M.B.S. Lost last Saturday between the Chi Omega house and the Union Pacific railroad station. Liberal reward. Call Marilyn Steinert, 731. LOST—Small brown change purse contains $5 bill and some small change, Wednesday between 1101 Mississippi and Henley House, 4:30 p. m. Please call J. M. Peavy at 1043. LOST—Silver identification bracelet Wednesday the 7th with "Katheryn" inscribed on front and "Eugene" on the back. Like to have because it was a gift. Call Katheryn Ward 860. LOST — Brown leather jacket, marked Jim-T. Finder please call Jim Thompson-284. FOR RENT — Good Garage — at northeast edge of campus call 1454M. LOST—A small red leather purse in Library Tuesday, containing red billfold. Please return billfold and pens to Kansan office. Reward. LOST—A brown leather jacket on Football fields behind Robinson Gym, Thursday afternoon. Please call 503 or return to 1127 Ohio. Reward. LOST—Blue Eversharp pen Thursday. Finder please call 1789-J or leave it at the Kansan office. LOST — Brown striped Shaeffer's Lifetime pen between Frank Strong and Shack. Call Bobbie Ford. $98. WANTED—Experienced presser full or part time at once. Apply at the New York Cleaners 926 Mass., or phone 75. Call KU 25 with your news. --for a cake or some of those Jayhawker Jewelry New Shipment Roberts Jewelry and Gifts Prepare for That "After Study" Snack! Drop into DRAKE'S delicious brownies. DRAKE BAKERY 901 MASS. PHONE 61 OVEMI ary M A. B. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. 16. Major Vichita member ernity. 0th dii dime Eur and will rick, for of. theta's nina R m cheidt ay at se. erkes Mrs. a gr hous meta t Mr. ergus, the ap taught with Arian Gene oene O Miss Alpha college Bracelersity thUi U nationlighter corps. OVEMBER 12, 1945 ... UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE VIVA SOCIALLY SPEAKING Larry Margaret Gaynor, Society Editor --- ibrand-Kocour to Wed Kappa Kappa Gamma has announced the engagement and approaching marriage of Miss Heloiseillbrand, daughter of Dean and Irs. Earl K. Hillbrand, Wichita, to Jai. Max Kocour, son of Mr. and O. F. Kocour, Andale. The wedding will take place at p.m., Nov. 21, at St. Mary's cathedral in Wichita. Miss Hillbrand, who was graduated from the University in 1944, is Homecoming queen in 1943, a member of the Dean's honor roll, the first woman dance manager the University. She attended Vichita university before enrolling are. Major Kocour was graduated from Michita university where he was a member of Phi Upilson Sigma fraternity. He has served with the 0th division of the Third army in the European Theater of Operations, and will report to Camp Robinson, rk., for reassignment on Dec. 15. Mina Roderick, Ens. Robert Wright, Id Mr. and Mrs. F. C. Winter- cheidt were dinner guests Thursday at the Kappa Alpha Theta se. heta's Entertain erkes Visits A. O. Pi Mrs. Sally Yerkes, Garden City, a guest at the Alpha Omicron house. meta to Marry - * * Gets to Marry Mr. and Mrs. Ewing Bradford Jergus, Wichita, have announced be approaching marriage of their mother, Jean to Ens. William with Brackman, son of Mr. and Brockman, Wichita. Chapel of the First Presby- can church in Wichita will be the cene of the ceremony on Nov. 24. Miss Fergus, a member of Kappa pha Theta, was a junior in the college last year. Brackman attended Wichita university, where he was a member of Hi Upsilon Sigma. He has been stationed in the South Pacific as aighter pilot with the navy air corps. Delta's Avenues Delta's Are Guests Delta Tau Delta entertained members of Tri-Delta at dinner and our dance Thursday at the chapter house. Guests were Jean McIntire, Catheme Osgood, Helen Dietzel, Shirley Brisby, Patricia Worral, Mary Marin, Betty Malone, Eunice Carlson, Norris Frisbie, Barbara McGill, Northa Jean Schnieder, Mary O'Brien Patricia Kirkern, Emily Berry, Mary Ann Sawyer, Bonnie Benkelman, Louise McIntire, Sally张, Mary Dooz, Beverly Cubbage, Joan Maners. Dinner guests of Delta Tau Delta Wednesday night were Miss Marjorie Duderstadt, Excelsior Springs, Co., and Miss Jean Phillips, Kansas City, Mo. elt's Pledge Two Delta Tau Delta has announced the pledging of Robert Crane and knest Rice, both of Fort Scott. newcomers Club to Meet Mrs. Paul B. Lawson will be host to the Newcomers club at their next meeting Thursday. Each mem- will bring a small antique or small object of special interest to the group. Jath Club Hears Price "Mathematics in universities today has been designed for the use of chemistry, physics, and engineering," prof. G.B. Price, of the mathematics department, told members at the regular Mathematics club meeting last week. Mr. Price spoke on Statistics: A Fundamental Tool in Modern Research." Verburg Is Sixth Vet With University Press John J. Verburg resumed his duties with the University Press today after 40 months in the U.S. army. Verburg was discharged as a staff sergeant, after having circled the globe, spending one year in Egypt and another in British West Africa. The return of Verburg brings the list of service veterans employed by the Press to six. Student veterans are Joy Howland, formerly with the Spars, now a proofreader, Harlin Lill, linotype operator, who was a bomber pilot and squadron leader in the Italian campaign; William E. Dennis, stereotyper; Richard Calvert, printer; and Orin L. Strobel, formerly with the Hiawatha World, a compositor and Duplex pressman. C. of C. to Sponsor Christmas Parade The people of Lawrence and K.U. students will see their first Christmas parade in three years this December. At a meeting of the Chamber of Commerce this morning, members voted to hold the far-famed Christmas parade again this year. All University groups are invited to enter a float in the parade. Prizes will be offered to those groups having the best and most distinctive floats. The parade will be held during the first week of December. A list of the prizes offered will be announced at a later date. later date. "With the help of K.U. groups, the merchants, and the bands, the Christmas parade should again be the appropriate herald for a Merry Christmas," one Lawrence merchant declared. Commissioned Ensigns Donald Cousins, Robert Miller, and Robert Neustrom, who attended the University in the V-12 training program and were graduated in June, 1945, were commissioned as ensigns in ceremonies at the Cathedral of Saint John the Divine, New York City. Nov. 2. The group was the 26th class to be graduated and brings the total number of graduates to 24,000. James Forrestal, secretary of the navy, was the principal speaker. Radio Acting Group Being Assembled A radio acting company of 16 members is being organized under the direction of Prof. Allen Crafton, of the department of speech and drama. The company will be chosen from members of the radio speaking class and students who tried out for the play "The Yellow Jacket." These two groups probably will represent all those interested in acting and capable of handling parts in the radio plays, Professor Crafton said. Some auditions already have been offered and the rest will be next week. Beginning Nov. 21, this group will present a series of radio plays on the early settlement of eastern Kansas over KFKU. Professor Crafton, who wrote and produced 33 radio plays on Kansas history in 1936, is working on the new series. Three scripts are ready for rehearsal at the present time. The series will be broadcast under the title, "Yankee Crusade." Chiapusso Presents Recital Tonight Jan Chiapusso, piano professor, will present his annual recital at 8 tonight in Fraser theater. The program includes "Variations on a Theme by Paganini," (Brahms); "Sonata in F Sharp Major, No. 4" (Scirabin; "Partita No. 5 in G Major," (Bach); "Etude on the Black Keys," (Chopin); "Etude Caprice", (Liszt); and "La Campanella,"( Liszt). Prof. Stene's Bulletin Issued by Research Bureau Prof. E, O. Stene, of the political science department, is the author of "Railroad Commission to Corporation Commission," a bulletin issued by the Bureau of Government Research at the University. Professor Stene's bulletin discusses Kansas legislation regulating railroads and public utilities. Copies of this bulletin and other studies published by the bureau are available in room 412, Watson library. Dr.Ethan P. Allen, bureau head, announced 8 740 Vermont LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS LOOK YOUR BEST Phone 432 for the Homecoming Dance! Have that dress cleaned by INDEPENDENT INDEPENDENT I'd Climb the Highest Mountain Ink Spots Thoughtless By the Old Corral Ridin' the Trail Dick Haymes I Don't Know Why Buster's Last Stand Claude Thornhill Bell Music Company GOSH, ONLY A PENNY! Once a penny was a fortune to a six-year-old. It could buy yards of licorice shoestrings, an all-day sucker, or a syrup-smothered scoop of shaved ice. A penny would pay for marbles, a tin whistle, or even a little lead soldier. It was the ceiling price for a new top-string. Nowadays, a penny won't buy much for a little boy. But it purchases a lot of labor-saving electricity. Sonny may sniff at a penny for running an errand- yet that same penny will (at average household rates) do any, of these jobs— - Run a sewing machine all afternoon - Keep a refrigerator cold for 4 hours - Vacuum clean 10 large rugs - Light a 50-watt bulb for 6 hours - Run the washer for 6 tubs of clothes - Give you the correct time for 7 days - Keep a radio playing for 3 hours Yes, a penny is still big money—electrically. Actually, the average family gets just about twice as much electricity for its money as it did 15 years ago. Keeping electric service cheap, friendly and dependable — even all through the war — is a tribute to the careful business management of your electric company, and to the hard work and experience of all the men and women in it. Heart NELSON FDYD in "THE ELECTRIC HOUSE" with Robert Lambert's Orchestra. Every Sunday afternoon, i:30, EST, CBS Network. Ka Kansas Electric Power Company 6 d n t 7 n s s f TAXI INSTITUTO TERMINAL DE LAS ZONAS VIVA EN EL CUBA PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 12,1945 Marquette Thrust Smothers K.U. In Second Half After holding Marquette to a scoreless first half, the Jayhawkers were crushed, 26-0, when the Avalanches let loose with second-half fire Saturday in Milwaukee. This loss places Kansas next to the bottom of the Big Six list, "fighting" for the cellar position with Kansas State. Big Six standings at present are: Won Lost Tie Oklahma ... 4 0 0 Missouri ... 3 0 0 Iowa State ... 2 2 1 Nebraska ... 2 3 0 Kansas ... 0 2 1 Kansas State ... 0 4 0 Although they lost, the Jayhawkers have the satisfaction of knowing they outplayed their opponents in the first half. Every Marquee offensive was stopped and at one time the Jayhawkers reached the 21-yard line on George Geir's passes. Contributions Short In War Fund Drive Contributions for the K.U. War Fund and Community Chest drive are still trailing last year's total by approximately $800, it was announced today by Dr. F. C. Allon, chairman of the drive. The $3,611 which has been collected to date has come from students, faculty, and University employees but only 290 of the 500 pledge cards mailed have been returned. The drive is not completed, and those who have not returned their pledge cards, or made their contributions are urged to do so immediately, Dr. Allen said. GRANADA NOW ALL WEEK Ahead of Loew's Midland, Kansas City The Screen's Grandest Surprise Laff and Love Smosh Since "It Happened One Night" THE PLAY BROADWAY ROARED AT FOR OVER 2 YEARS! Now a Great Columbia Picture! Kiss and Tell A GEORGE ABBOTT PRODUCTION Play and Screenplay by F. HUGH HERBERT starring with love and kisses from SHIRLEY TEMPLE at Carliss Ancher with Jerome COURTLAND Walter ABEL • Robert BENCHLEY Porter HALL • Tom TULLY ADDED— with love and hisses from SHIRLEY TEMPLE with Jorena COURTLAND Walter ABEL • Robert BENCHLEY Porter HALL • Tom TULLY ADDED— Oklahoma, Missouri Vie For Bix Six Title Kansas City, Mo. (UP)—"Eligibles for the 1945 Big Six conference football championship marrowed to two today, Oklahoma and Missouri COLOR CARTOON AND NEWS Oklahoma's Sooners, undefeated in four conference starts, and Missouri's Tigers, unbeaten in three league contests, meet at Columbia this week in a homecoming game that may determine the winner of the midland circuit. A win for Oklahoma would give it the title for the third straight year. Missouri must win over the Sooners to keep alive their championship hopes. The following Saturday the Tigers meet Kansas in their traditional game in Ruppert Stadium at Kansas City. Coach Henry Shenk's Jayhawk eleven could throw the conference championship race into a tie if they triumph over Missouri, and the Tigers get by the Sooner contest on the right side of the ledger. Dewey Luster's Oklahomaans scored a "Frank Merriwell" finish over Iowa State Saturday to eliminate any hopes the Cyclones entertained of capturing the pennant. Quartet Performs The Fine Arts quartet will appear in the Hiawatha High school, Tuesday, Guy V. Keeler, assistant director of the extension division, announced today. The quartet includes Waldenman Geltch, Joseph Wilkins, Miss Allie Conger, and Mrs. Winifred Hill Gallup. Phi Gam's Lead Division II Teams The league-leading Phi Gam's returned to the intramural football fray Thursday and trampled a game Pi K.A. team, 36-0. Sigma Chi walked over the Kappa Sig's with an 18-0 win, and the Teke's bowed to a heavy V-12 team, 48-0. Delta Upsilon upset the Phi Psi's with a close 7-6 win. The strong Beta team handed the Sigma Nu's their first loss by a winning 30-2. The Phi Delt's took Battenfeld hall, 18-0, in a slow game. Yesterday's win for the Fiji's brought their total number of scored points up to 136 in four games—a record for both leagues. Len Hartigan, Fiji quarterback, ran wild in the third play of the game to cross the goal for the first touchdown. Though the Pi K.A. team set up a stubborn defense they were unable to stop the steamroller Fiji offensive, and Hartigan repeated his performance twice more in the first half. John Herron and Tom Thompson both struck pay dirt for the Phi Gam's in the second half. Hartigan scored a fourth time to bring the final score 36-0 for the Phi Gam's. In Division II, the Delta Upsilon upset was the game of the day. At the end of the fourth quarter, the game was tied. In the final playoff, the D.U.'s outgained the Phi Psi's to win by one point. Mu Phi Meets Tonight A special meeting of Mu Phi Epsilon, music sorority, will be at 7:15 tonight in Miller Hall. This is our Veterans Homecoming Week-Buy a Bond in his honor and See our Show FREE! NOW ALL WEEK at the Jayhawker THE MIGHTIEST OF ALL SEA PICTURES! Romance AS YOU DREAM IT! Adventure AS YOU LIKE IT! Romance AS YOU DREAM IT! Adventure AS YOU LIKE IT! Haughty, beautiful, fiery, lovely... this wildcat meets her match in the boldest buccaneer that ever roamed the seven seas! In Glorious TECHNICOLOR THE SPANISH MAIN starring PAUL MAUREEN WALTER HENREID·O'HARA·SLEZAK JOHN BINNLE BARNES·JOHN EMERY A FLASH! Notre Dame-Navy in Foto Finish Thriller WATCH FOR One of the Year's Great "Weekend at the Waldorf" State Correspondents Meet Tomorrow (continued from page one) mond Rowe, Tribute; Bette Forbes, Eureka; Ken n e th Bonekowski, Madison; Oran Carter, Syracuse; Mary Yager, Anthony; Dwight Ban- han, Harper; Annabelle Saylor, Burton; Evelyn Yogt, Halstead; Nancy Goering, Newton; Eva Yung, Sedgwick. Ruth Giles, Sublette; Edward Lang, Jetmore; Jacquette Shaw, Holton; Betty Leighton, Nortonville; Arlen Nickels, McLouth; Ruth Payne, Oskaloosa; Sarah Marks, Valley Falls; Kipp Gimple, Burr Oak; Suzanne Albough, Olatte; Jane Atwood, Gardner; William Charlton, DeSoto; Bonnie Veatch, Merriam; John Crump, Lakin; Ian Campbell, Kingman; Martha Myers, Norwich; Janet Barker, Greensburg; Rosemary Jarbee, Parsons. Jean Bell, Chetopa; Bob Gaff, Oswego; Mary Elizabeth Graves, Dighton; Glenda Luehring, Leavenworth. The remainder of this list will appear in Tuesday's Daily Kansan. VARSITY TODAY — Ends Tuesday EAST SIDE KIDS "COME OUT FIGHTING" and JAMES DUNN "CARIBBEAN MYSTERY" Wednesday - Thursday JAMES CAGNEY ANN SHERIDAN PAT O'BRIEN "TORRID ZONE" COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING STATE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN HEADS GOT TOGETHER RESULT: MORE TRANSCONTINENTAL TELEPHONE CIRCUITS With wire scarce and wartime calls increasing, telephone engineers made existing pairs of long distance wires carry nearly four times as many calls as before. This was done through installation of additional carrier equipment, requiring closer spacing of the wires on the line and transpositions at shorter intervals. Three pairs on the Southern Transcontinental Route were rearranged, and in a 430-mile section this had to be done while keeping the urgently needed wires in service all the time. To do this, new tools and new methods had to be devised in the laboratories and on the job. This is another among many examples of how Bell System teamwork and engineering skills maintained telephone service under wartime conditions. BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM W ter 0 day atom cept brot TL Brit "Our four morgovsion in e P. cha Gen Frei 1,0 To Mea nea step tori Jew CITY OF NEW YORK BELL COUNTY University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Tuesday, Nov. 13, 1945 43rd Year No. 36 Lawrence Kansas News . . . of the World Cooperate to Live, Attlee Tells World Washington. (UP)—Prime Minister Clement Attlee told Congress today that civilization can survive the atomic bomb only if the nations accept the Christian principle of man's brotherhood. brotherhood. The new socialist leader of the British government, asserted that "Our United Nations, in which I profoundly believe, must be something more than an agreement between governments; it must be an expression of the will of the common people in every country." Paris. (UP)—The new French chamber of deputies today elected Gen. Charles DeGaulle chief of the French state. 1,000 Jews Meet To Proclaim 'Rights' Washington. (UP)—Sen. James M. Mead, D., N.Y., told a group of nearly 1,000 Jews assembled on the steps of the capitol today that "historically, legally and morally the Jews have a right to Palestine." The group came here from New York and other cities to press for admission of Jewish refugees to Palestine and the establishment of a Jewish homeland there. Chungkink, (UP)—Local military sources reported today that Soviet forces had begun a mass withdrawal from Manchuria and that Chinese-manned American transport planes were ready to begin flying in central government troops at a rate of 1,500 a day. Washington. (UP)—President Truman announced today that the American government had "acceded" to a British suggestion for establishment of a joint Anglo-American committee of inquiry to examine the Palestine problem. U.S. Sailors Attack Honolulu 'Gooks' Honolulu. (UP)—One thousand sailors of the Honolulu air station armed with bayonets, clubs, rocks and hammers rioted through a residential section for two hours last night in what the sailors called retaliation for "unprovoked attacks" by local islanders. The outbreak followed a period of increasing tension between military forces in Honolulu and local residents, in which soldiers and sailors charged that they had repeatedly been attacked by "Gooks"—local residents. Fifty officers and enlisted men were arrested. Washington. (UP)—With $550,000,000 of an old authorization still hanging fire in the Senate, President Truman today asked Congress for an additional $1,350,000,000 for the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation administration. Washington, Nov. 13. (UP) — The House Military affairs committee voted today to continue with immediate consideration of President Truman's request for a compulsory military training program. Chicago. (UP) — Carter Colwell, 13, the son of the new president of the University of Chicago, is the youngest student registered. Here's First Picture of Tri-Delta Pledge Class Δ Δ Δ This is the pledge class of Tri-Delta, a national sorority which is being organized on the campus this year. Members pictured here are: year. Members pictured. First row left to right—Eunice Marie Carlson, Shirley Ann Grigsby, Margaret Joan Manners, Dr. Cora Downs, Mary Alice Martin, Beverly Jane Cubbage, Louise McIntire. Loussard row left to right—Mary Klooz, Jean Mcintie, Mary Eileen O'Brien, Helen Marte Dixtel, Bonnie Jean Benklemann, Elizabeth Ann Mallonee, Norma Jean Schinceler, Emily Ann Berry, and Mary Ann Sawyer. Hull, Nobel Winner Asks Peace Effort Washington. (UP)—Former Secretary of State Cordell Hull, expressing his gratification at winning the Nobel peace award for 1945, said today that the struggle for peace must be intensified "if the human race is to be preserved in this new and dangerous atomic age." The award, granted for Hull's work in founding the United Nation's organization, was announced yesterday along with the award of the 1944 prize to the International Red Cross. Hull said today, that the preservation of peace is a task for the people of all nations and called for increased effort to promote and maintain a "more alert and better informed" public opinion throughout the world. Kansas has more land under cultivation than any other state except Texas. Closing Hours Extended Friday Closing hours have been extended to allow students to attend Friday night Homecoming activities, Miss Marie Miller, assistant to the adviser of women, announced today. No other changes in closing hours have been made for the weekend, she added. audience. Navy trainees will have liberty until 1 a.m. Saturday, and also will have liberty at 10 a.m. Saturday, to attend the Home-coming breakfast dance. Hilden Gibson to Discuss U.S. and Russia Toniqit Hilden Gibson, associate professor of political science, will discuss "The United States and the Soviet Union" at 7:30 tonight in Fraser theater. Professor Gibson's lecture is the third in the America at Peace series. This is the remainder of the list of State-wide Activities correspondents which appeared in Monday's Daily Kansan. State Correspondent List Completed Janet Wiley, Tonganoxie; Harold Ball, Meund City; Beryl Huffa Flessantam; Ardella Ringwalt, Oakley; Joan Anderson, Emporia; Josephine Hurtig, Hartford; Raymond Schmidt, Canton; Janis Burkholder, McPherson. Lois Burreh, Roxbury; Lylas Richen, Florence; Mary Vogt, Hillsboro; Mildred Garrison, Marion; Virginia Cooper, Peabody; Helen Hendricks, Axtell; Billy Schafer, Blue Rapids; Anna Stevens, Frankfort; Anna Johnston, Maryville. JOHNSEY, Jean Fitzgerald, Waterville; Maybelle St. Lawrence, Fowler; John Dickerson, Meade; Mary Lou York, Osawatime; Pearl Geiger, Paola; Rebecca Vallette, Beloit; Orville (continued to page four) 'Young Cal' VanderWerf Never Has Owned a Hat Each year the young chemistry professor becomes involved in some case of mistaken identity even if it is being called a student by University newcomers. Nevertheless, he has to set everyone right, maybe even his wife. The guy who drinks beer at the Dine-A-Mite every night is not Calvin VanderWerf, the young chemistry professor. The name, VanderWerf, sounds Dutch and why not? It means from the harbor, and all his ancestors were Dutch sailors. His parents came from the Netherlands to Highland, Mich., the tulip center of America, whose population is 95 per cent Dutch. He holds two surprising records. He has never worn, or even owned, a hat and he has never drunk a cup of coffee. He doesn't like coffee, and, he says if you ever saw him in a The son of a minister, Professor VanderWerf spent his early life in seven midwestern states, moving in a manner not uncommon to a minister's family. Athletics rank high on his hobby hat, you wouldn't wonder why he doesn't wear one. PROF. CALVIN VANDERWERF His intended major was journalism, but instead, he took up the study of organic chemistry with special application to medicine. He received his bachelor of arts degree from Hope college, Highland, Mich. list. Whether it's baseball, football, track, volleyball or tennis, he's out for it. He is a music listener, either classic or jive depending upon his mood, although his choice leans to the classical. From Ohio State university he earned his doctor of philosophy degree. In 1941, he came to the University as an associate professor at the age of 23. "One fault a man is certain to overcome is his age," he remarked in defense of being young. in defense of During his last year in Columbus, Ohio, he met Mrs. VanderWerf who is well known on the campus and is active in YWCA work. They met at a mixed shower after a wedding where he had substituted as best man. Squad, Coaches Top Candidates At Rally Friday The three top Homecoming queen candidates, the football travelling squad, and coaches will appear at the South park rally after the Nightshirt parade Friday night, Eugenia Heworth. Homecoming committee chairman, announced today. Paradors will assemble outside the Union at 7 p.m. Friday. The University band will lead the parade, followed by Jay James, nighthirted freshman men, Ku Ku's, and all other students. The parade will mark down Oread avenue and Indiana street to Sixth street, changing at Sixth and Massachusetts streets from four-abreast formation to a single-line snake dance to South park. Cider and doughnuts will be served. Jay James will distribute free tickets for 9 and 11 p.m. shows at Lawrence theaters. Men's Glee Club Names 53 Members The names of 53 students chosen for the Men's Glce club were announced today by Prof. Joseph Wilkins, of the School of Fine Arts. The Glee club was discontinued in 1942 when there were not enough men on the campus. However, with the relatively large enrollment of men this fall the club is being reorganized. The list of members follows; First Tenors—Jim Conrad, Russell Halvorson, Harry Hanson, Bill Haskell, Richard Ong, Baryl Peterson, George Pyle, and Beryl White. Second Tenors—Wallace Abbey, Boyd D. Adult, Jack Cannon, Eugene Casement, Arnold Khukoski, Gary McKeen, C. E. Miller, Mike Nichols, Melvin Rice, Orville Roberts, Charles Rockhold, Benjamin Shanklin, Lyle Wheateroft, and John Wilcox. First Bass -- William Andrews, Nicholas R. Anzelmo, Melvin Borell, Byron De Haan, Bernard Domann, Charles N. Howard, Chesley Looney, Roy Matheson, Will Noble, Dean Patterson, Myron Rake, Richard Raney, William Richardson, Edgar Rickel, Eugene Voigt, John Wallace, Ben White, and Charles Hall. Contrary to reports that Thursday is the deadline for mailing Christmas packages to navy personnel overseas, the Lawrence post office told the Daily Kansan today that packages may be mailed at any time before the holiday. However, prompt mailing will insure the delivery of the parcel in time for Christmas. Second Bass — Owen Ambler, Lewis Bayles, Clay E. E. Borchers, Eugene Chinn, George Davidson, Randolph Funston, Larry Guy, Donald E. Himes, James W. Watt, O. A. West, and Hubert Westmacott, Kappa Psi, national pharmacy fraternity, and Kappa Epsilon, national pharmacy sorority, will hold a joint meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in room 205 Bailey laboratories. Mail Gifts to Navy Early WEATHER Kansas—Little change in temperature tonight. Low tonight 25 in the northwest to 40 southeast. Tomorrow increasing cloudiness, light rain southeast late afternoon or night. Somewhat warmer. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS NOVEMBER 13.1945 DAILY KANSAN Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Association, National Editorial Association, and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented the authors of *The American Journal of Madison Ave., New York City*. Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Law and Library, April 1978. School year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second class matte Sept. 17, 1970. At the Post Office at Kauai, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. EDITORIAL STAFF NEWS STAFF MARY TURKINGTON ... Managing Editor ELEANOR ALBRIGHT. Asst. Managing Editor LOREN KING ... Telegraph Editor BRIAN O'DAY ... Order Editor MARY MARGARET GAYNOR ... Sociology Editor PAT PENNEY ... Sports Editor BILLIE HAMILTON ... Military Editor JANE ANDERSON ... Research Editor LEO NORRIS ... Research Editor BETTY BROOKS ... Asst. Sports Editor MARGARET WENKSI ... Asst. Sports Editor JOAN VEATCH ... Campus Editor EDITORIAL START SULZMAN ... Editor-in-Chief DOLORES SULZMAN MARY MORRILL FRANKLIN FEARING OVILLE ROEBERTS Editor-in-Chief BUSINESS STAFF Editorial Associates NANCY TOMLISON ... Business Manager BETTY BEACH ... Advertising Manager Assistanti BONE BORENAKE, MARY BRANI- GAN, ANN REDDING, ANNE COTTE, SOLVIM SMALL, ELEANOR THOMPSON. In Charge This Issue. ANN REDDING Dear Editor: University Daily Kansan We figure that it is about time that somebody said something. Here it is. Vet Attacks Credit Policy Veteran Reproaches Special Committee Service Credit Policy Evaluates War Credit If you spent six months or more on some college campus, taking college courses in college subjects under college professors in the cadet training detachment, the advanced standing board will allow you to take the final exam in any of those subjects. No credit is given unless you take the exam here in addition to the one you took upon completion of the course. The advanced standing board of the University of Kansas has set down a "policy" on granting service credits. That policy, while not too inconsistent, is really sad. The method of granting service credits is pretty hard to understand. How many students at K.U. could pass the final in a subject they took two years ago? Show me the way to go home. A Kappa trio, set out for Kaysee Saturday on a shopping spree. They had every intention of returning to Lawrence before dusk to keep their dates, but what with a pledge at the wheel, they wound up as 'outrists in Pleasantville, Mo. Several fellows had plenty of time to cool their heels at the Theta and Deegee open houses before the girls found their way home to Gower Place about midnight. If the board does not feel that sufficient work was covered by any given school to warrant full credit in a subject, let them pro-rate the credit accordingly. But I can explain everything.—A Phi Gam was tucked away in his bed Friday morn, his little jalopy resting peacefully in front of the premises (for the first time since 2 a. m.). Now how is he going to explain that a big bad and slightly "happy" driver quietly dented in the back end of the family bus when it was parked on sonny's doorstep? Lovely view—As the football squad wended its way into Milwaukee over the weekend, Dick Bertuzzi popped his head out the window and caught a glimpse of How about somebody doing something about this mess—but quick? If universities all over the country are taking this attitude, as the board intimates, it seems that it is an outright admission that colleges today aren't getting anything across to their students. In that case, it would pay the returning veteran to go right to work instead of wasting valuable time and money by going to college. Rock Chalk Talk Sincerely, Many tired vets. (Editor's Note: The writer of the above letter listed the names of five veterans attending the University who are dissatisfied with the method of granting credits at K.U.) The first copy of a new art bulletin from Spooner-Thayer museum will be published soon as an issue of the weekly University newsletter, Mrs. Margaret Warner, museum curator, said today. By JOAN HARRIS Art Bulletin Will Be Printed As University Newsletter The purpose of the eight-page bulletin, which will be sent to all organized houses and heads of departments of the University, is to acquaint its readers with museum activities. Special credit problems are handled through the armed forces credit committee set up by the University Senate on October 4. The committee, composed of Dr. L. H. Axe, director of the Veteran's Service bureau; Dr. Guy V. Smith, professor of mathematics; and D. D. Haines, professor of civil engineering, is in charge of special problems concerning credit for military service and credit for technical and specialized training received in service which might apply toward a degree from the University. The George B. Tuttle report, "Evaluation of Educational Experiences in the Armed Services," is used as a guide in determining credit. The report lists and explains all types of training given in the armed forces and gives estimates of such training in the terms of college credit. It is used by many state schools. Only one applicant out of more than 75 interviewed has objected to the committee's evaluation of credits, according to Dr. Axe, chairman. Immediate attention and personal interviews are available always to any veteran with credit problems. The committee has authority to give credit on the basis of its evaluation of the military record of the applicants. Credit recommendations are accepted by the registrar and advanced standing board. The DAILY KANSAN welcomes any comment or information on the matter of service credit from both veterans attending K.U. and those in charge of granting such credit. Jan Chiapusso, piano professor, presented his annual recital last night in Fraser theater before a near capacity audience which brought him back for five curtain calls. Chiopusso Plays Recital For Enthusiastic Audience "The committee is still studying the cadet training detachment mentioned in the letter," Dr. Axe said. "But 90 per cent of the students who have had it and are coming back to college say it is really 'high school stuff.'" Mr. Chiapusso played a variety of classical numbers. He received the traditional basket of assorted fruit from his students. Chinese and Japanese use masks instead of make up on the stage. Lake Michigan. "Behold, me hearty sailors," he shouted to K.U.'s "navy" team—"In case you have never seen a boat sailing in water, you'd better take a look so you can go home and tell the other fellows about it." Maybe she isn't inspired—Professor Wheeler was lecturing on "goals", his purple tie-flashing as he stalked around his desk."You need a major which inspires you to work," quoth he. The veteran in the back row said that he was inclined to agree, but his wife, a zoology major, doesn't even know how to boil water. Popularity queen—Everybody in the Theta house fights over who gets to room with Bev Stucker. She is a very sweet girl, but the true secret of her success is the fact that whoever buns with Bev always winds up married before the semester is over. It happened last year, and again this year. Overheard on a bus—“Kitty's such a sweet kid, but she takes up so much of my time—I used to make straight A's before I met her—Of course, she's so darn cute, with those big blue eyes and her convertible—I can't ever get anything done trying to keep up with her—she sure looks reet in green.” Second person—“Yea.” First person—"You talked me into it—I'm going to ask her to go steady." Ouch! According to a Kansas weekly newspaper, you can't insult the modern girl by telling her her hair looks like a mop she doesn't know what a mop looks like. That's telling him Pop. And then there's the studious K.U. freshman who wrote home that he needed an encyclopedia for school. His father's reaction: "Encyclopedia, nothing, you can walk to classes like I did." Letters to the Editor Tables Not Reserved For Groups in Library University Daily Kansan Dear Editor: Dear Editor: Recently a student seeking to study in the library was told by other students that the table at which he sat was reserved for their organized group. I wish to inform the entire student body that at no time has the library reserved tables for special groups. Students are free to sit wherever they wish in the reading rooms provided they study and do not disturb others. Any interference with this right should be reported at once to the director. C. M. Baker, Director of Libraries. The Music Appreciation club held an informal open house from 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday, in the Old English room of the Memorial Union. Music Club Meets Garage and Cab Co. HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. 922 Mass. Phone 12 LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. Phone 425 OFFICIAL BULLETIN University of Kansas Nov.13, 1945 Tau Sigma will meet at 7:30 tonight in Robinson gymnasium. Please be prompt. All members will dress for dancing and pledges are asked to remember dues.-Glenda Luehring, Publicity chairman. All-Student Council will meet at 7:15 p.m. Tuesday in the Pine room of the Union building—Mary Jo Cox, president. Cheerleading practice will be at 4:30 p.m. Thursday in Memorial stadium if the weather permits, otherwise in Kansan room. Attendance required.-Alberta Cornwell, Head Cheerleader. Bayles on Leave Ens. Robert Bayles, who attended the University in the V-12 training program and was graduated in June, 1945, received his commission from the naval reserve midshipman school at the University of Notre Dame last Friday. He is home on leave and will report to Washington, D.C., to turret school. Large Selection of SKIRTS! - Complete Line of Sizes Zungra Wool Crepe Rayon Crepe All Wool GOOD ASSORTMENT OF STYLES AND COLORS TO CHOOSE FROM 823 MASS. Adelane's PHONE 544 Students! PHONOGRAPH PLAYERS Are in Stock Now Quantity Limited So Get Yours NOW! New 5-tube superhectrodyne radios are also in. These are splendid radios with Beam power output and equals 7-tube operation in other sets. Complete Stock of Fresh Portable Radio Batteries We have new tubes for your radio. We can give you speedy service on all your radio repair work. Thanks for your business. Phone 138. ED BOWMAN BOWMAN RADIO Shop, 944 Mass. St., and F. M. TELECTRAD SHOP, 900 Mass. St. NOVE Mary HP S Mr Paul a bot the was in Mort Kapp Mr entit S.K. Two nae banc hous W Sched Eliza Mo. The ente pled Blue Ka nou Blue Glen Robe Cha The choc Frid The rece ar har the cors M Sched Ex the spring Gam Ann L le the bethe hosp an vers 100 NOVEMBER 13, 1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THRE ... SOCIALLY SPEAKING Mary Margarot Goynor, Society Editors Cormack Talks to A.A.U.W. Mrs. Margaret Lawson Cormack, who was born in India and who has lived in that country for 21 years, will speak at a meeting of the American Association of University Women at a dinner meeting at 5:45 tonight. Mrs. Cormack, the niece of Dean Paul B. Lawson, is now completing a book on India as her thesis for the degree of master of arts. She was graduated from the University in 1932, and was a member of Mortar board and of Phi Beta Kappa. Mrs. Cormack's speech will be entitled "India Today." S. K. Honors Alumnae Twenty-eight Sigma Kappa alumnae were guests at an alumnae day banquet, Sunday at the chapter house. Weekend guests were Patricia Scherrer, Clara Lee Oxley, and Elizabeth MacMillan, Kansas City, Mo. The pledge class of Sigma Kappa entertained Phi Gamma Delta pledges at an hour dance Monday. Blue-Bayles Pinned Kappa Alpha Theta has announced the pinning of Gladys Blue, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn A. Blue, Emporia, to Ens. Robert Bayles, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Bayles, Lawrence. The announcement was made and chocolates were passed at dinner Friday night at the Kappa Alpha Theta chapter house. Miss Blue received an orchid corsage. Mrs. Mark, Mandigo, housemother, was sent a corsage of yellow roses. Martha Yingling, who assisted with the ceremony received a gardenia corsage. Miss Blue is a senior in the School of Fine Arts. Announce Birth of Daughter Ens. Bayles was graduated from the School of Engineering last spring. He is affiliated with the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. Lt. and Mrs. E. F. Horn announce the birth of a daughter, Ellen Elizabeth, Friday, Nov. 9, at Providence hospital, Kansas City. Lt. Horn is an assistant professor in the University N.R.O.T.C. program. --or Jayhawker Jewelry New Shipment Roberts Jewelry and Gifts SLEEP IS EASY WHEN YOU DRINK MILK BEFORE RE TIRING. Lawrence Sanitary Milk & Ice Cream Co. Visitors to Tipperary Sunday dinner guests at Tipperary were Gene Smith, John and Robert Light. Margaret Polifka, Neaeh, Wis; Jacqueline Fry, Kansas City; Mara June Hudson, Winfield; and Mrs. Warren D. Haxton, Topeka; were weekend guests. Aldridges Visits D. G. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Aldridge were dinner guests Thursday at the Delta Gamma house. Overstreet Is Bride The marriage of Jeanne Overstreet, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. M. Overstreet, Newton, and Richard V. Brown, U.S.N.R., son of Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Brown, St. Louis, Mo, was solemnized in the Salem Evangelical church at Newton, at 3:30 p.m. Friday. The Rev. C. R. Findley read the double ring ceremony. The bride wore a gown of white satin and peplin with a scalloped neckline and long sleeves. A tiera of seed pearls held her finger-tip veil, and she carried a bouquet of white roses. Marguerite Overstreet was the bride's maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Betty Ball and Dolores Martin. Evelyn Vogt and Amy Little lighted the tapers. Hilly Stong acted as best man for the groom. Ushers were Charles Ball and George Brown. The bride has been employed in the intelligence department of an airline company since her graduation from the University last spring. Brown was recently graduated from the V-12 unit at the University. He will report for duty on Nov. 19, at which time he will receive his commission. *** Sleepy Hollow Entertains Sunday dinner guests *Sleepy Hollow were Barbara Hargis, Kansas City, Mo; Bernadine Read, Baxter Springs; Pvt. William Estham and Pvt. Richard Harkum, Camp Crowder, Mo.; and A/S Willis Baker, Pleasanton. This is our Veterans Homecoming Week. Buy a bond in his honor and see our show FREE! at the Jayhawker NOW Another Record Breaker ROMANCE AS YOU DREAM IT! ADVENTURE AS YOU LIKE IT! ALL WEEK THE MIGHTIEST OF ALL SEA PICTURES! in Glorious TECHNICALOZ! THE SPANISH MAIN STARRING PAUL MAUREEN WALTER HENREID • O'HARA • SLEZAK Notre Dame- Navy Foto-Finish FLASH And Still They Come! SUNDAY "Weekend at the Waldorf" OH, MY ACHING BACK Education and interest have been gaining steadily on the spread of the tuberculosis germ, cutting the "TB" death rate one-half in 20 years. How to Stay Out of the Hospital A few facts about tuberculosis, not too long ago discovered and not at all too well-known by the ordinary on-looker are: Tuberculosis is caused by a germ which can be spread in droplets of sputum coughed from infected persons, by direct contact, on improperly washed dishes, or blown about in dust. Its waxy coat resists heat and drying, but sunlight and cleanliness are its foes. Tuberculosis is not inherited. It may "run in families" but it is not born with the child. Infection may occur through contact with tuberculosis members of the household or may be imposed upon the helpless infant by the kisses of infected friends or relatives. Tuberculosis is no respector of persons. Those who are worn-out or undernourished may have a better chance of getting it, but the strong do not necessarily escape if the exposure is sufficient. Tuberculosis is deceitful in its onset. The classical symptoms of fatigue, fever, loss of weight, and cough are not always present. Their presence doesn't necessarily indicate tuberculosis. When the disease reaches the stage where it can be diagnosed by these symptoms and the use of a stethoscope, it is well on its way. Early diagnosis is established by the tuberculin test and X-ray. Tuberculosis is curable. Early diagnosis, sanatorium rest, diet, and modern surgery result in a high percentage of cures. New medicines now on trial may be spectacular in their effectiveness. —Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson 9:30 p.m.—America at Peace Series "The United States and the United Nations"—Hilden Gibson, departments of sociology and political science. ON KFKU Tonight: 2:30 p.m. Tales From Ivory Towers—the story of "Pecos Pill" Wednesday: 2:45 p.m. Music 2:45 p.m. Music 9:30 p.m. National Education week program, presented by the School of Education. K.U. Fingerprinting Discussed As Service Group Project Fingerprinting all University students, selling Christmas seals, and sponsoring a March-of-Dimes dance were among the proposed projects discussed by the Alpha Phi Omega national service fraternity Sidney North, Kansas City, Mo. national secretary, attended to aid in the selection of projects. The only membership requirement for this fraternity is past or present membership in the Boy Scouts of America. WANT ADS LOST — Black Sheafer's fountain pen lost a week ago, Name, "Lee Shull," engraved and Flying Red Horse on top. Reward offered. Return to Kansan office. FOR SALE—A good slightly used Muskrat fur coat. About size 32-34. After 7 p.m. call 3217 or come to 1124 Emery Road for further information. GIRL wanted—to share a double with Liberal Art freshman. Twin beds. At 1717 III. or call 2680W. ROOM FOR RENT Wanted, 4 boys for heated sleeping porch and study room. Three blocks from K.U. on bus line. 308 W. 16th St. LOST—Green billfold with initials M.B.S. Lost last Saturday between the Chi Omega house and the Union ALL GRANADA WEEK Record Crowds Laugh and Laugh . . and love it. They'll "KISS AND TELL" that it's the Grandest Laff and Love Comedy Surprise Since "It Happened One Night" Filmed from Broadway's stage hit! COLUMBIA PICTURES presents KISS AND TELL L A GEORGE ABBOTT PRODUCTION Play and Screenplay by F. HUGH HERBERT Starrin$ SHIRLEY TEMPL $COLLIS ARCHER with JEROME COURTLAND • WALTER ABEL • ROBERT BENCHLEY PORTER HALL • TOM TULLY ADDED—COLOR CARTOON - LATEST NEWS SAT. OWL & SUNDAY — 4 Days 11:45 ATOMIC BOMB STRIKES JAPAN! SEE IT THROUGH THE EYES OF THE . . . "First Yank Into Tokyo" Pacific railroad station. Liberal reward. Call Marilyn Steinier, 731. Timely! Tense! Terrific! LOST—Small brown change purse contains $5 bill and some small change, Wednesday between 1101 Mississippi and Henley House, 4:30 p. m. Please call J. M. Peavy at 1043. LOST—Silver identification bracelet Wednesday the 7th with "Katheryn" inscribed on front and "Eugene" on back. Like to have because it was a gift. Call Katherine Ward 860. LOST—A brown leather jacket on Football fields behind Robinson Gym. Thursday afternoon. Please call 503 or return to 1127 Ohio. Reward. LOST — Brown leather jacket, marked Jim-T. Finder please call Jim Thompson-234. FOR RENT — Good Garage — at northeast edge of campus call 1454M. LOST—Blue Eversharp pen Thursday. Finder please call 1789-J or leave it at the Kansan office. LOST — Brown striped Shafefer's Lifetime pen between Frank Strong and Shack. Call Bobbie Ford, 898. WANTED—Expertenced presser full or part time at once. Apply at the New York Cleaners 926 Mass., or ohone 75. EAST SIDE KIDS VARSITY ENDS TONITE EAST SIDE KIDS "COME OUT FIGHTING" and JAMES DUNN "CARIBBEAN MYSTERY" Wednesday - Thursday James CAGNY hes flery! TORRIFIC TRIO! hitting the hot spots- and each other! James CAGNEY he's fiery! Ann SHERIDAN she's sizzling! Pat OBRIEN He's burned-up! TORRID ZONE TORRID ZONE by recommended by WARNER BR03. RE-RELEASED ANDY DEVINE · HELEN VINSON PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS NOVEMBER 13,1945 IN THE HUDDLE with PAT PENNEY The fighting eleven of Kansas is not relying on student rallies to bolster its pep for the coming K-State game. Prominently displayed in the team's dressing rooms are signs reading "Beat the Aggies" and "Remember 1944." That was the year a touchdown in the last few seconds, which would have made the Jayhawkers victorious, was called back. Kansas hasn't forgotten the game. BEAT K-STATE Kansas played its best defensive game of the season during the first half of the Marquette encounter Saturday. The Jayhawkers were held scoreless for the first time since the start of the season when they lost to T.C.U. 18-0. K-State will be on the rebound this week after playing its poorest game of the season last week with Nebraska. The Jayhawkers can take K-State and Missouri both, considering the present condition of the team, Coach Shenk believes for they have no injuries this week. Prognosticators last week, were swayed by "school loyalty" in predicting a Kansas win over Milwaukee. (Your editor's honest prediction was a loss for the Jayhawkers.) "Quigi" missed the boat by selecting K-State to win over Nebraska. "Tex" Langford and Coach Shenk picked two winners out of three by selecting Oklahoma and Nebraska as winners over Iowa State and Kansas State. First Matches Scheduled In Men's Handball Tourney The men's intramural handball tournament has started. The tournament schedule, with addresses of entrants, is posted on the intramural bulletin board in Robinson evm. Players will meet in first round matches this week. State Correspondent Names Listed (continued from page one) Roberts, Independence; Betty Brothers. Cherryvale; Frances Crisp, Coffeville. Stanley Woods, Caney; Barbara Pattison, Council Grove; Cora Hunter, White City; Ruth Brown, Sabetha; Mary Jackson, Seneca; Patricia Riegle, Chanute; Paul Ensch, St. Paul; Valdah Harkness, Ness City; Lyle Wheatcroft, Utica; Bethy Cummings, Almena; Shirley Otter, Norton; Edith Stodard, Burlingame; Shirley Wellborn, Lyndon. Emily Hollis, Overbrook; Alice Peterson, Osage City; Melba Whiting, Downs; Barbara Ford, Osborne; Max Musgrave, Minneapolis; Deane Postlethwaite, Delphos; Marlyn Frizzell, Learned; Laura Templeton, Logan; Marchita Townsend, Phillipsburg; Joe Arnold, Westmoreland; Joan Larson, Wamego; Neva Jean Unruh, Pratt; Marjorie Robbins Atwood. Joan Howard, McDonald; Jacquelin McDermed, Hutchinson; Mary Crandall, Sylvia; Coral Wade, Belleville; Beverly Hylle, Courtland; Billie J. Stillman, Bushton; Reva Brown, Sterling; Florence Stodel, Randelb. Virginia Pond, Plainville; Betty Loefler, Stockton; Donald Schwartz-kopf, LaCrosse, Epsie Brandt, Russell; Charles Marsh, Salina; Marion Greenlee, Scott City; Max Hand, Sedgwick; Marjorie Gardner, Valley Center; Jean Harris, Wichita; Jane Priest, Wichita; Loren King, Liberal; Sarah Heil, Topeka. Evangeline Pratt, Hoxie; Delores Sulzman, Selden; Dorothy Hoover, Smith Center; Patricia Colglazier, St. John; Anne Ardrey, Stafford; Joanne Cockram, Johnson; Mary Dudley, Hugoton; Lois Wooden, Argonia; Vivian Stunkel, Belle Plaine; Dorothy Harter, Caldwell; Barbara Ann Felt, Wellington; Sheila Guise, Brewsner; Glenn Warner, Colly. Marjorie Brown, Wakeeney; Geneva Laman, Alma; Marjorie Skeen, Eskridge; Kenneth Oldham, Leoti; Norma Lou Hall, Altoona; Gordon Offenhacker, Buffalo; Sheela Stryker, Fredonia; Juana Satterlee, Neodesha; Mary Burnside, Yates Center; Mary Margaret Gaynor, Kansas City; Norma Harrington; Bonner Springs. ANTI-FREEZE! ANTI-FREEZE! Prepare Your Car for Winter NOW! Morgan-Mack Motor Co. 609 Mass. Phone 277 University Sends Programs Over State Kansas communities are being entertained and educated again this year by a variety of companies and individuals booked for appearances by the University lecture bureau, Guy V. Keeler, director of the bureau, announced today. Lecture bureau programs are given in high schools, colleges, service clubs, and community gatherings, he said. Sometimes they are scheduled in Oklahoma and Nebraska towns near the Kansas line. The list of performers on the lecture bureau's program varies throughout the year. Usually an individual or company gives the bureau a specific block of time in which to schedule Kansas performances. Currently appearing before audiences in western Kansas, northern Oklahoma, and southern Nebraska are: Maxine McCormick, dramatic reader; Iluster Musgrove, contralto; Yolanda Meek '45, pianist; Nathan H. Gist, speaker on education; Ben Hammond, cartoonist; Carmeron Beck, speaker on educational and vocational guidance; Willis A. Sutton, lecturer, and Pamahasikia's pets, a collection of trained birds. Band to M.U. Game The University band will play at the Kansas-Missouri football game in Kansas City, Mo., Nov. 24, Prof. Russell L. Wiley, director, announced today. The band will take about 75 members. Gustafson the "COLLEGE JEWELER" 911 Mass. St. Students' Jewelry Store 41 Years DO YOU KNOW YOUR ABC's SIGNE HASSO knows her A B C's. This glamorous star is currently appearing in Twentieth Century-Fox's "The House on 92nd Street." Always Buy Chesterfield Take your pick. Name any pleasure you enjoy in a cigarette. You'll find them all in Chesterfield's ABC: A—ALWAYS MILDER, B—BETTER TASTING and C—COOLER SMOKING. The point is: Chesterfield’s famous Right Combination . . . World’s Best Tobaccos gives you ALL the benefits of smoking pleasure. They Satisfy ALWAYS MILDER BETTER TASTING COOLER SMOKING DO YOU KNOW YOUR ABC's SIGNE HASSO knows her A B C's. This glamorous star is currently appearing in Twentieth Century Fox's "The House on 92nd Street." Chesterfield CARETTES LINCOLN & MIDDLE TARACCO CO. ALWAYS MILDER BETTER TASTING COOLER SMOKING University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Wednesday, Nov. 14, 1935 43rd Year No. 37 Lawrence, Kansas News of the World Soerabaja Bombarded By British Forces Batavia. (UP)—British warships, planes and artillery used a shattering bombardment on the heart of Soerabaja today in a concerted attempt to blast out Indonesian nationalists making a determined stand in the East Java naval base. Unconfirmed reports circulated that Sutan Sjahir, new premier of the nationalist government, was ready to deal with the British and Dutch in an effort to end the bloody strife in Java. Jerusalem. (UP)—Palestine was virtually paralyzed at noon today by a Jewish general strike in protest against the proposed Anglo-American inquiry into the Jewish situation. Soviets Contribute To Atom Research Moseow. (UP)—Soviet scientists today reported major cosmic ray discoveries which they said should greatly aid development of atomic power. The Soviet press reported the new discoveries as a result of experiments undertaken by Prof. Peter Kapitza, a long-time experimenter with atomic problems. Washington (UP)—President Truman today begins the concluding phases of his atomic energy conferences with Prime Ministers Attlee of Great Britain and MacKenzie King of Canada. Los Angeles. (UP)—The nation's leading builders, architects, and structural engineers will petition congress to break up all U.S. cities of more than 200,000 population to guard against destruction by atomic bomb attacks, it was disclosed today. 'We Still Want Veto,' Russia Insists Washington. (UP)—Secretary of State James F. Byrnes disclosed today that Russia is still insisting on veto rights in any Allied council which might be set up to asssit Gen. MacArthur in Japanese occupation matters. The United States had suggested abondment of the so-called unanimity rule on the grounds that it had not worked well in practice in Germany. The U.S. also insists that MacArthur shall have the final say, regardless of how the council operates. Washington, (UP)—President Trump today accepted the resignation of Assistant Secretary of war John J. McCloy, effective Nov. 24. Indianapolis, (UP)—A young soldier and his bride were married legally—when they strolled into a meeting of county judges at the Indianapolis probate court and asked if somebody would perform a marriage ceremony for them. Judge Dan V. White obliged and all the judges present signed as witnesses. Miss Margaret Allen, court reporter, served as impromptu bridesmaid. London. (UP)—The discovery of a new anti-malaria drug called paludrine was announced today by Lord Leverhulme, who said the drug was more powerful and had a much better influence upon malaria than any known specific. Marines Cover New Invasion Chungking. (UP)—The Chungking government said today that the battles of Kwesiui and Paotow, chief citadels of Suiyuan province, had reached the "White-Ho" stage, hinting that they might not be able to hold out much longer against Communist siege armies. To the southeast, strong government forces landed in Tsingtao under the covering guns of U.S. Marines and naval units. A full scale push to drive the Communists from Shantung peninsula appeared to be shaping up. Lui Chieh, vice minister for foreign affairs, revealed that Chungking and Russian representatives still were negotiating regarding entry of Kuomintang forces into Manchuria. The way was cleared yesterday for the aerial transport of Chinese troops into Manchuria, from which the Soviet forces were reported withdrawing. The invasion of Shantung carried Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek's Nationalist troops into the main stronghold of the famed Communist Eighth Route army and threatened to touch off the first major battle of China's undeclared civil war. Work With Russia Gibson Urges "We need not be like the Russians in order to live peaceably with them," Prof. Hilden Gibson, of the political science department stated in Fraser theater in the third America at Peace lecture last night. Prof. Walter Sandelius, chairman of the political science department, introduced the speaker. After the lecture, part of the audience remained to question Professor Gibson. "The only thing that can make war between the United States and Russia inevitable is the thought that such a war cannot be avoided," Professor Gibson said. "We must apply the golden rule in our relations with the Soviet Union," he said. "Russia has shown no tendency to interfere in our sphere of influence, and we should leave Russia alone in the areas which she considers vital to her own safety. The Pan-Hellenic scholarship tea will be held from 4:30 p.m. to 5:30 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas room of the Union building, instead of Tuesday as previously announced, Jane Miller, president of the Pan-Hellenic council, announced today. "Viewed objectively, Russia's territorial demands are no more unreasonable than our demands for bases in the Pacific, or the use of American equipment to suppress a democratic revolution in Greece." Pan-Hellenic Tea Changed to Thursday Members of Kappa Kappa Gamma will receive the scholarship cup at the tea. Simpson to Aviation Clinic Prof. William M. Simpson will attend the National Aviation Clinic which is to be held next week at Oklahoma City. Some of the phases of the future of aviation are to be discussed. Franzena Jackson Majors in Sociology, Serves on ASC FRANZENA JACKSON Franzena Jackson, 21-year-old senior major in sociology, is the Negro youth representative to the All Student Council. She is a member of the Union operating committee and the auditing committee. Franzena lives in Kansas City,Kan. and wants to teach sociology or enter the field of social work after graduation. She plans to study for a master's degree in sociology first, and says marriage also enters her plans for the future. She is dean of pledges in Delta Sigma Theta sorority, a sociology club member, and Y.W.C.A. finance chairman. Franzena belongs to Pi Lambda Theta, honorary educational sorority, was on the dean's honor roll, and has received the Caroline Winston scholarship. Council Will Show Union Addition Plans The All-Student Council meeting next week will be open to all students at 7:15 p.m. Tuesday in the men's lounge of the Union. Dean Henry Werner will show slides of the proposed plans for additions to the Union building. Sale of Christmas seals will be sponsored by the Council again this year, members decided last night. A factual public service report to the students concerning student wage rates, housing costs, and wage increases of the last 10 years is being prepared by a committee appointed earlier in the year, Marjorie Nan Bentley reported. The publications committee of the Council authorized Kan-Do, Independent party publication, and the paper again will be issued, Dixie Gilland, committee chairman, said. Nine members, Leonard Brown, Laura Jean Templeton, Guy Aschcraft, Robert Ray Witt, Emily Jane Stacey, Richard Hollingsworth, Sewell Macferran, Charles Hall, and Shirley Corlett, were absent. Other Council business last night included presentation and explanation of the policy and operation of the Daily Kansan by Dolores Sulzman, editor-in-chief of the newspaper. WEATHER Kansas—Partly, cloudy tonight and tomorrow. Little change in temperature except slightly warmer west and north tomorrow. Low tonight lower to upper 30's, except mid-20's extreme west. Universal Military Training Plan 'Hasty, Ineffectual,' Malott Says In Statement Criticizing President President Truman's proposal for universal military training "seems to be hastily formulated, and to represent an ineffectual attack on a major problem facing the nation," Chancellor Deane W. Malott declared today. The chancellor wrote a 1,400-word question-filled release to the press, reiterating his stand against compulsory military training. He first publicized his views on this question last January, when he joined 11 other university presidents in a letter to the late President Roosevelt, opposing "During that time do we fear attack from England, seriously drained of men, materials, and money, as she is, by the war? Or from Russia, which certainly at the very least needs time for reconstruction, and some blanience of naval power, before she could possibly attack our shores? "Or do we simply fear ourselves, and our inability to make bold and purposeful decisions once the emotional stimulus of World War II has disappeared? Is that the real reason for the haste shown by our leaders?" such training during wartime? In today's release, Chancellor Malott criticised the machinery needed for administration of compulsory service, and proposed utilization of the curricula of existing educational institutions, with added military training as a more workable plan. "Why the haste in urging military training legislation?" the executive asked. "Considering the size of our potential fighting force, we have little to concern us for several years. "If so, what a sad commentary on our democratic processes." Taking a pre-medical or engineering student from his studies for a year, the chancellor pointed out, would withhold from him his greatest military usefulness for that time, "because it is only as a physician or qualified engineer that he is of maximum use to the armed services. "He would not be held back if kept at his regular curricular routine and at the same time given the necessary military drill and instruction," he added. There is "an ominous quiet" on (continued to page four) Rites to Honor K.U. Servicemen a memorial service honoring all K.U. servicemen and ex-servicemen will precede the Homecoming game Saturday in Memorial stadium, Eugenia Hepworth, Homecoming committee chairman, announced today. University navy trainees, the K. U. and K-State bands will stand at attention on the football field while Judge Harry W. Fisher, '13, vicepresident of the University Alumni association, will narrate the memorial service. The bands will play "The Star-Spangled Banner" as the flag is raised. The K.U.-K.State peace trophy will be presented to the winning school after the game. Mary Jo Cox, president of the All-Student Council, will represent the University, and Merle Eyestone will represent K-State. Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, will decorate the goal posts for the game. A special section will be reserved for University navy trainees. Nomen's Hours Extended Friday night closing hours for women students have been extended to 1:30 a.m. Saturday, Mrs. Elizabeth Meguiar, adviser of women, announced today. Pull That Whistle, Ring The Bell We're on Our Way with AT & SF New York. (UP)—Pull that whistle, ring the bell, and we're on our way with the old Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe. But the historic railroad will have to do some mighty huffing and puffing to catch up with the song of the same name. The whole country is singing it, and right now the catchy little ditty apparently is out-pulling the box-cars when it comes to hauling in the money. A slightly-embarrassed railway executive pointed out today that this was just a temporary condition, and he certainly didn't expect things to stay that way. Harry Link, manager of the firm publishing the song, revealed that "Atchison, Topcka and Santa Fe" already has sold one million copies and two million records. It's still going strong. "It has already earned over $850,- 000," Link said. "I'll reach a million dollars easily." The tune was first published on July 1. The railway official said from July 1 until the present date his outfit had been operating "in the red." He added, however, that this didn't present a true picture of the old railroad's financial condition because of an extensive amortization program during September. "Certainly, we've received a great amount of publicity from the song," he said. But he didn't know how much it had helped in swelling the passenger list. Link squealed a rumor that the song originally was offered to the railroad by its author for the price of a ticket. "It was written by Johnny Merder and Harry Warren," he explained, "The story is supposed to be about Mercer. He's making a barrel of money and could buy a hat-full of tickets, if he wanted them, I asked him about the story and he said somebody just dreamed it up." The song was written for the new picture, "The Harvey Girls." "The funny thing is that the boys have another song in the movie called 'Wait and See'," Link said. "When the film is released 'Wait and See' will make even more money than 'Achison, Topeka, and the Santa Fe.'" So pour on the coal, Mr. Engineer. Those old boxcars really got to step on it. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 14,1945 University DAILY KANSAN Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Association, National Editorial Association, and the Associated College Advertising Service. Represented in advertising for 420 Madison Ave., New York City. Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Law School year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sep. 17, 1910. to the Post Office at Kansas, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS STAFF MARY TURKINGTON Managing Editor ELEANOR ALBERTY Asst. Managing Editor LOREN KING Telegraph Editor WILLIAM O'BRIEN Order Editor MARY MARGARET GAYNOR. Society Editor PAT PENNEY Sports Editor BILLIE HAMILTON Sports Editor JANE ANDERSON Military Research CLEO NORMIS Research Coach MARGARET WENSKI Asst. Sports Editor JOAN VEATCH Campus Editor EDITORIAL STAFF DOLORES SULZMAN ... Editor-in-Chief MARY MORGILL FRANKLIN FEARING } Editorial Associates OVILLE ROBERTS BUSINESS STAFF NANCY TOMLSON ... Business Manager BETTY BEACH ... Advertising Manager Assistance员 BON BERRANK, MANY BRAN- ANN, ANN REDING, ANNE T. GOLLIVIA The prevalence of talk about war and preparation for war requires that thinking people face the situation and analyze it in order to form an intelligent opinion as to the inevitability of war. U.S. vs. U.S.S.R.? SMALL. ELEANOR THOMPSON. In Charge This Issue. SYLVIA SMALL The average man is saying that we are going to have another war. Some say within five years, some say ten to twenty. Military men are preparing for it. Yet no one wants it. Although few will say so until pressed, the general assumption is that our enemy will be Russia. But shall we fight Russia? Why should we? We have our differences, to be sure, but there are ways to settle them. If the Russians for reasons not clear at present seem unwilling to cooperate, shall we be impatient with peaceful processes and turn to war? If we realize that Russia is just as afraid of Anglo-American power—and with as much justification—as we are of her power, our fear would take on its proper ridiculous aspot. Consider the Russian case against Anglo-American intervention and domination. Immediately after the first World War, American and British troops were among those that fought the Bolsheviks. For almost two decades after the Russian revolution the United States gave the Soviet government the cold shoulder, refusing to recognize it until 1933. At Munich, it was clear to the Russians that Chamberlain did all he could to turn Hitler's hordes eastward and let both Germany and Russia waste themselves in a long, bloody war. Add to this the present Anglo-American control of the atom bomb and the United State's navy's insistence that the Pacific be an American lake, and then wonder why the Soviets take lightly the war-enforced Big Three alliance. Surely today, when the smoke of the atom bomb barely has cleared in the skies over Nagasaki and millions of our fighting men are still on the battlefields of the most vicious war in history, we should be willing to give the negotiations machinery of the United States a fair chance to save the peace—L. K. Liberal and Elkhart, Kansas are among the largest shipping points of broom corn in the world. Kansas ranks fourth in agricultural production in the United States. ATOMIC WARFARE IMADEQUATE DEFENSE DANIE'S GISHOP Feeble Reply to That Threat Rock Chalk Talk Rock The crowning blow fell when the hearing aid man came to see his prospective customer. She didn't know quite what it was all about, but at long last she discovered the identity of her helpful friends. She tripped to town, bought two ducks and returned to the GPB lodge. Slyly plunking the ducks into their Bv ANNE No mail. No 'nuthin. Several kindly coeds took pity on their Gamma Phi sister 'cause she just never received any mail. By answering a few "Have your feet been hurting lately!" and "Do you need a hearing aid?" ads, they induced a few of the companies to write the poor gal. How to be a GooFoo and like it too. A DG pledge has the perfect solution for those times when you're bothered with too many classes and six mid-semesters in one day. Just follow these directions and you'll be out of this world. SCOTT First and always invert body (place feet on ceiling), then put hand in mouth (we know it's big enough so, maybe you can get your whole arm in). Next place other arm around neck and with it touch ankle. Then (and here's where it gets hard, place nose on chest with hand still in mouth (and it's a big mouth like, well we won't say, you will have your arm in, too) and other arm touching ankle; and slowly (remember slowly!) raise one foot and then, and only then, at that precise moment, and we will let you know just when that is, raise other foot. Now, for those who have read so far and still have their wits about them, and you'll look darned silly with your wits wrapped around you, the test is if you don't fall after raising both feet; and if you were sucker enough to go that far, we will swear you in and you will be a goofo forever till the little men with the white coats come and take you away. But don't be afraid cause that's where all us goofoos end up, anyway. Cartoon from St. Louis Star Times sweater drawers, she waited for the screaming to begin. It did! May we help you, madam? 'Twas high noon and the Locksley gals were wearily trudging for that longed-for lunch. The house prexy didn't know what was coming off as she entered the door and heard two air corps men yelling, "Now just log into the left on that little white paper pad and wipe your feet to the right!" The airdials thought the girls needed two handsome receptionists—well, it's not a bad idea. Green or Nightengale? Ever since the Pumpkin prom, the Union activities has been minus seven lanterns. Monday night while walking by Jimmy Green, Union activity leaders noticed that Jimmy was holding a lantern, Florence Nightingale-like in one hand. Having retrieved the lantern, the girls were bending over it to determine the identity when some, shall we say, male acquaintance drove by and hollered, "Can we help you girls?" Yes, caught red-handed. Meeting of all Independent house presidents at 7:15 tonight in the Union.-Lois Thompson, president, independents. Notices must be typewritten and must be in Public Relations office, or by mail at no later than 9:30 a.m. on day of publication. No phone messages accepted. OFFICIAL BULLETIN There will be a meeting of the Ku Ku club Thursday in the Kansas room of the Union building, to discuss homecoming.—Michael J. Kuklenski, president. Cheerleading practice 4:30 pm Thursday in stadium if weather permits, otherwise in Kansas room in the Union. Attendance required.Alberta Cornwell, head cheerleader. University of Kansas Nov. 14, 1945 - * * *** Student Musicians To Travel Again Student concert tours, that have been discontinued because of the war, will begin as soon as transportation and hotel facilities are available, L. E. Anderson, chairman of the extension division committee on graduate study of music said today. "The men's and women's glee clubs, the University band, and faculty members formerly made tours over the state under the auspices of the extension division, visiting high schools, colleges, and civic groups." Professor Anderson said. He explained that many servicemen have enrolled in correspondence courses offered by the School of Fine Arts through the extension division. "Through this work many new students have been brought to the University for further training," he added. Five music study courses of 16 lessons each, including Rudiments of Music and four courses in harmony constitute the two years of correspondence work. Grove Trees Cut For Valley Vista Walnut and elm trees in Marvin Grove are being thinned out to make a vista north from the library toward the valley, as decided by the campus development committee. German war prisoners are doing the job. War prisoners have been loaned to the University by the camp north of town to do agricultural labor the past three months. They will be available for work until Thursday, C. G. Bayles, buildings and grounds superintendent, said today. Christmas in Air Denver. (UP)—It's Chris t m a s wherever you are, and United Air Lines is making sure, with time to spare, that the Yeluetle will not go unmarked aboard its passenger blanes. Chefs in United's 10 flight kitchens are working on four tons of fruit cake, which will be distributed to 13,500 holiday passengers. WANT ADS WANTED—Experienced presser full or part time at once. Apply at the New York Cleaners 926 Mass., or phone 75. LOST—Black Sheaffer's fountain pen lost a week ago. Name, "Lee Shull," engraved and Flying Red Horse on top. Reward offered. Return to Kansan office. FOR SALE—A good slightly used Muskrat fur coat. About size 32-34. After 7 p.m. call 3217 or come to 1124 Emery Road for further information. ROOM FOR RENT-Wanted, 4 boys for heated sleeping porch and study room. Three blocks from K.U. on bus line. 308 W. 16th St. GIRL wanted—to share a double with Liberal Art freshman. Twin beds. At 1717 Iul. or call 2680W. HELP WANTED—Good paying jobs on Saturday night. Apply at room 223 F.S. before Thursday night. LOST—Green billfold with initials M.B.S. Lost last Saturday between the Chi Omega house and the Union Pacific railroad station. Liberal reward. Call Marilyn Steinert, 731. HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Garage and Cab Co. 922 Mass. Phone 12 LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. Phone 425 A man is bending down. For Those Trips To Town RIDE THE BUS SAFE ECONOMICAL DEPENDABLE Bus Leaves Campus Every 10 Minutes The RAPID TRANSIT CO. YOUR LOCAL BUS SERVICE Pea M Eth the Pled Th terta pled NOVEMBER 14.1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE 02 SOCIALLY SPEAKING Mary Margaret Gaynor, Society Edito Guests of D.U.'s Guests at a "manor house" formal dance Friday night at the Delta Upsilon house were: Margaret Logan, Nancy Jackson, Jean McIntire, Josephine Byerley, Patricia Creel, Joan Larson, Jean Francisco, Patricia Zachman, Barbara Smith, Jo Ann Weworth, Alice Ackerman, Eleanor Albright, Maybele Karner, Joan Power, Helen Harkrader, Virginia Stephenson, Marjorie Darby, Marjorie Boyle, Mary Ainsworth, B. Ann Brown, Lice Peterson, Topeka; and Mary Tanner, Kansas City, Mo. Chaperones were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Warden,Mr. and Mrs.Lloyd Houston, Mr. and Mrs.Edward Nelson. Alpha Omicron Pi entertained its patronesses and alumnae with a coffee and dessert Monday night. Ketzler-Evans Pinned A.O. Pi's Entertain Chi Omega has announced the pinning of Joan Louise Ketzler, daughter of Major and Mrs. K. N. Ketzler, Ft. Leavenworth, to William Allen Evans, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. D. Evans, Kansas City, Mo. The announcement was made Friday night at the chapter house with the passing of chocolates. Miss Ketzler received an orchid corsage. Mrs Edith Martin, housemother, and Patricia Coolidge and Alice Rose Shankland, who assisted Miss Ketzler, received corsages of white chrysanthemums. Miss Ketzler is a college sophomore. Mr. Evans, a member of Ph. Kappa Psi, is a senior in the School. --night. Pledge classes of Alpha Chi Omega and Alpha Delta Pi will be guests at a coke party Thursday afternoon. Burton Visits Tipperary Donald Burton, Russell, was a dinner guest Monday at Tipperary. Smith-Butler Wed The marriage of Miss Evelyn Margaret Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Sumption, Santa Monica, Calif, to Ensius William P. Butler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Mayo P. Butler, Seattle, Wash., took place Nov. 8 at the Ft. Schuyler Presbyterian church in New York. Mrs. Butler attended the University last year, where she was a member of Alpha Chi Omega. Ensign Butler, a member of Sigma Chi, was a V-12 engineering student at the University last year. The couple will live in Daviesville, R.I., where Ensign Butler is stationed. - * * Guests of A.D. Pi Sunday dinner guests at the Alpha Delta Pi house were Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Conner, Miss Ellen Conner, and Mrs. M. C. Hardman, Leavenworth, Miss Suzanne Reilly, Leavenworth, and Miss Ruth Reid, Kansas City, Mo., were weekend guests. Locksley Has Visitors Miss Joyce Morgan, Wichita; Phyllis Ellis, Ens. Vic Crangh, Hutchinson; and Lt. Dick Wildan, Ft. Worth, Texas; were guests Monday at Locksley hall. Dinner guests Sunday were Miss Jean Corwin, Wakeeney; Pfc. Merlin Corwin, Topeka; Miss Ruby Peck, Fremont, Neb., Catherine Rodeeer, Norme Hoff, and Anna Wakenhut. James Yoxall, Wakeeney, was a guest Sunday. Miss Barbara Willis, Kansas City, Mo., visited the hall Saturday. * * Pearsons Visit Chi O's Mrs. Marie Pearson and daughter, Ethel, were Sunday dinner guests at the Chi Omega house. Pledges Entertain The Pi Beta Phi pledge class entertained Sigma Alpha Epsilon pledges at an hour dance Tuesday Exchange Dinners Thursday Will Begin Season Series Exchange dinners among sororities and dormitories will begin Thursday night, Jane Miller, Pan-Hellenic council president, announced today. Five girls from each sorority and dormitory, with the exception of four from Jolliffe, Foster, and Sleepy Hollow halls, and three from Ricker hall, will attend dinners at organized houses, Miss Miller said. Alpha Chi's Give Dance Alpha Chi Omega pledges entertained at a dance Friday night. The chapter house was decorated in blue and white with a bedtime theme, and pledges and their guests wore night-shirts. Theta's Have Guests Dinner guests Sunday of Kappa Alpha Theta were William Sharp, Charles Marsh, Keith Wilson, Frank Davis, Ens. Robert Bayles, Roderick Maclvor, Donald Fricker, Charles Hunter, Duane Kline, Charles Wagstaff, and S 2 c Ted Sciacqua and S 2 c Larmarr Denny, Norman, Okla. Weekend guests were Mrs. Charles Hunter, Miss Katherine Burchfield and Miss Nancy Haffner, Kansas City, Mo.; Miss Joan Moore, Miss Virginia Stuber, and Miss Marjorie Snyder, and Miss Marjorie Snyder, Winfield. William Brackman, Wichita, and Charles Bothorf were dinner guests Friday. D. Holds Openhouse Guests at the Delta Gamma open house Saturday were: Hubert Kintzel, Robert Holli-baugh, Richard Nelson, Bruce Worthington, George Darsie, Dale Haynes, Joseph Barrington, Rensselaer McClure, Ens. Give Arnold, John Oear, James Richardson, Lowell Prenske, Preston Clement Ben McKinley, Orval Kaufman, William Richardson, John Gardner, Glenn Crittenden, William Riehl, Bolivar Marquez, William Reeder, Lew Purinton, Patrick Thiessen, William Addis, William Wellborn, Donald Cochran, David Shaad, Dale Smith, Thomas Mayhew, Fainaf Funston, Edward Brunk, Richard Marsh, Edgar Williams, Donald Jackson, Lloyd Eisenhower, William Lacy, Robert Dafforn, Albert Welch, Richard Menuet. William Burgess, James Conard Jack Peeler, Eugene Sawyer, Wendell Clark, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Slason Michael Nichols, Otis Harding, Marshall Fryer, Albert Welch, Carol Stuart, Helen Hovey, and Dorothy Oelschlaeger. VOL. 20TH AWAKENING WE SERVE Vegetable Plates Steaks Dinners Delicious BARS and STRIPES BILL'S GRILL Wm. Pappas Across from the Courthouse 1109 Mass. Harkness in Law Lt. Thomas Harkness, '43, recently discharged from the air corps, is enrolled this semester in the School of Law. His wife, the former Roberta Breitweiser, who attended the University in 1943, has been discharged from the Spars and will join her husband soon. In Medical Corps Lt. James M. Mott, Jr., who received his medical degree from the University in 1944, has been assigned to the medical corps at Scott Field, Ill., near St. Louis. Stoneback Honored Capt. Ray G. Stoneback, '41, has been awarded the bronze star medal, He is assigned to the 10th air force, which is assisting with the redeployment of Chinese troops. Capt. Stoneback entered the army in December, 1941, and was sent overseas in November, 1943. Blades in Red Cross Josephine Blades, A.B. '28 and M.A. 31, has been a Red Cross representative with Evacuation hospital 91 in Europe for the past two and one-half years. Before that, she was in the government offices in Washington. * * ON KFKU Miss Blades visited the department of romance languages recently. After a brief visit to her home in Independence, she will return to Washington on her way to China as a member of the personnel staff of the United Nations Relief and Rehabilitation administration. 9:30 p.m. National Education week program, presented by Tonight: Thursday: 2:30 p.m. Book review program. "The Thurber Carnival" by James Thurber, reviewed by Professor John Hankins. 2:45 p.m. Spanish lesson. K.U. Food Handlers Attend Two-Day Health School WINNER OF 10 WORLD'S FAIR GRAND PRIZES, 28 GOLD MEDALS AND MORE HONORS FOR ACCURACY THAN ANY OTHER TIMEPIECE THE MOST HONORED W Food handlers of K.U. enrolled 100 per cent in the two-day school conducted by the state board of health for employees in Douglas county food-handling establishments. Thirty-nine students were among the 117 employees of the University department of food service who comprised one third of the enrollment, in which 60 other establishments were represented. All K.U. food handlers are required to report for annual chest X-rays and serological tests. Permanent employees wear clean white uniforms daily, and dishes are pre-washed, then sterilized at $ 180^{\circ} \mathrm{F} $ The bacteriology department of the University periodically checks bacteriological count and butter fat content of milk used. Y.W. Plans Social Meeting A joint social meeting of the Y.W.C.A. advisory board and cabinet will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the home of Mrs. W. S. Johnson, 1509 Crescent road, Miss Martha Peterson, chairman of the advisory board, announced today. Longines THE WORLD'S MOST HONORED WATCH THE CAMPUS It's WRIGHTS for Records For Homecoming Get These New Hit Tunes SPIKE JONES "Drip, Drip, Drip, Sleepy Lagoon" PERRY COMO "That Feeling in the Moonlight" TOMMY DORSEY "A Door Will "It's Gotta Be This Or That" C. S. BENNY GOODMAN Also— "Rhapsody in Blue"—George Gershwin Albums WRIGHT'S Corner of 9th and Mass. Phone 725 NEW at the LIBRARY "Our Age of Unreason;" a study of the irrational forces in social life, by F. Alexander. "The First Woman Doctor," the story of Elizabeth Blackwell, by R. Baker. "National Self-determinism," by A. Cobban. "Radio Production Directings," by A. R. Crews. 1945," by A. P. Hackett. "Price and Related Controls in the United States," by S. E. Harris. "Radio and English Teaching," by M. J. Herzberg. "The Psychology of Children's Drawings from the First Stroke to the Coloured Drawing;" by H. K. Eng. "Fifty Years of Best Sellers, 1895- 1945," by A. P. Hackett. "The Axis on the Air," by H. Ettlinger. "Price Flexibility and Employment," by O. R. Lange. "Off Mike;" radio writing by the nation's top radio writers, by J. Lawrence. Correspondent, by S. J. Lucas. "Radio Workshop Plays," by J. M. Morris, "Meteorology for Pilots," by R. W. Mudge. "Yellow Magic, the Story of Penicillin," by J. D. Ratcliff. "The Art of D. Hill." "Combat Correspondent," by J. G. Lucas. "The Wayfarers," by D. Wicken- den. --carries the news of Your University Roberts Jayhawker Jewelry New Shipment Jewelry and Gifts EVERY DAY Through the School Year The University Daily KANSAN READ IT BOOST IT SEND IT HOME! PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 14, 1945 A IN THE HUDDLE with PAT PENNEY If the Kansas Jayhawkers can make Kansas State raise the white flag of surrender here Saturday, the 1945 football season will have been a success in the eyes of many—especially those who participated in or witnessed last year's Manhattan heartbreaker. As conference bouts go, there is actually nothing more at stake than avoidance of the Big Six cellar championship, when the two ancient enemies trot out on Memorial stadium field. But both teams, neither of which have won a conference game, have a grudge at stake Las; year's tussle in which Charlie Moffeti's 82-yard touchdown sprint was annulled by a penalty **m** the last seconds of the game is still fresh in Jayhawkers' minds. And the last-minute goal that didn't count for K-State when the two schools met on the basketball court keeps the minds of the Wildcats on victory. These are two different sports, but the same schools, each of which was pretty bitter about its respective loss. Neither team has made a particularly good showing in Big Six encounters, Kansas losing two games and tying one. K-State losing four in a row. But if one team were the prospective Big Six champions, and the other were in sixth spot, it would still be a good game. BEAT K-STATE That's the way Kansas-K-State games always are. Jayhawk Jabher: Leroy Robison, veteran, fullback, has been named honorary game captain against K-State, Saturday. Robbie will preside as master of ceremonies at the half-time presentation of the Homecoming Queen. . . Twelve V - 12 students enrolled at K.U. are wearing Washburn football letters for the 1945 season. The letters, designed especially for navy players, are engraved silver bracelets. A neat system for the uniformed sailors who can't wear letter-sweaters, we think. . . If all goes well in practice this week, the Jayhawkers will go into the K-State game with no injuries, except that of Robison, who is out for the season. . . K-State is bringing 500 rooters arriving in Lawrence about 11 a.m., Saturday. Cow College Cowboys will be armed with their traditional cowbells, plus their incessant chanting of "Boek Chalk, Dead Hawk, P.U." Meet your team. Another transfer from Dennison, Ohio, Jim Legg rounds out the backfield for the Javhawkers. Hailing 41 from Bexley, Ono, and ranking as a junior in the College, 19 - year - old Jim has spent 16 months in the navy. He captained the varsity team at Dennison last spring, and in high school at Bexley he lettered Legg four year in baseball, three years in football, and three years in basketball. He played softball for the navy "Misfits" team in Lawrence during the summer and he played basketball for the same squad at Dennison. a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity, Jim has seen action in the Iowa State, Oklahoma, and Marquette games this fall. Vital statistics; height, 5 ft. 10 in. weight, 160 lbs. In regards to food, he "likes it all", but places peas and carrots at the top of his list, and "mix 'em please". Jayhawks Aim To Tame 'Kitty' The Kansas Jayhawkers are arming themselves with milk and catnip for the Kansas State Wildcat in the form of spirited offensive and defensive play this week. "Remember 444" is a slogan which has had the Jayhawkers on their toes during practice sessions in preparation for Saturday's Homecoming tilt with their Sunflower bretherm and most intensive foe. The Crimson and Blue squid, ignoring seasonal records which give them an edge in comparative scores, have undergone rugged workouts this week in hopes of taming the Manhattan Kitty. Both teams took liking from Marquette, Oklahoma, and Nebraska, and both downed Wichita. The Jayhawkers, however, held powerful Iowa State to a 13-13 tie early in the season, while State suffered a 40-13 setback by the Cyclones. In two of their three mutual defeats, Kansas played the opposition to tighter triumphs. Marquette hammered the Purple and White, 55-13, a 16-point worse beating than their last weekend's blanking of the Jayhawks. Nebraska handed Kansas a 27-13 licking, while Kansas State fell before the Cornhuskers, 24-0, last weekend. Kansas State enjoys a four-pom edge in the record book in a comparison of the two clubs' showings against the champion Sooner team. The K-Staters forced the sooners to come from behind to win 41-13, while Kansas took a 39-7 troucing. Adelbert Corchran, end injured in the T.C.U. game, will be ready against the Wildcats, as will a Kennedy, another wingman, who was hurt at Wichita. Ringmaster Henry Shenk has been emphasizing pass defense this week plus stiff blocking and tackling sessions. Two Visit Watkins Dale Robinson, Kansas City, and Ens. John Conard, Ottumwa, Iowa, were Sunday dinner guests at Watkins hall. --the problem of occupation, Malott declared. Many questions of where occupation troops will come from, whether voluntary enlistments will be enough, what the minimum training period for occupation is, "must be answered before we can formulate any full-scale military plans for the American people," he said. VARSITY TODAY They're TOGETHER ...and TORRIFIC! JAMES CAGNEY ANN SHERIDAN PAT O'BRIEN TORRID ZONE ANDY DEVINE HELEN VINSON RE-LEASED ENDS THURSDAY FRIDAY - SATURDAY CHAS. STARRETT "Outlaws of the Rockies" and JUNE STOREY "Road to Alcatraz" Phi Gam Beats V-12, Phi Psi Over Phi Delt, In Intramural Football The two titans of Division II, Phi Gamma Delta and the V-12's, fought it out for intramural grid supremacy yesterday, with the Phi Gam's gaining a 12-6 decision over the sailors. Both Phi Gam and V-12 were credited with four wins and neither had been scored upon before their encounter. The V-12's received the ball at the kickoff and started their offensive rolling with a long pass series which terminated with a score by Jack Blanton, guard. The Phi Gam offensive started to purr in the second quarter, with Jim Richey completing a long pass to Jim Orris, who scored to tie up the game 6-5. In the fourth quarter,Len Hartigan,Fiji quarterback,tossed a long pass to Morris,who scored once again,to make the final count,12-6, Phi Gam. Rounding out Division II games, Delta Tau Delta walked over the game Kappa Alpha Psi', 24-0. Upsets were the order of the day in Division I. The supposedly weak Phi Psl team suddenly awoke and ran off with a 6-0 win over the league-leading Phil Delt's. The game was hard fought throughout, with the Phi Deelts' badly crippled by the loss of their sparkplug. Johnny McGhane. Because of this loss they were unable to put into use their usual brilliant pass plays. In the latter part of the third quarter Bill Burgess carried the ball across the goal to chalk up the winning touchdown for the Phi Psi's. SAE boat Carruth, 24-0, and Sigma Nu defeated DU, 12-0, to round out Division I. Call KU 25 with your news. Malott Criticizes Training Plan (continued from page one) "Instead of offering emotional support of hastily proposed legislation," Chancellor Malott advised, "ask the president of the United States to appoint a small civilian commission of distinguished scientists, civic leaders, and spokesmen for labor, industry, and agriculture, to study, promptly and fully during the coming months, the whole broad problem of our national defense." "It should try to determine the proper distribution of industrial plants for war purposes, and the feasibility of their mobilization in case of attack. It should consider the changes in military techniques which are likely to be found in future warfare, and it should study the probable types of fighting men o be needed. Such a commission "should seek the aid of the military high command and of others who have acquired intimate knowledge of modern warfare," he said. "It should finally attempt to learn the best methods of securing and training these forces for the nation's protection. Then, if we will pass legislation based upon a study such as this, America may realistically, intelligently, and confidently prepare for the eventualities of an unknown future. "Only then shall we have a fair chance of making secure our dearly won peace." Lexington, Ky. (UP)—Robert M. Watt, Lexington, is president of the Lexington Gas and Electric Co. ALL WEEK GRANADA Record Crowds Laugh and Laugh . . and love it. They'll "KISS AND TELL" that it's the Grandest Laff and Love Comedy Surprise Since "It Happened One Night" Filmed from Broadway's stage hit! COLOMBIA PICTURES presents KISS AND TELL A GEORGE ABBOTT PRODUCTION Play and Screenplay by F. HUGH HEBERT starring SHIRLEY TEMPE BE CORLUS ARCHER with JEROME COURTLAND • WALTER ABEL • ROBERT BENCHLEY PORTER HALL • TOM TULLY LL ADDED—COLOR CARTOON - LATEST NEWS Coming SAT. OWL 11:45 & SUNDAY — 4 Days ATOMIC BOMB STRIKES JAPAN! SEE IT THROUGH THE EYES OF THE . . . "First Yank Into Tokyo" Timely! Tense! Terrific! Seven Will Perform In Fine Arts Recital Seven students of the School of Fine Arts will perform at 3:30 p.m. Thursday in the weekly student recital in Frank Strong auditorium. Norma Dymond, Joan Vickers, Jeanne Aldridge, Martha Myers, and Mildred Garrison will sing. Margaret Merrifield and Maxine Dunkleberg will play piano selection. Jayhawker Ready For Distribution Tuesday The fall issue of the Jayhawker will be ready for distribution Tuesday, Hanna Hedrick, editor, said today. Students may call for their copies either at the Jayhawker office or the W.E.C. book exchange, she said. Both offices are in the sub-basement of the Memorial union. A.D. Pi, Kappa Vie For Volleyball Title In the division playoffs Monday, Alpha Delta Pi defeated Kappa Alpha Theta 29 to 24, and Kappa Kappa Gamma won a 38 to 15 victory from Chi Omega. The women's intramural volleyball championship will be decided when Kappa Kappa Gamma meets Alpha Delta Pi at 7:30 p. m. Thursday in Robinson gymnasium. Joan Anderson and Lucile Land, A.D. Pi, and Maxine Gunsoll, Lou Little, and Barbara Heller, Kappa, led offenses of the winning teams. Kathryn O'Leary and Marjorie Fadler were outstanding Theta players, and Rose Curtis and Betty Nichols showed up well for the Chi O's. - This is our Veterans Home coming Week. Buy a Bond in his honor and see our show free. Buy Bonds in our lobby. at the Jayhawker NOW ALL WEEK THE MIGHTIEST OF ALL SEA PICTURES! HENNEDD O HARA ALEZAK IN TECHNICOLOR! of the SPANISH MAIN AM RED-BADI PICTURE Age of Romance! REGULAR LOW PRICES PREVAIL And Still They Come SUNDAY GINGER ROGERS WALTER PIDGEON LANA TURNER VAN JOHNSON MGM's Weekend at the Waldorf WHERE STRANGERS MEET AND LOVE - THINGS REALLY HAPPEN Thursday, Nov. 15, 1945 University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Thursday, Nov. 15, 1945 43rd Year No. 38 Lawrence, Kansas News .. of the World Secrets Temporary Atomic Powers Say Washington. (UP)—The atomic powers, United States, Great Britain, and Canada, today offered to share all their secrets with the rest of the world as soon as "effective enforceable safeguards" can be established internationally against the atomic bomb. In the meantime, according to the decision by President Truman and the Prime Ministers Attlee and King they will keep the secret of how to make the bombs. Chungking. (UP) — Communist sources said today that 100 American-manned tanks had moved out of the U.S. Marine beachhead at Tientsin and were racing north and west toward the embattled Manchurian border. There was no immediate word from the Communists as to the purpose of the alleged American thrust. They binted, however, that the tanks were to be turned over to Camorrelissimo Chiang Kai-shek's forces for use against the communists. Kansas Liquor Trial Goes to Second Jury Wichita, Kan. (UP)—The trial of William Zurbrücken, resigned chief of the Kansas highway patrol, opened here today as federal judge Guy T. Helvering ordered a second grand jury summoned Monday to continued investigation of the liquor-gambling syndicate allegedly operating in Kansas. Helvering said the action was the result of raids made last week by alcohol tax unit men in which 500 cases of whiskey were uncovered in five local nightclubs. Washington. (UP)—This country's military power is the "greatest single motivating force for world peace," Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower today told the house military affairs committee in support of universal training legislation. 'British Expected Pearl Harbor' Washington. (UP) - The Pearl Harbor investigating committee, beginning formal hearings today, reviewed evidence contained in an intercepted Japanese diplomatic message that on Dec. 6, 1941, the British government expected war in the Pacific to break out the next day. Dachau. (UP) — Forty-two Germans went on trial before a U.S. military government court today on charges of murdering thousands of persons at the notorious Dachau concentration camp by torture, starvation, and sadistic experiments. Detroit. (UP)—The Ford Motor company, in its first official statement on the CIO united auto workers demands for a 30 per cent pay boost, today demanded that the union modify its Ford contract to provide "effective guarantees against work stoppages." WEATHER Kansas—Fair and warmer tonight. Low tonight 30-35 northwest to 35-40 southwest. Tomorrow partly cloudy and slightly warmer southeast. 1948 GWEN HARGER Alpha Delta Pi 10 HELEN CHERRY Foster Mary Louise Queen Contest Tops Activities For Weekend (1) ANNETTE STOUT Watkins Twenty-five University women are competing for the title of 1945 Homecoming queen. The queen will be presented with two attendants in a half-time ceremony at the Kansas-Kansas State football game in Memorial stadium, Saturday. The three top can dates will be announced at the South Park rally Friday night. MARGARET LOGAN Alpha Chi Omega The queen and two attendants are being selected by a football squad from technicolor movies iid still photos. Each candidate was selected by her house. The queen and her attendants will be framed in a huge heart formed by the 100-piece K.U. band, when they are presented to Gov. Andrew E. Schoepel by Leroy Robison, president of the K-Club. Governor Schoepel will present the women with flowers and introduce them to the spectators. The governor's party will include Chancellor Deane W. Malot, Capt Chester A. Kunz of the campus navy JOHN DESSIE HUNTER Locksley unit, Capt, John D. Bradley of the University R.O.T.C., Michael Kuklenski of the Ku Ku Club, Owen Peck of the K-Club, and cheerleaders Virginia Urban, Joan Woodward, and Anna Frances Muhlenbruch. The candidates for queen, twenty of whom are pictured in today's Daily Kansan, here and on page 5. include: Elizabeth Berry, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Helen Dietzel, Sleepy Hollow hall; Elizabeth Esterle, Delta Gamma; Dorothy Moffett, Chi Omega; Joy Godbehere, Pi Beta Phi; Gwen Harger, Alpha Delta Pi; and Pat Nelibarer, Alpha Omicron Pi, all of Kansas City, Mo. Edna Carothers, 1701 Ohio; Elinor Browne, 745 Ohio, both of Kansas City, Kan; Mary Beiderwell, Tipperary, and Margaret Logan, Alpha Chi Omega, both of Garden City; and Mary Billings, Campus House, Pratt; Marilyn Carlson, Kappa Alpha Theta, Blue Rapids; Helen Cherry, Foster, Westphalia; Ruth Green, Miller, Berryion; Joan Harris, Sigma Kappa, Wichita; Wilda Hasler, 1234 Oread, Ottawa; Dessie Hunter, Locksley, White Horton; Emily Burgert, 1247 Tennessee; Horton; Helen Miler, Joliffe, Ottava, Ill.; Jewell Mishler, 1011 Indiana, Richmond; Shirley Otter, Gamma Phi Beta, Norton; Norma Pyke Corbin, Strong City; Annette Stout, Watkins, Rothville, Mo.; and Willa Wolfe, Corbin, Meade. 1945 WILLA WOLFE Corbin 1940 DOROTHY MOFFETT Chi Omega A. L. WILDA HOSLER 1234 Oread [Image of a woman with long hair and a white shirt]. ELIZABETH ESTERLE Delta Gamma Bye, Bye, Books ---Homecoming Here We Come Only one more night to study- Only one more night to study—Regal, military, and athletic activities will vie for attention this week end, when students toss aside mid-semester worries to participate in K.U.'s first post-war Homecoming. With a schedule packed full for 36 hours, students will dash from parades, rallies, free shows, dances, and football. Alumni registration will begin in the Union building by Jay James at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow and will continue through Saturday. Students will be at the Union at 7 p.m. Friday to form for the freshman Nightshirt Parade downtown and rally at South Park. Free shows at the Varsity and Granada theaters will keep students out until 1:30 a.m., m., Saturday. Chancellor Deane W. Malott will entertain Pres, Milton Eisenhower of Kansas State college with a luncheon in the English room of the Union. Gov. Andrew F. Schoeppel will be the chancellor's guest at a luncheon Saturday. State Executives to Attend Homecoming Game Among the spectators at the KU-K-State game Saturday will be Gov. and Mrs. Andrew Schoeppel, Lt. Gov. and Mrs. Jess Denious, and members of the legislative council now in session. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Stauffer, chairman of the University board of regents, Mr. and Mrs. Willis Kelly, and Mr. and Mrs. Drew McLaughlin, board members, also will attend the game. Music Groups to Present Homecoming Vespers A "Homecoming" all-musical vespers program with 275 students and faculty participants will be presented at 4 p.m. Sunday in Hoch auditorium. The University Symphony orchestra, A Cappella choir, Women's Glee club, and University string quarter will make their initial appearances this season. Station KFKU will broadcast the program. Hate to Mention It, But Those Grades---- All unsatisfactory midsemester grades are due in the College office Monday, Gilbert Ulmer, assistant dean, said today. Advising periods will be Nov. 26, 27, and 28. All freshmen and sophomores regardless of their grades will see their advisers. Because faculty members' office hours will not be the same as those for the four-weeks conferences, students should consult the schedule which will be posted outside the College office. If students have conflicting classes, they should arrange for special appointments with the adviser. Juniors and seniors with unsatisfactory reports in 40 per cent of their work will be notified by mail and requested to consult the dean. Organizations wanting reports of their members should require freshmen and sophomores to bring statements by advisers rather than individual instructors. Dean Ulmer suggested. Lists of juniors and seniors enrolled in the College may be left at the office for completion, he offered. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS NOVEMBER 15. 1945 University DAILY KANSAN Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Association, National Editorial Association, and the Associate Collegiate Press. Represented National Nat'l News Press, 420 Madison Ave. New York City. Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage), Published in Lawrence, school year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second class matte September 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Kinsnell, Kin., under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS STAFF MARY TURINGTON Managing Editor ELEANOR ALLEIGHT Asst. Managing Editor LOREN KING Telegraph Editor ORIGINA ORDER Wes Jones MARIA MARGARET GAYNOR School Teacher PAT PENNICK Sports Editor BILLIE HAMILTON Feature Editor JANE ANDERSON Military Editor GEO NORIS Research Editor MARGARET WENSKI Ast. Sports Editor JOAN YVATCH Campus Editor DOLores SULTMAN ... Editor-in-Chile MARY MORRILL FRANCLIN FEARING } Editorial Associates OVILLE ROWES EDITORIAL STAFI BUSINESS STAFF NANCY TOMLISON ... *Business Manager* BETTY BRACH ... *Advertising Manager* ASSISTANT ... BONNERMAN, MARY BRAMI- NGHIA, HARRY READING, SOLLYVA SMALL, ELEANOR THOMPSON. Rock Chalk Talk By O. A.WEST VISITORS ON MT. OREAD Green and his flyin' machine, And Flash Gordon with all his contraptions,$^*$ They will be here in force and the reason, of course, They've been reading the daily captions. It's a well-known fact that they're coming back—Grads of three generations or more. Those from home and abroad will applaud When again they approach K.U.'s door. There'll be plenty to do out here at KU... There'll be dances, a good game, and teas. And we'll gaze at the stars, old Polaris and Mars, While the nightshirts flap in the breeze. Old grads of K.U.? We bid welcome anew— You're the nation's best leaders, it's known. You climbed up this Hill for four years with a will, Hats off for the valor you've shown. *(*Green and Gordon are not listed at the alumni office—their records probably were destroyed during Quantrill's raid.*) (This poetic contribution was submitted by O. A. West, junior in the Naval R.O.T.C., who, although a K. U. man of two weeks only, seems to Arguing Is Hobby Of Senior Betty Ball, Member of A.S.C. Dear Editor: Letters to the Editor Nature of Training Plan Is Important, Student Says ★ Among the most vital reconversion problems is the familiar pro and con enigma of compulsory peacetime military training for 18-year-olds. It has been the common practice to discuss this controversial subject on a definite basis of "for" or "against" argument, but in the heated debates the actual substance and crux of such training is not usually well defined. have captured the homecoming spirit. Known as "Chaplain" to fellow Salts, West, with 100 other Rotsie's, lives at Lindley hall, known by the residents as the "stables.") We are in favor of any system which will serve us a prepared and organized nation, capable of upholding the established peace. The question is not so much "Should we have military training?" but rather "What will be the nature of the training program and how will it operate?" We sanction a national training program which probably can be most efficiently conducted under a military command. But first we insist upon the assurance that the proposed program will provide us these things—preparedness and individual physical and mental improvement. BETTY BALL A year of training, if conducted progressively and thoroughly, could prove of immense value to most American boys. Senior Favors Adoption Of Military Program To the Daily Kansan: Peacetime military training, a big issue in our reconversion program, is still "sweating it out" in Congress. Loud outcries from sentimentists and theorists are urging our lawmakers, always a little on the lethargic side, anyway, to take their time in considering President Truman's message on adoption of an adequate national defense system which would include a year's specialized training for the nation's youth. How many army officers released from the strain of total mobilization, will approach the less exigent emergency of future preparedness with the same vigor after four years of war? How many high-ranking officers now holding inflated, temporary status are exerting pressure toward maintaining the armed forces at swollen numerical strength merely to insure their own rank? Kennehunkport, Me. (UP)—Kenneth Roberts may say he is "only a writer," but his neighbors testify that he also is quite a gardener. Roberts grew tomatoes this year; which measured ' six or more inches in diameter. And some of his plants had as many as 44 tomatoes on them. Can and will the army, after the emergency ends, maintain its war-time efficiency? Or will it lapse in inertia and permit the proposed program, if it is enacted, to grow stagnant? A year of unsupervised or misguided camp life in distant areas could cause decadence rather than progress in the ranks of American youth. It is a challenge to any enacted system of training to afford full time constructive activity for a million, energetic 18-year-olds. We fully recognize the necessity of a constructive preparedness scheme. The question of purpose is overshadowed by that of designing n means toward the end.-F. F. Memorial Association Trustee To Elect Officers Saturday The success or failure of the program could depend on the answers to these questions. Trustees of the University Memorial association will meet in 222 Frank Strong at 10 a.m., Saturday to adopt by-laws for the association and to elect its officers and executive committee, Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary, said today. Betty Ball, College senior from Newton, is chairman of the All-Student Council's charter committee and a member of the finance committee. They want facts more clearly established before they give their approval to a policy which, they say, has not saved Europe from ruin and one which, up to this time, Americans have regarded as having no proper place in their way of peace time living. They want, most of all, to mark time until the ravages and ruin of war are far enough behind us to make preparedness and military strength seem unnecessary. Adoption of military training during the life of our present congress, before the remnants of our wartime army are dissipated, is a step in the right direction.—A College Senior. The association has been granted a charter, Justice Hugo Wedell, chairman of the Memorial committee, has announced, and plans for the financial campaign will be made. 16 Attend Meeting Of Music Club We are aware that to institute a system of compulsory one-year military training and discipline for male citizens of the United States is to institute a radical innovation in American socio-economic life. It isn't pleasant to think in terms of another war. In fact it's much easier to slip into the old routine of blind idealism that assures us "it can't happen again." That happened after World War I. The delay culminated in neglect and final disregard of the lessons taught by that conflict. Students discussed the organization's purpose—music for those who are interested in good music, but who haven't the chance to hear it. Writes and Farms Betty came to the University as a freshman in 1942 and is majoring in political science. Recordings of the music of Brahms, Grofe, and Debussy were played. Attending were Eleanor Brown, Sue Newcomer, Sara Webb, Guinevere Goerz, Lois Linck, Lois Lauer Martha Haines, Louise Haines, Ruth Granger, Shirley Cundiff Harriett Harlow, Elaine Walker, Joy Godbehere, Joan Vickers, Gloria Hill, and Janet Tavlet Sixteen students attended the Musie Appreciation club's first fall meeting the Union Tuesday, with Norma Kennedy, Fine Arts junior, presiding. She belongs to the Alpha Chi Omega sorority, Jay Janes, Tau Sigma, W.A.A., and is president of Pi Sigma Alpha, honorary political science fraternity. Sophomore-Junior Team Defeats Freshmen-Seniors She would like to get a master's degree in political science, then work for the state department in Europe. If there are powers on earth which recognize no authority save that of force, who are we to turn back to a peacetime program which was not workable after any previous war and which becomes less workable for us every year? Why should we hesitate to take the step that will make us strong in a world where the voice of a nation is measured by the force behind it? "My only hobby is arguing and I really like to do that." Betty says. The sophomore-junior hockey team won 3 to 1 over the freshman-senior team Tuesday afternoon. Mary Hoffman made two goals with Joan Anderson adding another one for the sophomore-junior team. Lucile Land scored the freshman-senior team's only point. Mrs. Richard Boyce New on Nursery Staff Mrs. G. L. Smith, Lawrence, registered nurse, has also been appointed to the staff. Mrs. Smith will inspect each child daily as a health measure. Mrs. Richard Boye, former business student, has been appointed to the K.U. Nursery school staff to replace Mrs. Floyd Krebhiel who has resigned, Miss Mary Evans, supervisor, announced today. Mrs. Gerald Miller had been filling Mrs. Krehbiel's position. Cosmetic Dept. Weaver CHENYU Chinese Red CHENYU CHENYU et Set Gift Box Diana Smart Set Gift Box $1.75 tax extra Chen Yu Chinese Red The New Red that goes with every color. 1. 75 (tax extra) This is the red that was found in the gown of a Chinese princess, living there in perfect harmony with every color in the rainbow. No matter what complexion type you may be, or what costume colors you choose to wear. Chen Yu Chinese Red is perfect. Smart Set Gift Box contains nail lacquer, Lacquerol base coat and matching lipstick. Good luck, Jayhawkers. We are backing you all the way to the goal. NOVEMBER 15,1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE 223 SOCIALLY SPEAKING Mary Margaret Gaynor, Society Editor Zimmerman-Martin Pinned Gamma Phi Beta has announced the pinning of Ann Zimmerman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W.H. Zimmerman, Kansas City, Mo., to Robert Martin, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Martin, Kansas City. The announcement was read by Mrs. Ralph Baldwin, housemother, at dinner Saturday night at the Gamma Phi Beta chapter. Mrs. Baldwin received a corsage of gardenias and rose buds. Miss Zimmerman wore an orchid corsage. Miss Zimmerman was graduated last spring from the College. Chocolates were passed by Frances Muhlenbruch, and Jane Atwood, who were presented corsages of gardenias and rose buds. Martin was recently discharged from the army air corps. He is president of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity. ** ** Kappa's Have Guest Lt. Albert Hartley, Leavenworth, was a dinner guest at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house Tuesday. Celebrate Anniversary Gamma Phi Beta celebrated its 71st Founders day Tuesday night at the chapter house. Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes, one of the Sigma chapter founders, was the speaker. Other alumnae present were Mrs. Fred Ellsworth, Mrs. Hovey Hanna, Mrs. James Smith, Mrs. W. A. Stacey, and Mrs. George Beal. Guests at a ranch party Saturday night were William Daugherty, Stanley Hobbs, John Murray, Robert Ellsworth, Robert Weber, Richard Ehrman, Laurence Miller, John Wildgen, James Metcalf, William Sharp, Stephen Ellsworth, Bertrand Morris, Donald Schaake, Charles Robertson, Robert Bell, Benjamin White, Robert Bessier, William Degan, Wood Runyan. Robert Franklin, Jack McShane, James Burwell, Fred Helm, Donald Miller, Bruce Brown, Frank Pattee, John Addington, Jack Blanton, Clyde Wharton, Todd Akins, Robert Bonebrake, Robert Light, Robert Morton, Larry Sillas, Robert Stoffer, William Porter, Robert Martin, John Owen, and Robert Forsler. 51 Attend Theta Party Members of Kappa Alpha Theta held open house Saturday in the Kansas room of the Union. Chaperones included Mrs. Clark Mandigo, Mrs. J. H.Kramer, Mrs. Andrew McKay, Mrs. R. H. Wilson, Mrs. Dean Alt, and Mrs. Edith Martin. Guests were: James Sargent, William Marshall, James Calkins, William Jenson, James Roderick, Duane Kline, Earle Crawford, Donald Fricker, William Fackwood, Carl Clark, Richard Ong, Harold Baker, Frank Davis, Shippan Winter, John Gorman, Donald Williams, Charles McGill, Wayne Johnson, Lou Goring, Garland Weed, James Thompson, Paul Conrad, Donald Ferguson, Sciatiaqua, Keith Wilson. Harlan' Lill, Michael Kuklenski, Robert Bayles, Eugene Alford, Jack Greer, Roger Parland, Frank Wood, John McEvers, Ralph Fleagle, Eugene Lund, Donald Cousins, Jerry Simpson, Tom Nicklem, Kirk Scott, Charles Marsh, Richard Hawkinson, Dean Styer, William Brackman, Chris Eberhardt, Charles Hunter, Keith Congdon, Robert Neustrom, Elton Hoff, Robert McHarg, Richard Geiger, and John Stauffer. Straw in the Wind Rawlins, Wyo. (UP) — The Republican-Bulletin, in a story recently, declared that war was over definitely, because a reporter, after finishing a meal at a local restaurant, was thanked and asked to come back again by the cashier. A.O. Pi Installed At K.U. in 1914 1947 LORRAINE WITT This is another of a series of articles by the Daily Kansan to acquaint the campus with the various organized houses, their members, officers, and histories. Phi chapter of Alpha Omicron Pi was installed at the university on May 4, 1914. Members of a local sorority, Beta Gamma, were the charter members of this organization. Mrs. A. J. Mix, a member of the Cornell university chapter, was one of the women responsible for the founding of an A. O. Pi chapter here. Alpha Omicron Pi was the only Pan-Hellenic sorority to begin at Barnard college, Columbia university, N. Y. Four 18-year old women, Jessie Wallace Hughan, Helen St. Clair Mullan, Stella George Stern Perry, and Elizabeth Heywood Wyman, founded this national sorority on Jan. 2, 1897. Today there are 47 active chapters in the United States, two in Canada, and 51 alumnae groups. Social service work in the Kentucky mountains in connection with the Frontier Nursing service is the national organization's project. The rose is the sorority flower; cardinal, the color; and the ruby, the jewel. The pledge pin is a gold sheaf of wheat. The active badge is composed of the three Greek letters superimposed. The chapter house is located at 1144 Louisiana street. Mrs. P. H. Klinkenberg is the housemother. Officer of the chapter mother. Lorraine Witt, president; Marguerita Kerschen, vice-president; Ruth Stallard, treasurer; Helen June Wise, corresponding secretary; Jo Ann Tindall, rush captain; and Mary Stark, social chairman. Janet Belt, Wilma Bown, Dorothy Deem, Mary Beth Jepson, Helen Lawrence, Carol Long, Helen Mather, Sidney Lee Mayfield, Verda Praeger, Beverly Reitz, Mary Sedlock, Marilyn Voth, and Juanita Satterlee. Other members of the active chapter are: Alpha Omicron. Fi pledged 25 Dr. Martin Will Speak To OT Club Tomorrow Dr. Gordon Martin, director of physical medicine at the University hospital in Kansas City, will address the Occupational Therapy club meeting at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Kansas room of the Union. Physical training students and members of the Kansas Occupational Therapy association may attend. Dr. Martin will speak on the treatment of poliomyelitis stressing physical and occupational therapy. Approximately 20 physical therapy students at the University have been invited to become associate members of the Occupational Therapy club which has 85 members. Scruggs Is Honor Initiate Dr. Sherman D. Scruggs, president of Lincoln university Jefferson City, Mo., will be initiated into Phi Delta Kappa, men's professional fraternity, tonight at the home of Dr. E. E. Bayles, associate professor of education. Dr. Scruggs received his doctor of philosophy degree from the University in 1935. Education Sorority Officer Will Visit Chapter Here Spur Club Will Hunt With Hounds Dec. 1 The newly organized Spur Club will hunt raccoons and possums with hounds when the game season opens Dec. 1, Martha Laffer, club president announced today. Mrs. Justus Fugate, national vicepresident of Pi Lambda Thea, honorary education sorority, will visit the Gamma chapter here Thursday and Friday, Harriet Danly, president of the Gamma chapter, said today. Mrs. Fugate will discuss the merits of Pi Lambda Theta at the initiation banquet at the Hearth Thursday night. She is an alumni of the University. For initiation into the club, a rider must be able to bridle, saddle, walk, trot, and canter a horse, Miss Laffer said. She is then eligible to wear a pair of spurs and a white shirt. Advances in the club include the wearing of a blue shirt and finally a red shirt. Membership in the club is limited to 30 women. Other officers of Spur club are Alice Wright, vice-president, and Carol Long, secretary. The American War Dads recently organized a state chapter in Wyoming, and held their first convention. The state has six chapters within it. women this year. Members of the pledge class are: Helen Ames, Margaret Gosney, Frances Goerke, Pat Neilbarger, Rose Hosking, Joan List, Roberta Smith, Joan Spalding, Mary Jean Monroe, Susan Leatherman, Zoe Siller, Janet Wiley, Phyllis Whittrock, Billie Burtcher, Marjorie Burtcher, Lee Duncan, Mary Lucille Garton, Glendale Jones, Emna Ruth Kendall, Elise Lemon, Elwanda Brewer, Sydney Letson, Barbara Paez, Virginia Lou Stephenson, and Ruth Williams. Gustafson Women Chosen For Class Volleyball the "COLLEGE JEWELER" Students' Jewelry Store 41 Years W. A.A. volleyball class teams have been chosen and will begin competition at 8:15 p.m. Monday in Robinson gymnasium, Miss Ruth Hoover, associate professor of physical education, announced today. The junior-freshman and senior-sonhore games will be played. Women selected for class teams receive 100 W.A.A. points. Juniors: Manager, Margery Stubbs; Ruth Payne, Kathryn O'Leary, Alberta Cornwell, Wilma Bown, Billye Simmons, Ruth Green, Marjorie Fadler, Marilyn Voth, Marie Horseman, Jane Topping, Mary Jean Hoffmann, Mary Vermillion, Nancy Miller, Marjorie Peet. Seniors: Manager, Lou Little; Lucile Land, Marjorie Free, Violet Conard, Charlotte Price, Bobette Sellers, Barbara Prier, Edith Boehmer, Barbara Heller, Mary Morrill, Betty Nichols, Lucy Smith, Sue Blessington, Dorothy Higginbottom, Joan Eurch. 911 Mass. St. Sophomores: Manager, Rose Nell Curtie; Joan Anderson, Frances Chubb, Joan Lippelmann, Helen Boazarth, Mary Varner, Pat Billings, Pat Coolidge, Marjorie Kaff, Joan Schindling, Joan Hendrickson, Maxine Gunsolly, Virginia Winter, Varel Strobel, Annette Stout. ON KFKU Freshman: Manager, Jean Francisco; Donna Mueller, Kathleen McClanahan, Roesmary Gaines, Wendolyn Harger, Margaret VanderSmissen, Harriet Connor, Joyce Mahin, Georgia Westmoreland, Patricia Strang, Mary Alice White, JoAnn Spalding, Joan Strowig, Martha Kelpinger, Pat Elledge 9:30 p.m. K.U. Vespers, Dr. Theodore Aszman, pastor, Presbyterian church. Tonight: Tomorrow: 2:30 p.m. Campus News, Edwin Browne, University publicity director. 2:45 p.m. Music... OFFICIAL BULLETIN University of Kansas Nov.15,1945 The Occupational Therapy club will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas room of the Union. Dr. G. M. Martin of the University of Kansas hospital will be guest speaker.—Doris Klindt, Vice-president. Quack club will meet at 7:30 tonight in Robinson Gymnasium. All members please be present and bring you dues. The University Art club will have its first meeting in the Antique Room of Frank Strong Hall at 7:30 tonight. All art majors are urged to come. The annual Thanksgiving fellowship banquet at the First Baptist church will be held Sunday from 5:30 to 7:30 p. m. at the church, Eighth and Kentucky. Students are especially invited. Call 1429 or 1504 for reservations. — Jean Mansur, chairman. *** There will be a meeting of the Ku Ku club at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas room to discuss homecoming plans—Michael J. Kuklenski, President. WANT ADS WANTED—Expertised presser full or part time at once. Apply at the New York Cleaners 926 Mass., or phone 75. LOST—Black Sheaffer's fountain pen lost a week ago. Name, "Lee Shull," engraved and Flying Red Horse on top. Reward offered. Return to Kansan office. GIRL wanted—to share a double with Liberal Art freshman. Twin beds. At 1717 Ill. or call 2800W. ROOM FOR RENT—Wanted, 4 boys for heated sleeping porch and study room. Three blocks from K.U. on bus line. 308 W. 16th St. LOST—A black and white striped top shepherd's fountain pen. Finder please call Miss Elliott Social Dept. 158. FOR SALE-Low library, section bookcases. Shown by appointment. 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WITH FASTER BUSES—MORE SCHEDULES For your convenience—more schedules daily to more points in America than any other public carrier. Ride Greyhound for through service—on one ticket—one baggage check. Courteous drivers, comfortable coaches, low fares make your bus trip a real vacation for you—and your pocketbook. UNION BUS DEPOT 638 MASS. OVERLAND GREYHOUND LINES GREYHOUN PHONE 707 D OPERATED BY INTERSTATE TRANSIT LINES PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 15,1945 'Little Hollywood' Brings a Fourth 'R' to Education Invading Kansas Classrooms With Reels of Film In 15,000 Reels, Four Million Fans See Everything From Hens to Hitler There's a "little Hollywood" at the University and more than 4 million persons will see its films next year. The "film capital" of the campus is the bureau of visual instruction, one of the largest distributing centers for classroom movies in the United States. More than 15,000 reels of educational film sent out last year by the bureau were seen by more than 3,600,000 persons. This new "R" for reels has broadened the meaning of the original three "R's" that dad and mother learned. Pig-tailed girls and freewheel faced boys are still getting the elements out of the books, but filmy Shown here are some of the thousands of reels of film distributed by the visual instruction bureau. Each reel is checked carefully before being released. JOHN M. PLEASANT FRED S. MONTGOMERY are showing them how the system actually works. "Screen-lining education" is what Fred S. Montgomery, bureau director, calls this phase of visual instruction—a field of still pictures, moving pictures, maps and models—eye-objects which show the student what the textbooks describe. [Image of a group of children sitting at a desk, engaged in an activity that involves reading and writing.] "We have everything here from mounds to molecules, and from hens to Hitler," explains Montgomery. "And students learn from these motion pictures because they remember action shots more easily than paragraphs in a book." Teachers like the "screen-lined" method. Dodge City, Wichita, Hutchinson, Topeka, Chanute, Salina and Atchison are a few of the Kansas schools now using films to educate their pupils. The number of towns renting sound film from the university center has taken a 97 per cent upswing in the last eleven years. Some children who think that "movie" means either a detective thriller or a cowboy serial may at first misunderstand the classroom films, which teach rather than entertain. "In Chanute, last year, I showed the second grade a film on pet care called "Three Little Kittens," Mrs Margaret Wulikuhle, the bureau's --audio-visual supervisor, recalls, "When I was through a small boy raised his hand and asked, "But when do we see the movies?" Some Children Surprised Jayhawker Jewelry New Shipment Roberts Jewelry and Gifts What kind of films do customers rent from the bureau? That's easy; every kind. Biographical sketches, excerpts from classical Hollywood productions, safety films, travelogues—anything which teaches. A special series of Walt Disney's animated cartoons are some of the most popular films in the screen library, but you'll never see them outside of a schoolroom. That's because they're produced for just one purpose, to educate their audience. It's effective. In one Disney feature, caricatures of Hitler, Mussolini and Hirohito turn out to be three mosquitoes which teach the importance of disease prevention. Hollywood films are condensed for use in literature and drama classes. "Romeo and Juliet," "Mutiny on the Bounty," "Tale of Two Cities" and "The Good Earth" have been cut from fourteen reels to three. After seeing such top-notch actors as Charles Laughton, Ronald Colman and Paul Muni, in roles right out of the book, the students don't forget what they read. In fact, such motion pictures stimulate as high as a 40 per cent increase in voluntary reading. Experimental tests have revealed an additional 55 per cent improvement in learning and remembering material when presented with screen aid. Boys and girls today are learning safety methods from the screen. "Like adults," remarks Mrs. Wulf-kuhle, "they don't always like to follow directions. But show them someone they respect following those directions, and it will make them want to do it. That's why our film called "Street Safety—Primary Grades" is so popular. big, friendly police dog is the star. He takes children to school, observes all the stop signs and never runs while crossing the street. The youngsters love it, and want to do just as the dog does." The Hudson river is no longer that blue body of water on page 32 of the geography book. In one film, called "Boat Trip," pupils travel from Albany to New York by boat and climaxing an exciting trip by watching a glistening ocean liner begin its journey to Europe. It's fun, and it's learning. Onlookers see boats of every description and learn to recognize them. Often the films excite the pupil's imagination. In Wichita, Mrs. Wulfkuble was demonstrating the film, "Three Little Kittens," to a fourth grade audience. To stimulate discussion on the picture, she asked the boys and girls what pets they had. A small boy proudly answered, "I have a dog, and he can climb any tree in the whole world." On The Spot "An answer like that always puts you on the spot. I just couldn't persuade him that he was wrong." laughed the supervisor, "and I still wonder about it." Top screen biographies of the famous include the life stories of Dr. George Washington Carver, Negro inventor; David and Mary Bruce, discoverors of the tsetse fly, cause of sleeping sickness; Charles Goodyear, inventor of rubber, and Alfred Nobel, who used his millions from the invention of dynamite to provide recognition of men and women contributing to peace. These are the kinds of films which will be used in more Kansas classrooms next year than ever before. Projectors are now off the priority list, which means that small schools can get equipment immediately. Electricity is all that is needed to run film machines, and the Rural Electrification association is paving the way in rural areas by providing the current for $2 a month. The initial equipment cost may be the prohibitive factor for some schools. Good sound equipment begins at $300 and silent projectors start at $100. In such districts, Mrs. Wulfkhule suggests that the county superintendent purchase one unit and distribute it to several schools at regular intervals on a co-operative ownership plan, which will cut the initial cost. Once the primary expense is out of the way, the film rental charge is quite reasonably, as low as 50 cents a day for 1 or 2-reel films on all phases of our life. It's a cheap price for education, and 4 million persons agree it's worth while. Busy 'Liz' Baker Wrote This Article (Reprinted from The Kansas City Star.) The accompanying article was written by Elizabeth Baker, a '45 graduate in journalism. "Liz" as she was more popularly known around the campus, spent a busy four years at KU. She was a member of Mortar Board, All-Student Council, Kansan board, state-wide activities executive board, a capella choir, Theta Sigma Phi, Dramatic workshop, and the Dean's honor roll. She was editor-in-chief, news editor, and campus editor of the Daily Kansan; editor of the '44-'45 student directory; Press club club president, Jay James publicity chairman, quill club secretary, I.S.A. secretary, Jayhawker staff member and Chi Omega sorority member. Miss Baker is now in New York City, working for NEA. Beat K-State Three Cheers for the Jayhawkers For Dinner after the Game Complete Real Estate Service LAWRENCE, KANSAS BILL'S GRILL Phone 344 BILL'S GRILL Wm. Pappas 1109 Mass. Across from the Courthouse ALEXANDRA TURANO It takes a large office force of both full-time employees and part-time student help to keep the visual instruction bureau rolling at top speed. Homecoming Victory GOOD LUCK, K.U. Come On, Team!! Let's Have a J. M. CLEVENGER 735 Mass. OUR STORE WILL CLOSE SATURDAY AT 1:30 FOR THE HOMECOMING GAME We want to help the Jayhawks over with a WIN DO YOUR SHOPPING NOW Store Open After the Game CARLS GOOD CLOTHES means a winner whether it's "Now You're Cookin' With GAS" Football or Delicious Food Kansas Public Service Co., Inc. Your Gas Company e r NOVEMBER 15, 1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Here Are Photos of More Beautiful Homecoming Queen Candidates NORMA JEAN PYKE Corbin Jane L. MARY BILLINGS Campus House Jane RUTH GREEN Miller Hall (1) JOAN HARRIS Sigma Kappa P HELEN DIETZEL Sleepy Hollow A MARY BEIDERWELL Tipperary Ku Come On, Jayhawkers Wallop the Wildcats and Win That Game We Appreciate Your Business FRANK'S FURNITURE COMPANY 834 Mass. Free Delivery Phone 834 FRANK PIPPERT, Owner A. K. H. ELINOR BROWNE Ricker Hall ELIZABETH BERRY Kappa Kappa Gamma (1) JOY GODBEHERE Pi Beta Phi A. M. E. HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Garage and Cab Co. 922 Mass. Phone 12 EMILY BURGERT 1247 Tenn. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. PENNY PARKER 1025 Mass. Phone 425 "Where Your Savings are Safe" Lawrence National BANK LAWRENCE HELEN MILLER Jolliffe FOR THAT COKE DATE Remember ELDRIDGE PHARMACY Phone 999 701 Mass. THE MOST HONORED WATCH ON THE CAMP.US Longines THE WORLD'S MOST HONORED WATCH WINNER OF 10 WORLD'S FAIR GRAND PRIZES, 28 GOLD MEDALS AND MORE HONORS FOR ACCURACY THAN ANY OTHER TIMEPIECE THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA 2013 MAY 29 Big Moment Drink Coca-Cola BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY KANSAS CITY COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO. 2540 West Pennyway-Kansas City, Mo. PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 15,1945 A IN THE HUDDLE with with PAT PENNEY Jayhawk Jabber: Wayne Hird, center, is having a tough time deciding which leg to limp on. Wayne, in scrimage yesterday, who had one bum knee, banged up the other. This puts "Tex" Langford, lanky pivot man, in the first string center birth against K-State. . . Dick Bertuzzi, troubled by bad ankles since the Oklahoma fray, was helped out of the practice session yesterday, after receiving more blows on his almost-well ankles. Minutes before his mishap, Bert was racking up plenty of yardage in offensive scrimage. . . "Quig," K.U.'s hot-rock athletic director, was glimpsed at practice, sporting a "Beat K-State" sign. . . Among the Jayhawk squadmen who are wearing the frosh caps and "Beat K-State" signs are Larry Channel, guard, George Gear, quarterback, Duke Burt, tackle, and Rusty Baltis, center. BEAT K-STATE Meet your team. Another gridster who wants to coach for a living is Rex Marxmiller, freshman from Smith Center. A mop 104825367 Marxmiller warmth. The team's college ball letters at forward, and two track letters at center. of red hair is "Reded" distinguishing mark, but he says he didn't acquire the temper usually associated with redheads. His high school record is a good start for a phys-ed major—two football let- Red adds a touch of the artistic to the Jayhawk lineup. Sketching has been his hobby "since I've been able to hold a pencil." His specialty is sports drawings in pencil. Though just a freshman, Red has been in the starting lineup of the Jayhawker squad many times. A spectacular 80-yard run at the Washburn game marked him as a "bit of all-right." BEAT K-STATE Meet your team. Also hailing from Smith Center, is 5 ft. 7 in. 180 lb. left halfback, Frank Pattee. Frank was quite an active man in sports back at the Smith Center High school. He played four years of varsity football and basketball. This was not enough to satisfy him, however, so he entered track competition, making quite a record throwing weights and sprinting. Frank entered K.U. back in the fall of 1942, but like so many students he discontinued his studies because of the war. He was a naval aircrewman for three years, and was discharged in August. He is now a freshman with the advanced studying in the Engineering school. Frank majors in civil engineering and is a member of Sigma Chi. K-S Plans Rebound Against Jayhawks There isn't a man in the locker room under Memorial Stadium who doesn't realize that Saturday's brawl with the Wildcats will probably be the hardest fought contest of the 1945 season. The Wildcats are spurred by the thought that the Kansas tilt will be their last chance to snare a Big Six victory, a factor which may cause them to turn in an ace performance. They have won one game in seven starts—a 13-6 triumph over Wichita. Two other factors may be putting the spring into a possible Wildcat rebound. State turned in its dullest shewing of the year against Nebraska before a disappointed Homecoming crowd, and the Aggies are seeing their first chance to score two triumphs in a row over their brother team since 1940. But Bud Fiser's young 'uns will have to be keyed to top pitch to match the spirit being generated on Mt. Oread this week. The biggest mental boost for Kansas is the everpresent remembrance of last season's heartbreaking, 18-14 loss, which found an 82-yard touchdown run called back in the last minutes of the game. Dr. Elliott to Entertain The Sociology club will be entertained at a dessert party at 7:30 tonight, in the home of Dr. Mable A. Elliott, 1532 Massachusetts street. Miss Myrtle Glover, '44, will speak on her work at the Boy's Industrial school. --in VARSITY ENDS TONITE JAMES CAGNEY ANN SHERIDAN PAT O'BRIEN `THEY'RE TORRIFIO TOGETHER!` JAMES CAGNEY ANN SHERIDAN PAT O'BRIEN TORPID ZONE RE-RELEASED ANDY.DEVINF • HELEN VINSON FRIDAY - SATURDAY THE DURANGO KID "Outlaws of the Rockies" and "Road to Alcatraz" $695 SUNDAY — 3 Days "Girl of the Limberlost" Gen. Eisenhower's "TRUE GLORY" It's a FREEMAN Shoe You'll Get A BETTER FIT IN A FINER SHOE AT $695 Royal COLLEGE SHOP Royal COLLEGE SHOPS The next student panel discussion, in connection with Western Civilization, will be held Monday. Prof. Hilden Gibson said today. Second Western Civilization Lecture Scheduled Monday Students enrolled in Western Civilization are regularly checking out books from the Western Civilization reading room, according to Professor Gibson. Approximately 80 people attended the first discussion, held two weeks ago. Quill Meeting Postponed The Quill Club meeting scheduled for tonight has been postponed indefinitely. Manuscripts to be submitted to the Club may be turned in as late as Sunday according to Prof. John E. Hankins. Students should leave their entries at room 211, Fraser hall. WELCOME GRADS Shows 2:30,7:00,9:00 Continuous Sunday from 1:00 GRANADA NOW SATURDAY The Screen's Grandest Surprise Laff and Love Smash Since "It Happened One Night" THE PLAY BROADWAY ROARED AT FOR OVER 2 YEARS! Now a Great Columbia Picture! Kiss Kiss and Tell Kiss and Tell A GEORGE ABBOTT PRODUCTION Play and Screenplay by F. NUGH HERBERT starring with love and kisses from SHIRLEY TEMPLE with Jerome COURTLAND Walter ABEL • Robert BENCHLEY Porter HALL • Tom TULLY and Tell starring with love and kisses from SHIRLEY TEMPLE a Corliss Ancher with Jerome COURTLAND Walter ABEL • Robert BENCHLEY Porter HALL • Tom TULLY ADDED— Saturday. Owl 11:45 and SUNDAY 4 DAYS COLOR CARTOON AND NEWS ATOMIC BOMB UNLEAShed OVER JAPANI FIRST YANK INTO TOKYO TOMIE HERZ DANN LARA HALEY - MARK REMNER MICHAEL SE ABBELLE LEONARD ZIONA HAND WORK AT 711 WAY ST. House and Promoted by a BOX OFFICE, GROUP OF TOKYO FOUNDATION Timely! Tense! . . . Terrific! ___ Exploding on the screen of the very moment when the world is pondering the terrifying problem of the atom bomb . . . trumpcard for Jap surrender! Art Club Meets Tonight The University Art club, a new organization for art majors, will meet for the first time at 7:30 tonight in the Antique room of Frank Strong hall. Miss Marjorie Whitney, of the design department, and Karl Mattern, of the drawing and painting department, will sponsor the group. Call KU 25 with your news. Capt. R. F. Farwell, USMR, will speak before an all-naval students convexation Saturday, Capt. Chester A. Kunz, N.R.O.T.C. commander, announced today. Captain Farwell is on leave of absence from the University of Washington where he is professor of maritime law. He is attached to a special coast guard committee studying laws governing ships at sea. First Church of Christ, Scientist Lawrence, Kansas, Announces a Entitled Free Lecture on CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Christian Science: Prayer Made Practical By LEONARD T. CARNEY, C.S.B., of Beverly Hills, California Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts The Community Building Auditorium 115 West 11th Street Sunday Afternoon, November 18, 1945 at 3 o'Clock, Doors Open at 2:00 NOW This is our Veterans Homecoming Week-Buy a Bond in his honor and See our Show FREE! Dayhawkler Haughty, beautiful, fiery, lovely... this wildcat meets her match in the holdest buccaneer that ever roamed the seven seas! in Glorious TECHNICOLOR in Glorious TECHNICOLOR SPANISH MAIN THE SPANISH MAIN starring PAUL MAUREEN WALTER HENREID O'HARA SLEZAK WITH BINNIE BARNES JOHN EMERY THE SPANISH MAIN starring PAUL MAUREEN WALTER HENREID O'HARA SLEZAK WITH BINNIE BARNES • JOHN EMERY ONE OF THE YEAR'S GREAT! SUNDAY M-C-M BRINGS YOU 1,000 ROMANTIC THRILLS! On an exciting GINGER ROOGERS as the love-starved movie queen week-end with LANA TURNER Gold-digger at work! WALTER PIDGEON Was he the jewel thief? VAN JOHNSON Romance for a hero! MCM's Weekend at the Waldorf On an exciting GINGER ROGERS as the love-starved movie queen week-end with LANA TURNER Gold-digger at work! WALTER PIDGEON Was he the jewel thief? VAN JOHNSON Romance for a hero! MCM's Weekend at the Waldorf WHEN STRANGERS MEET—AND LOVE—THINGS REALLY HAPPEN! I h a t I n e o A a t h A p a t p y e L f u n d a fam Sta lum ev o s bro gras spri tene tim New "V Will new avia field Row tion and J F R. thet ing in I renece the Mr. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 15, 1945 PAGE SEVEN 'Boli' Prepares At K.U. to Build in Panama Bolivar "Boli" Marquez, the first Latin American student to be elected to Sachem, senior men's honorary society, hails from Chitre, Panama. "Boli," small, dark, and with a vivacious twinkle in his eyes, is a College senior, and hopes some day to be an architectural engineer in Panama. He is secretary- treasurer of Sahem, president of El Atenco, vice-president of Newman club, secretary-treasurer of MARQYEZ "I originally started taking a pre-medical course, but I have changed my mind and wish to become an engineer," he explained. French club, and a member of Phi Chi, medical fraternity. "In Panama if someone promises me meet you at 8, he may be three hours late. To impress upon a Latin American the importance of an ap- pointment, we tell him to be there at 8 American time." "I plan to visit the United States often." Boli said. "I never suspected people could be as kind as they are. Also I have found that all Americans are sincere and keep their word. Marquez has appeared on many programs during the past three years, demonstrating card tricks and Latin American dances. He was the first Latin American student to dance the conga at a University city. name of "Bolin" criticisms of Uni- ity students is that they know so little about Latin America. "It is hard to convince you that in Latin America there are people and places just like here," he commented. "You don't know much about Latin American geography or history, or the names of the countries and their capitals." "My greatest ambition is to see the Pan-American highway open for travel, and good will between the two Americas," he said. "Why not have courses which would explain why Latin America did not advance as fast as the United States? Other members of the Marquez family have studied in the United States. "Bolis" father attended Columbia university in New York, and even brothers and sisters have gone to school in the United States. One brother, Maximino Marquez was graduated from the University last spring, and another, Eduardo, attended the University for a short time. New Books in Law Library "Winged Peace" by air Marshal William A. Bishop, R.C.A.F., is a new book in the law library on aviation law. Other books in that field are "The Law of Aviation" by Rowland W. Hotchkiss; "Civil Aviation Law" by George W. Lupton, and "Civil Aviation and Peace" by J. Parker Van Zandt. "Legal Effects of War" by Sir Arnold Duncan McNair, Edward R. Stettinius's "Lend Lease—Weapon Victory," and "The Bible and theomon Reader" by Mary Ellen Cnase have proved popular with students, said Miss Hazel Anderson, law librarian, reported today. Abyaham On Vacation R. C. Abraham, superintendent of the university post office, is spending a 10-day vacation at his home in Lawrence. B. E. McKee, Lawrence post office clerk, is directing the University post office during Mr. Abraham's absence. "MUMS" FOR THE Game YES! GEORGEOUS ONES with "K. U. Colors." ORDER EARLY! Don't Forget HER CORSAGE for the DANCE M C GARDENIAS ORCHIDS ROSES ALLISON AT THOMAS Flower Shop PHONE 363 927 Mass St. PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 15,1945 [Football player in motion] CHARGE THAT LINE Charge This Up to Profit BETTER BUYS AT- H. W. Stowits Rexall Drug Store Ph.516 9th 8 Mass. Beat K-State You supply the Touchdowns Now and the time's coming when we'll be able to furnish CAMERA SUPPLIES HIXON'S 721 Mass. Phone 41 60 COMPLETE THAT PASS Complete Your Library Now with Books from The Book Nook 1021 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Phone 666 ROCK CHALK JAYHAWK K. U. Ku Three Cheers for the TEAM BEAT K-STATE Kroger Grocery and Baking Co. 809 Mass. St. WALLOP WILDCATS 7 We are all pulling for a HOMECOMING VICTORY BELL MUSIC CO. WOLFSON'S MONTGOMERY WARD'S BROWNIE'S—the Goodyear Store Douglas County Bldg. & Loan Assn. SANITARY BARBER SHOP LESCHER SHOE SHOP RAMSEY'S THE WRIGHT APPLIANCE STORES BEST OF LUCK JAYHAWKERS Aggravate the AGGIES ku and WIN THAT GAME The First National Bank "The Student Bank Since 1877" N.E. Corner 8th & Mass. MEMBER F.D.I.C Make It a Point Now to Have Your Car Checked for Winter 14 C. J. TOPPING MAKE THAT KICK MOTOR-IN 827 Vermont Phone 607 GEO. S. WARE Welcome Grads! Cheer for K. U. First. Last. and First. Last. and Always BEAT K-STATE Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 735 MASS. PHONE 548 Pass the Good Word Around . . . PHONOGRAPHS and Small Radios Now Available PASS THAT PIGSKIN ED BOWMAN 944 MASS. ST. I University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Friday, November 16, 1945 43rd Year No. 39 Lawrence, Kansas News ... of the World Navy Couldn't Fight Major Battle—King Washington. (UP)—Fleet Adm. Ernest J. King said today that the U.S. navy is so disorganized by demobilization that it could not now fight a major battle. Mexico City. (UP)—More than 10,000 students of 14 schools in the National University of Mexico went on strike today in support of medical student demands for conditional examinations. The strike began over "irregular" medical students' demands that they be allowed to take examinations in advanced courses before finishing lower courses in the same subjects. Washington. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower said today that merger of the army and navy would save the armed forces more than 25 per cent in manpower and "substantial" amounts of money. Wichita. (UP)—A federal court jury hearing testimony in the case of Col. Will Zurbucken, former superintendent of the state highway patrol, had before it today statements by two confessed bootleggers who said they paid the defendant about $2,800 in 1940 for "protection" for their liquor running activities. Jerusalem. (UP)—British authorities followed up their bloody suppression of the Zionist riots at Tel Aviv today with a new military decree aimed at stamping out the smuggling of illegal Jewish immigrants into Palestine. Merger Would Save Men, Money—Ike De Gaulle Denies Resignation Report Paris. (UP)—Gen. Charles De Gaulle tonight denied widespread reports made earlier today that he had resigned his provisional presidency, but reliable sources said he had decided to do so. London. (UP)—Joseph Hoffman, Nazi commandant of the infamous Maidanek prison camp in Poland, has been sentenced to death by the Polish people's court at Lublin, radio Moscow reported last night. Meanwhile, at Luebenburg, Germany, a British military tribunal today found Joseph Kramer, commandant of the Belsen concentration camp, guilty of mass cruelty and killing of inmates of Belsen and Auschwitz camps. His death sentence is expected tomorrow. Washington. (UP)—Swiss government and banking officials were accused by a senate military affairs subcommittee today of aiding a Nazi attempt to preserve German economic assets for another try at world domination. Washington. (UP)—The war department today lowered the discharge point score for male enlisted personnel from 60 to 55, effective Dec.1. Manila (UP)—Japan's former naval commander in the Philippines made a surprise courtroom appearance today to swear that Gen. Tomoyuki Yamashita's Japanese army command alone was responsible for the rape of Manila. K. U. Favored To Claw Wildcats K 32 Schmidt L. E. Members of the teams are: A.D. Pi: Lucile Land, Rosemary Hall, Mary Cranald, Ann Cox, Joan Anderson, Elizabeth Schindling, Dayle B寡熙d, Marjorie Shrory, Bobette Sellers. Shanghai. (UP)—Lt. Gen, A. C. Wedemeyer announced today he has authorized U.S. marine commanders to take "appropriate action" including air attacks, if necessary, to halt attacks upon U.S. marines which have been made from a small village between Tangshan and Chinwangtao. The village is Communist-held and has been a center for attacks against coal trains guarded by U.S. marines. K. K.G.: Maxine Gunsolly, Mary Morrill, Mary Hoffman, Carrie Arnold, Nancy Miller, Barbara Heller, Marjorie Free, Lou Little, Lucy Smith. M. M. SULTANI Fire If Necessary Marines Ordered Kansas: Clear to partly cloudy and windy tonight and tomorrow. Continued mild tonight. Low near 40 west border through 50. Continued warm, except slightly cooler southwest. Wedemeyer said that Maj. Gen. Keller E. Rockey, commander of the U.S. marine mission at Tientsin, reported the coal trains had been under rifle fire from the town several times and 300 yards of the track had been destroyed by land mines, inuring Chinese workmen. Rockey reported that Maj. Gen. Dewitt Peck, commander of the First marine division, had been under fire one day and had requested permission to launch an air bombing mission against the village. WEATHER The second half, the tables began to turn as the A.D. Pi's gradually gained on the Kappa' lead, tieing the score several times during the closing moments of the game. The attacks, Rockey said, were being launched from a village 600 yards north of Loanshein. The marine commander said he had directed Peck to send an emissary to the village to inform the Communist leader that if the firing continues "I will order an air strafing mission against the village." Alpha Delta Pi volleyballers became intramural champions last night when they defeated Kappa Kappa Gamma 31 to 28 in a five-minute extension of a game which had ended in a 26-all deadlock. A.D. Pi's Champs By Defeating K.K.G. The Kappa's were ahead at the half 17 to 9, knocking over balls too hot for the A.D. Pi's to handle Burt L. T. WILLIAM M. ROBERTS Dickerson L.G. L. G. 94 Langford MAKIN MARTIN Moore R.T. Burke R.G. 1930 C. Pumphrey Here's the Probable Starting Lineup 54 R. E. Gear Q.B. ROBERT B. PARKER Pattee L.H.B. 70 66 Bertuzzi R.H.B. Kwu 95 Collins F.B. We're Putting All Ags in One Basket A jet-propelled Jayhawk will peel offMemorial stadium tomorrow with his mind on slaughtering the wily Wildcat of Kansas State. The 43rd gridiron clash between Kansas and Kansas State, brother teams in name only, will be the highlight of the University's first postwar Homecoming festivities. Passing Frank Pattie, rugged left halfback, will captain the Jayhawks when they go to the post at 2 p. m. tomorrow. With rany "Tex" Langford taking over for the injured Wayne Hird at center, the tally per man in the forward wall will read only 179 pounds, undoubtedly the lightest line ever to face the Aggies and eight pounds less than that of the present Purple squad. The chief difficulty of both aggregations has been leaks in the defensive set-up, and both are expected to "shoot the works" tomorrow. The young Kansas team held potent Marquette scoreless for two periods last week and has been looking better in defensive scrimmage this week. Kansas State will be aiming for its only conference win, having lost seven games this season, winning over only Wichita by the count of 13-6. The State crew is on the short end in overall scores through the years, having won 14 games to K.U.'s 25. The traditional foes have tied three times. K.U. has scored 522 points to the Wildcat's 294 in 42 encounters. Busy 'Queen' Lear Will Be Seeing Her25th Homecoming Celebration Many persons who now hold important positions havs worked for Miss Lear. When Chancellor Malott was BY BILLIE MARIE HAMILTON (Daily Kansan Feature Editor) Tomorrow will mark the 25th Homecoming celebration for "Queen" Veta B. Lear, assistant to Paul B. Lawson, College dean. This efficient administrator took her position a quarter-century ago last February "just for a few weeks" to help out and stayed to become one of the best-known personalities in the University. With half the students in the entire University enrolled in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, its office is a busy one and the woman who sits in the middle of it, answering scores of questions each day from faculty members and students, has become a by-word to many students during her nearly 26 years. Mr. Lawson is the third College dean to "work for" Miss Lear and he describes her as a "remarkable woman doing a remarkable job." "Mine is the most interesting job at the University," she says. "I meet so many people-students, parents, and faculty members—and I like people." "She has given a lot of good training to deans, including me," he declares. "He was a marvelous worker—students who aren't, don't stay in this office." Miss Lear declares. Her working hours are not measured by the clock but by the amount of work to be done. University student he was "one of her boys." "One of her chief characteristics is her devotion to duty and her willingness to get the job done no matter how long it may take," Dean Lawson says. Her memory for small incidents, details, and persons has proved invaluable in this office where so many records are kept. It also has been valuable for making life-long friends. The other day a former student, now a Navy captain, stepped into the office to greet her, after an absence from the University of five years. "Everyone who knows me knows how much I like to play bridge," she laughs. Miss Lear stepped forward, shook his hand and called him by name. Although she is a very busy person, she always has time for a bridge game. She was a Phi Beta Kappa when she was graduated and now is vice-president of that organization, a member of Pi Lamba Theta, honorary education society, and an honorary Mortar Board member. Miss Lear was graduated from the University in 1914 and, then, taught school for five years. Godbehere Wins Queen Contest Joy Godbehere, Kansas City sophomore in the College, will be named winner of the 1945 Homecoming Queen contest at the K.U.-K.State football game tomorrow, the Daily, Kansas learned today. Miss Godbehere, tall, lanky, and red-haired, is a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority, was one of 25 queen candidates who were judged by members of the Kansas State football team. The K.State gridders made their choice from technicolor C. S. KENNEDY JOY GODBEHERE motion pictures sent them by the K.U. Homecoming committee, of which Eugenia Hepworth was chairman. Gwendolyn Harger, also of Kansas City and a freshman in the College, won second place in the contest, and will be one of Miss Godbehere's two attendants in the ceremonies between halves tomorrow. The queen contest climaxed a full weekend of activities centering about the University's 43rd annual Homecoming. The complete schedule of event is as follows: 7:00 p.m.-Nightshift parade, assemble at Union 8:00 p.m.—Bonnfre-ralley, South Park. Presentation of football travel- eling squad. Delta Gamma Skit. Cider, doughnuts, and free theater tickets for all. 9:00 p.m. Free entry. 9:00 p.m.-Free show, Varsity. Chi Omega skit. 11:00 p.m.-Free show, Granada. 11:00 p.m.-Free show. Granada Battenfeld skit. 11.00 p.m. Hamilton Battenfield skit. TOMORROW. 8:00 a.m.—Registration of alumni, Union. 9:30 a.m.—Breakfast-dance, Union lounge Alpha Omicron Pi, Pi Beta Alpha, Pi Delta Theta skis. Music by Johnny Beach, the V-12 band, and the Sere- 11:30 a.m.—Rally, Union lounge. 1:10 p.m.—Kansas vs. Kansas State. Memorial stadium. 9:00-midnight--Homecoming varsity. 0:10-midnight--Homecoming varity. 10:30 p.m.—Intermission program. House Decorations awards. Frank Pattee, game captain. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 16, 1945 University DAILY KANSAN Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Association, National Editorial Association, and the represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York City. Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $450 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence and $1 a semester postage). Published in Law, Kansas. Kan. even except during Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second class Sept. 17, 1910, at the Pacific Lawn, Kansas, under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS STAFF MARY TURINGHON ... Managing Editor ELEANOR ALBRIGHT ... Managing Editor LOREN KING ... Telegraph Editor DINITA VAN ODER ... News Editor MATTHEW MAGNET GAYNOR ... Sports Editor PAT PRINSEY ... Feature Editor BILLIE HAMILTON ... Feature Editor JANE ANDERSON ... Military Editor CLEO NORRIS ... Research Editor NORRIES ... Asst. Telephonist Editor MARGARET WENSKI ... Asst. Sports Editor JOAN VAATCH ... Campus Editor EDITORIAL STAFF DOLORS SULZMAN ... Editor-in-Chief MARY MORGILL FRANKLIN FEARING ... Editorial Associates ORVILLE ROBERTS BUSINESS STAFF NANCY TOMLSONL ... *Business Manager* BETTY BEACH ... *Advertising Manager* Assistance BOB BORNKARE, MARY BRANI- NESS, ELEANOR THOMPSON, SELVIA SMALL, ELEANOR THOMPSON It's Up to Us Tomorrow we will be host to the largest homecoming crowd since 1941. Many parents, friends, and football fans will be visiting the campus for the first time. Many alums will be returning to K.U. for the first time since before the war. What they think of our University after the homecoming festivities will depend, to a great extent, upon the conduct of the "college kids" they met on the campus. Hundreds of K-State rooters will be among the visitors. Our relations with the Aggies, strained a bit by several close athletic contests last year, could stand improvement. The first step for better understanding between the schools was taken by our student council and K-State's in publishing the 1929 peace pact which appeared in Monday's Daily Kansas. Tomorrow all students can further the "good neighbor" move. Parents, alums, football fans, and our rivals from Manhattan—it's up to us to make them feel at home. After the Whistle According to the present schedule, our classes run for 50 minutes. According to many professors the plan is more like 50-minute classes and 60-minute lectures. There are times when it takes a professor several extra minutes to wind up a lecture, and there are the habitual "overtime" educators. Student scuttlebutt has resulted in their official classification: 1. Those who wail at length on the abject poverty in which a teacher must live and get to the lecture only about five minutes before whistle time. 2. Those who deliver a 40-minute travelogue and then try to squeeze in a 50-minute lecture. 3. Those who keep lecturing until the whistle blows and then take roll, return quizzes, record grades, and explain, in detail, the next assignment. 4. Those who offer opinions on every other course in the curriculum and get to their own about time you're leaving for your next class. 5. Those who shriek at their own humor at least half of the period before they get going good on the lecture. Which shall it be — 50-minute classes or 50-minute lectures? Rock Chalk Talk By TERRY HERRIOTT "I have called you to my cave," said the Sage of Mt. Oread, "because it is nearing homecoming day As you no doubt realize, it has been a good while since I have stirred." (And indeed it had.) He shook his head slowly as he reached over and picked up his March, 1943, issue of "Esquire." "My beard," said the Sage, sometimes called "Old Man Mose," "has grown longer and graver, and this issue of 'Esquire' is getting old, so I thought it high time I talked, with someone." (He stroked his long beard.) "When I last said farewell to the campus, I knew it would be a good long while before I again emerged from my cave. And incidentally, young man, I always emerge from my cave." (He emerged from his cave.) "Speaking of stories that I have told takes me back many years" continued the Sage. "In 1912 I was in on the big controversy over whether or not we should have a class whistle. . . and the student vote to eliminate final examinations. In 1919 Jayhawkers weekending in the City were saddened to see the 'Blue Goose' sign at Eighth and Walnut replaced by one announcing the 'Puritan Hotel.' The year 1932 saw the Y.M.C.A. posting 10 reasons why a man should swear. Cracks about the breadline were at their height. All along I scooped up stories. Like in 1943, the one on sailors who remarked of students running around in shorts "Huh, victory pants—no cuffs." "Yes," continued the Sage, "many many things have happened on the old campus. And things are beginning to become normal again this year. Why, I even heard that a girl turned down a date the other day. Yes, I did." (And he certainly did.) "And now," said the Sage, "for a proverb. Let it be known that one coke and two aspirin will . . . " "And now," said the Sage, picking "Esquire," "I shall return to my cave." (And he did.) "As I look over Mt. Oread I can well see that the good old days are back," said the Sage. "Every time the Jayhawkers have homecoming I always seem to think back and remember all the little things that have happened. I can remember many things from many, many years in the past because I am a very, very old Sage indeed." (And indeed he is.) "Next to my 'Esquire,' the Sage commented, "my favorite hobby is women. I am undoubtedly the world's greatest authority on women. I can prove that, because I never tell a story which does not have a woman in it or which does not apply to women." BEAT Ku K-STATE We're Backing K.U. for a HOMECOMING VICTORY Don't Forget, Grads, Meet Your Old School Chums at the ELDRIDGE HOTEL and COFFEE SHOP A HUTSON HOTEL W. G. "BILLY" HUTSON, Pres. M. J. "MIKE" GETTO, Mgr. 7th & Mass. Phone 807 Hello Grads! Meet your friends at Homecoming and Dine with us. Let's Beat the Wildcats DeLuxe Cafe 711 Mass. Phone 561 Make the Weekend even more Joyous Give 'Your' Favorite a Corsage For the Dance ORCHIDS - ROSES - GARDENIAS ALLISON AT THOMAS Flower Shop 927 MASS. PHONE 363 BEAT KANSAS STATE Welcome 41 K. U. Alumni and Friends of Kansas University For over 40 years we have welcomed Homecoming crowds. Ask Dad. But this year should be a Real Homecoming and we're glad to have them back. Before and after the game make OBER'S your downtown headquarters. We still carry— Dobbs Hats Kuppenheimer Suits MacGregor Sportswear Windbreaker Jackets Botany "500" Suits Hickok Jewelry Bostonian Shoes Arrow Shirts Crestknit Topcoats Wilson Sportswear Griffon Suits Holeproof Sox Ocea's Notionally Advertised Brands That Assure Quality and Authentic Styling NOVEMBER 16,1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE 200 SOCIALLY SPEAKING Mary Margaret Gaynor, Society Editor Varsity Ends Homecoming George Tidona and his band will play for the last of the Homecoming activities, the Varsity dance, sponsored by the Union Activities committee and the All-Student council in the ballroom of the Union building from 9 p.m. to midnight Saturday. *** E. Russell Carter, director of religious activities at Haskell institute, will speak at a smoker meeting of the university club at 8 tonight in the University club room in Green hall. His subject will be, "Indians Are People, Too." Hosts will be Madison Coombs and Gordon Wiseman. Carter to Speak Tonight Kappa Kappa Gamma pledges were hostesses to the Delta Gamma pledge class at a tea Wednesday. ** Delt's Are Guests The pledge's of Delta Tau Dale were guests of the Chi Omega pledge's at an hour dance Tuesday. Kappa Pledges Give Tea. Alpha Omicron Pi held an exchange dinner with Watkins hall and Alpha Chi Omega Thursday. Col. Apt Visits S.A.E. Three Pledge T.K.E. Col. Fred Apt, a former chapter member from Iola, was a house guest of Sigma Epsilon Wednesday. Three Flatro T.K.E. A. O. Pi Entertains Tau Kappa Epsilon has announced the pledging of Robert Winetrout, Moline, Ill., Robert Dreizler, Frank-堡, N.Y., and Robert Urlich, Vichita. D. G.'s Are Hostesses featured in the JOURNAL AND ON CLEVER WOMEN AND ON CLE Everywhere! Paradise Shoes This Seabird Nosed Paradise Tango PUMP WITH THE NO FINCH INSTITUTION 3.95 Royal COLLEGE SHOPS Let's Go to CHURCH. Trinity Lutheran Church Morning worship, 11 a.m. Trinity Episcopal Church Holy communion, 8 a.m.; church school 9:30 a.m. Morning worship 11 a.m. St. John's Catholic Church Masses at 8,10, and 11:30 a.m. First Baptist Church University class, 9:45 a.m., The Christian World Outreach." Morning worship, 11 a.m., "What is the Church?" by Dr.E.L.Askley, acting president of the Central Baptist Seminary. Annual youth fellowship banquet at the church parlorls from 5:30 to 7:30 p.m. "The Rainbow Road to Peace" by Jean Mansur. Call 1429 or 1594 for reservations. First Presbyterian Church Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.; worship service, 11 a.m. "Thanksgiving and Restoration." Vesper service, 5 p.m. at 1212 Oread. First Methodist Church Student class, 9:45 a.m.; "Means to Growth in Religious Living." Morning worship, 10:50; "Religion Can Be Disappointing." Wesley Foundation fellowship, 6 p.m., "The Crimes of Our Age," led by Jeanne Ackley. Plymouth Congregational Church Morning worship 11 a.m.; Fireside forum 4:30-6 p.m., Parish house, Church of God Sunday school, 9:45 am; worship service, 10:45 am, youth group, 6:30 pm; vespers 7:30 pm. First Church of Christ School Sunday school, 9:45 a.m.; morning services, 11 a.m.; "Mortals and Immortals." Wednesday services, 8 p. m.; University organization, Kansas room, Union building, 7-7:30 p.m. Robert Keeling, reader. The Lutheran Student association will meet at the church at 6 p.m. Sunday for a fellowship lunch, Margaret Gruenthal, president, announced today. "Where Your Savings are Safe" Lawrence National BANK LOST — Black Sheaffer's fountain pen lost a week ago. Name, "Lee Shull," engraved and Flying Red Horse on top. Reward offered. Return to Kansan office. WANT ADS HE'S YOUR GUY... This is his own story of his... and your victory! Walk by his side! Fight by his side! Live by his side! Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's THE TRUE GLORY GENERAL EISENHOWER REVEALS...the secret story behind D-Day to V-E Day! Brought to the Screen by Two Great Directors! Capt. GARSON KANIN • CAROL REED (for the United States) (for Great Britain) Distributed by COLUMBIA PICTURES for Office of War Information through the War Activities Committee - Melton, Massachusetts. VARSITY VARSITY SUNDAY THRU TUESDAY [Hand illustration] NATION-WIDE WILLING HANDS! When you are ready to ship your baggage you will always find WILLING HANDS of Railway Express waiting to serve you. Rates are low and shipments can be sent either collect or prepaid. A convenient service to use on all your baggage shipments. ROOM FOR RENT- Wanted, 4 boys for heated sleeping porch and study room. Three blocks from K.U. on bus line. 308 W. 16th St. RAILWAY EXPRESS AGENCY LOST-A black and white striped top sheafster's fountain pen. Finder please call Miss Elliott, Sociology Dent., 158. RAIL-AIR SERVICE FOR SALE—Low library, section bookcases. Shown by appointment. Call 2239. FOUND—A Waterman's fountain pen. Owner can have same by identifying and paying for ad at Kansan office. FOR THAT COKE DATE Remember ELDRIDGE PHARMACY Phone 999 701 Mass. HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Garage and Cab Co. 922 Mass. Phone 12 LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. Phone 425 1025 Mass. Call KU 25 with your news. --- Jayhawker Jewelry New Shipment Roberts Jewelry and Gifts WELCOME GRADS! HAVE A PICTURE TAKEN with your K.U. PENNANT INSTANT PHOTO SHOP 1035 Mass. 17 K. U. vs.K.State Homecoming! Yes GAMBLES will also attend the game (We will be closed 1:30-4:30 Sat.) AS YOU WIN WITH K.U. Come In and Win With 930 Mass. Gamble's The Friendly Store Phone 528 PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 16,1945 'Daddy' Flint's Portrait Will Hang In William A. White School Office MICHAEL W. SCHULDEN PROF. L. N. "DADDY" FLINT A portrait of Leon N. Flint, professor of journalism and for 25 years head of the journalism department, is now being painted by Raynold J. Eastwood, associate professor of painting and drawing, and will hang in the dean's office of the William Allen White School of Journalism. The 25 by 30-inch oil painting is the first potrait Professor Eastwood has painted of a University faculty member, he said today. The project is being sponsored by the Kansan board and will be financed by alumni and former students of the journalism department Professor "Daddy" Flint, for 40 years a member of the faculty, was chairman of the journalism department from 1916 until 1944, and is still teaching several courses in journalism. He was born at Thayer, Oct. 8, 1875; was graduated from Lawrence High school in 1893, and from the University in 1897. After graduation, he taught in Kansas high schools until 1901 when he became half-owner and manager of the Manhattan Nationalist. In 1905, Professor Flint came to the University as first general secretary of the K.U. alumni association and editor of the Graduate magazine. In 1920, he organized the high school conference for editors of high school papers, and a few years later organized the Kansas Council of Teachers of Journalism. Professor Flint is the author of three books, "Newspaper Writing in High Schools," "The Editorial" and "Concise of the Newsroom." He is a member of the American Association of Teachers of Journalism, American Association of Schools and Departments of Journalism, the Kansas Historical Association, Kansas Author's club, and Phi Beta Kappa. Library Closes Early Saturday for Homecoming Activities Even the University Library will close early Saturday due to Homecoming activities, according to C. M. Baker, director of libraries. The library will close at 12:20 tomorrow. Reserve books may be taken out at 11 a.m. Saturday for over Sunday to be returned at the regular time on Monday morning. Dying Wildcats Feature Decorations Wildcats—dead and dying—and Jayhawks in victorious poses were scattered about lawns of organized houses today as the campus decorated for Homecoming. A spider Jayhawk, complete with web, invites the gullible wildcat to "come into my parlor" at one fraternity. A 30-foot Kansas football player gazes upon 11 crosses—the K-State graveyard at another fraternity house, and a Wildcat fur coat is presented to a scantily-dressed coed at a third. Wildcats are squashed, pounded, beaten, skinned, and mutilated by a buzz saw in other displays. College Group Meets To Discuss Vet Credit Representatives from five Kansas colleges will meet with the K.U. veterans bureau tomorrow in Frank Strong hall to discuss military experience and credit offered by their Graduate School Appoints Committee Four new members of the administrative committee were appointed at the Graduate school faculty meeting this week, Dean E. B. Stouffer announced today. Appointments were A. B. Leonard, associate professor of zoology, E. S. Gray, professor of mechanical engineering, F. P. O'Brien, professor of education, and R. H. Wheeler, professor of psychology. Mr. Leonard was replaced on the graduate research committee by E. O. Stene, associate professor of political science. Graduate degrees were recommended for the following: Esther Anderson, Johnette Bradley, Millicent Christine Nyquist, and Roscoe I. Brown, master of arts. C. D. Cass, Margaret Alice Dabney, Doradenn Perry, Harold Francis Summers, master of science in education; Ernest Courtney Edmonds, Larley Beveve Gregg, Robert H. Loomis, Dorothy Margaret Watson, master of education. William H. Beck, Jr., Elizabeth Van Ness Hutton, Lida Pickett Warrick, James Joseph Weigand, master of music education; and Helen Dill Goo, master of music. schools, Dr. L, D. Woodruff, registrar, said today. Delegates from state teachers colleges include J. N. Massey, Pittsburgh; Ray C. Maul, Emporia; and D. Daldon, Hays. S. S. A. Nack will represent Kansas State college at Manhattan, and W. A. Fletcher is the delegate from Wichita university. VARSITY TODAY TOMMY BROWN AND RAYMOND LAWSON ENDS SATURDAY ROAD TO ALCATRAZ ROBERT LOWERY JUNE STORY GRANT WEBSTER CHRISTOPHER FOORD A Rebellious PICTURE and THE DURANGO KID "Outlaws of the Rockies" SUNDAY — 3 Days "Girl of the Limberlost" and Gen. Eisenhower's "TRUE GLORY" First Church of Christ, Scientist Lawrence, Kansas. Announces a Free Lecture on CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Entitled Christian Science: Prayer Made Practical WALLOP WILDCAT$ By LEONARD T. CARNEY, C.S.B., of Beverly Hills, California Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Massachusetts The Community Building Auditorium 115 West 11th Street in Sunday Afternoon, November 18, 1945 at 3 o'Clock, Doors Open at 2:00 WALLOP WILDCATS Welcome Grads For TRANSPORTATION Here in Lawrence RIDE THE BUS Bus Leaves Campus 5 minutes past hour and every 10 minutes Bus Leaves Downtown 5 minutes past hour and every 10 minutes The Rapid Transit Your Local Bus Service WALLOP WILDCATS= BEAT KANSAS STATE THEY SERVED RK YOUFELLOWS---- Who Wear This Emblem Did a Bang-Up Job of Winning the War We Are Proud to Have You With Us in Lawrence K The Kansas Electric Power Company VIRGINIA DEPARTMENT OF INTERIOR DESIGN 520 NW 7TH ST. NEW YORK, NY 10026 10 NOVEMBER 16,1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE A with PAT PENNEY The experts gazed into their crystal balls this week and came out with different versions of this weekend's gridiron picture. Henry Shenk and Norman Pumphery, right end and the Marquette game captain, see it in the stars for Oklahoma to take Missouri and for Iowa State to win over Drake. On the other side of the fence is E. C. Quigley taking Missouri over O. U. and Drake over the Cyclones. And a sittin' in the middle is the Kansan 200 Newspapermen Meet Mere Saturday Two hundred Kansas editors, press women, and journalism teachers will visit the University tomorrow for the annual Editors day, sponsored by the University journalism department, Prof. Elmer F. Beth, acting department chairman said today. The morning program includes a discussion of editor's problems, a reorganization meeting for journalism teachers, and talks in Fraser theater by Russell S. Bauder, vice-chairman of the regional war labor board, and Ralph Heinzen, former United Press director for France. All four are planning to be on hand, of course, to help K.U. raise the victory pennant after the K-State fray. sports editor who picks Missouri over the Sooners but thinks the Cyclones will take Drake. I'm in to see me! Come On Team Chalk Up That Score VICKER'S GIFT SHOP 1023 Mass. Phone 933 We'll Close from 1:30 to 4:30 Saturday for the Homecoming Game SPORT JACKETS For Campus Wear $1475 to $2250 Good looking as well as comfortable and they come in colors to harmonize with any slacks. Gibbs Clothing Co 811 MASS. ST. Boston. (UP)—Frank P. Sherman boasts the distinction of having one son who witnessed the German surrender and another who witnessed the Japanese surrender. Double Distinction Members of Gamma Phi Beta were guests at an exchange dinner Thursday night at the Pi Beta Phi house. Pi Phi Gives Dinner Beat K. State! Aggravate Those Aggies, Team We All Want a HOMECOMING VICTORY DON'T FORGET THAT AFTER-GAME COKE AT Round Corner Drug Co. 801 Mass. MEL FISHER Phone 20 WELCOME GRADS! TIE THE CAN TO K-STATE! NOW ENDS SATURDAY GRANADA The Grandest Surprise Comedy Since "IT HAPPENED ONE NIGHT" Filmed from the Great Broadway Play Filmed from Broadway's stage hit! COLUMBIA PICTURES presents KiSS AND TELL A GEORGE ABBOTT PRODUCTION Play and Screenplay by F. HUGH MERRERT Since RIGHT" starring SHIRLEY TEMPLE OF ARCHERS JEROME COURTLAND - WALTER ABEL - ROBERT BENCHLEY ROBERT ABLER TORA ELYN OWL SHOW SAT. 11:45 - SUNDAY - 4 DAYS ATOMIC BOMB TOMMY JONES FIRST Y into TOKYO JAPAN One Lone Yank Living the War's Most Exciting ADVENTURE! See it through the eyes of . FIRST YANK into TOKYO with TOM NEAL BARBARA NALE • MARC CRAMER Michael ST. ANGEL • Leonard STRONG RICHARD LOO • KEVE, LUKE Written and Produced by A ROBERT BREM Directed by GORDON DOUGLAS TENSE! . . . TIMELY! . . . TERRIFIC! Exploding on the screen at the very when the world is pondering a problem of the Atom Bomb . . . Trump card for Jap surrender! COLUMBIA Also: DISNEY CARTOON--"Californay or Bust" - News Call KU 25 with your news. WALLOP WILDCATS! Welcome, Grads to Homecoming Festivities WE'RE HOPIN' for a VICTORY LANDRITH'S Finer Foods 1007 Mass. Phone 173 This is our Veterans Homecoming Week! Buy a Bond in his honor and see our show free! Bond Booth in our lobby every evening! at the Jayhawker Just One More Day NOW ENDS SATURDAY MENEFID O HARA SLEZAK IN TECHNICOLOR! The SPANISH MAIN AN ECO-RADIO PICTURE Age of Romance! FLASH! Penn Routes Columbia Army Crushes Irish FLASH! AND STILL THEY COME 1,000 ROMANTIC THRILLS! ★ GINGER ROGERS ★ LANA TURNER ★ WALTER PIDGEON ★ VAN JOHNSON 1,000 ROMANTIC THRILLS! GINGER ROGERS LANA TURNER WALTER PIDGEON VAN JOHNSON in the MOVIE Weekend at the Waldorf in Mr. M. Weekend at the Waldorf EDWARD ARNOLD • PHYLLIS THAXTER KEENAN WYNN • COBERT BENCHLEY LEOH AMES • LIMA ROMAY • SAMUEL H. HINDS and XAVIER CUGAT and HIS ORCHESTRA PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 16,1945 'Remember '44' Is Hawk War Cry For Gridiron Civil War Tomorrow "Civil war" breaks out in Kansas tomorrow as two factions of the Sunflower state line up solidly behind their teams. Gridiron rivalry is renewed for the 43rd time between the University and Kansas State college. This annual fall reunion is the most stable of all the Jayhawker football traditions, being broken only once since its inauguration in 1902. History shows that the Jayhawks have come out on the long end of the score 25 times, with the Wildcats victorious in 14 games. Three games ended in ties. No game was played in 1910. Most of the K-State victories were piled up during the years 1924 to 1940 during which time the Jayhawker football team was on the downgrade. The Hawks have come back with vengeance in recent years, winning in '41, '42, and '43. Biggest upset in this rivalry took place last year when the Jayhawker eleven suffered a startling 18-14 set-back. In losing, winning, and finally losing a football game all in the last 15 seconds of play, the Jayhawkers made this the most talked-of game of the 1944 season. The Aggie band already had begun its victory song with 30 seconds of playing time remaining when Charlie Moffett, Kansas back, returned a punt 5 yards to the Kansas 20-yard line. With time for only one play remaining, Moffett tore through the edging Aggie team behind good interference and outran three Wildcat backs to cross the goal line for a touchdown. The game was not over, however. The referee had detected clipping on the play, claiming that a Kansas guard, had hauled down a would-be tackler from behind. Just as Kansas was assessed the necessary penalty, the clock had run out, and the referee, after pausing a few seconds, fired the gun to end the game. A screaming mob of K-State fans swarmed the field. Just then, the referee, advised the players that there should have been one more play in the game. After the umpire and headlinesmen had returned from the dressing room, the teams lined up for the last time. A pass from Wea- therby to Danneberg was broken up by the Aggies. Determined to avenge the defeat by the Aggies last year, the Jay-hawkers are geared to make the 1945 victory an uncontestable one. They "Remember 1944" with not the least bit of satisfaction. 'Papa' Jayhawk Passes Cigars For a Daughter The Kansas Jayhawk has another reason to strut; he has become a father. His daughter, Joyce Jayhawk, recently hatched, is the most popular girl at the University School of Nursing in Kansas City, and has her picture printed on the official stationery of Hinch hall, nurses' dormitory. Persons at the hospital report that Joyce is developing a Rock Chalk chirp that gives promise of the real McCoy. Joyce first appeared in a contest held at Hinch hall for a design for stationery letterhead. She was entered by her designer, Joyce Rieling, Kansas City, Mo., student at the University from 1943 to this year, when she entered the University School of Nursing. The baby wears the student nurses' uniform, blue striped dress with white apron and bib, and the conventional nurse's cap. Hinchee, Law Miss Today's Race Harold Hinchee, K.U. cleatman whof inished second in two out of three two-mile meets, and Jack Law, another track regular, were to miss this afternoon's meet with Missouri in Memorial stadium, Ray Kanehil, track coach, announced today. Moore is out with shin-splints and Law with a severe cold. Clarence Erickson, Minnesota City, Minn., and Walter Morrow, Newark, Ohio, went to replace Hinchee and Law. Harold Moore, first place winner in all three meets this year, Bob Laptad, and Bill Johnson were to round out the team as usual. Freshmen Signs Are At Union Building Freshman men who do not live in organized houses are asked to get their "Beat K-State" signs from the desk of the hostess, Memorial Union building, Michael Kuklenski, Ku Ku president, announced today. The signs must be worn by freshmen through Homecoming, he said. Freshman caps will be worn until Christmas holidays, because of their late arrival, Leroy Robison, K-Club president, said today. Memphis, Tenn. (UP)—"GI Joe" at the Kennedy General hospital here is Pfc. Gene Bowers of Coldsprings, Ala. Bowers—a veteran of three major Pacific campaigns with the 7th Infantry division—was selected by patients as the typical infantryman in the hospital. See the LEADING STYLE of 1945 at Typical Doughfoot HAYNES & KEENE VI'S GIFT SHOP A Fine Gift for a Fine Weekend EXTRA HEAVY SOLES INVERTED SEAMS MILITARY BLUCHER Hotel Eldridge Show Your Appreciation To Your Weekend Hostess or Housemother $685 With a GIFT from Vi's 706 Mass. Now here is a real man's shoe—good to look at and rugged as an oak. Extra heavy soles for longer wear—plus Jarman's famous "friendliness of fit." Don't delay ... get yours today. $585 to $885 MOST STYLES Jarmon SHOES FOR MEN Haynes & Keene PHONE 524 In New York for Meeting 819 MASS. Miss Esther Twente, associate professor of sociology, is in New York this week, for a meeting of the social case work division of the national conference of social work. Miss Twente is chairman of this division which is making plans for the annual conference meeting, next spring. Trautwein Returns Lt. Don Trautwein, Topeka, a College sophomore in the fall of 1940 when he was inducted into the army air forces, has returned to the campus after serving overseas. He expects to receive his discharge Dec. 20 and is planning to enroll next semester. Lt. Trautwein lived at Battenfeld hall while in school. Welcome Home Agin' JAYHAWKERS- YES SIR! IT'S YOUR SAME OLD College Store, with the same 'Old Gang' featuring only: fine Clothes for Men & Young Men— Hart Schaffner & Marx Varsity Town Suits - Coats - Sportcoats Kansas Sweat Shirts Sweaters Sleeveless Slips Wool Gloves & Mitts Dress Gloves Lounging Robes Flannel Shirts Kansas T-Shirts Our Store will close at 1:30 for the game. Open after—until 9 p.m. Kansas Jayhawks Ski Socks Fancy Wool Socks Leafers Wool Socks Stetson Hats Sport Shirts CARLS GOOD CLOTHES CHRISTMAS NECKTIES AND GIFTS ON DISPLAY PENNEY'S O. PENNEY CO., INC. SAID THE GROWN-UP BUNNY 7 "My mittens give me lots of charm" For Misses—Charm! FUR MITTENS $2.37 ALL WOOL FASCINATORS Every Color of the Rainbow For glamour girls, a real glamour gift—pure white rabbit fur miffens, soft and pretty; fleece-lined warmth. Colored leather palm! $1.49 NOVEMBER 16, 1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN IT'S HOMECOMING MEMORIAL UNION MEET YOUR FRIENDS AT YOUR The doors of the Memorial Union are opened wide to all who come to the campus for Homecoming weekend. As always, alumni, students, and friends can count on finding the best in entertainment, recreation and food at the Union, the center of campus activities. First Floor—Main Lobby Louge . . . Dances . . . Lost and Found Bureau . . . Book Rental Library . . . Information Desk . . Coat Check Stand . . Ping Pong Music Room Southeast corner of the main floor. Large collection of records for your enjoyment. Kansan Room Third floor. . . Small parties and dances. Pine Room On the third floor. Old English Room Teas and meetings. East Room Cafeteria On third floor. . . For meetings. One level below the main floor. Provides daily meal service. The best food on the campus. Soda Fountain In the Basement. . . "Let's go to the Union for a coke." . . Breakfast . . Light Lunches. The UNION is your host on the campus. VISIT IT OFTEN PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 16,1945 KEEP FIGHTING!K.U. The COTTAGE and BRICKS 7 Join to Cheer You We're Holding Out for a on to VICTORY MURPHY HOMECOMING VICTORY Winter Chevrolet LUCK to You Jayhawkers From Your Own Bookstore Rowlands WHAT'S THE SCORE WITH YOUR CAR? Bring It In for a Check Keep Keep That Score High Jayhawkers Those Wildcats Down GOOD LUCK Jayhawkers! --- FRITZ MOTOR CO. Harzfeld's Don't Forget to Drop In After the Vctory for a Coke at the JAYHAWK CAFE 1340 OHIO PHONE 2007 University DAILY KANSAN Monday, Nov. 19, 1945 STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Monday, Nov. 19, 1945 43rd Year No. 40 Lawrence, Kansas Students Celebrate With 'Wildcat' Walk-Out News ... of the World De Gaulle Gets another Chance' aris. (UP)—The French assembly over Communist opposition voted en. Charles De Gaulle another dance to form a coalition government today and the first violence of the political crisis followed when police clubbed students demonstrating for him. Tokyo. (UP)—Japan was barred from the air today under an Allied headquarters directive outlawing session of aircraft, aeronautical training and research by private or commercial firms. Boone, Iowa. (UP)—Gen. Dwight Eisenhower today maintained a vigil beside the bedside of his wife, under treatment at the Boone county spital for bronchial pneumonia. Her condition was reported "very satisfactory." Compulsory Health Program Proposed hington. (UP)—President Tru- Washington. (UF)—President Tru- doday proposed a 5-point na- tional health program, recommended that congress adopt a compul- tery national health insurance sys- sion for prepayment of medical costs. He stressed that what he was re- commending was "not socialized medicine." Chungking. (UP)—Chinese nationalist troops have occupied the important railway center of Suichung, 50 miles northeast of Shanhaikwan, and two other North China towns in their race with Chinese Communists for control of Manchuria, it was reported today. Tehran. (UP)—Rioting and revolution swept northern Iran today and government spokesmen said the insurgents, armed with Russian weapons, were marching on Tehran, out they did not charge that Soviet forces were involved. Washington. (UP)-Retail prices or new Studebaker, Fords, and Chrysler-built cars will be up 1 to 9 per cent over January, 1942, prices, OPA announced today. Retail prices for General Motors cars will be cut an average of 2.5 per cent. Seek Who Ordered Dec. 7 Fleet Line-Up Washington. (UP)—Pearl Harbor investigators sought today to determine who ordered most of the battleships of the Pacific fleet to be enrolled in close formation in Pearl Harbor on Dec. 7, 1941, where they proved an easy target for Japanese planes. Manhattan. (UF)—The state regents approved the leasing of approximately 100 trailers to house married ex-servicemen students at Kansas State college in Manhattan, the President's office here announced today. Council Decides Classes Should Be Held as Usual, But Unauthorized Strikers Defy Leaders, Interrupt School K. U. students went on partial "strike" today, in celebration of the Jayhawk Homecoming football victory over K-State Saturday, and in protest against an All Student Council decision in favor of "classes as usual." The Council decision came at an emergency meeting called by Mary Jo Cox at 8 a.m. today. Student action in cutting classes and in parading through University buildings disrupting other classes was climaxed by a visit to Chancellor Deane W. Malott, who pointed out that ASC Says 'No' To Football Holiday The All-Student Council voted 14-9 this morning against a student walk-out in celebration of the Jayhawker victory over Kansas State Saturday. Mary Jo Cox, president, called the special Council meeting at 8 this morning in answer to campus sentiment which grew by telephone calls last night. She told the Council that plans for the walkout grew without authority, and that she felt the student body was somewhat doubtful about a holiday so near Thanksgiving vacation. Other council members voiced the opinion that students were strongly backing the proposed holiday, and asked for the administration's stand on the question. Chancellor Deane W. Malott explained he had no authority to declare a holiday, but the administration could take no action if the Council voted to lead a student walk-out. "Such a move is not in the spirit of the times," he said. "Certain groups today have refused to work. I would hate to see K.U. lined up with those groups." "I do not plan to police classes today to see if students are absent in retaliation," the Chancellor said. Fire Damages Roof At Phi Kappa Psi A fire of unknown origin caused little damage to the roof of the Phi Kappa Psi house and roused speculation among persons who noticed it from the stadium Saturday afternoon during the Homecoming football game. A passing stranger notified Mrs. E. C. Chapman, Kansas City, a Homecoming guest and only occupant of the house at the time of the fire and Mrs. Chapman called the fire department Mrs. Arthur Little, housemother, said. University V-12 and NROTC students will have a chance to hear and see what the marine corps has to offer. Three lectures will be given this week by Marine Lt. Dean N. McDowell, Capt. Chester A. Kunz announced today. Chicago. (UP)—Telephone service to and from Chicago was halted today when, 700 Illinois operators went on strike. Several of the fraternity members who saw the fire from the stadium left immediately for the house, but the fire had been extinguished by the fire department. Navy to Hear Talks On Marine Corps The talks, illustrated by motion pictures, will be given in Fraser theater at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday and Friday, and at 10 a.m. Saturday. They will explain what the marines are and how navy men can get into the marine corps, Capt. Kunz said. if you take an unofficial holiday today against the ruling of your student governing body, it will indicate a complete failure of that body." The "wildcat" walk-out began at 9 a.m., but not all classes stopped functioning. Navy enrollees were kept in school by a threat from Capt. Chester A. Kunz to have classes "on Thanksgiving day" if many cut today. Many other students didn't attempt to cut, but some instructors dismissed class immediately after starting., sometimes without calling roll. The demonstration started in front of Hoch auditorium and Robinson gymnasium. The mob of students moved to Frank Strong hall shouting "We want a walkout!" Entering the east door of Frank Strong hall they marched along the corridor and up the stairs to the chancellor's office. Yells of "Did we beat K-State," answered by the roar "Hell yes!" and "Do we want a walk-out?" with the same reply thundered through the halls. The Chancellor's outside office door was shut and his secretary came out to talk to the crowd. Students shouted for the chancellor and Jay Gray, College freshman, and William Sharp, College freshman, were admitted to talk to him as representatives of the students gathered outside the door. Jean Moore", College junior and University debater, quieted the crowd as the chancellor came to the door. "The University is here for the student's benefit and it is up to the individual student to take advantage of it," Mr. Malott said. "I cannot stop you from walking out of your classes and I cannot give you a holiday. If you take unofficial holiday against the ruling of your student governing body it will indicate a complete failure of that body. I will not be able to count on the student Council." The chancellor's speech ended with shouts from the students "We want a walkout," and they surged on down the hall. (The K-State student council is allotted two days a year to designate as special holidays, and the day K-Staters took off after beating K.U., 18-14, in 1924, was one of these.) Other shouts from the mob was "K-State got a holiday last year. Why don't we?" One voice shouted "United we stand, divided we flunk." The crowd went from the chancellor's office at 10 a.m. to the power house to blow the whistle. C. W. Sanderson, chief engineer, said he thought it was a class coming to inspect the plant until the students were inside the door, hunting for the whistle. The chain of the whistle was broken as the students blew it for the first time. Several men ran up (continued to page four) An Editorial Walkout 'Asinine Irresponsible' Two thousand "thinking" students of the University this morning blindly followed a few irresponsible "rah rah" College Joes in one of the saddest, most poorly-organized and asinine exhibitions ever staged on this campus. It is not a compliment to American youth when university students of college-age and supposedly of higher than average intelligence, can be led, like so many spineless old women, to join the mob. "More student government" has been the battle-cry of K.U. students since the idea of student government was conceived. The All-Student Council, representing the student governing body, Several students who did the thinking for 99 percent of the student body this morning in declaring an all-university walk-out, are: Jean Moore, College junior Charles Hall, College junior Jay Gray, College freshman William Sharp, College freshman Alvin Haggard, College freshman William Flatt, College freshman acted this morning as it is empowered to act—to determine student action in a manner which could be recognized by the University administration. Before Chancellor Malott, the one man who gets most credit for trying to squelch student government, K.U. students denied they had a governing body, a voice in University administration. Malott said, "Do you want to follow your student government's decision?" We hope the "Hell, No" answer of the student mob is not representative of individual students' intelligence and thinking. We hope the All-Student Council and the Student Court consider if their responsibility to punish the students who were instrumental in starting the walk-out movement against the vote of the students' representatives. It is not for the University Senate or anyone else to punish the students who disrupted classes today. It is a student matter, started by students, to be handled by students. This is the time to show a few of the big-time students on the campus that there is a student government. This is the time to show a few thousand students on the campus that "sophomore" stuff can't get ahead of intelligent action. Maybe the next time students decide they want an extra holiday, they will have the foresight to present the matter to administration ahead of time—in a manner more becoming to university students. Independents To Vote Tonight Elections will be held today for Independent councilwoman representatives from each of the six Independent precincts. Precinct one has held its election. Precinct one has held its election. Precinct two, which includes Tipperary hall, Locksley hall, and the West Hills area, will meet at 7 tonight in Tipperary with Patricia Miller presiding and Shirley Wellborn as secretary. Precinct three will meet at 6:45 in Miller hall. This includes Miller, Watkins hall, and Briar Manor. Ruth Green wil preside and Alma Robison will act as secretary. Precinct four which includes Foster and Ricker halls, will meet at 7:00 tonight in Foster with Jacqueline Goodell as president and Marjorie Skeen as secretary. Precinct five includes Hopkins hall, Westminster, Cutler house, and others north of 14th street, west of Louisiana street to Illinois street. It will meet at 7 tonight in the Union. Fronzena Jackson will preside and Doris Klindt will be the secretary. Presidet six, houses east of Tennessee street and east of Louisiana street between 14th and 17th street will meet at 7:15 tonight in Jolliffe hall. Phi Psi, Carruth Win Decorations Contest Phi Kappa Psi's animated "Wreck Silo Tech" Jayhawk and Carruth's "Full House for Homecoming" poker hand won the Homecoming decorations contest. The awards were announced at the Homecoming varsity dance Saturday night. Honorable mention in the larger house group, won by Phi Kappa Psi, went to Kappa Alpha Theat, Delta Tau Delta, and Phi Delta Theta. Carruth half won among houses with 30 or less members, while Tau Kappa Epsilon and Delta Upsilon won honorable mention. College Faculty to Hear Change Recommendations Houses were judged on beauty, appropriateness, originality, and cleverness. The College faculty will hear proposals for new courses and course changes submitted by each department at a meeting in Frank Strong auditorium at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow, Dean Paul B. Lawson announced today. Recommendations will be submitted to the administrative committee of the College as a basis for preparing a new catalog. University Vespers Tuesday Thanksgiving vespers for University students will be held at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday in Barlow chapel, Myer's hall. The program of music and thought will be sponsored by the Y.W.C.A., Rosalie Erwin, president, said today. WEATHER Kansas: Increasing cloudiness tonight and tomorrow. Warmer tonight. Low temperatures mid-30's extreme west to mid-40's east. Warmer extreme east. Cooler northwest and extreme west tomorrow. Increasing wind tonight and to- PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN NOVEMBER 19,19 Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Association, National Editorial Association, and the Association of Advertising Presented by the National Advertising Service. 420 Madison Ave. New York City. Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $450 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Law, a university journal. School year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examinations periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS STAFF ELEANOR ALBRIGHT Managing Editor ASSISTANT Asst. Managing Ed. MARY MARGARET GAYNO Marketing Editor BETTY JENNINGS Telephographer BRECKY VALLEY News Editor MARGARET WENKS1 Sports Editor JAMES DENDERON Feature Editor CINDY NOEL Research Editor ANNABELLE SAYLOR JOY HOWLAND Copy Editor JOAN VATCH MAHIEAT THOMSON ... Asst. Feature Editor ALEX GILLIAND MAHIEAT THOMSON ... Dixie. Feature Editor BARBARA EWING JEAN MURRAY NEAL SHEEIAN PAUL CONRAD BUSINESS STAFF NANCY TOMLSONLING ... Business Manager BETTY BEACH ... Advertising Manager Assistants: BOB BONRAKEW, MARY BRANI- GAN, ANN REEDING, ANN SCOTT, SOLVIN N KEDDING, ANNE S ELEANOR THOMPSON. Slides of the proposed plans for the Union building will be shown Tuesday in the men's lounge of the Union. The All-Student Council and Dean Henry Werner have asked all students to come to the meeting to hear the plans discussed and to make suggestions and recommendations for improving them. SMALL, ELEANOR TROMPSON. IN Charge This Issue MARY BRANIGAN Your Chance This is your chance to put in your two cents' worth. If you have some ideas on game rooms, a snack bar, or dance floor, let them be heard. If you are acquainted with student unions on other campuses, you may be able to iron out some of the planning problems. Bowling alleys, ping pong and pool rooms, dining and dancing facilities, a larger cafeteria, a soda fountain on the main floor, and an air-conditioning system are part of the proposed plans. How much office space will be available for activity offices where the book exchange, possibly the new student book store, will be located, a larger music room, and a ballroom which may be used as an auditorium and formal dining room are issues to be decided. The present Memorial Union building, built in memory of the 130 students and alumni who gave their lives for their country in World War I, will extend 148 feet from the south side of the present building. We need a larger union building to accommodate the increasing student body. And just as important, we need plans for the enlarged building which will best answer student needs and requests. This is where you come in—at 7:30 Tuesday, men's lounge of the Union. Any Similarity . . . The United States and Great Britain are in a very similar position in China and Java. The Far East is afame with nationalism, and the motive of the two big powers in the use of their military force is being questioned Both are accused of open intervention in the old imperialist tradition. Britain and the United States had excellent reasons for their actions at the start. British forces were in Java only to disarm the Japanese, rescue war prisoners and protect Allied property. The United States gave almost identical reasons for its procedure in North China. It sounded simple enough, but internal complications arose in both countries. The big power troops now are involved in something too close to active warfare for comfort. Rock Chalk Talk Rock By M. Sheldon and Keith Wilson A Siren for sirens. After having dinner at the Phi Psi house Tuesday evening, the Theta's decided to give their hosts a serenade. Just as they reached the second verse of "Theta Lips" they were drowned out by an air raid siren turned on by the music-loving Nu Sig neighbors. Housing shortage. According to the student directory, Connie Clohaugh, Chi Omega, lives at the Sigma Chi house. Any Gum, Chum?. The local grocery recently stocked up on bubble gum and an entire sorority pledge class rushed down to get a supply—mainly so they could read their fortunes on the wrapper. One wrapper stated, "You have no fear of wild animals because you understand their habits and behavior." She wouldn't say who she'd been dating. In the dark. Some of the recent intramural night football games (played by moonlight) have been rugged. The other evening after the ball was put into play, the players rushed around the field in a state of bewilderment, striking matches. Suddenly an excited yell was heard, "Here he is,"—a dull thud followed. A lantern was brought around and the tackled ball carrier was found to be an innocent frost spectator and his date. Kid stuff. Pi Phi's are starting a new intramural activity—bubble blowing. A young Man's fancy. A young college man seated himself in the library one afternoon and proceeded to peer through his glasses at Margie Darby with one eye while he laboriously perused "Comes the Revolution" with the other. After remaining seated for an hour, he crept silently to his feet and sped off toward the periodical room, leaving a note behind—it read, "You're the most beautiful girl in the whole University." Ah love! A Gentle Hint? An unknownTheta is sending a list of pamphlets from model agencies and success courses to Sig Alph, George Robb. George has been following directions but it hasn't helped. "I wasn't even put up for homecoming queen," he complains. New song hit. "She Lost Her Girdle," or "June is Busting Out All Over." All who are interested are invited to attend the second Western Civilization forum in Little Theater, Green hall, at 7:30 tonight.—William Vandiver, chairman. Wedemeyer's attitude is, of course, technically correct. American forces are in North China for the sole, avowed purpose of aiding the disarmament and disbanding of the Japanese. If they are attacked in the process, they must defend themselves. Unfortunately, the Communists regard American policy as out-and-out intervention and they are bitter. OFFICIAL BULLETIN University of Kansas Nov. 19, 1945 Russia's policy of non-intervention, if it can be called that, is much more subtle. Soviet Russia, like the United States recognizes and is committed to support the Chungking government. Yet Russia is giving no support to Chiang Kai-Shek. She is withdrawing her troops from Manchuria in literal compliance with treaty terms, but in so doing is permitting the Chinese communists to take over vast stores of Japanese arms, munitions and supplies. Gen. Wedemeyer's announcement implies that United States forces soon may be drawn into the shooting. That would be unfortunate, since it is not easy to isolate such an "incident" in a country torn by war. Obviously, Russia and the United States are following divergent policies in China. Just as obviously, unless the two governments get together and press for a peaceful There will be a meeting of the Dramatics Workshop organization at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Little Theater. All-Student Council will meet at 7:15 p.m. Tuesday in the men's lounge of the Union. Slides of study plans for the addition to the Union building will be shown. All University students are urged to attend. Mary Jo Cox, president. WANT ADS Russia and the United States are already directly involved. Both have troops in Chinese territory, although the Russians are pulling out fast. FOR SALE-Low library, section bookcases. Shown by appointment. Call 2239. LOST—Black Sheaffer's fountain pen lost a week ago. Name, "Lee Shull," engraved and Flying Red Horse on top. Reward offered. Return to Kansan office. FOUND—A Waterman's fountain pen. Owner can have same by identifying and paying for ad at Kansan office. WANTED—36 Ford at dealer price. Call 2915J. FOUND--A girl's silver identificatior bracelet with name on top. Own can have same by identifying at paying for this ad at Kansan office TUXEDOES—All wool black broac cloth, double-breasted. Less the half price, used, but show no war Dr. Will R. Gorrill, 803 Mass. Ph. 399. Any tendency to regard the trouble in China as a local affair which can be solved by the Chinese themselves without disturbing the world picture is a grave mistake. Interpreting Today's Important News: The other is resentment, so far entirely unofficial, in Chungking against Soviet Russia's course in Manchuria. One is the decision of the United States military commander, Lt. Gen. A. C. Wedemeyer, to take armed action against a communist-held village in Northeastern China, if necessary to prevent further attacks on United State marines. HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Garage and Cab Co. 922 Mass. Phone 12 LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. Phone 425 solution in China, another clash of interests might arise which would impede efforts to reach an understanding on matters ranging all the way up to the Atomic bomb. Two developments emphasize the international importance of the civil strike in China. Chinese Civil Strife Important Internationally, UP Writer Reports Jayhawker Jewelry New Shipment By LOUIS F. KEEMLE United Press Staff Correspondent Roberts Jewelry and Gifts SPEND YOUR VACATION EAT YOUR TURKEY Store Closed —IN CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES and feel as alright outside as you will inside. —You'll enjoy wearing the new style garments Thursday CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES GE GE CAMPUS NEWS RESEARCH AND ENGINEERING KEEP GENERAL ELECTRIC YEARS AHEAD 50 YEARS OF X-RAY COLUMBIA WORKING in his laboratory at the University of Wurzburg Roentgen discovered the x-ray. That was November, 1895. This year, 1945 is the 50th anniversary of that discovery and also the 100th anniversary of Roentgen's birth. Within the space of fifty years x-rays have come to benefit mankind through the part they play in science and medicine. Equally important, though less well known, is the part they have come to play as an inspection tool in industry. It was Dr. William D. Coolidge, working in the G-E Research Laboratory, who developed the high-vacuum tube—second only in importance to Roentgen's original discovery—which increased x-ray efficiency in medicine. And his sectional tube with its cascade principle has made possible high-voltage x-rays for industry. Using this sectional tube, the G-E two-million volt x-ray, developed by Dr. E. E. Charlton and W. F. Westendorp, makes it possible to see through twelve inches of steel. And it can radiograph an eight-inch steel casting 78 times as fast as the smaller giant of one million volts. General Electric Company, Schenectady, N. Y. The best investment in the world is in this country's future; Keep all the Bonds you Buy. GENERAL ELECTRIC GE NOVEMBER 19, 1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE 1234567890 SOCIALLY SPEAKING Mary Margaret Gaynor, Society Editor --science fraternity, and lives in Hays. Mechanical Engineers Elect Newcomer's Club Meets The American Society of Mechanical Engineers have elected John McGuckin, president; John Murray, vice-chairman; Stanley Hobbs, social chairman; Wilbur Pro, secretary; and Robert E. Smith, treasurer. They're all N.R.O.T.C. trainees. New members were introduced at a meeting of the Newcomer's club, at Mrs. Paul B. Lawson's Thursday. After the business meeting, each member told the history of her "favorite antique." Mrs. Lawson served refreshments, assisted by Mrs. Ernest Quigley, Mrs. Edwin Browne, Mrs. J. S. Carey, Mrs. Robert McNair Davis, and Mrs. C. K. Hyder. Games and refreshments were highlights of the semi-annual social of Y.W.C.A. board and cabinet members Thursday night at the home of Mrs. W. S. Johnson, chairman of the board. Games at YWCA Social Delta Gamma entertained members of Tri Delta at dinner Thursday. Alpha Chi Has Guests D. G. Entertains Tri Delta Five exchange guests from Miller and five from Alpha Omicron Hid dinner at the Alpha Chi Omega house, Thursday. Three Pledged to T.K.E. Tau Kappa Epsilon announces the pledging of three N.R.O.T.C. students—Robert Dreizler, Frankfort, N.Y.; Robert Ulrich, Wichita; and Robert Weintraut, Moline, Ill. Pi K. A. Entertains Otto Merton L. Otto, Pi Kappa Alpha's district president, was their guest of honor at dinner Wednesday. Emerson Hazlett, a former chapter member, was a guest. He recently returned from Germany. NEW at the LIBRARY "Rorschach's Test," by S. J. Beck "The Heart of the Middle East," by R. Coke. "Politics and Morals," by B. Groce. "Foster Home Care for Mental Patients," by H. B. Chutcher. "Personality and Economic Background," a study of highly intelligent children, by H. H. Davidson. "Children and the Theater," by C. E. Fisher. "Netherlands India," a study of plural economy, by J. S. Turnivall. "Belgium," by J. A. Goris. "Men under Stress," a study of the medical aspects of aeronautics, by R. R. Crinker. "Labor Problems of Africa," by J A. Noon. "Main-springs of Civilization," by E. Huntington. "Calcium Metallurgy and Technology," by C. L. Mantell. "Francois Magendie, Pioneer in Experimental Physiology and Scientific Medicine in XIX Century France," by J. M. D. Olmsted. "Stout Cortez," a biography of the Spanish conquest, by H. M. Robinson. "Plastics in Practice, a Handbook of Product Applications," by J. Sasso. "Lake Ontario," by A. Pound. "Intelligence and Its Deviations," by M. Sherman. "Part of a Lifetime," drawing and designs, 1919-1940, by L. Simpson. "The Netherlands and the United States," by B. H. M. Vlakke. The natives of Tibet drink an average of 30 to 50 cups of tea per person a day, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica. Robert Witt Holds Grad School Position On Student Council Phi Chi Theta Has Pledging, Initiation For 18 Women Robert Witt, a graduate student in political science, is the Graduate school representative to the All-Student Council. He belongs to the Pigma Alpha honorary political ROBERT WITT Three women were initiated and 15 pledged to Phi Chi Theta, women's honorary business sorority, at services Wednesday night in the English room of the Union. Those initiated were Dorothy Cooper, Lorraine Witt, and Marjorie Boyle. Women pledged were Betty Cunningham, Elizabeth Posornow, Virginia Wickert, Jean Jones, Mary K. Parker, Meredith Gear, Patricia Coolidge, Maxine Thach, Betty Soukop, Sara Minis, Patina Peterson, Frances Goerke, Rosemary Graves, Jean Brunton, and Norma Jean Pyke. Miss Loda Newcomb and Mrs. Ruth McMahon, faculty advisors, were present. A dinner followed the service. Planted by Lafayette Concord, N.H. (UP)—An elm tree planted by Lafayette during a visit here 120 years ago still stands on the State House grounds. science fraternity, and lives in Hays. Robert was president of Battenfeld hall last year and was twice awarded the Battenfeld Memorial scholarship, as well as the Graduate school scholarship, the residence hall scholarship, and the class of 1943 scholarship. "Being a graduate student and a procter in Western Civilization is occupying most of my time this year," Robert says. Just Arrived! Black and White and Brown and White Check Skirts $398 each Sizes 24-30 Rayon and Wool Adelanes New Records in Stock: Just a Little Fond Affection Charlie Barnet Surprise Party Hora Staccato Fred Waring Meadowland Tell You What I'm Goin' to Do Duke Ellington Come to Baby Bell Music Company Union 'Dished Out' 71,000 Meals During October Rush Memorial Union employees "dished out" plenty during October, serving some 71,000 meals. University students "took it" at a rate of 1,350 per day in the cafeteria, and 1,100 at the fountain. Miss Hermina Zipple, director of the Union, also reported 9,455 of the total number of meals were served to Navy personnel. ON KFKU Today 9:30 p.m. Symphonic favorites: Beethoven's Sixth Symphy. Tomorrow torrow 2:30 p.m. Art by Radio, Maude Elsworth. 9:30 p.m. K.U. Band. Rockville, Ind. (UP)—Betty Myers of Montezuma, Ind., narrowly escaped death by lightning. She received only first and second degree burns, but the bobby pins in her hair were welded together. DRY CLEANING SPECIALS FOR FALL Cold weather's here to stay. Better keep those warm clothes in good condition. Send them to Independent! INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS 740 Vermont Phone 432 For Delicious Cakes It's Always DRAKE'S DRAKE BAKERY 907 MASS. PHONE 61 PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 19, 1945 2014 IN THE HUDDLE with PAT PENNEY Women's intuition or what have you? Whatever the guiding force was, your Kansan sports editor predicted the only correct versions of the Big Six picture last weekend. Big Six standings now are: Won Lost Tied Won Lost Tie Missouri 4 0 Oklahoma 4 1 Iowa State 2 2 Nebraska 2 3 Kansas 1 2 Kansas State 0 5 The battle royal between Kansas and Missouri is yet to come. The Jayhawkers may sway the race if they are victorious over the Tigers next weekend. TROUNCE THE TIGERS Meet Your Team. And all the Schmidt's came from miles around to see Dave play against Marquette. Dave Schmidt, 820 hard - working right end, enjoyed a family reunion in Milwaukee a week ago. Schmidt "The athletic department a b o u t dropped its teeth when I asked 'em for 10 tickets to the game," Dave grinned, "but all my folks were there." A large time was had by all, with Smitty's navy-doctor brother home on leave, plus his two sisters, one a WAVE and the other an army nurse. Smitty came to K.U. in July from Dennison, where he had been for a year. He lived in Merrill, Wis., until he was 15, lettering a year in football and basketball there. He spent a year in Milwaukee, then went to Zanesville, Ohio, where he again earned two letters in the same sports. Now he's back in Milwaukee, whenever the navy isn't looking. A junior in N.R.O.T.C., Dave is thinking of chem or medicine as a major. He resides at "Club Five," and is a speedy first baseman on the Dennison sailors' baseball team, "the Mismits." TROUNCE THE TIGERS Meet your team. R. D. Moore, Jayhawker tackle from Bellflower, Calif., has great ambitions after leaving the navy. "For years and years, I want to do nothing," he declares. I. M. S. H. C. H. C Moore In past years he has done plenty — lettered three years in football at Excelior High school, Norwalk, Calif, lettered three year in track (shotput, his specialty), and he also took to the basketball court during his senior year in high school and was stationed at Dennison college until July, when he came to Kansas. His preference in food is "more food." Bob is a junior in mechanical engineering. He is a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity. Vavra Visits Mother CPO Marlin A. Vavra, a student in 1930-32, and his wife visited on the campus the past weekend before returning to their home in Kansas City. Chief Vavra, just back from 28 months service in the South Pacific, visited his mother, Mrs. Alice Vavra, housemother of Tipperay hall. He was a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity. Students Stage 'Wildcat' Walk-Out (continued from page one) the stairs to the roof where they blew the whistle again. "Government property has been destroyed in the breaking of the whistle chain," Mr. Sanderson said. "There were two dynamos of 3300 volts on each side of the stairs where students were standing. If anyone had been caught in one of these he would have been burned to a crisp." After the whistle had blown, students gathered in front of the library, then marched to Fraser hall singing "I'm a Jayhawk." Marching to the third floor of Fraser the marching students urged other students to leave class. They then went to Bailey Chemical laboratory and Frank Strong hall where they repeated the performance. Gathering again in front of Hoch auditorium, 14 members of the University's band joined the procession with their instruments. Seeing Navy V-12 students in the windows of Marvin hall the mob followed the band singing, "Anchors Aweigh" and shouting "We want, the navy." They marched to the Military Science building to see Capt. C. A. Kunz, commanding officer of the University's naval unit. The doors of the building were locked as the crowd came down the hill but the captain then came out to explain why the navy trainees could not be given a holiday today. "Navy trainees have to complete so many hours of class instruction and many of them cannot afford to miss today," Captain Kunz said. "I don't want to send any of them back to sea because they missed needed instruction. I am in favor of your celebration but I suggest you go down town so as not to disturb our navy classes." All navy classes, usually meeting in Marvin hall, were changed to the Military Science building today to escape the noise from walkout students. Dean Paul B. Lawson, of the College, said individual instructors would be responsible for any action they took but he did not think it would go any farther than counting the student absent for the class period. "I'm sorry about it but I don't think any responsible students were behind it," Dean Lawson said. "Student Council should have planned a celebration or some sort of observation last week for this occasion." Mary Jo Cox, Council president, explained the Council's decision to the Daily Kansan today. "One of the main reasons the Council voted against a walk-out was that it realized most of the football team was composed of navy men," she said. "We knew it would be impossible for them to get out of classes. It didn't seem logical for us to take a vacation while the team attended classes." The Occupational Therapy club has introduced a program of recreational activities at the Douglas county convalescent home in Lawrence. Each day a group works with the patients, whose average is 70. Creative craft work, recreational activities, music, and plays are planned. O. T. Club to County Home Thank You For the Swell Start You Have Given Us We know our service is not perfect, but WE NEED HELP physical help—any boys you may know of who want to work. Send them to us. We have a café well as meals. In the meantime, come and see us and we will try to please you. ROCK CHALK CAFE Freshman Bertuzzi Helps Jayhawks Remember '44,' Trounce Wildcats Victorious Jayhawkers "remembered 1944" as they trounced the Kansas-State Wildcats, 27-0, in their first post-war Homecoming game Saturday before a crowd of 15,700. Suspense and surprise filled the annual K-State fracas as the Jay-hawkers waited until 30 second. 36 Robison until 30 seconds before the end of the first half for Richard Bertuzzi, freshman back, to make their first touchdown following a drive from the Kansas $2^{1/2}$-yard line. LeRoy Robison honorary co- captain, made his first appearance since a collar-bone injury in the Wichita encounter, to kick for the extra point which brought the score to 7-0 at the half. Norman Pumphrey, speedy Kansas end, came through for the second touchdown in the third quarter after picking up a relay pass from Grear to Pattee to Pumphrey. Robinson failed to convert. Dave Schmidt and Pat Green marked up two more touchdowns in the fourth period while a helpless K-State team stood by without a chance to handle the ball before the victorious climax of the tilt by the Jayhawkers. Although the Kansas victory was lopsided, the Jayhawkers had turned in their best performance of the year, everyone admitted. This first Big-Six victory for Kansas leaves the cellar position in the conference for K-State. If the renewed vigor of the team remains strong, Kansas has a chance to snare the Missouri Tigers, Big-Six title contenders, when the rival states meet next Saturday in Kansas City. GRANADA NOW ENDS WEDNESDAY THE RISING SUN BLACKED OUT BY AN ATOM BOMB! FIRST YANK INTO TOKYO FIRST YANK TOM NEAL BARBARA HALE • MARC GRAMER Michael ST ANGEI • Leonard STRING RICHARD LOB • KEYE LUKE FIRST YANK INTO TOKYO A-3 WITH EUM NEAL GARBARA HALE - MARC CRANER Michael ST ANGEI - Leonard STRONG RICHARD LOOD - KEVE LUKE Timely! Tense! . . . Terrific! ___ Exploding on the screen at the very moment when the world is pondering the terrifying problem of the atom bomb . . . trumpcard for Jap surrender! THURSDAY 3 DAYS Tunes you'll whistle . . . Girls you'll whistle at! GIRLB * MUSIC * LAUGHB! GEORGE WHITE'S Scandals JOAN DAVIS JACK HALEY GENE KRUPA AND HIS BAND ETHEL SMITH SWING ORGANIST 100 SCANDAL-LOVELIES SUNDAY—"Fallen Angel" VARSITY TODAY — Ends Tuesday "The Girl of the Limberlost" and GEN. EISENHOWER'S "TRUE GLORY" Wednesday - Thursday Wednesday - Thursday DICK HAYMES JUNE HAVER "When Irish Eyes Are Smiling" IN TECHNICOLOR After the Denver ordnance plant converted to artillery fuse production in 1944, more than 2,500,000 fuses were shipped from the plant. at the Jayhawker at the Jayhawker NOW ALL WEEK Ginger ROGERS Lana TURNER Walter PIDGEON Van JOHNSON IN M-G-M's "Weekend AT THE WALDORF" Ginger ROGERS Lana TURNER Water PIDGEON Van JOHNSON IN M-G-M's Weekend AT THE WALDORF THE GAMMERS DUELYS Radio's Riot Show is A Musical Mirth- quake on the screen! with 32 STARS! TAYERN SUNDAY Students! RADIOS 5-tube - $27.50 RECORD PLAYERS $24.95 and Are in Stock Now Quantity Limited So Get Yours NOW! New 5-tube superhetrodye radios are also in. These are splendid radios with Beam power output and equals 7-tube operation in other sets. Complete Stock of Fresh Portable Radio Batteries We have new tubes for your radio. We can give you speedy service on all your radio repair work. Thanks for your business. Phone 138. ED BOWMAN BOWMAN RADIO Shop, 944 Mass. St., and F. M. TELECTRAD SHOP, 900 Mass. St. University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Tuesday, Nov. 20, 1945 43rd Year No. 41 Lawrence, Kansas News of the World Kansas Medical Plan Proposed by Doctors Topcka. (UP)—Dr. Barrett A. Nelson, Manhattan, president of the Kansas physicians service, a nonprofit organization, announced today statewide plans for family medical care for $2.25 per month. Release of the plan was ordered after President Truman's announcement of a compulsory health insurance program yesterday. The program would provide all surgical, obstetrical care, and treatment of injuries. About half the state's doctors have signed up for the plan, under which a patient may choose his own physician. Washington. (UP) — Rep. Sam Russell, D., Texas, today introduced a bill to make railroads responsible for any drinking on their trains. Frankfurt. (UP)—Joseph Rosensaft, chairman of the Jewish committee for the British occupation zone in Germany, charged today that conditions at the Belsen concentration camp are as bad as they were under the Nazis, excepting only elimination of Belsen's wholesale murder mill. Roosevelt Said 'No' To Navy Increases Washington. (UP)—Although President Roosevelt insisted on keeping the U.S. Pacific fleet at Pearl Harbor in 1940 as a deterrent to Japanese aggression, he did not then want to increase the navy's personnel, Adm. J. O. Richardson said today. The committee hoped to learn whether Mr. Roosevelt relieved Adm. Richardson from the fleet command because he would not endorse the chief executive's determination to keep it at Pearl Harbor. Athens, (UP)—The Greek government headed by Prime Minister Panayoti Canellopoulos resigned today. Nueremberg, (UP)—Twenty fallen leaders of the Nazi regime went on trial before a United Nations tribunal today and listened unceasily to a shocking indictment holding them directly responsible for the death and misery of World War II. Superfortress Breaks Nonstop Record Again Washington. (UP)]—A U.S. Superfortress arrived here from Guam today, setting a new world's nonstop flight record of an estimated 8,198 miles. The flight was the latest in a series designed, according to the war department, to demonstrate how easily U.S. long-range aircraft could bomb great distances away, and how vulnerable this country could be to "enemy attacks from vast distances." Moscow. (UP)—The government newspaper, Izvestia, today editorially denied that the Red army is supplying arms and trucks to any faction in Persian Azerbaijan. Meanwhile, it was announced in Tehran that Iranian troops moving north to reinforce garrisons along the Russian-Iranian border were stopped by Russian occupation forces and ordered to return to Tehran. 'China Can Rule,' Russians Say (Ru United Press) (By United Press) Chungking - negotiations with Soviet Russia have resulted in permission for Generalissimo Chiang Kai-Shek's government to take over Manchuria, central government sources said today. The Soviet view was said to be one of upholding Russia's obligation under a treaty of last Aug. 14 to permit the national government to take over Manchuria but that "actual military circumstances" there prevented occupation. It was reported that Russian negotiators insisted that Chinese airborne occupation forces be manned exclusively by Chinese. This provision was said to be acceptable to the Chunqking government. Present obstacles to taking over a network of military airfields in North Manchuria, originally built by the Japanese for operations against Siberia, include the fact that some of China's best American-trained and American-equipped veteran troops are accustomed to tropical weather and are now garrisoning South China, government sources said. Lower Classmen Must See Advisers All College freshmen and sophomores must see their advisers Monday, Tuesday, or Wednesday after vacation, Gilbert Ulmer, assistant dean of the College, reminded today. Lists of students with their advisers and office hours will be posted outside the College office Monday. Students whose classes conflict with advising periods should arrange with the adviser for a special conference, Dean Ulmer suggested. Juniors and seniors with unsatisfactory grades will be notified by mail, and will be required to see the dean. Independents Name Four Council Women Winners in last night's election for Independent council women, as announced today by Lois Thompson, president of the Independent party are: Precinct 1, Betty Jennings, Corbin hall; precinct 2, Ruth Carwood, Tipperary; precinct 3, Marylee Masterson, Miller hall; precinct 4, Johnnie May Mann, Foster hall; precinct 5, Frances Fridell, Campus house; and precinct 6, Billie Joan Stillman, Jolife hall. Election in the four men's precincts will be held immediately after Thanksgiving vacation, Miss Thompson said. The KU flag on Fraser hall flew upside down all day yesterday. The mistake was apparently not even noticed by the student body. Wonder Why WEATHER Kansas—Mostly cloudy tonight and tomorrow. Light showers extreme east tonight and rain or snow west tomorrow afternoon. Colder west and central tonight. Low 25-30 extreme west to 40 extreme east. Colder tomorrow, windy. Billie Marie Hamilton Is 'K.U. Activity Girl' [Picture of a woman with curly hair and a necklace. She is smiling.] BILLIE MARIE HAMILTON Billie Marie Hamilton, Jay Jane representative to the All-Student Council, is becoming one of K.U.'s top executives. She is president of W.E.C., of the Press club, and of the Christian Science University organization, besides being assistant news editor of the Daily Kansan, a member of the Kansan board and Jay James. Billie is a College junior majoring in journalism. She is chairman of the A.S.C. social committee and on the Union operating board. Her pet pieve is the Abbott and Costello routine that happens whenever anyone asks where she lives. It goes like this: "Where do you live, Billie?" "Wis." "Yes, that's what I asked you—where?" Billie collects forge gn newspapers and plays the piano "Where no one can hear me." She likes to read interesting non-fiction. She is the only member of her family attending K.U., but her younger brother is coming here when he is released from the navy. A University Memorial association of World War II was formally organized Saturday with Justice Hugo T. Wedell, Topeka, as president, Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary, announced today. The association consists of 26 trustees. If you fail to get your fall edition of the Jayhawker this afternoon, you will have to wait until Monday for a copy. The carillon tower, part of the World War II memorial, will be located in a landscaped area just north of the Rock Chalk cairn back of Frank Strong hall, according to present proposals, the Daily Kansan learned today. The magazine is being distributed until 5:30 this afternoon, Sally Fitzpatrick, business manager, said today. Students are asked to call for their copies at the W.E.C. Book Exchange in the sub-basement of the Memorial Union. Tower Site Tentatively Set Plans for the Memorial driveway route include an entrance off Mississippi street leading around the northern brow of the Hill, past the carillon tower and Potter lake to the circular flower bed at the west end of the campus. From there it will go behind the engineering laboratories, past the Military Science building and Hoch auditorium, and along the southern edge of the hill high enough to afford a view of the entire Kaw valley. Mary Jo Cox and Keith Bunnel, will represent the present student body as trustees. ★ The proposed field house will be built in the northern part of Marvin grove. University workmen are thinning out trees in the grove so that a vista will be formed between the library steps and the field house. Letters to the Editor 'Some Advantages The Council is a representative governing body, and it has the allegiance of the student body. It is indeed ignoble that the latter saw fi in order to have its own w a few rah rah "sophomo. able to lead 2,000 students to use the Council decision indicates that the Council did not act in accordance with popular feeling. The walkout was a big success In Walkout'—Stovall Dear Editor: Yesterday's student walkout has been editorialized as "an anasine, irresponsible exhibition led by a few rah rah College Joes." That, perhaps, is correct. But it is not hard to see that the walkout had some advantages. There was a lot of spirit in that mob. They were proud of a football team that won a game. Spirit like that will win another game. Kansas University has been sadly lacking in football spirit for a long time. The All-Student Council definitely lost face. It is a splendid body and has by no means failed. It just made a mistake. All governing bodies make mistakes. The majority of students wanted a walkout and they got it. Their governing body figured that the football players who are in the navy program would be unable to cut classes, so they decided not to take advantage of an otherwise splendid opportunity to let loose a little pep. That was a bad decision. ★ Kansan Coverage 'Unfair,' Three Students Declare To the University Daily Kansan: We Protest! Monday's front-page coverage o. the student walkout was, in our opinion, both prematurely and unfairly presented. It was not based on fact! It is unfair to accuse or implicate any individuals without offering proof of your accusations. We can show that some of the accused "big-time students" took little, if any, active part in the demonstration. We challenge you to show us evidence to the contrary We contend that it is "asinine" to assume that any six 'rah rah College Joes," however eloquent, can incite two thousand "thinking" students into such an expression of student sentiment. Conversely, why not consider the possibility of one powerful figure coercing a spineless majority of the late student governing body? If their decision reflected student opinion, why was it repudiated? Did you print hear-say or facts? Three "Thinking" Students There was no planning behind it—it was a free spontaneous thing that all enjoyed who participated. A lot of good spirit was loosed. We might beat the Tigers! Jack P. Stovall (Editor's Note: Stovall enrolled in the November 1 term as a freshman in engineering.) At Last K.U. Gives Thanks--- A Real Vacation The first real Thanksgiving vacation we've had since 1941 begins tomorrow, but fired by the University victory over Kansas State, many students will be in Kansas City Saturday to see if a tiger is tougher than a wildcat. Student interest in this last game of the year is so high the abletic office ran out of tickets Monday. The annual student rally in Kansas City will begin at noon Saturday in the Continental hotel. However, 500 more student tickets will be available tomorrow in the University athletic office, it was announced today. There also will be 100 end-zone tickets for the public. A rally, which will begin at 5:30 p.m. Friday at the Kansas City Advertising and Sales Executives club, has been planned by Kansas City alumni. Speakers will be Gov. Andrew Schoeppel, Chancellor Deane W. Malott, Mayor Gage, and E. C. Quigley, Henry Shenk, coach, and Dr. F. C. Allen, from the athletic department. The Jayhawkers will meet the favored Missouri Tigers at 2 p.m. Saturday in Ruppert stadium. The rival teams will meet in Kansas City for the second time in 35 years. Although Missouri holds an edge, the Jayhawkers intend to make it a hard battle. Coach Henry Shenk predicted a Kansas victory. "The team is in tiptop shape and will put on a good performance Saturday," Coach Shenk said. The Missouri team outweighs the youthful Jayhawkers at least 20 pounds a man. Rivalry between the Universities of Kansas and Missouri exists as strongly today as it did in 1891 when Kansas walked away from the first clash with a 22-8 victory. By winning the game, the Jayhawkers could climb into a third-place tie with Iowa State at two wins, two defeats, and one tie. Such a turn of events would force Missouri to share its championship bunting with Oklahoma university. The Jayhawkers' last win from the Tigers was in 1943 when Missouri suffered an unexpected defeat, 7-6, in one of the biggest upsets of the year. Last year, a young Kansas team found the Tigers too much and lost 28-0. Missouri is preparing for its first Big Six championship in three years. Jayhawk practice this week will emphasize the running attack and passing. Cecil Langford and George Gear were injured last weekend but will probably join their team for the last chance at football this year. The team will leave for Kansas City Saturday morning. Slides of Union Plans At ASC Tonight Color slides of the proposed plans for the addition to the Union will be shown at the All-Student Council meeting at 7:15 tonight in the pine room of the Union building. "All students are urged to attend," said Mary Jo Cox this morning. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE TWO NOVEMBER 20,1945 University DAILY KANSAN Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Association, National Editorial Association, and the Writers' Society, presented by the National Advertising Company, 420 Madison Ave. New York City. Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in The Journal of the School year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second class at Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS STAFF ELEANOR ALBERTRIG Managing Editor. MARY MARGARET ASTON Manage Editr. MARY MARGARET GAYNOR BETTY JENNINGS Telegraph Editr. BETTY JENNINGS Telegraph Editr. BECKY VALLETTE Society Editr. MARGARET WENSKI Sports Editr. MARGARET WENSKI Sports Editr. CLEO NOBERS Military Editr. ANNABELLE SAYLOR Research Editr. THOMSON IRISON Account Editr. JOHN HOWE Copy Editr. **Assst. Telegraph Editors** JOAN VEATCH DIXIE GILILAND JOAN VEATCH DIXIE GILLILAN Staff Assistants: BARBARA EWING JEAN MURRAY NEAL SHEEKIAN PAUL CONRAD EDITORIAL STAFF EDITORIAL STAFF ZUMAN ... Editor-in-Chief DOLORES SULZAN ... Editor-in-Chief MARY MORRILL FRANKLIN FARING ... Editorial Associates OWLELL PORENTS BUSINESS STAFF NANCY TOMLISSON ... Business Manager BETTY BRACH ... Advertising Manager Assistants: Bob BONNERBAKE, MARY BRANI- GAN, ANN REDNING, ANNE SCOTT, SVILIA SMALL, ELEARON THOMPSON. In Charge This Issue...MARY BRANIGA Then and Now Thanksgiving --an impressed onlooker yelled, "Hello, Grace!" Thanksgiving Day in America this year will parallel even more closely than usual the celebrations of our Pilgrim fathers. Thanksgiving, 1623, was a period of rejoicing for deliverance from the scourge of drought and famine. Our joy in 1945 is in our release from the harsher grip of war and destruction. The parallel extends into the attitudes of isolation that prevailed among the celebrators then. The Plymouth festival was a strictly local affair. Concern for folk further down the coast or in the Mother country was not a feature of the holiday emotion there. Today we are able to plan happily for a Thanksgiving dinner with whipped cream for the pumpkin pie again and plenty of real butter for mother's home-made rolls. We are able to exult in a lengthened vacation. We have this while people are gaunt with war-bom hunger in extensive areas of the world—a part of the price of our victory and peace. The Pilgrims at least included their allies against starvation, the Indians, in their feast of plenty. Along with our wholesome and natural thanksgiving for material gifts and for the abundance of our life in wealthy, secure America, we need a deep, purposeful gratitude for our mental and physical strength which must be the main force in restoring plenty and harmony to the entire world-J.C. 10,000 Students Learn Over 'School of Air' More than 10,000 Kansas students have enrolled in the "School of the Air" series now being broadcast by KFKU, the University broadcasting station, Miss Mildred Seaman, program director, announced today. A new program "Rhythms by Radio," will be added to "Art by Radio," "We Want to Live," and "Tales from Ivory Towers," which are currently broadcast on the series. KFKU displays, based on the "Tales from Ivory Towers" program, are now being shown in Topeka, Atchison, Newton, Manhattan, and Pittsburg, public libraries and in Ober's window in Lawrence. Rock Chalk Talk Mistaken Identity.—It was a confused world for Mary Wisner and Johnny Daniels when they got all the way from the library to a before-dinner coke date, each thinking the other was someone else. Johnny had "met her somewhere before" and Mary was sure Johnny was helping with the W.S.S.F. drive. Heartbreak—One coed was badly disappointed when she was told the bovine exhibits on the Alpha Chi porch weren't cows after all — just calves. By ELAINE THALMAN Interested By-stander. Larry Silks was plodding across the campus in his 'lil Abner shoes enjoying the free period between classes. Before he knew it he tripped over a crack in the walk. As he picked himself up Song without lungs. With students looking forward to the vesper program as well as victory over K-State last Thursday, Dean Swarthout begged choir members to save their voices for him. Sayeth the Dean: "When we make a touchdown, just wave a flag or something." Bulletin—All fire broke loose last week when the "raiders," secret demolition army, declared total war on Battenfeld hall by setting off a blast which was heard at 17th and Massachusetts streets. PT 6 thought the furnace at Jollife had exploded. Girls at Watkins hall were accused of throwing sticks of dynamite out of the windows. Casualties: one Battenfeld man who stuck his head out to see what was going on. Sharp or Flat? Latest enrollee in Harmony IV is an English sparrow. Even a bamboo pole was no inducement for the warbler to leave the room. The class also boasts a group of pet wasps. **Hoofing it.** Several campus casanovas are running a close foot race—foot race because the winner will be the one with the most phone numbers on his saddle shoes by the end of the semester. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. Phone 425 1025 Mass. I'm not proud. Conversation between roommates: "Say what's that book you're readine?" "They call it 'What 20,000,000 Girls Want.'" "Did they spell my name right?" Moore Enrolls as Pre-Med Capt. C. E. Moore, on terminal leave from the army, is enrolled as a pre-medical student in the College. He attended the University from 1937 to 1940 when he went to Camp Robinson, Ark., as a member of the National guard. Capt. Moore has returned after two years in the Aleutians and six months in the European theater of operations. Pre-Meds Take Tests The medical aptitude tests to be taken Dec. 14 will be given at 2 p. m. in room 426 Lindley hall, Dr. A. H. Turney, head of the Guidance Bureau said. Pre-medical students who have not registered for the test may still do so at the Guidance Bureau and pay a $2 fee, he said. WANT ADS LOST — Black Sheaffer's fountain pen lost a week ago. Name, "Lee Shull," engraved and Flying Red Horse on top. Reward offered. Return to Kansan office. TUXEDOES—All wool black broadcloth, double-breasted. Less than half price, used, but show no wear. Dr. Will R. Gorrill, 803 Mass. Phone 399. FOUND—A girl's silver identification bracelet with name on top. Owner can have same by identifying and paying for this ad at Kansan office. FOUND—White pearls, owner may have same by identifying and paying for this at the Kansan office. LOST—Green purse containing pen, bus book, and compact. If found return to Kansan office. Reward. 922 Mass. Garage and Cab Co. HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Gustafson Phone 12 911 Moss. St. Students' Jewelry Store 41 Years the "COLLEGE JEWELER" WINNER OF 10 WORLD'S FAR GRAND PRIZES, 28 GOLD MEDALS AND MORE HONORS FOR ACCURACY THAN ANY OTHER TIMEPIECE THE MOST HONORED WATCH THE WORLD'S MOST HONORED WATCH Longines THE CAMPUS OFFICIAL BULLETIN university of Kan Nov. 20, 1945 Tau Sigma will meet at 7:30 to night in Robinson gymnasium. Wear your leotards and be on time. The University Housemothers association will meet at 2 p.m. Monday in Myers hall-Carlotta S. Nellis, secretary. ** ** The Newman club will hold an important meeting after the 7:45 tonight mission service in the basement of St. John's church. The Rev. Fr. Arthur will speak.-Laura Schmid, president. Louisiana was the first state in the Union to legalize prize fights. It became a legal sport in 1891. Jayhawker Jewelry New Shipment Roberts Jewelry and Gifts Students! RADIOS 5-tube - $27.50 RECORD PLAYERS $24.95 and up Are in Stock Now Quantity Limited So Get Yours NOW! New 5-tube superhetrodye radios are also in. These are splendid radios with Beam power output and equals 7-tube operation in other sets. Complete Stock of Fresh Portable Radio Batteries We have new tubes for your radio. We can give you speedy service on all your radio repair work. Thanks for your business. Phone 138. ED BOWMAN BOWMAN RADIO Shop, 944 Mass. St., and F. M. TELECTRAD SHOP, 900 Mass. St. WHAT'S THE SCORE WITH YOUR CAR? Bring It In for a Check Congratulations, Jayhawkers On Your Victory F Fritz Co. Co. CITIES SERVICE PRODUCTS PHONE 4 K lun clu son Ft. A. Bor Fau Roy Dr. Dr. NOVEMBER 20,1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Jesus is feeding the elephants. SOCIALLY SPEAKING Becky Vallette, Konsan Society Editor to celebrate K.U.'s first post-war homecoming, most organized houses entertained their guests with a buffet, a coffee, or an open house. Watkins Entertains Watkins hall had the following guests at a coffee after the game: Maxine Crawford, Manhattan; Mrs. William Applegate, Myrtle Glover, "Hopeka; Mrs. Don Williams, Bertha Cummins, Olathe; Mrs. Effie Lou Summers, Phyllis Singer, Mrs. Paul Adams, Kansas City; Idabelle Bradley, Eureka; Mrs. Clarence Miller, Mrs. Barbara Russell, Phyllis Oliver, Lou Hughes, Lawrence. Dorothy Britton, Ethiel Brillhart, Mapleton; Paul Horton, T. F. Ednonds, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Davis, A. J. Bradley, and sons, Blue Mound; Helen Cleveland, Florence Cornelsen, Mary Ruth Yound, Florence Strickler, Dorothy Agee, Wichita; Jeanne McDaniel, Lyndon; Elrena Martiney, Fratt; Opal Joy Mullins, Kathleen Chestnut, Concordia; C. John Mann, Junction City; Elaine Griffitts, Shirley Reams, Paul Adams, Kansas City; Carole Ruhlen, Baldwin. Darlene Lawrence, Burlington; Jane Hydle, La Verne Robert, Topeka; Mrs. Grover Fox and sons, Humboldt; Joan Miller, Portia Baldwin, Pat McCray, Charlotte Reams, Maxine Russell, Manhattan A.O. Pi Has Luncheon Alpha Omicron Pi entertained alumnae, parents, and guests with a buffet luncheon Saturday, and with a coffee after the game. Guests were Clyde Neibarger, LeRoy Miller, Marvin Crouch, Janet Sloan, Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Paul List, Richard Channas, Kansas City, Mo.; Mr. and J. John Oyer, Myrtle Brown, LaDonne Brown, Georgena Hosking, Dill Larsen, Mr. and Mrs. Louis A. Long, Janet Long, Paul A. Vohs, and Mrs. R. E. Mather, Justin Hampton, Kansas City. Jo Ann Neibarger, Edd Herres, Juanita Cooper, Lois Carlson, and Betty Sugar, Manhattan; A. W. Burtscher, Margaret Ping, Hays; Betty Jo Lorbeer, Neoescha; Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Tindall, Mr. and Mrs. Selden Feugh, Hoisington; Audrey Bateman, Coffeyville; Marilyn Kutz, Tish Mkannon, Willadene Cleveland, Concordia; Cpl. William Denholm, Dallas, Texas; Marilyn Marks, Topeka; and Elaine Erharat, Phyllis Good, Baldwin. Delta Gamma Buffet Guests at a buffet supper at the Delta Gamma house Saturday were: Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Vance, Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Beach, Kansas City, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. C. T. Manley, Stanley Manley, Mrs. Allred Grimwood, San Francisco; Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Nigg, Whitewater. Mrs. R. B. Sanden, Iola; E. A. Esterle, Kansas City, Mo.; Mrs. R. E. Mueller, Kansas City, Mo.; Dr. and Mrs. Michael Ryan, Kansas City; Edward Safford, Wichita; Cpl. Elden Kauffman, St. Joseph, Mo.; Lt. Wayne Ownes, Kansas City, Mo.; Ens. John Warrack, Iola; Bernice Carlson, Edla Carlson, Phyllis Ahl, Nancy Steele, Betty Golding, Jean Fleck, Jerre Mueler, Helen Dedds, Virginia Church, Wilmer Landon, Charles Kelly, Kansas City, Mo.; Dale Haynes, Marsh Frier, Bill Burress, Keith Wilson, and Bill Addis. eta Entertains With Buffet Kappa Alpha Theta had a buffet Juncheon and a coffee. Guests included John D. Conners, Hutchinson; Mr. and Mrs. V. R. Tomlinson, Ft. Worth, Texas; Mr. and Mrs. W. A. McKinney, Mr. and Mrs. F. F. Bonebrake, Mr. and Mrs. Cy T. Faulders, Wichita; B. P. Allie, and Roy A. Roberts, Kansas City, Mo.; Dr. and Mrs. H. B. Vallette, Beloit; Dr. and Mrs. H. J. Veatch, Pitts- ON KFKU 9:30 p.m.—K.U. Band. Today Tomorrow 2:30 p.m.-Tales from Ivory Tow ers: The Story of Joan of Arc. 2:45 p.m.-Music. 9:30 p.m.-Music. 9:45 p.m.-"Yankee Crusade", dramatizing Kansas history, written and produced by Prof. Allen Crafton. burg; and Maj. and Mrs. James Mandigo, Kansas City. * * * Corbin Hall Guests Corbin Hall Guests Weekend guests from Kansas State college were Mary Frances Jennings, Junction City; Barbara Held, Clay Center; Nila Jean Torrence, Axtell; Helen Grittman, Shirley Jordan, Glasco; "Chris" Christensen, Beth Stratton, Stella Marie Spurney, Manhattan, Vonda Gates, Clay Center; Georganna Sells, Kansas City; Margaret Collier, Smith Center; Richard M. Bullock, Glasco; Lucille Hammer, Manhattan Additional guests were Helen Smith, Neodesh; Mrs. John W. Pratt, Galveston, Texas; Jean Kirkham, Topea; Mrs. F. G. Spurney and sons, Belleville; Phyllis Hoover, Kansas City; Mrs. W.E. Janes, Mrs. Agnes Rinn, Charles Porter Rinn, Eureka; Doris Custer, Topea; Ruth Daylor, Nellouise Marten, Wamego; Charleen McCann, Iola. Mary Elizabeth Todd, Atchison Corlyn Holbrook, Beloit; Frances Abts, Iola; Mary Galloway, Kansas City; Marian Steckel, Emporia; Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Heinsohn, Topeka; Marjorie Doctor, Kansas City, Mo; Wanda Brown, Dorothy Smith, Topeka; Lu Wayne Duncan, Kansas City; Martha Whiteford, Topeka; Alberta Collier, Marjorie Page Smith Center; Phyllis Warren, Garnet; Mrs. John Bullock, Barbara Bullock, Glasco; Dorothy Cooper, Mary Elizabeth Cooper, Carlenne Cooper, Marysville; Edith Sula, Wilson; Mrs. A. W. Hedrick; Richmond; Virginia Beard, Independence, Mo.; Helen Harrington, Bonner Springs; Lois Roeler, Bernadine Ames, Salina; Marilyn Straub, Clafain; Jane Ann Willison, Kansas City, Mo.; Patricia Graham, Winfield; Eleanor Boehmer, Sugar Creek. The COTTAGE and BRICKS Join to Congratulate OH, MY ACHING BACK Your Victory You on MURPHY Tuberculosis claims more lives in the 15 to 24-year old group than any other contagious disease. The bulwarks against the disease are early diagnosis and isolation of infected persons until the disease is non-contagious. The implements of early diagnosis are the tuberculin test and the x-ray. For 15 years the K.U. Health Service has tuberculin tested or x-rayed all new students. The tuberculin test is the injection of a minute quantity of tuberculin, the product of growth of the tuberculosis germ, into the skin. If a person has had exposure to tuberculosis and the germ has established itself in the body, a partial immunity and allergic condition result. This first infection always heals, but the victims, because of the allergy set up, will show positive reaction to the tuberculin test. The chest x-ray is used to discover evidence of tuberculous infection in positive cases and to determine the type and activity of such infection. About 25 percent of all college students have positive tests. But x-ray shows that only a few have tuberculosis of significance. In a group of more than 8,000 K.U. students first tested with the tuberculin test and then with the x-ray of the positive reactors, 34 cases of the secondary (illness producing) at the Jayhawker NOW 1,000 ROMANTIC THRILLS! GINGER ROGERS LANA TURNER WALTER PIDGEON VAN JOHNSON in McGM Weekend at the Waldorf EDWARD-ARNOLD • PHYLLIS THAXTER KEENAN WYNN • ROBERT BENCHLEY LENA MEMS • LINA ROMAY • SAMUEL S. HIRDS and XAVIER CUGAT and HIS ORCHESTRA THE GREATEST BOX OFFICE ATTRACTION SINCE "GONE WITH THE WIND" SUNDAY Greatest Star Party in Hollywood History 32 STARS in ED GARDNER'S DUFFY'S TAVERN A Paramount Picture type were found. Only 14 were in an active stage. By sanatorium treatment and simple surgical help the 14 students with active tuberculosis were cured. Tuberculosis is the concern of every member of society. Its prevention can be furthered by participation in the Christmas Seal sale. —Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson Ludes Commissioned Ensign James Francis Ludes, who attended the University in 1941-43, recently was commissioned an ensign in the navy air corps at Corpus Christi, Texas. Ensign Ludes was a member of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity. Call KU 25 with your news. NAI MING HI-SPEED Let Our Mechanics check and service your car for Winter Driving. Morgan-Mack Motor Co. 609 Mass. Phone 277 LUCIEN LELONG said goodbye to plastic tubes. We now have metal tubes in every color. for all your moods... LUCIEN LELONG lipsticks When you're feeling your most feminine, Lucien Leiong gives you nostalgic, lovable rosy-pinks . . . for excitement — flaming reds ...or the dark mystery of deep, deep crimson. And always the creamy-smooth texture that lasts through the day—$1 plus tax COSMETIC DEPT. Phone 636 Weaver 901 Mass. PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 20,1945 IN THE HUDDLE with PAT PENNEY Iowa and Oklahoma A. & M. are favorites over Nebraska and Oklahoma with the crystal ball gazers in the last football Pickograph of the season. Frank Pattee, guest prognosticator, and game captain of the victorious K-State game, selects the Jayhawkers as winners over the Missouri Tigers in the final gridiron clash this Saturday. E. C. Quigley and Henry Shenk likewise follow Pattee's predictions. Your editor stands alone in selecting the strong Missouri Tigers as victors in the annual Thanksgiving tilt. The Missouri line, which is far from a featherweight line, is hard to crack and your editor believes they will take Kansas with at least two touchdowns to spare. MASSACRE MIZZOU Meet Your Team Meet Your Team He's sold on the navy as a career, and after 16 months in bell-bottom trousers, Ben Wilson, 200-lb Jay- C9 -Wilson hawker center, plans to serve at least 16 more years in the service of the navy. Ben is another V-12 transfer from Dennison where he was a military science major. After four months out West (Lawrence is Wilson West (Chapman is the farthest west he has been) Ben is a confirmed Hilltopper and really likes K.U. During his senior year of high school at Dover, Ohio, Ben played every minute of every football game. He played four years of football for Dover High and lettered two years in the pivot position. MASSACRE MIZZOU Ambitious Wilson says sleeping is his No. 1 hobby, with sports running a close second. He is a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity. John Wise is another 6-foot freshman from Lawrence majoring in physical education. John played one year of football for Lawrence High and is now substitute in the pivot position for the Jayhawkers. During this season, he has seen action in the Washburn, Ft. Riley and K-State games. Not to be different from his teammates, John goes for T-bones and French fries in a big way. He served on his high school Student Council for three years. Call KU 25 with your news. VARSITY ENDS TONITE GEN. EISENHOWER'S "The True Glory" and "The Girl of the Limberlost" Wednesday - Thursday DICK HAYMES JUNE HAVER Damon Kanyon's IRISH EYES' ARE SMILING in Technicolor! Nursing Aptitude Tests In Union Tomorrow Nurses appitude tests will be given Wednesday to all applicants for nursing, Dr. A. H. Turney, head of the Guidance Bureau said today. The tests will be given in the Pine room at the Union, he said. These tests are given once a month under the direction of the National League for Nursing Education. They last all day and are taken by applicants from Kansas and surrounding states. Tourney Deadline Set Intramural basketball and tennis tournament entry blanks must be in at the women's gym before Thanksgiving vacation, Miss Ruth Hoover said today. Free Homecoming Movies DK With Theater Manager The free motion pictures offered to K.U. students Friday night may become part of the Homecoming plaus every year, S. E. Schwahn; manager of the Lawrence theaters, stated today. LOST—Sigma Nu pin. Inscribed on back (R.W.Y. Nu '45). Finder please call Richard Young, 18908. GRANADA NOW ENDS WEDNESDAY THE RISING SUN BLACKED OUT BY AN ATOM BOMB! FIRST YANK INTO TOKYO TOM NEAL BAKEARA HALE MARC CRAMER Michael ST ANGEL Leonard STRONG RICHARD LOO KEKE LUKE FIRST YA INTO TOKYO TOM NEAL BARBARA HALE - MARC CRAMER Michelin SP ANGEL - Leonard STRONG RICHARD LOD - KERE LUKE TIMELY!... TENSE!... TERRIFIC! Exploding onto the screen as the world ponders t he terrifying problem of the Atom Bomb! FREE! WED. NITE! 2 TURKEYS - 2 DUCKS and They're Dressed Continuous Shows Thanksgiving (Thursday) from 1:00 Tunes to Whistle! Girls to Whistle At! THURSDAY 3 DAYS GIRLS * MUSIC * LAUGHS! GEORGE WHITE'S Scandals JOAN DAVIS JACK HALEY GENE KRUPA AND HIS BAND ETHEL SMITH SWING ORGANIST 100 SCANDAL-LOVELIES Intramural Gridders In Hot Race to Playoff By KEITH WILSON With only one more day of games scheduled in the intramural football battle, several teams have pulled ahead and can be picked to participate in the playoff fight. The closest race of many recent years was run this year in Division I with the Beta's and the Phi Delt's battling it out all the way. Both teams have racked up four wins and one loss. Though both teams are organized on an entirely different basis, they constitute a threat to the Division II teams they will meet in the play-offs. The Phi Delt team is a one man outfit. It depends heavily on the triple-threat back, Johnny McShane. With McShane in the star backfield position, the Phi Delt's can be counted on to give a tough fight to any opponent. Without him they The Beta's, on the contrary have a well balanced team that depends on no one man. lose all their offensive strength and become an easy victim. In Division II the competition has been more clearly divided, with the steamrolling Phi Gam team taking the lead and showing up as one of the best teams in either league. With their score of six wins and no losses, the Phi Gams are certain to play against the Division I teams in the playoff. The Fijis have a well-organized team which can run as well as pass. Unlike many of the other teams which depend almost entirely on an aerial offensive, the Fijis have made nearly half their record-breaking 158 points, on runs. Len Hartigan, Jim Kennedy, and Jim Richey share the spotlight in the Fiji backfield with End Jim Morris, completing a wicked pass combination. Rounding out the Division II combination for the playoff will be either the V-12 team or the Sigma Chi team, with the V-12's favored to fill Sophomores, Juniors Lead Volleyball Race The sophomore volleyball team trimmed the seniors 30-17 last night in Robinson gym. The upper classmen couldn't seem to settle down. The juniors defeated the fresh man team 46-23. Alberta Cornwell, Margery Stubbs, and Kathryn O'Leary were outstanding junior players. JoAnn Spalding, Rosemary Gaines, and Harriet Connor made some good set-ups and spikes for the freshmen. The winners will play off the tie Monday, and the two losers will battle for the third place. the spot. Though the Sigma Chis have a fast running team quite adept at handling the ball, the V-12's will be slightly favored to win in their tussle Tuesday. Looking at both leagues as a whole, the teams to watch closely will be the powerful Phi Gam's and the Beta's. It's more exciting because it's true Get your December true at your favorite newsstand now HAS FOOTBALL LOST ITS KICK? Knute Rocke said, "Give me a good, reliable punter, and I won't worry about my offense." Can't today's football players kick? Why is Lou Little a little sad? Maybe he remembers when guys really could boot the pigskin—17 field goals in one game! A 63-yard kick for a field goal! 97 points scored by a player who was never officially in the game! Only 3 field goals missed in two years of college football! How does today stack up? Read this true sports thriller. e your GOAL! Leather-Socking Tales of spi ping men Khy book 'YOU WILL BE SORRY, CAPTAIN KIRILSKI' by Gordon M. Atkins Iskandar swallowed hard —he had eaten that accursed bacon. Then he stood there, staring, smi- ling. That was before Joan McNaughton was kidnapped, before Mai- jor Yeats-Brown, of the famous Bengal Lancers, went up into those death-packed hills. In his last true story before he died, Abdullah dallah, one of the best adventure story spinners of all time, tells a gri- ting tale of mystery, and tall men with cruel smiles, in India's über Pass. Read this great true k-length feature . . . by Capt. Achmed Abdullah Flames on the Border WANT YOUR OWN BUSINESS? You can start it for peanuts, says Minnesota's Stubborn Swede. He parlayed a $6 a week failure into a $7,500,000 a year success in 11 years. "Money's all around you, sitting and watching your idea"—that's what he says. It makes sense, in this latest of the popular true Adventures in Business . . ; Farmer's Friend by Charles Samuels. DOWN! You never heard much about the UDT till after the Japs sur-rendered, did you? They were the boys who "fought the war in swim trunks." Their story was one of our Navy's top secrets. Now it's out—told from the inside out—in the true exclusive... Watch for the January True on sale December 12, featuring one of the greatest stories of this war or any war. "Pappy" Boyington's Own Story! HALF FISH, HALF NUTS, THEY CALLED 'EM JUMP! 17 Seconds to Live By Commander Harold B. Soy, USN A Sim Webb did jump, but Casey Jones didn't. He rode to 1.092 You've BENZEL AUGUSTIN glory on old soz. You sing the song about him. The song is wrong, you know. Set yourself straight on history's most famous "hoghead"—here's the true low-down . . . John Luther Jones Was a Brave Engineer by William Burke by William Burke Besides! A-a-ah, man! Another Petty Girl each month in True and only True An original Petty drawing! Read true, the man's magazine Get your December TRUE at your newsstand now true THE MASTER WEATHER 25¢ University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Monday, Nov. 26, 1945 43rd Year No. 42 Lawrence, Kansas News . . . of the World Withdraw Troops From Iran, U.S. Urges Washington. (UP) — The United States has proposed to Russia and Great Britain that all troops of the three nations be withdrawn from Iran by Jan. 1, the state department announced today. This country suggested that Soviet commanders in northern Iran may have been acting without the sanction of the Soviet government in preventing the free movement of Iranian forces. Washington. (UP)—More than 56 per cent of the 8,300,000 men who were in the army on V-E day will be back in civilian life by Jan. 1, the War department estimated today. U.S. Appeal Delivered As Japs Attacked Washington. (UP)—Joseph Clark Grew, last U.S. ambassador to Japan, said today before the Pearl Harbor investigating committee that Japan broke off diplomatic relations and attacked Pearl Harbor at the very time he was trying to deliver a last-minute appeal for peace from the late President Roosevelt to Emperor Hirohito. Stillwater, Okla. (UP)—The bells of Oklahoma A. and M. rang out today to add to the bedlam that broke loose simultaneously upon announcement that the all-victorious Aggies had been invited to the Sugar Bowl at New Orleans, Jan. 1. Washington. (UP)—A fresh drive was under way here today to give each congressman a $5,000-a-year pay raise, which would hike congressional salaries from the present $10,000 to $15,000 a year. Ruin of Jap Cyclotron Deplored by Scientists Nuenberg. (UP) — Counsel for Joachim von Ribbentrop said today that they were considering asking the war crimes tribunal to call Foreign Commissar V. M. Molotov and "a certain Russian general" to testify in Ribbentrop's defense. Oak Ridge, Tenn. (UP)—Atomic bomb scientists asked today that disciplinary action be taken against American authorities who ordered the "wanton and stupid" destruction of a Japanese cyclotron. The scientists said the act was "a crime against humanity" because the cyclotron was merely a research instrument and incapable of any bomb production. Washington. (UP)—The population of the United States passed 140 million Oct. 1, the census bureau said today. The U.S. population in 1930 was 122,775,046. In 1940, it was 131,669,275. Jerusalem. (UP)—British troops forced their way into two Jewish coastal villages with clubs and tear gas bombs today in search of Zionist terrorists who blew up two coast guard stations yesterday. Meribah Moore Will Sing Tonight Miss Meribah Moore, soprano, associate professor of voice, will give a recital at 8 tonight in Frank Strong auditorium. Miss Ruth Orcutt, associate professor of piano, will accompany her. Miss Moore will sing, "Transporting Joy," (Handel); "Ye Tender Breezes, Tell," (Handel); "Hist! Hist!" from "The Maid of the Mill," (Dr. Arnold); Four Songs from the "Magalone Cycle" (Brahms); "L'Abelle," (Widor); Chanson Triste (Duparc); "Il Etaite Un P'tit Oiseau," (Grovlez); "Fetes Galanes," (Hahn); "The Homing Heart," (Malotte); "April Children," (Carey); "Les Silhouettes," (Carpenter), and "Blow, Blow, Thou Winter Wind," (Igniferr). CIO Strikes Against Wards (Ru United Press) The CIO United Auto Workers today awaited a reply to their bid for government intervention in the General Motors strike, and another CIO union began a one-week "demonstration" work stoppage against Montgomery Ward and company. The Ward unit at Kansas City is affected. (The Lawrence store was still open today.) Across the nation, 487,000 workers were idle as the result of strikes. The General Motors strike alone accounted for 175,000. Union leaders claimed the Montgomery Ward walkout already had affected at least 9,500 workers and predicted that it would spread to 75,000. Meenwhile the Ford Motor company announced that it would close its huge River Rouge plant and some subsidiary plants tomorrow night because of strikes at 15 supplying firms. The U.S. department of labor today directed a conciliation service worker to attempt to resolve differences at the Kansas City stockyards which led to a strike call for next Monday morning. Allen Evans Dies After Football Game William Allen Evans, 23, College senior, died Saturday night at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harold D. Evans, Kansas City, Mo. Mr. Evans would have received his bachelor of arts degree at the end of the semester. He was engaged to marry Jean Ketzler, Ft. Leavenworth, College sophomore. Evans was graduated from the Border Star school and Southwest high school in Kansas City. He received a medical discharge from the army air corps because of a heart allment shortly before he was to receive his commission last spring. He was a member of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. Mr. Evans had suffered a heart attack at the K.U.-M.U. football game Saturday afternoon and a second attack about 9 p.m. at his home. The funeral will be at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow from the Stine and McClure funeral home, Kansas City, Mo. He is survived by his parents; a brother, Harold D. Evans, Jr., of Seattle; his maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. William Allen of the home; and two uncles, Russell Evans, Los Angeles, and E. F. Allen, Washington. Walkout Now A 'University Problem, So Malott Invites Seven for Talk Seven persons representin and the student body will associaion of Chancellor Deane W. confronting the University as Monday." In a letter to Man president, the chancellor invited one delegate from each of three student organizations, the All Student Council, the student court, and the Kansan Board, to sit on the walkout committee with a representative from the faculty senate and a member of the administration. Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, will be an ex-officio member of the committee, said the chancellor who will be present at the meeting himself. This is the first time in University history that students will help decide a disciplinary action of all-University scope, Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, said today. Chancellor Malet said today that he was not prepared to enumerate the "problems" which he referred to as arising from the walkout demonstration. He said he could not predict the trend of the committee's discussion tomorrow. Guy E. Ashercraft has been elected by the All-Student Council as its representative on the committee. The council directed Ashercraft to suggest either a planned program to cover such incidents in the future or the definite delegation of power enabling the Council to call appropriate holidays. Students will have the same voting power as faculty representatives, Dean Werner said. The walkout took place on the first school day after K.U.'s Homecoming football victory over K-State. The faculty and administration representatives had not been named early this afternoon. Appointments of representatives from the Kansan board and the student court were to be confirmed this afternoon. Following is the letter written to Miss Cox, Council president, by Chancellor Malott suggesting possible action to close the incident of the student walkout of last Monday: "The small group of thoughtless students who acted as leaders to disrupt the work of the University of Kansas Monday, behaved in such a way as to affront the majority of students, and the faculty, and staff brought discredit to the entire institution. "But it is not alone my problem. It is to a considerable extent a problem for the students, and for the faculty. It is both the decision of the Student Council and the vote of the senate which create the calendar which was violated. "From the point of view of the inevitable responsibility which I bear as head of the University, I intend to act in the matter, and to prevent, if possible, the occurrence in the future of such activities. I am ashamed, as I know you are, of the actions of this group, who after an entire week-end given over to the events of Homecoming, feel they must continue into a working day and to disrupt the activities of others who are here for more serious purposes. "I therefore propose to create to handle the matter with me a committee including representatives of the senate and of the students, one Student Council member, one member of the court, and one member of the Kansan Board to act energetically and rapidly to close the incident. "Let me emphasize again that this ing the administration, the faculty, assemble tomorrow upon the invitaW. Malott to discuss "the problems as a result of the student walkout Mary Jo Cox, All-Student Council is an all-University affair. When classes are disrupted, and the actions of the group are of such a nature as to attract attention throughout the state, it becomes more than merely an affair involving one group in the University. "I am eager to have the counsel and judgment and active help of the students in taking whatever action is warranted and in assuring the University of orderly procedures in the future." Deane W. Malott. TB Seal Sale Starts Today Mary Morrill, Alice Akerman, Eugenia Hepworp, Constance Markey, Marjorie Burtscher, Dixie Gilliland, Donald Fricker, Shirley Corlett, Betty Jo O'Neal, Betty Wahlstedt, James Graham, Robert Witt, Dorothy Higginbottom, Paul Conrad, Thomas Conroy, John Jackson, Jacqueline Goodell, Margaret Merrifield, erome Wilden. James Sanders, Robert Yendes, Nadyne Brewer, Bertrand Morris, Bernice Alexander, Frederick Wendel, Elaine Carlson, Patricia Bentley, Esteleen Downs, Kenneth Higdon, Theodore Curry, David Ballard, Maurice O'Leary, Leon Thomas, Richard Madsen, James Stewart, Lee Berglund, Jean McIntire, and Anne Scott. The proceeds of the drive, which is being sponsored by the public relations committee of the All-Student Council, will help finance the work of the Douglas County Tuberculosis and Health association for the coming year. University chairmen of the annual Christmas seal sale, which begins on the campus today, are Miss Jole Stapleton, assistant professor of physical education, and Dr. E. L. Treece, professor of bacteriology, Miss Stapleton is chairman of the student drive and Dr. Treece has charge of the faculty drive which will be conducted by mail. A representative from each organied house has been chosen to promote the sale in his house. The representatives include: Five New Dorms To Be Built For Students Four University-owned dwellings east of Memorial stadium will be converted into women's dormitories, and a men's dormitory will be constructed under the stadium, as soon as materials and labor are available, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, said today. The housing projects, approved by the state board of regents at a meeting in Topeka, Friday, will accommodate 48 women and 64 men. The cost of remodeling of the houses and construction of dormitory is subject to the approval of the state architect and the state business manager. Mr. Nichols said. "Because of the shortage of materials and labor, we cannot estimate when construction and repair can be started," Mr. Nichols added. "The projects are designed primarily to alleviate another housing shortage next fall." The houses at 712, 716, and 716 McCook street and 1112 Illinois, now occupied by private families, are to be vacated by Jan. 1, Karl Klooz, bursar said. Lindley hall, the mineral resources building which now houses 100 Naval R.O.T.C. men, will be available to accommodate 75 more men, if the housing situation makes it necessary. Lt. Hiebsch To Teach Navy Classes in Seamanship Chemists Nominated Lt. Kenneth H. Hiebsch, USNR, will teach navy classes in seamanship, Capt. Chester A. Kunz announced today. Lieutenant Hiebsch arrived last week. He was attached to the ninth amphibious group in the Pacific. Dr. Harry Sisler and Dr. Calvin VanderWerf, of the department of chemistry have been nominated for chairman-elect of the Kansas City Section of the American Chemical Society. Winner will take office Jan. 1 WEATHER KANSAS—Fair and warmer. Schmidt on All-Big-Six Team; Hird, Gear, Pattee, Robison Place Kansas City. (UP)—Dave Schmidt, stellar lineman for the K.U. football eleven all season, has been named All-Big-Six left end in a poll conducted today by United Press among Big Six Schmidt 92 football coaches and athletic directors. Wayne Hird, veteran center; George Gear, quarterback; Frank Pattee, halfback, and LeRoy Robison, fullback who was injured in the Wichita game and missed the latter half of the season., received honorable mention in the United Press poll. Schmidt piled up five touchdowns this year, most of them on a slick-working end-around play. Other places on the first team were divided between Missouri and Oklahoma, which took four spots apiece, and Iowa State, which won two. Other players on the first team were Kekeris, Eigelberger, Stewart, and Brown, of Missouri; Tallchief, Burgert, West, and Venable, of Oklahoma, and Fathauer and Howard, Iowa State. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 26.1945 University DAILY KANSAN Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Association, National Editorial Association, and the Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave. New York City Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence add $1 Lawrence postage). Published in Lawrence, school year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examinations. Periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS STAFF ELEANOR ALBRIGHT Managing Editor IBURGIA VAN ORDER Asst. Managing Editor CHELSEA GAYNOR Editorial Editor BETTY JENNINGS Telegraph Editor PATRICIA PENNEY News Editor BELLEM H. MHAMILTON Asst. News Editor BELLWOOD L. BLAIR Sports Editor MARGARET WENSKI Feature Editor JANE ANDERSON Military Editor CREO NOBRIS Military Editor RYAN THOMSON Feature Editor MARIAN THOMSON Asst. Feature Editor JOY HOWLAND Copy Editor JOAN VEATCH DIXIE GILLILIAN BARBARA EWING JEAN MURRAY NEAL SHEEIAN PAUL CONRAD STEIN EDITORIAL; STAFF E STAFF ... Editor-in-Chief DOLORES SULZMAN ... Editor-in-Chief MARY MORRILL FRANKLIN FEARING OVILLE ROENTES Editorial Associates BUSINESS STAFF NANCY TOMLINSON ... Business Manager BETTY BEACH ... Advertising Manager Assistants: BOB BONERKAY, MARY BRANCH, ANNY BREWARD, ANNE BROWN GAN, ANN REDDING. ANNE SMALL. ELEANOR THOMPSON. SMALL, ELEANOR TROMPSON. In Charge This Issue SYLVIA SMALL Rock Chalk Talk By TERRY HERRIOTT Today's Topic: COLLICH LIFE. Dear Mom. It is rumored that a certain K.U. fresh wrote home to his mother that he was taking a course in languages and enclosed the following bill: $20 for French, $50 for Spanish, and $200 for Scotch. Collisch edition. "The Three Bears"—Once upon a time a lowly freshman went to see his fair princess across the campus. He found her dressed in red from head to foot. In his most gallant manner, he said, "Good evening. You look just like Little Rid Riding Hood." Look, Prof. A K.U. alum was gloating over the fact that good ol' K.U. was considered such a great storehouse of knowledge. A professor commented, "It's probably because the freshmen bring so much knowledge here and seniors take so little away." Dear Folks: Please write more often, even if it’s only a five or ten. Pop says. College-bred means a wad of dough, with plenty of crust and a lot of crumbs gathered together for a good loaf. "Well," she said, "I guess you know what that makes you." Hubba Hubba. An out-of-state visitor was inquiring about K.U. life and customs last week. "What," he asked, "is you pass word—your college yell?" Communication from the collicch man who is "selected": Dere Mabel Here I happen to be in the army just like you said I would be and it's not so bad if you can consider anything that takes the starch out of you not so bad. As I am one of the only guys in my barracks what had any collicit at all, I am known far and wide as the Brain which I think is very appropriate don't you? It is considered that except for the other 59 guys here I am undoubtedly the smartest. I have just received a promotion from the captain. I am now a Pvt. (j.g.) I am not sure why. I really like the army. Your ever-loving Joe. P.S. I had to make this letter short as I have to see the captain to buck for a discharge. Parting Thought: A highbrow is a person who is educated beyond his intelligence. Could Music Room System Be Improved? Union Activities Supervises Carnegie Record Gift The music room, which houses the Carnegie record collection, is just off the southeast corner of the main lounge in the Memorial Union building. The Carnegie grant, made to the University in 1939, included 600 classical records, a record machine and loud speaker, a record case, and six books on music appreciation. Under the direction of the Union Activities committee, the music room is open three hours a day. 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. and 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. These hours were selected, Miss Hermina Zipple, director of the Student Union, said, by observing the hours that most students are free. According to the provisions in the Carnegie grant, the collection is to be used only under the supervision of an attendant and is to remain in the building. It is for informal music appreciation for students and is not to be used for formal class work. Until one attendant took another job several weeks ago, there were two regular music room supervisors. The vacancy will be filled after the Thanksgiving holiday, Miss Zipple said. Every other Tuesday the Music Appreciation club, headed by Norma Kennedy, fine arts junior, presents an evening program of records requested in advance. English War Poetry Displayed in Fraser A collection of poetry read in England during the war is now on display in the English department in Fraser hall. John R. Tye, English instructor, collected the poetry while stationed with the air corps in England. Many of the poems were written during World War II by such army poets as John Pudney, Richard Spender, and Alyn Lewis. Mr. Spender and Mr. Lewis were killed in the last year of the war. "Missing" by Pudney, unofficial poet laureate, of the Royal air force, was the most popular in England written in the last five years. Mr. Tye said. Poems written by Joyce Kilmer and Rupert Brooke during World War I and re-published in World War II also are displayed. Student Says Collection Not Properly Appreciated To the Editor: Andrew Carnegie the philanthropy has provided our University with a fine collection of classical records. However, this gift goes largely unappreciated due to its lack of use. This lack of use may be attributed to the system under which the records are kept and used. The inadequate music room in the Union building, with its limited hours of use and one machine, offers little opportunity to music lovers to hear the records. Since the records are a gift it would seem that adequate facilities for their use should be provided. If the record collection would be placed in the library, and the records made available to borrowers on a suitable basis, the use could be greatly increased. A number of small rooms, each containing a record player, would also be necessary, since facilities for the records' use must be provided as well as a means of obtaining them. Other universities make use of their Carnegie gift of records in this manner. It would be fitting if K.U. were to do likewise. J.W.H. James B. Smith, professor in the School of Law on leave of absence, is the author of "Irresistible Impulse," published in the September issue of the Virginia Law Review. Smith's Article Published Lincoln, Neb. (UP)—The change back to standard time found at least one Lincoln church organist prepared. His prelude was Bach's sinfonia, "God's Time Is Best." He expects to return to the University next semester. God's Time Is Best Corporal Richardson Killed Cpl. James C. Richardson, an engineering student in 1943, was killed in a plane crash in Germany, Nov. 1. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Richardson, 1117 Vermont street, were notified recently. Corporal Richardson had been overseas since July, 1944, and served as a radio repairman in the Ninth air force in Europe. He is survived by his parents and two sisters, Mrs. Clarence McCabe, Wakefield, Mass; and Mabel Ann Richardson, a College sophomore. Laboratory, Clinic To Test Reading A reading laboratory and clinic to help University students with their reading difficulties will be conducted for the remainder of this semester, Dr. Bert A. Nash, director of the educational clinic, announced today. While only a limited number of students may enroll this semester, the clinic plans to enroll 75 people next semester. The clinic diagnoses the reading habits of the student, and then concentrates on the weaknesses, trying to increase both reading speed and comprehension. A film taken of the eye movements while the student reads given material shows the eye muscle coordination and the reading rate. The student's hearing also is tested, Dr. Nash said, because slow reading may result from auditory as well as visual defects. The clinic, discontinued during the war, will be held at 3:30 p.m. daily in room 16, Fraser hall. Students who are interested should enroll at room 18, Fraser hall, as soon as possible. The laboratory, held two hours each week, will require no outside work, and is not given for credit. WINNER OF 10 WORLD'S FAIR GRAND PRIZES, 28 GOLD MEDALS AND MORE HONORS FOR ACCURACY THAN ANY OTHER TIMEPIECE Longines THE MOST HONORED WATCH ON THE CAMPUS Mary Margaret Gaynor Is Council Member With Varied Interests 1946 MARY MARGARET GAYNOR Mary Margaret Gaynor, College senior, was elected to the All-Student Council as a representative from the College. She is a member of the Council's parking committee and chairman of the public relations committee. Mary Margaret came to the University as a sophomore in 1943, having attended the Kansas City, Kan., Junior college her freshman year. She had intended to go to another university but, after spending two summers at the University attending girl's state and a newspaper conference, she changed her plans in favor of Kansas. She has been society editor of the Daily Kansan, a member of the Pan-Hellenic association, recording secretary of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority and president of the Greek Women's political party. She keeps a scrap book on campus activities and, in her spare time, writes short stories. SLEEP IS EASY WHEN YOU DRINK MILK BEFORE RE-TIRING. Lawrence Sanitary Milk & Ice Cream Co. OFFICIAL BULLETIN University of Kansas Monday, Nov. 26 All Student Council will meet at 7:15 p.m. Tuesday in the Pine room of the Union.—Mary J. Cox, president. The Music Appreciation club will meet in the English room of the Union building at 4:30 p.m. Tuesday. * * * Inter-Fraternity Council meeting tonight at 8:30 in the Pine room of the Union building—Bill Marshall, secretary. WANT ADS LOST — Black Sheaffer's fountain pen lost a week ago, Name, "Lee Shull," engraved and Flying Red Horse on top. Reward offered. Return to Kansan office. FOUND—A key on chain. Owner may have same by identifying and paying for this ad at the Kansan office. FOUND—A girl's silver identification bracelet with name on top. Owner can have same by identifying and paying for this ad at Kansan office. TUXEDOES—All wool black broadcloth, double-breasted. Less than half price, used, but show no wear. Dr. Will R. Gorrill, 803 Mass. Phone 399. FOUND—White poarls, owner may have same by identifying and paying for this ad at the Kansan office. LOST—Green purse containing pen, bus book, and compact. If found return to Kansan office. Reward. LOST — Walthman wrist watch, gold dial, silver case. Lost Friday night in downtown Lawrence. Call Lynn Chase 3386 Reward. Risk's Help Yourself Laundry RATES 50c PER HOUR Tubs Filled and Emptied 19th and III. Phone 623 For That Coke Date Remember HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Garage and Cab Co. ELDRIDGE PHARMACY Phone 999 701 Mass. 1025 Mass. 922 Mass. Phone 12 LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. KANSAS CITY'S BEST DANCE BAND JIMMY LENGE and HIS ORCHESTRA JACKSON 4648 or LINWOOD 0360 1846 E. 68th K.C., MO. Christmas Cheer No.1 BOTANY ALL WOOL MUFFLERS Yellow Wine Green Brown Blue White They're "Honeys"—holiday-boxed $2 Do your Christmas. Shopping Now--- $2 CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES NOVEMBER 26,1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE 88 Becky Vallette, Society Editor Turkey, the game, parties, and sleep filled Thanksgiving vacation for most K.U. students. They went to all parts of the state for Thanksgiving dinner at home. But, many came back to Kansas City, Saturday, to the annual Kansas-Missouri battle, and for "after the game parties." Jean Fergus and Ens. Bill Brackman were married at 8 p.m. Saturday, in the First Presbyterian chapel in Wichita. Mrs. Brackman was attended by Beverly Stucker, Ottawa, as maid of honor, and by Jean O'Connor, Wichita, as bridesmaid. Fergus-Brackman Wed Before her marriage, Mrs. Brackman was a home economics senior at the University. She was Kappa Alpha Theta's treasurer. Ensign Brackman has just returned from the Pacific, where he was a navy air corps fighter pilot. Sigma Nu has announced the pledging of James Findley, Lawrence, and Charles Werhan, Bennington. Milton Bloodgood, South Amboy, N.J., has affiliated with the K.J. chapter. He attended Case college, Cleveland. Pi Beta Phi has announced the pinning of Carolyn Ann Campbell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Newton Campbell, Kansas City, Mo., to Frank A. Howard, son of Mrs. Merle Howard, Enid, Okla. Campbell-Howard Pinned Chocolates were passed, and the announcement made at the Pi Phi House Nov. 15 by Mrs. Dean Alt, sistermother. Miss Campbell received an orchid. Assisting in the ceremony were Sara Jayne Scott, Sally Fitzpatrick, Sue Newcomer, Jody McCrory, Eleanor Pack, and Mary Jane Marts. They wore gardenia corsages. Miss Campbell is a sophomore in the School of Fine Arts. A premedical junior, Howard transferred recently from Tulane university, where he was president of Phi Delta Theta. Moore Pledges Phi Chi Capt. Chester E. Moore, Lawrence, has pledged Phi Chi medical fraternity. Capt. Moore will be discharged from the field artillery upon completion of his army terminal leave. Breitenbach Engaged Miss Breitenbach is a senior in the School of Fine Arts, Ensign Ludes attended the University in 1541-43, and was a member of Pi Kappa Alpha. The engagement of Maurine Breitenbach, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Breitenbach, Belpre, to Ens. James F. Ludes, son of Mr. and Mrs. B. E. Ludes, Salina, was announced Nov. 18, at the Sigma Kappa house. Corsages of chrysanthemums were given to Mrs. Mary Younkman, housemother, Helen Todd, and Kathleen Wright. Two portions of a chain of mountains in Kentucky are connected by Natural Bridge, in Wolfe county. The bridge spans a chasm 60 feet wide and 40 feet high. --years after the founding of Watkins hall, which was also a gift to the University from Mrs. Watkins. Jayhawker Jewelry New Shipment Roberts Jewelry and Gifts Miller Hall Is Scholarship Dorm P --- RUTH GREEN This is another of a series of articles by the Daily Kansan to acquaint the campus with the various organized houses, their members, officers, and histories. Miller hall was a gift to the University from the late Mrs. J. B. Watkins, former student and benefactor. The hall was opened in 1937, just 10 It was built in memory of Mrs. Watkins nephew, Frank C. Miller, his aunt's business manager. After his death in an automobile accident, Mrs. Watkins decided to build another women's dormitory at the University in his memory. Scholarships are awarded yearly to candidates selected by the members of the University committee on scholarships. The hall is self-governed. The original constitution was written by the first group to reside in the hall. Mrs. R. G. Roche is housemother. Ruth Green, a junior in the School of Education is hall president. Other officers include: Lucile Rothenberger, vice-president; Marcella Stewart, secretary; Betty Rose Soukup, treasurer; and Dolores Sulzman, social chairman. Members are Virginia Pauline Allen, Doris Marie Anderson, Jeanne Louise Bowlby, Emalouise Britton, Dora Ann Brown, Marjorie Lois Brown, Gracia Lou Bundren, Marjean Carr, Julia Ann Casad, Martha Jo Easter, Ruth Green, Mary Jean Hatch, Marylee Masterson, Cleo Norris, Grace Piros, Virginia Louise Powell. Billie Jean Rottermund, Lucille Rothenberger, Iva Rothenberger, Winifred Elaine Sawyer, Betty Rose Soukup, Marcella Stewart, Dolores Sulzman, Lois Thompson, Maxine Weir, Joann Clough, Neva Cranson. Men Will Select 'Miss Student Union' "Miss Student Union" will be selected at a series of midweeks beginning Nov. 28. Each organized women's house will name a candidate, who will be introduced at that time. Joan Woodward, chairman, announced. Houses are to select their candidates on the basis of "personality rather than profile," Miss Woodward said. A representative from each organized men's house will select the three top candidates at the Dec. 5 midweek. The queen will be elected from these by popular vote on Dec. 12. Beverly Ann Good, Mary Elizabeth Graves, Adrea Hinkel, Nancy Ann Jolly, Doris Klein. THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK Norma Jean Kopp, Anna May Marley, Janice Oehrle, Shirley Jean Ousley, Edith Marie Schreiber, Dorothy Jean Scroggy, Berniece Strop, Nolene Stump, Mary Maxine Thach, Erma Lea Volkel, Pauline Wegscheider, Margaret Wynn. Offers Complete Banking Service to Every Student The First National Bank "The Student Bank Since 1877" Northeast Corner Eighth and Mass. Member F.D.I.C. Navy Medics Go On Inactive Duty Navy sophomores in the School of Medicine were released from active duty Oct. 24. All navy students at the University School of Medicine in Kansas City will go on inactive duty Dec. 1, Capt. Kunz said. Seniors will be given their choice of navy or civilian internships. Freshman medical students will discard their navy uniforms and transfer to inactive duty Feb. 7, i.Capt. Chester A Kunz, announced today. INDEPENDENT ON KFKU LAUNDRY and DRY CLEANERS Phone 432 740 Vermont 2:30 Art by Radio, Maude Elsworth. Tomorrow: 9:30-Silent (Time released to WREN) Have Your Wardrobe Cleaned Now Tonight: Waters' Bulletin Reprinted Demand for Prof. L. L. Waters' bulletin on post-war employment in Kansas has been so great that a reprint is now being made, Dean Frank T. Stockton of the School of Business said today. Christmas Parties Are Coming Don't be caught without anything to wear. Betty Hutton: I'm Just a Square in the Social Circle Doctor, Lawyer, Indian Chief New Vocals: 10 Andy Russell: I Can't Begin to Tell You Love Me Frank Sinatra: Nancy Cradle Song Bell Music Company --at Season Parties Are Coming with Christmas --- Get your 'Home-Made'Cakes Drake Bakery If it's from Drake's it's good to eat 907 MASS. PHONE 61 --- PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 26,1945 K.U. Scored in Every Big Six Game For Highest Total Since Title Year By MARGARET WENSKI Daily Kansan Sports Editor Kansas scored a total of 72 points in conference games this year, the highest number the Jayhawkers have made since 1930 when Kansas was the Big Six title winner. That year Kansas scored 79 points, although it failed to score against Nebraska. This year is the first time Kansas has scored in every Big Six game since 1927. Winding up their 1945 football schedule, the Jayhawks suffered a 33-12 defeat at the hands of the mighty Missouri Tigers before 21,494 fans in Kansas City Saturday. Missouri wears the Big Six crown now for the first time in two years. Kansas claims fifth place position. Witnesses who didn't expect the underdogs to score against the Big Six contenders saw the Tigers leading 12-6 at the half with the Jayhawkers repelling attacks in a superior manner. The weight of the Tigers showed itself in the second half as they added three touchdowns to their first two almost without effort. A Missouri fumble on the Missouri 35 provided Kansas with its first opportunity to head for the goal. Norman Pumphrey recovered the fumble and a few seconds later Dave Season's Record Season's accolta Kansas 0 Texas Christ. 18 Kansas 20 Denver 19 Kansas 14 Iowa State 14 Kansas 34 Washburn 0 Kansas 7 Oklahoma 39 Kansas 13 Wichita 0 Kansas 13 Nebraska 27 Kansas 0 Marquette 26 Kansas 27 K-State 0 Kansas 12 Missouri 33 140 176 Schmidt brought the score to 6-6 on an end-around play standing up. LeRoy Robison, injured fullback, failed to convert for the extra point. Three more Missouri touchdowns were made before the Jayhawkers had a chance at the ball and a touchdown. From the Kansas 35, three passes carried the Jayhawkers to their second goal for the day. A pass from Pattee to Milford Collins, halfback, brought the ball to mid-field. Another pass from Pattee to Max Marxmiller placed the ball on the Missouri 35. Still in the groove for passes, Pattee landed one in the arms of Norman Pumphrey in the end zone. Kansas-Missouri football games may be returned to Lawrence and Columbia beginning next fall after being played two years in Kansas City. Although game attendance has increased at Kansas City games, this plan was a temporary measure instigated during the war years only. Plans for the 1945 game were made prior to V-J Day. --- It might look like a setup, but the Dally Kansan Pickograph winds up the football season with your sports editor winner in selecting 2 out of 34 Big Six winners. E. C. Quigley and Coach Henry Shenk tied for second place, selecting 24 out of 34 winners, and guest gridsters selected 22 out of 34 winners. Games last weekend saw an upset in Nebraska's win over Iowa. All four prognosticators missed the boat in selecting Iowa as winner. Oklahoma A. & M. was selected unanimously to win over Oklahoma. Dave Schmidt, Milwaukee end, is the foremost Kansas candidate for All-Big Six teams. He has piled up five touchdowns this year, and exhibited exceptional playing at the K. U.-M.U. game Saturday, scoring the first touchdown for the Jayhawkers. Meet your team. 东 东 东 Ishkabibble in bell bottoms--that's Norman Pumphrey, K.U.'s speedy right wingman, who offers his talent courtesy of the navy. There's neveh a dull moment in practice or on a football trip around Pump, who passes for radio's Ish- 54 kabibble when he combs his hair into bangs. Pump came to K. U. from Mercer college in Macon, Ga., where he spent two semesters after a term in boot camp. A native of Arlington, Va. he claims that imitations of Pumphrey "We talk just like everyone else," he maintains. Virginian accent are crazy. In high school Pumph lettered two years in football and one in track, where he threw the discus. As for K. U. women, he says. "I haven't got any use for 'em'—adding as an explanation, "I have a girl back home." Hard to get. Apparently they "like to be alone" or they are busy as bees. Three team members we want to mention were not interviewed personally, simply because we could not contact them, despite repeated efforts. Charles Buschhorn hails from the president's home town of Independence, Mo. He plays center for the Jayhawkers even though he is just a freshman. Diane McCarter is a sophomore V-12 trainee from Toppeka. Vital statistics show him to be 5 foot 6 in., 170 pounds, and 18-years-old. Joe Shamet, is a 6 foot 1 inch freshman end from Milwaukee. He's another man to add weight to the team with his 190 pounds. K.U. Places Seventh In Cross Country Kansas tracksters took seventh place in the N.C.A.A. cross-country run at East Lansing, Mich., Saturday. Harold Moore, star runner for the Jayhawkers, won sixth place, running the four-mile course at 22:08. Other winners in the order in which they finished are Bob Laptad, Walter Morrow, Bill Johnson, Swede Erickson, and Harold Hinchee. VARSITY TODAY and TUESDAY JAMES CRAIG "Dangerous Partners" and "SHADOW OF TERROR" Wednesday - Thursday JUDY CANOVA JOE E. BROWN "JOAN OF OZARK" and WEAVER BROS. and ELVIRY "In Old Missouri" A.D. Pi, Kappa, Lead In W.A.A. Points Alpha Delta Pi athletes head the list of high point houses in women's intramural sports with 288 W.A.A. points. Points are given to teams or members of houses participating in volleyball, tennis, and badminton. Kappa Kappa Gamma is runner-up with 242 points. Pi Beta Hpa has 205, Delta Gamma 170, Kappa Alpha Theta 168, and Chi Omega 163. Other houses fall below 150 points. W. A.A. high pointers in individual sports are Lueville Land, AD Pi, 54 points; Mary Morill, KKG, 38; Joan Anderson, AD Pi, 38; Donna Mueller, DG, 31. Lucile Land First In Tennis, Badminton The tennis and badminton tournaments have been won by Lucie Land, senior in Education from Lee's Summit, Mo. Runner-up in tennis was Dona Mueller. Pat Billings took second place in badminton. Lucile has left a trail of athletic achievements through her two years at Missouri Valley college, as well as at K.U. She is outstanding in every sport she enters: tennis, volleyball, badminton, hockey and basketball. Last year, she and Connie Marklew won the tennis doubles. Bees never have learned to avoid hazards erected by man, and great numbers are killed in collisions with telephone wires. In 1943 Lucile won the Tri-State doubles at Independence. Last year she won the women's singles and doubles in the city tournament at Kansas City, Mo. Longer Skirts, Smaller Hats Mark America's Post-War Fashions New York. (UP)—Skirts are getting longer. A preview of 1946 styles has shown that long skirts are coming back. But milady's hat will be smaller, lighter and saucier by spring. That's the post-war trend of America's top designers, following in some part the lead of Parisian milliners, who have discarded their out-sized occupation monstrosities. Long skirts are bad news for men who like to look at women's legs—and b'news for men who pay for women's clothes. A new skirt length makes last year's clothes look old. The fact remains that next spring's skirts will be at least one inch longer all round, and sometimes a lot longer in one spot. These latter skirts are called drape skirts. Just one drape of material hangs below the hem. It's sort of a symbol that skirts are going down. Stylists agree that while you can take the hem up on a dress, it doesn't work very well to let one down. Skirts are also hippier. There are pleats over the hips, or peplums, or flares. Sometimes the fullness extends all the way around the waist. Sometimes it is just on the sides. Lilly Dache, who showed some of the French battery with her own, has presented two new silhouettes which can be expected to be in the running at the Easter parade. One she term a Canot—French,for canoe. It follows the canoe's lines closely—in a shortened way. The NOW ALL WEEK at the Jayhawker Crammed to the raptures with 32 STAR-RIFFIC LUMINOSITIES! It's Archia's Radio Gang on the screen in "the Greatest Amusical Mirthquake in the History of Captivity!" Starting BING CROSBY PAULETTIE GODDARD BETTY HUTTON ALAN LAADD DOROTHY LAMOUR EDDIE BRACKEN BRIAN DONLEVY SONNY TUFTS VERONICA LAKE ARTURO DE CORDOVA BARRY FITZGERALD CASS DALEY DIANA LYNN VICTOR MOORE MARIORIE REYNOLDS BARRY SULLIVAM and Archie (Himself) ED GARDNER with Charles (Finagan) Cantor Eddie (Felix De Wahla) Green Ann (Miss Gully) Thomas and Robert Benchley William Demarest Howard De Silva Billy De Wolf Walter Abel Johnny Coy Miriam Franklin Olga San Juan Gary, Philip, Dennis and Lin Crosby Directed by Hal Walker Based on Characters created by Ed Gardner A PARAMOUNT PICTURE ED GARDNER'S DUFFYS TAVERN YOU HAVE A DATE SUNDAY WITH THE "Dolly Sisters" pointed cloche-type brim overhang, the forehead without hiding the hairline. Others in the group switch the pointed brim to the side on a broader brim; they're called "spooners." The off-the-face line is characteristic of almost her entire collection. Dache's other new silhouette, titled "fantail," has the saucy upsweep rear of a good laying hen. Other hats are tiny, head-hugging, fancifully decorated toques and caps which Miss Dache calls "Modern Victorian" or "Victorian Nonsense." A little black one, with the suggestion of a bonnet, was trimmed in bed ball-fringe and looked like the Surrey with the Fringe on Top. The English walnut—why "English" no one knows—originated in Persia. GRANADA Shows 2:30 - 7:00 - 9:00 NOW ENDS THURSDAY NOW DANA LINDA ANDREWS·DARNELI in FALLEN ANGEL In His Arms A Girl Of Glorious Love! In His Mind A Girl Of Terrible Fascination! ALICE FAYE DANA ANDREWS · LINDA DARNELL in FALLEN ANGEL ALSO—Color Cartoon — News FRIDAY - SATURDAY Merry Marital Mixup "LOVE, HONOR AND GOODBYE" VIRGINIA BRUCE —EXTRA— FRANK SINatra in "The HOUSE! LIVE IN" SATURDAY OWL & SUNDAY Critics Predict Academy for JENNIFER JONES "LOVE LETTERS" Joseph Cotten University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Tuesday, Nov. 27, 1945 43rd Year No 43 Lawrence, Kansas News ... of the World Nazis Had Poison Gas Before War Began Nuernberg. (UP)—Germany manufacture of poison gas on a mass basis more than a year before the outbreak of war, evidence at the war crimes trial revealed today. Orders to start turning out poison gas on a massive scale were issued by Herman Goering on July 12, 1938, the evidence disclosed. The notes did not explain why Germany failed to use poison gas during the war. Truman, Tex. (UP)—It's going to be official. The tiny town of Trumann, Texas, named for the president, is going on the map. Details on the newly-chistened town just east of Dallas are easy: Truman has 200 citizens and nine business establishments. McNarney Predicts 10-Year Occupation Frankfurt. (UP)—Gen. Joseph T. McNarney, new commander of American forces in Europe, predicted today that the Allied occupation of Germany would continue for at least 10 years. The strict denazification program in the American occupation zone will continue Gen. McNarney announced Washington. UP—Six west coast congressmen today introduced identical resolutions calling on President Truman to order immediate withdrawal of all U.S. troops, transports and supplies from China. Tokyo. (UP)—Emperor Hirohito, opening the extraordinary session of the Japanese diet, today urged passage of a law giving votes to women and other legislation to make Japan more democratic. Top U.A.W. Officers To See Schwellenbach Detroit. (UP)—Six top officers of the United Automobile Workers union (CIO) will meet with Secretary of Labor Lewis B. Schwellenbach and his conciliation aides tomorrow in connection with the nationwide General Motors strike. DeSoto. (UP)—One worker was killed and three others, including Dench Pritt, Lawrence, were injured when powder exploded in a "rollhouse" at the Sunflower ordinance works here late yesterday. Damage was estimated at $15,000. Washington. (UP)—The United States, leading a move to clear Iran of foreign troops, already has ordered American forces and installations evacuated by the end of December. Vienna. (UP)—Almost complete returns from yesterday's Austrian national elections showed a landslide defeat of the Communist party today in what was generally regarded as a Conservative-Socialist protest vote against the Russian occupation. Boston. (UP) — The famous old Phoenix Coffee Mills, situated in Boston's Cornhill, always keeps a bowl of cracked ice on its counter so customers can cool their coffee quickly. Bowling Alley, Billiard Room In Union Plans A bowling alley, a billiard room, and a larger ballroom are included in proposed plans for additions to the Memorial Union, George M. Beal, professor of architecture, and Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, told students Tuesday night at a meeting in the men's lounge of the Union. Dean Werner showed slides of the proposed additions and Professor Beal explained the pictures. The proposed bowling alley is to have six lanes, and the ballroom is to have an opening on the terrace to the south. Professor Beal said. Dean Werner stated that the state allows the University to issue bonds for $300,000 for Union buildings, and if bonds are issued, no more than that can be spent. Other possibilities mentioned by Professor Beal in the proposed plans were a larger soda fountain, enlarged cafeteria, and three private dining rooms. "The plans are still under study and are not final, so they may be changed if students desire and the committee sees fit," Dean Werner added. Hurley Resigns, Slams Diplomats Washington, (UP)—Patrick J. Hurley resigned today as U.S. ambassador to China with a charge that professional diplomats in the state department are sabotaging the basic principles of American foreign policy. Hurley said in a blistering critique of the U.S. foreign service that "in diplomacy today we are permitting ourselves to be sucked into a power bloc on the side of colonial imperialism against communist imperialism. "Our professional diplomats continuously advised the Communists that my efforts in preventing the collapse of China's national government did not represent the policy of the United States." A third world war "is in the making." Hurley declared. The answer, Hurley said, lies in two directions. First, he said, the "secrecy which has shrouded the actions of the state department" must be eliminated to give the people correct basic information on which to form judgments. He said the professional diplomats also advised the Chinese Communists not to accept unification with the Chinese national army unless the Communists were given control. Second, there must be "a complete reorganization of our policy-making machinery beginning at the lower official levels" to coordinate the nation's economic and diplomatic policies and give "loyal and intelligent implementation" to the nation's international policy as laid down by its top leaders. The "K-Union," official publication of the Memorial Union, will be distributed at the Midweek Wednesday, Joan Harris, editor announced today. 'K-Union' Will Be Distributed At Midweek Wednesday WEATHER Kansas-Clear to partly cloudy, not much change in temperature tonight and tomorrow. At Long Last, A Chance to Save on Texts Campus Book Store OK'ed After more than 30 years of wishing and discussing, students soon will operate a campus book store. "Plans for the book store should be under way by February," Chancellor Deane W. Malott announced today, after the state board of regents had authorized establishment of cooperative book stores in the five state schools. "It is up to the All-Student Council and the Union operating committee to decide the location of the store," the chancellor said. As soon as a location and someone to run the store are found, definite plans will be made, he added. Cooperative book stores at other state schools in this region save students at least 10 per cent on books and supplies, and work with faculty members to prevent book shortages at the beginning of each term, a Council survey, beaded by Wendell, Nickell and Helen Howe, recently reported. The store will operate on one of two plans: Books will be sold at local prices and profits returned to students at the end of each year or the prices of books sold to students will be as near cost is possible. The idea of a campus book store began at the University in 1910, when men students sold shares of stock in such a venture for $10 a share. Discouraged by local merchants, the project soon was discontinued. Soon after this, University women sold used books in Fraser hall. Gradually, a more permanent establishment developed. The book exchange in the Memorial Union basement, originally operated by the Women's Self-Government Association, now is supervised by the Women's Executive Council, and sells used books at a 10 per cent profit. University Employee Hit by Motorcycle Mrs. Frances Sheehan, 1028 Hermont street, was struck by a motorcycle at the corner of 14th and Oread near Green hall at 12:35 p.m. today. Mrs. Sheehan is employed in the physics department of the University, and is the wife of James Edward Sheehan, a freshman in the college. Mrs. Sheehan was taken to Watkins hospital. Officials report that she is "apparently not seriously injured." Two Army veterans, Norman Stewart, 1146 New York street and Kenneth Hickman, 1119 New Jersey street said they were riding on the motorcycle at the time of the accident. Is Your Name Wrong? If you want your name to appear in the Daily Kansan in some manner different from the way it is listed in the Student directory, please bring a written correction to the Kansan news room and notify the student in charge. K.U. to Offer New Sociology Course To meet the demand for more social workers, a new graduate curriculum in social work will be established at the University, Deane W. Malott, chancellor, announced today. Graduate students will be able to receive one year of specialized professional training fitting them for positions in public welfare departments, child-placing agencies, family welfare organizations, and character building agencies such as the Boy Scouts and Y.M.C.A. Under this plan, the senior year and the first year of graduate work will be co-ordinated. During the graduate year students will spend one semester in class work, one semester doing actual field work in an agency, and will complete their work in a summer session, or they will take their field work concurrently (continued to page four) It's the Boys Who Are So Partial To Helen Rhoda--She Says attend the McDowell Colony. As a University booster, she has (continued to page four) By ELIZABETH TRIPP A campus character who is famous for her ability to express herself vividly is Miss Helen Rhoda Hoopes, professor of English. As a teacher, Miss Hoopes has a reputation for being partial to boys. "I don't know why they say I'm partial to boys," she says, "It's the boys who are partial to me." She formerly taught speech and dramatics at the Dillonbck School of Expression and at her home studio. She wrote plays and Christmas operetta for children, directed plays, and has had considerable amateur theatrical acting experience. Miss Hoopes was the first woman editor of the Daily Kansan. She received no credit because technically a woman could not hold the position at that time. However, she wrote for every section except society and sport news. She wrote poetry for 10 years, and much of it has appeared in national poetry magazines. She was the third Kansas poet selected to PROF. HELEN RHODA HOOPES 21 Candidates To Be Presented At Midweek 1930. Candidates for "Miss Student Union", who will be presented at the Midweek tomorrow, were announced today by Joan Woodward, chairman. They are Dona Lou Kelly, Westminster hall; Mary Billings, Campus house; Virginia Powell, Miller hall; Barbara White, Sigma Kappa; Betty Jo O'Neal, Gamma Phi Beta; Sue Taylor, Hopkins hall; Shirley Wellborn, Locksley hall; Virginia Joseph, Kappa Alpha Theta; Joyce Mahin, Chi Omega; Lee Duncan, Alpha Omega Pi. Elizabeth Shaw, Ricker hall; Doris Neve, Foster hall, Eloise Hodgson, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Lois Temple, Watkins hall; Barbara Varner, Pi Beta Phi; Doris Dennis, Harmon Coop; Mary Louis Mathews, Delta Gamma; Joyce Wormom, Sleepy Hollow hall; Judith Quiros, Corbin hall, Virginia DeWald, Joliffe hall; and Marilyn McAlister, Briar Manor. Social chaimen from men's organized houses, Miss Woodward said, who will act as judges, are J. Bertrand Mpris, Phi Delta Theta; William C. Richardson, Sigma Chi; John Danneberg, Tau Kappa Epsilon; Charles Dixon Kennedy, Pi Kappa Alpha, George Gail Stout, Carruth hall. Federick Charles Huffman, Battenfield hall; Richard Baxter Cray, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; David Robert Bonebreak, Delta Tau Delta; Gene McLaughlin, Phi Kappa Psi; John Kenneth Higdon, Sigma Nu; and Leonard Hartigan, Phi Gamma Delta. Advanced ROTC Plans Outlined Circular letters have been sent to all veterans in the University to acquaint them with the requirements and benefits of the proposed advanced R.O.T.C. course, Capt. John D. Bradley, commanding officer, announced today. The beginning class in the R.O.T.C. program will be held Monday through Friday at 11:30 a.m., unless suggestions for a better time are received by the instructors, he continued. The class will be open to veterans who have completed at least six months of active duty and male students who are high graduates of military schools. Pay of about $18 a month will be paid these advanced students. These letters set forth the credits allowed for military service, the conditions, qualifications, and instructio nprogram of the new course, Capt. Bradley said. Spanish Club to Meet The Spanish club will meet at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in room 9, Frank Strong hall. J. M. Osma, professor of Romance languages, who was born and lived in Spain, will speak in Spanish and moving pictures about Spain will be shown. Art Club to Elect The University Art club will elect officers at its second meeting at 8:30 tonight in the Kansas room of the Union. All design, drawing and painting, and art majors are invited according to Miss Marjorie Whitney, of the design department, and Prof. Karl Mattern of the drawing and painting department, club sponsors, PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS NOVEMBER 27,1945 University DAILY KANSAN Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Association, National Editorial Association, and the represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York City. Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Law and Law School year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination period. Entered as second class September 7, 1987 at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS STAFF ELEANOR ALBRIGHT Managing Editor JORDINA GORDON ORDER Ast. Managing Editor MARCO GAYNOR GAYNOR Telegraph Editor BETTY JENNINGS Telegraph Editor PATICIA PENNEY Neus Editor MARGARET MARTIN Assistant Editor BICKY VALLETT Society Editor MARGARET WENTKI Sports Editor JANK ANDERSON Feature Editor MARGARET MARTIN Management Editor ANNABELLE SAYLOR Research Editor MARIAN THOMSON Ast. Feature Editor JOY HOWLAND Copy Editor MARGARET MARTIN Telegraph Editor JOAN VEATCH BARRY DIXIE GILLILAND Staff Assistants: BARRADA EWING JEAN MURRAY NEAL SEHEMAN PAUL CONRAD EDITORIAL STAFF DOLORES SULZMAN ... Editor-in-Chief MARY MORRILL FRANKLIN FEARING } Editorial Associates OVILLE ROENTES BUSINESS STAFF NANCY TOMLISON ... Business Manager BETTY BEACH ... Advertising Manager Assistants: BOB BORNEBAKE, MARY BRANI- ANN, ANN REDDING, ANN COECH, SLYVIN SMALL. ELEANOR THOMPSON. In Charge This Issue ... Sylvia SMALL Rock Chalk Talk Round Town—Lou Bundren, Miller, returned from the turkey holiday with a chic cotton flannel affair for winter nightwear, complete with night cap and bed sox . . . Katie Wright, Wellingtonian, returned with a fur coat, also for nightwear . . . “Mooning” in Wichita were Faith Severson, Bev Stucken, Johnny Beach, Marty Laffer, Bill Quiring, and Co. . . . The honeymooning Johnny Blairs (Lorea Norrie) happened on in the Tiger game Saturday with lots of enthusiasm (for each other) . . . Al Steinhauer made a mess of the Gillimb floor lamp in Ottawa; compensated by washing dishes . . . And then there is Georgianna Sewell, Kappa frosh, who spent the vacation in study (“Yep, mid-semesters are over but finals are coming up.”) Proud Prof.—It had been a particularly tough lecture period in naval science; Lt. Horn assigned a You Can't Win—"Cornie" and the yell-leading lineup made valiant efforts in trying to coax the crowd to their feet Saturday. Finally an ex-asperated spectator shouted, "When I stand up I walk on three people and when I sit down I smash three more." ★ Letters to the Editor ★ Werner Points Out Facts Walkout Committee Selection Concerning Walkout Questioned by I-F Council University Daily Kansan Dear Editor:: The writer of this letter feels that certain misrepresentations and misunderstandings have been created in connection with the student demonstration of last Monday. This letter is therefore written in an attempt to allow some clearer thinking about the matter. Here are some of the facts: 2. The actual authors of this completely unofficial message contrary to some reports, were anonymous and have remained so. 1. On Sunday evening, Nov. 18, a group of about three students broadcast telephone calls to organized houses in the name of the All-Student Council, to the effect that a walkout on Monday was "Official and O.K." The All-Student Council had not authorized any such action. 3. Contrary to some reports, not all of the classes throughout the University were disturbed. As far as can be ascertained, only a few classes were brought to the point of dismissal by student action. 4. Contrary to some reports, students were not forced out of the library and compelled to join in a parade. The disturbance in the library lasted net longer than five minutes. 5. The demonstration has been claimed as an evidence of school spirit. In the light of this claim it should be noted that while several hundred students were dancing at the Memorial Union, less than twelve students were in attendance down at the field watching the team practice. Very truly yours, Henry Werner By JOAN HARRIS More than 30 new courses and "dozens of course changes" have been requested for inclusion in the catalog to be published next month, according to Dean Paul B. Lawson. Suggestions by each department were read at the College faculty meeting Nov. 20, and were referred to the administrative committee for study and recommendation. Many Curriculum Changes Being Considered by College 1 University Daily Kansan Dear Editor: ★ An open letter to the Chancellor: An open letter to the Chancellor: Quoting from your letter in the Kansan yesterday: "But it is not alone my problem. It is, to a considerable extent a problem for the students and for the faculty." How true! Then why weren't members of the walkout committee chosen from representative student groups? The All-Student Council member is the only direct representative of the student body. In this case, his vote failed by a considerable majority (2009-14) to reflect student sentiment. Both the Kansan Board and the student court can voice only a minority opinion. Neither is elected by a direct student vote. Why weren't the Independent Student Association, the Pan-Hellenic Council, the Inter-Fraternity council, the Veteran's association, or the Navy (to mention only a few) granted a voice on the committee? Surely you did not attempt to rearoad a decision. Perhaps you acted contrary to your own better judgment in closing the incident "energetically and rapidly." You prosecute on the basis of injury to the majority of the student body. You said, "It becomes more than an affair involving one group in the University." How can you justify your selection of committee members? long lesson without batting an eye It was with trepidation, therefore that the sea-going Jayawkers stay after class upon his request. Lt Horn beamed broadly, however, waved a handful of cigars and announced the birth of a daughter, Elen Elizabeth (blonde, too!). Conferences to plan courses for the 1946 summer session begin today Raymond Nichols, University executive secretary, said today. Chancellor Deane W. Malott has scheduled meetings with the chairmen of budget committees and the chairmen of all teaching departments. There will be a number of conferences. Conferences to Plan 1946 Summer Session Inter-Fraternity Council The summer session probably will be an eight-weeks term, Mr. Nichols said. The University Art club will meet to elect officers in the Kansas room at 8:30 p.m. tonight. Art Club to Meet Tonight All art students are invited. Going my way?—Lila Doughman Hunter, last year's Theta prey, went to Wichita for the weekend to witness the wedding of a friend. It brought back nostalgic memories of her own aisle tripping last summer, when most of K.U. adjourned to Wichita to see her marry Chuck Hunter, Phi Dett. Lilia had a beautiful gown, flowers, music, lights, newspaper cameramen, et al. The most impressive part of the whole affair occurred when she was marching down the aisle with Pvt. Hunter following the ceremony. The Private rushed forward to greet a few of the fellows, forgetting Mrs. Hunter, whose train had become entangled somewhere along the way. A plaintive "Wait for me" slowed him down. OFFICIAL BULLETIN University of Kansas November 27,1945 All Student Council will meet Tuesday at 7:15 tonight in the Pine room of the Union.-Mary Jo Cox, president. Tau Sigma will meet at 7:30 tonight in Robinson gymnasium. Wear your leotards and be on time. Bring dues. Union Activities meeting of all committee heads at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Union Activities office. Important.-Alberta Cornwell, president. --- K U. Dames will meet at 7:30 p.m Wednesday in Kansas Room, Union The program will be folk dancing. 尚肃尚 Le Carcle Francais se reunira mercredi qui trois heures et demie dans 113 Frank Strong. Tous ceux qui s'interessent en français sont invites. Mary Schnitzler, Secretaire. The University Art club will meet in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union at 8:30 tonight. All art majors are urged to attend. Election of officers will be held. Call KU 25 with your news. Jayhawker Jewelry New Shipment Roberts Jewelry and Gifts SLEEP IS EASY WHEN YOU DRINK MILK BEFORE RE-TIRING. Lawrence Sanitary Milk & Ice Cream Co. Lind to Explain Carvings L. R. Lind, associate professor of Latin and Greek, will attend a meeting of the American Philological association in Cincinnati Dec. 27, 28, and 29. WANT ADS He will present a paper dealing with Greek and Latin inscriptions from the University collection in the Wilcox Museum, and one Greek inscription from Indiana. None of these three inscriptions has been published before. NOTICE—Photographs tinted for Christmas. Reasonable prices. Experience. Call 507. Pat Allen. By 1850, most of the United States toll roads had become free highways NOTICE—Exchanged by error—tan gaberdine topcoat at Union Fountain, Nov. 21. Please call E. M. Jones, 1914. FOUND—A key on chain. Owner may have same by identifying and paying for this ad at the Kansan office. LOST—Keys on a chain Thursday. If found call 1782. Jacque Ogan. FOUND—White pearls, owner may have same by identifying and paying for this ad at the Kansan office. LOST—Green purse containing pen, bus book, and compact. If found return to Kansan office. Reward. LOST - wauntman wrist watch, gold dial, silver case. Lost Friday night in downtown Lawrence. Call Lynn Chase 3386 Reward. LOST—Tan leather suitcase initialed M.E.O., between 7:30 and 8:00 Sunday evening at Union Pacific depot or somewhere on the Hill. 1619 R, Mary Branigan. Reward Risk's Help Yourself Laundry RATES 50c PER HOUR Tubs Filled and Emptied 19th and Ill. Phone 623 For That Coke Date Remember ELDRIDGE PHARMACY Phone 999 701 Mass. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. LAWRENCE OPTICAL 1025 Mass. Phone 425 HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Garage and Cab Co. 922 Mass. Phone 12 Open Weeks days - - Open Saturday and Sunday Free instruction to beginners. SCORE 0 points 1 point 2 point 3 point 4 point 5 point 6 point 7 point 8 point 9 point 10 point 11 point 12 point You're the Winner-- Even If You Lose! Win a jolly evening's diversion in good company! Win the benefit of healthful exercise — even if you don't score at bowling. You'll enjoy our smooth alleys too! 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. 1:30 p.m. to 11 p.m. League played invited. LAWRENCE BOWLING ALLEY 916 $ \frac{1}{2} $ MASS. Operated by JOE HERTZ - FINNEY L Operated by JOE HERTZ - FINNEY HOKE Students! RADIOS 5-tube - $27.50 RECORD PLAYERS $24.95 and up Are in Stock Now Quantity Limited So Get Yours NOW! New 5-tube superhetrodyne radios are also in. These are splendid radios with Beam power output and equals 7-tube operation in other sets. Complete Stock of Fresh Portable Radio Batteries We have new tubes for your radio. We can give you speedy service on all your radio repair work. Thanks for your business. Phone 138. ED BOWMAN BOWMAN RADIO Shop, 944 Mass. St., and F. M. TELECTRAD SHOP, 900 Mass. St. NOVEMBER 27,1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE THREE 20 SOCIALLY SPEAKING Becky Vallette, Konsan Society Editor 1. U. Dames to Meet Wednesday Prentice-Schroll Wed The K.U. Dames will meet in the Pine room of the Union at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. All married women students and all wives of students are eligible for membership. Ruth Prentice, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd E. Prentice, Kansas City, and Jack C. Schroll, U.S.N.R., son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Schroll, Hutchinson, were married at the Westport Presbyterian church in Kansas City, Mo., Wednesday. Mrs. Gerald Prentice, sister-in-law of the bride, was matron of honor, and Betty Jennings was bridesaidmaid. Bobe Jane Parker lighted the tapers. Ina Katherine Roderick sang "All for You," and "I Love You Truly." A home economics major, Mrs. Schroll was graduated from the University in June. She was a member of Pi Lambda Theta, honorary educational sorority; Jay Janes; Omicron Nu, honorary home economics sorority; and was president of home economies club. Seaman Schroll, a freshman in the School of Medicine, is a member of Sigma Chi and Nu Sigma Nu fraternities. Fileen Friesen Married They will live In Lawrence. Eileen Friesen and Glenn B. Lewis were married at Blessed Sacrament church, Wichita, Thanksgiving day, Miss Joyce Friesen was maid of honor and Ann Cowan was bridesmaid. Mrs. Lewis is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. F. Friesen, Cheney. A member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority, she was graduated from the University last spring. Mr. Lewis is the son of Mr. and Mrs. M. G. Lewis, Escanaba, Mich. He attended Minnesota college, where he was a member of Sigma Chi. Hilbrand-Kocour Wed Heloise Hillbrand, daughter of Dean and Mrs. Earl Hillbrand, and Maj. Max Kocour, son of Mrs. O. E. Kocour, Andale, were married at St. Mary's cathedral, Wichita, Wednesday. Mary Louise Laffer, Wichita, was maid of honor. Hanna Hedrick, Newton, and Dorothea Diem, Tula, were bridesmaids. A reception was held after the wedding at the home of the bride's parents. Maj. and Mrs. Kocour will go to Camp Robinson, Ark., after Dec. 15, where he will report for reassignment. A member of Kappa Kappa Gamma, Mrs. Kocour was graduated from the College in 1944. Mr. Kocour is a graduate of Wichita university and has served with the Third army in the European theater University students attending the wedding were Beverly Frizell, Nancy Mille; Marjorie Free, Marilyn McEwen, Barbara Necle, and Martha Laffer. Gamma Phi Announces Pinning Gamma Phi Beta has announced the pinning of Shirley Carl, Cherryvale, to Ens, Lynn Leigh Burley, Idaho. Mrs. Ralph Baldwin, housemother, read the announcement. Miss Carl's corsage was a white rose, surrounded by red roses. Leatrice Gibbs and Mazzie Lane, who assisted in the pinning, and Mrs. Baldwin wore gardenia corsages. Miss Carl is a senior in the College. Ensign Leigh was graduated from the School of Engineering in November, and received his commission. He will report to San Francisco. Ensign Leigh is a member of Sigma Chi fraternity. Brazil became a republic in 1891 Gamma Phi Distinctive For Bond Selling Peggy S. BETTY JO O'NEAL This is another in a series of articles by the Daily Kansan to acquaint the campus with the various organized houses, their members, officers, and histories. Whether it's selling bonds, winning Phi Beta Kappa keys, or donning pig tails and ruffles for the traditional Christmas party, Gamma Phi Beta girls are qualified experts. During the war, Gamma Phi was the first sorority authorized by the United States treasury department as a government bond selling agency. Its latest drive went over the five million dollar mark. Sigma chapter of Gamma Phi Beta, was founded at the University in 1915. It is now one of 52 active chapters, the first of which was founded in 1874 at Syracuse university. Four members were chosen last year for Phi Beta Kappa and two became members of Motar board. The most "prized possession" of the local chapter is its own "Mother Baldwin," who has been the sorority housemother for 22 years. The sorority colors are mode and brown. The flower is pink carnation. The chapter house is located at 1339 West Campus road. The word "sorority" was coined for Gamma Phi by a Syracuse University Greek professor. Other members of the active chapter are: Joan Carr, Billye Anne Simmons, Virginia Urban, Marjorie Cooper, Shirley Lee, Leatrice Gibbs, Emily Stacey, Dorothy Feldkamp, Sheila Stryker, Geralele Kreider, Lee Blackwill, Joan Hendrickson, Sarah Heil, Mazzie Lane, Peggy Vickers, Judith Tihen, Glenda Leuhring, Jeanne Brown, Beverly Ann Brown, Marjorie Reich Dietrich. Chapter officers are: Betty Jo O'Neal, president; Jane Atwood, vice-president; Frances Muhlenbruch, recording secretary; and Jane Owen, treasurer. Mary Schnitzler, Jo Ellen Shifley, Elaine Falkoner, Norma Whittaker, ON KFKU 2:30 p.m.—Tales from Ivory Towers—dramatized story of "Call It Courage." 9:30—Program to be announced. Tomorrow; TELL ME, DOCTOR--the "COLLEGE JEWELER" Tonight: 2:45 p.m. Music How to Stay Out of the Hospital A clamor for physical fitness was a part of our national war effort. For the first time in several generations, a comprehensive check-up revealed the state of the nation's health. The rejections of selective service registrants threw a lot of light on health conditions in the United States—conditions which indicated that the leading causes for physical rejection were defects of long standing mental deficiencies and disease, ear and eye defects, heart disease, defects of the bones and muscles, and venereal diseases. A peacetime program to develop optimum health and physical fitness should begin much farther back than with the selective service age group. Use of precautions and corrections for preschool and school children would do more to improve national health and physical fitness than the most rigid health program for young men and women about to go to war. Becoming and staying physically fit is not a matter of daily grinding away on an obstacle course. National good health and "fitness" cannot be acquired in a hurried up training program. Modern warfare demands a state of physical efficiency that would have put many an old sword and armor warrior on the bench. The G.I.'s health standing was determined by his ability to do a job. In many cases this ability was limited by physical defects which could have been checked years before. —Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson Meribah Moore Sings To Large Audience Meribah Moore, soprano, associate professor of voice, sang to a large audience in Frank Strong hall auditorium last night. English, French, German, and Italian songs were included in the program. Ruth Orcutt, associate professor of piano, accompanied Miss Moore. Joan Hise, Mary Ann McClure, Geraldine Nelson, Shirley Otter, Rosemary Jarboe, Bonnie Veatch, and Elizabeth Evans. Members of the pledge class arc Beverly Fox, Nancy Jackson, Barbara Byrd, LaJuan Braden, Patricia Kelly, Helen Hakrader, Lola Branit, Marion Shieldon, Mary Jean Moore, Barbara Felt, Lu Anu Powell, Caroline Merritt, Patricia Schultz, Katherine Culley, Susan Wright, Jeanne Gorbutt, Arlene Feldkamp, Betty Sara Brothers, Dorothy Jean James, and Rosemary Gaines. Students' Jewelry Store 41 Years AT THE HOSPITAL Gustafson Admitted to the hospital 11-26-45 Marion Pugh, Watkins hall. Richard Blum. 1602 Louisiana Laura Jean Templeton, Locksley hall. 911 Mass. St. Ellen Jean McIntire, 1045 W. Hills. Floyd Tony Veatch, 1339 W. Campus. Frank Eberhardt, 1616 Louisiana. Marilyn Judy Carlson, 1433 Tennessee. Doris Chapman, 905 Maine. William E. Dennis, 1537½ Tennesse 800 Paul Francis O'Brien, 1245 W. Campus. Mary Jeanne Johnson, Corbin hall. Whitson Godfrey, 1111 W. 11th St. Wanda Dean, Locksley hall. Jose Portuguez, 1614 Kentucky. Patsy Marie Morris, 844 Arkansas. Edward Eugene Jensen, 1616 Ind. Donald Eugene Owen, 1409 Tenn. Nellie Ann Angle, 1313 Vermont. Patricia Elledge, 1246 Oread. Robert W Jantsch, 1541 Tenn. Edith Bossom, Corbin hall. Paul Wayne Ott, 1439 Tenn. Joseph T. Barrington, 1621 Edge- Joseph T. Barrington, 1621 Edge- pill. Judd Tarrant, 1540 Louisiana. Dismissed. 11-26-45. Henry W. Firner, Jr., 1422 New York. --- CHRISTMAS IS COMING . . . For a gift that will last the whole year give an ALBUM OF RECORDS DANNY KAYE Album DINNING SISTERS Album Record—"Doctor, Lawyer, Indian Chief" BETTY HUTTON FRANKII CARLE Album RHAPSODY RHAPSODY IN BLUE Album "IT'S WRIGHT'S FOR RECORDS" THE WRIGHT APPLIANCE STORES 9th and Mass. M. C. Our Mechanics are equipped to give you the best and quickest possible service . . . Morgan-Mack Motor Co. 609 Mass. Phone 277 PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 27,1945 Cage Prospects Are Far From Drab Even Though 'Phog' Won't Admit It Basketball at the University of Kansas is never dull. of Kansas is never dum. And despite the fact that there are no 1945 regulars back for the 1946 Jayhawk quintet, the prospects are good with Charlie Black, All-American in 1942, Gene Petersen, Nebraska fugitive, six holdover lettermen, and a host of talented yearlings on hand. Dr. F. C. Allen, K.U's cage mentor, is not looking at the scene through rose-colored glasses, however. "Those boys like Charlie Black haven't been using their legs much," Allen commented. "They are out of shape nine times out of 10, and it may take some of them a long time to get into condition. While that's taking place, the freshmen are grouping for continuity of play." The lineup also includes Salina's Gene Anderson 6 ft., in center and Jack Lippoldt, guard; Gib Stramel Hays center; Maurice Martin, clever pre-hop hitter at Topeka; Dick Van Gundy, Salina and Washburn ace; Ray Frisby, quarterback with an all-Ark valley rating; Don Culhane, Marysville, Mo., V-12; Bob Bonebrake, former Baker star; Wendell Clark, Dennison product; Bob Richardson and Bob Hays, Lawrence; Bill Wilson, Kansas City Central store; Leslie Philolod, Houston V-12; Denver Markland, Purdue; and Lawrence Goben, Case V-12er. The six lettermen who have reported are Dean Corder, Owen Peck, Gus Daum, Everett Hill, "Odd" Williams, and Lou Gochring. Five games and three tournament tits have been added to the basketball schedule, making it a rough-18 event affair, including the ten conference bouts. The season opens Dec. 3, when the Crimson and Blue meets Warensburg Teachers college in Lawrence. Junior Team Cops Volleyball Title The junior volleyball team defeated the sophomores, 27 to 18, last night to become the intramural class champions. The seniors came in third by defeating the freshmen, 26 to 16. Offers Alternative For Military Training Members of the winning junior team are; Alberta Cornwell, Ruth Payne, Kathryn O'Leary, Wilma Bown, Billye Simmons, Ruth Green, Marjorie Fadler, Marilyn Voth, Marie Horseman, Jane Topping, Mary Jean Hoffmann, Mary Vermillion, Nancy Miller, Marjorie Peet, and Margery Stubbs, manager. Chancellor Deane W. Malott was one of the 34 university and college president who last week recommended a three-point program as an alternative for universal military training to Chairman Andrew J. May of the house military affairs committee. The three points are; Extension of existing selective service on a year to year basis, with an amendment limiting the period of military service of draftees to 15 months. Vigorous promotion of a new program of voluntary enlistment. Postponement of a decision on universal military training. Dr. Roofe Ill Dr. Paul Roofe, anatomy professor, is confined to his home with an illness, according to Dr. O. O. Stoland, secretary of the School of Medicine. Dr. Roofe is new in the department this year. K. U.'s 1946 SCHEDULE Non-Conference Games Dec. 3 Warrensburg Teachers at Lawrence Dec. 7 Olathe Naval Air station at Lawrence Dec. 11 Rockhurst at Kansas City Dec. 14, 15 Kansas State, Nebraska, Missouri at Kansas City Dec. 17 Rockhurst at Lawrence Dec. 19 Olathe Naval Air station at Olathe Jan. 7 Missouri at Lawrence Jan. 9 Kansas State at Manhattan Jan. 11 Nebraska at Lincoln Jan. 18 Oklahoma at Lawrence Jan. 25 Iowa State at Ames Jan. 29 Kansas State at Lawrence Feb. 15 Nebraska at Lawrence Feb. 22 Missouri at Columbia Feb. 25 Iowa State at Lawrence Feb. 28 Oklahoma at Norman Twenty-two freshman navy medical students will go on inactive duty Feb. 7, when the navy's medical program at the University is discontinued. Capt. Chester A. Kunz announced today. 22 Navy Medics To Be Inactivated the trainees who will be inactivated are Rex Charles Belisle, Robert W. Borders, John G. Campbell, Thomas H. Conroy, Earl D. Coriell, Dennis A. Hardman, Leo Russell Hines, Charles A. Isaac, Lawrence E. Lamb, Daniel A. Lang, William R. McPhee. Max E. Musgrave, Wendell K. Nickell, John Lewis Ott, Jack Clare Schroll, William S. Spicer, Rex Roger Taggart, Robert A. Tennant, Robert W. Weber, Charles B. Wheeler, John Jerome Wilden, and Samuel Zweifel, Jr. Basketball Managers To Draw Divisions Men's intramural basketball team managers will meet at 4:30 p.m. Dec. 5 in Robinson gymnasium to draw divisions for their teams, Raymond Kanehl, director of men's intramural athletics, announced today. Intramural basketball games are scheduled to start Dec. 7. Independent groups planning to enter teams may obtain entry blanks at the intramural office, according to Mr. Kanehl. Organized houses will receive entry blanks by mail this week, he said. VARSITY ENDS TONITE "Dangerous Partners" and "Shadow of Terror" Wednesday - Thurs. 'Boys Are Partial To Me'—Hoopes 2 Hilarious Hits JUDY CANOVA JOE E. BROWN (continued from page one) traveled for the alumni association. Her articles are familiar to Graduate and Jayhawker magazine readers. She describes Fraser hall as a "dear old ruin" of which she has become quite fond. Her safety practice is to walk near the wall because she fears that otherwise she will fall through third floor. "In Old Missouri" Her collection of New Testaments include those in Swedish, Welch, Latin, and Greek. She started to collect Chinese snuff bottles, but "their prices went up," so she has turned her attention to her old rings and black lacquer collections. She has several hobbies, one of which is a typical midwestern miniature house that records the comforts, luxuries, and fads from 1935 to 1945. She plans to give it to a children's museum. "JOAN OF OZARK" and WEAVER BROS. and ELVIRY She likes handmade things, old things, and Oriental, especially Chinese, things. Her favorite colors are brown and blue. She thinks Frank Sinatra is marvelous. She says that her most restful period of the day is her seven minute bus ride home. As her war project she spent much of her time writing to boys in the armed forces. Her father sold saddles and harnesses and traveled in Kansas and Oklahoma before they became states. His extensive Indian collection was a gift to Spooner Thayer museum by Miss Hoopes. She described her mother as a very jovial person, but she didn't Schoeppel to Speak At Football Banquet Gov. Andrew Schooppel will speak at the annual University football banquet Wednesday night in the 100 Kansas room of the Memorial Union. Henry Shenk, head football coach, said today. The coaching staff plus Don Pierce, sports publicity director and E. L. Falkenstien, business secretary of athletics, will don waiter's garb and serve the 1945 K.U. football squad and 50 guests. The 1945 football captain, to be elected tonight, will be announced at the banquet. Lt. Epps to Teach V-12's Lt. Junius P. Epps, USN, reported for duty with the V-12 unit here on Nov. 24. He will teach navy classes in navigation. think it good to have two points of interest—her mother and herself together. "However." Miss Hoopes added, some of these girls in sweaters seem to get away with it." She received her bachelor of art degree in 1913 and her master of arts degree in 1914 when she started her teaching career. Before coming to the University she taught at Oread High school. She attended Emporia Teachers' college, Chicago university, and Harvard university. GO SANDWERS DUMMY'S Radio's Riot Show is A Musical Mirth- quake on the screen! with 32 STARS! TAVERN ALL TOPS! Q at the Jayhawk NOW ALL WEEK Here Are 6 of the 32 Stars! BING CROSBY BETTY HUTTON PAULETTE GODDARD ALAN LADD DOROTHY LAMOUR SONNY TUFTS THOSE Lovely... Glamorous... Scandalous DOLLY SISTERS... IN A MUSICAL STORY GLORIOUS AS THESE STARS! THE DOLLY SISTERS in Technicolor Starring BETTY GRABLE AND JOHN PAYNE SUNDAY JUNE HAVER Obtain Free Radio Award Tickets Now for $109.50 Console Radio Given Free Thursday, Dec. 20th K.U. to Offer New Course (continued from page one) with their class work in nearby social agencies. According to Miss Ester Twente, associate professor of sociology, who is currently teaching courses in social work, more inquiries from social agencies for workers are received than she is able to fill with graduates. A survey made the later part of 1944 showed that of the 18 majors in sociology who were graduated from the University in June of that year, five were in social work, four were in graduate schools of social work and nine were either married or working in war industries. Although the curriculum trains for opportunities particularly attractive to women, an increasing number of men are entering the field of social work, especially in administrative position, and the curriculum also meets their needs. The Isle of Man is 30 by 12 miles in size. GRANADA Shows 2:30 - 7:00 - 9:00 NOW ENDS THURSDAY In His Arms ... A Girl Of Glorious Love! In His Mind ... A Girl Of Terrible Fascination! ALICE FAYE DANA LINDA ANDREWS·DARNELL FALLEN ANGEL ALSO—Color Cartoon - News FRIDAY - SATURDAY Merry Marital Mixup "LOVE, HONOR AND GOODBYE" VIRGINIA BRUCE —EXTRA— FRANK SINATRA in "THE HOUSE I LIVE IN" SATURDAY OWL & SUNDAY Critics Predict Academy for JENNIFER JONES "LOVE LETTERS" Joseph Cotten University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Wednesday, Nov. 28, 1945 43rd Year No. 44 Lawrence, Kansas News. . . of the World Steel Workers Vote To Strike for Raise Pittsburgh. (UP)—First returns reported today in a strike vote being taken in the steel industry, shoved that CIO steel workers favor a strike to back their demands for a $2 a day wage increase. More than 650,000 CIO United Steel workers in 2 states are voting. A 24 hour nationwide shipping strike has been called for Monday by the National Maritime union (CIO). Washington. (UP)—The United States will keep on making atomic bombs until "somebody decides" what international control measures will be taken, Maj. Gen. Leslie R. Groves said today. British May Testify In Ribbentrop Trial Nuenenberg (UF)—The war crimes tribunal now granted the request of Joachim Von Ribbentrop for permission to obtain testimony from Lords Beaverbrook, Kemsley, Londonderry, and Van Sittart for use in Ribbentrop's defense. Hollywood, (UP)—Screen star Bette Davis and William Grant Sherry, 31-year-old artist and former wrestler, will be married at Lagrama Beach, Calif., Friday, friends said today. It will be Miss Davis third marriage. Fort Worth, Tex., (UP)—Communist forces in this country were blamed today by Maj. Gen. Claire L. Chenault for magnifying the importance of China's civil war. Russia Is Quiet On China Inquiry Tokyo. (UP)-Edwin S. Pauley, personal envoy of President Truman, said today he had asked Russia for permission to enter the Soviet areas of North Korea and Manchuria to study Japan's ability to pay reparations, but so far his request had not been granted. Pauley said he had heard rumors that the Russians were removing huge quantities of equipment and supplies from Manchuria, but had no confirmation. Washington. (UP)—Sen, Edwin C Johnson, D., Colo., told the Senate today that the United States "is drifting toward war with Russia with certainty and speed." "We are trying to bluff Russia with conscription of 'teen-aged boys but we are only fooling ourselves," Johnson decares that Russia knows that we are waving an empty pistol by our conscription prattle and their contempt for us must grow with each passing hour." Washington. (UP)—Byron Price, in a report to President Truman, warned that French obstruction of Allied policy in Germany constituted "a certain step toward future international friction." Washington. (UP)—The office of Price Administration said today that the special five-pound sugar coupon for home canning issued last summer will not be valid after Friday. Regular sugar stamp No. 38 will be valid until Dec. 31. Low Grades for 12-Week Students Due Next Week Unsatisfactory grades for students who are enrolled in the 12-weeks' term in the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences are due in the College office Dec. 3. These grades will not be given out through the advisers, but will be mailed to students directly the following week. Those desiring a conference concerning their work may make appointments at the College office to see Deans Paul B. Lawson or Gilbert Ulmer. Mail Gifts Early And Carefully, Post Office Advises "Do your Christmas mailing early and carefully," is the advice of Bruce E. McKee, Lawrence post office clerk who is substituting for R. C. Abraham, superintendent of the University station, this week. "In spite of our warnings, people continue to send Christmas packages wrapped only in tissue paper," Mr. McKee said. "The wrapping station sponsored by the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce will be open about Dec. 10 and will offer its free service to students as well as townpeople." Decorative seals or "non-postage stamps" may not be used on the face of parcels to be sent overseas, but may be put elsewhere on the package, Mr. McKee explained. Army regulations now permit parcels not exceeding 11 pounds to be sent overseas. They may be 42 inches long, with a maximum of length and girth 72 inches. Navy regulations, with a five-pound limit, have not been changed. "We are handling lots of Christmas parcels already," Mr. McKee said. Frances Sheehan Suffers Bruises, No Broken Bones Mrs. Frances Sheehan, University employee injured yesterday when struck by a motorcycle at 14th street and Oread avenue was discharged from Watkins hospital yesterday afternoon after X-rays showed no broken bones. Because of severe bruises, Mrs. Sheehan will be unable to work for several weeks. Byrnes Names Diplomats Who Angered Hurley Washington. (UP)—Secretary of State James F. Byrnes declared today Patrick J. Hurley would have had the State department's complete backing if he had continued in his post as U.S. ambassador to China. Hurley resigned yesterday with the charge that career diplomats in the State department had sabotaged his attempt to unify now warring factions in China on a democratic basis. He did not then identify the diplomats he had in mind. It appeared a certainty that either the house or senate would investigate his charges. President Truman, meanwhile, conferred with Gen. George C. Marshall, former Army chief of staff, who will be his personal envoy to China. Marshall will succeed Hurley in China at least temporarily. Byrnes said the career diplomats whose activities displeased Hurley were George Atcheson and John Service. They subsequently were recalled from China and are now in Tokyo on the State department's advisory staff to Gen. Douglas MacArthur, Harry Lees Hangs Out Shingle Apartments for Rent to GIs Hurley charged that career diplomats undermined his efforts to bring the Chinese central and Communist elements together by giving aid and comfort to the Communists behind his back. Byrnes said Hurley objected to a report which Atcheson sent the department from Chungking while Hurley was in the United States on leave. In that report, Byrnes said, Atcheson outlined a plan to promote unity in China. Hurley found statements in it to which he objected on the basis of policy. Byrnes said. "There is no change in United States policy as to China," Byrnes said. "We are now implementing the terms of Japan's surrender. The United States troops now in China are there to disarm and to repatriate the Japanese armies in compliance to a promise made to the Japanese authorities last Aug. 16." On Candidate List If you can't rent a room, buy house! The name of Dorothy Savage, Alpha Delta Pi, was unintentionally omitted from the list of candidates for "Miss Student Union" in yesterday's Daily Kansan. Keeping one apartment for himself, he rents others to servicemen with children, and expects the house to pay for itself. This is the advice of Harry Lees, sophomore in the School of Fine Arts, who solved his housing problem by purchasing an eight-room house a month ago. "But I didn't," the former army lieutenant declared. "Being a landlord is too much fun." "When I couldn't get all the feathers off one wing of my Thanksgiving chicken, I just cut the wing off," he explained. ing curtains and drapes. In between times, he attends classes and practices trumpet, his major. After paying $3,000 for the building, he could have sold it for a $500-profit the next day. Lees, who is not married, takes housekeeping in his stride and thinks cooking is a snap. "I made some unusual cake icing," he remarked. "I didn't want to use any eggs, so found a recipe which said to melt a cup of granulated sugar until it was brown. The cake was large; so I dumped in another cup, then poured it over the cake." So far, he has not found the life of a landlord too complicated. He has been busy, however, installing channellets, building bookcases, conferring with a plumber, and buy- "Something must have happened," he added. "I couldn't dent that cake with my sharpest knife!" Lees, wanting to evict the mice from his closet, is in the market for a house-broken cat. Rogers Plays Tonight Rogers Plays ALLEN ROGERS The first senior recital this year will be given by Allen Rogers, pianist, at 8 p. m. tonight in Fraser theater. Mr. Rogers has been highest ranking student in his class each year. He has been awarded a Summerfield scholarship, a Mu Phi Epsilon scholarship, and the Pi Kappa Lambda proficiency award in music. Drama Series Begins Over KFKU Tonight The first episode of "Yankee Crusade," a radio series, written and produced by Prof. Allen Crafton, will be presented at 9:45 tonight over KFKU. Mrs. Frances Feist directs the production. Each episode will be complete, based on the historical struggles between the slave states and abolitionists. Transcriptions have been made for each broadcast. Members of the radio company are Margaret Gosney, Clinton Hurley, Chester Boyd, Jessica Crafton, and Jack Feist. Dick Schiefelbusch will play Dr. Charles Robinson, for whom Robinson gym was named, and Richard Johnson will play James Lane, the first Kansas senator. Gaston Will Head Freshman Lawyers T. Gra Gaston was elected president of the first year Law students today. Other officers elected were Carla Eddy, vice-president; Glee S. Smith, secretary-treasurer; and Richard D. Rogers, bailiff. Entomologists to Dallas Meeting Plans were made for a Law school party. Members decided to return to prewar customs and traditions within the school. Dr. John Frye, professor of geology is accompanying George S. Knapp, chief engineer of the division of water resources of the state board of agriculture, on an inspection tour of dam sites in northwestern Kansas this week. Dr. Ray H. Beamer, professor of entomology; Mrs. Beamer; Dr. Kathleen Deering, associate professor of entomology; and Dr. H. B. Hungerford, state entomologist, will attend a meeting of the American Association of Economic Entomologists in Dallas, Texas, next week. A three-inch naval gun which will be used in naval ordnance laboratory for instruction has been received by the navy unit here. Navy Receives Big Gun Frye on Dam Inspection Committee Fails to Mention Walkout Penalty No mention of punishment of leaders in the student walkout on Nov. 19, after the K-State football game was made at the student-faculty committee meeting held yesterday, Guy E. Ashcraft, All-Student Council representative, told the Council last night. The committee will meet again Wednesday night, but it is not definite what it will do." Ashcraft said. "The main motive of the committee is to keep such demonstrations from happening again." Members of the committee, organized on the invitation of Chancellor Deane W. Malott, are Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, F. J. Moreau, dean of the School of Law, and John G. Blocker, professor of accounting, from the University senate, and Ascraft, Marvin Thompson from the Student court, and Mary Morrill from the Kansan Board. The council voted to conduct a Christmas caroling trip to organized houses to raise funds for Danforth chapel. It also voted to put booths or places on the campus for members of unorganized houses to contribute to the chancel fund. Mary Margaret Gaynor, chairman of the public relations committee, will set the carolling date. The navy storeroom next to the fountain may be turned into a dancing room, Dolores Custer told the Cornell. She added that the Union operating committee suggested, cutting potholes in the wall to make the rooms seem closer to the fountain. Jane Peterson and Frank Davis, freshman representatives on the Council, were sworn in. Dixie Gilland, Helen Stark, Jean Templeton, Charles Hall, and Jean McNithre were absent. Naval Clothes Stolen During V-12's Chow Numerous articles of naval clothing recently have been reported missing, Capt. Chester A. Kunz, commanding officer of the University's naval unit, announced today. These items, especially peacocks and flat hats, usually disappear while navy students are at chew, Capt. Kunz said Students are subject to disciplinary action for any loss or damage to their clothing, which is government property merely loaned to the naval student. Navy trainees who lose such clothing may be penalized for this loss, Capt. Kunz continued, even though such loss is no fault of his Any unauthorized person vaulting or possessing naval clothing may be prosecuted for stealing government property or accepting stolen government property. Capt. Kunz added. Curry on National Pharmacy Committee Wayne Curry, pharmacy sophmore, has been named to the national executive committee of Kappa Psl. pharmaceutical fraternity. Two members are appointed each year from the 42 undergraduate chapters in the United States. WEATHER Kansas—Fair and mild. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 28,1945 University DAILY KANSAN Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Association, National Editorial Association, and the Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave, New York City. Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Law and School, Vol. II, Saturdays; school year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. II, 1910, at the Post Office at Kan., Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS STAFF ELEANOR ALBRIGHT Managing Editor VIRGINIA V ANORM Asst. Managing Ed. MARY MARGARET GAYNOR Makeup Editor PATRICIA PENNEY Traffic Editor BILLIE M. HAMILTON News Editor ICKY M. Assst. News Editor MARGARET WENSKI Sports Editor JANK ANDERSON Feature Editor CLEO NORRIIS Military Editor NNABWALD SAYLOR Research Editor NATE TENSION Assessment Editor JOY HOWLAN Copy Editor Assst. Telegraph Editors JOAN VEATCH DIXIE GILLIAND JOAN VEATCH DIXIE GULLIANA *Staff Assistants: BARBARA EWING JEAN MURRAY NEAL SHEHAN PAUL CONRAD EDITORIAL STAFF DOLores SULZMAN BRUNELLI LOYN ROBIN Editor-in-Chief Editorial Associates BUSINESS STAFF NANCY TOMLINSON ... Business Manager BETTY BEACH ... Advertising Manager Assistants: BOB BONKERNE, MARY BRANI- GAN, ANN REDING, ANNE CORET, SOLYLIA SMALL. ELEANOR THOMPSON. In Charge This Issue ... SYLVIA SMALL The Aggie Way Because they wanted it that way, K-State students had two days for Thanksgiving instead of one. Because they have an established holiday system, recognized and respected by students, faculty, and president, they have no problems confronting their school as a result of a student walkout. A holiday committee on the Kansas State student council, upon recommendation of the whole council, submits plans for movable holidays to the president of the college for his approval. The plan is submitted in writing at least four days before the proposed holiday. The council has power to declare two school days as holidays every year. The president believes in the students' good judgment and intelligence in authorizing them to choose the holidays. Still on a 16-week term basis, K-Staters were to get one day for Thanksgiving. Acting on the suggestion of students and campus groups, the council arranged to use one of the "blanket" holidays to lengthen the Thanksgiving vacation. This was decided early in the term. All students knew about it and accepted it. At the same time they agreed not to have a holiday after the KU game—even if they won. Had they decided to declare a victory holiday, their plan to the president would have read, "If we win from KU, . . ." A little orderly procedure and faculty-student cooperation seem to do a neater job than walkouts. (Editor's Note: Facts used were obtained from Dean Russell Thackrey, Kansas State college.) Letter From the Editor Every "Letter to the Editor" must me signed by the writer. The name will be withheld from publication upon request. If a letter is not published, it is placed in the editor's files and the writer receives an acknowledgment of its receipt by the editor. It is impossible to acknowledge or publish letters signed, "A Perturbed Student" or "63 percent of the Student Body." Because of limited space, letters to the editor must not exceed 250 words in length. Rock Chalk Talk Lost—one bag. If any of you see Mary Branigan walking forlornly along the campus with the look of the hunter in her eye you will know that she's looking for her lost overnight bag. Sunday night, Mary happily returned to dear old KU only to find herself packed into a taxi with a mere dozen joyful knowledge-seeking students. By ANNE In the course of their travels over the city it seems that Mary's little bag bounced right out of the taxi's trunk. As a result poor Mary and the taxi driver wandered over the hill Letters to the Editor Compliments to K.U. From K-State Dean SCOTT University Daily Kansan To the Editor To the Daily Kansan; This is to express my personal appreciation for the efforts of the University of Kansas students and staff to include the students and staff of Kansas State college in various phases of your Homecoming activities at Lawrence. The hospitality of the University was cordial and the homecoming program of events was capably planned and carried out. Of course, we here in Manhattan have some regrets as to the outcome of the football game, but I imagine they are not shared on your campus. Plans Should Be Made Now for Future, Senior Says Every time demonstrations similar to last week's walkout have occurred the primary thought of the University and the All-Student Council has been punishment as an aftermath. Why haven't these situations been anticipated? Why haven't working solutions been presented? Surely these failures in the past to unite the student body with the administration do not make a solution incorporating the desires of all factions impossible, illogical, or impractical with this student body. K-State has at least a working plan. Perhaps our student government can improve on that plan or use a similar one. But we cannot sacrifice its name nor the student body's good will simply because we do not have a better solution. Plans should be laid out that can be put into operation for any general spontaneous action. Enforcement accompanied by logical and sufficient penalties must be provided. Sincerely, Russell I. Thackrey, Dean of Administration A solution for the present problem should be worked out once and for all. William A. Andrews, College senior Spoon sandwich, big joke. Everything seems to have happened in the city, but the Phi Delts, not to be outdone, had a party. After the game, the boys and their dates traveled around from house to house eating all the left-over turkey. They finally ended up at Ralph (truth or consequences?) Edwards. and dale flashlight in hand hunting for the little lost bag. She hasn't found it yet, so if anybody finds a stray bag, just call Mary. It may have been a consequence or it may have been attempted murder—anyway, when Carl Clark bit down on his sandwich, he found a large sized spoon imbedded deeply within it. No one knows just how it got there, but Carl hasn't recovered yet. He even went to bed Monday night with the sparrows—at 9 p.m. Momnie, the circus is in town. During their jaunt to the city to play for the game, the band stopped at the Plaza. While director Wiley hunted around for a suitable eating place for his kidnes, Al Ritts dropped into a dime store to see his cousin who worked there. As Al stepped from the bus in his band uniform a little boy excitedly screamed, "Mommie, mommie! look at the clown!" Result—Al dashed back to the bus to don his Navy coat. Piming, but where? After the fine MU-KU game, Sally Krehbald, Tom Sinclair, Cathy Piller, and Todd Alkens adjourned to a nice KC spot to take in some local color. Suddenly the zipper of Sally's red suit skirt just refused to co-operate. Tom, rising to the occasion, offered his Phi Psi pin for assistance. So Sally saved the day by combining her Kappa key with the sigh boy's pin. Ah yes—pining, need we say more. Rumor of the week—It has been heard that Chancellor Malott has written a book entitled, "Mein Campus." 'Campus Problems' Is Speech Contest Topic "Preliminary Campus Problems, will be the subject of a speaking contest to be held at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Little Theater of Green hall. All students are eligible to enter." Speeches should be about four minutes long and may cover any phase of student and campus life, Prof. E. C. Buehler of the speech department said today. Eight of the speakers will be selected by the judges to participate in the finals on Dec. 5. The winner at that time will be awarded a trophy by the speech department. Judges will be Mrs. Frances Feist, Prof. Robert Calderwood, and Professor Buchler. Going Downtown? Call KU 25 with your news. Safe - Economical - Dependable RIDE THE BUS The Rapid Transit Your Local Bus Service OFFICIAL BULLETIN K. U. Dames meet at 7:30 tonight, Kansan room, Union. Program will be folk dancing—Alberta Cornwell, president. University of Kansas Nov. 28,1945 Mathematics club will meet at 4:30 p.m. Thursday in the home of Charlotte Price, 1209 Tennessee. June Montgomery will discuss the history and use of the abacus. Those desiring rides meet in the east end of Frank Strong hall. Interdorm council will meet at 4:30 p.m. Thursday at Watkins hall to discuss coke party to be held Dec. 4—June Peterson, president; Ina K. Roderick, secretary. 临床 Pre-nursing club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday at the Watkins nurses home. ★ ★ ★ Home Economics club will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday in Fraser hall. A motion picture will be shown—Eleanor Brown, president. The University Catholic club will have a discussion meeting from 7 to 8 tonight in room 416, Watson library.-Laura Schmid, president. The Forensic League will meet Thursday at 4:30 p.m. in the East Room of the Union Building.-Patsy Cree President, NEW at the LIBRARY American council on education "Division on Child Development and Teacher Personnel" "Helping Teachers to Understand Children Cadwallader, L. H. "Principles of Indexing and Filing" Goodenough, F. L. "The Mental Heyel, C. "The Foreman's Handbook" Kilpatrick, W. H. "Group Education for a Democracy" Lansing, M. F. "Calling South America" Mackie, T. T. "A Manual of Tropical Medicine" Pickard, M. E. "The Midwest Pioneer, His Iils, Cures, & Doctors" Scott, M. G. "Better Teaching Through Testing" Steiner, L. R. "Where Do People Take Their Troubles?" Snyth, H. D. "Atomic Energy for Military Purposes" Stewart, J. Q. "Coasts, Waves and Weather, for Navigators" Woodward, W. E., "Tom Paine: "America's Godfather." "Patent Law and Practice" by Leon H. Amdur. "A Constructive Patent Law" by Willis B. Rice. "Digest of Canadian Cases" by H. G. Fox. "Digest of English Cases" by H. G. Fox. "Treatise of Law of Patents" by Risdale Ellis. Museum to Report On Its Coptic Textiles Spooner-Thayer museum has been asked to send in a census of Coptic textiles to Dumbarton Oaks which is affiliated with Fogg Museum of Art at Harvard university, Mrs Mary Margaret Warner, museum curator, said today. The museum has a collection of about 35 pieces, she added. The museum's textile tapestry weavings were taken from Coptic graves in Egypt and date from the third to the seventh century A.D. WANT ADS NOTICE—Photographs tinted for Christmas. Reasonable prices. Experience. Call 507. Pat Allen. FOUND—A key on chain. Owner may have same by identifying and paying for this ad at the Kansan office. NOTICE—Exchanged by error—tan gaberdine topcoat at Union Fountain, Nov. 21. Please call E. M. Jones, 1914. LOST—Keys on a chain Thursday. If found call 1782. Jacue Ogan. FOUND—White pearls, owner may have same by identifying and paying for this ad at the Kansan office. LOST—Green purse containing pen, bus book, and compact. If found return to Kansan office. Reward. LOST—On field no. 3 of Intramural field, brown fingertip coat containing valuable articles. Reward if found. Call Frank O'Connell 366. LOST—Tan leather suitcase initialed M.E.O., between 7:30 and 8:00 Sunday evening at Union Pacific depot or somewhere on the Hill. Cal 1619 R, Mary Branigan. Reward. LOST — Walthman wrist watch, gold dial, silver case. Lost Friday night in downtown Lawrence. Call Lynn Chase 3386 Reward. For That Coke Date Remember ELDRIDGE PHARMACY Phone 999 701 Mass. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. Phone 425 HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Garage and Cab Co. 922 Mass. Phone 12 What about Christmas? Have you ordered those presents from your Balfour man yet? Do it now. SORORITY and FRATERNITY JEWELRY Balfour Company NOVEMBER 28,1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE 40 SOCIALLY SPEAKING Becky Vallette. Kansan Society Editor Catching up on themes, notebooks, and daily assignments evidently has kept most houses from having the usual dinner guests and pinnings since vacation. Another more likely reason is that students are too busy planning pre-Christmas parties, or that they're still recuperating from a "restful" vacation. ** Sigma Nu. Pledges Fowler Sigma Nu has announced the pledging of William Fowler, Iola. He is a freshman in the School of Engineering. --the sorority colors; its flower, the white carnation. The national magazine is called the Eleusis. Mayfield To Be Married Mr. and Mrs. O. B. Mayfield, Hutchinson, have announced the approaching marriage of their daughter, Sidney Lee, to Marcus Hahn, son of Mrs. Nora Hahn. The wedding will take place at the First Presbyterian church, Hutchinson, Dec. 23. A senior in the School of Fine Arts, Miss Mayfield is majoring in public school music. She is a member of Alpha Omicron Pi sorority. Hahn recently was discharged from the navy. As a lieutenant, he had been stationed for duty in the South Pacific. Orville Roper Married Mrs. Frank E. Heaton, Pittsburg, has announced the engagement of her daughter, Sammy Lou, to Orville Edward Roper, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Roper, San Diego, Calif Roper is a N.R.O.T.C. trainee. An engineering sophomore, he came to the University in July. Miss Heaton was graduated in June from the Pittsburg State Teachers college. Brain Teams' to Battle At Chem Club Meet Faculty members and students will mentally maul each other in the "Big Battle of Brains" quiz program at the Chemistry club meeting at 4:30 p. m. Thursday in room 305 Bailey chemical laboratories. Quiz Master, Alberta Cornwell, College Junior, will fire questions at the two competing teams. There is to be no limit on the subjects covered by the questions. Judges Jean Mansur, Robert Hammer, and Mrs. Frances Clancy will keep proceedings on the up and up and will award a prize to the winning team. On the faculty team (and on the spot) will be Dr. R. Q. Brewster, Dr. G. W. Stretton, Dr. A.W. Davidson, Dr. Harry Sisler, Dr. Calvin VanderWerf, Leo Lemmerman, and Frank Jirik. On the student team will be Leslie, Boatright, Russell Bridwell, Jack Fellman, John Cory, Earl Barney, Carol Wineinger, and William Schechter. Aptitude Tests Available High school-college aptitude tests are now available for all high school seniors in Kansas, Dr. A. H. Turney, head of the Guidance Bureau, said today. He estimated that 10,000 to 20,000 students will take these tests. MUSIC NOVELTIES Powder Boxes Pianos Cigarette Chests Roberts Jewelry and Gifts Chi O's Have Been At K.U. Since 1902 ALEXANDRA MAYER LOUISE HATCH *** This is another in a series of articles by the Daily Kansan to acquaint the campus with the various organized houses, their members, officers, and histories. *** Thirty thousand women have become members of Chi Omega, and 98 chapters have been formed since the founding of that sorority at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, in 1895. Lambda chapter was founded in 1902. The first house was located on Indiana street, the present chapter house, 1345 West campus, was built in 1925. Journalism is a popular major with the Chi Omega's who are active in work on the Jayhawker, the Student directory, and the Daily Kansan. Last year two members were chosen for Phi Bka Kappa and one was elected to Mortar Board. For the last two years they have placed second in intramurals. Chapter officers are Louise Hatch president; Barbara Barcrow, vicepresident; Marjorie Kern, secretary; and Marjorie Pollock, treasurer. Their pin is a monogram with a jeweled X. Cardinal and straw are "Small Town," a painting by Karl Mattern, associate professor of drawing and painting, has been chosen for exhibition in the second annual "Portrait of America" competition, being held in New York. Mattern's Painting Chosen for Exhibition ON KFKU 9:30 p.m. Music. 9:45 p.m. Yankee Crusade, dramatized history of Kansas. Today Tomorrow 2:30 p.m. Book review program, "The Missouri" by Stanley Vestal and "The Rivers of the Eastern Shore" by Footner. They will be reviewed by Clyde K. Hyder. 2:45 p.m. Spanish lesson. 9:30 p.m. K.U. Vespers, Dr. Theodore Aszman, speaker. Governor to Speak on KFKU Gov. Andrew F. Schoepel will be interviewed at 9:30 p.m. Wednesday over KFKU during the first of a series of weekly programs "Look to Kansas," Miss Mildred Seaman, program director, announced today. Mrs. Edith Martin has been the housemother for 16 years. Other members of the active chapter include Jeanne Louise Atkinson, Patricia Belt, Alice Louise Brown, Patricia Coolidge, Shirley Crawford, Rose Nell Curtis, Betty Duemke, Meredith Gear, Dixie Gilliland, Bennie Jean Holden, Sara Houck. Janice Jones, Jean Ketzler, Virginia Larsen, Anna Jane LaShelle, Joyce Mahin, Madelon McClure, Martha Mitchell, Barbara Moffett, Betty Lu Nichols, Margaret O'Neil, Marjorie Peet, Alice Rose Shanklaw, Betty Smith, Barbara Smith, Marilyn Sweeney, Janet Taylor, Dorothea Thomas, and Anne Young. Members of the pledge class are Ann Alexander, Patricia Barron, Constance Cloughley, Patricia Cook, Mary Carolyn Daugherty, Jane Elbate, Jane Ferrell, Jo Anne Jacobs, Jo Anne Larson, Marilyn McClure, Patricia Riezle. Irislee Shull, Marilyn Steinert, Patricia Ann Strang, Mary Wilson, Dorothy Moffett, Patricia Pearson, and Regina McGeorge. MARINE CORPS Duplicate photographs can be made from any negatives in our files in time for Christmas! Hixon Studio Phone 41 AT THE HOSPITAL 721 Mass. Admissions Franklin Papin, PT 8. Carl Lewton, 1006 Mississippi. Eleanor Thompson, 1246 Mississippi. John W. Kendrick, PT 6. Gerald Hall, 1127 Ohio. Oliver Dexter, 1130 Kentucky. Harold Hinchee, PT 8. Elvern Rose, 1318 Louisiana. Raymond Vonasek, PT 9. Chester Lewis, Jr., 732 Connecti- Paul Conrad, 1602 Louisiana. James Jackson, Battenfeld hall. John H. Thompson, Jr., 161 Lincoln. Caryl Dyer, 1200 Louisiana. Nolene Stump, Miller Hall Dismissals Paul O'Brien, 1245 West Campus. Laura Templeton, Locksley Hall. Vincent McCabe, 1439 Tennessee. The first public school in Kansas was established in 1844 in Kansas City. Appointment Bureau Places Pence, Beck, Earger, Hemphill Four teachers have been placed by the teachers' appointment bureau, H. E. Chandler, associate professor of education, said today. Don P. Pence, M. A. 1942, will instruct in music at the State Teachers' College in Dickinson, N. D. Leroi Beck, M. A. 1940, is a science teacher at the Community high school in Oberlin, Kan Gustave Earger, M. A. 1939, is teaching chemistry in the high school at Appleton, Wis. Orval E. Hemphill is a psychometrist with the Veterans' Administration in Kansas City, Mo. Guidance Librar to Open Students not enrolled in the guidance course may use the library, he said. The occupational information library which the Bureau of Vocational Guidance has been collecting since July will be open to all students about Dec. 15, Dr. A. H. Turney, director, announced today. Christmas Cheer No. 1-'Lounging Socks' All wool knit tops, soft cushion leather soles— warm, comfortable, for Dad, Mom, Sis, or Brother. 4 COLORS— "A Real Useful Gift" Arrow Superior Ties - $1.50 Arrow Neckties - $1 Botany Wool Ties - $1 Phoenix Knit Ties - $1.50 CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES $2.95 0 just one drop on each of your White Shoulders PARFUM BY Eryan ...and you'll find yourself enveloped completely in a new experience ... and one that may require skillful handling. Parfum $2.50 $5.00 Cologne $2.75 $5.00 $8.50 Plus Federal Tax COSMETIC DEPT. PHONE 636 Weaver's 901 MASS. PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 28,1945 Shenk to Stay United Press Writer Declares By JIM GRIEVES United Press Sports Writer Kansas City, Mo. (UP)—Henry Shenk will be back at the University of Kansas next year, but before another grid season roils around, there will be four major football coaching changes in the Big Six conference. Don Faurot returns to the helm at Missouri, Lt. Hobbs Adams returns from the service to take over at Kansas State college, while Oklahoma and Nebraska are both in the market for head coaches. Dewey "Snorter" Luster, who compiled one of the finest coaching records at Oklahoma in Sooner football history, announced his retirement because of ill health. (The United Press dispatch did not indicate specifically that Shenk would be back as head football coach, his present position. He also is an assistant professor on the physical education department staff.) Lud Fiser graduated from the high school ranks to return to his alma mater, Kansas State college, as head coach this season. Fiser will be retained in a coaching capacity at K-State under Adams. George "Potisy" Clark, veteran college and pro mentor, signed only a one-year contract to pilot the Nebraska Cornhuskers and told university athletic authorities that he wouldn't be available for next year. The Cornhuskers developed rapidly under Clark, winning their final four games. Mike Michalske will be back at Iowa State to complete the coaching picture. Jack, Venable, keg-legged Oklahoma fallback, won the individual Big Six scoring honors, crossing the double-chalked marker six times for a total of 38 points. Loyd Brinkman, Missouri's outstanding freshman back, finished second to Venable with 38 points. The league produced several outstading freshmen candidates this season. These included Brinkman of Missouri, Bob Bodenhamer of Oklahoma, Mack Robinson of Nebraska, Ted Grimes of Kansas State, George Gear and Dick Bertuzzi of Kansas. Pound for pound—all 295 of them —Jumbo Jim Kekeris was rated the league's best all-around lineman, with second place honors being divided among Jim Riding of Iowa State, Russell Hardin of Kansas State, Dave Schmidt of Kansas, and Tommy "The Chief" Tallchief of Oklahoma. Kekeris was amazingly fast and agile for a big man and he loved to play when the going was the roughest—sometimes being a little too rough. Conference members fared poorly in extra-curricular games outside the Big Six border, Nebraska defeated Iowa's Hawkeyes of the Western conference 13-6, Missouri sweated out a 10-7 victory over Southern Methodist of the Southwestern conference on the strength of Kelkers' into game field goal, and Kansas earned a 29-19 thriller over Denver university. Aside from those three wins, conference elevends dropped all the rest of their 15 intersectional matches this season. Missouri's league titlists dropped one-sided games to Minnesota and Ohio State and a 14-7 defeat to Michigan State to eliminate them from any possible bowl consideration. Parrots in the forests of Mexico are valued for food, and in New Caledonia roast spiders are a favorite dish. Activity Books Admit To First Cage Games Orders for reserved basketball tickets will be accepted next week in the athletic office, E. C. Falkenstien, athletic financial secretary, announced today. Students will be admitted to the first three basketball games with activity books, but must purchase a basketball season ticket at the student rate for the conference games, he said. V-12's Football Team Second in Division The intramural football battle drew into its final round yesterday as the smaller teams fought it for for cellar positions in their leagues. In Division II the game of the day was the V-12's defeat over Sigma Chi for second position. Though the Sig's tried hard to get their smooth pass plays to click they were held down by the Navy aerial defense and strong offensive. In the latter part of the second quarter the V-12's star end, Dodd ran over the goal to chalk up the first score of the game. The Sigma Chi's tried hard to rally in the second half, but were unable to do so. In the fourth quarter Blanton for the Navy ran wild around the Sigma Chi team and made the final touchdown of the game. Rounding out the scores in Division II, the powerhouse Phi Gam team made certain of their division championship by trumping the Delt's 42-6. Kappa Sig won over Kappa Alph Psi by default. In Division I the Sig Alph's walked over the DU's by a margin of 24 to 0. Battenfield Hall was beaten by a heavier Sigma Nu team by a score of 12-0. Lytle and Petesch scored for Sigma Nu. The Phi Delt's won over Carruth Hall by design. Davis to Preside At Football Banquet W. W. Davis, professor of history, will be toastmaster at the annual football banquet at 6:30 tonight in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union. Coaches and guests will be introduced by E. C. Quigley, athletic director. Coach Henry Shenk will introduce the football team and the 1945 football captain. Chancellor Deane W. Malott and Gov. Andrew Schoeppel will be guest speakers. AAUW Group Meets Tonight The book review group of the recent graduates of the American Association of University Women meets at 8 tonight at the home of Miss Jean Stouffer, 1019 Maine street. Miss Mary Louise McNown will give a book review. 2 Hilarious Hits JUDY CANOVA JOE E. BROWN VARSITY TODAY ENDS THURSDAY "JOAN OF OZARK" and WEAVER BROS. and ELVIRY "In Old Missouri" FRIDAY and SATURDAY WILD BILL ELLIOTT "Marshal of Laredo" and "My Name Is Julia Ross" How Odd We'll All Look In the Year 2,000,000 By Marian Thomson Daily Kansan Staff Writer The year was 2000,000. The hoary Jayhawk, who had been touring the solar system in his atomic rocket ship since the year 2000, swooped down over Mt. Oread to inspect the current crop of K.U. students. He perched on Uncle Jimmy Green's shoulder, just as the 12:20 whistle blew. The door of Green hall opened. Surely those old creatures swarming the sidewalks were not K.U. students. "Hubba hubba, what's that?" the old bird squawked, almost toppling from his post. "Look at 'em," the Jayhawk whispered to uncle Jimmy. "Where's their hair? Those shining tops look like volleyballs. And what about their fingers? Their hands look like baseball bats!" "Maybe they have turned Green hall into a zoo, and these aren't really humans," he consoleed himself. He hopped down to Robinsor gymnasium. "Where is the basketball team practicing?" he asked a green-capped freshman, who was doing pushups. "Basketball?" The freshman then serached his oversized bald head. "Oh yes, that's the game we studied in ancient history. They had to give it up when everyone went blind, a couple of thousand years ago. The encyclopedia said K.U.'s team wasn't bad." "You might even say we were sort of good," the bird muttered as he hopped on down the campus. "I remember talking to a K.U. professor, back in 1945," the Jayhawk remarked to himself. "When I asked him how much farther evolution would go, he said this very thing might happen. He told me, 'We're losing our hair, our fingers, our toes, our ears, and our eyes. Look how many more persons wear glasses than did in pioneer days. We wear out our eyes reading at night instead of looking across the prairies for Indians.'" The Jayhawk went on to cross the campus. "The professor and I talked about whether the soft life of the 20th century would eventually destroy the civilized human race. We decided that vitamins and complex scientific care would keep them going, maybe even making them bigger and better." A monkey ran across the Jayhawk's path. "I'm, a throwback," observed the bird. With this, he climbed back into his rocket ship and headed for the moon. NOW ALL WEEK Radio's Riot Show Even Greater on the Screen! at the Jayhawker ED GARDNER'S DUFFY'STAVERN Here Are 8 of the 32 Top Stars: BING CROSBY - BETTY HUTTON - ALAN LADD DOT. LAMOUR - EDDIE BRACKEN - SONNY TUFTS VERONICA LAKE - PAULETTE GODDARD It's Not WHAT They Do... It's The WAY They Do It! that makes this a matchless musical story! THE DOLLY SISTERS Technicolor! SAMUELLE BETTY GRABLE JOHN PAYNE JUNE HAVER SUNDAY UNDAY ALL WEEK Obtain Free Bond Award Tickets Now for $109.50 Console Radio Given Free Thursday, Dec. 20th CHEMISTRY Navy Men Eligible For Campus Activities All Naval R.O.T.C. and V-12 students may participate in any University extra-curricular activity, Capt. Chester A. Kunz, naval commanding officer, announced today. Naval students may be excused from study hours for participation in such activities to a reasonable extent by submitting their requests in advance, he continued. N. R.O.T.C. and V-12 students, all University students are eligible for participation in any University function while they are not on probation or restricted for academic or disciplinary reasons, Capt. Kunz said. Play in Recital Margaret Hankins, Marilyn Barr, Ralph Conner, Imogen Billings, and Gorjia Weinrich will play in the regular Thursday afternoon recital tomorrow in Frank Strong auditorium at 3:30 p.m. Sentenced to death in London in 1478, George, Duke of Clarence, was executed by being drowned in wine. GRANADA NOW ENDS THURSDAY Most Exciting Screen Shock of the Year ALICE FAYE DANA ANDREWS LINDA DARNELL FALLEN ANGEL A 20th CENTURY-FOX PICTURE MARY JONES ALICE FAYE DANA ANDREWS LINDA DARNELL FALLEN ANGEL And COLOR CARTOON - NEWS FRIDAY AND SATURDAY with VIRGINIA BRUCE EDWARD ASHLEY VICTOR McLAGLEN - Special Short Hit FRANK SINATRA Mad, Merry Marital Mix-up! "LOVE, HONOR AND GOODBYE" "The House I Live In" And Sports - Now SAT. OWL - SUNDAY CRITICS PREDICT ANOTHER ACADEMY AWARD . . . JENNIFER JONES JOSEPH COTTON "LOVE LETTERS" University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Thursday, Nov. 29, 1945 43rd Year No. 45 Lawrence Kansas Lawrence, Kansas News... of the World U.S. Wants Change In Potsdam Pledge Washington. (UP)—President Truman announced today that this government has taken steps to revise the Potsdam declaration with a view to remedying difficulties in the four-power control of Germany. The veto situation on the four-power control commission, the president said, is one of the things being discussed by this government in its efforts to have at least some portions of the Potsdam declaration changed. Chungking. (UP)—Lt. Gen. Albert C. Wedemeyer, commander of U.S. forces in China, said today he had ignored Chinese Communist Gen. Chu Teh's formal protest against American intervention in the civil war because his instructions directed him to deal only with the Chinese central government. Strikers Ask Truman For G.M. Hearing Detroit. (UP)—Striking members of the United Automobile Workers union (CIO) today appealed directly to President Truman for intervention in the paralyzing General Motor shutdown, asking that he bring General Motors officials into immediate negotiations over the union's demand for a 30 per cent pay increase. Washington. (UP)—President Truan said today that Gen. George C. Marshall will be given specific, published instructions before he leaves for Chungking as temporary diplomatic successor to Patrick J. Hurley. Batavia. (UP)—The British announced officially today that Soerabaja has been occupied completely and that fighting in Java appeared to be confined to interior regions and the western part of the island. Control A-Bombs Or Else, Urey Says Washington. (UP)—A leading atom-bomb expert, Dr Harold C. Urey, University of Chicago professor, told congress today that failure to control atomic weapons would lead to a world in which "every ripple on the international scene will make us vonder whether the atomic bombs may arrive before morning." Was! on. (UP)—A preview of passeng' light to Paris next Monday, marking the debut of the 300-mile an hour Lockheed Constellation as a luxury liner of the skyways, was announced today by transcontinental and Western Air. London. (UP)—An Iranian embassy spokesman said today that Russia has refused formally to permit Iranian government troops to move against the rebels in Soviet-held northern Iran. Cambridge. (UP)—The allies not only had the drop on the Axis in the development of radar but were able to develop counter-radar techniques that had Germans and Japanese dizzy in the closing months of the war, it was disclosed today. Nuernberg, (UP)—Germany was preparing for a two-iron war in Europe as far back as 1937 and thought Russia poorly prepared to enter the conflict, a secret Nazi war ministry document disclosed today in the war crimes trial here today. Three Staff Members Present Bacteriology Papers Three members of the bacteriology staff will present papers at meetings of the Missouri valley branch of the Society of American Bacteriologists Friday and Saturday in Topeka. They are Prof. Noble P. Sherwood, society president, and Mrs. Barbara Russell, and Daniel J. Tenmenberg, instructors. Student Calendar On Sale Tuesday The 1946 Student Calendar, a 40- page souvenir desk unit, will go on on sale on the campus and in downtown goes Tuesday. Dixie Gilland, is editor and Marjorie Pollock, fine arts senior, made the cover design, which is a drawing of the stained glass window to be in Danforth chapel, with the University seal. Julia Fields drew the future home of the William Allen White School of Journalism; Sue Burton, the Watkins Memorial Hospital; Marjorie Benske, the new Lindley Hall; Peggy Sanderson, the proposed memorial drive; and Patricia Williams, Robinson gymnasium. The illustration of campus scenes were done in grease pencil on coquille paper by students in Miss Helen Skilton's first year commercial art techniques class. Santa Claus Pretties Massachusetts Street Massachusetts street is dressed up for Christmas-the first time since 1941. At the intersections decorated by the Chamber of Commerce are cross streamers of evergreen and colored lights, with large wooden stars and red and silver bellies attached. On the light poles are large steel stars, with evergreen trees and lights. Business places complete the theme with window decorations of Santa, toys, lights, and Christmas scenes. Lt. Carl C. Perkins, '43, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. Perkins of 1510 Massachusetts street, has been released from active duty with the umy air force. It's the opposition of the French that makes a centralized government so hard to obtain in Germany, United Press analyst Louis Keemle says. Page 2. Some K.U. students are going from cradle to college to cradle again. The explanation's on Page 3. What's going on in your home town? Here's the answer, in a new Daily Kansan feature. Page 4. ON THE INSIDE "On the Fenski" bothers Meg Wenski, but, she asks, what else can a person do with such a Russian background? Page 6. Les Bricenthal went through Paris, but he didn't see much of it. Nazi prisoners usually didn't. Pause. 5. If that cable from General Marshall only had reached Pearl Harbor in time . . . One of the war's greatest "could-have-been" stories. Page 7. Kansan Spokesman Only Representative to Uphold Right of Student Government to Settle the Walkout Soldier-Dean Returns To Education Post Lt. Col. George Baxter Smith, dean of the School of Education on leave of absence since August, 1942 returned Sunday from Europe where he has been serving in the army for the past year, the Daily Kansan learned today. GEORGE BAXTER SMITH POLICE INVESTIGATION UNION Col. Smith is now at Camp Chaffee, Ark, awaiting his discharge, after which he will resume his duties at the University. Dr. J. W. Twente has been serving as dean on an interim appointment during Col. Smith's absence. Col. Smith has served in Belgium, France, and Germany. His last assignment was at the army school at Shrivenham, England. Dr. Costonguay Leads True Friendship Discussion Dr. Thomas Castonguay, associate professor of chemical engineering, lead the University Catholic club in a discussion on true friendship last night in room 416. Watson library. The Catholic club, sponsored by the Newman club, a national Catholic organization, is open to all persons interested in the series of discussions on friendship. The student-faculty committee will handle the punishment of students involved in the football walkout of Nov.19, its members decided in a five-to-one commitment last night. From reports on the progress of the student-faculty walkout committee, it looks as though this group is laying the foundation for an all-time high in anti-administration feeling. An Editorial It's Not Too Late Instead of recognizing the basic issue that of student-administration antagonism the committee is blundering ahead to widen the rift between the two factions as other administrative groups have widened it in the past. The immediate question of "punishment" seems to be blinding committee members to the opportunity which the situation offers for reconciling the students and the administration. It is not too late to set up a plan that will avoid similar occurrences. When such a plan has been established, it is important that its effectiveness has not been impaired by unpopular punitive measures imposed at the suggestion of administrative leaders. Reporting to the Kansan Board which she represents on the committee, Mary Morrill said this afternoon that she was the only member remaining in favor of the recommendation that By turning the situation over so the All-Student Council and Student Court, the administration will find it has gained far more discipline through student cooperation and good will than it could have obtained through penalizing student offenders. If Your GI Is in Tokyo, Don't Keep Asking When He's Coming Home By such action the administration would hand a challenge to student government worthy of the highest efforts and integrity of every student at the Universitp of Kansas. WEATHER Kansas — Clear to partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow. Slightly warmer extreme east tonight. Low tonight 25-30, slightly warmer tomorrow eastern third of state. "It is only natural that people back in the States should want to know when their husbands, sweet-hearts and sons are coming home," he said. "However, they must realize that occupation troops are necessary and that low-point men will be on duty in occupation zones for some time. "A constant stream of letters is good for a soldier's mental hygiene —unless those letters keep hounding him about coming home. People in America can help these boys Tokyo. (UP)—“If your soldier is serving with occupation troops overseas, don't keep him upset and unhappy by constantly asking him when he is coming home.” This is the advise of Lt. Col. Henry A. Dotton, executive officers in the office of the chief surgeon, Tokyo. Col. Cotton said low-point service-time to think about going home and men are going to have plenty of that letters that keep this question in their minds will only make their jobs tougher. complete their task by avoiding subjects that will create mental turmoil." He said that the men will have their regular duties to perform and also will have extensive training. In addition, the Army plans to keep the boys busy by instituting extensive recreational programs. In this way the Army hopes to reduce the boredom of occupational life. Col. Cotton said the army is not only looking after the mental health of troops here but is taking every precaution to protect the men against diseases found in the Orient. He is confident that the army can lick physical ills but says the people at home must help with mental problems. "The people must realize the need for keeping occupational troops in foreign countries and must do their part to make the job easier for the boys," he said. "Low-point soldiers are needed now to serve their country. We must win the peace and we must have these troops here to do it." the All-Student Council and the student court be allowed to handle the situation. Three students, two accused of organizing the walk out through telephone calls the Sunday night after the K-State game, and one representing the band members who participated in the demonstration, were interviewed by the committee. The students accused of telephoning testified they had been informed of walkout plans themselves through anonymous calls. Both said they had no clue as to the origin of the demonstration. The band representative testified that musicians took their instruments from Hoch auditorium when called upon to do so by the rallying crowd. He said the members played as a group only about 30 minutes. Punishment for walkout offenders was not formally discussed during the committee meeting, but Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, suggested that participating hand members be put on probation from the band for a semester and also that the parents of students who drove cars in the demonstration be requested to deprive their children of automobiles for a time. All the names of participating band members have been obtained, Dean Werner said. The committee also has the names of additional telephone callers and leaders and the license numbers of all cars thought to have been used in the walkout. State license bureaus in Topeka and Jefferson City, Mo. have been consulted for identification of the owners of these vehicles. Dean Werner expressed his belief that if the student-faculty committee didn't take some definite step toward punishing student offenders, the faculty senate will act at its meeting Tuesday. In the presence of two of the students called before the committee for hearings, Dean Werner said he wanted to make it clear that Chancellor Deane W. Malot has acted in "absolute fairness" to the students throughout his handling of the walk-out problem. The Chancellor did not attend the meeting. "Chancellor Malott had the idea of calling students in to confer with the faculty on the matter of a settlement," Dean Werner said. "He abonald his first idea of naming the students himself after meeting with three members of the All-Student Council, including Mary Jo Cox, president. They helped to decide what organizations should send representatives." The committee will meet again at 7 p.m. tomorrow. Art Museum Bulletin Ready for Distribution The first issue of the University Museum of Arts news bulletin is now available at the museum office. The November issue contains eight pages of news and articles on special exhibitions featured by the museum during the month. Copies are distributed at the office of Thayer museum or mailed on request. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE TWO NOVEMBER 29,1945 University DAILY KANSAN University Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Association, National Editorial Association, and the Representative by the National Advertising Service, 42 Madison Ave. New York City. Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in the school year except during the school year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second class September, 19, 1910, at the Peterson Lawrence, Kan., under for March 3, 1879. ELEANOR ALBRIGHT Managing Editor VIRGINIA VAN ORDER Asst. Managing Edi MARIA MARGARET GAYNOR Makeup Editor BRIAN HALLMAN Tattoo Editor PATICIA PUNNEY News Editor BILLIE M. HAMILTON Asst. News Editor JACK WILSON Sports Editor MANGARET WINSKI Feature Editor JANE ANDERSON Feature Editor CLEO NOBREI Military Editor MARYLAND YANSON Assistant Editor MANRIAN THOMSON Asst. Feature Editor JOY HOWLAND Copy Editor NEWS STAFF JOAN VEATCH DIXIE GILLILANI Staff Assistants BARRAMA EWING NEAL SHEEIAN PAUL CONRAID EDITORIAL STAFF DOLGERS SUZMAN ... Editor-in-Chief MARSH MOURDL ... Editorial Associates BUSINESS STAFF NANCY TOMILION ... Business Manager BETTY BECK ... Advertising Manager ASSISTANTS: BOB BONKEARE, MARY BRANI- GAN, ANA RINDING, ANNE CREE, SOLLYM SMALL. ELEANOR THOMPSON. In Charge This Issue. ANNE SCOTT Behind It All Sharing top billing with industrial disputes on the current national scene is the Pearl Harbor inquiry, supposedly designed to place responsibility for the American errors contributing to the disaster. It is obvious today that the investigation is being influenced from many angles by powerful interests, who seek not to reveal the truth but to create such public impressions of the Pearl Harbor debacle as will further their own selfish policies. The emergence of a factional political trial such a public examination as the Pearl Harbor inquiry is not surprising, but it is necessary that the public be aware of the possible surface effects of this situation and evaluate them carefully. Apparently, the proceedings in Washington are developing on two levels—that involving the apportioning of actual blame, and the plane of inquiry on which the very basis and intent of our war with Japan is being questioned. It is on this latter level that the more dangerous implications of misleading information should be recognized. Irresponsible minorities in the U.S. press, plus Republican and Democratic lobbies primarily set upon inflicting damage to each other through the investigation, have rendered impartial fact-finding difficult. An undercurrent of emotion being stimulated by these prejudices has played its part in the growing disillusionment. So the drama in Washington is rapidly losing sight of its established purpose through the adverse actions of certain parties, intent upon laying the blame where it will promote their own interests or goading the American people into assuming that their participation in the war was a mistake. Americans desiring the unabridged truth must keep in mind these difficulties now blocking complete revelation of the facts behind Pearl Harbor.-F.F. Last year a K.U. professor said that college was characterized by fraternities, football, and funny papers. Within six years the University of Chicago, more heaped on education than college, has banned football and fraternities. Funny papers haven't given much trouble. A survey of the bottoms of the theater seats indicates that the chewing gum shortage is over. Letters to the Editor Scenic Drive—'Beautiful But Not Practical' University Daily Kansan To the Editor: The beauty of the proposed memorial drive probably shouldn't be questioned; but, on the face of it, the practicality of the plan should be examined carefully. Pike's peak would look nice between Lawrence and Topeka—and it would make a nice memorial; but it is impractical to move Pike's peak. The memorial drive might add beauty to the campus—and it would probably be all right as a memorial; but it doesn't add to the physical teaching facilities of the University. In the first place, the present buildings of the University are not architecturally designed to be approached from the hind side. In the second place, the present drive serves its purpose well—furnishing a quick and easily accessible approach to every building. In the third place, the apparent cost of the memorial drive makes it a luxury that the University can ill afford at this time. There are many other necessities that are now needed, expenditures for luxuries seem like sheer foolishness. Wouldn't a new chemistry building or physics building be a wiser investment of the memorial fund? Is it fair to tomorrow's scientists to train them in 1900-model laboratories, while a few aesthetic-minded individuals gaze at the alley-side of the buildings from a paved road? A friend of the University University Daily Kansan Dear Editor: Why Not a Bowl Game At K.U., Student Asks With sports followers and scribes bickering all over the state as to which high school team is tops, what better way could this argument be decided than to have a play-off or post-season game in the fine University of Kansas stadium? It would definitely be a paying proposition. This game would be an incentive to every team in the state to give its very all in the season play. This type of game would also end the habitual post-season arguments and would aid sports officials in getting a line on all-state team selections. Such a post-season game would introduce many of the state's best athletes to the sports layout here on Mount Oread. They would get an actual chance to test the firm footing of the K.U. gridiron. Besides the athletes themselves, other prospective students would be present on the campus. The Buildings and Grounds commission is repairing the ceiling of the women's lounge in the Union. Water from steam tables in the ballroom soaked the ceiling and caused the plaster to fall Thanksgiving day. In other words, this attraction could be a colossal promotion idea for K.U. and Kansas athletes' in general. Texas has such a playoff. Maybe such a sports extravaganza would have the effect of putting Kansas football at the top of the heap with Texas—R.R.M. A specimen of the cotton rat believed to be in the most northerly range of its habitat was trapped near Muscotah by Dr. A. B. Leonard, associate professor of zoology, and his students, last week. The two-day field trip to the marsh was made primarily to study mice called microtines. Dr. Leonard, Students, Trap North-Bound Cotton Rat Repair Women's Lounge Everett W. Jameson, Jr., and Henry W. Setzer, graduate students, worked with Dr. Leonard. One-third of all the people in Ulster live in Belfast. Rock Chalk Talk Rock WHATTA GAME, WHATTA GAME During the friendly encounter which we had with Missouri over the weekend, Alberta Cornwell was giving orders to Joan Woodward about the next cheer. "Let's yell Fight Team Fight, Woody," she said. She was soon helped out with the cheer by an old grad who was high in school spirit-or just high. He leaped to his feet and yelled, "Fight team fight Woody, Fight team fight Woody." By KEITH WILSON It was a little bit crowded where we were sitting. Every time the lady next to us took a deep breath, three people fell off the end of the bleachers. The traffic was thick after the game, too. We heard one man wall after driving home. "Anybody want to buy a tall, thin Buick?" Later that night most of MUJ gathered in the Plaza Royale. The thing that we enjoy about football games is that they are so friendly and conducive to good sportsmanship. As we left the stadium we overheard this conversation: Are you from Missouri? No, a horse stepped in my face. 3. If the occupation zones are to be merged and Germany placed under a central administration, there must be clearly-defined limits beyond which the central authority shall not extend. France therefore is sticking by three main demands in the present situation, and has temporarily sidetracking efforts of the other occupying powers to re-constitute Germany as an economic and political whole. France has her fourth republic; she is adamant against a fourth Reich. 1. The Rühr, which is the heart of Germany's industrial and warmaking power, shall be placed under international control. Since decisions of the four-power control council in Germany must be unanimous, France so far has blocked successfully the efforts of the other powers to unify the administration. The treaty of Versailles was intended by the old tiger, Clemenceau, to insure that it would not happen again. He did not live to see it, but other Frenchmen watched the treaty torn to pieces and France overrun in an invasion that dwarfed the other two. Pres. Charles De Gaulle is determined against a repitition. 2. The Rhineland, compromising areas on both sides of the great river, shall be made a separate state—presumably subject to French influence if not control. The three points insisted on by France are: French Opposition to Government In Germany Makes Things Touchy DeGaule also made it clear in his statement of policy to the constituent assembly last week that France By LOUIS F. KEEMLE (United Press Staff Analyst) Kekeris rose to his feet (what an effort) and led the mob in singing Missouri songs. He kept time to the music by beating his head into the wall. As the crowd reached the third verse of "Missouri, Missouri, how I love thee, Fairest Flower," they were interrupted by Bunny Lawler who led six valient Jay-hawkers in roaring out a "Rock Chalks, thus saving the day for our side. All in all, however, it was a great game, especially from where we sat. here is a worm's eye view of how he game looked to us: French opposition to the establishment of a centralized government for Germany has created a touchy situation among the four powers administering the defeated Reich. "Bertuzzi snagged the ball out of the air just as it was about to be intercepted by the feather on the hat of the lady in front of us. He then starts a line drive down the arm of the gentleman to our left. He is blotted out for a moment by a passing coke bottle but emerges safely to the left of a hot dog. It looks like he is away. But no, Jim Kekeris suddenly emerges from under an uplifted bottle of Seagram's Five Crown and after defly sideesteping a poised handkerchief, he tackles Bertuzzi on top of a plaid muffler. The crowd goes wild France plainly would like a dismembered Germany, one that would never rise again as a central European power, although there has been no official utterance as bald as that. Nevertheless, France has been thoroughly disillusioned about Germany. She has been invaded by the Germans three times in the 70 years between 1870 and 1940. WHATTA GAME! WHATTA GAM will not consent to any further international arrangements in Europe on which she has not been consulted on an equal footing with the other powers. De Gaulle's stand means that France will have to be persuaded, not coerced, in the matter of Germany. OFFICIAL BULLETIN University of Kansas Thursday, Nov. 29, 1945 Notices must be typewritten and must be in Public Relations office, or later than 9:30 a.m. on day of publication. No phone messages accepted. Pre-Nursing club will meet at 7:30 tonight at nursing nurses home. Feeh Rune of the American College Quill club will meet in the Music room, room, at 7:30 tonight. First practice of Modern Choir, 7 to 9:30 tonight in Kansas room. Rosemary Harding, Union committee, chairman. Christian Science University organization will meet at 7 tonight in the Kansas room, Union. Quack club meeting at 7:30 tonight in Robinson gymnasium. Bring dues. Home Economics club meeting at 7 tonight at Fraser hall. Motion picture.-Eleanor Brown, president. ON KFKU Tonight: 9:30-10 K.U. Vesper, Dr. Theodore Aszman, speaker, Tomorrow: 2:30 Campus News. 2:45 Music 9:30 Girl Scouts Program 9:45 Know the Orient: "Oriental Politics," H. B. Chubb, department of political science. WANT ADS 219 ROOM or Room and Board. "Girls." 2 double rooms. Twin beds. 1247 Ohio, phone 3338. LOST—Green striped Schaffer pen and pencil set, with a wide gold band. Finder please call 257, Eloise West. Reward. NOTICE—Photographs tinted for Christmas. Reasonable prices. Experience. Call 507. Pat Allen. FOUND—A key on chain. Owner may have same by identifying and paying for this ad at the Kansan office. NOTICE—Exchanged by error—tan gaberdine topcat at Union Fountain, Nov. 21. Please call E. M. Jones, 1914. LOST—Keys on a chain Thursday. If found call 1782. Jacquie Ogan. LOST—On field no. 3 of intramural field, brown fingertip coat containing valuable articles. Reward if found. Call Frank O'Connell 366. LOST—Tan leather suitcase initialed M.E.O., between 7:30 and 8:00 Sunday evening at Union Pacific depot or somewhere on the Hill. Call 1619 I, Mary Briganan. Reward. For That Coke Date Remember ELDRIDGE PHARMACY Phone 999 701 Mass. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. Phone 425 HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Garage and Cab Co. 922 Mass. Phone 12 Jewelry and Gifts MUSIC NOVELTIES Powder Boxes Pianos Cigarette Chests 7 4 2 1 6 10 If you want to bowl! but don't know how, come on over and let our Instructor put you wise. Just a few tries and you'll be able to play with the best! Open Weeks days Open Saturday and Sunday Free instruction to beginners. Fun to Play— Fun to Learn— 7 p.m. to 11 p.m. 1:30 p.m. to 11 p.m. League play invited. LAWRENCE BOWLING ALLEY 916 $ \frac{1}{2} $ MASS. Operated by JOE HERTZ - FINNEY HOKE NOVEMBER 29,1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE WILD WOODS SOCIALLY SPEAKING fcky Vallette, Kanson Society Editor Phipps-Altman Wed Virginia Anne Phipps and Lt. Harlan Cribbs Altman, Jr. were married in the Hillside Christian church, Wichita, Nov. 17. The maid of honor was Sarah Frances Phipps. The matron of honor was Mrs. R. Jones, Wellington; and the bridesmaids were Mrs. Graham T. Johnson, Dallas, and Mrs. C. A. Hunter, Jr., Kansas City. Richard Altman acted as best man, and ushers were Lt. Fred Olander, Jr., Kansas City; Lt. Robert Renn, Wellington; Lt. Jack Dotson, Wichita, Capt, Dale Hysten, Wellington; and Lt. Francis Carr, Wellington. Mrs. Altman is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry K. Phipps. A member of Kappa Alpha Theta, she was a senior in the College last year. Lt. Altman, a member of Beta Theta Pi, was a student at KU. from 1939 to 1943 when he joined the army. He is now stationed at Camp Wolters, Texas. The couple went to Dallas on a honeymoon. Exchange Dinners Tonight Organized houses will exchange dinner guests again tonight. Several girls from each house will go to another specified house, according to a schedule worked out by the Panhellenic council. Selected members of Alpha Chi Omega will go to the Alpha Delta Pi house, Chi Omega and Miller hall to Alpha Micron Pi; Alpha Chi Omega and Watkins hall to Alpha Delta Pi; Pi Beta Phi and Tipperary to Delta Gamma; Alpha Micron Pi and Corbin hall to Chi Omega; Kappa Kappa Gamma and Locksley hall to Gamma Phi Beta; Sigma Kappa and Jolliffe hall to Kappa Alpha Theta; Gamma Phi Beta and Sleepy Hollow to Kappa Kappa Gamma; Kappa Alpha Theta, Foster hall, and Delta Delta Delta to Sigma Kappa. Delta Gamma and Ricker hall to Pi Betaphi; Chi Omega to Corbin hall; Sigma Kappa to Foster hall; Kappa Alpha Theta to Joliffe hall; Gamma Phi Beta to Locksley hall; Alpha Omicron Pi to Miller; Pi BetaPhi to Ricker hall; Kappa KappaGamma to Sleepy Hollow; DeltaGamma to Tipperary; and AlphaDelta Pi to Watkins hall. AT THE HOSPITAL Admitted: Rebecca Larson, Corbin Hall. Rebecca Larson, Corbin Hal Oscar Ed Utter, 1233 Oread. Lester I. Michea PT 10 Oscar Ed Otter, 1233 Oral Lester L. Mische, PT 10. Mrs. Verda Ames Praeger, 1144 Louisiana. Vollie Mathis Piland, 1006 Mississippi. Dorothy Mae Black, 1247 Ohio. Mrs. Frances D. Eubanks, 18 East 13th Richard H. Hodges, PT 6. Billie Jean Evans, 1343 Tennessee. Thomas E. Thompson, PT 7. William A. Marshall, 1111 West 11th Cecil Clendis Chappelow, 1409 Tennessee Carl William Clark, 1409 Tennessee. Harold A. Vagtborg, 1329 Ohio. Roland D. Brooks, 1532 Lilac Lane. Robert Clayton McHarg, 1111 West 11th Corothy Lee Hoover, Corbin Hall. Dismissed: Dismissed. William B. Ansdell, PT 6. John G. Schlagel, 1329 Ohio Rex R. Taggart, 746 Mississippi. Doris Chapman, 905 Maine. Marilyn Carlson, 1433 Tennessee. William E. Dennis, 1332 Louisiana. Patricia Elledge, 1246 Oread. Bernard E. Domann, PT 5. Frank Chris Eberhardt, 1616 Louisiana There are 50 fresh water lakes in the state of Delaware. Paddle Party Is Sigma Kappa Favorite A. R. G. MAVIS LUKERT This is another in a series of articles to acquaint the campus with the various organized houses, their members, officers, and histories. Paddle party, senior banquet, and Founder's day are traditional favorites with the Sigma Kappa's. Differing from most sororites, the pledges of Sigma Kappa choose their pledge mothers. At a big party soon after rush week, pledges present their chosen mother with a paddle. In the spring the chapter honors its graduating seniors with a banquet. It's all formal and solemn, except for one thing. At each senior's place is either a piece of sandy or a lemon. The engaged women are given the candy, the spinners, the lemon. Founder's day for Sigma Kappa is Nov. 11. About 25 alums came back this year to celebrate. Sigma Kappa was founded in 1874 at Colby college, Waterville, Maine. In 1913, it was established at K.U. It had existed for a year before, as Delta Psi, a local sorority. The first house was at 11th and Indiana streets, and the present chapter house is at 1625 Edgahill road. Violet is their flower; maroon and lavender, their colors. The sorority magazine is the Triangle. There are 42 active chapters of Sigma Kappa in the United States, and one in Canada. Mrs. Mary Younkman is the house-mother. Officers are Mavis Lukert, president; Betty Whitney, vice-president; Martha Hogan, recording secretary; Frances Hadley, treasurer; Sheila Guise, pledge trainer, and Mary Vermillion, rush captain. Other members of the active chapter are Caroline Morriss, Joan Harris, Maurine Breitenbach, Marilyn Beck, Sarah Ann Scotchone, Kathleen Wright, Margaret Wright, Jeanne Marie Smith, Jill Lauderdale, Shirley Guenther, Betty Wahlstedt, Lorea Norrie Blair, LaJune Dunn, Jeannette Perkins, Helen Todd. "Publication of the Graduate magazine is behind schedule and we do not know when the November issue will appear." Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the Alumni association, said today. Shortage of help has caused the delay. Mr. Ellsworth explained. THE MOST HONORED WATCH ON THE CAMPUS Longines THE WORLD'S MOST HONORED WATCH Graduate Magazine Is Late Because of Help Shortage WINNER OF 10 WORLD'S FAIR GRAND PRIZES, 28 GOLD MEDALS AND MORE HONORS FOR ACCURACY THAN ANY OTHER TIMEPIECE VICTORIA MUSEUM OF ART Pharmacists Hear Lee Dr. Charles O. Lee, '13, spoke to classes in the School of Pharmacy Tuesday on his first return to the campus in more than 25 years. Dr. Lee is now a professor of pharmacy at Purdue university. Roberts, Moore to Speak Orville Roberts and Jean Moore, K.U. debaters, will speak at a tournament and discussion meeting at the University of Iowa Friday, on "Resolved, that the U.S. should adopt a policy of free trade." Capt. Paul Oman, a 1933 graduate, discussed "Malaria Control in the South Pacific" at a meeting of the Entomology club in Snow hall Monday. Guests were Jonathan Nottingham, '31, and Henry Thomas, '34. Paul Oman Speaks Louise Morrow, Mary Holtzclaw, Marian Thomson, Sara Rothrock, Mary Jane Pistorius, Marilyn Bougher, Martha Jewett, Alice Hobbs, and Beth Beamer Dimond. Pledges are Betty Black, Charlene Phipps, Janis Burkett, Bobby Sargent, Eileen Deutschmann, Estelle Stewart, Barbara Hanley, Constance Waggener, Beryle Hines, Barbara White, Lola Welch, Sue Webster, Doris Kingsbury, Joan Kingsbury, Joan Wharton, and Galvin St. John. Cradle to College to Cradle Again--- That's Story of K.U. Nursery School From cradle to college to cradle again— Psychologists may term this "regression," but it isn't. Students enrolled in Child Development I and II, and a few other University courses, are required to spend their laboratory time at the University nursery school. The school, 1100 Missouri street, is sponsored by the University with 15 children, from two to four years of age, enrolled. and occasionally help in m $\textcircled{2}$ The home economics department was responsible for the school's establishment in July, 1943. Department heads aided the wartime community by caring for working mothers' children, and at the same time, provided a laboratory for University students. In their two-hour laboratory period every week, each student in Child Development II takes complete charge of the children for a few minutes. The other students note mistakes which the student made, and during one class period each week, the laboratory work is discussed. Students in Child Development I spend some time during the semester observing the children at play. Though the nursery school is used principally as a laboratory for Child Development I and II classes, other students have practical experience with the children in some way. Students, enrolled in a clinical psychology course, give the children their pre-school psychological tests, and class members in a physical education course observe the children during their play period. Case work of nursery school children has been carried out by one sociology class, and elementary school art is observed by education majors. Nutrition classes at the University check nursery school menus. and occasionally help in meal preparation. Nursery school hours are from 11:30 a.m. to 4:45 p.m. Lunch is served the children upon their arrival at nursery school. Every child takes a nap after lunch, then after a second lunch of orange juice and cookies, the rest of the afternoon is a play period. When the University nursery school was first established it was sponsored by the University, but financed by the federal Landham act. Now on post war basis, all nursery school children pay a tuition to the University, which sponsors and finances the school. Equipment in the nursery school is scaled so that it is the appropriately small size for the children. The arrangement of furniture is planned so that there is a minimum of restriction. Children are taught their responsibilities to the group in an effort to make the nursery school as much like home as possible. The school staff includes Miss Mary Elizabeth Evans, supervisor and instructor of both child development courses, Mrs. Edwin O. Stene, head teacher, Mrs. Jack Stevens, '42, and Mrs. Gerald Buehler, assistants. So essential was the new tree for making bow-staves that early English laws made the planting of these compulsory. * A For Outdoor Girls And who isn't an outdoor girl with these exciting For Outdoor Girls And who isn't an outdoor girl with these exciting Christmas holidays on the way . . . with skating and sledding parties and snow fights planned? We have just the thing for you on these icy and snowy days — an Eisenhower sport jacket—this one is water repellent and reversible, blue on one side and red the other—with slacks—comfortably styled with adjustable straps for a pinched-in waist. Only $19.50 complete. SECOND FLOOR Weaver's 7 Weaver PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 29,1945 Here's The News From Your Home Town In Kansas 'Prohibition May Go,' Lt. Gov. Denious Says Topcka. (UP)—Lt. Gov. Jess C. Denious, here for a legislative council meeting, said today that repeal or modification of Kansas prohibition statutes may be discussed seriously in the next legislative session because of recent federal liquor raids in the state. A check in the office of Att. Gen. A. B. Mitchell revealed that 350 federal liquor licenses had been sold in Kansas of September last year. The government annually collects $27.50 from retailers and $110 from wholesalers for these licenses. Circumstances could permit Kansas liquor dealers to be fully within state law even though they were doing business under these federal permits. Truck, Farm Tire Production To Be Increased 400 Daily Topcka. (UP)—Production of truck and farm equipment tires will be increased from 700 to 1,100 daily by the end of the year, L. E. Spencer, superintendent of the Goodyear plant, said here today. Spencer warned against optimism on the part of motorists, however. He said no passenger car tires would be forthcoming from the Topeka plant before next spring. Spencer said the delay in passenger car tires production was the slowness of installation of specialized machinery. University Press Jobs Taken by Students Every good organization must have a printing department and so it is with the University and the University Press, located in the Journalism building basement. The biggest and best job of the Press, according to T.C. Rythe, director, is that it gives students an opportunity to work and get a college education at the same time. Not all these students are printers or printers to be. Some are studying medicine, law engineering, pharmacy, and nursing. In the past 10 years, $43,000 has been paid to student employees. These students now are outstanding in many fields, including the printing profession, with many owning their own newspaper. Of 27 employees this semester, 17 are students, including 12 women, and 5 men. Had Nest Egg Colorado Springs, Col. (UP)— George D. Fugate, retired city employee of Colorado Springs, was distressed when he was not granted his usual monthly pension. But even the Colorado Supreme Court refused to okay the pension when it was disclosed Fugate had $15,000 salted away. To Present 'Messiah' Arkansas City. (UP)—The 13th annual presentation of Handel's "Messiah" will be given here Dec. 16 by the music departments of the high school and junior college. 26 Kansans Considered For Federal Bench Washington. (UP)—Names of 14 other men have been added to the list of candidates to be considered for the new federal district judge-ship created recently by congress. The new list, now totaling at least 26 candidates, did not include Carl Rice, Democratic national committeeman from Kansas, considered one of the leading candidates for the roos' Latest candidates announced are Judge Harry K. Allen, Topeka; U.S. Attorney Randolph Carpenter, Marion; State Senator Robert S. Lemon, Pittsburgh; James T. Nash, Wichita; Howard W. Payne, Olathe; Glenn Porter, Wichita; Balie P. Waggener; Atchison; Arthur J. Mellott, Kansas City; George B. Collins, Wichita; George J. Venson, ElDorado; Robert L. Nesmith, Wichita; Harry G. Miller, Jr., Kansas City; L. E. Goodrich, Parsons; Joseph H. McDowell, Kansas City. One of the candidates will be recommended to President Truman for the appointment by the justice department. New Staff Takes Over Winter General Hospital Topka. (UF)—The first group of 100 members of the Veterans administration medical staff were in Winter General hospital ffeeday. Only 00 army patients remained in the hospital and these were expected to be transferred during the week. Veterans administration officials were due to take over the facility officially Saturday. No manager has been appointed by the Veterans Administration. Washburn Faculty Asks U.S. To Subsidize Atomic Study Topcka. (UP)—The Washburn university faculty today recommended that the federal government should subsidize atomic research not only for war but also for peace purposes. Dr. Bryan S. Stoffer said the faculty believed also that fundamental research in nuclear physics and in other scientific fields should be free and untrammeled and that the manufacturing processes used in developing the atomic bomb should be kept secret "until such time as we can set up a world organization sufficiently powerful and effective to control any attempted misuse of such discoveries for aggressive purposes." Those three points were included as amendments to a resolution being sponsored by the independent citizens committees on Arts, Science and Professions, Inc. and were written by Washburn faculty members to avoid their stand being interpreted as a recommendation for immediate release of the atomic bomb secrets. for— Where Is That Santa? Visit VICKER'S GIFT SHOP LEATHER GOODS CERAMICS in Fine China GLASSWARE POTTERY CHINA Dr. William K. Meege and Mrs. Bessie Mae Spurling, both of Moberly, were married by Judge Clark E. Tucker in the Wyandotte county probate court in Kansas City. Kansas City. (UP)—An 84-year old small town physician and surgeon, who is entering his 62nd year of practice, exchanged marriage vows with the 41-year-old city tax collector of Moberly, Mo., here today. "We thought we might just as well come and get married," the aged doctor said, "People down at Moberly have been expecting it for quite a while." "And I'm still going strong," he said. "Looks like I'll just have to keep going. My wife resigned." The doctor, who looked 20 years younger than his 84 years, said he had been practicing medicine and delivering babies in and around Moberly for 54 years. He has three grandchildren. He said he had a son, Otto, 60, who was a doctor also. VICKER'S City Marshal Exonerated In Larned Farmer's Death Wife Begins For Him at 84 1023 MASS. "But he retired four years ago." The doctor smiled. PHONE 933 Larned. (UP)—A coroner's jury has exonerated City Marshal Chet Cleveland in connection with the killing of Carl Daughenbaugh, farmer. Remedies for All The jury ruled that Cleveland shot in self defense after Daughenbaugh resisted arrest and struck Cleveland with a whiskey bottle. Cleveland fired twice at the farmer's feet before he fired the fatal shot. Althaus Addresses Rotary Alexandria, La. (UP)—Police confiscated a "laboratory" at the home of "Rev." G. W. Shealey and found cans of fast luck incense, money-drawing incense, snake root, conqueror's root, gold and silver pellets, dragon blood and success oil. The 66-year-old Negro was charged with practicing medicine without a license. Dr. C. B. Althaus, associate professor of education, spoke today on "School District Organization in Kansas" before Rotary club. K. C. Strike Averted Kansas City. (UP)—A threatenec strike in the Kansas City livestock yards was averted today after company and union officials reached an agreement on wage issues. Finney County Vet Dies in Collision Pierceville. (UP) — Delmar O. Kitch, 26, became the first discharged Finney county war veteran to die when he was killed in a train-car collision a block from his home. His death was another in a tragic 40-year series which has brought more accidental deaths to this hamlet than many good-sized cities' record. Kitch had just driven from a filling station when his car was struck by a fast mail train at the main street crossing. His father, R. O. Kitch, rushed him to a Garden City hospital, not knowing that his son had been killed outright. Horton. (UP)—Gov. Andrew Schoeppel today appointed Forrest J. Hennyey, of Horton, to fill the unexpired term of W. G. Saip, savings and loan commissioner who died several weeks ago. Henney Gets New Post Cop 'Fares Well,' Kills Meal on Street Arkansas City, (UP)—A member of the local-police department had a goose dinner without hunting for the goose. He stopped the car, hit the goose on the head with his billy club, and took home his dinner. Capt. Herman Pratt drove a police car down the main street of Arkansas City, when he saw a goose in the middle of the street. He said apparently the goose had fallen out of a flock which passed over Arkansas City some hours earlier. Coach Shenk to Address High School Football Teams Henry Shenk, head football coach will speak to the Belleville high school football team tonight. He is scheduled to speak at Wyandotte high school, Kansas City, tomorrow night. State Highway Dept. Pleased With New Road Surfacing Experiments on U.S. highway 24 and U.S. 40 proved very satisfactory, officials said. These roads were given a three-inch covering of the matting, and two feet of extra width were poured at each side. Topека. (UP]—State highway department officials said today they were pleased with tests of new bittuminous mat surfacing and widening of Kansas highways. DAY EVERY School Year Through the The University Daily KANSAN carries the news of Your University READ IT BOOST IT SEND IT HOME! There's a DON'T FORGET » » Have you put your car on your Christmas List? Let Us Give Your Car That Christmas Treat and . . . DEC 25 Ford your future! SANTA WILL FILL THE BILL MORGAN-MACK MOTOR Co. NOVEMBER 29,1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Sachem Represents Highest Ideals In University Honor, Action, Service @ A University history full of tradition—a need for unified student action—a handful of students interested in molding K.U. spirit and loyalty—chancellor who inspired such ambitions—and Sachem, senior men's honor society, was born, 25 years ago. When Prof. F. E. Melvin, of the department of history, was a graduate student in 1908 and 1909, he and other men students took to heart Chancellor Frank Strong's question, often repeated at daily all-student chapels, "What can we do for K.U." "Chancellor Strong changed K.U. from a college into a university," Professor Melvin said today. "He gave us vision, pounding it into us that we needed a 'permanent student body,' and a K.U. spirit based upon K.U. traditions. Several of us graduates and senior men met often to discuss things we could do for the University." Out of these discussions grew the first honorary class society, formally organized in the fall of 1910, with 12 charter members and five honorary faculty advisors. Adopting the name Sachem, which means "Indian Chieftain," the society incorporated Indian symbols and rituals, and stated its purpose, "to further in every possible way the interests of the University and the student body, and especially to promote the unity of spirit and action which prevent its breaking up into groups." Skull and K, another senior organization, was formed in 1912, choosing members on the basis of scholarship, prominence in activities, school spirit, and character. The two societies were merged two years later, with 28 members and 14 faculty advisers. Sachsen encouraged the wearing of freshman caps, to foster class spirit among the freshmen, Professor Melvin said. "The custom was not new," he added. "In the 1870's, every class had insignia. The freshmen wore caps, while the seniors sported stovepipe hats." In 1926, Sachem started the Rock Chalk cairn every year adding a new stone with some significance in University history. Originally the cairn was to have been placed in the center of Fowler grove, at the west edge of the campus. Professor Melvin first promoted the idea of the cairn in 1906 to be a distinctive mark on the campus, such as the famous Yale "fence," where students meet to discuss problems which further the university interests. Every year near Commencement time Sachem warriors have a pow-wow and banquet, with talks by faculty members at occasional smokers during the year, Professor Melvin said. "Because its members are active in so many other University activities," he explained, "Sachem is largely an honorary society, not having too many activities of its own However, it represents University tradition and service, and helps give K.U. sprit the 'continuity and stability' Chancellor Strong envisioned. Each spring the new members of Sachem are chosen by the graduating members and the faculty advisers, and announcement of the choices is made at the annual honors convocation. Present members are: Rudy Carl, chief sachem; Keith Dunnell, Albert Chase, Clyde Jacobs, Boliver Marquez, and Thad Marsh. Les Breidenthal Went Through Paris-- But Not to See Much Lt. Leslie Breidenthal, former B-17 pilot and now a sophomore in the School of Fine Arts, went through Paris but he didn't see many of the sights. War prisoners usually don't. Lt. Breidenthal, a University student four years ago, returned this semester, after spending 16 months in a prison camp in Sagan, Germany, and four months in a camp at Moorsburg, Germany. "On Sept. 13, 1943, my crew and I parachuted into France after a mission over Germany," he said, "but I was free for only four hours." Lt. Breidenthal was "banged up" when he landed near a French village and a French sympathizer was taking him to a doctor when the Germans changed their plans, he explained. There were 2,000 officers and enlisted men in his prison camp who did their own cooking over coal stoves, and even made eating utensils from tin cans, the lieutenant said. "Did you ever bake a cake, using tooth powder for soda?" he grinned. Lt. Breidenthal spent two Christmas Days in the prison camp. The men decorated their barracks with crepe paper received from the Red Cross, and fixed one room to ressemble a night club. He was liberated April 29, 1945, by Gen. George S. Patton's army. "One of the happiest days in my life," the lieutenant said, "was when I saw the white flag go up over Moosburg." The bombardier on his plane, George Padgett, who also parashuted to safety, was a University student in 1940. Lt. Breidenthal said; out the two hadn't known each other while here. Accountants Honor Stockton Frank T. Stockton, dean of the School of Business, has been made the first honorary member of the Kansas Society of Certified Public Accountants, John P. Bonicamp, Wichita, secretary of the organization, announced. Give Your PORTRAIT For Christmas Have it made while you wait. Come in for films and picture frames. We also do tinting and enlarging of any picture. PHOTO NOOK 715 MASS. PHONE 2091 The end of the World Student Service Fund drive will be reached Friday, with $3,100 collected and pledged. W.S.S.F. Drive Closes With Total of $3,100 This fund combined the community chest and W.S.S.F., with each organization receiving half the total fund. Mrs. Christine Alford, YWCA secretary, and drive committee member, stated all pledges should be paid immediately. Famous Cow Missing Chicago (UP)—Legend has it that a cow being milked by Mrs. Patrick O'Leary kicked a kerosene lamp and started the fire that destroyed a large portion of Chicago 74 years ago. Diligent research has failed to disclose what became of the cow. Ernie Pyle Post Chicago (UP)—The Ernie Pyle American Legion post, named in honor of the late was correspondent, has been organized by 250 employees of the Chicago Sun, which featured Pyle's dispatches. Mary Shelley, the poet's wife, who wrote Frankenstein, wasn't the first person to think of robots. A gentleman back in 400 B.C., says the Encyclopedia Britannica, made a wooden pigeon that would fly. Another ancient is said to have made an iron fly which would flutter around the room and return to his hand. Call KU 25 with your news. You'll love the Beauty and comfort of Paradise Tango Pumps Rodeo CALF $7.95 The no-pinch instep gives you unbelievable ease in wear. Look for the slenderizing pointed heel. In black and brown calf. As featured in all leading fashion magazines. Royal COLLEGE SHOPS 837 MASS. PHONE 648 Royal Three Men, 20 Women On Honor Roll Three men and 20 women were on the School of Business honor roll for the spring semester of 1945, Dean F. T. Stockton announced today. Seniors were: Guy E. Ashcraft, Mary D. Burnside, Margaret L. Fessler, Bonita Gustafson, Joyce Lee Hahn, Mary Tudor Hanna, Kathleen A. Hazen, Hazel E. Jones, Virginia Kirlin, Betty Leibbrand, Charleen McCann, Evelyn Mercer, Marian Montgomery, Mignon Morton, Elizabeth Pile, Helen Stormont. Lt. Brown Is in Manila Lt. Bert L. Brown, '41, is attached to the 29th replacement depot near Manila where he is awaiting transportation to the United States and discharge from the army. Lt. Brown, the son of Mr. and Mrs. B. F. Brown of Topeka, was inducted into the army in 1942. His many months overseas service have earned him the Asiatic-Pacific and Philippine liberation ribbons with three battle stars. Juniors were: Paulene Bohannon, Mrs. Esther J. Dudgeon, Mary Jean Hatch, Jack Lee Nichols, Donald Hunter Ong, Gloria M. Schmitendorf, Barbara Showard FOR YOUR Christmas MALE THE BRIDGE OF SAN LUCA Combination set ... Pigskin Wallet, Belt and gold-inlay Buckle . . . beautifully boxed, $10. H Handsome gift set ... Two-tone initial Buckle on genuine leather Belt, $3. Ober's HISTORY QUIZNER Make this a RECORD CHRISTMAS Let It Be a Merry, Musical Holiday With a Lasting Gift of Music "It's WRIGHT'S for RECORDS" Popular, Classical and Children's Records The WRIGHT APPLIANCE STORES 846 MASSACHUSETTS PHONE 725 PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 29,1945 On the Fenski On the Fenski with MEG WENSKI It's different you must admit. But if you think our headline slightly on the corny side, we suggest you try rhyming words with a Russian atmosphere. Today is the first appearance for "On the Fenski" and your editor hopes that up until its last showing, she never will be placed "on the fence." Basketball Parades. The Red and Blue quintet of Kansas has not made its way to the pennant roost for two years, but 1946 will see atomic power plus developed from the new squad. Basketball practice has been in full swing for a month now and already most of the new men have been molded to fit the shoes of former court stars. Owen "Hey, with a shrill voice" Peck, letterman of last year, remains one of the fastest moving "little" men on the team. His height is no hindrance for skillful manuvering down the court. Wendel Clark, fugitive V-12 from Dennison, is displaying superior ability at handling the ball. The terrors of the court have added "camera posing" to their extra curricula activities this week. Although none of the fellas would fear the on-rush of all the defense on the court, they definitely are shy of the camera. Football History Recently found in literary exploits (of football scores for K.U.) was this brief explanation of the origin of "crimson" of "crimson and the blue." "A special excursion train will be run from Lawrence, and the students and football enthusiasts in general will attend the game in a body. Hoping to make the day a red letter one, criseman has been chosen for the colors of the eleven." This paragraph was obtained from a clipping in the Kansas City Star of Oct. 31, 1891. W. J. Coleman, center on the first K.U. football team, kept a scrap book of sports affairs, and this apparently is the first mention of the adoption of colors for Kansas' athletic teams. K.C. Navy Medics To Inactive Duty Junior and, senior navy medical students will go on inactive duty, Dec. 1, when the navy's medical program at the University School of Medicine, Kansas City, is discontinued, Capt. Chester A. Kunz said today. Navy men will leave for the St. Louis separation center Thursday and will return to classes in Kansas City, Dec. 3, he added. Junius who will be inactivated are Paul Adams, William Benfield, Paul Bittick, Jr., J. Roderick Bradley, James Bridgens, Calvin Curtis, Karl Ehrlich, James H. Enns, Richard Fox, Clark Henry, Robert Holmgren, Charles Hopper, Maurice Jennison, and Robert Jones. Raymond Lance, Wilson Miller, William Mowery, Jr., John Nessel- rode, Victor North, Erwin Olson, George Fogson, Kenneth Powers, James Pretz, James Reed, Floyd Santner, Otto Theel, Jr., Dana Tompkins, Donald Upp, Harold Voth, Sidney Walker, Jr., and Winton Wilcox. Sailors, who will be given their choice of navy or civilian internships, include Vincent Christ, Donald Cruse, Frank Flack, Dean Huebert, Lawrence Johnson, William Larsen, Lyle Litton, Donald Lloyd, James Marchbanks, Carroll Monroe, and Marion Nunemaker. James Proctor, Louis Saxe, William Shinkle, Raymond Stockton, and James Ziegler. Schmidt Chosen '45 Grid Captain BY NEAL SHEEHAN (Daily Kansan Sports Writer) Dave Schmidt, V-12 trainee from Milwaukee, was elected honorary captain of the 1945 Jayhawker football team last night at the annual football banquet in the Memorial Union. Schmidt, a lean 163-pounder playing his first year of college football, turned in a complete season of outstanding play. On the defense his end was a stone wall, and on the offense he scored five touchdowns, four on end-around plays and one on a pass from Pattie in the Kansas State game. He was named left end on three all Big Six teams, U.P., A.P., and Kansas City Star. Other K.U. players receiving honorable mention on the all-star selections were Geroge Gear, quarterback, Frank Patttee, salfback, Leroy Robison, fullback, and Bob Moore, tackle. Gov. Andrew Schoeppel was the principal speaker at the dinner attended by team members, University staff members, and Lawrence businessmen. W.W. Davis, K.U.'s Big Six faculty representative, was toastmaster and Chancellor Deane W. Mallott, E. C. Quigley, director of athletics, and Henry Shenk, head football coach, spoke briefly. BARS and STRIPES News of Men in the Services Burbach Reports to Norfolk Ens. John Kenneth Burbach, U.S.N.R., Hebron, Neb., a University student in 1943, has reported to Norfolk, Va., to train for duties aboard a destroyer or similar type vessel. Lt. Moses Is Home Lt. Kenneth V. Mosei of the navy arrived in Lawrence this week after receiving his discharge. Lt. Moses, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Moses, 1501 West Campus, spent almost four years in the navy with two years service in the Atlantic. He was graduated from the School of Law at the University. Brothers Meet in Tokyo Bay An observant navy dispatch messenger brought about the reunion of two brothers, both former University students, in Tokyo bay recently. Upon delivering a dispatch to Ens. Donald Thomas, the messenger discovered that Ens. Thomas's brother's picture was his pal, F/2c Richard (Dick) Thomas. Donald Thomas, '41, and his brother, Richard who attended the University last year, both were members of Beta Theta Pi. VARSITY ENDS TONITE FRIDAY and SATURDAY WILD BILL ELLIOTT JUDY CANOVA JOE E. BROWN "JOAN OF OZARK" and WEAVER BROS. and ELVIRY "In Old Missouri" "Marshal of Laredo and NINA EOCH Cage Team Invited To College Tourney "My Name Is Julia Ross" The University basketball team has been invited to attend the All-College tournament at Oklahoma City, Dec. 26, 27, and 28. Attendance at Kansas home football games reached an all-time high in 1945 with 64,300 fans attending five home games. The previous high record was 61,000 in 1929. Last year the attendance for home games was 29,000. Teams from the Missouri Valley, Big Six, and Northwestern conferences also will participate in the tournament. K.U. Football Fans Reach New High The Kansas-Missouri fray at Griffith stadium pulled the highest attendance for the year with 21,500. The Washburn game drew the smallest crowd with 6,800. Other games attendances were Iowa State, 7,000; T.C.U., 13,000; and Kansas State, 16,000. Nuernberg. (UP) -Baldur Von Schirach, the ex-Nazi youth boss, offered this unhappy epitaph for the late Adolf Hitler today; "We chose in him a genius of destruction." A 'Genius of Destruction,' Nazi Now Calls Hitler X-Ray Process 50 Years Old Chicago. (UP)—Fifty years ago, an obscure physic professor at the University of Wurzburg, Bavaria, covered a Crookes tube with an opaque piece of cardboard and observed a wierd glow reflecting from a piece of barium plantinocyanide paper on a nearby table. That was the way X-ray was born and the eyes of the medical profession opened to undreamed of wonders. The discoverer was Wilhelm Conrad Roentgen, a modest man whose previous life gave no hint that he was to present mankind with one of its great gifts. Made Through Check He was the first to learn that a ray could be produced which would penetrate materials resistant to all known types of light. The date of his discovery was Nov. 8, 1895. With a cool restraint, Roentgen kept his findings to himself until experiment proved his conclusions indisputable. Not until more than two months later did Roentgen announce that he had discovered a new invisible ray which could pass through opaque materials. Curiosily enough, many could think only evil of the new ray which could "see" through almost NOW ALL WEEK at the Dayhawker Radio's Riot Show Even Greater on the Screen! ED GARDNER'S DUFFY'STAVERN Here Are 8 of the 32 Top Stars: BING CROSBY - BETTY HUTTON - ALAN LADD DOT. LAMOUR - EDDIE BRACKEN - SONNY TUFTS VERONICA LAKE - PAULETTE GODDARD It's Not WHAT They Do... It's The WAY They Do It! that makes this a matchless musical story! THEDOLLY SISTERS Technicolor! Sunday BETTY GRABLE JOHN PAYNE JUNE HAVER SUNDAY ALL WEEK Obtain Free Bond Award Tickets Now for $109.50 Console Radio Given Free Thursday, Dec. 20th WHERE LOVE IS MORE THAN FOUND anything. A New Jersey assemblyman, whose sense of decency was aroused by reports that the ray could penetrate clothing, introduced a bill prohibiting the use of X-ray in opera glasses. A London clothier cashed in on the public ignorance of the potentialities of Roentgen's discovery by advertising the sale of X-ray proof clothing for women. G GRANADA -ENDS TONITE Linda DARNELL Alice FAYE "Fallen Angel" FRIDAY AND SATURDAY MAD, MERRY MARITAL MIXUP! . . . But . . . WHAT FUN TO KISS AND MAKE UP! . . . featuring VICTOR McLAGLEN A Republic Picture A CHILDREN'S WORLD. starring VIRGINIA BRUCE EDWARD ASHLEY FRANK SINATRA "The House I Live In" and SPORTS - NEWS -Xtra Short Hit!penned in passion written in blood! Love, Honor and GOODBYE Owl Show Sat. 11:45 & SUNDAY ONE WEEK Academy Award Performances, Say Critics Love Letters (1) Jennifer Jones Joseph Cotten in Hal. Wallis' production "Love Letters" with ANN RICHAMS and Cecil Kallaway Gladys Cooper Annie Louse - Robert Sully Directed by WILLIAM DISTERLEY Author of The Footnote Author of "The Footnote" A Permanent Picture B "fir one bee of of day arm to wa on olu " . Eas amo Pea "Al stro diat hou but navi tion T cial time anes But It until three Th the Mars last The isfact sage comm for Ivere Sk "An had ti get th tack." phone teleph scram receive "we more idea Rus UN Lon porta tions! K. Ki man numbe Gull to War of the which portan trustee ancol The five on of justi Egypti Hamid and the Rivera Comr assembl wegian chairma rero of gan or A Jacqt of the Art club day nig LuAn Barbara Dietzel, historian at arms. NOVEMBER 29,1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 2017 PAGE SEVEN Marshall Sent Message Warning of Possible Nip Action Before Pearl Harbor Attack, But It Didn't Help Any Chief's Alert Order Decoded Too Late Washington. (UP)—The so-called "final message from Washington," one of the biggest "could-have-beens" in the whole unhappy story of Dec. 7, 1941, went into the record of the Pearl Harbor investigation today. Gen. George C. Marshall, then army chief of staff, filed the message to Maj. Gen. Walter C. Short in Hawaii at 12:18 p.m. (Washington time) on Dec. 7. That was 6:48 a.m. Honolulu time. "Japanese are presenting at 1 p.m. Eastern standard time today what amounts to an ultimatum" it told the Pearl Harbor army commander. "Also they are under orders to destroy their code machine immediately. Just what significance the hour set may have we do not know but be on alert accordingly. Inform naval authorities of this communication." The message arrived, by commercial cable, at 7:33 a.m. Honolulu time =22 minutes before the first Japanese planes struck. But it never did any good. The army board which investigated the Pearl Harbor defeat criticized Marshall on this point in its report last August. It was not decoded and delivered until 2:58 p.m.-seven hours and three minutes after the attack. Short told the army board that had The board said it had not been "satisfactorily explained" why the message was sent by time-consuming commercial cable when FBI radio, for example, could have gotten it were in 20 minutes. A message been sent by "scrambler phone" — a device for scrambling telephone messages which are unscrambled by a similar device at the receiving end — he believed that "we would probably have gotten more of the import and a clearer idea of danger." "And," he said, "we would have had time to warm up the planes and get them in the air to meet any attack." Russ Win Important UNO Commission Post London. (UP)—Russia won an important position on the United Nations Preparatory commission when K. Kiselev was elected vice-chairman of the technical committee, number four on trusteeships. Gullermo Belt, Cuban ambassador to Washington, was elected chairman of the trusteeship committee, on which the Russians place great importance since they are seeking the trusteeship of one of the former Italian colonies in Africa. the technical committee, number five on the new international court of justice and legal questions, elected Egyptian foreign minister Abd El Hamid Badawi Pasha as chairman and the delegate from Peru, Ricardo Rivera Schreiber, as vice-chairman. Committee number one on general assembly elected Erik Colban, Norwegian ambassador in London, as chairman, and Manuel Perez Guerrero of Venezuela as vice-chairman. Japan Heads New Club at Art Majors Jacquelyn Logan, is the president of the newly organized University Art club. Other officers elected Tuesday night were: LuAnne' Powell, Vice president, Barbara Meyer, secretary; Helen Dietzel, treasurer; Marion Greenlee, historian, and Roy Rogers, sergeant at arms. No Session—Wonder Why? Washington. (UP) — Chairman Alben W. Barkley, announced today the Pearl Harbor investigating committee will not have a session Saturday. He said the recess has "nothing to do with the Army-Navy football game to be played at Philadelphia that day." A Million Servicemen Home From Pacific Pearl Harbor. (UP)—Almost one-third of the servicemen who were in the Pacific ocean areas when Japan signed the surrender on Sept. 2 have been returned to the United States, Pacific fleet headquarters announced today. In Washington the war department announced that 252,000 soldiers returned to civilian life during the week ended Nov. 23, bringing the total released since May 12 to 3,366,000. A navy press release said 1,104,655 army, navy, and marine corps personnel of the 3,400,000 in the Pacific on V-J day had been transported to the United States on shipboard by Nov. 25. In addition, 23,655 liberated prisoners of war, civilian internes, and civil service workers were returned home. The navy estimated that by Jan 1, ships of the "Magic Carpet" fleet will be returning about 350,000 returning servicemen monthly. A total of 341 vessels has been assigned to the fleet of which 162 vessels with a passenger capacity of 227,000 were reported loading in the Pacific or enroute to the United States. Roosevelt Stamp Collection Goes on Auction Block New York. (UP)—President Roosevelt's stamp collection valued at approximately $100,000, has been given officially to the auctioneer by executors of the late president's estate. To Prevent Air Attacks From Unguarded Arctic Washington. (UP)—The government, heeding warnings from its top air generals, is taking steps to safeguard the nation against air attacks through the unguarded Arctic approaches. Station in Clouds The University of Chicago has been authorized to set up an experimental station aboard a free balloon within a 350-mile radius of Chicago. Chicago (UP)—A radio station in the clouds has been licensed by the Federal Communications Commission. The balloon will be used in the university's studies on cosmic rays, Japs Sounded Out Latin Views on War Washington. (UP)—Japanese diplomats in the spring of 1941 were trying to find out how Latin American countries would react in the event of a U.S.-Japanese war, it was disclosed today. State department records revealed instances in which Japanese envoys hinted the possibility of war to learn the attitudes of Brazil, Peru, Venezuela, Costa Rica, Panama, Cuba, Colombia, and the Dominican republic. This development came near the close of day-long testimony by Joseph C. Grew, last U.S. ambassador to Japan. Meanwhile, Rep. Frank B. Keefe, a committee member, asked for all communications between the late President Roosevelt and former Prime Minister Winston Churchill from Nov. 24 to Dec. 7, 1941. Committee Chairman Alben W. Barkley, indicated that one of the next big-name witnesses before the committee would be Gen. George C. Marshall. Barkley said the former army staff chief would be called to the stand before he leaves for China as President Truman's personal envoy replacing ambassador Patrick J. Hurley, resigned. The state department records of Japanese diplomatic activity in Latin America revealed that in each case the Japanese envoy was told the American nations would present a United front in the event of war. Pittsburgh. (UP) -Freshman radium class $-5,000 per lecture. Frosh Radium Class Once Cost Pittsburgh $5,000 a Lecture The University of Pittsburgh's fall term catalogue could have listed such a course at one time. Because that's what the lectures used to cost—but the students didn't know it—and neither did the professor. It was Dr. Alexander Silverman's lecture, and he used $180,000,000 worth of radon gas in six years in the accompanying demonstrations, given three times in one day in each semester. His former student, Dr. Glenn D. Kammer, became associated with a chemical firm in 1913 and began to work with radium. Recently Dr. Silverman explained how the costly classes came about. Radium is a solid, Dr. Silverman explained, and it is composed of atoms. About half of the atoms break up or disintegrate and give off two gases. One is helium and the other radon. When Dr. Kammer experimented with the gas back in the early 1920s it was known only as "radium emanation." No uses were known for it. And so Dr. Kammer presented Dr the "COLLEGE JEWELER" Gustafson Students' Jewelry Store 41 Years Washington. (UP)—The OPA says with a sigh, that the American public is unpredictable. Not Appreciated By Public, OPA Says After all the gripes about the rationing of meat and shoes, the public didn't send OPA a single letter of appreciation when these programs were ended. 911 Mass. St. Washington. (UP) A navy spokesman revealed today that a torpedo accidentally fired by a U.S. destroyer missed the battleship Iowa while the Iowa was carrying the late President Roosevelt to the Cairo conference. "The psychological reaction of the public is too much for the OPA to figure out," one OPA official said. Torpedo Missed Iowa With F.D.R. Aboard The incident took place on Nov. 14, 1943. The destroyer William D. Porter accidentally fired a torpedo which exploded some distance astern of the Iowa. The late President and the U.S. Chiefs of Staff were aboard the Iowa at the time en route to Cairo. The navy spokesman said the explosion took place at a considerable distance from the ship and caused no injuries either to the ship or to its personnel. An investigating board found certain personnel of the Porter inefficient in performance of duty and he officers and men concerned were admonished." Today, a sealed tube of the gas now widely used in radium therapy, filled with one millicurie, or less than one-millionth of an ounce of radon, sells for $2.50. Silverman with three three-and-a-third ounce bulbs of radon each day he gave his lecture on radium. Chicago (UP)—A survey by L. V. Sorenson, city traffic engineer, has disclosed that an estimated 817,792 persons enter the downtown business district of Chicago each day. Chicago Crowd But back in the early '20s Dr. Sil- verman used $15,000,000 worth a day just to show the fledgling students how it glowed. Fishbein, Sullivan Attack Truman's Federal Health Plan (By United Press) President Truman's plan for compulsory health insurance underwent attacks from two quarters today as men of the medical profession became articulate on the subject. The movement . . . is the first step toward regimentation of utilities, of industries, of finance and eventually of labor itself," he told the sixth annual conference of the professions-industries on the extension of medical service group insurance programs. In New York, Dr. Morris Fishbein, editor of the Journal of the American Medical Association, said that a compulsory health program would be the first step toward regimentation similar to that which led to the downfall of Germany. "This is the kind of regimentation that led to totalitarianism in Germany and the downfall of that nation. Its prime consideration is deduction from the pay of the worker and taxation of the employer so that the government does for the people most of the things that our people . . . have been accustomed to do for themselves." Dr. Sullivan, retiring president of the Association of American Physicians and Surgeons, Inc. spoke at a luncheon of the south central section of the American Urological Association, in Kansas City, Mo. Meanwhile Dr. Andrew J. Sullivan, Chicago, declared that any scheme of compulsory health insurance was highly utopian and impossible of fulfillment. "The Wayne-Murray-Dingle, bill is not a bill offered in response to spontaneous demand of the public," he said, "but is the result of a long-time propaganda campaign of various labor organizations." He said the International Labor organization "has assiduously and insistently labored for a long period of years for socialization of medicine throughout the nations of the world." The first governor of Kansas was Andrew H. Reeder, of Pennsylvania. PENNEY'S IMPORTED PIGSKIN SLIPPERS Co-ed Scuffs $100 Men's Slippers Scuffs — always a favorite! Pig leather uppers, soles and heels. A smart, eye-catching pattern, plus perfect ease. Three popular colors. Natural Pigskin. All leather sole, heel and upper. $100 (2) PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 29,1945 The UNION is your host on the campus... TODAY and EVERY DAY The doors of the Memorial Union are opened wide to all who come to the campus. As always, alumni, students, and friends can count on finding the best in entertainment, recreation and food at the Union, the center of campus activities. First Floor—Main Lobby Lounge . . . Dances . . . Lost and Found Bureau . . . Book Rental Library . . . Information Desk . . . Coat Check Stand . . . Ping Pong Music Room Southeast corner of the main floor. Large collection of records for your enjoyment. Kansan Room Third floor. . . Small parties and dances. Pine Room On the third floor. Old English Room Teas and meetings. East Room On third floor. . . For meetings. Cafeteria One level below the main floor Provides daily meal service. The best food on the campus. Soda Fountain MEET YOUR FRIENDS In the Basement. . . "Let's go to the Union for a coke." . . Breakfast . . Light Lunches. AT THE MEMORIAL UNION HERMINA ZIPPLE, Director 0 Ti University DAILY KANSAN Friday, November 30, 1945 43rd Year No. 46 Lawrence, Kansas STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS News . . . of the World MU Gets O.K. to Play Texas in Cotton Bowl Kansas City, Mo. (UP)—The University of Missouri football team, big six champions, today obtained conference approval to play Texas in the Cotton bowl at Dallas on New Year's day. New York. (UP)—The name of Elliot Rooselt was dropped from the new edition of the Social Register, out today. France Blocks Allied Control of Germany This was the third bowl bid received by the Tigers in six years. Coach Don Faurot's champions met Georgia Tech in the Orange bowl in 1839 and played Fordham in the Sugar bowl in 1941. Washington (UP)—The House Un-American activities committee today invited former ambassador to China Patrick J. Hurley to tell it what he knows about any pro-communists in the State department. Berlin. (UP)—The American military government charged bluntly today that France's uncompromising attitude toward Germany and the war occupation powers is block- use these methods to further reduce the recovery in the deflected nail. Lt. Gen. Lucius D. Clay, deputy American military governor, said much of the economic paralysis now gripping Germany traces directly to the French refusal to join with the other occupation powers in treating Germany as a single economic unit. Washington. (UP)—The War deparment today awaited a report by Lt. Gen. Robert Richardson, commander of the Hawaiian theater, on the return to the United States of low-point football players. The Army newspaper Stars and Stripes was quoted as saying that only 13 of the 54 army air forces players flown back to the U.S. had the 60 points necessary. Over-Caution Gave Tip-Off on A-Bomb Washington. (UP)—A prominent scientist, predicting that Russia can start atom bomb production in about three years, told congress today that over-zealous army security relations tipped the Soviets last June to our secret manufacture of atomic weapons. Paris. (UP)—The government introduced before the assembly today a bill to nationalize the Bank of France and four of the country's biggest private banks, and to bring all French credit operations under close government supervision. Elmorebeck N.Y. (UP)—Blaze, the alpine-traveling English bull mastiff owned by Elliott Roosevelt, was destroyed Sunday for attacking Fala, scotti pet of the late President Roosevelt. Parsans. (UP) -Ollie Ray, Jr. 21 Paxter Springs, continued today to deny that he robbed the Hepler and Stark banks during the noon hour yesterday and asserted he'd won the car in which he was arrested in a gambling game. Nazi Admits Polish War Incidents 'Faked' Nuernberg. (UP) — The No. 2 man of the German counter-intelligence service testified today that the Nazi war criminals faked the incidents used as a pretext for the war on Poland by dressing up concentration camp prisoners in Polish uniforms. The inside picture of the Nazi world was told for the first time by Maj. Gen, Edwin Lahousen, chief assistant to Admiral Wilhelm Canaris, head of the German counter-intelligence service. Lahousen's testimony sent the 20 war crime defendants into panic and rage. At the luncheon recess Hermann Goering snorted that Labouens ought to be "lynched" and Joachim Vib Rinbert nervously muttered, "What shall I do? What shall I do?" Lahousen said Ribbentrop told him that a directive had been issued to arrange for Ukrainian groups to rise against the Poles in the Polish Ukraine and exterminate both Poles and Jews. The uprising must be so arranged that all the Polish houses in the region were burned down, Ribbentrop was quoted as saying. "Some time in August, 1939," Lahousen said, "The counter-intelligence section was ordered to hand over Polish uniforms and identification tags to Heinrich Himmel." Lahousen said that when the first pullover about Polish attacks on German villages were published — the pretext Hitler used for attacking the Poles — “it became clear what the uniforms had been used for.” He said that prisoners had been taken from concentration camps, dressed in Polish uniforms and directed to attack the Glauwitz radio station. 'It All Comes Back To Me Now"—Hess Nuernberg, (UP) — Rudolf Hess testified from the war crimes witness stand today that his pretense of amnesia and insanity was a hoax and that he was quite competent and ready to go ahead with his own trial. His counsel, preceding Hess in a hearing for which the courtroom was cleared of the other Nazi defendants, pleaded that his client's claim to mental fitness was a part of the quirks of the mind that made him irresponsible. Despite Hess' melodramatic assertion from the stand that his purported loss of memory was faked, the international tribunal withheld an immediate ruling on his mental condition. The testimony provided a sensational climax to Hess' claims for more than three years that he remembered nothing of his doings as deputy chief of the Nazi party and one of the top-dogs of the Hitler regime. WEATHER Phi Chi Theta Hears Ise Prof. John Ise spoke on "Communism" at a Phi Chi Theta, business sorority, meeting Thursday in the Memorial Union. Kansas — Fair and warmer to night. Low tonight 35 to 40. except near 30 west border. Tomorrow partly cloudy, slightly cooler north-west. We Were All in the Dark in the Library But Since When Was That Unusual? Light's out!" It was a little dark in the library this morning. Everyone had a good time while a new fuse box was being put in. Speaks for Veterans This is E. R. Elbel, of the University veterans' bureau, who will speak at a convention of collegiate veterans organizations of Missouri and Kansas at the University of Kansas City, Dec. 7. VA Representative Here Next Week To Speak With Vets Paul West, Veteran's Administration training officer from Kansas City, will confer with University veterans Monday and Tuesday, E.R. Elbel, of the veterans' bureau, said today. Tonight's Dance: Informal Appointments for advice concerning their problems may be made by veterans, Mr. Elbel explained. Tenight's varsity dance at the Military Science building is informal, Laura Schmid, Newman club president, said today. If You'd Like to See World News Pour In Here's an Invitation By BETTY JENNINGS Daily Kansan Telegraph Editor Clickety-clak, clickety-clak, and 40,000 words roll off the Daily Kansan United Press teletype every day. Just a little curious? All right, here's an open invitation for you to come to the Journalism building and see how this little machine supplies your student paper with complete news coverage from all over the world. It's really fascinating to watch such datelines as Chungking, Tehran, London, and Manila, come to the newsroom — even Washington can take on a little glamor. There was the time that shoe ractioning went off—and the story was rushed down to the composing room just before the paper went to press. Result—University students got the Latest News. Hull winning the Nobel prize, the war in China, the political situation in France—it all comes out of the machine and into your paper. Flashes, bulletins, first leads — they all come over the United Press wire, which, incidentally, is the largest press association in the world. In fact, the Daily Kansan has longer press protection than any other paper in Douglas county to give complete assurance you are getting the last word in news. Still wonder how it all works out? Why don't you come over and see for yourself? Between classes, during your free hours, drop in at the "Shack" and watch the news come out of the telegraph machine letter by letter, word by word. See how the telegraph editor and her assistants sort and evaluate the news, edit the wire copy, and write headlines for the important stories. Coming in to see us? We're holding open house. Monday? Fine? Nothing Can Stop the Air Corps Even at University of Kansas - * * Dunne Adsit, who piloted a B-24 during his three years in the army air corps, still has his hands at the controls — only this time he's guiding the freshman class instead of an airplane. He entered the University in September and was elected class president in the election Nov. 6. He was stationed in Wendling, England, with the 578th squadron of the 392nd bombing group for nine months and participated in a number of missions over central Europe. He has the Air medal with three oak leaf clusters, the ETO ribbon with three battle stars, and the Presidential unit citation. He is a member of the Caterpillar club. S. K. MAYER Duane entered the army in September, 1942, and received his discharge Oct. 8, three weeks after he entered the University. He attended the University of Missouri in 1943 as part of his army training course. He is a member of the Men's Glee club, P.S.G.L., and a radio skit presented over KFKU each week. He is circulation manager of Kan Do, publication of the Independent party. ADSIT Freshman Class President Sigma Nu Frat To Reoccupy Locksley Hall Sigma Nu fraternity members now plan to return to their chapter house in West Hills at the beginning of next semester, the Daily Kansan learned today. Fifty women now living in the Sigma Nu building will be housed in university residences on McCook and Louisiana streets. These houses, now occupied by private residents, will be remodeled beginning Jan. 1. The women had named the Sigma Nu house Locksley hall. Sigma Nu members now occupy a floor of the Delta Upsilon house. They have not occupied their own house since 1943. The University's lease on the house expires Feb. 8. Tokyo. (UP)—A storm of protest by U.S. atomic scientists over destruction of Japanese cyclotrons led to an order by Army Chief of Staff Gen. Dwight Eisenhower to save the largest atom-smasher—a "reprise" that arrived too late, it was disclosed today. Patricia Creel Heads New Spanish Group The Forensic League, new organization for persons interested in speech has been organized under the direction of Prof. E. C. Buehler. The officers are Patrician, Creel, president, Kenneth Beasley, vice president, and Laura Schmid, secretary. One purpose of the league is to provide speakers for organizations. Committees appointed yesterday are program, Jim Crook, chairman, Floyd Krehbiel, Kenneth Beasley, Joy Godbehe, and Keith Congdon; speakers bureau, Dick Schiefelbusch, chairman; publicity, Orville Roberts, Keith Wilson, and Jean Moore; managers of speaking events, Shirley Corlett, chairman, Emily Stacey, Dolores Custer, William Vandiver, James Black, and Anne Ardrey. At the next meeting on Jan. 10, Prof. Buehler will give a lecture-recital to "Voices That Have Made History." V-12's Swimming Cut During Colds Season At the request of Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, all navy trainees, except non-qualified swimmers, will not take swimming until the present epidemic of colds is over, Capt. Chester A. Kunz said today. This order will affect 300 navy V-12's, Captain Kunz said. At present 12 navy students are in the hospital. ON THE INSIDE Ah, yes, women's fashions. Mi- lady will be interested in Page 3. Want to buy a glider? Prof. Huy has one for sale. Page 4. It was a tough fight, Mom, but we won. It took 35 years to get this close to a real student book-store. Page 4. How Mary Ellen Turkington hates to be called Mary Ellen. Cuch! We were only kidding, Turk. Page 6. Social fraternities have been banned at the University of Chicago. Page 7. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 30,1945 University DAILY KANSAN Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Association, National Editorial Association, and the associated Collegiate Press Represented a number of publications, including: 420 Madison Ave. New York City. Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence) add $1 a semester postage). Published in Law and School school your except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Kanker,伞, under act of March 3, 1879. NEWS STAFF ELEKANOR ALRIGHT Managing Editor VIRGINIA VAN ORDER Asst. Managing Ed. MARY MANAGER GAYNOR BRIARMAN GAYNOR TAPHIGRAF Editor PATIHEA PENNEY News Editor JULIE VAHILTON Assist. Editor BILLION U. Sociedad MARGARET WENRIK Sports Editor JANE ANDERSON Feature Editor CLEO NOBLE Maturp Editor NORLAND Research Editor MARIAN THOMSON Asst. Feature Editor JOY HOWLANSO Copy Editor Telephone: 718-265-3490 Historical Telegraph Bureau JOAN VEATCH DINIX GILLILAND Staff Assistant BARBARA EWING JEAN MUFRAY NEAL SHELMAN PAUL CONRAD EDITORIAL STAFF DOLORES SULYMAN ... Editor-in-Chief MARY MOHLLY ... Editorial Associates BUSINESS STAFF NANCY TOMLISSON ... Business Manager BETTY BEACH ... Advertising Manager ASSISTANT: BORE BONDERKAK, MAJNY BRANI- ANK, ANN RIBING, ANNE COO, SOLLYA In Small, ELEGANT THROUGH In Charge This Issue Anne Scott Whose Move? You haven't heard anything about the campus peace conference since the initial blow up in October, and it isn't because the conference has been progressing behind closed doors. The conference, to be truthful, simply hasn't progressed. Orphaned at the age of five months, the project was never solicited by its foster parent, Forums board, whose members announced at the beginning that they "didn't have time to think about organizing it until after mid-semesters." Now at last, with a few professors, they have started to thing, and a few indefinite ideas rattle around in the projects, void. First of all, the board has concluded that we do not need a conference as such. They favor a series of movies, panels, discussions, and chatty affairs at professor's homes. One proposal which should excite students even if a lasting peace doesn't is a week-end get-together at Lone Star lake. But the way things stand now, these ideas will spend themselves soon. The Forums board is only mildly inspired. Apparently, even with mid-semesters behind them, they find it hard to become enthusiastic over the prospect of making a 3-man stand against the problems of the world. And professors have been fed up for some time with planning things for students and then sitting around talking to themselves. But we also know that a substantial percentage of students is sincerely worried about the state of the world. These students are eager for any crumb of understanding, any hint of solution. What the project must have before it can or will be carried on is student support, active student participants. Even a hundred in the beginning would be enough. We have heard an appalling number of undergraduates admit that they aren't interested in world problems. They have the interest to back discussions of peace; they are the key to the whole campus project. We call upon them now to make themselves and their interests articulate, to indicate to the Forums Board chairman, George Caldwell, and to professors of the political science department that any word on world affairs will have an audience.-M.M. OUR DEMOCRATIC EFFORTS DAVID RICHARD There's More Than Japan Attached Throwing in a Towel While we look forward to a prewar Christmas holiday, unrated meat and butter, nylon hose, and better service in cafes and department stores, masses of shifting, homeless Europeans are facing a winter of famine, cold and disease Since then several Y.W.C.A. groups have "adopted" European families and have introduced the "Togs in a Towel" plan to organized houses. Several weeks ago Miss Myra Lou Williamson, youth secretary of the Kansas Institute of International Relations, gave W.W.C.A. members a hint as to how they could help needy children in Europe. The togs are wrapped in a towel and sent to the service committee for shipment to a child in Europe. The donor's name and address is pinned to the towel. Paul' West, training officer from Veterans Administration in Kansas City, will meet with K.U. veterans from 7 to 8:30 p.m., Monday, in Frank Strong auditorium. Appointments may be made through the local veterans office with Mr. West to discuss any questions not answered Monday or questions of a personal nature.-George Parmelee, secretary, Jyhawk Veterans. The plan, sponsored by the American Friends Service committee, makes it possible for persons in the United States to send clothes and presents to European families. An individual, club, or organization selects a child of a certain age and buys an outfit of clothing for him. Delaware retains the whipping-post as a punishment for criminals. As we set out to do our shopping for Christmas and for luxuries we were denied during the war, a thought about our European neighbors who are without the bare necessities of life should prompt us to throw in a towel—with togs for needy children. Notices must be typwritten and must be in Public Relations office, 222A, Frank Strong, not later than 6pm. No messages accepted. OFFICIAL BULLETIN Cartoon from St. Louis Star Times University of Kansas Nov. 30, 1945 Rock Chalk Talk By RODNEY MORRISON In the interest of art? Just about the time the man shortage seems to be letting up, something happens to indicate that the situation tends the other way. There is a well-built statue of a man in Fraser hall entitled, "The Dying Dying Gaul." Over the weekend the Gaul acquired a suspicious coating of lipstick. Chi Yeah! Some enterprising young man was rather startled the other evening when he called for Connie Cloughley at the Chi O house. Joan Larsen answered the phone and went to find Connie. Connie was taking a bath and wanted him to call later. In her haste to say the right thing Joan blurted out, "She's out of the house right now, but she said to call back in 10 minutes." Laundry blues. Sig Alph men are still wondering why laundry men can't be convinced that Fran is a boy's name and that brother Fran Pierpont lives at the S.A.E. house—not the Chi O lodge. Alah! It Sad? The hanging of a black crepe on a door at Jolliffe hall notified residents of the death of a thoroughbred Gupple fish three-eighths of an inch long. An appropriately short sermon and a soft rendition of "Asleep in the Deep" over the body of the deceased cinched the funeral ceremony. Among the mourners of this leviathan of the deep were companion Guppies, Eustacius and Gertrude, who, themselves, expired a few hours after their friend's rites. Fowl Play—Rosie Erwin and Mar- jorie Bentley, Henley店, spent Stork stuff. Carefully cradling a towel-wrapped hot water bottle in her arms, a Miller haller entered the sleeping porch to sleep off a common cold. An upper-bunk occupant observed the entrance, sat bolt upright, and asked eagerly, "Gosh, Doc, is it a boy?" You should know—the lavestest campus pass-word and greeting is "Tovarich!" a nectic quarter hour chasing what they thought was a bat. When the bird landed on a bed, the girls decided it was an English sparrow, anyway. Happy weekend—If the "admitted to the hospital" list means anything, K.U. students had more to think about than preserving their health over the Thanksgiving holiday. Toast of the week: Here's to God's first thought, Man! And 'here's to God's second thought, Woman! Second thoughts are always best— So here's to women! Heard on the Campus. "She has the most darling southern accent—where's she from?" A shy lad of 21. Women in an organized house were voting to determine when they wanted to clothes in the "Togs in a Towel" plan for European children. They had their choice of boy or girl of any age. At least half the house held out for a boy, age 21. "Wichita." You know how is it. With everyone knocking themselves out these days trying to be clever, we hear things like: Exchange dinners between women's organized houses are a means of sibisternization. Under Wrong Bed Hammond, Ind. (UP)—Finding a man under the bed might have been an answer to a maiden's prayer, but it scared Robert G. Olwarez. Olwarez awoke one morning to find a stranger under his bed. He rushed out of the room, locked the door and called the police. The stranger couldn't explain how he got there. 'Kids' Are Vets Evanston. Ill. (UP)—There are five real veterans on the so-called "Kid" football team of Northwestern University. The group is comprised of four former Army air corps pilots and one gunner. An Editorial Peace Is Not Absence of War Adm, William V. Pratt, author of a current series of interpretative articles in Newsweck magazine, wrote for the Nov. 26 issue under the title, "Preparedness as a Weapon for Peace." Characterizing the public attitude toward national security as hazy and fallacious, he argued that indeed preparedness is a weapon for peace. But, speaking of fallacies, Adm. Pratt's thesis is predicated on a popular misconception of the nature of peace. According to this widely held mistaken idea, peace is a thing to be fought for and that once gained, it can be guaranteed, protected, cradled, and coddled, by threat of war. Under the influence of this misconception, we are logically led to seek weapons with which to secure the peace. We seem to learn from experience that preparedness will protect a nation from war, that is, keep the peace. The fallacy in this is that peace is not the mere absence of war, it is a positive, though complicated, force within a national or international community. Peace as a force is the dynamic result of the component forces of communal vitality, cooperation, common ambition, and just plain work. These forces operate only under conditions of relative prosperity, security, and freedom. America at peace was America after the Revolution when she was, with vitality, cooperating in the pursuit of her ambition to build a new nation on the shores of the new continent. America at peace was America after the Civil war, energetically working to make-of that nation an industrial giant that continued to grow until today we are called the greatest sovereign power on earth. Our conception of peace, then, should be like that of a man riding a bicycle. While he keeps up speed, he is secure. But he keeps his speed, not by trying to remain secure, but by pushing the pedals, by working. So the peace problem is a 'problem of humanity as a 'whole and can be settled only by applying on a world-wide scale the forces that are the components of peace.-LK. And as the United States grew, other nations were growing, and today we are crowding each other. Frictions develop between us and must be overcome. And when the stuff of peace wears thin, when the constructive forces grow weak, wars break out. Man tries to fight out the problems that he cannot work out. But when the fighting is done, he finds that the problems are still there. The annual Union carnival will be held Dec. 8 in the Military Science building, Alberta Cornwell, Union president, announced today. "Organized houses that wish to erect booths should telephone Elaine Wells, Union secretary at 295, no later than Monday," Miss Cornwell said. Houses Will Sponsor Booths at Carnival Booths will be judged on originality, cleverness, and attractiveness she explained. In the past years booth attracts have featured cokes, marriages, and shows, chance games, and games requiring skill in marksmanship. "A small general admission fee for dancing will be charged," Miss Cornwell said. "Each house will determine the fee for entering its particular booth." The first English-speaking white man to see Kansas was the son of Daniel Boone, born August 22, 1828. 1 945 NOVEMBER 30,1945 10 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE SOCIALLY SPEAKING 63 Kay Vallette, Kansas Society Editor Kappa Phi Party Tonight Theta Sigma Phi Pledges The Kappa Phi Christmas party will be held at 7 tonight at the First Methodist church, Charlotte Price, president, said. Hostesses will be Eleanor Davis, Betty Ann Dunn, Reva Dwyer, Patricia Elledge, Billie Enterline, and Barbara Felt. On the party planning committee were Grace Janke, Mary Jo Cox, Marilyn Whiteford, Doris Jean Cox, and Ida Mae Woodburn. Eleven women were pledged to the Theta Sigma Phi honorary journalism fraternity, in the sky parlor of the journalism building last night. Those pledged include Patricia Penney, Billie Hamilton, Rebecca Vallette, Dixie Gilland, Margaret Wenski, Virigina Van Order, Anne Young, Jane Anderson, Eleanor Albright, Cleo Norris, and Alamada Bollier. Kappa Pledges Entertain The Kappa Kappa Gamma pledge class entertained members of Delta Upson fraternity at an hour dance Tuesday night. Theta Has Guests K.U. Dames Met Wednesday Nancy Neville and Patricia Armel, former chapter members, were dinner guests at the Kappa Alpha Theta house, Tuesday. Square dancing was the chief entertainment at a meeting of the K.U. Dames in the University clubroom in Green hall, Wednesday night. Miss Ruth Hoover and Miss Joie Stapleton of the physical education Seventeen new members were introduced. They are Donna Jean Bangs, Eloise Barkley, Valeda Villinius, Mildred Brown, Beulah Holly, Gladys Hooper, Lois Lieberg, Virginia Lindemood, Phyllis Matchett, Bet Maya, Hazel Haynesworth, Wilma Howard, Shirley Moon, Delma Peck, Ruth Schieflebusch, Ruth Stephenson, and Louise Wade. Members of the refreshment committee were Jean Cole, chairman; Sue Adams; Helen Barr; Jean Mainen, Ann Canniff, and Vera Carter. Pledge Sigma Kappa Sigma Kappa has announced the pledging of Doris Kingsbury, Grenola, Elizabeth Ann Wakenhut, Parsons, and Jane Wilcox, Bridgeport Conn. Blair-Norrie Wedding The wedding of Lorea Louise Norrie, Sabetha, to John W. Blair, McPherson, took place Nov. 23, at the Methodist church in Sabetha. Her attendant was Mary Holtz-claw of Lawrence. Those assisting at the reception which followed were Ruth Brown, Mavis Lukert, both of Sabetha and John Harris of Wichita. Mrs. Blair is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Norrie of Sabeth. She is a sophomore in the college and a member of Sigma Kappa sorority. Mr. Blaire received his discharge last year and is a sophomore in the college. - The couple went to Kansas City for a honeymoon and are now living at 2129 New Hampshire street. MUSIC NOVELTIES Powder Boxes Pianos Cigarette Chests Cigarette Chests Roberts Jewelry and Gift Jewelry and Gifts Skull, Cross Bones Form Phi Chi Badge M. A. S. K. By Don Ferguson This is another in a series of articles to acquaint the campus with the various organized houses, their members, officers, and histories. Skull and cross bones superimposed on the Phi Chi letters form the badge for the medical fraternity. This professional fraternity was organized in Baltimore in 1905, when the Phi Chi society at the University of Vermont and the Phi Chi medical fraternity at the University of Louisville were consolidated to become the Phi Chi International Medical Fraternity, Inc. Since receiving its charter in 1915, Kappa Upsilon has been located at 1233 Oread road. At the traditional sophomore farewell banquet last spring, the fraternity burned the mortgage on its house. The banquet is held for each sophomore class when its members are advanced to the University hospitals. Kansas City. The chapter recently received as a gift, the private library of the late Dr. J. B. Henry, former Lawrence physician. Mrs. V. A. Mallory is the housemother. Today Phi Chi has 65 active chapters in the United States and Canada and a membership of 27.000. Dan Ferguson, sophomore medical student is the past-president of Phi Chi. He was sent to the University hospitals in Kansas City this month. Donald Gholson, freshman medical student, replaced him. Active members include Wesley Innes, Bolivar Marquez, Robert Edwards, Ben Bryant, Elton Shroder, George Yeckel, Don Peterson, Tom Montgomery, Bernard Brunner, Eugene Throne, Benedict Budai, Eugene VanderSmissen, Raymond Schmidt, Leonard Barrington, and Angelo Pasano. Other chapter officers are Maurice O'Leary, vice-president; Donald MacLean, secretary; Robert Borders, treasurer. Members of the pledge class are Capt. C. E. Moore, Robert Adams, and Gilbert Weimuller. Missourians elected the first Kansas legislature in 1855. Of 6307 votes cast, only 2905 were legally cast by Kansans. Up and Coming Six Independent women's houses dance, 9 p.m. to midnight, Kansas room, Union. Tonight A Calendar of Campus Events Up Sigma Alpha Epsilon dance, 8:30 p.m. to midnight, chapter house. Newman club all school dance, 9 p.m. to midnight, Military Science ... Pl Beta Phi dance, 9 p.m. to midnight, Kansas room, Union. Tomorrow Kappa Kappa Gamma tea dance, 3 to 5 p.m., chapterhouse. Foster hall dance, 9 p.m. to midnight, at the hall. Gamma Phi Beta dance, 9 p.m. to midnight, Eldridge hotel. Jolife hall openhouse, 9 p.m. to midnight. Let's Go to CHURCH. Trinity Lutheran Church Morning Worship, 11 a.m. Lutheran Students' association meeting, 6 p.m., Rev. Harold Hamilton, speaker. Holy Communion, 8 a.m. Church school, 9:30 a.m. Morning worship, 11 a.m. First Christian Church Trinity Episcopal Church College class, 9:30 a.m. Worship service, 10:45 a.m. Velva Dreese, Topeka, guest speaker. Forum, Myers hall, lunch, 5 p.m. Worship, Barlow chapel, Norma Dudley, leader, "Christmas in Mexico" by Miss Irene Cebula, of the University Spanish department, 6 p.m. St John's Catholic Church Masses at 8, 10, and 11:30 a.m. First Baptist Church Yellow White Blue Student discussion class, "Christmas and Economics," 9:45 a.m. Worship service, 11 a.m. Youth Fellowship, speaker, Prof. W. E. Sandellius, "Christian Principles and World Outlook, 5:30 p.m. First Presbyterian Church Sunday school, 9:45 a.m. Morning worship, 11 a.m. Vesper club, 1921 Oread avenue, guest speaker, Prof. Esther Twente, "Race Relations From Sociological Angle," 5 p.m. Plymouth Congregational Church Morning worship, Rev. C. Fosberg Hughes, minister, 11 a.m. Fireside forum, Parish house, 4:30 to 6 p.m. First Methodist Church Student class, 9:45 a.m. Dr. E. F. Price, "Is the Bible True?" Morning worship service, Oscar E. Allison. SLEEP IS EASY WHEN YOU DRINK MILK BEFORE RE-TIRING. Lawrence Sanitary Christmas Cheer No. 2 FINE MUFFLERS Milk & Ice Cream Co. Warm, dressy, comfortable, all wool. From Botany Mills. "Get 'em now while we have 'em" Maroon Green $2. Fancy Blocks Phoenix Knit Neckties, Plain Colors and Stripes, $1.50 CARLS GOOD CLOTHES Women's Styles Won't Follow Excesses of'20's Expert Says Jacksonville, Fla. (UP)—From all signs so far, women are not going in for extremes in fashions during the reconversion period as women did after World War I. At least that is the opinion of one fashion expert--Alice Wilson Richard, son, merchandise editor of Mademoiselle magazine. Skirts will be tall. AT THE HOSPITAL Conant Wait, Jr., Lindley Hall. Charles Kendall Pursell, 1614 Kentucky. Keith Congdon, 1409 Tennessee. Bugsnail Tog Yumbsss Cordon Ell Enbacher, Batten- feld. Gordon Paul Handley, 1140 Mississippi. Doris M. Doane, 1433 Tennessee. 123 M. Diane, 124 c.doussee, Sarah Louise Marks, 1001 West Hills William Lawrence Stringer, 1430 Louisiana. James Larry Bowman, PT 6. Ford Neal Bohl. PT 8. Dismissed Floyd Tony Veatch, 1301 West Campus. John Paul Feist, $ 533 \frac{1}{2} $ Ohio. John Paul Feist, 533$\frac{1}{2}$ Ohio. Richard Don Blim, 1602 Louisiana. Paul Wayne Ott, PT 9. Wanda Dean, Locksley Hall. Caryl Audine Dyer, 1200 Louisiana. Edith Lucile Bossom, Corbin Louis Bissonn Eleanor Thompson, 1246 Mississippi. John H. Thompson, Jr., 161 Lincoln Whitson Godfrey, 1111 West Eleventh. James Richard Jackson, Battenfield. John W. Kendrick, PT 6. minister, "The Church in a Convalescing World." Wesley Foundation Fellowship, Alvin Pitts, Keplar's Credo, "I Believe," 6 p.m. Church of God Sunday, school. Rev. Everett L. Riley, minister. 9:45 a.m. Morning worship, 10:45 a.m. Youth group, 6:30 p.m. Evening service, 7:30 p.m. First Church of Christ, Scientist ... First Church of Christ, Scientist Sunday school, 9:45 a.m. Church, Jean Kridel, reader, Ancient and Modern Necromancy, alias Mesmerism and Hypnotism — Denounced" 11 a.m. and longer, but won't be taking off on a cock-eyed fashion tangent, she said during a visit here. Case of Wearing Out The nearest thing to the zany jazz age clothes of the early '20s would be the bobbie-soxers' dress. The sudden change in the sloppy college girl attire of yesteryear is one of the best trends in fashions since the beginning of the war, Miss Richardson thought. Terming it a fad "out of this world," she said, "That fad will just have to wear itself out of fashion." When asked if the currently popular fitted sweaters were the result of the Lana Turner influence; she conceded "perhaps so." "But whatever the cause, it proves that swooning, giggling bobbie soxers are going through a stage and are not a generation of permanently demented young girls. At least they can grow up in college," she said. Referring to the effects of the war on fashions, the editor said the war itself had completed the break-away of the American school of fashion from the Paris school. No Foreign Influence America's close contact with other sections of the world during the war has not caused any marked foreign influence on the American fashion school, she added. Asked if the greater quantity of material to be available after the first of the year might cause extreme reaction and the use of yards and yards of cloth, Miss Richardson said she didn't think so. When asked, however, if she thought women's ideas on fashions were becoming more mature and conservative, the jaunty, blond editor gave one thought to women's hats and declined to comment. The first church in Kansas was the Lawrence Plymouth Congregational Church, organized October 15, 1854. Students! RADIOS 5-tube - $27.50 RECORD PLAYERS $24.95 and up Are in Stock Now Quantity Limited So Get Yours NOW! New 5-tube superhetrodyne radios are also in. These are splendid radios with Beam power output and equals 7-tube operation in other sets. Complete Stock of Fresh Portable Radio Batteries We have new tubes for your radio. We can give you speedy service on all your radio repair work. Thanks for your business. Phone 138. ED ED BOWMAN BOWMAN RADIO Shop, 944 Mass. St., and F.M. TELECTRAD SHOP, 900 Mass. St. PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 30,1945 Langford Adds That 'Touch of Texas' To Student Council Cecil M. Langford, tall, 19-year-old V-12 trainee, is a School of Engineering representative to the All- Student Council 99 Langford "Tex" is a senior. He has been a member of the University's navy unit since March, 1944 His home is in Kilgore, Texas, and he attended Texas A. & M. university before joining the navy. majoring in civil engineering. He is president of the K.U. chapter of the American Society of Civil Engineers, center on the football team, member of K Club, and of Kappa Sigma fraternity. He is on the parking and socia committees of the Council. Lindy Got a 'Zero As a Civilian Pilot In Pacific Area New York. (UP)—Charles A. Lindbergh sent a Japanese Zero fighter plane down in flames with one short burst from the guns in his Army Lightning during a raid on oil installations at Balikpapan, Borneo, Oct. 10, 1944. The high military authority who gave out this story more than 13 months ago has just released it for publication. Reason for secrecy — at least until the end of the Japanese war — was obvious: Lindbergh was a civilian, and as such was supposedly a non-combatant. And after his one combat flight to Balikpapan, he was ordered by Gen. George C. Kenney, Far East Air Force commander, to make no more fighting missions. Lindbergh, then 42 years old, had come to the Southwest Pacific area some weeks before, as a civilian attached to the army air forces, to train American fighter pilots, most of them little more than half his age, in long-range fiving. He was flying with America's finisher pilots, Maj. Richard Ira Bong, whose score of 40 enemy planes destroyed made him this country's top-ranking ace of all time was in the formation. Maj. Thomas B. McGuire, second-ranking ace, was there. There wasn't a green pilot among the more than 33 fighters on the mission. McGuire was to die later strafting a Jap destroyer in the Philippines, and Bong in a test flight of a jet plane in California. Both declared, in interviews before their deaths; "Lindbergh was as hot a pilot as any of us. He would have been out there knocking off Jacks every day if Kenney had let him." Lone Bandit Robs Hepler, Stark Banks Kansas City, Mo. (UP) — A lone bandit, armed with a revolver, robbed two Kansas banks during the noon hour yesterday the FBI announced today. According to the FBI the bandit entered a bank at Hepler, at 11:10 a.m. and escaped with between 700 and 800 dollars. Forty minutes later the same man held up a bank at Stark, 12 miles west of Hepler, and escaped with about 500 dollars. Officers said the bandit was driving a 1941 blue-green motorcar, either an Oldsmobile or a Chevrolet. The Kansas bird is the meadowlark, elected by school children in 1925. After a 35-Year Student Dream Book Store Becomes a Reality A campus book store—result of three decades of crusading. Thirty-five years ago, an attempt to start a campus book store at the University of Kansas failed. Today, the work of thousands of students since 1910 has been realized and a student book store will open as soon as a location and manager can be found, for Monday the board of regents lent bookstores in the five state schools. The student book exchange idea was brought from Yale university in 1910 by Miss Elsie Neuenschwander, professor of French. The Men's Student council captured the idea and immediately started selling $10 shares of stock. Local merchants prevented the plan from running smoothly, and the discouraged council soon gave up. Steps were taken in 1916 to raise a capital stock of $300 for the store which was to be situated in Fraser hall. The shares at par for $5 were harder to sell than was anticipated for the idea died in the early part of the year. For a decade following this attempt to raise money for the bookstore, no action was taken by the students. In 1927, however, the book store idea arose again when the president of the Cooperative League of America was invited to discuss experiences with other groups of students in establishing student cooperative enterprises, with special emphasis on the University book store. Rebukes by University professors who pointed out failures of other schools in attempting such a plan as well as comments such as "Alumni and other friends of the University would criticize such an extra-curricular activity." were ignored. At several times during the struggle for recognition, the W.S.G.A. offered the profits built up by the Book Exchange to develop a student bookstore, owned and operated by the students. Student forums to discuss the pros and cons of the 27-year-old issue were common in 1937. In April of that year, the W.S.G.A. donated six thousand dollars toward the development of a cooperative book store and the entire responsibility of securing the store was left in the hands of the women. During the past eight years, little action had taken place until the recent approval by the state board of regents, which made the 35-year-old dream a reality. Governor Says State is Progress Conscious Gov. Andrew Schooppel, in a radio address Wednesday night over KFKU, said that Kansas more than ever before today stood in a position to enhance her leadership in the mid-west and set an example for others to follow. "Kansas people are progress conscious," Schoepel said. "Within a few years there should be much general advancement made in all lines of enterprise, with special emphasis upon that of industry." The governor said it was small wonder that so many manufacturers, processors, industrialists, and businessmen of the midwest were looking to Kansas as a location for their activities during the development period upon which we now are embarked. Must Be One-Way Steps Cheyenne, Wyo. (UP) — Some fresh-looking, deep scars on the front steps of the state capitol here were the result of an unknown driver's attempt to steer his car up them early one morning. The custodian of the building reported next day that he heard an unearthly noise about 2 am., looked out and saw the car backing down the steps. It was about half-way up. The vehicle was steered on the erratic course down the street The janitor salvaged a bumper and the headlights. 'Sentiment Against Liquor Law Repeal,' Schoeppel Says Topcka. (UP)—Gov. Andrew Schoepel said today that the sentiment in Kansas, judging by the deluge of mail he has been receiving, is against any consideration of repeal of the state liquor law. "Any community can have the kind of liquor law enforcement its own citizens want to demand," Scoepel said. "I have little patience with those who complain that state officials are not bearing down hard enough. "There is adequate law on the statute books to give all officers in each community all the enforcement power they need. "Of course, I'll admit that it takes a degree of courage and some sense of civic responsibility." Sigma Kappa Entertains Dinner guests at the Sigma Kappa house Wednesday were Dean and Mrs. Gilbert Ulmer, Mr. and Mrs. L.C. Woodruff, Mr. and Mrs. Hilden Gibson, Mr. and Mrs. Russell Wiley, Jane Wilcox, Tom Wilcox, Bill Quiring, and Jay Stewart. MAN THIS SPORTSHIRT RINGS THE BELL Henry SHAPELY Sportshirts feature style as well as comfort. Note that snappy long-point collar ...it's quite the thing! And those nicely-tailored, rosemary California styling pockets. SHAPELY TRADE MARK SPORTSHIRTS Air Club Antique Now On Sale The collar is convertible . can be wem with tie for work, or open for leisure. Step in for a look-seel $2.95 GIBBS CLO. CO. 811 Mass. St. Anyone like to buy a practical antique, a remnant from the early days of flying Jayhawks? Prof. E. D. Hay of the mechanical engineering department is offering for sale a glider that made its first flight in 1933. It was constructed by one of the many University flying clubs that have existed since Orville and Wilbur made the first hop at Kittyhawk. Old as it is, the white-winged glider doesn't date back as far as flying activities on the campus. In fact, it's modern compared to the gliders flown by the University Glider club in 1924. This organization, composed almost entirely of men from the building and grounds department built its own gliders and soared off the south edge of the "hill." Six years of silent, peaceful gliding were broken by only one crash when one of the students "got a little excited" and dropped into a tree. Neither he nor the glider was seriously damaged. The Jayhawks tried real airplanes for the first time in 1929 when the University Aero club started regular flying school with two planes. In 1935, after numerous ups and downs, the Aero club joined Omega, honorary aeronautical Traternity, and K.U.飞wing was really on the map. By 1937 the club had changed its name to the University Flying club and owned two of its own planes. Instruction was given at $3 an hour. From then until the war it was smooth sailing. Prof. William Simpson of the aeronautical engineering department said that the University was credited with one of the best flying programs in the country, at that time. By the way, that glider will fly, and Professor Hay's office is in room 211, Marvin hall. On March 12, 1945, the Jayhawk Flying club initiated 15 members and the newest University Flying club was born. Since that time 15 students have earned pilot licenses One hundred forty-four varieties of trees are native to Kansas. NEW TELEPHONES Full speed ahead on our biggest peacetime job Western Electric, supply unit of the Bell System, is hard at work on the biggest peacetime job in its history. Furnishing materials and equipment to meet the System's immediate needs — and to carry out the System's $2,000,000,000 post-war program — promises record peacetime volume and a high level of employment. Buy all the Victory Bonds you can — and keep them! Western Electric SOURCE OF SUPPLY FOR THE BELL SYSTEM TODAY, conveyors like this at Western Electric are carrying thousands of new telephones for the Bell System. But it takes far more than just telephones to provide service. It takes cable, central office equipment and many other complex items that cannot be produced and fitted into the telephone system overnight. On these things, too, production is steadily increasing. Buy all the Victory Bonds you can — and keep them! SOURCE OF SUPPLY FOR THE BELL SYSTEM NOVEMBER 30,1945 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE its club names. Our was implying city best at awkers 15 times, only in es BAYLEAD ROAD UNIVERSITY DRIVE LEIGHING AVE CRESENT DRIVE W E S 28 24 31 30 16 12 9 15 13 16 18 17 19 20 21 23 7 3 6 5 4 22 Here Are Names Descriptions of Campus Buildings The University of Kansas, situated on a ridge between the valleys of the Wakarusa and the Kaw rivers, affords a panoramic view of the countryside. According to the numbers on the map campus buildings are: 1. Fraser Hall, oldest building on the campus, includes the offices of the following departments: English, Latin and Greek, German, Home Economics, the School of Education the Extension Division, and the summer session. The valuable Wilcox museum collection of busts and statuary is housed here. The stage of Fraser Theater on the second floor is the scene of the Dramatic club productions throughout the year. 3. The Journalism building houses all journalism and advertising courses. It is the home of the University Daily Kansan and the University of Kansas press. 2. Watkins Memorial Hospital is a gift of the late Mrs. Elizabeth Watkins. It provides for the needs of dispensary and hospital patients from the student body. 6. Warehouse houses the buildings and grounds equipment. 4. Blake hall, the building at the southeast corner of the campus with a tower bearing the University clock contains the department of physics 7. Watson Library, located to the left of the Journalism building, contains a valuable collection of books and is one of the University's greatest assets. Its four floors include a large study room containing the reserve book desk and the biological desk in the basement; education and periodical rooms on the first floor; the card index and the general reference desk and the circulation desk, a large study room, and the browsing and graduate rooms are on the second floor; various study rooms and offices comprise the third floor. 8. Myers hall is the low, long building across the street east from the Memorial Union building, Offices and classes of the School of Religion and the Kansas Bible college are found here. 9. Spooner hall contains the Thayer Museum of art. Special exhibitions are shown here throughout the year. Classes in design are held in this building. 10. University High school is a certified high school of Lawrence. Students in education act as practice teachers. Campus and Vicinity 1. Peaser Hall 2. Welling Memorial Hosp. 3. Journalism Building 4. Blake Hall 5. Power Plant 6. Ware House 7. Watson Library 8. Myers Hall 9. Spooner Hall 10. University High School 11. Memorial Union 12. Dyche Hall 13. Green Hall 14. Corbin Hall 15. Carruth Hall 16. Templin Hall 17. Jolliffe Hall 18. Battenfeld Hall 19. Watkins Hall 20. Miller Hall 21. Chancellor's Home 22. Heating Plant 23. Fowler Shops 24. Bailey Chem. Lab. 25. Robinson Gymnasium 26. Frank Strong Hall 27. Haworth Hall 28. Snow Hall 29. Hoch Auditorium 30. Marvin Hall 31. Astronomy Observatory 32. Engineering Laboratory 33. Engineering Research 34. ROTC Building 35. Nurses Home 36. Lindley Hall 12. Dyche hall has been completely remodeled and contains in the museum of natural history one of the most complete arrays of mammals and birds found in any American University. Classes in drawing and painting are held here. 15. Corruth hall is the late Chancellor E.H. Lindley's former home. It is now a men's dormitory. 13. Green hall, with the statue of the late "Uncle Jimmy" Green in front, is the home of the School of Law, of which "Uncle Jimmy" was dean for many years. The administrative offices are on the first floor and political science class rooms, the law library on the second, and the offices of the department of speech and dramatic art in the basement. 16. Templin is a men's dormitory, but now houses Navy V-12 trainees. 17. Jollife hall is a women's residence hall. 21. Chancellor Deane Malott's home was formerly the home of the 18. Battenfeld hall was built by Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Battenfeld in memory of their son, John Battenfeld who died while a student at the University. 14. Corbin ball is a women's dormitory. 19 and 20. Watkins and Miller halls are gifts of the late Mrs. Elizabeth Watkins, both are cooperative dormitories for women. late Mrs. Elizabeth Watkins and was given to the University in her will. Heating Plant 22. Heating Plant. The Anatomy building, formerly used by the School of Medicine, is the unnumbered square above and to the left of Watson library. It burned March 3, 1943. 23. The Fowler shops contains the machine shops, a foundry, wood-working department, heat treatment and welding department. Fowler will house the William Allen White School of Journalism and the University Press as soon as new shops are built. 24. The E.H.S. Bailey Chemical laboratories house the departments of chemistry, biochemistry, chemical engineering, and the School of Pharmacy. 25. Robinson gymnasium is devoted to physical education, with the men's quarters on the west side and the women's on the east. Dressing rooms and the swimming pool are in the basement. The building also serves as a place for enrollment. 26. Frank Strong hall houses the administrative offices of the University. The offices of the Registrar, the business office, and the School of 1943 JANUARY 1943 1941 DECEMBER 1941 3 10 WINTER MONTHS 25 29 39 31 It's About Time! Is your car all ready for the cold days ahead? Better let us take care of it now. FRITZ Co. CITIES SERVICE PRODUCTS Phone 5 Home Ec Group Sees Motion Picture 111 East 8th A moving picture of the arts and crafts in Mexico was shown at the Home Economics club meeting Thursday night in Fraser hall, Eleanor Brown, president, reported today. "We're launching a new project," Miss Brown said. "The girls' are going to collect, test and print recipes n the home economics department." Fine Arts are located on the first floor. The University's post office, the Navy V-12 office, the Vocational Guidance and Testing office, and the Veteran's Administration office, are in the basement. On the second door are the offices of the chancellor, the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, the School of Business, and the Dean of the Graduate School, the office of the men's adviser, the Alumni office, and the Endowment association office. Other departments in the building are: philosophy, psychology, Romance languages, mathematics, history, and the social sciences. 27. Haworth hall houses the departments of physiology and anatomy. 34. The Military Science building houses the classes and offices in military science. 28. Snow hall was completed in 1930. It houses the departments of biological sciences. 35. Lindley hall houses the departments of geology, mining engineering, and petroleum engineering; U.S. geological survey, and State geological survey. 35. The Nurses home is known as the Watkins home and is likewise a gift of the late Mrs. Elizabeth Watkins. Dixie Gilliland Heads Publications As ASC Member 1954 Dixie Gilliland, College junior from Ottawa, is a College representative to the All-Student Council. DIXIE GILLILAND She is a member of the Council cabinet, the elections committee, and chairman of the publications committee. Dixie is a journalism major and is on the Kansan board, the Jayhawk staff, and editor of the University calendar. She also is treasurer and personnel chairman of the Y.W.C.A., a nurse's aid, treasurer of the W.E.C., and a member of Forums board. She has been a reporter for the Ottawa Herald the past three summers. Photography is her hobby. The first night school in Lawrence was established in 1861. There were 83 scholars and 27 teachers. CARL'S Good Clothes Carry Arrow Ties and Shirts We don't guarantee that the gals will be magnetically attracted to your Arrow Tie. Don't let this picture fool you But here's what you can be sure of: Eyepleasing colors. Patterns you'll go for. Plus a special lining that resists wrinkles. See these attractive ties at your Arrow Dealer's. ARROW SHIRTS and TIES UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS We Carry Arrow Ties and Shirts OBER'S PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 30.1945 Turk Would Give Us Hades If She Knew We Called Her Mary Ellen More than anything else Mary Elen Turkington, College senior, likes horses and people. And more than anything else she dislikes being called Mary Ellen. As for liking people "Turk" (as anyone who knows better calls her) seems to have gotten somewhere. A walk across the campus with her proves she knows a lot of them. She speaks to at least four out of every five students she meets. "The best six months of my life I gave to my profession." Turk could say with all sincerity. A thoroughbred Shack Rat, she took over as editor of the Summer Session Kansan in July. For eight weeks she did everything on the paper from writing and editing copy to spraying the type lice. Because she has lived 17 of her 19 years on a farm, Turk has a deep respect for horses — and their brand of sense. Several weeks of recuperation and she was behind the desk as managing editor of the Daily Kansan. Beginning of school editions, a week of eight-pagers, and working in a new staff kept her on her feet all hours of the day (and night.) She was managing editor until the staff changed Nov. 16. Looking back at her early days in newspaper work, Turk considers the time she had the fine arts office and women's intramurals for a reporting beat. There was a time when she had to decide between physical education and journalism. (She had no trouble deciding about fine arts—"I'm just not the type," she says without hesitation.) BETTY HENRY "TURK" Turk served the Daily Kansan as news editor, assistant managing ed itor, and assistant sports editor last year. Last summer she was Lawrence correspondent for the Kansas City Star. She is now the International News Service correspondent for Lawrence. Judging from her professional experience on the campus and her plans to work on a newspaper in the future, it would seem Turk will devote considerable more of her best years to the news racket. A congenial type of person, Turk has a nice way of saying exactly what she means. She truthfully admits that after two years she is outgrowing a hair-utw which was entirely too close to a close shave. She and her Corbin hail roommate have a motto, "First up, best dressed," as one leaves for class with the clean shirt. Turk came to K.U. in June, 1943, Jap Officers Admit Beheading Airmen —But Respectfully Kwajalein, Marshall Is. (UP) — Ten Japanese officers on trial for the murder of five American airmen admitted today that the fliers had been beheaded and staked their lives on pleas they were ignorant of international law and only followed orders. One accused officer said he paid his "respects" to an American flier before swinging the broad-edge execution sword. Defense counsel submitted a statement in which the accused men did not deny that the executions had been committed on Mille Island in February, 1944, but claimed that none of the defendants had originated the execution orders. Lt. Kyoshi Feuta, commander of the north naval sector on Mille, a veteran of 26 years service with the Japanese Imperial navy, contended he was not aware of any regulations regarding the treatment of prisoners of war as set forth in the Geneva convention. a few days after she was graduated from the McCune high school. Her pre-K.U. days were just ordinary she says — going to school when you couldn't think of a good excuse and working around summers. Some of her summer "positions" have been, clerk in a grocery store, waitress in a cafe — and then there's the summer she drew beer on top at a local place. She will receive a bachelor of arts degree in journalism in June — that is if Juck, the INS, and educational subsidies from home hold out. A member of Jay Janes, Kansan board, Press club, and W.A.A., Turk uses her spare time to help with Corbin hall intramurals and activities. She has made her mark in speech classes and won first place last year in a campus speech contest. $100,000 Question: Male or Female? Muskogee, Okla. (UP)—Baby Jo Ella Hull gurgled contentedly in her crib today unmindful that she was the central figure in a hundred thousand dollar sex-mixup case. A suit that amount was filed in district court here late yesterday by the mother, Mrs. Charles Hull of Checotah, Okla., who alleged she had been told her baby was a son at the time of birth last July 7. Not until 10 days later when mother and baby returned from the Oklahoma Baptist hospital in Muskogee did Mrs. Hull learn that the infant was a girl. The frantic mother — recalling baby-mixup cases in other cities in the past — immediately returned to the hospital but was assured she had given birth to the girl instead of a boy. The suit asked $50,000 damages for mental pain and anguish suffered by the mother, causing her to lose weight. The other $50,000 was demanded for asserted negligence in record-keeping. Dr. Charles Ed White, obstetrician who delivered the Hull infant and one of the defendants in the court action, said flatly that "I know Mrs. Hull has the baby that she gave birth to." For That Coke Date Remember ELDRIDGE PHARMACY Phone 999 701 Mass. LAWRENCE OPTICAL CO. 1025 Mass. Phone 425 The War Is Over For Mrs. Jack Mohler, Kansan Bookkeeper The war is over for Mrs. Jean Mohler, bookkeeper for the University press and the Daily Kansan. Her husband is on his way home from 8 months in the Pacific. Jack B. Mohler, 21-year-old navy machinist, will land at San Pedro, Calif., tomorrow, report in St. Louis for discharge, and arrive in Lawrence next week. Entering the navy after his graduation from Eudora high school in 1943, Mohler served on an LCT in the Normandy invasion in June, 1944, and in the battle of Okinawa, where his ship was sunk by a Japanese suicide plane last summer. "It's a wonderful feeling — I can't describe it," Mrs. Mohler says of her husband's approaching return. The couple was married last February when he had a 30-day leave. Mohler plans to enter the School of Engineering next semester as a freshman. Kansas is 208 miles wide and 411 miles long. WANT ADS ROOM or Room and Board. "Girls." 2 double rooms. Twin beds. 1247 Ohio, phone 3338. LOST—Green striped Schaffer pen and pencil set, with a wide gold band. Finder please call 257, Eloise West. Reward. NOTICE—Photographs tinted for Christmas. Reasonable prices. Experience. Call 507. Pat Allen. LOST—On field no. 3 of Intramural tank, brown fingertip coat containing valuable articles. Reward if found. Call Frank O'Connell 366.. LOST AGAIN—Brown and white striped Sheaffer's Lifetime pen. Call Bobbie Ford, 898. Get Your Tickets for the Annual UNION CARNIVAL December 8th Johnny Beach and His Band MILITARY SCIENCE BUILDING UNION ACTIVITES 9 to 12 p.m. NOVEMBER 30,1945 VII III UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Speaking of the Walkout—As Who Isn't— Here's what it was like in 1941. This year's demonstration after the football game that shoved K-State into the league cellar was no match for the walkout pictured here. After a victory Convocation celebrating the Jayhawkers' 20-16 triumph over the Wildcats, students took an unscheduled holiday. They paraded to town, picked up a casket, chalked Chancellor Malott's name on it, and conducted mock funeral services over it down in the park. Early in the afternoon, the Chancellor was burned in effigy in front of Frank Strong hall. Later, after the striking students let off steam at a dance in the Union, Malott was cheered by 1500 students who joined the Chancellor and faculty members to watch football practice. Book L'arnin' A la Comics "Greasy" Ulmer, with split vest, "Gay-Nineties" hairdo, and tennis shoes, polished silver with smoke from his ragged cigar, and teamed with "Butch" Gibson, who wore soot, shirt tails, and a nondescript hat, on telephone duty. They finally disappeared, hatchets in hand, to return with a disconnected phone which still rang. Since the good old days before "The Yellow Kid," children under 18 haven't been able to call their amusement their own. The kids above 18 have taken it over. By DOLORES SULZMAN (Daily Konson Editor) With the inception of the first comic strip, the hand of the child has been against the father, and the father's hand against the child. Morning and evening there is a struggle which ends in a foot race and a tug-of-war. To the victor belong the spoils of first reading of the comic section. Serving coffee in tin cups, the four then went into action with jet-propelled rolls, shot onto the table through a rain pipe, to the accompaniment of circus-style cymbol crashes administered by "Slats." Cartoonists soon realizing what composed their reading public, began relating the adventures of adults, capitalizing on whatever was current in world affairs. Imagination became the right-hand of the cartoonist. Today the comic strip star thinks no more of cracking an atom than he does of breaking an egg. For years the more aggressive parents, have snatched the papers and sat down unabashed to satain themselves with "Felix the Cat," their guffaws blending with the wails of their offspring. "Slats" Wiley, in 10-gallon nat tails, and red satin scarf, bossed the crew, warning "Slick" Woodruff, who wore a tuxedo with menu and ceiling prices printed on his shirt, not to eat from the plates he was serving. Propaganda found its way into cartoons on both the home front, like Junior eating spinach because it makes Popeye strong, and in the war areas, where Joe Palooka saw action and Dan Dunn and Co. smashed a spy ring. The kids learned commando work from "Little Orphan Annie," and Dad kept up on the war (and Burma) from "Terry and the Pirates." From newspapers the comic strip has advanced to magazines devoted entirely to comics. Gi's go for comic magazines in a big way. Post exchanges in the United States show that purchases of the books run 10 times higher than the combined sales of the Reader's Digest and Saturday Evening Post. A singing waiter quartet, four faculty members whose services were purchased for $65.50 at the recent World Student Service Fund auction, made its debut, and its finale, at the Sigma Kappa house Tuesday night. Textbooks of the future will very likely be printed in comic strip form, something like "The Adventures of Minnie the Microbe" or "Alley OOp's Prehistoric Review." Dad will rush home from the sweat shop at night to help Junior with his homework, only to have his aid rejected Junior will become a Phi Beta Kappa in college on his own hook. Boston (UP)—State Comptroller Frank Lang opened a savings account in a Roxbury bank when he was a boy. Its number was 196144. Ten years later he opened another account in a Boston bank. When he was handed the bank book it was numbered 196144. 'Slats' 'Slick' 'Butch', 'Greasy' Sing for Supper University of Chicago Bans Fraternities Chicago. (Special to the Daily Kansan) — The University of Chicago has banished social fraternities on the undergraduate level, outlawing pledging after March, 1947. Under the university's present plan, the divisions begin at the end of the conventional sophomore year and continue for three years. The University has invited the fraternities to discuss possibilities of reorganization on the divisional level. After repeated attempts to sing opera, during which "Greasy" lost the pitch under the table, the quartet triumphantly bellowed "I Want to Be a College Girl." The Board of Trustees' decision, after two years of investigation by a faculty committee and a University administrative ruling board, does not prohibit fraternities in the graduate divisions, nor does it affect women's clubs. Chicago has studied the problem since 1944. A seven-member faculty committee, including six former fraternity men, recommended abolishing the social groups. The board of co-ordination of student interests unanimously approved the committee's suggestion and the Board of Trustees' decision followed. A new house plan was inaugurated this fall to unify the college as a distinct segment of the university, with activities centered in the dormitories. The leadership of older students in the dormitory plan would be lost if they were pledged by fraternities, the trustees' report stated. "MARSHAL OF LAREDO" WILD BILL ELLIOTT VARSITY N. Y.Museum Lends Cases SUNDAY 3 Days ROY ROGERS and NINA FOCH "My Name Is Julia Ross" TODAY and SATURDAY Three table cases of 19th century Christmas cards loaned by the New York City museum are on display in the main gallery of Thayer Art museum. "Sunset in Eldorado" and ROBERT LOWERY "Prison Ship" "We quit, before you can fire us," they called as they departed. NOW NOW ALL WEEK at the Jayhawker Radio's Riot Show Even Greater on the Screen! ED GARDNER'S DUFFY'STAVERN Here Are 8 of the 32 Top Stars: BING CROSBY - BETTY HUTTON - ALAN LADD DOT. LAMOUR - EDDIE BRACKEN - SONNY TUFTS VERONICA LAKE - PAULETTE GODDARD It's Not WHAT They Do... It's The WAY They Do It! that makes this a matchless musical story! THE DOLLY SISTERS Technicolor! STORY OF BETTY GRABLE AND JOHN PAYNE JUNE HAVER --and SPORTS - NEWS SUNDAY ALL WEEK Obtain Free Bond Award Tickets Now for $109.50 Console Radio Given Free Thursday, Dec. 20th 图 Bloch's Watercolors On Display at Thayer Twenty-five watercolors by Professor Albert Bloch, head of the department of drawing and painting, are now on display at Spooner-Thayer art museum. A number of the watercolors was recently on exhibition in the galleries of the New Art circle in New York City. Three other watercolors by Professor Bloch are in the permanent collection of the Phillips Mein gallery in Washington, D.C. G GRANADA NOW 2:30 - 7-9 ENDS SATURDAY MAD, MERRY MARITAL MIXUP! But . Love, Honor and GOODBYE starring VIRGINIA BRUCE EDWARD ASHLEY featuring VICTOR McLAGLEN Republic -Xtra Short Hit! "The House I Live In" FRANK SINATRA Owl Show Sat. 11:45 & SUNDAY ONE WEEK Love Letters CRITICS HAIL HIT! Predict Academy Award for Jennifer Jones! Love Letters Love Letters Pages of passion—with murder between the lines! Jennifer Jones Joseph Colten IN Hal Wallis' Production "Love Letters" --- with AIN RICHARDS and Cecil Kellaway Gladys Cooper Ani Lauise Robert Sully Directed by William Dietlere Screen Play by Ayn Band, Author of The Dish A Paramount Picture SPECIAL! New March of Time LATEST NEWS PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS NOVEMBER 30,1945 On the Fenski with MEG WENSKI The tallest basketball team in Kansas history will enter the field for the first post-war court game Monday night with Warrensburg Teachers. An analysis of the heights finds: Four at six-fect five inches, Three at six-fect three or more, Two at six-fect two. This makes a grand total of 18 men on the court who easily stretch over the two-yard mark. Although the Patagonian quintet won't enter the court at one time, it would be possible to line up a squad which averages slightly under six-feet five. Home Again. Nine others over six feet. Back in the fold after almost 3 years in the army air corps is Otto Schnellbacher, All American in 1943, who was discharged as a lieutenant last Wednesday. Otto was another member of the famed "Iron Five" and will be on the court next week. He Worked There Once "Phog" will be rubbing elbows with familiar grounds when the Jayhawkers meet their first foe Warensburg. In 1912 Allen started coaching the Mules in sports and had a winning basketball team there for seven years. So They Organized And now it's the "Hot Stove club." And the football team can now bring guests to join the scuttle-butt behind the sacred dressing-room doors of the stadium. Since abandoning football practice, the football team will have regular meetings at 4:30 every Monday to view football films and listen to the wisdom of various coaches and guest speakers. Students Give $86 To TB Seal Drive A total of $86 has been turned in before the deadline today by students from the tuberculosis Christmas seal sales, Miss Joie Stapleton, faculty chairman of the student drive, said today. Mary Margaret Gaynor is chairman of the public relations committee of the student council which is sponsoring the drive. Other members of the committee are Patricia Bentley, Dean Corder, and Robert Witt. Huffman Is President Of New Choral Group Theodore Huffman, freshman in the School of Fine Arts, is the director of a new choral group on the campus, the Modern choir. The choir was organized in a meeting Thursday night. Flaine Thalman is the accompaniist for the choir and Rosemary Harding is the Union Activities leader under which the choir is being organized. The choir will meet from 7:30 to 9:30 every Thursday night in the Kansas room, and will sing for Christmas programs and other University events. ON KFKU 9:30 to 10 p.m., K.U. Vesper, Dr Theodore Aszman, speaker. Sunday Tonight 4 to 5 p.m., 87th All-Musical Vespers. Sutton Speaks on Psycb Dr. Dorothy Sutton, instructor of psychology, spoke on "The Relation of Abnormal Psychology to Nursing" at the Pre-Nursing club meeting Thursday night at Watkins nurses home, Jean Blanchard, president, reported today. K.U. Ranks in Top Six Cage Teams In Esquire Sports Poll; Illinois First A recent Esquire sports poll ranked the Kansas Jayhawks among the top half dozen basketball teams in cage history. In the same poll Doug Mills' Illinois Hoopers were voted the kingpins of basketball by the sports writers and fans who participated. Had the poll been taken in 1940 when K.U. stood runner-up to Indiana in the N.C.A.A. finals, or during the 1942-43 season before pneumonia took Charlie Black from the court. Kansas might have occupied top rung as the "Notre Dame of Basketball," coached by Dr. Forrest C. Allen, the "Knute Rockne of Basketball." No Esquire poll is needed to hang titles on F.C.A.-he was known as "Rock" of the hardboards before his friend Knute plane-crashed to death in Kansas in 1929. It was James Naismith, the inventor of basketball, who autographed his photograph. "From the father of basketball to the father of basketball coaching." Illinois was more recently remembered by the voters for her Whiz Kids of 1942. It is granted that Illinois, Purdue, and Indiana have reigned supreme in the Big Ten and could not be left out of Esquire's top bracket of great basketball quintets. Nineteen conference championships in his years at K.U. is, "Phog's" record who this season embarks on his 36th year of basketball coaching. As the cigaret ad states, no other college and coach can make this, or a comparable, claim. However, Kansas is the real stronghold of basketball, second to none. Records and tradition bear this out. Sixty, though he looks 40, Allen is quiet over this year's prospects, which many consider the best since the 1942-43 season. With Otto Schnellbacher, top scorer and All Eig Six forward in 1943, back next week, K.U. well may have one of her greatest teams in history. Don Pierce, K.U. sports publicity director, predicted Charlie Black and Co. would go through an all-victorious conference season, before Otto sent word of his discharge. Black was All-American during his sophomore year here and was called "the greatest player I've ever seen," by Tony Hinkle, coach of the Great Lakes team which met 32 of the nation's best in 1942-43. "Phog" Allen is not really worried about Charlie's "flier's legs" but he has never been one to count his chickens. "Little Bill" Miller, coach of the McPherson Globe-Oilers, winners of the 1936 Olympics for the United States, refuted the general consensus of Allen's greatness last year with the claim that Allen never had a "national championship" team, hence was not a great coach. It has only been in the last 10 years of "big time" subsidized basketball that "national collegiate championships" have been a part of the American sporting scene. Surely the great Kansas team of 1923 —Endicott, Ackerman, Charlie Black I, Bowman—which won 16 games in as many played, had no peers. Or the 1936 team—Ebling, Kappelman, Fralle, Noble, Allen—which swept through 10 conference games undaunted. Kansas attempted to gain statehood four times. 1 Connie Casuals in Clear VINYLITE Connie Casuals in Clear VINYLITE Four Teams Enter Intramural Play-Offs 1 The intramural touch football championship will be decided Saturday and Sunday when the four top teams of the two divisions meet in a play-off series. Games will begin at 2:30 p.m. on intramural fields four and six. Newest fashion idea in wedgies! Sparkling clear plastic...for that casual yet sophisticated air... prettily perf'd and outlined in black for contrast.* Leather soles. $ 5^{00} HAYNES & KEENE 819 MASS. PHONE 524 Division I teams entering the finals are Beta Theta Phi, who won a shot at the championship by trouncing a strong Phi Kappa Psi team yesterday, and Phi Delta Theta. Both teams have a season record of six wins and one loss. Winners of the Saturday games will meet for the championship bout The two Division I teams will flip a coin this afternoon to see which team will tangle with the powerful Phi Gam's Saturday. The Phi Gam's have scored 242 points to their opponent's 12 during the season. A strong Phi Gamma Delta team, undefeated and untied in seven games, and the V-12 team, with a record of six victories and one defeat, will represent Division II. STUDENT LAMPS We have a few Student Fluorescent Lamps in stock. Three styles. From $8.50 to $14.00 LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE 735 MASS. ST. Zoologists to Hear Ortenburger on Monday Dr. A. I. Ortenburger, professor of zoology at the University of Oklahoma, will speak on "The Salt Plains of Western Oklahoma." at the seminar of zoology meeting in Snow half at 4:30 Monday. Walkout Group Meets The seven-member student and faculty committee appointed to handle the student walkout will meet at 7 tonight in Dean Henry Werner's office for a further discussion of the problem, the dean said today. Sunday afternoon, while the losers fight it out for the consolation prize. Ballot sheets for an intramural all-star team were sent to all team managers today. The resulting team will be announced next week. HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Garage and Cab Co. Phone 12 922 Mass. HAVE YOU THOUGHT OF Figurines Nice Stationery Marlow Woodcuts Madera Hankies for that Christmas Gift VI'S GIFT SHOP Santa "DON'T MISS IT!" —Ol' Santa Sez 3 Hours of Dancing and Fun with BOB WILSON AND HIS ORCHESTRA (GIRL VOCALIST) Hear Bob's Symphonic Arrangement of "WHITE CHRISTMAS" ALL-UNIVERSITY DANCE (Semi-Formal) Military Science Bldg. Dec. 15 — 9:00-12:00 TICKETS $1.00 PER COUPLE (Tax Incl.) Sponsored by I.S.A.