University DAILY KANSAN
STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Monday, January 6, 1947
44th Year No.62
Lawrence, Kansas
Returning Students Find Cold, Snow Face Bout With Books, Activities
10. Students returning to Lawrence after 16 days' vacation for a quick sound of concerts, books, and basketball games before finals begin Jan.
30. found a cold, snowy campus, complete with ski paths.
Lucky persons holding even-numbered basketball tickets will jam Hoch auditorium tomorrow night for K.U.'s opening Big Six basketball contest against Missouri.
Two nights later, author-lecturers Walter Duranty and H. R. Knickerbocker will debate the question, "Can Russia Be Part of One World," in the same building.
University offices, departments, and class rooms were getting back on schedule this morning after near-desertion for the two-week vacation.
K.U. Hangers-On Had Balmy Christmas Day
Hot and cold, wet and dry, but nearly always deserted was the K.U. campus during Christmas vacation.
Students and faculty members left behind in Lawrence found at least the weather was interesting.
Take Christmas Day. The sun was warm, the afternoon as balmy as spring. A Lawrence housewife picked yiolets on her lawn. On Dec. 27, the temperature reached a record 72.
Then two nights later it was a degree below zero. Plumbers and automobile mechanics got their usual calls for help. Part of the student families remaining at Sunflower Village found themselves without a gas supply most of one day. Water was heated and food cooked on coal heating stoves.
In Lawrence, collectors found garbage frozen tight in the cans. They left it there to thaw.
On New Year's night, snow began to call, and it didn't stop all the next day. Children gambled frosted cars against an afternoon on a sled.
Thermometers dipped even lower last week-end, with reports ranging from 14 to 25 below. Conservative estimates agreed it was "about 15 below." Some energetic persons swept -off Potter lake for skating and skiers made heringbone patterns on Mount Oread.
Of course, there were other vacation occupations besides sunbathing and sleighriding. Last-minute Christmas shopping (and shoplifting) for instance. Some light-fingered person or persons lifted a $400 Persian lamb coat from one store and a model airplane motor from another on the same day.
Several more families moved into Sunnyside apartments, and workmen at the Lawrence veterans-housing project (for non-student veterans) said they hoped to finish in three weeks.
The first building materials, including a shipment of bar steel, for the northward extension of the Memorial Union, arrived.
Hill musicians got some sizeable chunks of Uyletide cheer when Director Russell L. Wiley received eight new tubas and as many string passes for the K.U. band and symphony orchestra respectively.
Deans Paul B. Lawson of the College and J. O. Jones of the School of Engineering and Architecture came out with the prediction that your grades will average higher this semester than prewar students.
They based their forecast on an analysis of mid-term deficiency reports, which were 5 per cent under 1039
Dean Lawson pointed out, however, that grades probably won't be as high as last fall, when the proportion of women to men was greater. Somehow, women always get higher grades, he explained.
Some energetic "vacationers" put a lot of time in the library, trying boost B's into A's or F's into C's. And even if they were able to get
library chair anywhere they wanted or a hard-to-get book at the reserve desk at any hour of the day, they still welcome back all of the rest of you.
'Portal Pay,' Bilbo Made Biggest News
Happy New Year.
Labor problems, earthquake the atom bomb, and Senator Bilbo made the biggest news over the year-end holiday.
Congress convened for the 80th time with Republicans holding a majority for the first time in 14 years. The new congress is expected to cut appropriations and taxes, enact specific legislation to put a damper on portal-to-portal pay drives by labor unions, and work out a revision of the Wagner labor act.
Joseph Martin, Republican representative from Massachusetts, took over the Speaker's reins in the house of representatives and Arthur Vandenberg, veteran Republican senator became president pro tem of the senate.
The United Nations atomic energy commission after prolonged study on international controls, turned in a recommendation to the UN Security council, which was adopted by a 10 to 1 vote. Russia and Poland withheld ballots.
After seeing his atomic energy control plan adopted, Mr. Baruch resigned his membership to the commission, saying he saw "no reason why the United States should not continue to make atomic bombs."
Senator Theodore Bilbo, Mississippi Democrat, was denied his oath of office when congress convened Friday. Opening the fight to force his ouster were Senator Taylor, Idaho Democrat, and Republican members of the upper house. Southern Democrats threaten a filibuster.
Casualties ran high in Japan's Wakayama prefecture when an earthquake devastated the entire southern tip of the area, Dec. 21. A fishing village, Kushimoto, was reported to have been swept away by tidal waves.
Taking their cue from the Mt. Clemens, Mich., pottery company case, labor unions put in a bid for two billion dollars back pay in a "portal-to-portal" pay controversy. In Washington, the justice department moved to intervene and Atty. Gen. Tom Clark offered his services in "settling some of the legal problems involved in the Mt. Clemens case."
President Truman flew home to Independence, Mo., for Christmas and hurried back to Washington after a 24-hour holiday to finish preparations on his "State of the Nation" speech.
Harold Stassen announced he would be a candidate for the Republican nomination for the president in 1948.
Film comedian W. C. "never give a sucker an even break" Fields, whose propensity for strong snirls was almost as famous as his bulbous nose, died at the age of 67.
Film actress Gene Tiernay, her sister Pat, and her New Year's escort, Jimmy Costelle, mixed it up in a parking lot at Hollywood's swank Cro'o with M. Ternay's estranged husband, C. Cassini.
Little Man On Campus
The American Davis Cup tennis team mad a clean sweep of its matches with the Australian team and brought the cup back to the U. S. for the first time since 1938.
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AND AFTER!
The University will have to wait until after Jan. 13 to find out whether Georgia's governor, Ellis Arnall, will be a convocation speaker here Feb. 14, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, said today.
K.U. Awaits Answer On Arnall Lecture
The Georgia legislature will meet next Monday to straighten out the mix-up caused by the death of Governor-elect Eugene Talmadge.
Supporters of Talmadge's son, Herman, say the legislature will designate him as his father's successor. Arnall says that while he legally could remain in office for another four years under the constitution, he will resign in favor of the lieutenant-governor elect, M. E. Thompson.
President Asks Legislation On 'Unjustified Strikes'
'State Of Union' Message To Congress Also Requests Business Monopoly Curb
Washington. (UP)—President Truman asked congress today to impose compulsory arbitration against unjustified strikes and to join him in protecting the nation against restrictive business monopoly.
'U.S. Won't Disarm Without Security'
Washington. (UP) — President Truman told congress today that achievement of a system of collective security under the United Nations must precede this country's participation in disarmament.
On American policy with the Soviet Union, the president promised that it was guided by the same principles which determine policies toward all countries.
Whatever differences exist between the United States and Russia, he said, must not obscure the fact that the basic interests of both lie in establishment of an early peace.
He did not elaborate the point, but left unsaid his belief that the United Nations has not yet developed sufficiently to maintain world peace and security.
He warned that the armed services already were encountering serious difficulties in maintaining the army at 1,070,000 mme and the navy at 571,000 men; that "occupation troops are barely sufficient to carry out the duties which our foreign policies require."
He rejected Republican proposals for personal income tax reductions
K.U. Medical School To Sponsor 'Refresher'
A four-day post-graduate course in fracture treatment will be presented for the orthopedic surgeons of America by the University School of Medicine Jan. 30-Feb. 2.
The school will be held at the Palmer house in Chicago, H. G. Ingham, director of the University extension division has announced.
Sir Reginald Watson-Jones, internationally known orthopedic specialist of London, England, will be the principal instructor.
The post-graduate course will be held immediately following the annual meeting of the National Accreditation Board, which also will be held in Chicago.
Dr. Rex L. Diveley, member of the faculty in Kansas City, is president-elect of the national academy.
"The University of Kansas is proud that it will have the opportunity of sponsoring instruction by so eminent a bone-specialist as Sir Reginald Watson-Jones," Mr. Ingham said.
Mr. Ingham explained that the facilities of the School of Medicine at the University hospitals in Kansas City are in full use for normal instruction, leaving no adequate facilities for further instruction.
Directory Committee Holds First Session
A student-faculty committee to decide on what method will be recommended for paying for the student directory was to hold an organization meeting at 3 p.m. today in the office of the dean of women.
Members of the committee are Dean J. H. Nelson; Miss Martha Peterson, Pan-Hellenic secretary; Clifford E. Reynolds, business senior; Anne Scott, College junior; and Eloise Hodgson, College sophomore
He said he had prepared a balanced budget for the next fiscal year providing for a small surplus, and he will make suggestions to increase that surplus. But he told congress that good fiscal practice requires that the excess of revenue be applied to debt reduction.
Mr. Truman made these recommendations in his annual message on the state of the Union. The president delivered it personally before a joint session of the new Republican congress in the chamber of the house of representatives.
Mr. Truman's tax policies promised to cause a sharp fight with congress. Not only did he oppose income tax cuts, but he recommended that congress immediately extend beyond June 30 the $1\%$ billion dollars of war time excise taxes which would expire at that time under terms of his proclamation ending the state of hostilities. Republican congressional leaders are planning, on the contrary, to pass a quickie bill ending those levies this month.
Other major points which he made with a plea for mutual cooperation for the national welfare:
TWO. Unification of the armed services would effect economies and enhance our national security.
ONE. Universal (military) training is the best method of developing a trained citizen reserve. It may be necessary to continue the draft.
THREE. We have not done our part in absorbing Europe's displaced persons. Congress should relax immigration laws to permit thousands of them to come here.
FOUR. Congress should create a cabinet rank department of welfare.
Legislation should be enacted to provide machinery whereby unsettled disputes concerning the interpretation of an existing agreement may be referred by either party to final and binding arbitration."
the rank department of welfare. "Collective bargaining agreements," the president said, "like other contracts, should be faithfully adhered to by both parties. In the most enlightened union-management relationships, disputes over the interpretation of contract terms are settled peacefully by negotiation or arbitration.
A telegraph pole guy wire saved Frederick Amelung, College sophomore, and his wife from a 95-foot plunge over Calhoun bluffs east of Topeka Friday.
Wire Saves Student From 95-Foot Drop
The Amelungs were driving along U.S. highway 24 when they were forced off the road by a car going in the opposite direction. Their car skidded, overturned, and rolled off the bluff that borders the highway
The front bumper of the car caught in the guy wire and prevented the car from falling to the tracks at the foot of the bluff.
Amelung was stunned and his wife suffered minor nose and eye injuries. They were taken to a Topeka hospital where they were reported not seriously hurt.
WEATHER
Kansas—Clear to partly cloudy and warmer today. Mostly cloudy tonight and Tuesday.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENC, KANSAS
JANUARY 6,1947
Belles AND THEIR Weddings
Mrs. Howard L. Snyder, Winfield announces the marriage of her daughter, Marjorie, to Charles Ward McDermott, Topeka. The wedding took place at the First Presbyterian church in Winfield on Dec. 22.
McDermott-Snyder
Mr. and Mrs. McDermott are at home in Topska. Mr. McDermott is a student in the Washburn law school and a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity.
The bride was graduated from the University of Kansas in 1945 and is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority.
Faye Elaine Ellede, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Ellede, Wichita, and Erwin J. Netzer, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Netzer, Lawrence, were married Dec. 28 at the Plymouth Congregational church in Wichita.
After returning from a wedding trig, Mr. and Mrs. Netzer will be at house at 1344 Kentucky street in Lawrence.
Mr. Netzer is a College freshman. Mrs. Netzer was graduated from the University of Kansas in 1944. She is a member of Alpha Chi Omega sorority.
Netzer-Elledge
☆ ☆
☆ ☆
McClymond-Stutz
Mr. and Mrs. J. L. McClymond, Topeka, announce the engagement of their daughter, Charlotte Elizabeth, to Alan Griffin Snitz, son of Mr. and Mrs. John G. Stutz, Topeka.
Miss McLymond is a graduate of Stephens college, Columbia, Mo., and Washburn university. At present she is teaching English in the Dover High school.
Mr. Stutz, Engineering sophomore is a member of Alpha Tau Omega fraternity.
☆ ☆
Turk-Coulson
The marriage of Miss Janet Louise Coulson, daughter of Mrs. J. R. Coulson of Kansas City, to Henry C. Turk, St. Charles, Mo., took place Dec. 21 in Danforth chapel. The Rev. Edwin F. Price read the ceremony.
Mrs. Turk, who came here last fall from Lindenwood college, teaches piano at the University. She received her bachelor of music and master of music degrees from KU., where she was a member of Kappa Alpha Theta sorority.
Mr. Turk is a member of the Renaissance languages faculty at Lindenwood college, St. Charles, Mo.
Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Johnson, Route 4, announce the marriage of their daughter, Wilma Johnson Gibb, to Dean H. Stoneback, Route 4. The wedding took place in Danforth chapel on Dec. 15.
Stoneback-Gibb
Marjean Carr, Fine Arts senior, played "Thru The Years," "Thine Alone," and "I Love You Truly" on the organ. She accompanied Jeann Clough, Education junior, who sang "Because" and "This Is Always."
Mr. Stoneback is a College freshman.
Mr. and Mrs. Phillip M. Doane. El Dorado, announce the engagement of their daughter, Dorsis Margaret, to Charles D. Robertson, Topeka, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles M. Robertson, Lawrence. The wedding will take place in February.
☆ ☆
Diane-Robertson
Miss Doane attended junior college in El Dorado and the University of Kansas. She belonged to Kappa Alpha Theta sorority. Mr. Robertson, a former K.U. student, was a member of Kappa Phara Psi fraternity.
Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Withington, Curtis, Neb., announce the marriage of their daughter, Charlotte, to Robert J. Busy, Kansas City, Mo., son
合 合
Busby-Withington
University Daily Kansan
Mail subscription: $2 a semester, $4.50 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence. Kan., every afternoon during the school year except Saturdays and Sundays. University postage. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
Clerk-Typists Hired
Two new clerk-typists have been added to the University staff. They are Mrs. Dorotny] Norburg, who works for the department of chemistry, and Mrs. Marilyn Crimmins, of the registrar's office.
of Mrs. Mary A. Busby, Lawrence,
on Dec. 31.
Mrs. Busby is a graduate of the University! of Missouri school of journalism. Mr. Busby is a graduate of the University of Kansas. He is now a member of the sports department of the Kansas City Star-
Shirley Jeane Binkey and Robert E. Bell, both of Coffeyville, were married Dec. 21 in Danforth chapel, with the Rev. Edwin F. Price reading the ceremony. Sue McCoy, College junior, and J. R. Binkley, Jr., cousin of the bride, attended the couple.
☆ ☆
Bell-Binkley
The bride was a College junior and a member of Delta Gamma sorority. After Jan. 25, Mr. and Mrs. Bell will be at home in Kilgore, Texas, where he is employed with the Rayer Funeral home.
Official Bulletin
Jan. 6, 1947
Alpha Phi Omega officers meeting at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas room of the Union.
--examination must register at the registrar's office some time between Jan. 6 and Jan.11.
The Women's Independent political party senate will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Pine room of the Union.
***
The Lampodus club will meet at 6:45 tonight in Hoch auditorium.
***
Pre-Nursing club will meet at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the home economics dining room. Miss Van Lew, director of nursing at the University of Kansas hospitals, will be the guest speaker. All members urged to attend.
A final examination in Western Civilization will be given Jan. 18 from 1 to 5 p.m. in 426 Lindley hall. All students who plan to take this
Graduate record examination February 3 and 4. Applications may be secured in 2A Frank Strong.
High In Stamp Sales
The K.U. post office sold $50,942,74 worth of postage stamps alone during 1946, R. C. Abraham, mail superintendent, said today. Proceeds from similar sales in 1945 totaled about $36,000 he added.
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Chicago. (UP) — It cost Steve Horozinski $15 to change his mind about who robbed him of $210. At a detective line-up identified a suspect as the man who took the money. When he appeared before Judge Charles S. Dougherty he wasn't so sure. The case was dismissed and Horozinski was fined $15 for wasting the court's time.
Phone KU-25 with your news.
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JANUARY 6,1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Y 6,1947
sive
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his mind
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sme money.
are Judge
wasn't so
missed and
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PAGE THREE
news.
HS
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ords
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e 343
COEDS' CORNER
Carruth Prexy, Emma Lou Britton Studies World Politics, Sociology
"Social barriers should be broken down," is the belief of Emma Lou Britton, College, and president of Carruth hall. She continued that world peace and cooperation can only come through community cooperation and understanding.
She is in charge of a freshman orientation commission in Y.W.C.A. She also is one of the two representatives for Y.W.C.A. to the Student Religious council which promotes religious activity on the campus and coordinates the plans of the different religious groups represented. In addition to this she is on the Inter-Dorm council.
A serious-minded citizenship is shown through her aims in life. At one time she was interested in social work, helping at the Marcey Settlement house in Chicago during the summer of 1945. There she assisted in teaching a group of 150 to 200 children under the sponsorship of a professor of sociology at Adrian college in Michigan.
"Social work is not the base of the trouble," she said, and now her aims are striking higher. With a background as a political science major she hopes someday to be in government work, with perhaps a future in international relations or with the United Nations Security council.
Band, Orchestra Get New Bass Instruments
Being president of Carruth and having the responsibility of organizing a new hall is one of her many jobs on the campus.
Her enthusiasm has given her wide interests. She has taken organ work here at the University. She now is playing basketball on the Carruth and Templin team. She has a fondness for walking in the rain, hiking, and has an appreciation of music.
The bass notes emanating from the K.U. band will be rounder, smoother, and mellower than ever before, if new instruments mean anything.
Eight new tubas and as many bass fiddles have been received by Prof. Russell L. Wiley, director of both the band and orchestra.
The tubas are not the old-fashioned wrap-around type, according to Professor Wiley. Instead, the gold-plated bells open to the front from a vertical shaft.
The University owns and supplies some of the larger, expensive instruments not normally owned by students.
An oil painting constantly hung in a dark place loses some of its vividness, and therefore depreciates in value
Hessler Is Co-Author Of Engineering Text
A text book written by Prof. V. P. Hessler, department of electrical engineering, and John J. Carey, former K.U. professor, will make its formal appearance in U.S. colleges next fall. The book is "Fundamentals of Electrical Engineering." Mimeographed copies of the text now are being used at K.U.
The book resulted from a study of electrical engineering teaching problems at K.U. made by Professor Hessler and Professor Carey, who is now a faculty member at the University of Michigan.
The text is designed for a one semester elementary course which will normally come during the sophomore year.
Don't look now, but you may be losing a little toe.
And That, Said The Anthropologist Will Be Toe Bad
According to Albert Spaulding, assistant professor of sociology and assistant curator of anthropology, in a discussion after his recent talk on "Apes, Giants, and Men" given to Sigma Xi, man may lose his little toes as he is losing wisdom teeth in a physical deterioration of evolution.
"But at least," laughed Professor Spauling, "four-toed zoologists will at long last have a real distinction between man and the other orimates."
In his talk, the professor traced evolutionary development of man from ape-like ancestors, discussing such important type-fossils as Pithecanthropus Erectus, found in Java and China, and Neanderthal man from Europe and northern Africa.
In addition, in what he termed a "believe-or-it-not" section, Professor Spaulding described the freak specimens of evolutionary history. He mentioned such finds as the Piltdown man of England, with the skull of a human and a lower jaw identical to that of a chimpanzee.
Veterans to Meet
A nationwide Eniwetok reunion will be held in Omaha, Nebr., June 26, 27, and 28. Ten thousand veterans have been contacted and 3,000 more are expected to attend.
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Bright Ideas Club Members Will Meet At 8 Tonight
The Bright Idea section of the Engineers' Wives' club will meet at the home of Mrs. Margaret Holbert, 941 Pennsylvania, at 8 tonight.
Hottestess will be Mrs. Betty Barnett and Mrs. Eleanor Randolph.
SSO Will Hold Dinner Meeting Tonight
Before the war, the United States imported 60 per cent of the world's output of cork.
Sunflower Student organization members will have a dinner-business meeting at 6 tonight in English room of the Union, R. G. Henley, secretary, treasurer, said today.
All members of the Oread chapter, and two Sunflower chapters are urged to attend, ne added.
Theodore Roosevelt at 42 was the youngest president to take office.
Dramatists to Organize
An organizational meeting of a dramatics club will be held at 4:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Little theater of Green hall.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 6,1947
K.U. Still Slight Big Six Favorite After Hard Vacation Cage Schedule
Kansas still rates as a slight favorite for the Big Six title as the Jay-hawkers prepare to open defense of their championship tomorrow night
The initial Kansas game of the 1947 conference season will get under way at 7:30 in Hoch auditorium as the Jayhawkers take on the Missouri Tigers. ◀
The Tigers are now in a two-way tie for first place in the Big Six, their 1-0 record being equalled by Kansas State.
Missouri opened league play Friday night by dumping Iowa State, 36-25, at Columbia and the Wildcats rang up their first victory Saturday by downing Nebraska, 63-54.
The Jayhawkers have had a busy time of it outside the conference for the past two weeks, playing six games and coming out with an even split.
On Dec. 20, the Jayhawkers suffered their second loss of the campaign, bowing 37-47 to last year's national champs, the Oklahoma Aggies.
The game was fairly even during the first period, but the set shot artistry of Aggie guard Joe Bradley pulled the Cowboys away in the second period. Bradley accounted for 17 points, while Charlie Black led the Javahawks with 10.
After spending Christmas day en route to Oklahoma City, the Jayhawkers started off their part of the All-College tournament by downing the Green Wave of Tulane, 65-33.
Otto Schnellbacher, Charlie Black,
and Ray Evans were the front line
men in the game accounting for 18,
16, and 12 points respectively.
Oklahoma A. & M., Texas, and Okla-
hamia also took first round victories
with the Texans accounting for Missouri.
65-46.
In the second round of the tournament, played on Friday, the Jayhawkers showed a spurt of real power. Oklahoma under by a 51-45 count.
While the Sooner scoring leader, Gerald Tucker, was being held to six points, the Kansas "Big Three" poured in 32. Evans counted five goals and two freezes before fouling out, and Black and Schnellbacher hit for 11 and nine respectively.
In the other semi-final game of the night, the Oklahoma Aggies barely edged Texas on a late free throw. In the consolation bracket, Missouri defeated Rice, 57-53, and Baylor edged Tulane, 69-65, in an overtime contest.
On Saturday night, Missouri had been relegated to sixth place in the bracket by a 51-58 loss to Baylor, and Oklahoma had been dumped into fifth by Texas' 62-40 victory when the Jayhawkers and the Aggies took the court in the finals.
The Jayhawkers still had trouble in penetrating the iron ring of the Cowboy defense, but managed to stay within shooting distance during the first half by sinking free throws.
The Aggies led, 20-16, at the half, but couldn't pull away. Kansas pulled up to a 38-38 tie and Black's loss put the Jayhawkers out in front.
With two minutes left, A. L. Bennett, shifty Aggie forward, slipped in for a goal which provided the winning margin. Two frees by Bennett as the Aggies stalled and were fouled, pushed the final count up to 42-39.
Bennett, with six goals and five freees, led the Aggies in scoring while Schennbhecher with 17 points and Black with 12 naked Kansas.
The Kansas club returned home only to be pushed to the limit by a game Stanford club in annexing its victory. The Jayhawkers led almost all the way, but had to stave off a desperate rally by the west coast team to haul in a 54-52 triumph.
Otto Schnellbacher became the first Jayhawker of the year to cross the double-ten mark as he put seven goals and six frees together for an even 20. Black hit six and one for 13 points, and Evans dumped in five and one for 11.
The Jayhawkers dropped their final pre-conference game to Colorado, 52-50, but fought into overtime before losing.
Kansas came back from behind to come up to a 44-44 tie at the end
of regulation time, but late goals by Horace Huggins and Lee Robbins in the overtime period put Colorado out in front.
Schnellbacher and Black again accounted for 20 and 13 points respectively.
The Jayhawkers open the Big Six race with a record of eight wins and four losses which doesn't compare statistically with the 11-2 record of Kansas State, but which ranks high when the opposition is compared.
The Oklahoma Aggies, by virtue of a surprise victory over powerful Kentucky, now rates No. 1 in the country and two of the four Kansas 'osses have been to the Cowpokes.
The worst Kansas loss of the season was to the Aggies, 37-47, but the other three losses were of three different teams in a two-point overtime margin once.
The "B" squad rolled on unde-
feated after bouncing Kansas State
"B" for the second time with little
trouble.
The Kansas record to date:
Won—8
Lost—4
Pct.—667
Total Points—590
Opponents Points—534
Average per game—49.17
Defensive average—44.50
Derby Explains Insurance Refund
A number of former prisoners or war in this vicinity are mistaken about GI insurance refunds, according to Sherwin L. Derby, Lawrence VA representative.
Former prisoners are not entitled to a refund unless they were totally disabled for six or more consecutive months, he explained.
A refund of premiums paid during a period of total disability is made upon approval of the Veterans administration. The policy applies equally to men who were prisoners of war and those who were not, he said.
Boston. (UP)—The first large shipment of caviar since the war was landed in Boston by the Swedish freighter Selma Thorden. It comprised 37 tons valued at more than $1,000,000.
Caviar To The Bostonians
Back Leads Macksville Cagers To Tournament Victory
Robert Bock, College junior, who was elected to the state legislature in the November election, led the Macksville basketball town team to victory in a 12-team tournament during vacation.
Macksville defeated St. John's, Kinsley, and Byers to take the team trophy. Bock, center for the winners, was voted the outstanding player in the tournament.
Kansas State Leads Big Six Basketball
Kansas State, co-leader of the Big Six with Missouri, also tops the league's teams in all games played. Kansas State and M.U. won their opening league games, downing Nebraska and Iowa State respectively. Argies lost their two gamer
The records:
The Aggies lost their two games to Southern Methodist and Iowa.
W L
Kansas State ... 10 2
Oklahoma ... 10 3
Missouri ... 9 4
Kansas ... 8 4
Nebraska ... 3 8
Iowa State ... 2 8
Results last week-Kansas State 42, Washburn 40; Kansas State 63, Nebraska 54; Missouri 63, Texas Christian 36; Missouri 36, Iowa State 25; Oklahoma 55, City College of new York 62, Oklahoma 64; Iowa State 14, Drake 35; Nebraska 53, Louisville 68; Nebraska 53, Western Kentucky 74.
Games this week—tonight, Oklahoma at Nebraska; Tuesday, Missouri at Kansas, Iowa State at Drake; Friday, Kansas State at Iow State; Saturday, Ottumwa Naval at Nebraska.
Flame You Can't See Offered Campers
Wilmington, Del. (UP)—When you go camping next summer, you'll be able to cook your hamburgers and over an "invisible flameless" flame.
At least, that's how Dupont describes its new tablet fuel made from trioxane, a form of formaldehyde.
The fuel, being produced for the first time on a commercial scale, ignites instantly with a non-luminous flame not easily blown out by wind. It was used during the war in 1942 and again in 1945 to fuel to heat field rations without disclosing positions of front line troops to the enemy.
M
Longer life for your car
depends on the kind of service it gets. Avoid trouble by bringing it in for servicing today!
Winter Chevrolet Co.
738 N.H.
Phone 77
SNOW AND SLUSH BRING OUT THE DEFECTS IN THE BEST OF CARS!
A Defective Automobile Is A Dangerous Automobile
There are many accidents which could have been avoided by attending to the minor defects.
BRING YOUR CAR IN TODAY
CHANNEL-SANDERS MOTOR CO.
622-24 Mass.
Phone 616
Lost Something? Try a University Daily Kansan Want Ad
MEN'S SHORT SLEEVES
FOR BUSINESS AND FASHION
For That Dressed-Up Feeling
Wear An Independent Laundered Shirt
Use Independent
Superior Laundry Service
INDEPENDENT LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS
"GUARDIAN OF PUBLIC HEALTH"
740 Vermont St.
Call 432
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
RY 6,1947
PAGE FIVE
S!
JANUARY 6,1947
Stop College Raids Coaches Will Ask Organized Baseball
New York. (UP)—President Branch Rickey of the Brooklyn Dodgers will appear today before the American Association of College Baseball coaches and, in his usual few thousand well chosen words, tell them nothing about why they are snubbed by organized baseball.
The irate members honestly don't expect any enlightenment from the Deacon. As one member put it:
But the frustrated college coaches are hoping to build up a bit of good will which may help them achieve their aims. These are, namely, to receive the same consideration given college football coaches, that is, no signing of college players until their senior year and stamping out of the "bird dog" baseball scout.
"We know he won't say anything, about why baseball refuses to stop the larceny of college players."
Professional baseball has been putting off the college coaches for a year now with repeated promises to "do something" at the "next meeting." Since that declaration the organized baseball men have met four times—and notified the collegiate tutors that "the matter didn't come up."
Meanwhile, the college coaches have become embroiled in an argument with Commissioner A. B. "Happy" Chandler. The commissioner told them, undiplomatically, that "only a few colleges play baseball, anyhow."
The matter, the college coaches point out, is not just one of protecting their teams. They assert with good argument that it is one of education and the good of the boy at heart.
"We are fighting for the kids and for their education," said President Everett D. Barnes of Colgate. "Many a college freshman has had his life ruined by signing an organized baseball contract. He is a professional then and unable to compete in college sports. He fails to make the grade professionally and then is dropped by the wayside. More often than not he fails to return to school."
Another organized baseball implement they hope to outlaw is the "bird dog" scout. He is the local barber or bartender who signs a college athlete to a contract for a major league club. If the athlete fails in organized ball he is an outcast collegian who has sold his collegiate life and future hopes for a paltry retainer.
One thing the coaches won't do is meet with Chandler.
"He'll just tell us that he used to play baseball at Transylvania college," one member said disgusted, "and also that—'ah loves baseball.'"
SOUIR
Invading Missouri Tiger
This is Robert Garwitz, who will be on M.U. Coach Wilbur "Sparky" Stalcup's forward line against the Jayhawkers tomorrow night in Hoch auditorium.
Beware Of The 'Doorless Door,' Girls
Chicago. UP) — Leonard Z. Plebank, inventor, claims he has invented a "doorless door."
He said every home should have at least one of them.
He said air currents would keep insects and dirt out of the house and keep the heat in.
"It really is quite simple," Mr. Plebank said. "First you cut a hole for a doorway, and then substitute a wall of air blasts for the door."
"There's only one difficulty," he said. "You get all mussed up walking through the door."
Santa's Sleigh In Union Gets Toys, Clothing, Money
The Santa's sleigh near the steps of the Union received toys, clothing, and coins totaling $21.27 before Christmas.
The project for needy families of Lawrence was sponsored by the Sunday Afternoon Activities Committee of the Union. Most of the toys were given to one family having a number of small children, and the money was used to buy Christmas dinners for three families.
Ancient Wall Clue To Norse Landing
Is Your Car Safe?
Cold and Snowy Weather
Take A Lot Out Of A Car
The wall is known variously as Norseman's Fireplace and Norsemen's Fort.
Some local historians theorize that the wall was built from ballast taken ashore from Leif Ericson's vessel to build a fort as protection against the natives.
One such bit of evidence is a strange wall discovered on Chip Hell here in the mid-19th century. While building a house, workmen uncovered a red wall, the mortar for which contained fish bones.
3-Foot Snake Intrudes
Provincetown, Mass. (UP)—Some 50 communities along the New England coast claim to have evidence that they were landing places for the Norsemen around 1.000 A.D.
Chicago. (UP)—F. A. Swett, grocer, reached up to a shelf, felt something strange, and called police. Chief George Mason killed the "thing." It was a three-foot boa constrictor which probably arrived in a banana shipment.
CHECK YOUR
L CH
Bra
Bat
Motor
Ignition System
Steering Gears
Jack's Motor Co.
Brakes
Battery
1012 Mass.
Phone 424
Medical Aptitude Tests To Be Given Saturday
Applicants for the 1947 entering class of the University School of Medicine will take medical aptitude tests Saturday at 8:30 a.m. in Fraser theater. Registered candidates will be given preference in the assignment of test materials, according to Thomas Christensen, counselor of the guidance bureau.
Candidates must bring a fountain pen, an eraser, and a check or money order of $5 made out to the graduate office. Cash will not be accepted.
The test is scheduled only once a year. Special examinations may be arranged only by paying an extra fee.
THE RAPID TRANSIT COMPANY
The first session will be from 8:30 a.m. to 12 noon. The second session will be from 1:15 to 4 p.m.
YOUR CITY BUS SERVICE
Japanese occupation of Java during the war years cost the United States and its allies 1,250,000 tons of sugar.
LAWRENCE SANITARY Milk and Ice Cream Co.
TOAST TO HEALTH WHEN ALL THE FAMILY DRINK OUR PURE MILK AT MEALS.
SLICK STREETS OR NOT!
You Will Find BUS SERVICE Safe--Convenient--Economical
For All Occasions
RIDE THE BUS
HERE IS A NEW YEAR'S RESOLUTION TO ADD TO YOUR LIST!!
"I resolve to show my dates and friends a good time all through the New Year—by doing what all good hosts do—taking guests to the Skylne Club."
9 Resolve
Delicious Dinners and Short Orders
Dancing On Lawrence's Most Beautiful Floor
SKYLINE CLUB
For Reservations Phone 3339
2333 Haskell
PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
100%
JANUARY 6,1947
Kansan Comments.
Who's Dumb?
While you were home, you probably heard some of your friends say something like this, "I don't think I'll go back second semester; I just can't get it; I guess I just must be a dumbie."
That person wasn't dumb; he's smart. He's begun to realize that he's one of the persons who's not fitted to go to college.
Some people eat up school work; others have to fight their way to a college degree; still others couldn't get a degree in anything, no matter how hard they worked. And it's nothing to be ashamed of if you are in that last category.
Those of you who were in the army remember that the army had a number of tests which it gave to determine what job you were best fitted for. Despite all the jokes about how the army fouled up in placing men in military jobs, the army usually managed to put square pegs in square holes and round pegs in round holes.
The army tests were based on the idea that everyone has a certain temperament, a certain set of latent capabilities which determined whether combat duty or rear echelon duty or stateside service was best for each soldier. A prizefighter might be temperamentally unfit for combat duty while a hairdresser might give promise of being a suicide squad soldier.
Everyone is entitled to spend some time finding out what kind of work best suits his capabilities. If he finds that he doesn't have the particular ability needed for going to college, he hasn't wasted any time because he's eliminated college from his list of possibilities.
The person who finds college isn't for him and so leaves school isn't dumb; the person who's dumb is the one who has that ability and wastes it or the person who doesn't have that ability and insists on continuing to waste time in a futile effort to buck his way through.
Hangovers
In a pre-New Year's Eve story, Hal Boyle, AP feature writer, suggested that suspending a Japanese war sword by a silk cord over one's bed would solve the question of whether life was worth living after an evening celebrating the coming of 1947.
While his article wasn't intended to be serious, he did put some good psychology in it. He realized that some strong stimulus must be used to break the lethargy which inevitably follows every period of high-pressure living.
Most of us, whether we realize it have been on an emotional binge ever since we departed from the University for the Christmas holidays.
The excitement of meeting hometown people again, of comparing notes with seldom-seen buddies, of changing completely one's routine of living for more than two weeks is an emotional binge; and an emotional binge produces just as uncomfortable a hangover as an alcoholic binge. It may not be as intense as a hangover born of alcohol, but it's a hangover just the same.
If a dangling sword can be the stimulus to make one decide he
wants to live despite his physical condition, then the thought of final examinations should make one decide to get rid of the effects of an emotional hangover. Less than four weeks remains before finals and if that thought doesn't make you decide time's awaisting, you're not just hanging over, you're past all hope.
Dear Editor----
Dec.18,1946
There have been two events lately that seem to give new hope to us incoming freshmen that the sorry state of student politics may improve after all.
First, the formation of the United Women's Council, if it carries out its aims, is a milestone in achieving a goal. The body with a broader frame of mind.
Second is the announcement of the Progressive party and its platform. The six fraternities are to be commended for their efforts to remove the Greek-independent barriers.
The next move seems to be up to the independents as to what effort they will make in the same direction. I hope that before our student leaders meet on a question concerning the nearly nine thousand students on the campus, they will check their I.S.A. cards and their Greek pins outside that meeting door, and that, in this way, the need of the student will be considered and judged in an unbiased manner.
I think that your paper has improved greatly in the last two or three weeks. You seem to have reported the news in as unbiased a way as could be desired or hoped to be achieved. You seem to be the official organ that we can present to others with pride and esteem.
One suggestion is that you might give a little more play to student-sponsored programs such as plays, lectures, and other similar activities.
Otis "Bud" Hill College freshman
Dec.18.1946
"If we could get rid of the engineers, we wouldn't have to worry about peace," said Prof. John Ise in a speech to an initiation banquet. . . . "The engineers," he said, "spend their time developing diabolic and complicated machinery that complicates our society. People just can't keep up with it."
It was with incredible amazement that I read the above excerpt from an article in the Daily Kansan. (Dec. 18) Amazement, yes! For I was dumbfounded that a supposedly intelligent professor of this great University would make such a stupid and thoughtless statement as that. I say stupid and thoughtless because I find it utterly impossible to excuse such a statement on the premise that it was a "slip of the tonue."
Let Professor Ise remember that, except for the engineer, he wouldn't have any "diabolic and complicated" automobile, or bathroom with hot and cold running water, automatic flushing stool and so forth.
If Professor Ise will take a few moments off from his speech making and read a little history (both ancient and modern) he will find that wars were being fought by money and power-mad politicians and economists long before engineering had shed its three-cornered pants. It is indexed unfortunate that the product of engineering labor should be turned to terrible uses. But by whom? Engineers? Hell no! Politicians and those peculiarly perverted human beings that we call economists.
Professor Ise's solution of the problem "How to preserve the peace," calls for the use of professors because, as he says, "They're cheap labor and generally honest." With only a few more statements such as he made, we can add the words "AND SIMPLE" in capital letters.
Engineering freshman (Editor's note—Professor Ise, who is sometimes called "The old curmudgeon of K.U.," has been known to speak with his tongue in his cheek.)
Jack Stines
Minneapolis, (UP)—That women still want to hang onto their regular weekly pay-checks is proved by the experience of a Minneapolis firm which discloses that 60 per cent of its factory employs today are women.
Women Get Foot In Door, Stay On Payroll
Minneapolis Honeywell Regulator company has employed women in its assembly departments for more than 23 years because of their proven ability to manufacture of small precision instruments of the type made by the company.
During the war, because of manpower shortages and the need for greatly expanded production, employment of women was increased until they comprised approximately 30 per cent of the company's total sayrolls.
That percentage still holds today
—15 months after V-J day.
Vancouver, Wash. (UP) — Two prowlers were frightened away when a neighbor shouted "boo" at them, Anna Oltjenbruns told police. The prowlers had stolen into her backyard to steal wood.
'Boo' Routs Prowlers
The University Daily Kansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Advertising College, and the Associated College Press. Represented the National Advertising Service 429 Madison Ave. New York, NY 10017.
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City Editor ... R. T. Kingman
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VARSITY
TODAY — Ends Tuesday
Charlie Chan
A Case of Terror
With S
"THE TERROR"
—and
LEON
and Joe Knight
"Gentleman Joe
Palooka"
6,1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
TE
ier
TE
rier
k
T
T
AN
TOON
er
JANUARY 6.1947
The Ideal Stadium, Falkenstien Says Has All Seats On 50-Yard Line
At the K.U.-Nebraska football game a number of persons took a look at the 33,000 fans in Memorial stadium and began to figure how much the athletic department was going to make.
According to Earl Falkenstien, the athletic business manager, the majority multiply 33,000 by $2.50 to get $ the answer.
"Most of them forget that we have to deduct a 41-cent federal tax, a 4-cent state tax, and give half of the receipts to the visiting school," he said. "We get only $1.23 from general admission tickets and then we have to pay all the expenses, including salaries, training table meals, uniforms, and payments on the stadium debt."
Mr. Falkenstien, who has been financial secretary of the athletic association since 1932, takes care of such problems and a lot more.
The athletic department is enjoying its greatest financial year in history, and in this respect, the business manager runs into one of his biggest problems.
"It's difficult trying to give everyone a seat on the 50-yard line or center section, front row basketball seats," Mr. Fakkenstein said. "Everyone generally asks for the best location, but they really don't expect to get it. We've had a lot of cooperation from the fans this year."
Some of the basketball enthusiasts got "plenty mad" last spring, however, over ticket sales for the K.U.-Oklahoma Aggie championship game played in Kansas City. Mo., he added.
"After the Oklahoma coach agreed to play the game in Kansas City, we started taking ticket orders immediately and printed," Mr. Falkenstein related.
The trouble began when the athlete office received its allotment of seats.
"They gave us half of the auditorium," the business manager said, "but we had more orders than tickets. The same thing happened in
Kansas City. The secretary there said that he could have sold 25,000 for that game instead of limiting the sale to a capacity 9,500. The fans got plenty mad."
Mr. Falkenstien, a World War I veteran, has been in Lawrence since 1920, coming here from Onaga. He was first employed in the old Watkins National bank which is now the city hall. From there he went to the Lawrence National bank before coming to Mount Oread.
"Many persons think we are brothers, Mr. Falkenstein said. "It's appropriate for someone to come up to me and tell me the heard my brother over the radio."
According to the diminutive business manager, his work is "very enjoyable" because there's something doing all the time, and he gets a kick out of showing enthusiasm along with the student body.
He has one son, Max, a College junior and WREN sports announcer.
After having so many lean years around the athletic office, Mr. Falkenstein said it's a good feeling to be able to see everything doing so well.
"We've had a very encouraging year so far, and the future looks bright," he said. "There's no question in my mind that we'll fill the stadium for the Missouri game next year. Everything looks rosy."
"I almost lost that enthusiasm," he said jokingly, "when I was in my office from 8 a.m. until 11 p.m. selling tickets."
Starch that remains in clothing a long time may cause the fabric to weaken.
Boston. (UP)—This may be the atomic age, but a recent survey revealed that at least 3,000 work horses still are in harness in Boston
Boston Cherishes Horses
Copy must be in the University Daly Kansan Business Office, Journalism bldg., not later than 4 p.m. of the day before class is started. All classifieds are cash in advance.
Classified Advertising
Classified Advertising Rates
One day Three days Five days
25 words or less 35c 65c 90c
additional words 1c 2c 3c
Lost
THIS SEMESTER, plastic frame glasses,
mess-make case carrying,
cloth cleaning, yellow printed
headscarf. On both on. Found, black
gloves. Please call Lucille Harlow
860.
LOOSE-LEAF Notebook containing two spiral notebooks in the basement of Frank Strong hall. Finder please return to Kansan office. -6-
MONDAY, One pain brown and yellow
MONDAY, H. found, please call Edna Hall,
2019.
LIGHT Brown Parker pencil with gold cap. LAW engraved in cap. Reward. Findley Law. 1043 Indiana. phone 3014. -7-
NEEDED Badly. Girl's black box winter coat missing since Dec. 6. Also a gaa wool scarf lost before Thanksgiving. Revard. Call Stellkirchner, 86-7-
8 M.M. Eastman Cedar Kodak movie camera with leather case and with f. 1.9 lens plus additional 9 m.m. f. 2.5 wide anal lens. Call 1564. Ask for Hake after 2.00.
For Sale
For Rent
FURNISHED. One-room stone house, suitable for two men students. Electricity. 1973 University Drive, phone 1839-W. -6-
Business Services
MICROSCOPES, Colorimeters, balances,
baskets, cameras, microscopes.
Thirteen years of experience. Call
Victor 9218, Technical Instruments Ser-
vice, Kansas City, Mo. F no. 123-
mates.
PHOTO-EXACT Copies, discharge and valuable papers. Fast service. Low price. Drug Co., 901 Mass.rence. Kansas, or Lane F., Apt. 18. Sunflower, Kansas.
--J16
Across from Court House
BILL'S GRILL
HAVE A TASTY, WELL-PREPARED STEAK for Less at
1109 Mass.
Phone 2054
How Would YOU Do It!
If there were no Banks here how would you get your money for Living Costs and School Expenses?
No matter where you cash your check, it ultimately must go to a local bank which has set up the necessary system of collecting it and transferring it into usable funds in Lawrence.
Yes, even postal money orders are paid for in Cash obtained at a local bank
We render you a service even though you never enter the bank.—Why not come in and get better acquainted?
The Lawrence National Bank
Lawrence, Kansas
Member: Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
WATCH THAT SKID!
IT'S THE ACE OF DIRT-TRACK DRIVERS
CHAMPION JOIE CHITWOOD AT THE WHEEL!
LEADING THE FIELD WITH ONLY 2 LAPS TO GO,
JOIE CHITWOOD NO.6 TRIES TO LAP 3 CARS...
IF JOIE TAKES
THOSE THREE, HE'LL
HAVE LAPPED THE
WHOLE FIELD
STAND
ON IT!®
JOIE!
GEO HAMIDIN
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* RACING SLANG FOR ACCELERATE
- RACING SLANG FOR ACCELERATE
THOSE THREE ARE RIDING AWFUL CLOSE FOR COMFORT WATCH IT THERE.. OW!
A WICKED SKID — A
ANNE CARELL UP ON THE
OF THE ONRUSHING CHITWOOD. A
HE CAN'T TURN OUT TO CLEAR THE
THOSE THREE
ARE RIDING AWFUL
CLOSE FOR COMFORT—
WATCH IT THERE...
OW!
ORT—
E...
R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, North Carolina
LOOK AT HIM THROW THAT WHEEL—HE'S HEADING RIGHT INTO THEM!
NO! HE'S THROWING HIMSELF INTO A SKID
---
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NO HE'S THROWING HIMSELF INTO A SKID
IN A SPLIT-SC DECISION, OF THROWING HIS WHEELS SHARE THE LEFT TIP HIS TAIL IN CONTROL - UP AND A THE PILED-
CAMEL IS MY CIGARETTE. THEY SUIT MY TASTE AND MY THROAT TO A 'T'
Joie Chitwood
IN A SPRIT-SECOND
DECISION, CHIWITOO
THROWS HIS FRONT
WHEELS SHARRYLY TO
HIS TAIL INTO A
CONTROLLED SKIP
—UP AND AROUND
THE PILED-UP CARS
HE SKIDDED AROUND 'EM!
AND HE'S STILL RIGHT SIDE UP! WHAT A DRIVER!
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THAT WAS
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YOUR "T-ZONE"
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T for Taste...
T for Threat...
T
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 6.1947
Police Seek Two In Spencer Case
Kansas City. Kan. (UP)—Still without a tangible lead to the slayer of Lewis J. Spencer, 27-year-old male nurse student, beaten to death with a soft drink bottle in his sixth floor living quarters at the University of Kansas hospital, police here are seeking a woman for questioning.
Also sought for interrogation was a man in a chinchilla coat, seen in the hospital two or three times the right of the murder. The man, a total stranger, appeared "agitated and nervous," witnesses told police, and left for the last time shortly before midnight.
An inquest was scheduled for today. Mr Spencer's father, L. A Spencer, a Greeley, Colo., barber here to return his son's body to Greely for burial, was unable to give police a lead. He said his son was "studious, accustomed to good company" and had no known enemies.
Detective said they have been informed that Mr. Spencer was met by a woman in the hospital's waiting room early Thursday night, a few hours before he was slain. Mr. Spencer was seen leaving the building with her.
Sunflower Wives Can't Boil Water Without Gas
Some K.U. students living at Sunflower Village returned from their vacations and found out what it's like to be "cooking without gas."
Extreme cold weather caused heavy demands on the village's gas supply which resulted in a complete shutdown. The cast section of the village is furnished with electric stoves. Those with gas stoves either are elsewhere or cooked hot plates and coal heating stoves.
No Seat-Saving At Game,
Falkenstien Reminds
You can't save a seat for the basketball game tomorrow night, or have one saved for you, Earl Falkenstien, athletic business manager, reminded students today.
In case you want a seat which someone else is "saving," just call an usher, he advised.
Eight K.U. Professors Attend Conference
Eight K.U. professors were official delegates to annual meetings of educational societies during vacation.
They were:
Prof. Edward Robinson, to a Southwestern Philosophical conference. Dallas, Texas.
Prof. H. T. U. Smith, to the Geological Society of America convention. Chicago.
Prof. Walter Kollmorgen, to a meeting of the American Association of Geographers, Columbus, Ohio.
Prof. Robert Schatten, to an American Mathematical society conference, Swarthmore, Pa.
Prof. William Young, to a meeting of the American Society of Geologists, Bologna.
Prof. A. B. Leonard, to a Paleontological Society of America meeting Chicago.
Prof. Robert Stallman, to the meeting-place of the Modern Language association. Washington, D.C.
Prof. A. J. Mix, to a Mycological Society of America conference, Boston.
Remodel Post Office
Remodeling of the K.U. post office in the basement of Frank Strong ball, scheduled to be completed today, will probably take another week, R. C. Abraham, superintendent, has announced.
When the additional room is available a mail carrier for Sunnyside will be added to the staff.
News of the World
China Suspends Airlines
- Shanghai. (UP)-China's two major airlines were ordered today to suspend operations for one week following the fourth plane crash within 11 days in which a total of 113 persons have been killed.
Jap Naval Chief Dies
Tokyo (UP)—Fleet Admiral Osami Nagano, chief of the Japanese naval general staff when Pearl Harbor was attacked, died Sunday of bronchial pneumonia.
It was Nagano who, shortly after the Japanese surrender, admitted "full responsibility" for the Pearl Harbor sneak blow in an interview with the Japanese press.
European Command Changed
Washington. UP)—The army, in a shake-up of its European command, announced today that Lt. Gen. Lucius D. Clay will succeed Gen. Joseph M. McNarney as commander of U.S. army forces in Europe.
Lt. Gen. Geoffrey Keyes will succeed Gen. Mark W. Clark as chief of U.S. forces in Austria.
Domestic Atomic Commission
Lake Success. (UP)—Warren R. Austin, chief American delegate to the UN, probably will call on members of the five-man domestic atomic energy commission for help in pushing America's atomic proposals through the UN security council, informed sources said today.
Dairen Situation Deplored
Mr. Austin became chief American negotiator as a result of Bernard M. Baruch's sudden resignation.
Washington. (UP) — The United States today deplored the "unsatisfactory situation" at Dairen, Manchuria, where the Russians abruptly ordered an American cruiser to leave port.
Marshals Seek Arsonist
San Francisco, UP]—Fire marshals searched among the charred timbers in the basement of a lower Market street office building today for evidence that would indicate an arsonist started to five-alarm fire described by authorities as the "worst San Francisco fire in 10 years."
Aboard U. S. S. Mt. Olympus with Byrd Expedition. (UP) — A monstrous iceberg, as large as Yankee stadium, threatened for several hours today to smash into two ships of the Byrd expedition but finally changed course and drifted harmlessly by.
Iceberg Threatens Byrd
Books Will Be In Ample Supply
Textbooks will be in ample supply when the second semester begins at the University in February, L. E. Woolley, manager of the student bookstore, said today.
Recent large shipments, including 8,000 books this week, have filled shelves and stockrooms to capacity
Although publishers have increased prices, the increases have not been so great as might be expected, according to Mr. Woolley. Paper costs have skyrocketed but increased volume brought by the boom in college enrollments has held total costs to a moderate increase of from 15 to 25 cents for the average text.
The demand for new books has increased much more than the proportional increase in enrollment. Veterans attending school under the GI bill receive text books at no cost to themselves. There is a tendency for the veteran to keep his old books since there is no need to turn them in for new ones.
"Odd" students may get to see motion pictures or "even" basketball games, and vice versa, if the visual instruction bureau's photographers can keep up with Big Six ball handlers.
The same movie men—Russell Mosser, supervisor, and Ross Wulf-kuhle, technical assistant—who took pictures of all K.U. football games except Denver expect to film home basketball contests from the second balcony of Hoch auditorium.
Although They're Being Snapped For Phog,
You May Get To See Home Game Movies
They took test shots of the Idaho game. Dec. 11, which Mr. Mosser said "came out pretty well." The films are taken for Dr. F. C. Allen as an aid in training his squad.
sometimes go half a minute at full speed."
According to the photographers, it's harder to follow a basketball up and down the floor than to catch a halfback skirting left end.
The football motion pictures, originally planned as a help to the coaching staff, cost the athletic department some money. The Nebraska game bill, including some extra Homecoming shots, amounted to $230.
On that day, the photographers used up 1,600 feet of color film, at the rate of $15 for each 100 feet. Black and white film costs $12 a hundred.
Honest To Gosh, KFKU Presented Jazz Concert
Three of the games—Nebraska, Kansas State, and Missouri—were photographed in color.
"And now this is KFKU presenting a jazz concert..."
"In football, the action usually doesn't last more than four or five seconds at a time." Mr. Mosser explained. "In basketball, players
"The hell you do," he told his radio. "Say that again, slowly."
The original Jayhawker's left eyebrow almost flew off.
All equipment came from the visual instruction bureau. The film is sent away for developing.
"... which we dedicate to the freshman engineers at K.U."
That was too much. The Jay- hawker fell into a stupor which wasn't at all caused by the fact it was New Year's night.
True enough, if you were listening to KFKU Wednesday night, you heard the announcement of the jazz concert by Miss Mildred Seaman dignified one more director for the station, a famous staed in Spain the usually staed (Spanish lesson at 2:30, book review at 2:45) University radio voice.
Welcome Back!
Both the jazz and the dedication were unusual. Both stemmed from a letter to the editor of the Daily Kansan, in which a "freshman engineer," as he described himself, compained that KFKU played programs that "students tune out."
The letter appeared in the last paper before the Christmas vacation. It asked for some "Hit Parade" tunes, instead of "Beethoven's 96th violin concerto in Z cubed."
The New Year's tunes weren't of Hit Parade variety—they sounded about 20-25 years old—but they certainly were dance music. The program of Lady Jayne at Midway, Miss Sarah broke in to dedicate "Somebody Loves You" to "Peaches," another freshman engineer.
Remember We Said We Would Be Waiting For You — And We Are!
READY TO SERVE YOU—
Hamburgers
Value of the films doesn't end when the athletic season is over. Movies of the one-point victory over Missouri, which gave K.U. a share in the Big Six football title, are still making the rounds of Kansas towns, Earl Falkenstien, athletic business manager, said today.
Across From Court House
Hot Chili
Court House Lunch
Are Your Clothes Ready To Go Back To School?
For Careful Cleaning Bring Your Clothes To Us—
Sunflower Village
Cleaners
WESTERN UNION HOURS
8 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Resolved!
1. To drive more slowly.
2. To stop completely at stop signs.
3. To signal for turns and stops.
4. To not pass on hills and curves.
5. To drive courteously.
6. To keep my car in good condition The last one is easy for you if you bring it to us.
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University DAILY KANSAN
STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
'I'm Going Back And Fight Until Hell Freezes Over'—
Bilbo Won't Sell Whites Short
Popularville, Miss. (UP) — Sen. Theodore Bilbo, (D.-Miss.) denied his seat in congress, made a home-coming statement that "If I've got to surrender my views on white supremacy and sell my race down the river, then I don't want to be senator."
"The Republicans want to throw me out now," Senator Bilbo said. "But when they read my book that's coming out this month, they'll want to hang me."
The Mississippi senator referred to his book, "Take Your Choice—Separation or Mongrelization."
Senator Bilbo is scheduled to undergo a cancer operation in New Orleans this week.
"If I live and the Lord lets me,"
he said, "I'm going back and fight until hell freezes over. I'm going to whip them, too."
He praised senators who defended him in his two-day effort to reach his seat in the 80th congress. He accused him of "insults" in terms of "playing for the Nero, yoh".
"He ain't got no sense, he's just a nut. He goes around playing a fiddle with a hill-billy band just like Ross Collins did."
As for Sen. Glen H. Taylor, (D-Idaho) who led the revolt against seating him, Senator Bilbo said:
Mr. Collins was Senator Bilbo's opponent in the senatorial race.
Southern Democratic rally in his behalf.
"They did a good job in helping me out in my fight," he said. "As fine a team as I ever saw."
Asked if he thought he would lose his patronage by being absent from the Senate, he said:
"The Democrats ain't got no patronage. I led the fight against the anti-lynch law, the anti-poll tax and the F.E.P.C."
Senator Bilbo praised Senators John Overton and Allen Ellender of Louisiana, who sparked the
Writers Debate Reds, One World
"We were organized for a real fight when I had to leave Washington," he continued.
He had a good word for the Republicans before he finished, however.
"Can Russia Be Part of 'One World?'" will be debated by two veteran journalists and authorities on the Soviet Union at 8 p.m. Thursday in Hoch auditorium as the second presentation of the Community Lecture series.
"The Republicans were pretty decent," he said, "about letting me continue to draw my salary."
H. R. Knickerbocker, roving correspondent for the International News service, will debate the negative side and Walter Duranty, author of several books on Russia, the alternative. Both men have lived in New York and New Jersey. Mr. Knickerbocker two years as an INS correspondent. Mr. Duranty was a Pulitzer prize winner in 1932 and Mr. Knickerbocker in 1939.
Mr. Knickerbocker spoke at the University in February, 1940, on "The Question of War and Us" and made predictions which many believed incredible but practically all of which proved to be correct. Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, said. Mr. Knickerbocker covered the war in the southwest Pacific, Europe, and North Africa.
Duranty, a correspondent for the North American Newspaper Alliance in Europe, Russia, and Japan from 1939 to 1941. is author of "USSR", "The Kremlin and the People."
Senior Pictures Taken For Jayhawker
Pictures of seniors graduating in February will be taken Jan. 14 and 15. Those students who contacted the Jayhawker office will be notified of the picture schedule.
Back copies of Jayhawk magazines should be picked up as soon as possible, because limited staff and storage space reduces the length of time any back copies can be left in the office, Carmean added.
Miss Nadine Miller, who received her bachelor of arts degree in journalism from K.U. in 1929, will become director of press and public relations for the C. E. Hooper corporation, a radio audience measurement concern, in New York next month.
Nadine Miller-To Hooper's As Press Director
February graduates who have not contacted the Jayhawker office are asked to call KU 32 immediately, or Carmean, business manager, stated.
Miss Miller has been director of the public school information service in Kansas City, Mo., since it was established in 1940. She taught English and was in charge of the school newspaper at Central Junior High school previously. Miss Miller has taught at K.U.
Thursday's Speakers
M. M. H. C.
WALTER DURANTY
J. M. H.
After graduating with a bachelor of science degree in 1939, Mr. Geraughyt worked with the federal security administration, the navy bureau of yards and docks and the defense plant corporation. Since the end of the war, he has been engaged in war contract termination work in the Cincinnati area.
Geraughty Is New Professor Of Architecture
Thomas J. Geraughty, '39, employee of the navy and several government bureaus since 1940, will become an assistant professor of architecture at the beginning of the second semester.
H. R. KNICKERBOCKER
The University band concert has been postponed from Jan. 15 to Wednesday, Feb. 19 at 8 p.m., according to Pref. Russell Wiley, director. Unavoidable conflicts have made the postponement necessary, he said.
450 Parking Fines Assessed By Court
Concert Postponed
"If you received a notice recently of a parking fine, you might as well pay it now because you won't be able to enroll next semester unless it is paid," Wayne Gugler, parking committee clerk, said today.
More than 450 notices have been sent out and a few more are to be mailed.
William McEhenny, prosecutor for the student court, explained that students may pay fines at the business office or, if they believe that there is some reason why the fines should not be paid, they may present their cases to the court. Jan. 14.
"The business office has no power to rule on cases," he said, "but the student court will decide any case brought to it."
The court will meet in Green hall at 7:30 p.m. He added that the only requirement for the bringing up a case is that the student be there.
Checks Total $18,961 To Set New Record
The University business office cashed checks totaling $18,961.35 for students yesterday.
Previous high day for the new check cashing service was $11,000. The Union Operating committee posts a daily guarantee fund of $10,000 for cashing the checks because state funds cannot be used for that purpose. Check cashing had to be stopped once yesterday for a trip to the bank to replenish the fund.
Most of the checks were government subsistence checks for veterans, which arrived during vacation in Lawrence.
Stern Concert In Hoch Monday
Isaac Stern, concert violinist who will make his third appearance as guest soloist with the New York Philharmonic orchestra this season, will present a concert in Hoeh auditorium at 8:20 p.m. Monday.
One of the University Concert course series managed by Dean D. M. Swarthout of the School of Fine Arts, it will be the young artist's first appearance on Mt. Oread. He tour his fifth national tour.
In addition to 82 concerts last year, he performed almost a full concert for the sound track in Warner Brothers! "Humoresque." He also recorded two albums for Columbia records and introduced the new "Sonata 1933" by Faul Hindemith at the composer's invitation.
League-Leading MU Meets KU Tonight
The Jayhawkers meet Missouri's Tigers at 7:30 tonight to enter the wildest Big Six cage race in several years.
Kansas is the last team in the conference to get under way in the league fight, and is favored to wind up 6n top or close to the top.
Dr. F. C. Allen, Kansas coach, is still
The Starters
| MISSOURI | KANSAS |
| :--- | :--- |
| Jenkins | F. Schnellibacher |
| Pippin | F. Black |
| Haynes | C. Evans |
| Lorrance | G. Eskridge |
| Smith | G. Clark |
K.U. Has Three-Day Fuel Supply On Hand
The University fuel supply has run dangerously low.
During a barrel of fuel on every seven minutes during the vacation cold weather, the central heating plant used 10,000 gallons per day and now has only a three-day supply for emergency cold weather use, according to C. G. Bayles, superintendent of buildings and grounds.
"This means that sub-zero temperatures in the immediate future would force a general closing of classes," Mr. Bayles stated.
During Christmas vacation, the University had to use most of its reserve fuel oil. All buildings were kept warm in order to prevent plumbing from freezing all over the campus. Need of natural gas to heat private homes caused a University change-over to its reserve supply of fuel oil, and only yesterday afternoon could it go back to natural gas consumption.
WEATHER
Kansas—Clear to partly cloudy today, tonight, and Wednesday. Slightly colder central and west today and central and east tonight.
lineup which is powerful on both offense and defense. Tonight he will put Ray Evans, veteran guard, at the quarterback post and start rookie Jack Eskridge at the vacant guard post.
The Tigers will have a jinx to fight. The Jayhawkers have won the last 17 games between the two teams at Lawrence.
The Jayhawkers enter the conference picture with a record of eight victories and four losses, standing fourth in the Big Six standings of total games played; but two of the Kansas defeats have been at the hands of the defending national champion. Oklahoma A. & M.
Missouri has a slightly more impressive percentage, but the Tigers have been spotty and have been called a "hot-and-cold" team so far. The Tigers now stand at the top of the league standings, tied with the Wildcats of Kansas State with one win and no losses each.
Another of the Tiger victories was over the Illinois "Whiz Kids" at Kansas City earlier this year.
The Tigers have not fared too well in tournament play this year. Missouri finished seventh in the eight-team All-Big Six tournament at Kansas City, and sixth at the All-College tournament at Oklahoma City.
In these two tourneys, the Tigers met only two conference teams, defeating Iowa State and losing to Oklahoma.
The game will be broadcast by WREN beginning at 7:25 p.m.
With tonight's encounter, the Jayhawkers will embark on their 19th Big Six season, and will be after their 13th championship. Dr. Allen's squads have finished all alone in the top spot nine times, and have shared the title three times.
_little Man On Campus
By Bibler
KU
"Have your activity tickets ready. You'll be able to see motion pictures of the basketball game after it's over."
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE TWO
JANUARY 7,1947
'Color Expresses Personalities'
—Film Director
Hollywood. (UP)—Psychoanalyze yourself in technicolor, says a Hollywood director. Perhaps in purple, instead of gray, you, too, can be a Lana Turner.
Robien Mamoulian, who directed the first technicolor film feature, "Becky Sharp," and since has developed revolutionary techniques for its use, believes that color is a powerful means of expressing emotions and personality.
Take Lana Turner now, he said. She's purple. And purple, conversely, gives somewhat the same impression that Lana does. Well, anyway, he said, you might try it.
"Color is a new dimension of realism, and film craftsmans should try to evolve a language of color," said Mr. Mamoulian, whose specialty is uniting the words, music, dancing, sets and costumes of a production into a dramatic whole.
He tried out his ideas in the Broadway hit productions of "Oklahoma!" "Carousel" and "St. Louis Woman" and now it piloting Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer's musical interpretation (in color, naturally) of Eugene O'Neill's "Ah Wilderness," now titled "Holiday Holiday."
"He's not the pastel type," the director explained. "Like Clark Gable and Robert Taylor, he is more at ease in the simple early American type of room with wood tones, greens and rough colors."
Translating the psychology of color into everyday use, Mr. Mamoultan in "Summer Holiday" shied away from pastels for sets surrounding Mickey Rooney.
Heroine Gloria de Haven, the typical American girl and "perfect wife" type, he interprets in yellow-green. But if you have the explosive personality of Marilyn Maxwell, the picture's siren, your personality color is yellow-red.
For sheer romance, typified by Jeanette MacDonald, stick to dusty pink. The womanly woman such as Greer Garson expresses her personality, in illac.
Judy Garland takes red-orange- Katharine Hepburn cobalt blue-young Elizabeth Taylor cerulean blue-and the streamlined athletic girl, like Esther Williams, is the blue-green type.
Money, Mothers Are Marital Sore Spots
New York. (UP)—Money may not be the root of all evil but it is at the root of the largest part of all family bickering, according to Dr. Clifford R. Adams, director of the marriage counseling service at Penn State college.
Dr. Adams says that along with money, the greatest potential trouble-maker is the husband's mother.
"A wife can usually get on with her own mother," he explains, but such is not the case with the husband's mother, especially when "the two women are cooped up all day together in the house."
'The basic element usually found behind all serious feuding is a feeling of frustration, according to Dr. Adams, who writes:
"Such frustration arises, for example, when either mate feels he or she does not have enough money to do all the things desired. Quarrelling, a senseless procedure, is simply one way of dealing with a frustrating situation. The yelling and abuse do not solve anything. The sensible approach is to face the problem frankly and talk it out."
University Daily Kansan
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, plus 2% tax (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the school year except Saturdays and Sundays. Uni-
niversity courses, online learning periods. Entered as second class matter in 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
World War II Pension Roll Doubles
NOVEMBER
1945
WORLD WAR II
WORLD WAR II
PRIOR WARS
NOVEMBER
1946
The list of World War II veterans drawing disability compensation has doubled the past year, the VA reports. While the disabled roll from previous wars dropped slightly, the WW II list increased from 859,762 to 1,682,216. Each figure in the above drawing represents 100,000 active cases.
Beer,'The International Drink, Is Not Fattening, Brewers Contend
By HARMAN W. NICHOLS
(United Press Staff Correspondent)
Advance notices hearling the publication of the beer manual said it was couched in language anybody could understand.
Under a question and answer section captioned "Is beer fattening?" the four authors—master brewers all—with malt in their hair—hedge a little bit about poundage.
"Beer may be a factor insofar as it stimulates the appetite and digestion of food, but by the same token, any zestful drink containing carbon dioxide causes a similar effect."
St. Louis. (UP)—Your friend, the bartender, didn't get that big bulge under his apron from drinking beer.
The chances are he is just a pig at the table. On page 192 of "The Practical Brewer," which has been turned loose in book form, it says that "beer definitely is not fattening."
It's a calorie-packed food, with a "definite tonic value," in case you feel the need of a tonic or want an excuse to run down to the corner pub.
But as the brewer-writers get on into the subject, they get fouled up in the technical language they know, but we don't. So to keep the public up on the big words they use to finally come up with a scuttle of suds, they wind up the book with a terminology—from A to Z.
"The Practical Brewer" (228 pages plus a careful index) was conceived, written, and published in St. Louis, which considers itself the beer capital of the world—Milwaukee can take a back seat.
A—'abschiebien' —the receding of the first foam head of wort beginning
to ferment from the sides of the vessel.
Z—"zwickel"—test cock; sampler It is interesting to note that beer, which the book says "has always been international" has been that way for some 6,000 years.
Presumably that 6.000 years takes in the period when America was undergoing that "noble experiment" and when brewers kept their hand in by making "near-beer."
8,145,000 Population Predicted For N.Y.
New York. (UP)—New York's population in 1950 will be 8,145,000, an increase of 600,000 over the 1940 census figures, it was indicated in a population growth survey.
By 1970 the population will have increased another 400,000 to 8,585,000, and will level off thereafter, a survey the Consolidated Edison Company predicted.
COURT HOUSE LUNCH
Meals - Short Orders
Sandwiches
Open 5:30-12:30
'Fireproof' Hotels Not Always So, Public Warned
New York. (UP)—Distinctions between the terms "fireproof" and "fireproof construction" as applied to hotel and other public places are explained in a statement by W. E. Mallalieu, general manager of the National Board of Fire Underwriters.
He expressed concern over the public's reaction to the recent disasters in the Hotel LaSalle fire in Chicago and the Hotel Winecoff fire in Atlanta.
Some hotels, especially the newer ones, which were built under the requirements of a city building code modeled upon the building code recommended by the National Board of Fire Underwriters, could correctly advertise that they were fireproof, Malliaille said.
"The term 'fireproof construction,' as used by the National Board of Fire Underwriters and other fire insurance interests," Mallalieu said, "indicates a type of construction in which the contents of the building can be completely destroyed and yet the framework of the building, including the interior, will be capable of being rehabilitated and continued in use.
Lyric ... $25.95
BEAMANS
"The term 'fireproof' as applied to a hotel should not be used even though the structure of the building is of fireproof construction—unless all vertical openings, such as stairs, elevators and other shafts, are enclosed with partitions and have fire doors on all openings, thus preventing the upward travel of the fire from one floor to another.
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"This vertical travel of fire was the prime cause of death and injury in both the Chicago and the Atlanta hotel fires.
"The separating partition and doorway between rooms and the corridor must be of such type as to prevent the ready spread of fire from the room to the corridor, or from the corridor to the room. This will fail no transom, and that any air conditioning system shall be of such a design as not to permit the travel of heated, poisonous gases into rooms.
Mallalieu said fire insurance interests have no police power to require such features, and that it was up to individual communities to make such requirements.
Minerva Tropic Master $71.05 Gray crackled enamel. Portable carrying case.
Radios At
1200 New York
Phone 140
Holds Laws Won't End Hotel Fires
Harrisburg, Pa. (UP)—Laws aimed at the prevention of hotel fires are "silly," in the opinion of Franklin Moore, president of the Inter-American Hotels association.
Moore said adherence to this pattern is more likely to do the trick. Education, through effective publicity means, of hotel guests not to smoke in bed and not to leave their rooms unless instructed, in case of fire.
He says you can declare it illegal to smoke in bed, but "that won't keep people from being negligent."
A well-run watchman system to patrol every hall several times an hour.
A properly trained hotel staff to prevent fires, keep them from spreading when discovered, and to instruct guests to check loss of life by avoiding panic.
No LOST WEEKENDS In 1947
When you have a good book to read!
Come in and see us whenever you are downtown--you are always welcome to browse.
We recommend especially the Modern Library—243 titles of the world's best writing in history, philosophy, poetry and fiction at $1.10 each.
Or, if you wish to read the new books everyone is talking about, they too are here for sale or in our Rental Library.
Open 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.
The Book Nook
1021 Mass. Phone 666
Oron 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.
Slobbovian Stomp
Price 1 Rasbutnick A Person including tax
M
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arren Durrett and ORCHESTRA
HOCH AUDITORIUM
Saturday, Jan.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
UARY 7,1947
PAGE THREE
'on't res
JANUARY 7,1947
-Laws aimed hotel fires are of Franklin Inter-Ameri-
dare it illegal
"that won't
g negligent."
to this pat-
do the trick
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War Memorial Drive Tops $111,000
PALACE TOWER
Officials in charge of the drive, to raise $500,000 for construction of the campanile and a memorial driveway, announced during Christmas vacation that gifts and pledges had passed $111,000.
Shown above is the latest revised sketch for the campanile, planned as part of the K.U. World War II memorial. This sketch was prepared by Homer F. Neville and Edward B. Delk, Kansas City, Mo., architects.
Hugo Wedell, Kansas supreme court justice and president of the memorial association, said less than 10 per cent to the total is in pledges.
H. A. Hart, a Dodge City alumnus, sent in two checks for $500, one each for the football victories over Oklahoma and Missouri. C. L. Burt, of Hutchinson, also contributed $1,000 recently.
Never Tell A Gal Her Slip Shows, Othman Says-She Already Knows
B FREEDERICK C. OTHMAN
(United Press Staff Correspondent)
This is final. I have spent the day with three officials (only one of whose slips was dipping below the danger mark) of the American Home Economics association. They have $ \textcircled{*} $
Washington. (UP)—Never tell a lady that her petticoat is showing. She knows it, poor gal. Tug as she will, the durn thing sags again and there she is with her slip in the open some more.
told me true. The ladies of this nation are weary of being played for sckers and, or, being reminded about their errant underwear.
"The manufacturers have told us they'd be delighted to make things the way we want them made," said Miss Lelia Massey, the executive secretary. "Now we're telling 'em.'
They certainly are. The 20,000 members, all graduate home economists, are making surveys on assorted things that plague womankind, like lingerie that stretches, dresses that don't (the blame things rip), bread that tastes like plywood, thick steaks that turn out bone, and stew pans which develop leaks.
Miss Massey and her associates at headquarters (I refuse to say which one wore a slippery slip), told me about the siren songs of the bakers, the butcher, and the dressmakers. The boys have promised to deliver tie goods the way the ladies want it. The ladies are waiting, but not patiently.
As of now they're working on those slips (some good, but many sleazy, said Miss Massey), sweaters, winter coats, refrigerators, cooking utensils, and milk. They have completed their studies on house dresses, bread, and meat. They know what they want.
The meat first. The women of America are tired of buying meat and getting gristle. They insist that the butchers adopt some standards of how much bone goes with every steak. The ladies said when they want a small roast, they want it,
Nearly 12,000 women contributed to what is wrong with those dresses. Not one of them, gentlemen, was satisfied. Multiply that by a 10 million like some public opinion pollsters do and what do you get? A lot of frightened dress manufacturers. Or so the ladies hope.
without the back talk. They are caught up on compromising on big roasts. They also want thick steaks to be no thicker in Maine than in California and, of course, vice-versa.
The bread situation perhaps is not so critical. About half the ladies said they had no complaints. The other half said the bakers ought to keep on pumping vitamins into each leaf and be forced to label the nutritional content as well as net weight. Also, gents in the white aprons, the ladies want white bread that doesn't go moldy.
A good house dress, they agree,
should cost $4.98 and not one cent more.
When a lady buys a size 14
dress, it ought to be size 14, and not
suitable for draping a small elephant.
The gew-gaws down the front should be left off. The ladies don't like 'em. The hems ought to be deep and a red dress shouldn't dye everything else in the washing machine pink.
I am not sneering at the ladies. I think their idea is wonderful. I think they are wonderful. I am glad I am not a dressmaker. Never again will I tell a lady that her slip is showing. I'll merely keep my fingers crossed inconspicuously against its falling off altogether.
One other thing:
COEDS' CORNER
"But I like your Kansas weather," said Dorothy Boh Yuen Park, Fine Arts sophomore, from Hilo, Hawaii. Her first snow last winter was an occasion for celebration.
Kansas Weather Isn't Balmy But Hawaiian Student Likes It
Dorothy's fondness for Kansas weather has never been challenged by a summer here yet. She returned to Hawaii by boat last summer and came back this fall by plane.
After hearing that the University has a good occupational therapy department, Dorothy decided to come to the United States in the fall of 1945. She lives at Corbin hall, whose volleyball team she enlivened with her endless vitality.
Chairman of the minorities commission, Dorothy is active in W.Y.-C.A. With the assistance of Antonia Martinez and Jose Portuguese, she founded the International club, whose main function is social, in an effort to help foreign students and Americans to learn more about each other.
Three brothers and two sisters make life in Hawaii active. One brother is now attending Loyola University medical school in Chicago.
Dorothy's parents are Korean, but she has lived in Hawaii all her life, and plans to work in occupational therapy there after she is graduated from K.U.
Official Bulletin
---
The Official Bulletin will accept announcements from University offices and student organizations and activities. Notices must be typewritten and submitted to the University office, 222A Frank Strong, at 9:30 am. on the day of desired publication.
Jan. 7, 1947
Tau Sigma will meet at 7:30 to night in Robinson gym.
SON GYM
International Relations club will have an important business meeting at 4:30 today in the Pine room of the Union.
---
Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship will meet at 7 tonight in Barlow chapel of Myers hall. Dr. Philip O. Bell will lead the discussion. Everyone welcome.
Pre-Nursing club will meet at 4 p.m. today in the home economics dining room. Miss Van Lew, director of nursing at the University hospitals will be the guest speaker. All members urged to attend.
---
K.U. Dames will meet at 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday in the Little theater in
green hall. Prof. John Ise of the de-
partment of economics will be the
guest speaker. The beginners bridge
club meeting originally scheduled
or this time has been cancelled until
Jan. 15.
***
Frank Sinatra's motion picture short, "The House I Live In" for which he was awarded a special academy Oscar in 1945 will be shown at 4 p.m. Thursday in the Pine room of the Union. A short discussion will follow.
The Christian Science organization will hold its regular weekly meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Danforth chapel. Members of faculty and students invited to attend.
***
The elections committee of the All-Student council will meet in 220 Frank Strong at 5 p.m. Friday.
Graduate record examination Feb. 3 and 4. Applications may be secured in 2A Frank Strong.
A final examination in Western Civilization will be given Saturday Jan. 18 from 1 to 5 p.m. in 426 Lindley. All students who plan to take this examination must register their intention to do so at the registrar's office from Jan. 6 to Jan. 11.
Malott Is In The East
Chancellor Deane W. Malot is in the East this week on business for the University. He will be in New York City, Boston, and Washington, D C., and will return Saturday.
Business Association Will Reorganize
A mixer on Jan. 22, will start reorganization of the Business Students association.
In the past, the Business School day featured a turnaround class procedure when alumni returned to instruct classes. Afternoon classes were dismissed for a convocation.
Werner Requests Hall Applications
Applications for residence hall scholarships are needed for the spring semester, Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, announced today.
Although no vacancies exist at present, Dean Warner explained that a list of alternate candidates is needed to fill vacancies which unexpectedly occur.
Students may file applications at Dean Werner's office.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 7,1947
SPOTLIGHT FOR SPORTS
By BOB DELLINGER
(Daily Kansan Sports Editor)
The Jayhawkers open the Big Six season tonight with almost a certain chance of finishing in the first three and a good chance of regaining the championship.
The Jayhawkers now have the comparatively poor record of eight and four, but may snap out of the doldrums for a winning streak.
Two of the Kansas losses have come at the hands of the Oklahoma defending national champs and recent victories over the powerful Kentucky quintet.
Coach F. C. Allen is still shifting his men around, trying to find a winning combination. So far this year, he has used different starting lineups in all but three games.
***
Otto Schnellbacher became the first Jayhawk to hit 20 points, equalling that mark in two consecutive games against Stanford and Colorado. Charlie Black came within a point of the score when he hit 19 against Southern Methodist, but fouled out before he could get into the third ten.
. . .
Pittsburg Teachers of Kansas downed Arkansas, 53-52, at Pittsburg Friday. Earlier in the season, Kansas had defeated the Porkers by the same score.
. . .
Artie Devlin, national amateur ski jumping champion, annexed his second straight victory in the Torger Tokle memorial jump at Bear Mountain, N.Y.
***
Devlin's winning jump was 146 feet.
Football fatalities jumped to 21 during the 1946 season, Dr. Floyd Eastwood of Purdue told the American Football Coaches association.
Thirteen of the deaths occurred among high school players, five on athletic club teams, two in colleges, and one in sandlot play.
Harold Howey, Kansas State forward, got off to a good start toward the Big Six scoring championship as he dumped in 27 points in the season opener with Nebraska.
Howey is the spearhead of the K-State slam-bang attack and his large number of shots will help raise his average in the conference race.
Other expected high scorers are Otto Schnellbacher and Charlie Black of Kansas, Gerald Tucker of Oklahoma, and possibly Jim Myers of Iowa State.
---
K. U. comes up to the third meeting with the Oklahoma Aggies on Feb 11 and it will be pretty much a do-or-die proposition.
The Jayhawkers will have to win the next two meetings or give up a chance at the N.C.A.A. F fifth district representation. Also, of course, they must win the conference championship; but even with that done, a three-one Aggie edge would get them the bid for the playoffs.
The fifth district includes the Big Six and Missouri Valley, of which the Aggies are the outstanding basketball member.
Committee Establishes Loans For Students
The student loan committee has reestablished the eligibility requirements for loans to University of Kansas students, Willis Tompkins has announced.
All men and women are eligible providing they can fulfill these stipulations. They must not have below a "C" average, nor are first year students eligible. No one may borrow more than 100 dollars, and there must be a co-signer.
Loans are payable for one year at 5 per cent interest. Tompkins pointed out that the loan fund is not for making gifts and that interest is charged to replenish the fund. It is less inconvenient and expensive than borrowing from a bank, he emphasized.
M.U.-K.U. Also Means Stalcup-Allen
M. E. WILSON
S. B. H. C.
These two coaches will match wits tonight in Hoch auditorium as Kansas opens its Big Six season. They are Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen of Kansas, right, and Wilbur "Sparky" Stalcup of Missouri.
Stalcup's squad has hung up a record of nine wins against four losses this year, including a victory over the highly-rated Illinois "Whiz Kids."
N.C.A.A. Recognizes Gambling Problem
Delegates to the 41st annual convention indicated no action on gambling was expected—or necessary.
"It's time we recognized this problem and keep abreast of it," said Kenneth L. "Tug" Wilson, Big Nine commissioner and secretary-treasurer of the N. C. A. A. "There'll be no major speeches, but if anyone has anything to say on the subject we all want to hear it."
New York. (UP)—In a breathing spell before their showdown fight on recruiting, officials of the National Collegiate Athletic association turned the spotlight on gambling today in a round-table discussion designed to bring the problem into the open.
The big fight of the convention—a plan to boycott all colleges failing to accept a standard code of eligibility—comes up in the annual business meeting tomorrow.
"We'll have a fight on that," Mr. Wilson conceded. "The principles are approximately the same as we recommended at Chicago last July but putting the teeth in it is new. We want to stop the coach who goes out on a talent hunt for a couple of months to load up for coming seasons."
36 Families Occupy Six Sunnyside Units
Faculty or staff members who will occupy the units are Joe Small, Hobart Hanson, Edward Hoag, Russell Mills, John Barley, Arthur Bowsher, Wilmer Tanner, Lendell Cockrum, Martin Arvey, Robert Holmer, Edwin Marks, and Robert Anderson.
Six Sunnyside units have beer completed and 36 families have moved into apartments, Irvin Youngberg, director of the housing bureau said today.
The faculty and staff members occupying the apartments are Arvid Jacobson, Harold Dilley, Anthony Smith, George Wilson, Melvin Jackel, Frank Owen, Ammon Andes, Russell Daaseh, Albert Stallman, Harry Daaseh, David Chamberlain, Kenneth Moses, Arthur Millard, Emil Telfel.
The first six families moved into building one on Dec. 16. Buildings, two, three, and four were completed Dec. 21, and 12 families moved into buildings five and nine on Jan. 4. Units seven and eight probably will be ready this week, Mr. Youngberg added.
Robert Williams, Paul Ott Rex Bradley, Jonathan T. Yoe, Thomas Christensen, Prandi Murphy, Finn Hirschard, Gwennward, G. E. Manahan, Robert Allen.
Twelve more apartments will be ready for occupation Wednesday or Thursday.
Music Room Popular For Entertainment
In the Memorial Union's music room there is neither any Louis Armstrong nor Stan Kenton, but there are plenty of symphonies, toccata and fugues, and preludes for the classical listener.
Major problem of the room, in the southeast corner of the Union lounge, is seating. When the audience reaches 14, the normal seating capacity, newcomers have to be satisfied with the floor and window sills.
There usually is a waiting line and a scramble for seats when the room is unlocked at 12 noon and protests when the 6:50 closing time arrives. Daily except Saturday and Sunday there are six hours and fifty minutes of continuous music selected by listeners. There is always a student on hand to flip the records and supply information on the number being plued.
The record library contains the music of George Gershwin, J. S. Bach, and a lot in between. All the selections are filed under the title, author, and medium.
Current favorites are modern composers, such as Stravinsky and his "Firebird Suite" and Ravel's "Bolero." The file reveals only one prelude by Dimitri Shostakovitch
"Highbrows" in the crowd ask to hear a Mozart violin sonata, the choral movement of Beethoven's "Ninth", or some of Chopin's keyboard exercises.
Some students prefer the music room for deep meditation, as witness one man who objected to Bizet's "Carmen" suite.
"Oh please, how can I sleep to that?" he asked.
Aid Athletes Openly Association Head Asks
New York. (UP)—Dr. Wilbur Smith of Wyoming university, president of the N.C.A.A., suggested today that it might be better for colleges to open aid an athlete to stay in school than to allow him to take "handouts" from an alumnus.
In a speech prepared for delivery before the convention, he asked: "why not honor the so-called physical side to some small degree at least. . . do we who believe in and love athletics not have the courage to honor physical attainment?
"We do not hesitate to award scholarships for so-called mental attainment—for high scholastic attainment—and even to members of the debating team, glee club and the band.
"From the standpoint of character, is it better to have some anonymous alumnus give a "handout" to some star athlete who knows such action is wrong? Or is it better to grant this young man aid, the same as is done for many other students?"
Intramural basketball will swing into play once again tonight after the Christmas vacation layoff. Two "B" league games will be played after the Kansas-Missouri clash in Hoch auditorium.
IM Basketball Tonight After K.U.-M.U. Game
The schedule:
10:00 - Spooner-Thayer "B" vs.
941 Club "B"
10:00 - 39'ers vs. Kappa Sigma "B"
Tomorrow night:
10:00 -Beta Theta Pt "B" vs. Sigma Alpha Epsilon "B"
10:00 - Sigma Chi "B" vs. Sigma
Phi Epsilon "B"
Filson To New Position
Dr. G. W. Filson, '24, has a new executive position with the E. I. du Pont corporation. Wilmington. Del
Dr. Filson, a native of Healy, has been appointed manager of the acetate division, part of the company's rayon department. He received a bachelor of arts degree here in 1924 and advanced degrees at the University of Wisconsin.
Women's Basketball After Varsity Game
Continuing the women's interorganizational practice tournament in the first of the new year games, Tem-Ruth hall will tangle with members of Pi Beta Phi and I. W. W. will spar with Watkins hall tonight at 9 o'clock in the gymnasium.
The games will be after the Missouri-Kansas basketball game by will not be played in Hoch auditorium.
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JANUARY 7,1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
JARY 7,1947
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Blustery Babe Ruth Still At Bat After Serious Operation On His Neck
New York. (UP)—The Babe is in there pitching again today so the game which started a half century ago in the dock district of Baltimore probably will go into extra innings.
Somehow it is impossible to believe that George Herman Ruth would go to the showers for the last time with such swift meekness. It just isn't the character of the hurly man with ☆ ☆
the character of the burly man with the unbelievably bulbous nose and the mingeing gait.
Everything he ever did was accompanied by noise and accomplished with gusto.
The Babe had as many facets as the Hope diamond. He could be reckless, like the night he and Bob Muesel held tiny Miller Huggins suspended over the observation car railing of a speeding express train. That was a terrible moment.
A funny guy, sure. There was the time somebody gave him a pedigreed bull dog in Hot Springs. The pup had Ruth's drawing room all the way home, the Babe feeding him on lamb chops.
He could be human, too, this big man who loved hot dogs to the point of acute gastronomical distress and during one hot spell in St. Louis wore 22 $30 silk shirts in three days. Like the time little Johnny Sylvester lay sick in bed in New Jersey during a world series, just one of a million kids who loved the Babe.
"Hey Tony, take Mr. uh, take this guy around and introduce him."
With that the Babe grabbed a bat and headed in confusion for the cage—even though the visiting team was at bat.
Not much of a man with names, the Babe, which some people held against him. If you were under 40 you were "Kid." If you were older, or wore specs and had gray hair, you simply were "Doc." They even tell this story about after he had visited a month with a governor of California.
"Hit a homer for me," Johnny wrote to the Bambino.
He hit three,paid Johnny a visit, and the kid recovered out of sheer gratitude.
The governor went east, shortly afterwards, and dropped into the Yankee dugout. He hailed the Babe and the struggling Bambino, hunting frantically for the name, yelled to Tony Lazzeri:
Sure, he had a fancy time for a while, the big guy who started in as a great pitcher and wound up as baseball's all-time home run hitter. Parties, nine motor cars at a time, rich food, and lots of it and high life on a salary larger than that of the president of the United States.
Yet they took most of that out of him in 1925—and by using a kid as a weapon.
"Babe, a kid just stopped me on the street and asked me for a dime. He wanted to make up a quarter to buy a Babe Ruth cap. Don't you think you owe something to a kid like that—and others like him?"
The Babe wasn't too penitent until the late Jimmy Walker said to him:
Tears flooded those big round eyes. That knocked the big guy farther than he ever had hit one of his famous homers.
Because its match with South Dakota State College has been cancelled, the Women's Rifle club will hold regular firing practice at 7:30 tonight, Sgt. Arthur Millard, team coach, has announced.
The first challenge match of the season will be held Jan. 14 with Carnegie Tech.
Scores made in this match will be used in the challenge matches with the University of California and Wheaton College, Wheaton, Ill. The winners will be determined by mail.
No, all in all, the Babe wasn't a bad guy. So now, when he's pitching his most crucial game, it would be fine if he could hit one more home run—just for himself.
Women's Rifle Team Will Practice Tonight
He's Ahead
New York. (UP)—Doctors said today that Babe Ruth, baseball's greatest power hitter, soon would have another "home run" to his credit—that the Babe will be able to go home if he continues his fast recovery from a serious neck operation.
The operation Monday relieved uncontrollable pain which the former home run king had been suffering.
When Ruth entered the hospital Nov. 26, it was thought his headaches were caused by sinus, but later diagnosis revealed that a condition in his neck cut down the supply of blood to the brain and caused pain.
It's Oklahoma Aggies In Valley Conference
Kansas City, Mo. (UP)—It's the Oklahoma Aggies against the field again this year as the Missouri Valley conference basketball campaign gets under way tomorrow night.
Minus the famous Bob "Foothills" Kurland but nevertheless a potent court outfit, the Aggies have posted 10 wins against one defeat in their pre-season efforts. The one loss was to Long Island university and that by a single point.
Creighton of Omaha right now figures to be the only Valley team capable of giving the Aggies a fight for the title. The Bluejays have won five against three losses.
Having moved through the Oklahoma City tournament and 4thus knocking off Kansas of the Big Six for the second time in as many December starts, Hank Iba's Aggies were away on a fast start toward a place in the N.C.A.A. westerns come next March.
Twice in a row the Aggies won the big crown, the only team to turn the trick. The way Iba's new team has been clicking it appears determined to show the pre-season pickers a thing or two and go for the third one.
After two non-conference games tonight-O.C.U. at Wichita and Iowa State college at Drake—the Valley teams get down to the serious business of the campaign tomorrow night with the two St. Louis entries, Washington U. and St. Louis U., squaring off. Washington has the best won-lost record but the Billikens are a good ball club.
College Basketball
Yeshiva 50, N. Y. U. School of Art 38.
Indiana 62, Ohio State 39
Milwaukee 24, Illinois 21
Cincinnati University 47, Wayne 36.
Furman 55, Presbyterian College 51.
Marshall 61, Morris Harvey 69
Worrington 68, Valparaíso 55.
Michigan State 53, Marquette 51.
Syracuse University 62, Yale 40.
Syracuse University 62, Yale 40
Marshall 87 Morris 65
Purdue 57, Depaul 41.
Allen-Bradley 64, University of Mexico 31.
Minnesota 34, Illinois 31.
Fort Belvoir 134, Army War College (Wash.) 35.
Oregon State 52. Washington
State 28.
John Marshall 61, Bergen J. C. 58.
Coe 60, University of Chicago 36.
Pittsburgh Teachers 42, Rockhurst 39.
Stars In Defeat
Texas 62, Texas Christian 46,
Nebraska 44, Oklahoma 41.
Youngstown 50, Muskegon 48.
John Marshall 61, Bergen J. C. 58
Coe 60, University of Chicago 36
Pittsburgh, Teachers 42, Book
Santa Clara 43, Seattle College 33 Western Kentucky 62, Brigham Young 44.
Georgia 46, University of Mississippi 38.
30
Paul Courty, Oklahoma forward, scored 16 points Monday night in the Sooners' 41-44 loss to Nebraska. Gerald Tucker, Oklahoma center, scored nine. High man for Nebraska was Rotherford with 10.
Date Troubles?
Campus Aids Are Available
By R. T. KINGMAN (Daily Kansan City Editor)
Dates are still scarce, the women say.
Some highly datable coeds report they are still spending time by the telephone. This, say the women, must stop.
As a service of the Daily Kansan, here for the first time is a list of all the offices and persons on the campus who may be of service in helping the bashful male find just the right girl:
Of course, if you're thinking of having an affair with a student, the first man to see is Henry Werner. He's Dean of Student Affairs.
Your next problem probably will be the approach, so you'd better drop by 204 Watson library. That's one of the Accession department.
If you don't know any sweet nothings to whisper on the first date, your next stop will be 115 Frank Strong. That's the office of Romance Languages.
There are people on the campus who can supply your every desire concerning special types of women. For instance, if your name is Nick Gopopolous and you want a date, you should call Kathryn O'Leary, phone 285, for advice. She's in charge of all Greek Women.
And if you want a date who can have a good time on a short bankroll, get in touch with the Athletic Office. They can tell you about all the good sports.
If your date wears high heels that put her about three inches over your head, don't give up. The people over in 115 Fraser can help you out. That's the Extension Division.
If your dream girl is a red-head who has a mind of her own and who's full of saucy comebacks, check with Lorraine Carpenter, phone 860. She has all the dope on Independent Women.
By this time you're all set—and now all you need is a cold weather necking spot. The University supplies even that; the building across from Dyche museum is really Spooner Hall.
But if you have any more questions about making passes, men, please take them to the football office and not the Daily Kansan. Over here we're all married.
Lawrence V.A. Office Will Close Saturdays
The Lawrence Veterans administration office, 1035 Massachusetts, will be closed on Saturdays, Sherwyn VA representative, has announced.
He explained that all VA offices in the Kansas City regional area are adopting the 40-hour week. Weekday hours are 8 to 4:30.
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 7,1947
Kansan Comments...
No Quarter
After the November elections, many experts and others not so expert predicted that President Tru-man would not try to buck congress on anything in the next two years. They reasoned this way:
Congress will have a rough time between now and the next presidential election. The people will be disgusted after two years and want a change. If the president has not fought with congress, then the Democrats can say, "See, the Republicans had their chance—they controlled both houses, the president didn't give them any trouble, and still they didn't do what you want. Why not put the good old Democrats back in?"
It sounded good at the time, but the president's state of the union speech to the joint meeting of the house and senate didn't sound as if the president plans to be a rubber stamp for congress.
Many of his points, such as anti-strike legislation and unification of the armed services, don't promise much of a straight political fight. But his stand on excise taxes and income tax reduction gives every promise of a knock-down and drag-out battle.
The Republican leaders have announced they will reduce personal income taxes 20 per cent at once and allow the wartime excise taxes to die in July. The president takes the other attitude—tax heavy now and pay off some of the national debt.
Reducing taxes is always popular, but. . The debts for World War I may be paid by our generation, maybe; if taxes are reduced now, the debts for World War II will be passed on to our children even unto the third and fourth or even fifth generation.
Buck-Passing
If you want to see the old buck-passing game in high gear, try to find out when the hills on and near the campus are going to be cleared of snow and who is going to clear them and how they are going to be cleared.
The city engineer says he doesn't have any equipment that can climb up the hills leading to the University. He seems to think that all that can be expected of the city is to put up the barriers and red flags and oil lanterns on the steeper hills. He says take the streets which don't have much of an incline.
The University buildings and grounds superintendent says that the University takes care of its property and the city takes care of its. He says anyone who knows anything about Lawrence won't try to drive up the 12th or 13th or 14th street hills. He also says no one has any trouble getting up the south drive past the back of the library.
We saw cars digging down through the top snow into the ice underneath. We saw them skid. We know that when snow melts as it does today, it'll be slippery if it freezes tonight which it will. We know that someone may be hurt if the University and the city don't get those hills cleared now.
In 1945, $36,000 worth of stamps were sold at the K.U. post office. In 1946, $50,000 worth was sold, not much of a jump when compared to the jump in enrollment. Guess when the male comes here, the mail doesn't leave here.
Filibusters
The 80th congress was saved from a black eye at the very first of its existence by Senator Bilbo's sudden decision to have his operation for cancer now instead of after a fight to be seated in the senate.
Filibusters have played a long and inglorious role in the nation's senior lawmaking body. Many times important problems confronting the nation have been held up when some long-winded senator read recipes and almanacs and miscellaneous poetry in an attempt to gain by sheer stamina what he couldn't gain by reasoning or compromising.
And every time the ordinary, tax-paying citizens of the United States have sickened at their stomachs at the spectacle of a legislative system which allows one man or one small group of men to waste the time of the U.S. senate.
Any law which would place a time limit on speeches in the senate would be branded immediately as a "gag" on free speech and unlimited debate, and probably would have no more chance of passing than a snowball has of existing in a blast furnace. However, there is one solution to the problem, a solution to which no one could object without proving he was more interested in parliamentary tricks than in good government.
The solution is merely to require that all speeches be relevant to the legislation before the senate. The presiding officer—the vice-president—would be the judge of whether what was being said was to the point. Judicial bodies require pertinancy—why can't legislative bodies?
The navy and a retired contractor are squabbling over the ownership of Palmyra atoll, a group of islets now being lashed and drenched by South Pacific winds and waves. The Americans stationed on the atoll have their own ideas as to who can have the atoll after they're rescued.
Senate, House Choose New Leaders
Washington. (UP) — Thumbnail sketches of the new congressional leaders—House Speaker Joseph W. Martin and Senate President pro tem Arthur H. Vandenberg:
Martin is a chunky, teetotaling red-faced, 62-year-old bachelor of Scottish-English descent. He is the son of a North Attleboro, Mass., blacksmith and eldest of a family of eight children. To help a family of slender means, Martin began work as a newsboy when five years of age. After completing high school, he declined a college scholarship to go to work. He became a newspaper reporter at 18 and publisher of the North Attleboro Chronicle when he was 24.
Martin was elected to the Massachusetts House of Representatives in 1912, serving two years. He followed that with three years' service in the state senate and dropped out of the political picture until 1924, when he first was elected to Congress. He has been House Republican leader for seven years.
Vandenberg, also 62, is a tall booming-voiced orator whose thinning hair does not detract from his generally handsome appearance. Once regarded as an isolationist, he has worked hard for international cooperation at United Nations meetings. He has a silver tongue and a sharp wit that served well in the Senate and at United Nations meetings.
Like Martin, Vandenberg was once a newspaper editor and publisher, but gave that up when he came to the senate in 1928. Vandenberg also is the author of several books on Alexander Hamilton and the holder of a half dozen honorary college degrees.
He was a United States delegate to the United Nations Organization meeting at San Francisco, 1945; a United States delegate to the assembly meetings of the United Nations, 1946; and accompanied Secretary of State James F. Byrnes to the foreign ministers' meetings in Paris and New York last year. He was given the 1946 Collier's award for distinguished service in Congress.
It's quite a coincidence that walking became a cold and wet proposition just before the taxi companies raised their Lawrence rates.
Washington. (UP)—The line-up of the new Congress is:
Republicans—51
Democrats—45
Senate
House
The Party Line-Up
Republicans—245
Democrats—187
Others—1
Vacant—2
Division of the Senate in the expiring Congress was Democrats, 55; Republicans, 39, other parties, 1; vacant, 1; House-Democrats, 236; Republicans, 191; other parties, 2; vacant, 6.
Vacancies in the new Congress were caused by the death of Rep. Robert K. Henry, R., Wis., and the resignation of Rep. John J. Sparkman, D., Ala., who will be in the Senate.
103 Kansas Counties Send Students Here
All but two of the 105 Kansas counties are represented in the current University student body. The 103 counties sent contingents ranging from the 752 from Douglas to four each from Grant, Haskell, and Hodgeman counties.
Second high is Wyandotte with 551 students. Shawnee follows with 445 and Sedgwick is fourth with 394. Johnson is in fifth place with 309 students. Wallace and Wichita are the two counties sending no students this semester.
The 752 students listing their homes in Douglas county include many veterans originally from other parts of the state but who have located their families here during their schooling.
Other counties represented by more than 100 students are Barton, 110; Butler, 106; Leavenworth, 164; Montgomery, 154; Reno, 192; and Saline, 100. Counties sending between 50 and 99 students number 25. Twenty-one are represented by 25 to 49 students, and 48 sent less than 25.
Eggs Survive Crack-Up
Chicago. (UP)—The automobile carrying Walter Houb, 39, and his mother, Mrs. Bertha Subotka, 60, struck an electric suburban train. They not only escaped injury, but two dozen eggs in the car remained intact.
And How Do I Reduce In That?
NATIONAL DEBT
PRESENT TAXES
20% TAX REDUCTION
DANIEL PUSHER
Daniel Bishop in St. Louis Star-Times
U.S. Must Back Foreign Policy Senator Reports
Washington. (UP)—Sen. Wayne Morse (R.-Ore.), who has just returned from a six-weeks tour of Europe and the Middle East, said today that our present foreign policy must be supported and strengthened "if we are to win the peace and avoid another war."
In a statement summarizing his observations abroad, Senator Morse said:
ONE. Americans "inexcessably" have let down military government and state department officials rendering "devoted service" abroad. The result is that "we have permitted American prestige to suffer among the allied liberated and conquered countries."
TWO. "Our failure to supply adequate personnel and security protection for our own military stores and property abroad and our weakening of the security forces of our military government has played right into the hands of anti-American elements abroad."
THREE. He was "convinced that the Truman - Brynes - Vandenberg-Connally foreign policies not only must be supported but must be strengthened if we are to win the peace and avoid another war."
Asserting that the war drove European hates and ideologies under fire, they are smoldering preparatory to their eruptions. Senator Morse continued.
"The American people should recognize the realistic fact that we cannot afford to retire into the supposed security of our own national comfort.
“If the next 20 years are to be something else besides an armistice between wars, we must make clear . . . that we are in Europe to stay for whatever period of years future events demonstrate that it is necessary for us to stay, until the nations of the world learn through the functioning of the United Nations the habits of peace.”
"They become easy victims of propaganda, disseminated by those who seek falsely to attribute to America and sources of Europe's ills."
"People haunted by the specter of starvation and disease find little sustenance in discussions of political idealologies—even that of democracy," he said.
He said Europeans had to struggle for enough food, shelter, and clothing "to just barely exist."
The senator asid the European struggle for food has made the American farmer a key figure in international affairs.
8
Jaytalking ---
Most disgusted vacationers were the guy and gal who went to a friend's home for a party after a New Year's Eve dance and found to their amazement that their host intended to sit up and celebrate with them.
After seeing the numerous "Rhoten Smith" bylines, we wonder who would have filled the Dove's columns had Rhoten not written what he wrote.
The University Daily Kansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press, National Advertising Press, Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave, New York, NY 10026.
York City.
Managing Editor Charles Roos
Assst. Managing Editor Janet Anderson
Makolem Editor Billie Marie Haughton
Editor-in-chief Bilt Haage
Advertiser Manager Bill Donnivan
Advertiser Manager Margery Handy
Telegraph Editor Eleanor Hawkins
Asst. Telegraph Ed. Marcela Steinert
City Editor R. T. Kineman
RY 7,1947
JANUARY 7,1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
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World Boundaries Shifted In 1946
Jap Upheaval, Treaties With Axis Satellites Produce New Changes For Mapmakers
Washington. Peace treaties were drafted, kings were ousted and recalled, old empire ties were loosened, and new independent governments set up—these and other events in 1946 brought change and transition to world maps, National Geographic society researchers reported today
In Europe, agreements were reached on peace treaties for Italy, Hungary, Romania, Bulgaria, and Finland. Several boundary revisions were involved. Austrian and German discussions were put off until 1947.
Transfers to United Nations trusteeship were approved for eight former League-of-Nations mandates—the Australian land-herritory in New Guinea, New Zealand's in Western Samoa, the four African mandates of Togoland and Cameroons which are divided between France and Great Britain, the British-controlled area of Tanganyika, and Belgium's Ruanda Urundi.
Along the "powder-keg border" between Italy and Yugoslavia, draft-treaty terms awarded Yugoslavia most of the Istrian Peninsula, with the former Italian city of Trieste to be made a "Free Territory" under United Nations' authority.
Italy also loses to France small sections along its Alpine frontier, and to Greece, the Dodecanese Islands of the eastern Mediterranean. The Italians, however, are to keep the South Tyrol area, claimed by Austria, while final decision on their African colonies has been postponed to next year.
Hungary gives up to Czechoslovakia a bit of border land around Bratislava, and in the northeast loses to Romania the long-contested region of Transylvania, a temporary gift from the Axis to Hungary in 1940.
Romania, in turn, leaves with Bulgaria the South Dobruja area along the lower Danube, and confirms its independence. So Sofia is of fettle, Bassarabia, and Bucayina.
To the Russians also go Finland's Far North territory and ice-free port of Petsamo, as well as a 50-year lease on Porkkala Udd Peninsula for a Soviet naval base on the Gulf of Finland.
In the juggling of royalty, Europe saw the abdication of Victor Emmanuel of Italy, followed by the establishment of an Italian republic. King George II of Greece returned to his throne. But Bulgaria, Albania, and Hungary voted to replace their former monarchies by republics.
On the other side of the world, Japan—reduced to its home islands—experienced a government upheaval. Under direction of the supreme commander for Allied powers, the Japanese emperor was shorn of power and the nation's constitution revised along Western lines. In a general election, among other innovations, women voted for the first time.
To Pacific islands and Asiatic countries liberated from the Japanese, the year brought other big changes.
The long-scheduled independence
of the Philippines was celebrated on July 4.
Colonial rule over the rich, tropical islands of the Netherlands Indies was changed by recognition, in fact, of the Indonesian Republic of Java, Madoera, and Sumatra, and the signing of preliminary agreements looking forward to an interim United States of Indonesia, to be linked witt the Netherlands Kingdom.
In the British imperial sphere, the vast sub-continent of India was offered full independence by Great Britain, although conflicting Hindu and Moslem groups failed to reach accord on a united government. Burma later was offered freedom on the same terms.
A smaller historical note was the British annexation, as a crown colony, of the long-family-ruled "White Rajah" state of Sarawak on the northwest coast of Borneo. Northern Borneo also changed status within the country as the last of the royal chartered companies to that of a British crown colony.
In the Middle East, the British mandatory regime made way for a new sovereign Arab state, Trans-Jordan, whose ruling prince was promoted to regal rank.
In neighboring French Indochina, amid sporadic uprisings, the native republics of Viet Nam and Cochin China were recognized within the French union and federation, with varying degrees of increased self-rule projected for other states.
Along the western border of the country, Siam returned to France the Indochina areas of Cambodia and Laos which, under Japanese pressure, the Vichy government had transferred to Siam in 1941.
Deep inside southwest Asia, another small but potentially important frontier was affected by an agreement under which Afghanistan gave up all claim to the Kushka district of the Turkmen Soviet Republic in return for certain river rights and border adjustments.
House-Building Peak Expected In 1948
Chicago. (UP)—Year after next is the soonest this nation can hope to surpass previous records in the production of housing, according to the United States Savings and Loan League.
The league's committee on trends and economic policies reported on a survey which, it said, indicated that approximately 950,000 new dwellings will be constructed in 1948, which will be more than the 937,000 units put up by the industry during the peak year of 1925.
The committee further suggested that beginning with 1949, the building industry in the U.S. can produce a million new homes.
SCHOOL OF CINEMAS
Professors See Triple At Wichita U.
Seeing triple is nothing new at the University of Wichita, where the 29-year-old Batt boys, from left to right Ted, Joe, and Lee, are at school. Ted is majoring in aeronautics, Lee is studying dramatics, and Joe is taking premedic work. Home of the three navy veterans is Augusta.
Buyer Resistance Hits Retailers
New York. (UP)—Benjamin H. Namm, president of the National Retail Dry Goods Association, predicted today that "faircant, indiscriminate" consumer buying probably will end in 1947 and warned that inferior goods will meet increasing resistance by the public.
He urged retailers to renew their cautious buying practices discarded during the war if they are to avoid "a glut of unsalable merchandise and serious inventory losses for both retailers and manufacturers, such as precipitated the 1921 crash."
While a retailer who restores his buying and selling policies to a "sound, common sense basis" in 1947 "may well sacrifice some of his potential sales and profits," such action "will be a small price to pay for insurance against disastrous inventory losses and a damaging setback to the country's business," according to Namm, chariman of the Namm Store, Brooklyn, N.Y.
"If retailers as a whole follow sound buying policies during the coming year," he continued, "their influence can be felt throughout our entire economy. They can play a major role in preventing a repetition of a boom and bust such as followed the last war."
40-Year Occupation Of Germany Seen
Brigadier Treadwell divided the aims of occupation into three classes—demilitarization, denazification and democratization. The last, he believes, will give the Allies their acid test.
Pittsburgh. UP)—An allied occupation of Germany which may last as long as 40 years is foreseen by Brigadier J. W.F. Treadwell, director-general of public relations in the British zone.
The veteran of 20 years service with the Scottish Guards made the prediction during a visit here on leave with his American-born wife.
The present generation cannot grasp democracy, Treadwell said, and it may have to be taught to succeed generations in schools. He suggestion, therefore, that the those children "grow into power."
Grant's Pass, Ore. (UP)—H. W. Baker helped to relieve the housing shortage by selling his home, and remodeling a large hay barn on his property for himself.
Moves Out To Barn
Classified Advertising
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five
day days five
25 words or less 35c 65c 90c
additional words 1c 2c 3c
Lost
LIGHT Brown Parker pencil with gold cap. LAW engraved in cap. Reward. Findley Law, 1043 Indiana. phone 3014.
Law, 1043. International
3014.
NEEDED Baddy. Girl's black box winter
coat missing since Dec. 6. Also a gau
wool scarf lost before Thanksgiving. Reward. Call Steinkirchner, 860.
BROWN SUTCASE, initiated J. N. Mc.
Dropped from taxi between Santa Fe
and New Mexico. Found, please
Mary Ann McClure, 2657.
BILFOLD, brown. Will finder keep
the money and return billfold and enclosed identification to Kansan office or call Charity Flisher, 1155.
BOX contains shoes, camera and my
phone. Returned to Mrs. K. C. Jones, 2540M. Reward.
Found
ONE NEW TIE FISH CHAIN. Owner may have
acquired and paying for 39-
and Call 2205W
For Sale
8 M.M. Eastman Kodak movie camera with leather case and with f 1.9 lens plus additional 9 m.m. f 2.5 wide angle SLIGHTLY USED ice skates, all sizes, in good condition. Call George Tamblyn 3334, between 7 and 10 p.m. -9-
HOUSE BOY. Salary in board and cash.
HOUSE BROTHER. Erica B. Borene, Theta-
fraternity, 645.
Business Services
MICROCOPES, Colorimeters, balances,
engineering instruments cleaned and re-
paired. Thirteen years experience. Call
for 9218, Technical Instrument Services
Co., Kansas City, Mo. F.ree-Size-
mates. -J13-
HIGH POWER, high fidelity public
address address for rent. Can be used for
record discs. Call Black, phone 3333.
-13-
PHOTO-EXACT Copies, discharge and
valuable papers. Fast service. Low price.
Round corner Drug Co., 801 Mass. Manuscript
or Lane F., Apt. 18. Sunflower,
Kansas.
Start the New Year Right
By eating good, nourishing food.
Go
Down
the
Hill
to the
BLUE MILL
Don't Miss The ISA
CARRER
ING PARTY!
AT THE ROLLERDROME
7:30-9:30, January 13
MEMBERSHIP CARD ADMITS ONE
SEE A SHOW TONITE
Jayhawker
-NOW - All Week-
NO RISK TOO GREAT For Love So Enticing!
Cary Grant Ingrid Bergman In Alfred Hitchcock's "NOTORIOUS" with Claud Rains
COMING SUNDAY
KATHERINE HEPBURN-
ROBERT TAYLOR
"UNDERCURRENT"
Shows 2:30 - 7:00 - 9:00
GRANADA
NOW! Ends Saturday
One of the Best
Of 1946 . . . Says Time!
In Technicolor
GLENN LANGAN
LYNN BARI
EXTRA! MARCH OF TIME
"NOBODY'S CHILDREN"
Follow-Up of "Life With Baby"
Jeanne Crain
"MARGIE"
Owl Sat. & SUNDAY 4 Days
ROBERT YOUNG
BARBARA HALE
"LADY LUCK"
Patee Ends Tonight
"DODSWORTH"
W. HUSTON—M. ASTOR
SHOCKING!
AS THE LASH OF A WHIP
ACROSS YOUR FACE!
COMING WEDNESDAY
HENRY FONDA IN
"THE OX-BOW INCIDENT"
VARSITY
ENDS TONIGHT
Charlie Chan
A Case of Murder
With Glamor
"THE TRAP"
—and
LEON ERROL and Joe Kirkwood "Gentleman Joe Palooka"
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
JANUARY 7,1947
Innocent Looking, But What A Man!
PETER WILLIAMS
An innocent-looking person, true, but Elden Tefft Lawrence junior in the College, can do some tricks you'd never imagine. A war veteran of southwest Pacific days, he's back in school now, and entertaining his speech and English classes with descriptions of one of his particular abilities. He's one man who doesn't merely put a foot in his mouth, he puts—but more of the story unfolds tomorrow. See this spot on this page Wednesday for more details.
If you did,you may be the GI the army's looking for.
Kansas City GI Lost-Found Office Handles Bayonets, Soap, Bourbon
Kansas City, Mo. (UP)—Misplaced your ski poles, Joe—or perhaps a wall safe—while you were in the army?
What is probably the world's largest lost and found department is ready to hand it back. Before World War II there wasn't any such department. Today it is part of the army effects bureau, a section of the Quartermaster Corps.
Two officers and 270 civilians handle all lost and found. They also take charge of all personal effects of men who died in service.
The officers are Lt. Col. P. U. Maxey and Lt. Charles L. Rumfield. Maxey is a beribboned veteran of more than a year and a half in the Pacific. Rumfield wears campaign ribbons won through 19 months of army life in Europe,
Their commanding officer—the man in charge of all operations at the Kansas City quartermaster depot—is Col. Michael A. Quinn, a soldier who survived Bataan and three and one-half years in Japanese prison camps.
In Maxey's office are files on 827,500 cases, both complete and incomplete. And he's quick to tell you the end is nowhere in sight.
Here's a typical dav:
The office received 1,917 letters asking about lost and found articles or the personal effects of some soldier. Outgoing letters answering these requests totaled 1,723. There were 243 cases of lost and found articles or personal effects shipped. When cases of articles are received—and they are received in carload lots from all over the world—each package is inventoried. Today, 109 cases were examined.
Some things don't get through.
The army bars live ammunition. Maxey and his boys have retrieved everything from 22-caliber bullets to bazooka shells. Sub-machine guns are out. Pistols, rifles, bayonets and other assorted articles of mayhem—so long as they aren't government issued property—get approval.
After-shaving lotion, tooth paste and other toilet articles are on the mix list of the army. They are easily contaminated and are removed for sanitary reasons.
Soap, incidentally, comes in the same category. So far, 128 cases—more than 12,500 pounds—have been
The majority of other articles go through. In fact, they leave in better condition than they came in. Clothing is dry-cleaned and jewelry furished up.
As far as losing or misplacing any of the valuables--that's out. A security detail checks every box as it is inventoried. Valuables are removed, tagged and locked in a vault. One person has the key.
Valuables aren't always in the jewelry line. A case of top quality bourbon was returned to its owner.
A note came back from California expressing amazement that, "Thank God, there's one honest guy in the army."
Another GI sent back a $1 bill and enclosed a note.
With hopes of reaching an agreement for a recommendation to the All-Student council on who should pay for the student directory, the student-faculty committee will meet at 3 p.m. Wednesday in the office of the dean of women.
Committee Meets To Discuss Directory
"Buy yourself a cigar," he told the colonel.
Letter Carrier To Return
At the first committee meeting, adequate information for a decision was not immediately obtainable. Miss Martha Peterson, Pan-Hellenic secretary and committee chairman, said.
Members of the committee are Miss Peterson, Dean J. H. Nelson Clifford E. Reynolds, business senior; Anne Scott, College junior; and Eloise Hodgson, College sophomore
Inter-Frat Dance Set
The Inter-fraternity council voted to hold its annual winter formal Jan. 25 at a meeting Monday night. The dance will be held at the Lawrence Country club from 9 p.m. to 12 with music by Jimmy Hollyfield's band. Seven members from each fraternity will be invited.
the well-known woman letter-carrier for the University. Mrs. J. L. McGhee, has been ill for a week, but is expected to return tomorrow. J. E. Crabtree and Hallie Harris have substituted for her during her absence.
Stars Don't Shine For Campus Contests
Hollywood. (UP)—Campus life is fraught with hazards to married movie stars who are constantly called on to judge queen and king contests. It doesn't do, many a star has learned, to tell your short, blond husband you picked a tall, dark student as the man you'd like to be locked in the college bell-tower with.
At least as many times a year as there are colleges comes a plea to some player or players in movies to judge a contest for military ball honorary colonel, fall frolics queens, or something.
The colleges want a name judge, of course, but they also want to shoulder the responsibility onto someone far, far away.
One of the principal targets for that kind of mail is the happily married couple of Ronald Reagan and Jane Wyman, Warner Bros. stars currently judging eight such college contests.
"It's a good thing we both have a sense of humor," Reagan said, "or we might pft, as the columnists say, during these judging sessions."
If his home relations were untranquil, Reagan pointed out, it might not be so good for him to point out a fair flower from Ohio whose general outlines weren't those of his wife.
“But one time,” he said, “I had to stand and look over her shoulder while she picked over a big, toothy, muscled hunk of personality for the title of ‘the man I’d like most to wreck my boat on a desert isle.’ I wanted to tell her he was the man I’d like to see most driving a truck’ but I restrained myself.”
Because Reagan is working in Warners' "Night Unto Night" while his wife labs for Robert Riskin at RKO-Radio, each makes selections, numbers them in order and brings them home to exchange.
"We don't debate about it at all."
Reagan said, "That's the sure way to start a fight. But every so often, when we have a lot of concessions on, I throw in a casual remark that she could walk away with any of them
"Then she says something about how I would have been the terror of any sorority house in the country. 'don't fight much about contests.'
Almost any college would give judges Reagan and Wyman an "A" in applied psychology.
Hospital Admits Fewer Students
A relatively slight number of students have been admitted to the Watkins Memorial hospital during the post-Christmas season period, Dr. R. I. Canuteson, hospital director, said today.
"Loss of sleep, using the time to study, only makes the brain duller for the examination on the following day."
In recommending aids to keep good health," he continued "eat three meals regularly each day, and begin now to study for finals.
Ten persons underwent operations at the hospital during Christmas vacation.
Those receiving surgery were William Alright, engineering freshman; Charles Van Buskirk, engineering sophomore; Clarence French, sophomore in education; Gilbert Fuller, engineering freshman; Jim Crook, business senior.
Carol Laired, engineering freshman;
William J. Stoner, sophomore in the College;
Glen E. Razak, engineering sophomore; Jerome Scheriffe, graduate student; and Alletta Powell,
graduate student.
Bachelor Partridge Leads Action To Bring 'Love-Marriage' To K.U.
If the nation's psychologists are right, lots of ex-GI's are disturbed by the perplexing problems of the post-war world—but K.U. has one veteran who's taking matters into his own hands. He's doing something about it.
He is Arthur Partridge, College senior, the man behind the campaign
X
ARTHUR PARTRIDGE
Juniors Will Meet To Discuss Prom
Plans for the Junior Prom will be the principal business of the first junior class meeting of the year at 1 p.m. Thursday in Frank Strong auditorium, Joan Woodward, secretary-treasurer, announced today.
Class officers Elizabeth Evans, president; Robert Barnes, vice-president; and Miss Woodward will be introduced, and committees will be appointed.
Murder Investigation Extends To Emporia
Kansas City, Kan. (UP)—Detective chief Stanley Beatty said today investigation of the slaying of Lewis J. Spencer, 27, male student nurse, whose body was found in his sixth floor living quarters at the University of Kansas hospital Friday morning, has extended to Emporia where Mr. Spencer formerly was in training at a hospital.
to bring "Love and Marriage" instruction to the campus.
Last February he was getting out of the army at Camp Cook, Calif. Just back from Germany, he was full of ideas about returning to college, but there wasn't much he could do on his paper came through. He stretched out on his blank flippped through the pages of a Collier's.
One article, "Sex in the Classroom," caught his interest. It told of successful experiments in marriage by sexually assaulting conducted by several universities.
He found that California was one of the strongholds of the idea, so he began asking questions. By the time he reached K.U. for the spring semester, he had all the information he needed. He contacted the new executive secretary of the Y.M.C.A., Ned Linegar, and suggested that the Y.M.C.A. sponsor a "Love and Marriage" lecture series.
"Those first lectures, by Dr. Wheeler and Dr. Canuteson, really packed the Kansas room," Partridge said. "The students were even standing outside on the stairs."
Mr. Linegar liked the idea, the Y.M.C.A. liked the idea, so a student committee got together to plan a three-lecture series.
At the third lecture the committee passed out a questionnaire, which revealed that the students wanted an eight-lecture course this fall.
So this fall the Y.M.C.A. carried out that wish. At the end of the series they took another poll and found that 98 per cent of the students want a full course in love and marriage. University officials apparently agreed, and said they'd think it over. Partridge said.
"We've made no recommendations as to credit hours or instructors," he said. "The course should be on an optional basis and available to all students."
While the plans for a full-time course are in the fire, Partridge and his aides are going on with arrangements for setting up a more inclusive lecture series for the spring semester.
In spite of his enthusiasm in seeing his project completed, Partridge explains he's no expert. He's still a bachelor.
News of the World
Marshall Says Extremists Hamper China Peace
Washington. (UP)—Gen. George C. Marshall, in a blasting criticism of both Chinese Nationalists and Communists, declared today that efforts to settle China's internal strife had been frustrated repeatedly "by extremist elements of both sides."
General Marshall has been summoned home by President Truman after failure of his mission to bring China's warring elements together in a representative, democratic government.
Steel Union Makes Demands.
Pittsburgh (UP) — The CIO united steel workers will demand a "substantial" wage increase, a guaranteed annual wage, social insurance, portal-to-portal pay and a union shop when negotiations for a 1947 contract are opened with the United States Steel corporation Jan. 16.
The union demands were made public last night when U. S. Steel announced that it would begin negotiations next week.
'No Interest In Liberals'
New York. (UF)—Lack of public interest has been responsible for the "elimination of liberal commentators, liberal columnists, and liberal newspapers," according to Henry A. Wallace, former secretary of commerce.
Republicans Speed Up Strike-Control Measures
Tax Battle Coming Up
Washington. (UP)—Congressional Republicans slapped a speedup priority on their own strike-control measures today, complaining that President Truman's would do too little too late.
Republicans were especially lukewarm to the president's request for a special commission to study labor problems. They were critical of his silence on portal-to-portal lawsuits claiming back overtime pay.
Washington. (UP)—President Truman and the Republican-controlled congress headed for a showdown battle over taxes today. Republicans insist that taxes will be cut.
The president probably will veto at least two GOP tax bills this year, one reducing personal taxes and the other immediately eliminating certain wartime increases in excise taxes on luxury items.
Trieste Plan Before Council
Lake Success. (UP) - The big powers opened a year of heavy work in the United Nations security council today with a bid for approval of their plan to make Trieste a free territory by Jan. 15 with the UN as its caretaker. Delegates also sought a decision on the way to assemble machinery for atomic control and world disarmament.
Y 7,1947
University DAILY KANSAN
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Wednesday, Jan. 8, 1947
44th Year No.64
Lawrence, Kansas
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Essay Contest Closes May 5
May 5 is the deadline for the 36th annual Hattie Elizabeth Lewis prize essay contest, which deals with the application of the teachings of Jesus to present day problems.
The contest, open to all students, is a memorial established at the University in 1911 by Prof. George Edward Patrick, Washington, D.C., in memory of his wife, the former Hattie Elizabeth Lewis, a University student.
Three prizes of $100, $75, and $50 are awarded for the winning essays.
Each contestant must hand in three copies of his essay to the Chancellor's office not later than May 5. The copies should be accompanied by a sealed envelope on which should be written the title of the essay and the writer's pen name, and containing the contestant's real name.
Essays must be not less than 5,000 or more than 10,000 words in length and must be typewritten, double spaced, and provided with a table of contents, footnotes giving reference to authorities cited, and bibliography.
The essay receiving first prize will be published if considered worthy by the committee, and if funds permit.
Members of the committee are Miss Lutu Gardner, professor of English; and chairman of the committee; Miss Mattie E. Crumme, assistant professor of romance languages; G. L. Anderson, professor of history; and Elmer F. Beth, chairman of the journalism department.
Students desiring further information may confer with Miss Gardner, 303 Fraser hall, 4 to 5 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.
Quack Club To Meet
Quack club, women's swimming club, will meet at 7:45 tomorrow night in Robinson gymnastium. Members will continue work on formations for a spring aquatic exhibition, Olivia Garvey, president, announced.
Eight Law Students Eligible For Bar Exam
Third year law students who will receive their degrees at the end of the present term and who plan to take the state bar examination in Topeka Feb. 10, must apply by Friday, they were reminded today by Walt Neibarger, supreme court clerk.
These examinations, which are held in the supreme court chambers, will last three days, beginning at noon Feb. 10, and concluding Feb. 12. Those who successfully pass the examination will be sworn in as members of the Kansas State Bar association the afternoon of the final day.
University law students who are eligible to take this examination are Thomas J. Brown, Aubrey Earlhart, Jerry Griffith, Thomas Harkness, Robert Luke, Doris Stowell, William Stowell, and Richard Young.
PRIEST
Leads Y.M.C.A.
'No Alibi'—Phog
This is Dean Smith, freshman medical student, who is president of the University Y.M.C.A. (Daily Kansan Staff Photo.)
"We have no alibi to offer," said Dr. F. C. Allen, speaking of the Kansas performance against Missouri Tuesday night. "The best alibi is to win the next game, and that's what we intend to do." he added.
Dr. Allen declined comment on his personal fraces with Coach Wilbur Stalcup of the Tigers, except to mention that Coach Stalcup had no business on the court and should have drawn a technical foul.
Keep Taxes Up Hold Rent Down Truman Asks
Washington. (UP) — President Truman today urged renewal of the rent control law which expires June 30, and jarred Republican tax reduction plans with a possible veto threat when he said it "would be unsound fiscal policy to reduce taxes."
He warned labor to refrain from "excessive" wage demands. He counselled management to cut prices wherever possible, particularly in food, clothing, house furnishings, and building materials.
Mr. Truman said that as 1947 begins, the nation never has been "so strong or so prosperous" nor have "prospects ever be brighter."
He acknowledge that there will be "minor bumps and detours" in the road ahead, but flatly rejected the notion that there must be another depression such that the one that started in 1929.
He also called for one million more housing units in 1947 and a prompt start on a long-range housing program "to reduce the cost of housing on all fronts and by all desirable methods."
From a long-range viewpoint, Mr. Truman recommended a drastic overhaul of the social security laws to increase the amount and duration of employment benefits, to extend benefits to persons not now covered, and to include health insurance. He also proposed that the social security system be financed in part by payment from general treasury funds inste-
Mr. aman rejected pump priming through public works program—a device used by the late President Roosevelt—as an adequate safeguard against recession "or an adequate fighting apparatus against depression."
ONE. A long-range, flexible federal program to support farm incomes at "reasonable levels." This program, he said, "Should be designed to encourage adjustments of production in line with the capacity of markets to take products at a prior remunerative to efficient farming.
Other high spots in the president's 15,000-word report:
TWO. Without completely ruling out the use of public works projects as depression cushions, the President advocated the stabilization of public works construction "according to our long-term needs."
Construction of the new textile laboratory it the basement of Fraser hall was s'ted yesterday morning, Miss Edra Hill, professor of home economics announced. Miss Hill said the new laboratory should be completed and ready for use by next semester.
Textile Laboratory Begun
Kansas----Generally fair today, tonight, and Thursday. Slightly warm southeast today. Otherwise little change in temperature. Low tonight upper 20's to lower 30's.
Marshall's First Test Is German Peace Treaty
Poor Health Forces Byrnes To Resign; Chooses General As Secretary Of State
BULLETIN
Washington. (UP)—The senate today unanimously confirmed the appointment of Gen. George C. Marshall as secretary of state.
Washington. (UP)—Gen. George C. Marshall, freshly baptized in the devious diplomacy of the Orient for his new job as Secretary of State, today faced the immediate task of negotiating with Soviet Russia, Britain and France a peace treaty for Germany.
☆ ☆
GEN. GEORGE C. MARSHALL
For this major post-World War II problem, General Marshall is ex-
[Name]
New Secretary Is First Army Statesman
By DONALD J. GONZALES
(United Press Staff Correspondent
Washington. (UP)—George Cattlett Marshall, the first professional soldier to become secretary of state, is a staunch advocate of offensive strategy in diplomatic as well as military battles.
When President Truman picked the former army chief of staff for the nation's No.1 diplomatic post, he knew he could depend on him to carry out American foreign policy to the hilt in the stormy months ahead.
For Marshall, diplomatic maneuvering will hold no insurmountable obstacles. If he had been one to capitulate easily, it would have cropped out during the early months of World War II when he was confronted with building the army from a sputtering midget to a mighty colossus of over 7,000,000 men.
To his new assignment, the 66-year-old Marshall brings candor, veracity, poise and a friendly personality backed up with a strong will to do his best. These attributes will serve him well in parrying with foreign diplomats.
Washington's politically surcharged air never has made it famous as a "City of Brotherly Love." But throughout his direction of the war, Marshall gained a position unique in public life through his lack of enemies and critics. Whether history will uphold this accolade will depend on events in the months to come.
Marshall will retain his rank as five-star general. Under a special act of congress, five-star generals and admirals do not retire but only revert to inactive status.
The Union fountain will be open nights, Monday through Friday, until 10:15, Miss Alice Kellogg, fountain manager, announced today. The fountain will close during home basketball games, but will be open before and after the games, she added.
Fountain Open Nights
If problem, General Marshall is expected to carry on James F. Byrnes "patient but firm" policy toward the Soviet Union.
The new secretary will get his first test on the Soviets' home ground. On March 10 he is scheduled to begin negotiations on German and Austrian peace settlements in Moscow at the next Big Four foreign ministers meeting.
The surprise selection of a military career man for the first time in history to direct American foreign policy startled all and pleased most
Washington. (UP)—Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg, Republican foreign policy spokesman, today promised his party's continued support of a bi-partisan foreign policy under Gen. George C. Marshall.
congressmen, who predicted swift confirmation of the appointment.
But Mr. Byrnes' departure from President Truman's cabinet was described by congressmen and diplomats alike as a "major loss."
Mr. Byrnes resigned because of his health—because his doctors warned him as long ago as last spring to stop taking the flu and authoritatively that unlike many other "health resignations," this one is on the level and the real thing.
Press Secretary Charles G. Ross revealed today that there had been al "understanding" between Mr. Trumman and General Marshall for some months before Mr. Byrnes resigned. This understanding was that if and when Mr. Byrnes should carry out his desire to leave, General Marshall would become Secretary of State.
The White House revealed last night that Byrnes had submitted two letters of resignation, one on April 16 and the other on Dec. 19, both because of his health.
In addition to being Secretary of State, General Marshall—after a brilliant lifelong career as a professional soldier which took him to the top of the military world—also will be heir to the presidency for the next two years in event anything happens to President Truman. He also will be a potential 1948 democratic presidential candidate if Mr. Truman doesn't seek the nomination.
☆ ☆
JOHN ROBERT BURKE
JAMES F. BYRNES
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
JANUARY 7,1947
Innocent Looking, But What A Man!
A. E. H. JOHNSON
An innocent-looking person, true, but Elden Tefft. Lawrence junior in the College, can do some tricks you'd never imagine. A war veteran of southwest Pacific days, he's back in school now, and entertaining his speech and English classes with descriptions of one of his particular abilities. He's one man who doesn't merely put a foot in his mouth, he puts—but more of the story unfolds tomorrow. See this spot on this page Wednesday for more details.
Kansas City GI Lost-Found Office Handles Bayonets, Soap, Bourbor
Kansas City, Mo. (UP)—Misplaced your ski poles, Joe—or perhaps a wall safe—while you were in the army?
If you did,you may be the GI the army's looking for.
What is probably the world's largest lost and found department is ready to hand it back. Before World War II there wasn't any such department. Today it is part of the army effects bureau, a section of the Quartermaster Corps. accumulated
Two officers and 270 civilians handle all lost and found. They also take charge of all personal effects of men who died in service.
The officers are Lt. Col. P. U. Maxey and Lt. Charles L. Rumfield. Maxey is a beribboned veteran of more than a year and a half in the Pacific. Rumfield wears campaign ribbons won through 19 months of army life in Europe.
In Maxey's office are files on 857,000 cases, both complete and incomplete. And he's quick to tell you the end is nowhere in sight.
Their commanding officer—the man in charge of all operations at the Kansas City quartermaster depot—is Col. Michael A. Quinn, a soldier who survived Bataan and three and one-half years in Japanese prison combs.
Here's a typical day:
The office received 1,917 letters asking about lost and found articles or the personal effects of some soldier. Outgoing letters answering these requests totaled 1,723. There were 242 cases of lost and found articles or personal effects shipped. When cases of articles are received
—and they are received in carloid
lets from all over the world—each
package is inventoried. Today, 109
cases were examined.
Some things don't get through.
The army bars live ammunition. Maxey and his boys have retrieved everything from 22-caliber bullets to bazooka shells. Sub-machine guns are out. Pistols, rifles, bayonets and other assorted articles of mayhem—so long as they aren't government issued property—get approval.
After-shaving lotion, tooth paste and other toilet articles are on the ols list of the army. They are easily disposed of and are removed for sanitary reasons.
Soap, incidentally, comes in the same category. So far, 128 cases—more than 12,500 pounds—have been
The majority of other articles go through. In fact, they leave in better condition than they came in. Clothing - cleaned and jewelry furnished up.
As far as losing or misplacing any of the valuables—that's out. A security detail checks every box as it is inventoried. Valuables are removed, tagged and locked in a vault. One person has the key.
Vainuables aren't always in the jewelry line. A case of top quality bourbon was returned to its owner.
A note came back from California expressing amazement that, "Thank God, there's one honest guy in the army."
Another GI sent back a $1 bill and enclosed a note.
Committee Meets To Discuss Directory
"Buy yourself a cigar," he told the colonel.
With hopes of reaching an agreement for a recommendation to the All-Student council on who should pay for the student directory, the student-faculty committee will meet at 3 p.m. Wednesday in the office of the dean of women.
Letter Carrier To Return
At the first committee meeting, adequate information for a decision was not immediately obtainable, Miss Martha Peterson, Pan-Hellenic secretary and committee chairman, said.
Inter-Frat Dance Set
Members of the committee are Miss Peterson, Dean J. H. Nelson; Clifford E. Reynolds, business senior; Anne Scott, College junior; and Elise Hodgson, College sophomore.
The Inter-fraternity council voted to hold its annual winter formal Jan. 25 at a meeting Monday night. The dance will be held at the Lawrence Country club from 9 p.m. to 12 with music by Jimmy Hollyfield's band. Seven members from each fraternity will be invited.
The well-known woman letter carrier for the University, Mrs. J. L McGhee, has been ill for a week but is expected to return tomorrow J. E. Crabtree and Hallie Harris have substituted for her during her absence.
Stars Don't Shine For Campus Contests
Hollywood. (UP)—Campus life is fraught with hazards to married movie stars who are constantly called on to judge queen and king contests. It doesn't do, many a star has learned, to tell your short, blond husband you picked a tall, dark student as the man you'd like to be locked in the college bell-tower with.
At least as many times a year as there are colleges comes a plea to some player or players in movies to judge a contest for military ball honorary colonel, fall frolics queens, or something.
The colleges want a name judge, of course, but they also want to shoulder the responsibility onto someone far, far away.
One of the principal targets for that kind of mail is the happily married couple of Ronald Reagan and Jane Wyman, Warner Bros. stars currently judging eight such college contests.
"It's a good thing we both have a sense of humor," Reagan said, "or we might pft, as the columnists say, during these judging sessions."
If his home relations were untranquil, Reagan pointed out, it might not be so good for him to point out a fair flower from Ohio whose general outlines weren't those of his wife.
"But one time," he said, "I had to stand and look over her shoulder while she picked out a big, toothy, muscled hunk of personality for the title of 'the man I'd like most to wreck my boat on a desert isle'. I wanted to tell her he was the man I'd like to see most driving a truck—but I restrained myself."
Because Reagan is working in Warners' "Night Unto Night" while his wife labors for Robert Riskin at RKO-Radio, each makes selections, numbers them in order and brings them home to exchange.
"We don't debate about it at all," Reagan said. "That's the sure way to start a fight. But every so often, when we have a lot of contests on, I throw in a casual remark that she could walk away with any of them.
"Then she says something about how I would have been the terror of any sorority house in the country. So we don't fight much about contests."
Almost any college would give judges Reagan and Wyman an "A" in applied psychology.
Hospital Admits Fewer Students
A relatively slight number of students have been admitted to the Watkins Memorial hospital during the post-Christmas season period, Dr. R. I. Canuteson, hospital director, said today.
"Loss of sleep, using the time to study, only makes the brain duller for the examination on the following day."
"In recommending aids to keep good health," he continued "eat three meals regularly each day, and begin now to study for finals."
Ten persons underwent operations at the hospital during Christmas vacation.
Those receiving surgery were: William Alright, engineering freshman; Charles Van Buskirk, engineering sophomore; Clarence French, sophomore in education; Gilbert Fuller, engineering freshman; Jim Crook, business senior.
Carol Laird, engineering freshman; William J. Stoner, sophomore in the College; Glen E. Razak, engineering sophomore; Jerome Schiffer, graduate student; and Alletta Powell, graduate student.
Bachelor Partridge Leads Action To Bring 'Love-Marriage' To K.U.
If the nation's psychologists are right, lots of ex-GI's are disturbed by the perplexing problems of the post-war battle—but K.U. has one veteran who's taking matters into his own hands. He's doing something about it.
He is Arthur Partridge, College senior, the man behind the campaign.
A. A.
ARTHUR PARTRIDGE
Juniors Will Meet To Discuss Prom
Plans for the Junior Prom will be the principal business of the first junior class meeting of the year at 1 p.m. Thursday in Frank Strong auditorium, Joan Woodward, secretary-treasurer, announced today.
Murder Investigation Extends To Emporia
Class officers Elizabeth Evans, president; Robert Barnes, vice-president; and Miss Woodward will be introduced, and committees will be appointed.
Kansas City, Kan. (UP)—Detective chief Stanley Beatty said today investigation of the slaying of Lewis J. Spencer, 27, male student nurse, whose body was found in his sixth floor living quarters at the University of Kansas hospital Friday morning, has extended to Emporia where Mr. Spencer formerly was in training at a hospital.
to bring "Love and Marriage" instruction to the campus.
Last February he was getting out of the army at Camp Cook, Calif. Just back from Germany, he was full of ideas about returning to college, but there wasn't much he could do and stretched out on his bunk and flipped through the pages of a Collier's.
One article, "Sex in the Classroom," caught his interest. It told of successful experiments in marriage problems courses being conducted by several universities.
He found that California was one of the strengthholds of the idea, so he began asking questions. By the time he reached K.U. for the spring semester, he had all the information he needed. He contacted the new executive secretary of the Y.M.C.A., Ned Linegar, and suggested that the Y.M.C.A. sponsor a "Love and Marriage" lecture series.
At the third lecture the committee passed out a questionnaire, which revealed that the students wanted an eight-lecture course this fall.
"Those first lectures, by Dr. Wheeler and Dr. Canuteson, really packed the Kansas room," Partridge said. "The students were even standing outside on the stairs."
So this fall the Y.M.C.A. carried out that wish. At the end of the series they took another poll and found that 98 per cent of the students want a full course in love and marriage. University officials apparently agreed, and said they'd think it over. Partridge说...
Mr. Linegar liked the idea, the Y.M.C.A. liked the idea, so a student committee got together to plan a three-lecture series.
"We've made no recommendations as to credit hours or instructors," he said. "Our course should be on an option basis and available to all students."
While the plans for a full-time course are in the fire, Partridge and his aides are going on with arrangements for setting up a more inclusive lecture series for the spring semester.
In spite of his enthusiasm in seeing his project completed, Partridge explains he's no expert. He's still a bachelor.
News of the World
Marshall Says Extremists Hamper China Peace
Washington. (UP)—Gen. George C. Marshall, in a blustering criticism of both Chinese Nationalists and Communists, declared today that efforts to settle China's internal strife had been frustrated repeatedly "by extremist elements of both sides."
General Marshall has been summoned home by President Truman after failure of his mission to bring China's warring elements together in a representative, democratic government.
Steel Union Makes Demands.
Pittsburgh (UP)—The CIO united steel workers will demand a "substantial" wage increase, a guaranteed annual wage, social insurance, portal-to-portal pay and a union shop when negotiations for a 1947 contract are opened with the United States Steel corporation Jan. 16.
The union demands were made public last night when U. S. Steel announced that it would begin negotiations next week.
'No Interest In Liberals'
New York. (UP)—Lack of public interest has been responsible for the "elimination of liberal commentators, liberal columnists, and liberal newspapers," according to Henry A. Wallace, former secretary of commerce.
Republicans Speed Up Strike-Control Measures
Republicans were especially lukewarm to the president's request for a special commission to study labor problems. They were critical of his silence on portal-to-portal lawsuits claiming back overtime pay.
Washington. (UP)—Congressional Republicans slapped a speedup priority on their own strike-control measures today, complaining that President Truman's would do too little too late.
Tax Battle Coming Up
Washington. (UP)—President Truman and the Republican-controlled congress headed for a showdown battle over taxes today. Republicans insist that taxes will be cut.
The president probably will veto at least two GOP tax bills this year, one reducing personal taxes and the other immediately eliminating certain wartime increases in excise taxes on luxury items.
Trieste Plan Before Council
Lake Success. (UP) — The big powers opened a year of heavy work in the United Nations security council today with a bid for approval of their plan to make Trieste a free territory by Jan. 15 with the UN as its caretaker. Delegates also sought a decision on the way to assemble machinery for atomic control and world disarmament.
7,1947
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Essay Contest Closes May 5
May 5 is the deadline for the 36th annual Hattie Elizabeth Lewis prize essay contest, which deals with the application of the teachings of Jesus to present day problems.
The contest, open to all students,
is a memorial established at the University in 1911 by Prof. George Edward Patrick, Washington, D.C., in memory of his wife, the former Hattie Elizabeth Lewis, a University student
Three prizes of $100, $75, and $50 are awarded for the winning essays.
Each contestant must hand in three copies of his essay to the Chancellor's office not later than May 5. The copies should be accompanied by a sealed envelope on which should be written the title of the essay and the writer's pen name, and containing the contestant's real name.
Essays must be not less than 5,000 or more than 10,000 words in length and must be typewritten, double spaced, and provided with a table of contents, footnotes giving reference to authorities cited, and bibliography.
The essay receiving first prize will be published if considered worthy by the committee, and if funds permit.
Members of the committee are Miss Lulu Gardner, professor of English and chairman of the committee; Miss Mattie E. Crumme, assistant professor of romance languages; G. L. Anderson, professor of history; and Elmer F. Beth, chairman of the journalism department.
Students desiring further information may confer with Miss Gardner, 302 Fraser hall, 4 to 5 p.m. Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.
Quack Club To Meet
Quack club, women's swimming club, will meet at 7:45 tomorrow night in Robinson gymnastics. Members will continue work on formations for a spring aquatic exhibition, Olivia Garvey, president, announced.
Eight Law Students Eligible For Bar Exam
Third year law students who will receive their degrees at the end of the present term and who plan to take the state bar examination in Topeka Feb. 10, must apply by Friday, they were reminded today by Walt Neibarger, supreme court clerk.
These examinations, which are held in the supreme court chambers, will last three days, beginning at noon Feb. 10, and concluding Feb. 12. Those who successfully pass the examination will be sworn in as members of the Kansas State Bar association the afternoon of the final day.
University law students who are eligible to take this examination are Thomas J. Brown, Aubrey Earhart, Jerry Griffith, Thomas Harkness, Robert Luke, Doris Stowell, William Stowell, and Richard Young.
PRIEST
Leads Y.M.C.A.
'No Alibi'—Phog
This is Dean Smith, freshman medical student, who is president of the University Y.M.C.A. (Daily Kansan Staff Photo.)
"We have no alibi to offer," said Dr. F. C. Allen, speaking of the Kansas performance against Missouri Tuesday night. "The best alibi is to win the next game, and that's what we intend to do." he added.
Dr. Allen declined comment on his personal fraces with Coach Wilbur Staluck of the Tigers, except to mention that Coach Staluck had no business on the court and should have drawn a technical foul.
Keep Taxes Up Hold Rent Down Truman Asks
Washington. (UP) — President Truman today urged renewal of the rent control law which expires June 30, and jarred Republican tax reduction plans with a possible veto threat when he said "it would be unsurd fiscal policy to reduce taxes."
He warned labor to refrain from "excessive" wage demands. He counseled management to cut prices wherever possible, particularly in food, clothing, house furnishings, and building materials.
Mr. Truman said that as 1947 begins, the nation never has been "so strong or so prosperous" nor have "prospects ever been brighter."
He acknowledge that there will be "minor bumps and detours" in the road ahead, but flatly rejected the notion that there must be another depression such the one that started in 1929.
He also called for one million more housing units in 1947 and a prompt start on a long-range housing program "to reduce the cost of housing on all fronts and by all desirable methods."
From a long-range viewpoint, Mr. Truman recommended a drastic overhaul of the social security laws to increase the amount and duration of employment benefits, to extend benefits to persons not now covered, and to include health insurance. He also proposed that the social security system be financed in part by payment from treasury funds instead of entirely from the special social security taxes.
Mr. Truman rejected pump printing through public works program—a device used by the late President Roosevelt—as an adequate safeguard against recession "or an adequate fighting apparatus against depression."
ONE. A long-range, flexible federal program to support farm incomes at "reasonable levels." This program, he said, "Should be designed to encourage adjustments of production in line with the capacity of markets to take products at a prior remunerative to efficient farming.
Other high spots in the president's 15.000-word report:
TWO. Without completely ruling out the use of public works projects as depression cushions, the President advocated the stabilization of public works construction "according to our long-term needs."
Construction of the new textile laboratory it the basement of Fraser hall was sted yesterday morning, Miss Edna Hill, professor of home economics announced. Miss Hill said the new laboratory should be completed and ready for use by next semester.
Textile Laboratory Begun
Kansas—Generally fair today, tonight, and Thursday. Slightly warmer southeast today. Otherwise little change in temperature. Low tonight upper 20's to lower 30's.
Marshall's First Test Is German Peace Treaty
Poor Health Forces Byrnes To Resign; Chooses General As Secretary Of State
BULLETIN
Washington. (UP)—The senate today unanimously confirmed the appointment of Gen. George C. Marshall as secretary of state.
Washington. (UP)—Gen. George C. Marshall, freshly baptized in the devious diplomacy of the Orient for his new job as Secretary of State, today faced the immediate task of negotiating with Soviet Russia, Britain and France a peace treaty for Germany.
GEN. GEORGE C. MARSHALL
JOHN E. MAYER
For this major post-World War II problem, General Marshall is expected to carry on James F. Byrnes' "patient but firm" policy toward the
New Secretary Is First Army Statesman
By DONALD J. GONZALES
(United Press Staff Correspondent
When President Truman picked the former army chief of staff for the nation's No.1 diplomatic post, he knew he could depend on him to carry out American foreign policy to the hilt in the stormy months ahead.
Washington. (UP)—George Catlett Marshall, the first professional soldier to become secretary of state, is a staunch advocate of offensive strategy in diplomatic as well as military battles.
For Marshall, diplomatic maneuvering will hold no insurmountable obstacles. If he had been one to capitulate easily, it would have cropped out during the early months of World War II when he was confronted with building the army from a sputtering midget to a mighty colossus of over 7,000,000 men.
To his new assignment, the 66-year-old Marshall brings candor, veracity, poise and a friendly personality backed up with a strong will to do his best. These attributes will serve him well in parrying with foreign diplomats.
Washington's politically surcharged air never has made it famous as a "City of Brotherly Love." But throughout his direction of the war, Marshall gained a position unique in public life through his lack of enemies and critics. Whether history will uphold this accolade will depend on events in the months to come.
Fountain Open Nights
The Union fountain will be open nights, Monday through Friday, until 10:15, Miss Alice Kellogg, fountain manager, announced today. The fountain will close during home basketball games, but will be open before and after the games, she added.
Marshall will retain his rank as five-star general. Under a special act of congress, five-star generals and admirals do not retire but only revert to inactive status.
The new secretary will get his first test on the Soviets' home ground. On March 10 he is scheduled to begin negotiations on German and Austrian peace settlements in Moscow at the next Big Four foreign ministers meeting.
The surprise selection of a military career man for the first time in history to direct American foreign policy startled all and pleased most
Washington. (UP)—Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg, Republican foreign policy spokesman, today promised his party's continued support of a bi-partisan foreign policy under Gen. George C. Marshall.
Press Secretary Charles G. Ross revealed today that there had been al "understanding" between Mr. Truman and General Marshall for some months before Mr. Byrnes resigned. This understanding was that if and when Mr. Byrnes should carry out his desire to leave, General Marshall would become Secretary of State.
congressman, who predicted swift confirmation of the appointment.
But Mr. Byrnes' departure from President Truman's cabinet was described by congressmen and diplomats alike as a "major loss."
Mr. Byrnes resigned because of his health—because his doctors warned him as long ago as last spring to "slow up." And it can be stated actively that he has other "health resignations," this one is on the level and the real thing.
The White House revealed last night that Byrnes had submitted two letters of resignation, one on April 16 and the other on Dec. 19, both because of his health.
In addition to being Secretary of State, General Marshall—after a brilliant lifelong career as a professional soldier which took him to the top of the military world—also will be heir to the presidency for the next two years in event anything happens to President Truman. He also will be a potential 1948 democratic presidential candidate if Mr. Truman doesn't seek the nomination.
☆ ☆
6
JAMES F. BYRNES
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 8,1947
LMOC Will Be With Us
TREVOR PARK
The "Little Man On Campus" cartoons drawn for the University Daily Kansan the past two semesters will remain in the paper for the spring semester of this year, through a continuing arrangement between the student newspaper and the artist, Dick Bibler, shown here. Bibler, adopted the nation's best collegiate cartoonist, previously had experience cartooning for Yank magazine. (Daily Kansan Staff Photo)
Carlson Appoints Stafford Secretary
Toskea. (UP)—Gov. elect Frank Carlson announced late today that he will appoint George Stafford, Valley Falls war veteran and a young Kansas Republican, as his executive secretary.
Stafford, 31, will resign his present office of executive secretary to the Republican State committee and assume his new duties as secretary to the governor at the same time Carson takes office Monday.
In the army service since Jan. 29, 1942, Stafford was discharged last Friday. Entering the army as a private he was commissioned and became a company commander in the 24th infantry division in the Pacific theater. On Mindanao in the Philippines campaign he was wounded by machine gun fire and was hospitalized until the spring of 1946. During his convalescence leave he took over the management of the Carlson primary headquarters and served as assistant to the Republican state chairman, the late Quentin Brown, during the fall campaign.
$100,000 In Pirate Gold Believed In Wreck
Wetftleet, Mass. (UP)—One hundred thousand dollars in pirate gold and silver is believed buried in the wrecked hull of the ship Whidah two miles south of the Wellfleet Coast Guard station.
Many years ago this vessel, captained by the pirate Samuel Bellamy, was cruising along the coast when it was wrecked by a gale and all but two of the 145 buccaneers aboard peruaded.
As late as 1923, the sunken hulk was located, but thus far nothing except a cannon has been removed from it.
Searchers Cannot Find Plane
Aboard U.S.S. Mt. Olympus with Byrd Expedition. (UP) - A Martin Maxier flight boat has found no trace of a sister ship missing since Dec. 30 with nine men aboard after searching 11,000 square miles in the area of the plane's last reported position, it was announced today.
University Daily Kansan
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan. every afternoon during the school year except holidays. University holiday, and examination days. Second class matter Sep. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
Daily Kansan Joins Inland Press Group
The University Daily Kansan has recently joined 10 other college newspapers as a member of the Inland Daily Press association.
The press association, oldest and largest regional group of daily newspapers, has 408 members in 19 states and Canada.
Other college members are the Daily Northwestern, Daily Illini, Indiana Daily Student, Butler Collegian, Daily Iowa, Minnesota Daily, Columbia Missouri, Daily Nebraskan, Ohio State Lantern, and the Wisconsin Daily Cardinal.
Getting His Money's Worth
Chicago. (UF)—John M. Langhout, 53, was fined $25 today on a charge of biting his dentist's finger. Dr. Barnett Midlin, appearing in court with the wounded digit in bandages, told Judge William V. Daly he had asked $50 for repairing Mr. Langhout's teeth and made the mistake of setting the price while his finger was in Mr. Langhout's mouth.
No Equal Pay For Women, Board Decides
London. (UP)—A Royal Commission, in a 100,000 word report, has written the final chapter of the "equal pay for women and men" controversy in Britain. The verdict was: "Women are just not worth equal pay."
The Royal Commission, comprising five men and four women, in substance handed down this dictum in a 220-page document summarizing two years of official inquiry.
The majority of the commission opposed equal pay mainly because there are few jobs where equal work is done by both men and women.
Analyzing the probable consequences of introducing equality of pay, the reporter held that men are more adaptable and versatile than women, more resourceful in dealing with surprise situations and therefore worth a higher wage.
The British Employer's Confederation asserted that "where women are employed on the same work as men, their output is in general lower than that of the men, thereby increasing a number of workers required for a given amount of production and overhead costs involved."
The commissoin based its opinion against equal pay on these main conclusions:
TWO. Equal pay would ultimately result in a general lowering of standards of pay for both men and women.
ONE. Present inequalities of pay are largely justified in the lower wage-earning classes by inequality of performance.
THREE. The married man with a family would become relatively the worst off member of the community.
Landis Takes Advertising Job With Newton, Iowa, Firm
Dean Landis is one K.U. graduate-veteran who had a short gap between military and civilian career.
Discharged from the army air corps on Jan. 2, Landis has already stepped into a position as head of the advertising department of the Maytag company in Newton, Iowa
Before entering the service in Sept., 1942, Landis, who received a bachelor of arts degree in Journalism in 1934, worked in the advertising departments of newspapers in Junction City and Dodge City, Aurora, Ill., and Cheyenne, Wyo.
THE GARDEN MUSEUM
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Alpha Phi Omega Appoints Six Committee Chairmen
Committee chairman were appointed Monday at a meeting of the officers of Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity.
The chairmen are Carlon Pryor programs; Robert Wehe, campus projects; Keith Criswell, community projects; Robert Judy, publicity; Lawrence Exley, Charles Howard, Oren Stanley, membership expansion; and Walter Houston and Richard Harrington, social. The chapter song leader will be Joseph Brown and Laurence Allred.
Radio Relay Colloquium
Richard H. Finney, engineering senior, will speak on "Radio Relays AN/TRC-6" at 4 p.m. Monday in room 203, Blake hall, as a colloquium sponsored by the department of physics and astronomy. Anyone interested is invited to attend.
Dinosaur Turns Out To Be Killer Whale
Painesville, O. (UP)—That was no pre-historic dinosaur, but only an ordinary killer whale found washed up on the shore near Homer, Alaska, Prof. Ivar Skarland has decided.
Richard Wyman, a student of geology at Cleveland college, read reports that a hugh dinosaur, perhaps 1,000,000 years old, had been found preserved in glacial ice. He wrote to the University of Alaska for further information.
Now On Sale—Tickets To
Skarland, professor of anthropology at the University of Alaska, answered the query, spiking thoroughly the dinosaur rumor. "T investigated the animal in question and found it was an ordinary killer whale, an animal common in Alaskan waters. There was nothing prehistoric about it—in fact it had been dead only a couple of months," Prof. Skarland wrote.
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MEMORIAL UNION BUILDING
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JARY 8,1947
s Out Whale
That was no but only an wound washed amer, Alaska, is decided. deng of geol. read re-resou peru,perl, had been ice. he of Alaska. He of Alaska.
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PAGE THREE
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JANUARY 8,1947
That Enrollment Line Will Return Soon
WATONIA
SEMINARY
SPECIALS
BOTANY
It won't be long now before that job of standing in line and praying Enrollment time (Feb. 10-13 this year) looked like this in Robinson gym-all the sections won't be filled before you get there comes around again! maximum last year
COEDS' CORNER
Weaving Baskets, Filing Jewelry Is Work And Play For OT Major
A friendly, blue-cyed, brunette, Frances Fridell, second - semester junior in occupational therapy, has found getting assignments in arts and crafts a full-time, fascinating job. At present, she may frequently be seen busily weaving baskets or filing a piece of jewelry.
As vice-president of the Occupational Therapy club, she is in charge of the Newsletter published once each semester. It includes information on the latest phases of the work here on the campus and a record of the club's various activities.
Frances hopes that by attending summer school she will be able to start her required semester of training at the Bell Memorial hospital in Kansas City next fall. Eight months training in psychiatric work, tuberculosis, general, and veteran hospitals is also prerequisite to receiving the bachelor of science degree.
In addition to working hard on her career, Frances has been active in Jay Janes and is now president of Theta Upsilon, Baptist girls' sorority. She calls herself "just a corned farm girl" from Robinson and specifies music and all outdoor sports with emphasis on horseback riding, as her favorite hobbies.
Frances agrees that being a fine arts student definitely has personal advantages, especially when it comes to solving Christmas gift problems.
Davis Will Discuss UN For Women Voters' League
Prof. R. M. Davis, of the School of Law will speak on "The United Nations at Work," at the luncheon meeting Thursday of the Lawrence League of Women Voters, at the Plymouth Congregational parish house.
A special invitation to students and the wives of students is extended by Mrs. Karl Kreider, league president. All interested persons are welcome to come for the talk at 1:30, following the luncheon. Mrs. Charles Heming, of the national board of directors of the league, will speak at the meeting.
Miss Avis VanLew, University of Kansas hospitals, spoke to the members of the Pre-Nursing club Tuesday about their future work in hospitals. A tea in honor of Miss VanLew followed the meeting.
Club Hears Van Lew
A. M. B. A.
Thirteen persons from the University returned recently from the national student assembly in Urbana, Ill. Fifteen hundred delegates from all states and many countries attended the meeting at which Y.M.-Y.W.C.A. policies for the next four years were formulated.
FRANCES FRIDELL
K. U. delegates were Ned Linegar, Y.M.C.A. executive secretary; Miss Mary McCracken, Henley housemother; Mary Winser, Marion Osnond, Betty van der Smissen, Willour Noble, Glenn Varenhorst, Milton Webster, Ernest Eskelin, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Thomas, and Mr. and Mrs. Roswell Wahl.
13 Hear Y.M.-Y.W. Plans At Illinois Conference
"One God; One World," will be the theme of Religious Emphasis week Feb. 22 to 28, Mary Holtzclaw, president of the Student Religious Council, has announced.
'One God; One World' Thame Of Religious Emphasis Week
The Rev. Byron S. Green, pastor of a Church of England in London, and the Rev. Gonzalo Baez Comargo, director of religious work in Mexico, are two of the fifteen speakers who will participate in Religious Emphasis week.
Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemistry fraternity, announces the pledging of Aldo Alliotti, Gerald Bechtle, John Campbell, Joseph Delaney, Sam Johnson, Vance Kirkland, Lyman Magee, Robert Malott, Gerald McGrew, John Minor, James Ralls, Milton Traux, and Thomas Whaley.
Socially Speaking!
Alpha Chi Sigma Pledges
Kappa Beta Plans Dinner
Kappa Beta will have a covered dish dinner at a meeting today at 5:30 p.m. in Myers hall.
Alpha Delta Pi will entertain the Alpha Tau Omega chapter at an hour dance from 7 to 8 tomorrow night at the chapter house.
Wilder Contributes To Research Series
Alpha Delta Pi Entertains
"Governmental agencies of the State of Kansas, 1861-1946" by Bessie E. Wilder, document librarian for the University of Kansas libraries, will be placed in the mails this week, Dr. Ethan P. Allen, director of the bureau of government research, has announced.
The 128-page book on Kansas governmental agencies is Miss Wilder's first contribution to the research series. It presents a checklist of the 563 agencies of Kansas, both past and present, and complete basic information regarding them.
Dr. Allen stated that about 2,500 copies of this fourth publication in the research series will be distributed throughout the state.
Pharmacy Professor Elected To Fraternity Post
Ralph W. Clark, professor of pharmacy, has been elected grand ritualist of Kappa Psi, national pharmacy fraternity, S. Wayne Curry, president of the local chapter, announced. The appointment was made at a meeting of the national executive committee of the fraternity held in Philadelphia during the holidays.
Professor Clark was recently appointed professor of pharmacy at the University. He is a graduate and former member of the faculty of the University of Wisconsin School of Pharmacy.
"Carnival in Flanders," outstanding movie of 1936, will be shown in Fraser theater at 7:30 p.m. Friday.
'Carnival In Flanders To Be Shown Friday
Similar movies will be shown every six weeks, Nancy Hulings, fine arts senior who arranged the schedule, said. Foreign films will be French, German, and Russian and will have English captions. Admission is free.
The movie is the second in a series of historical and educational movies sponsored by the Forums board. It is a satirical comedy on the Spanish invasion of Holland in the 16th century.
I.S.A. Members To Elect Jan. 27
Individuals may be nominated by petitions signed by 50 independent students. Petitions are to be submitted to Miss Thompson, Miller hall, or left in the L.S.A. office 228 Frank Strong hall by noon Sunday.
Independent Student association members will elect officers and a representative to the All-Student council in the annual election Jan. 27, Lois Thompson, elections committee chairman, has announced.
The elections committee will nominate two candidates for president, business manager and A.S.C. representative. Two representatives from each class also will be chosen. The presidential candidate receiving the second highest number of votes will be vice-president. Candidates must have served one semester on the I.S.A. council, Miss Thompson said.
Many students, he explained, apply for admission merely to get a passport from foreign governments. After entering this country, they decide upon another school, and the University loses money in preparing to receive them.
The committee on foreign students was voted to require a $25 deposit 'ee before accepting applications for enrollment from alien students, Henry Werner, chairman of the committee, announced today.
The deposit will be refunded when the student enrolls.
New Foreign Students Must Pay Deposit
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 8.1947
SPOTLIGHT SPORTS
By BOB DELLINGER
(Daily Kansan Sports Editor)
Kansas should include the basket in its scoring plans if it intends to stay within sight of the opponents in the next game.
The Jayhawkers lost the ball so many times before getting in for a shot, that most of the game was played in the Missouri end of the court.
The play was rough from the start, but with all that football beef in the lineup, Kansas couldn't seem to hold its own. Let it be sufficient to note that Ray Evans had more blood on his face at halftime than he did in the Nebraska football game.
"Phog" Allen and "Sparky" Stalcup had their little tiff to lend a little fire to the otherwise dull affair. Stalcup rushed onto the court to protest a referee's decision, which he did vehemently.
Kansas seemed to have completely forgotten the presence of the basket in the last half, and in the last four minutes of play, the Jayhawkers failed even to hit the backboard
This act aroused the Allen ire, and he went over to tell Stalcup to sit down.
Stalcup seemed to think that his protests were his private concern and he shoved Allen back toward the Kansas bench, but what looked like the beginning of a battle was broken up by Dr. Bob Allen, Kansas team physician, and the Missouri scorekeeper.
Minor league baseball may return to Wichita next summer, if plans now being discussed with St. Louis Browns represents work out.
Ray Dumont, president of the National (Semi-pro) Baseball congress, announced that the way was clear provided the city park department and the Brownns can agree on rentals.
Dumont spent two hours over the week-end ironing out difficulties with William DeWitt, general manager of the Browns.
He said that the Congress had no objections to organized baseball in Wichita if the two 17-day stretches for the national state and national semi-pro tournaments are allotted as in the past. DeWitt agreed that the Brownws would not interfere.
The Browns have planned since last year to move the San Antonio franchise from the Texas league to Wichita.
Merle Hapes and Frankie Filchok of the New York football Giants testified Tuesday that Alvin J. Paris actually tried to bribe them to throw the championship playoff game.
They said that Paris had offered among other inducements, girls restaurants, and cabarets.
UHS Trims Lansing In First Break
The University high school cagers came up with their first win in twelve starts Tuesday night by trimming Lansing high, 34-20, after dropping the "B" game, 20-22.
The Eagles were led by the sharpshooting of Gene Riling and Don Cochran who accounted for 28 points seven and six goals respectively.
U. H.S. held a slim, 12-11 lead at the half, but went on a 14-point rampage in the third quarter to salt away a safe margin.
Other Eagle scorers were O'Neill with four points, and Bowers and Dunham with two each.
The next opponent will be Basehor, which will be met in the Community building at 4 p.m. Friday.
Dean F. J. Moreau, Prof. William T. Dean, and Prof. Carl Slough, represented the University School of Law at a meeting of the Association of American Law schools held Dec. 27, 28, and 29, at the Edgewater Beach Hotel in Chicago.
Lawyers To Chicago
Tigers Strengthen Conference Lead By Defeating Jayhawkers
In the sorrisi exhibition of basketball seen on a Kansas court in several years, the University of Missouri Tigers whipped the Jayhawkers, 39-34, at tooch auditorium Tuesday.
The victory was Missouri's second of the current conference season, and strengthened the Tiger grip on the top spot in the Big Six. It was the first Missouri victory over Kan- $\textcircled{4}$
sas at Lawrence since 1930.
The Tigers were led by Dan Pippin, forward, with six goals and five frees for a 17-point total. Charlie Black was high for Kansas with two goals and eight charity ties for 12.
Kansas took a 3-1 lead on a goal and a free by Owen Peck, but Missouri came back quickly and knotted the count. A goal by Pleasant Smith put the Tigers ahead, and they fell behind only once during the game. Kansas led, 10-9, but the Tigers went out in front to stay.
The deadly one-hand shooting of the Tigers kept them ahead throughout the first half, with Pippin and Smith putting in three goals each from far out. Black and Otto Schnell-bacher kept Kansas in the lauter by hitting 10 of 12 free throws and two goals.
Kansas co-ordination was mediocre, and the Jayhawkers were almost completely blocked off from all rebounds. Missouri led at the half, 27-21.
The second half started slowly, with one goal being rung up in the first five minutes of play. Kansas then slowly crept up with long shots as the Tigers missed, and Black tied the count with a pivot. The score was 31-31 with six minutes to play.
Pippin then proceeded to win the game for Missouri by hitting two long set shots within 30 seconds to put the Tigers ahead by a four-point margin.
The Jayhawkers failed to hit the backboard in the last four minutes, and Missouri waltzed in to the final 38-34 total.
Play was slow throughout the game with the famed Kansas fast break stopped almost completely. Missouri blocked out the Jayhawk-and backboards and controlled a majority of rebounds from both baskets.
Second half play was extremely ragged, with both sides muffing fundamental plays and with both squads
missing setups and th-ins. Kansas frequently lost the ball before it could get out of the back court on bad passes, fumbles, and traveling penalties.
It was the first conference defeat for Kansas.
The box score:
Kansas (34)
Schnellbacher, f ... 1 6 1 8
Black, f ... 2 8 5 12
Peck, c ... 1 1 0 3
Evans, g ... 3 0 0 6
Ettinger, g ... 1 1 2 3
Eskridge ... 1 0 1 2
Stramel ... 0 0 0 0
Clark ... 0 0 1 0
Dewell ... 0 0 1 0
Auten ... 0 0 1 0
9 16 12 34
Missouri (39) FG FT II 34
Jenkins, f 2 4 3 3
Pippin, f 6 5 4 17
Rudolph, g 0 1 1 1
Smith, g 3 0 5 6
Lorrance, g 0 1 0 1
Garwitz 0 0 2 0
Haynes 2 0 3 4
Bounds 1 0 1 2
Score at half: Kansas 21, Missouri 27.
14 11 19 39
Officials: Cliff Ogden and Clay Van Reem.
Free throws missed: Kansas—Schnebacher (4), Black, Peck, Evans, Eskridge, Missouri—Jenkins, Lorrance, Haynes (2).
Leading Scorers
| | G | FG | FT | TP |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Tucker, Okla. | 14 | 81 | 33 | 195 |
| Schnellbacher, Kan. | 13 | 55 | 50 | 160 |
| Black, Kan. | 13 | 50 | 54 | 154 |
| Jenkins, Mo. | 14 | 58 | 40 | 144 |
| Retherford, Neb. | 12 | 52 | 36 | 140 |
| Courty, Okla. | 14 | 51 | 33 | 135 |
| Pippin, Mo. | 14 | 52 | 32 | 126 |
| Howey, Kan. State | 12 | 42 | 25 | 109 |
| MacArthur, Neb. | 11 | 43 | 22 | 108 |
| Dean, Kan. State | 11 | 42 | 23 | 107 |
Jones To New York
Ogden Jones, geologist for the Kansas state board of health, will deliver a paper before the American Society of Civil Engineers at its 94th annual meeting in New York, January 15-18.
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Lost Something? Try a University Daily Kansan Want Ad
FIRST----
That's where you'll find your student newspaper the University Daily Kansan.
It gives you, every afternoon, the top campus news of the day, plus the biggest stories from the nation and the world.
The Daily Kansan brings you the best of this news while it's new! It's brought to you ON TIME every afternoon—the first daily paper on the Hill.
And don't forget-you can't miss the Little Man on Campus, and his antics. He takes the sting out of any quiz!
No other publication can give you as much of this good reading as your
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
All The News While It's News
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
JARY 8,1947
JANUARY 8,1947
PAGE FIVE
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Plan Predicted To Eliminate College Sports Professionalism
New York. (UP)—Big Nine Commissioner Kenneth L. (Tug) Wilson predicted quick passage today for a new five-point plan aimed at knocking professionalism out of college sports as delegates to the 41st annual National Collegiate Athletic association convention met in their final business session.
"There is every indication it will be passed," Wilson said. "We expect a few will object to certain parts of it but all we need is a simple majority of the 252 N. C. A. A schools."
The standard eligibility plan, containing a schedule boycott provisio against schools that fail to conform, was far and away the hottest legislation up for approval although some action may be taken on a surprise proposal to create a "clean sports foundation" to curb gambling both in amateur and professional athletics.
Athletic Director Earl Yeomans of Temple University proposed a foundation, including officials of the N. C. A. A., Amateur Athletics union and All Pro sports, to police all athletic promotions and petition congress for strong anti-gambling laws.
The president of the United States or J. Edgar Hoover were suggested as honorary president of the foundation.
Foremost of the principles is that no athlete may accept more than tuition and stated fees—and then only when it is awarded by an agency awarding aid to all other students on the basis of need.
In a quieter session, the American Association of College Football coaches elected E. E. (Tad) Wieman, athletic director at Maine, as its 24th president, succeeding Dick Harlow of Harvard.
Featherweight Champ Breaks Leg In Crash
Millville, N. J. (UP)—Willie Pep,
world featherweight champion,
suffered a broken left leg in Sunday
night's airplane crash, instead of a
mere cut on his ankle, manager Lou
Viscusi disclosed today.
Pep was injured Sunday night when an airliner, flying from Miami, to Newark, crashed during a heavy snowstorm in a woods five miles west of Millville. Three persons were killed and 20 were injured in the crash.
Viscusi said the injury may prevent Pep from fighting for six months and it is certain to prevent the "Hartford Phantom" from earning about $100,000 in purses for fights he had scheduled during the next four months.
College Basketball
Long Island U. 56, Utah State 38
Akron U. 44, Kent State 32.
Holy Cross 64, Toledo 56.
Rhode Island 86, Butler 40.
St. Johns 46, C.C.N.Y. 41.
Rutgers 76, Newark 60.
Drake 41, Iowa State 38.
Loras 77, Mexico U. 38.
Alabama 48, Georgia 27.
Manhattan college 69, Iona college 62.
Ohio U. 47, Xavier 30,
Westport 76, Genesia 52
Clemson 56, Presbyterian college 42.
Villanova 42, Princeton 40.
St. Lawrence 50, Hobart 35
Western Kentucky 51, Brigham Young 40.
Corpus Christi 40, Abingdon 38.
Eau Claire Teachers 62, Winona
State Teachers 56.
Mercer U. 56, North Georgia college 43.
Rockhurst 44, Central (Mo.) State college 36.
Fairmont Teachers 76, California (Pa.) Teachers. 46.
Denver U. 44, Colorado State college 43.
East Texas State Teachers 79, Stephen F. Austin 66.
San Jose State 44, San Francisco 34.
Oregon State 53, Washington State college. 43.
Southern Oregon Normal 61, Eastern Oregon Normal 51.
941 Club, Kappa Sigs Win 'B' Cage Games
Two "B" league intramural basketball games were played Tuesday night on the Robinson gymnasium courts.
The 941 Club second squad handed the Spooner-Thayer "B" team a 32 to 11 setback. Lippert and McGee led scoring for the victors with 8 points apiece.
The Kappa Sigma "B" five defeated the '39ers' 23, to 18. Scott of the '39ers' was high point man of the game with 8 counters. Templer and parker each racked up 6 for the winners.
10:00 - Sigma Chi "B" vs. Sigma
Phi Epsilon "B"
Tonight's schedule:
10:00 - Beta Theta Pt "B" vs. Sigma Alpha Epsilon "B"
Joe Louis Will Box In Latin America
New York. (UP) — Heavyweight Champion Joe Louis will leave New York Jan. 26 to start a seven-week exhibition tour of Mexico, Central America, and South America, his manager, John Roxborough, said today.
First stop will be Mexico City, where Louis plans to box 10 two-minute rounds with Arturo Godoy, Chilean heavyweight who twice was defeated in title bouts with Louis. Roxborough said that Mexican promoters were prepared to put up a $50,000 guarantee to assure Louis' appearance at Mexico City.
All traveling will be done by air, Roxborough said, and the champion will return to New York by March 15 to start training for a June title defense.
Ball-Point Pen Patent In Perfume Dispensers
New York. (UP)—The "Battle of the Ball Point" which swept the nation's writing industry in 1946 will be extended to the perfume industry in 1947.
During the coming year, 1,000,000 ball point perfume dispensers which "write" delicate traces of fragrance on the skin and clothes of the user will be manufactured and sold in the United States, according to Biro, Meyne & Biro, the company which will market the dispenser.
Berlin. (UP)—It's almost a crime not to get drunk in Hettstedt, Germany, a small town near Leipzig.
It's Always Gesundheit In This German Town
Longview, Wash. (UP)—Hunters killed one of the largest cougars ever bagged in southwestern Washington. The animal measured 10 feet from tip to tip and weighed 250 pounds. The average size of cougars is less than eight feet, with an average weight of 150 pounds.
You can always get beer in Hettstedt. It is the only place in all Bremen where the populus is permitted by law to buy beer home. The law dates back to 1434.
One native commented: "Getting drunk regularly in Hettsted is one of the few customs which outlasted the war."
Bag 250-Pound Cougar
Mobridge, S.D. (UP) — Robert Beckman thinks nothing of commuting 120 miles to high school. He got his pilot's license on his 17th birthday and is using the plane his rancher-father bought him.
Flies To High School
WHY WE SAY
"THREE ON A MATCH"
Three on a match is unlucky—it began in the trenches when a sniper noticed a trio as they lit up—took aim on the second and the third fell victim of the sniper's bullet.
bv STAN J. COLLINS & L.J. SLAWSON
Basketball Clinic Held At Robinson Saturday
The day's program will be:
rules and officiating discussion at a
rally.
A state basketball clinic will be held in Robinson gymnasium Saturday for teachers, physical education majors, and women basketball students.
The day's program will be:
These ratings are good for two years and candidates are classified into three groups, national, local, and intramural, according to their test results and scores.
At 2 p.m. practical rating tests will be given till 5 p.m.
A written examination on officiating from 10 to 10:30 a.m.
Luncheon for the group will be served at 12:30 p.m. during which films on techniques of officiating will be shown.
Games will be played to test each candidate's practical officiating ability at 10:30 a.m.
Depression Likely Economist Warns
Brady warned when and if a depression occurred, the United States would face the same situation "which led to the rise of Hitler."
Berkeley, Cal. (UP)—Every economist in the nation expects some kind of depression within two to five years if present conditions continue, according to Dr. Robert A. Brady, professor of economics at the University of California.
"A dangerous situation has developed in the United States, with economic autocracy and political democracy existing side by side," Brady said. "This state of affairs has never lasted long."
"We have all the elements here," he said, "including racial animosity, which led to internal disorder in Germany."
The Standings
Big Six conference basketball standings:
Team W L PCT
Missouri 2 0 1.000
Kansas State 1 0 1.000
Nebraska 1 1 .500
Oklahoma 0 1 .000
Kansas 0 1 .000
Iowa State 0 1 .000
All games this season
All games this season.
**Team** **W** **L** **PCT**
Kansas State ... 10 2 .833
Oklahoma ... 10 4 .714
Missouri ... 10 4 .714
Kansas ... 8 5 .615
Nebraska ... 4 8 .333
Iowa State ... 9 2 .822
Ruth And DiMaggio Improving Rapidly
New York. (UP)—Babe Ruth, the hitting star of the New York Yankees in the 1920's, and Joe DiMaggio, his successor as an outfield slugging star for the Yanks, both were reported recovering rapidly today from operations.
Ruth's was much more serious, for doctors had to tie off an artery in his neck to give him relief from intolerable head pain. He underwent surgery Monday, spent an uncomfortable night and then improved greatly yesterday. DiMaggio underwent operation for removal of a bone spur from his left heel, and his doctor said his post-operative condition was excellent.
Women's Rifle Team Will Meet Carnegie
Starting line-up for the Women's Rifle club firing match Tuesday with Carnegie Institute of Technology, Pittsburgh, Penn., was announced today by Sgt. Arthur Millard, team coach. The line-up includes Frances Chubb and Peggy Baker (cocaptains), Peggy Sue Cloyd, Kathleen Broers, Shirley Otter, Janet Belt, Armilda Lincoln, Mary Anna Ward, and alternates Lola Branit and Mary L. Garton.
The match will be fired twice during the evening with the higher total score taken as the official score in the match with Carnegie Institute. The score will also be used for similar matches with the University of California, and Wheaton College, Ill.
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Ten R.O.T.C. Cadets Make Rifle Team
Cadets selected for the ROTC. rifle team have been announced by Maj. Emmitt Witt, team coach. They are James E. May, John K. Higdon, John R. Gurtner, Charles N. Howard, Donald W. Miller, Donald M. Allen, Martin L. Litwin, Gordon E. Offenbacker, Joseph M. Stryker, and Vernon W. Roberts, Jr.
As tryouts for the team are still being held, any interested R.O.T.C. cadet may report to the rifle range in the Military Science building between 4 and 8 p.m. either tomorrow or Friday and try out.
Scheduled practice for the first team will be held each Tuesday at 4 p.m. Matches with teams in other colleges and universities will begin next week. Firing for the William Randolph Hearst trophy will be held during the first two weeks of February.
SEE A SHOW TONITE
Jayhawker
NOW — All Week
DEEP Their Love!
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"NOTORIOUS"
ADDED: News and Cartoon
SUNDAY—ONE WEEK
Katharine Robert
HEPBURN · TAYLOR
UNDERCURRENT
Patee
Now Playing
SHOCKING!
as the lash of
a whip across
your face!
THE OX-BOW
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starring
HENRY FONDA
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 8,1947
Fueled by John L. Lewis
LABOR
LEGISLATION
NEW
CONGRESS
—Daniel Bishop in St. Louis Star-Times
Buyers' Strike
An encouraging news story was the Associated Press report of the condition of the new and used car markets of the nation.
The story reported that people just aren't interested in paying any price for new or used cars, that they have become fed up with paying "bonuses" for the privilege of buying new cars, that the average citizen won't take just any used car regardless of its condition. Ten to 25 per cent reductions in used car prices are common, and the traditional sharp depreciation for last year's models is again in operation. The 1946 models are reported to be selling from 15 to 25 per cent less than the original factory price after they hit the used car lots.
Used car prices still are high, the report said, but the trend is to lower prices, and many dealers have stopped requiring that new car customers must trade in a used car.
The AP story said that the citizens have finally rebelled at prices for used cars and are just going to sit down and wait for a new car or for the used car prices to get down from the stratospheric regions. Another way of explaining the current trend is to say that the laws of supply and demand haven't been repealed after all.
By the end of 1946, however, the picture had begun to change. Banks reported that their deposits were still higher than a year ago, but that the peak had already been reached. The supply of critical materials had begun to flow from the reconverted factories instead of trickling out in
For several years, since before the war, the United States has been a huge seller's market. The supply of nearly anything was low, and the demand for nearly everything was high. Naturally, when the buyer has money and only a few things can be bought, the prices of those few things are going to be marked up. The O.P.A. tried to prevent this, and so we had a black market—not as bad a black market as we could have had, but still it existed.
The "easy money" has begun to run out and the demand for goods is not as voracious as it was six months ago. When the demand goes down and the supply goes up, prices are bound to drop—and that's what they're doing.
an enticing manner.
Many times the idea of a buyer's strike has been suggested. Except in the case of housewives deciding not to buy butter at 95 cents a pound, or a group of farmers refusing to send grain to market until feed prices went down, the buyer's strike wasn't organized. But the AP story shows that, though unorganized, the buyers have begun a strike which is forcing prices down and making your money and my money worth more.
Jaytalking --occasionally ... 28
Listen to KFKU regularly ... 1
Listen to KFKU occasionally ... 3
Listen to neither ... 30
An enraged husband shot a man in the posterior for kissing his wife who is low girl in the human pyramids seen on Santa Monica beaches. The L.A. Daily News headed the story: "A bullet in the bustle for kissing queen of muscle."
Scalping goes on in other places—A U.C.L.A. coed posted $100 bond after police charged her with hooking suckers for $15 a chance to see her alma mater tromped by Illinois.
A Chicago man was standing on the rear platform of a street car when a snowball hit him in the eye and blacked it. Sno joked matter
The I.S.A. will have a roller-skating party Monday, but if the weather turns cold again, the members will need ice skates to get to and from the party.
Dr. Canutson says that losing sleep while boning for examinations only makes the brain duller the following day. Shucks, Doc, we learned that years and years ago while we were in our freshman year.
A roving deer was brought down by city dogs in Wheeling, W. Va., but the venison went to public institutions. Not even deer are going to the dogs these days.
Winston Churchill made his first speech in America in 1800. He was introduced to the audience by Mark Twain.
Dear Editor---occasionally ... 28
Listen to KFKU regularly ... 1
Listen to KFKU occasionally ... 3
Listen to neither ... 30
Machines Are Not Enough
It would seem from Jack Stines' letter in the Jan. 6 Daily Kansan that young Stines ought to get acquainted with our good Dr. Ise before he goes too berserk in his search for "higher" learning.
Tongue in cheek or no tongue in cheek, Dr. Ise has certainly put a finger on the major problem of 20th century life—particularly the American variety—whose technical development and engineering accomplishments have far outrun our economic and political accomplishments.
We can gird the earth with the aerial transport our engineers have built; we can destroy all its cities or send rockets to the moon with our atom-fission energy our physicists and engineers have propounded; we can starve our peoples in the face of plenty which our engineers have provided to those who already have; but our engineers have possessed no wisdom to direct the usage of their gifts to us. This later day engineer's world has not developed the other arts, sciences and larger intelligences sufficiently to determine whether efforts shall be spent on "automatic flushing stool and so forth" (if this is culturally important) or on weapons with which we may debauch, impoverish or destroy mankind.
Stines' polemics are proof that we ought to broaden the base of our engineering education, at least to give our engineering people a better idea of their position in the scheme of things; and to provide such spirited fellows as Stines with information and thinking equipment so that they may be irritated by important things.
In short, it seems we could let the engineering business rest a while and catch up on some of the other matters—those involved with living on the same little earth orb with our fellowmen.
Graduate Student (after nine years spent with engineers)
Sample KFKU Program
This is in response to the letter that was printed in the last issue of the Kansan before vacation began.
In the editor's note there was a suggestion that a sample program be submitted that would still be feasible with the station's facilities. As for a program, a sample program can be obtained from listening to the nightwatchman on WREN any night of the week. All that would be needed would be the records and a turntable.
I spent an hour in front of the library Monday afternoon taking a poll of student opinion on the subject. The results comparing KFKU and the Nightwatchman are as follows:
Listen to both regularly ... 0
Listen to both occasionally ... 4
Listen to Nightwatchman
Regularly
Listen to Nightwatchman
This is the result of 100 answers and 94 of the people I had never seen before; the other six were people that I knew who happened by. These 100 people were picked at random and as far as I can tell should represent a cross-section of K.U. students.
Robert M. Clave College sophomore
The University Daily Kansan
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., National Advertising Press, Represented by the National Advertising Service, 249 Madison Ave, New York, NY 10024.
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
York City.
Managing Editor Charles Roos
Aest. Managing Editor Jane Anderson
Bilic Marie Harper
Editor-in-chief Bill Hage
Business Manager Br. Donovan
Manager W. Swain
Telegraph Editor Edward W. Swain
Graph Ed. Edward W. Swain
City Editor R. T. Kligman
Jews, Arabs, British Prepare For Open War In Palestine
By SAM SOUKI (United Press Staff Correspondent)
Jerusalem. (UP)—The threat of war seems to be increasing in Palestine, despite earnest efforts for a settlement. Unless something like a miracle happens, the Palestine problem will remain a problem for a long time to come.
Armies, both in the open and underground, are being massed in readiness for the bloodshed that most people expect will be unleashed in the Holy Land. British Jews and Arabs $ \textcircled{2} $
Holy Land. British, Jews and Arabs are gathering their forces and are recruiting their manhood for a conflict which, if it started, easily could spread beyond the borders of Palestine.
The Jews want a Jewish State and a Jewish majority; the Arabs want an Arab Palestine, with no more Jews coming into the country; the British want to find a formula acceptable to both, which, at the same time, safeguards their own imperial interests.
Never before has tension reached such a high point. Palestine today is like a gigantic battlefield, criss-crossed with barbed wire and teeming with tanks, armored cars and cannons at strategic points. Patrols are hourly searching, probing into houses, questioning people and laying out more barbed wire and gun defenses.
Barbed wire surrounds all official buildings such as foreign consulates, while government buildings in addition have machine-gunners at sandbagged windows, ready to fire at the slightest hint of danger. On the roofs of these buildings are more machine-gunners who, binoculars in hand, can scan all the surrounding area.
But all these precautions searches, police raids and arrests do not prevent the strong Jewish factions from striking telling blows throughout the land. In Jerusalem, the King David Hotel's shattered walls stand as a grim, silent reminder.
Jewish districts are closely watched and kept under armed observation. Often policemen and soldiers stop all pedestrians, and brusquely ask them for identity cards. Before you enter any public building, you are searched by the guards at the door. They run their hands over your body and search any bag or brief case you may be carrying.
Three powerful Jewish groupsits frontiers
have formed underground armies, each fighting the British in its own way. There is the Haganah, with an estimated 70,000 organized fighters, the Irgun Zavai Leumi with some 7,000, and the Stern group with about 4,000.
So far, the Arabs have remained out of the fighting, but according to Arab sources, they have not remained idle. Youthful Arab nationalists claim that a secret Arab army is being trained both inside and outside Palestine.
Of the three, the Haganah is potentially the most dangerous, but politically the most moderate. Observers in Palestine believe that the Haganah will start an all-out fight only if it finds that no solution favoring the Jews is reached by the British at the end of this period of negotiations.
It is the Irgun and Stern organizations that have been responsible for most of the recent incidents in Palestine, exploits that even veteran British field commanders have described as brilliant in planning and execution. There is no doubt that the Jewish underground organizations in Palestine are powerful, well versed in the latest fighting tactics and include expert commandos armed with the finest type of weapons for this kind of operation.
The hard core of this organization is about 3,000 active members in Palestine. Their system is to split into small groups and recruit supporters in different areas who, while continuing with their lives, would be trained and ready to fight whenever wanted.
The Palestine Arabs believe that, in case of an Arab uprising, they will get the support of the neighboring Arab states. Arab nationalists everywhere, they say, would come to their aid, either by entering Palestine or by activities beyond groupsits frontiers.
a woman are
if allowed
of thoughts
to think
the truth
of things
are
and dead
of things
are
in a woman
is
Fallout
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
www.neverstopdrawing.com
"They'll be rickled when they see who 'its.'
UNIVERSITY OF KANNAR, TURDANDA APTERNOON, JANUARY 18, 1912
HIGH SCHOOL NEWS TO. BE A FEATURE
Daily Karakan Will Have
after arrival. A department of high school teachers will be sent to the fall semester of each year. A department of high school teachers will be sent to the fall semester of each year.
Communications have been increased in the past several years and in the increased demand for them, they will be presented.
each week. The high school teacher will be given a report on the progress of each individual. Every week it will be presented person. New work is assigned every week. I
land and body damage.
They had to stay on duty, assessment with
their back. They must be made of cloth, cash prices to be allowed above the ROW to the arithmetic proportion of 10, 50% and 50%. The bed with
TO SAVE ON LEMONS
evertment & Blanket Wrist Stamp
are to be in connection with
Citrate Acid Plate at Los
Angeles, Cal.
Young to Mabee Adkins
Born on April 19, 1957 in water with his parents in the District of Kentucky. Graduated from Division of Education of Kent, Kansas. Born at Springfield, KY, June 28, 1967. Died at home on August 30, 2014.
THE DUB.
A short story of a moll
boss man who "wouldn't
hence be taken good but didn't
be heard." Dedric Murnane
died on Wednesday's
Daily Mail.
SENIORS PETITION AGAINST FINAL
Vant Faculty to Exempt a
"2" Students from
Spring Exam.
The Society of the College are
responsible for the publication and
advocacy of their actions that all
officers believe better during the
hours before hearing the decision.
The principal argument abbreviated so that it will have the effect of raising the threshold of the interest pool based on the name and that abbreviation.
GOOD OLD TIMES
IT WENT BY RHYMES
was the author of a novel titled "A Murder on the Island," which describes the organization of murderers in the island. The novel, "The Illustrated Journal of Criminal Law," is one of the many books that have been written to alert those of the methods used in murder. If the book is read at an event or by someone else, it serves as a reminder of the Atlantic island's shouldered responsibility for its crimes. Before he left this work, he was in charge of all inquiries in advance of any criminal activity there and always had trouble with law and order. For decades after his death, the author wrote several books that have become well-known. He is survived by his wife, Judy, his son, James, and his grandchildren, Larry, Jules, and Mark.
Students Taught in Verse but Some of it Limped Perceptibly.
Traits of old fifty years ago,
was the subject of a shaped
tuesday by Prof. U. G. Mitchell
at the department of mathematics.
MEDICS IN MUS
KENTEN CREATION AND BROOKLYN, BROWN, E. 1908
Christmas Day Douglass, a man in the city of Brooklyn, had been incarcerated for robbery. He has now been released and is a man in the city of Brooklyn.
Johnson A. Johnson, a man in the city of Brooklyn, has been released and is a man in the city of Brooklyn.
A. W. Jefferson, a woman in the city of Brooklyn, has been released and is a woman in the city of Brooklyn.
RECITAL COURTS OF NEW YORK
Three new courtrooms are opening in the city of Brooklyn to handle the appeals of the Supreme Court of the United States.
The Supreme Court of the United States will hear cases with a panel of justices who will review the cases.
They will consider the appeals of the Supreme Court of the United States.
Wilton Martin, a man in the city of Brooklyn, has been released and is a man in the city of Brooklyn.
Edward E. C. Patterson, a man in the city of Brooklyn, has been released and is a man in the city of Brooklyn.
Addressed State Fair Banking Committee at Truckee National Forest Office on Tuesday, October 24th.
The state fair bank will hold its annual meeting of the state fair bank and will be held by Executive Branch of the Board of Supervisors.
The state fair bank will hold its annual meeting of the state fair bank and will be held by Executive Branch of the Board of Supervisors.
Wilton Martin, a man in the city of Brooklyn, has been released and is a man in the city of Brooklyn.
Edward E. C. Patterson, a man in the city of Brooklyn, has been released and is a man in the city of Brooklyn.
KANSAS MAKING USE OF NEW HOSPITAL
Thirty-four County Courts send to Brooklyn Since October 28.
Ministers residence of Kuwait was a small apartment building in the centre of Kuwait. It was occupied by members of the administrative council, whose residence was nearby. The building was designed by architect Ahmad Al-Husayni. It was 140 feet wide and 90 feet deep. It had an open balcony with views of the city. It was built for the Kuwait National Hospital.
The University Daily Kansan will be 40 years old next week, although there have been publications containing student news on the campus since before 1900. Here's how we looked 35 years ago, in 1912.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 8,1947
PAGE SEVEN
Y 8,1947
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About a week ago the Minister of Education of Jordan joined me in an address to the university community on the importance of academic freedom. The Minister explained that academic freedom is important to universities and colleges because it means that students can choose their own courses, take their own courses at any time without fear of being disciplined or punished for violating the law. He also emphasized the need to ensure that the course content is safe and free from any content that could harm students. That the new laws require universities to provide certain information to students will still remain effective. The government and universities are working together to ensure that the laws are in compliance with international standards.
The date of the address was Thursday, November 20, 2015.
London
The Bank of England
in the city of London.
The works. Pro
edition. 1980.
although us since
Journalism Professors To Attend Conference
PETER L. WESTMAN
ELMER F. BETH
Professors Elmer F. Beth, Gordon A. Sabine, and Emil L. Telfel will attend a joint convention of the American Association of Teachers of Journalism and the American Association of Schools and Departments of Journalism to be held Thursday, Friday, and Saturday in Lexington, Ky.
Professor Beth will make a report to the convention as editor of the Journalism Bulletin, a quarterly magazine published by the American Association of Teachers of Journalism. He also is a member of the time and place committee for the next convention and the committee on curriculum for the council on education for journalism.
Reading 100 Books To Be Basic Rule Of New College
PETER CALVIN
Pittsfield, Mass. (UP)—A daring educational innovation based on "the 100 best books of ancient and modern thought" will spread from Maryland to Pittsfield by September, 1947, when 300 students will attend a new college operated by "Liberal Arts, Inc."
It was Dr. Barr who introduced the organized reading of 100 volumes of the best from Homer to the present day at St. John's college in Annapolis, Md., in 1937. He has resigned as president of that institution to found the offshoot here.
EMIL L. TELFEL
The property already includes about 30 buildings, including an inn and dormitories, where the late John E. Persons, a New York lawyer, maintained a home for fresh air children.
The new institution to be established on a 700-acre estate fronting for nearly a mile on Stockbridge Lake, will be headed by Dr. Stringfellow Barr, who largely is credited with this new approach to liberal education.
A non-denominational college for men, the new school will have a maximum enrollment of 300, with a faculty of about 30. The entire college course will be devoted to the study of prescribed books, with no conventional college departments.
Endowed with $4,500,000 by Paul W. Mellon, son of the late secretary of the treasury Andrew W. Mellon, the new Liberal Arts college will be situated on the old Dan R. Hanna estate, about a mile and a half from Tanglewood, the home of Serge Koussitviky's Berkshire Festival.
Professor Telfel will be secretary of a round table discussion on specialized reporting.
12. Million Dozen Bras And Corsets Produced
New York. (UP)—The foundation industry, representing a total annual business of approximately $160,000,000, produced more than 12,000,000 dozen garments during 1946, according to Fletcher D. Dodge, executive vice president of the Corset and Brassiere Association of America. This is an increase of 15 per cent over 1945 production, which totalled 10,382,000 dozen.
Dodge stated that during 1947 "the industry, will turn energy which has been expended in complying with OPA regulations before de-control toward satisfying consumer wants and developing potential markets."
T. C. Rythe, superintendent of the University Press, will attend the Wichita convention of the Kansas Press association Friday and Saturday.
Food Prices Due To Drop, Grocery Head Says
New York. (UP)—Food prices are at their peak and should drop early this year, according to Paul S. Willis, president of the Grocery Manufacturers of America.
Willis told a hearing of the New York State legislative committee on nutrition that "greater quantities of food and lower prices" could be expected in 1947 if the food industry had industrial peace.
Berlin (UP)—Lt. Gen. Lucius D. Clay, newly appointed successor to Gen. Joseph T. McNarney as American military governor in Germany, said today he planned no drastic changes in occupation policy in the American zone. American headquarters will be in Berlin.
No German Policy Change
Russia Slashes Budget, Releases Excess Workers
Moscow. (UP)—Russia has begun to slash its administrative spending and streamline its government.
The objective is two-fold: to reduce expenditures and, by combing out unneeded personnel, swell the number of workers available to industry, commerce and agriculture.
This intention, and its scope, was first outlined during the October meeting of the Supreme Soviet by Minister of Finance Arseni G. Zverev and echoed during the three-day session by other ministers and deputies.
"The ministries and administrations must economize most strictly in spending money on the administrative apparatus." Mr. Zverev said. "However, it still can be seen that non-productive expenses are made, especially for the upkeep of a swollen network of supply and selling offices, of various factory representations, etc.
Within two weeks of Mr. Zverev's announcement, the dismissal of I. M. Slatin, vice minister of technical cultures for the entire USSR, pointed up the sincerity of the intentions.
"Serious attention must be given to the abolition of unnecessary institutions and organizations, to the correction of the structure and staffs, and to the maximum economy in administrative expenses."
The Ministry of State Control's investigators had found that Mr. Slatin, instead of reducing his department's expenditures, had hired 46 more persons and, to prevent liquidation of unfilled posts, had promoted ten persons from low-paid to high-paid posts.
Seriousness of this crime was emphasized by Pravda's reference to it as "deceit of the state."
Pravda editorialized that the government's economy plans were meeting with "inertness and bureaucratic resistance" on the part of some department heads who were "helping on more sectors, departments, administrations . . . and surrounding themselves with a mass of assistants, secretaries, typists."
Suede
HUNTER
$9.95
with persuasion
... by RHYTHM STEP SHOE DEPT.
Weaver
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five
day days five
25 words or less 35c 65c 90c
additional words 1c 2c 3c
Three days
65c
2c
Lost
BROWN SUITCASE, initialized J. N. Mc.
Dropped from taxi between Santa Fe station and campus. If found, please call Mary Ann McClure, 267. -9-
BOX containing shoes, camera and my
phones. M.S. Jones, 2580M. Reward.
Mrs. K. C. Jones, 2580M. Reward.
-9 GOLD Sheaffer, ball point fountain pen
house. ball point house. McClure,
957. Reward.
-10
Found
SHEAFFER Pencil in room 107 of Journalism bldg. Owner may have same by identifying and paying for this ad. Phone ONE NEW TIRE CHAIN. Owner may have by identifying and paying for this call. Call 2205W. -9-
For Sale
8 M.M. Eastman Kodak movie camera with leather case and with f 1.9 lens plus additional 9 m.m. f 2.5 wide angle lens for Hale after 2.00 SPARTUS 127 mm. film leather case and 7 rolls of film, 1 roll Kodacolor. $20 Britt Brown. 2321-M.-8 SLIGHTLY USED ice skates, all sizes, in good condition. Call George Tamblyn. 3334, between 7 and 10 p.m. -9 BED, mattress, and springs. Three drawer mirror. Also little used two-burner bot-lium and large briefcase. See at .16 West 13th.
1936 FORD. Ford deluxe in very good condition. Radio, heater, good tires, original paint. See at 1332 Connecticut after five. -10%.
New DUPLEX for sale. 5 rooms each unit.
Immediate occupancy. Phone 1568-J.-10-
STATION Wagon. 1940 Ford deluxe. Call
2273-J., 1632 Mass. with sterling
bell. Excellent. Silver with excellent
silver bell. Excellent condition. Ex-
berry B33, 577
Wanted
WANTED To rent. Close to campus.
single or double room for Education
senior. Call 1562-R.
-10-
Business Services
MICROSCOPES. Colorimeters, balances,
microimaging instruments cleaned and repaired.
Microscopy Instruments Victor 918, Technical Instruments Ser-
ment II., Kansas City. Mo. F. Rej-
mites.
Transportation
HIGH POWER, high fidelity public address system for rent. Can be used for speeches, entertaining, record dances, etc.
Call Black, phone 3338. -13-
PHOTO-EXACT Copies, discharge and valuable papers. Fast service. Low price. Round Center Drug Co., 801 Mass. Apt. 2, on Lane F, 14. August, flower, Kansas. -JI6-
COURT HOUSE LUNCH
Meals - Short Orders
Sandwiches
Open 5:30-12:30
WANTED. Round trip rides to Hutchin-
ton. Round trip each Friday after 10:
Call 1962-R.
WURLITZER
PHONOGRAPHS
FOR PARTY RENTALS
Used Juke Box Records For Sale
John H. Emick
1014 Mass. Phone 343
DE SOTO
APPROVED
SERVICE
LYMOURN
Suddie GALLAGHER FINE SERVICE MOTORS GREAT CARS
Buddy GALLAGHER
Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. SQUARE DEAL
A
NOW
A Bachelor's Laundry Service
The Acme Cleaners take this opportunity to announce the opening of their Bachelor's Laundry Service.
MEN-We have installed the latest and most modern equipment in our laundry department and are ready to take care of your laundry needs.
Tired of sewing on buttons?
Wearing socks with holes?
Send them to us. We will take care of them tor you.
At Popular Prices Rough Dry 10c lb. Shirts 12c
We also do Dry Cleaning for both men and women.
YOUR FIRST STOP DOWN THE HILL
ACME
Bachelor's Laundry and Dry Cleaners 1111 Mass. Phone 646
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 8, 1947
From Left To Right—Two Feet
1844 - KANSAS CITY, MO. HOTEL #20071000 MOV. 1844
24"
As someone once said, what's one man's meat is another man's swordfish. But this is a real sword—nothing fishy about it—and it's bad adventure that not even a Japanese sumarai slitter could equal. Twenty-four inches long, it measures 17 inches from the tip of the blade to the handle—just a tasty snack for after supper, perhaps. Maybe you remember that Elden Tefft, Lawrence junior in the College, is an innocent though adventuresome lad, and maybe you'll connect his picture (printed here Tuesday) with this shot. There'll be another tomorrow as the scene unfolds. You'll find it right here.
Venom-Gathering 'Seasonal' Work For Indian Ravanjas, Dewan Says
In India, men sometimes pursue unusual hobbies.
Take the ravanja, for instance. He charms snakes, according to Inder Mohan Dewan, K.U. engineering student from India, and although not all ravanias charm snakes as a hobby, they use the same methods.
Like the madari (magician), the ravanja considers his musical pipe an indispensable piece of equipment, for the pipe and his musical talent are
all that stand between him and death from the bite of a poisonous snake.
Snakes are awakened from the baskets by the ravani's music, Dewan said. The ravani draws a small boundary, about eight by 12 feet, within which the snakes are kept. Some charms wear gloves or remove the creature's fangs when entertaining crowds, he said.
"With some ravantjas, the work is a profession, and they come from a long line of snake charmers," Dewan said.
By playing a hypnotic tune on his pipe, the ravanna casts a spell over the snake and as long as he can keep the creature hypnotized, he is not in danger. The music is far less complicated than that used for the Indian rope trick because snakes can be hypnotized more easily than spectators who are 'put under' in the rope trick. Dewan explained.
"Some ravanjas ply their trade at a government institute in the southern part of the country where they extract venom from poisonous snakes for medicinal purposes," Dewan recalled.
Venom is used to treat an Indian disease similar to leprosy, he said.
Once the snake is charmed, it will stay in a rigid, attacking posture while the ravanna squeezes it just below the head and drains the venom into a test tube. It will add "batcatch" of venom, however, and after the operation, he is "firef" from the institute and can return to the jungle.
"The institute takes good care of snakes and feeds them well before taking the venom," Dewan said. (This does not mean, however, that snakes are so well cared for that they get loneless for the institute and come crawling back on their stomachs to beg for their old jobs back, he cautioned).
Employers on the institute's snake forms do not dock the ravanja's pay if the snake bites him and wastes its venom. Dewan said.
Most frequently used snake is the cobra, a jungle snake about 10 feet long, he said.
"Men are hard to find for this sort of work, but there are plenty of snakes," he explained.
Venom-gathering is seasonal work, according to Dewan. The work doesn't last long and workers are rather poorly paid.
Waffle Supper Soon
The annual waffle supper of the Home Economics club, to be prepared by the Foods III class, is scheduled for Jan. 16, Wilda Horton, president, announced.
Six Students Featured In Fine Arts Recital
Four voice students, one pianist, and one violinist will be heard at 3 p.m. tomorrow in a fine arts student recital in Frank Strong auditorium.
A piano solo, "Prelude No. 1
Danseuses de Delphes (Debussy),
will be played by Jack Labowitz.
Marion Alburty will play "Slavonic Dance, E minor" (Dvorak-Kreisler), a violin solo.
Vocal selections on the program are:
"Silent Strings," (Granville Bansock) and "When I Think Upon the Maidens." (Michael Head), by Louis Cunningham.
"The Little Shepherd's Song," (Watts), and "Children of the Moon," (Warren), by Joan Bennett.
"Art Thou Troubled?" (Handel), by Elaine Rodgers.
"I'm Herbst." (Franz), and "Lachen und Weinen," (Schubert), by Ruth Reisner.
The University A Cappella chair of 108 voices, under the direction of Dean D. M. Swarthout, will give a program of unaccompanied choral numbers at 9:30 tonight over KFKU.
It is a race against possible cold weather to come. Wells in the Olathe area are able to supply only a trickle toward replenishing the reserve in the 100,000 gallon storage tank.
Fuel Oil Increases To Four Day Supply
At 3 p.m. Tuesday the tank, which will run the University for about 10 days in cold weather, stood at 7/17 of its maximum capacity. This is approximately a four day supply.
The University supply of stand-by fuel is still critically low.
The central heating plant is burning natural gas at the present time, but private needs require that this must be shut off in favor of fuel oil when cold weather strikes.
McCracken Elected
Marshall Worries Europe's Capitals
Miss Anna D. McCracken, University of Kansas bureau of correspondence stury, was elected secretary-treasurer of the Southwestern philosophical conference at its annual meeting in Dallas, Texas. Miss McCracken will also edit the newsletter published by the conference, which covers an 11-state area.
Observers Expect Change In Policy
London (UP) — The capitals of western Europe were uncertain and anxious today about the appointment of Gen. George C. Marshall to succeed Secretary of State James F. Byrnes.
Many government officials, diplomats, and newspapers anticipated changes in American foreign policy. They viewed Mr. Marshall as a comparatively unknown diplomatic element, whereas Mr. Byrnes's attitude on major European issues was well known.
Generally, observers looked to the Moscow conference in March as the first big proving ground of Mr. Marshall's policy.
Immediate reaction to the White House announcement, which reached Europe at Midnight, was sharp surprise. Premier Clement Attlee and Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin had no comment when the news was phoned to them. London morning newspapers headlined the news in their late editions after inserting the flash in their early "stop press" columns.
The American embassy in London appeared flabbergasted. Apparently it had not been informed in advance.
A foreign office sokesman at a press conference officially expressed British regret at Mr. Byrnes' resignation.
"We have cooperated with him in a very friendly spirit over a considerable period of time, and his resignation is a matter of lively regret in London," the spokesman said.
"General Marshall is, of course, no stranger to us. As American chief of staff he also cooperated closely with the British chiefs of staff, and we look forward to our association with him."
The London Daily Worker, Communist party newspaper, banned, "Truman sacks Byrnes." Its Washington correspondent said Mr. Byrnes was fired because he was regarded as "an old Roosevelt man." The Worker story said Mr. Marshall had an "obvious prejudice" against the Chinese Communists.
In Vienna, an Austrian government spokesman regretted that Mr. Byrnes had resigned just when Big Four negotiations on Austria's status were pending.
The Moscow radio broadcast the Byrnes - Marshall announcement shortly after noon but made no comment. A United Press dispatch from Moscow said the story did not appear in Soviet morning newspapers. This probably was due to the late hour it broke.
Students Register This Week For Western Civilization Quiz
All students in Western Civilization planning to take the final examination Jan. 18 must notify the registrar's office by Saturday.
Lake Success. (UF)—The sudden switch in America's foreign policy leadership left United Nations diplomats wondering today whether the United States will alter its policy on the atomic bomb.
This is the first semester that students have been required to register for this examination.
United Nations Fear U.S. Atomic Policy
Final examinations for medical students will begin Jan. 30, Dr. O. O. Stoland announced today.
Atomic policy was at the center of speculation which surged up with the surprise resignation of secretary of state James F. Byrnnes and the nomination of General of the Army George C. Marshall to succeed him.
This special schedule is necessary in order that College students taking medical courses may adhere to the regular final program already set up. Instructors will tell their classes where the tests will take place.
Schedule Announced For Medical Finals
L. G. Templin, instructor in the sociology department and a former missionary in India, will lead the discussion at the Y.M.C.A. movie forum to be hold in the Pine room of the Union at 4 p.m. tomorrow. Two films, "Our Shrinking World" and Frank Sinatra's "The House I Live In" will be shown.
The speculation was heightened by the fact that only three days earlier Bernard M. Baruch, author of the American program for world atomic control resigned as chief United States delegate on the UN atomic energy commission. The 76-year-old statesman quit with a plea that this country preserve its atomic secret and that its atomic plan is adopted. So far, only Russia among the major countries has objected to the Baruch plan.
The schedule is as follows;
British officials, after getting over their initial surprise, expressed the opinion that the turnabout in the United States department of state would cause no change in American policy on he issues before the UN.
They declined to be quoted by name, but British representatives left little doubt they felt the new Republican congress would have more of a hand in American foreign policy than Marshall himself.
The schedule is as follows:
Anatomy 163—1:00, Jan. 31.
Anatomy 161—1:00, Feb. 1.
Biochemistry 150—1:30, Feb. 3.
Histology 187 and Developmental
Anatomy 168—8:00, Feb. 4.
Christian Science organization will hold its regular weekly meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Danforth chapel. Members of faculty and students invited to attend.
Topographical Anatomy—9:00, Jan. 30.
Official Bulletin
Physiology 170-8:00, Feb. 4
Physiology 271-9:00, Jan. 31 Immunity 151-8:00, Feb. 1.
Archery club will practice tonight in the Military Science building from 4 to 6 p.m.
Jay James will meet at 5 p.m. today in room 200 Frank Strong.
***
Jan. 8, 1947
Lambda chapter of Alpha Phi Omega will meet at 8:30 p.m. tomor-row in the Kansas room of the Union.
K. U. Dames will meet at 8 tonight in the Little Theater of Green hall. Prof. John Ise will be the guest speaker. The beginners bridge originally scheduled has been cancelled until Jan. 15.
Student forums board, will present the second in the series of foreign and historical movies Friday at 7:30 p.m. in Fraser theater. Title of film to be shown is "Carnival in Flanders". No admission charge.
The elections committee of the All-Student Council will meet in 220 Frank Strong at 5 p.m. Friday.
Kappa chapter of Phi Sigma will hold its monthly meeting at moon Friday in 301 Snow hall. Zoology department in charge of the program. All members are advised to bring their lunches. Coffee will be served.
A final examination in Western Civilization will be given Jan. 18, from 1 to 5 p.m., in 426 Lindley hall. All students who plan to take this examination must register at the registrar's office between Jan. 6 and 11.
---
Graduate record examination Feb 2, 4. Applications may be secured on 2A Frank Strong.
News ... of the World
Veterans Bonus Drive On As Four Bills Are Readied
Washington (UP)—A new drive for a veterans bonus was underway in congress today.
Of the four, Representative Stephen Pace's measure is the most generous. He would pay a veteran $5 for each day of overseas service and $4 for each day of service in this country.
Back Poy, Closed Shop Bills Planned By Republicans
Washington. (UP) — Republican leaders in both the senate and house pushed ahead today with plans for new labor legislation.
Four bonus bills already were in the house hopper despite President Truman's statement that the government program for aid to veterans is complete except for minor adjustments.
In the senate, high priority was given legislation which would overturn lawsuits claiming nearly four billion dollars in back overtime pay for portal-to-portal time.
In the house, there were strong indications that Republicans would write a bill to ban or restrict the closed union shop.
Cash Bonus, No GI Bill Will Be Aim of VFW
Dallas (UP)—Plans to replace the GI bill of rights with an outright cash bonus were outlined today by Louis E. Starr, commander-in-chief of the Veterans of Foreign Wars. Mr. Starr pointed out that the Veterans Administration had furnished VFW officials with information that the GI bill was benefiting only 13 per cent of veterans and has come one billion dollars.
Russia May Join Olympics
Alaskan Volcano Erupts
London. (UP)—The way was open today for Russia to move toward Olympic participation, with the international amateur athletic federation on record as eager for Russian application for membership in the IAAF.
Akutan Island, Alaska. (UP)—Navy and coast guard vessels prepared today to evacuate 75 white and native residents of this island whose homes lay directly in the path of a red-hot lava stream thrown up by 4,200 high Akutan volcano. The eruption began Sunday.
British Arrest Irgunists
Jerusalem. (UP)—British police today arrested 18 persons, at least three of whom were reported to be ranking leaders of the Irgun Zvai Leumi underground organization, in the first British action of its sort against renewed underground activity in Palestine.
Defense For Paris Rests
New York. (UP)—The defense rested its case without calling a witness in the Alvin J. Paris bribery trial today and defense attorney John McKim Minton began his summation to the jury immediately after the opening of court.
Bombs For Ex-Nazis
Frankfurt (UP)—A U.S. army spokesman announced today that a bomb exploded during the night in the Nuerberg denazification court where Franz von Papen and Hans Fritzsche are scheduled for trial.
The announcement said there were no casualties.
A Perfect Juror
Houston (UP)—S. V. Smith, 50-year-old cattleman, answered 2 summons to appear in court for possible jury duty.
During the routine questioning yesterday, Mr. Smith was asked if he knew anything about the case, a murder trial.
He said he knew quite a bit about it. "I saw it," he said.
RY 8,1947
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University DAILY KANSAN
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Seven Women Will Compete For' Jinx' Title
Finalists in the contest for title of "Jinx Rasputinburg," who will rule the Slobbovian Stomp Jan. 11, were announced today by the faculty selection committee.
Seven women were chosen by the three-man committee on the basis of photographs, and "Jinx" will be chosen from this group by personal interviews.
The candidates selected were Betty Boling, Delta Gamma; Martha
SHELBY
EMILY BURGERT
Other candidates for the title were Jane Anderson, Helen Atkisson, Anita Bedell, Barbara Byrd, Joann Clough, Helen Dietzel, Marilyn Erway, Geraldine Franklin, Shirley French, Eileen Horner, Sydney Lettson, and Marjorie Stark.
The presentation will be made at the intermission of the Stomp, with a program typical of Slobbovian culture.
Bonehake, Kappa Alpha Theta;
Emily Burgert, Templem; Constance
Cloughley, Chi Omega; Bernadene
Dawkins, Foster; Wanda Dumler,
Alpha Delta Pl; and Billie Dunn,
Sigma Kappa.
Sponsored by the sophomore class, the dance will be sweater and skirt.
Directory Report to ASC
The joint student-faculty committee, organized to help solve the problem of who pays the bill for the student directories, will submit a written recommendation to the student council tonight.
Writer-Professor To Lecture Here
Wallace Fowle, faculty member at Yale and Chicago universities, will speak on "Myth in Modern Poetry" at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas room of the Union.
Professor Fowlie is author of "Clowns and Angels," a collection of essays on modern French literature, and has published critical interpretations of such French authors as Proust, Valery, and Jules Romain.
Dr. Fowlie is a professor of French at Yale and a visiting professor of humanities at Chicago. His lecture is the first of two this year sponsored by the department of English. The meeting is open to the public without charge.
The second lecture of the series will be given next semester by Robert Penn Warren, professor of English at the University of Minnesota. Professor Warren is author of the novel, "All the King's Men."
One of his essays on Provost's "Mannon Lescant" will appear in the next issue of the Western Review, critical journal edited by K.U. Professors Ray B. West and R. W. Stallman.
Nelson Awarded Press Scholarship
Miss Betty Jean Nelson, '46, has won the journalism scholarship awarded by the Women's Press club of New York City. The scholarship entitles her to tuition in the graduate school of journalism at Columbia University, and carries with it honorary membership in the Women's Press Club. The chief requirement of the award, made on a competitive basis, is that she show great promise as a journalist and writer.
“He's a K.U. speech grad."
She also took first place in the Carruth Poetry Contest.
Last year, Miss Nelson, a major in the English department won the Edna Osborne Whitcomb award for excellence in creative prose writing.
By Bibler
10¢
KU
W. DAILY KANSAS
Little Man On Campus
M.U.-K.U. Basketball Movies Set for Sunday
Motion pictures of the K.U.M.U. basketball game will be shown in the Kansas room of the Union at 6:30 p.m., Sunday, Lois Thompson, Sunday activities chairman, said teday.
During the showing, Coach F. C. Allen will comment on the pictures and team play.
The glass-blowing services of Mr Fred Rustenbach are available to all schools and departments of the University, according to an announcement by the Research Foundation. Appointments can be made with him in his office in the Engineering Experimental Station building.
Mr. Glass-Blower Available To All Schools, Departments
'Enjoy Life' Is Ex-Fighter's Advice
Dad Hasn't Battered Nose, Bundren Says
"Dad had the idea that if they couldn't hit you, they couldn't beat you," says Gracia Lou Bundren, College junior, about her father, Herman Bundren of Topeka, who was a professional boxer for 15 years.
Although Mr. Eundren now owes his 160-acre farm southeast of Topeka and raises Shorthorn cattle, Belgian horses, and spotted Poland China hogs, his heart is still in the ring. His daughter has inherited his fighting spirit—her eyes sparkle when she speaks of her father's boxing houts.
Lou believes her father's theory and points that 354 bouts from 1921 to 1936 left no marks on him, no cauliflower ears, no smashed nose. His only injury was a broken bone in his right hand which has long since healed.
Herman Bundren, after attending school in Enid, Okla., went to work as a clerk in the Wichita State bank in 1919. He became a fighter by accident. Because he had a desk job, he joined the Y.M.C.A. for a little exercise.
"I was boxing there one evening when an old-time fighter took an interest in me and taught me a few
things. So I went on from there, he said.
During the depression he boxed for $600 or $700 a fight; the same bouts would now pay about $1800 or $2000. He fought and beat some of the best fighters of that time—Dane Shade, Roy Williams, Ray Tramble, Vince Gergoine, Abie Bain, Billy Fosk, Hasken Hansen, Donny Devlin, Bert Colema, and Ambrose Palmer.
Lou was a baby when her father took his little family to California. It was there that he received an offer to fight the middleweight champion of Australia. His wife and two daughters remained in San Francisco when he sailed. But when he arrived in Australia, he found that the middleweight was giving him the cold shoulder.
He relates that he wanted to be a second Jim Corbett since Corbett, too, had been a bank clerk.
Nothing daunted, Bundren proceeded to accomplish that very task. Fighting under the name of Kid Herman, he bowled over nearly 20 straight Australian foes, over half of
"Get a reputation," was the
champ's ultimatum.
Back in the U.S. Bundron fought under the name of Jack Kilbourne until he retired from the ring and bought his farm. By that time he had boxed in every state in the Union, in Sydney, Melbourne, and Brisbane, Australia.
There was no way out for the Australian title-holder. He accepted a match with Bundren and the Wichita boy walloped the champ and captured the title in the same way he won his other matches, a vicious right to the jaw.
them by knock-outs.
Lou says that her father is super-
sitious and Mr. Bundren admits it.
Looking back over the years, Mr. Bundren considers himself fortunate. Lou smiling attributes his success to philosophy, which he claims is divine.
"Most boys in the boxing racket are a little that way. In the ring I always put the left glove on first. I don't know why but that left glove always went on first. And to this day, I always put my left work glove and my left shoe on first. And a black cat is poison to me."
"Enjoy life. It is later than you think."
Death Mask, 'Boom' On Forensic Show
"Revue of 1947" will be presente in Fraser Theater at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday. The program, sponsored by the Forensic league, will present the best and most entertaining speech selections given this past year as chosen by student members of the league.
The "revenue" is a new type of presentation at the University. Orville Roberts will be master of ceremonies for the program which will present a "new slant" on speech making, by using demonstrations with nearly all of the presentations.
The seven numbers on the program will include humor, educational demonstrations and some short talks. One highlight will be when Elden Teft makes a "death mask" of some faculty members. Another is the "real" explosion that takes place during Ernest Wildhagen's fire prevention demonstration.
Others on the program will be Bernice Brady, who will "die" on the stage; Wallace McGehee, who will demonstrate "How Not to make a Speech"; Jean Moore will give an oration that has won in contests in 11 states; Russell Mammel with a question on Constitutional government, and Kenneth Beasley will present a problem concerning the Mississippi river.
Harvey Elected Prexy Of University Players
University Players, the new dramatic organization on the campus, elected officers at their second meeting Monday. Those elected were president, Harold Harvey; vicepresident, Alice McDonnell; secretary-treasurer, Vivian Rogers; publicity co-chairman, Jack Morton and Margaret Gosney.
Members adopted the constitution presented at the last meeting, with a few minor changes. About 24 members will attend the Theater Guild presentation of "Henry V" with Laurence Olivier in Kansas City Saturday.
Nine Building Contracts Given To University
D. A. Patterson, assistant project supervisor who will superintend the setting up job, will move into his office in 418 Lindley hall today, Mr. Nichols said.
Contracts for moving and setting up on the University campus nine buildings from Lake City, Mo., and Coffeyville by July 1, will be awarded by the Kansas City office of the Federal Works administration within a few days, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, announced today.
Fight one-story buildings will be moved from the army air base at Coffeyville, and one two-story, 128 by 61 foot building from an ordnance plant at Lake City to be set up in line with and west of the quonset hut behind Frank Strong hall for classroom use.
The other buildings:
Washington (UP)—Incoming secretary of State George C. Marshall will be called to Capitol Hill to outline his foreign policy views before he leaves for the Moscow conference, it was learned today.
two, 25 by 172 feet, north of Frank Strong hall, one for the Veterans administration and Western civilization, the other for secretarial training and general classrooms.
Two, 25 by 120 feet, south of Blake hall for laboratories.
Senate foreign relations committeemen indicated interest in questioning him on subjects ranging from relations with Russia to western hemisphere defense policies.
One hospital annex, 25 by 172 feet,
knee below and west of Watkins-
pengin.
A gymnasium, 151 by 88 feet, south of the hill and east of the west Sunnyside project.
One "T" shaped building 136 by 97 feet behind Lindley hall to be used as a cafeteria.
One, 100 by 25 feet, south of the Military Science building for army ordnance.
One. A report to the president on China and decisions on what steps to take next in that war-torn area. Should the United States continue mediation efforts?
Marshall Will Outline Policy To Senate
In the meantime, General Marshall was expected to move slowly in reshuffling top personnel in the state department and in recommend the changes in tactics on policies. One exception was China where he has personally observed the chaotic situation for 13 months.
Three major immediate problems
Marshall as Mr. Baxter's, successor.
Two. Preparations for the Moscow conference where the German and Austrian treaty negotiations will begin and he will face his first test with Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov.
Three. Selection of a personal staff and possibly top assistants if he is unable to persuade some of the present ones to remain in their jobs for a while.
Overton to Take Bar Exam
D. William Overton, third year law student, will take the state bar examination in February.
WEATHER
Kansas----Fair today, tonight and Friday. No important temperature change. Low tonight 25-32.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 9,1947
Tocka. (UP)—Cost of state and local government in Kansas is approaching an annual figure of a quarter of a billion dollars, the Kansas Government journal said today.
Kansas Budgets Taxes Going Up
John G. Stutz, executive director of the league, said high budgets are reflected in the 1946 general property tax levies. For cities of the first class, the rate for all purposes (including state, county, school and city) averaged 44.04, or 2.29 mills, 5.5 per cent higher than in 1945. The average total tax rates were 38.76, or 2.84 mills, 7.9 per cent higher for cities of the second class, and 3.4 mills, 2.7 higher for cities of the third class.
In its January issue, the organ of the League of Kansas Municipalities said that budget estimates for 1947 were at a record high.
The journal listed an anticipated expenditure of $213,443,625 in budgets for the state, county, city, school, township and other subdivisions.
The figure was 16 per cent above the 1046 expenditures, which were some $5\frac{1}{2}$ million dollars under budget estimates made at this time last year.
Thief Collects Radios
Guerraetta, Olda. (UP)–Police in this small city searched for a “mad-about-music” thief after receiving reports of a theft-a-day of radios for three consecutive days. The thief visited a different store each day. On one of the days, two radio thefts also were reported in nearby Okhalque. Police said the thief concentrated on portables.
Medical School Offers Refresher Course
A four-day refresher course in physical medicine will be presented Monday through Thursday at the University hospitals in Kansas City. The postgraduate medical course, which also includes a program for physical and occupational therapists, is sponsored by the School of Medicine in cooperation with the Kansas Medical society and the State Board of Health.
Enrollments have been received from physicians and therapists from medical centers and hospitals in Oklahoma and Missouri as well as Kansas, according to H. G. Ingham, director of the extension division which is handling administrative details.
Periods are scheduled for the use of physical medicine, for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis, fractures, postural defects, poliomyelitis, neurological disorders, spinal cord injuries, and surgery.
One class will be devoted to the physiologic effects of smoking alone as compared to effects after the taking of alcohol or after a large meal.
Clinics, demonstrations, and training films will be used for instruction as well as lectures.
Luntern Subs For Neon
Chester, Fa. (UP)—Harry Mudrick didn't let the coal strike dimout affect the flow of business to his drug store. He put a kerosene lamp outside when his neon sign was darkened.
University Daily Kansan
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year. (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the school year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holiday and annual periods. Entered as second class master Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
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Regular chassis lubrication will make your car last longer! Drive in today.
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200 Will Graduate In February
Between 175 and 200 seniors are expected to be graduated in February, James Hitt, registrar, said today.
"We have 105 students on tentative lists; however, many of them will not make their grades, while others will find that they can be graduated," he continued.
Almost half of those receiving diplomas will be graduated from the engineering school. Mr.Hitt said that between 1,000 and 1,200 students are expected to be graduated in June.
Hong Kong (UP)—Jockeys who continued racing during the Japanese occupation will be barred from the track until their qualifications are re-examined, the Hong Kong Jockey Club has decided at a recent meeting. Only four Chinese jockeys were listed as riders in the forthcoming meet, which opens around Chinese New Year in mid-January.
Age No Barrier
Lock Haven, Pa. (UP) - Age is no barrier to hunting in the case of 81-year-old W.H. K.narr. The elderly nimrod brought his lifetime bag total to 30 deer this season when he killed a six-point, 140-pound buck.
Collaborationists Barred
Eye
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Good Associations
Good Associations
mean a lot to newspapers.The Daily Kansan is now proud to announce that it has been accepted for membership in the
Inland Daily Press Association
★★
The Inland is the oldest and largest organization of its kind in the country. The Daily Kansan's membership means this paper is being accepted throughout the United States for its high professional standards and conscientious presentation of the top news of every day. Only 10 other college dailies belong.
JARY 9,1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 9.1947
PAGE THREE
ES
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COEDS' CORNER
Doctors Degrees, Research Work Take Only Part Of Russell's Time
And she likes golf, too.
Mrs. Barbara Russell looked up from her microscope with bright, sincere eyes and modestly remarked that she is working for her doctor of philosophy degree in bacteriology and her doctor of medicine degree.
Besides, she's doing research work and housewife's chores for her husband, Robert Russell, assistant instructor of chemistry.
Mrs. Russell, who formerly lived in Kansas City, started as a laboratory instructor in bacteriology in 1943 at the University, while her husband was a laboratory instructor in chemistry.
As for her work piling up, she said,
"Sometimes we just get working so hard we forget about it, and just hope."
Her interests, though, are not one-sided as they might be with so much work. She is fond of classical music, and has her own record collection. She enjoys cooking, and—she likes golf, too.
J. A. C.
Official Bulletin
Jan. 9, 1947
MRS. BARBARA RUSSELL
Deutscher Verein, heute um 4:30 in 402 Fraser.
---
Archery Club will have a short business meeting at 5 p.m. today in room 203 Robinson gym.
Two films, Frank Sinatra's academy award winning "The House I Live In" and "Our Shrinking World" will be shown at the YMCA movie forum at 4 p.m. in the Pine room of the Union today. Following their showing, L. G. Templin of the sociology department will lead a short discussion of the films.
Modern Choir will meet at 7:30 tonight in Frank Strong auditorium.
Chemistry Club will meet at 4 p.m. today in room 305 Bailey Laboratories. The program will consist of movies on synthetic rubber. All members requested to attend.
- * *
Christian Science organization will meet at 7:30 tonight in Danforth Chapel. Members of faculty and students are invited to attend.
Lambda Chapter of Alpha Phi Omega will meet at 8.30 tonight in the Kansas room of the Union building.
YMCA intramural basketball team practice at the Community building from 5:30 to 7:30 tonight. There will be a challenge game with the A.P.O.'s.
Kappa Phi will meet at 7 Friday night at the Methodist church. Pledge meeting and exam at the church at 8.
Kappa Chapter of Phi Sigma will hold its regular monthly meeting at noon tomorrow in 301 Snow hall. The zoology department is in charge of the program. All members advised to bring their lunches. Coffee will be served.
The Student Forums Board will present the second in the series of foreign and historical movies at 7:30 p.m. in Fraser theater. Title of the film to be shown is "Carnival in Flanders". No admission charge.
The elections committee of the All-
Student Council will meet in room
220 Frank Strong at 5 p.m. Friday.
Petitions with 50 signers must be turned in by Sunday noon to Lois Thompson, Miller hall, or at the ISA office, 228 Frank Strong, for candidates for president, business manager, ASC representative, or class representatives in the ISA election Jan. 27.
The Union Sunday Activities committee will meet at 6:30 p.m. Monday at 1032 Kentucky for a social and business meeting.
The student court will hear cases concerning smoking rule violations (ASC Bill No. 8) at 7:00 p.m. tuesday in Green hall. The court will hear any students wishing to appeal fines for parking rule violations (ASC Bill No. 4) at 7:30 p.m.
Home Economics club waffle supper at 5 p.m. Jan. 16 for Home Economics club members only. Dues will be collected. Tickets are 50c and must be brought before 5 p.m. Tuesday in home economics office.
---
A final examination in Western Civilization will be given Saturday, Jan. 18 from 1 to 5 p.m. in 426 Lindley. All students who plan to take this examination must register their intention to do so at the Registrar's office some time before Saturday.
Graduate Record examination Feb 3 and 4. Applications may be secured in 2A Frank Strong hall.
Policeman Impounds Boss's Hound In Dallas Pound
Dallas. (UP)—Desk sergeant O.
T. Slaughter of the Dallas police
department blushed today every time
he saw a dog.
He answered a routine call and sent Patrolman E. J, Cameron to investigate.
A dog was reported disturbing the peace of a drug store.
Cameron placed the dog in the city pound and he reported to Slaughter that his mission was accomplished. The next day, Slaughter searched
Clark Will Speak At Harvard Meeting
Dr. Carroll D. Clark, chairman of the department of sociology, will report on a course in human relations, introduced recently at K.U. at a meeting at Harvard university this weekend, it was announced today.
That's right. It was in the city pound.
The next day Slaughter searched the city for his missing pet dog.
The meeting was called by Dean Wallace B. Donham, of the Harvard business school. Those attending have been selected from universities where experimental courses in "Human Relations as a Part of General education" were introduced, Dr. Clark said.
Dr. Clark spent his leave of absence last year at Harvard studying the subject. He will return to K.U. Tuesday.
Socially Speaking
Gamma Phi's Will Entertain
The pledge class of Gamma Phi Beta will entertain the Chi Omega and Alpha Delta Pi pledges with a tea from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. at the chapter house.
Delta Chi Pledges Entertain
***
The Alpha Chi Omega pledges were entertained Wednesday night with a dinner-dance given by the pledge class of Delta Chi at the chapter house.
Lambda Chi Alpha Has Dinner
Lambda Chi Alpha, national social fraternity, held a dinner party and business meeting Monday night at the Hearth. The speakers were Doyle Morgan, Indianapolis, Ind., traveling secretary of the organization, who spoke on the history and traditions of the fraternity, and Dean Henry Werner, who spoke on "What a Fraternity Should be." Dr. Ethan P. Allen and Philip A. Dergance, alumni, were guests.
Mr. Morgan will be the guest speaker at the next meeting, which will be held at 7 pm. Friday in Frank Strong hall.
Lutherans To Have Banquet
The annual formal banquet of Gamma Delta, University Lutheran society, will be held at 6:30 p.m. Saturday in the English room of the student union. Harold Dunklau of Leavenworth will be the guest speaker.
Follow-Up Inspection Of Houses This Week
"We Must Be the Home We Want" will be the theme of the Kappa Phi meeting at 7 p.m. tomorrow night in the Methodist church. Program leaders will be Jane Chase, Maxine Garrison, Barbara Call, Marjorie Ramsey, Eleanor Edgar, and Frances Johnson. Devotions will be by Venita Inloes. A apledmeeting and examination will follow the regular meeting.
Kappa Phi Meets
An inspection committee headed by Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, is completing a follow-up inspection of organized houses this week.
Letters have been sent to all the houses recommending improvements specified in the report of the state fire marshal, Dean Werner stated. As yet, no replies have been received by the committee.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 9,1947
SPOTLIGHT
SPORTS
By BOB DELLINGER (Daily Kansan Sports Editor)
"Pistol Pete" Reiser, star outfielder for the Brooklyn Dodgers, is complaining that he has been ignored by the king pins in the Dodger organization.
Pete says he has not heard from the Dodger management either before or after the recent operation on his arm, and he also said that Rickey would not even respond to his attempts to contact the Brooklyn boss.
Reiser's main complaint is that he wants to know if he is going to spend another year as a second-rater with the Bums, or if he is included in trading plans.
Dr. Hyland predicted that Reiser would be as good as ever after the operation, and if that's the case, it seems that Brooklyn is missing a good bet in not making sure of a star.
***
* *
Mel Ott, manager of the New York Giants, is getting tired of seeing the "third-helping spread" on his ball-players, and has "invited" 11 members of the squad to Mesa, Ariz., to get rid of a little of it.
Tami Mauriello gets started on the comeback trail against Jimmy O'Brien of Tampa, Fla. Tami is still considered the No. 1 contender, in spite of his 2:09 knockout by Louis.
Not all the players asked to meet him there Feb. 17 were "fat boys." Some of them, Otte, were living in Chicago with their leurs, that means that the hot baths there will help.
The players summoned included Ernie Lombardi, John Mize, Sid Gordon, and Bill Voiselle.
Babe Ruth, convalescing in a French hospital from a neck operation, is complaining of pains in the left side of his neck and face, but attendants said his general condition was the same.
**
Another Yankee great, Joe DiMaggio, was reported in satisfactory condition in Bet David hospital where he died. One spine removed from his left chest.
** **
Mel Harder, Cleveland curveballer, has signed with the Indians for his twentieth year of pitching duty.
The N.C.A.A. is concentrating on a study of football headgear construction to try and lessen the number and seriousness of head and spinal injuries. Maybe there'll be a revolutionary change in football helmets soon.
***
The University High Eagles, after five straight varsity losses, and six "B" squad losses, turned the trick against Lansing for the first win of the season.
The joker in the deck is that the Eagles picked one of the best teams in the league to dump. It seems that the high school picture is in as much of a mess as is the college cage situation.
Schnellbacher Is K.U. High Scorer
Lean Otto Schnellbacher, Jay-
hawker forward, is leading in the
present two-way race for Kansas
scoring honors. In 13 games he has
dumped in 160 points to lead both
in total and average.
Second in both categories is Charlie "Hawk" Black with 154 points in 13 contests, and he is followed by Ray Evans, Wendell Clark, Jack Eskridge, and Owen Peck.
All but Eskridge were members of last year's Big Six champion quintet. Peck is tied with the big freshman in average, but lags behind in total points.
Season record:
Player g tp avg av.1
Schnellbacher, f 13 160 12.31
Black, f 13 154 11.85
Evans, g 13 79 6.08
Clark, g 13 61 4.69
Eskridge, f- 12 40 3.33
Peck, c 9 30 3.33
Stramel, f 10 24 2.40
Ettinger, g 6 13 2.17
K.U.-O.U. Clash Tomorrow Means Comeback Start For Winner
Tomorrow's meeting between the Oklahoma Sooners and the Kansas Jayhawkers will be little more than a comeback starter for the winner, and will drop the loser deeper into the loop cellar.
Unlike other clashes between the two squads, games which usually have a major bearing on the conference lead, the game can put the winner no higher than a tie for second place. $ ^{ \textcircled{2}} $
and will dump the loser out of the league race for some time.
The two league leaders at the present time, Missouri and Kansas State, will meet Tuesday at Manhattan, but the Wildcats must first defeat Iowa State on the Cyclone court.
The Tigers from Columbia have two wins and no losses on the slate now, and will be idle over the week-end. Nebraska, with a 1-1 split, will also sit this one out.
The Sooner-Jayhawker clash will be the second meeting of the year between the two clubs. Kansas defeated Oklahoma, 51-45, in the semifinals of the All-College tournament at Oklahoma City, Dec. 27.
Nebraska, with two games under its belt, has the leading conference scorer in Claude Retherford who has hit 28 points.
Harold Howey of Kansas State dumped in 27 points in a single game to lead in average and run second in total points. Pippin of Missouri and Brown of Nebraska rank third with 20 points each in two games.
The scoring race to date:
Player, team pos g pts avg
Retherford, Nebraska f 2 18.4
Howey, Kansas State f 2 27 20.0
Pippin, Missouri f 2 27 10.0
Brown, Nebraska g 2 20 10.0
Courty, Oklahoma g 2 16 16.0
Jenkins, Missouri f 2 13 6.5
Black, Kansas f 1 12 12.0
Loisel, Nebraska g 2 12 6.0
Haynes, Missile c 2 11 5.1
College Frats Showing More Mature Outlook
Beckley, Calif. (UP)—Fraternities on the Berkeley campus of the University of California are showing a more mature outlook toward campus and world affairs than ever before, according to Dr. Hurford E. Stone, dean of students.
"Credit for this new attitude must go in large part to the veterans who have returned to the campus," said Dean Stone.
"It is not just an age of differential which marks the veteran." he continued, "but a more serious attitude toward university work and a more co-operative outlook on group living."
A survey of 1,977 members of 38 fraternities on the Berkeley campus showed individual chapter presidents rating the 1,568 veteran members superior to others in scholarship, seriousness of attitude and knowledge of, and interest in, current affairs, Dean Stone revealed.
Albuquerque, N.M. (UP)—"Ugh," was the reply of an elderly Indian when asked by Giles L. Mathews, deputy for the collector of internal revenue, how much he had earned.
Indian Discovers English In Hurry
Another "ugh" provided an answer to the question as to how much did the Indian raise or sell.
"You'll have to tell me," Mathews insisted. "Maybe you have a refund coming."
The two were working on the Indian's income tax form.
"How much, and when do I get it?" demanded the Indian, in perfect English.
Tip On Tooth Care
New York. (UP)—Fruit and fruit juices should be taken instead, instead of before, a meal to benefit the teeth, says Dr. Joseph F. Volker of Tufts College Dental school. He reports that citrus fruits, apples and raw vegetables are efficient cleansers to remove sugars and starches which cause tooth decay.
Sooner All-American
WRESTLING
Gerald Tucker, Oklahoma center who won All-American honors before entering the service, holds the Big Six scoring record of 175 points for a 10-game schedule. He will oppose K. U. shotmakers in the second conference game of the season for both teams tomorrow night at Norman.
Glancy Appointed Mechanics Instructor
Walter P. Glancy will become an instructor in the department of applied mechanics beginning with the second semester.
Mr. Glancy received a bachelor of science degree in mechanical engineering here in 1940. Since then he has been employed by the Lockheed Aircraft corporation in Burbank, California. He will teach dynamics, statics, strength of materials and hydraulics at the University.
Gambler Is Guilty
As an undergraduate Mr. Glaney was president of the local chapter of Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity. He is married and will move his family to Lawrence soon.
New York. (UF)—Alvin J. Paris, Broadway gambler has been found guilty of attempting to bribe two New York Giants football players to throw the National Professional league championship game to the Chicago Bears.
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Read the Daily Kansan daily.
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SATURDAY, JAN. 11
JANUARY 9,1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
1947
3
N.C.A.A. Ruling Leaves Colleges One Year's Grace For 'Recruiting'
New York. (UP)—Delegates to the 41st National Collegiate Athletic association convention, many of them bitter over recruiting provisions in their new "clean-up" plan, dispersed today with only one year of grace before schedule sanctions are applied to colleges that refuse to fall into line.
Until the N.C.A.A.'s constitution can be revised next year, all member schools were placed "on their honor" not to compete in any sport against colleges known to be dissenters.
"Existing schedules probably will not be affected," said Prof. Karl Leib of the University of Iowa, newly elected president. "It is possible, however, that some long-range football contracts could be dissolved by mutual agreement."
In the most momentous session in its history, the N.C.A.A. also waded into the gambling problem with a proposal to seek federal and state legislation carrying heavy penalties "fix" the outcome of collegiate contests.
Then came the principle on recruiting, limiting a coach or any athletic department official to the boundaries of his own campus in which to solicit attendance of any prospective students. A clear split developed with the South and South-west opposing all others.
With the recruiting principle already on the record, the payoff punch, calling for a schedule boycott against schools that fail to live up to the five principles, passed unanimously.
Gayle Scott of Texas Christian and Bill Alexander of Georgia Tech led the objecting Southern group but on the roll call the motion carried. 76 to 33.
Col. William Couper, executive officer at Virginia Military Institute, started the convention with a proposal to prohibit all post-season games. This direct slap at the "bowl" quickly brought hearty support and bowl-minded schools had to marshal their forces in a hurry to table the resolution for another year. One of eight new vice-presidents elected was H. H. King, Kansas State college.
Beta 'B' Team Wins From Sig Alphs
In one of the tightest defensive games of the intramural basketball season, the Beta Theta Pi "B" team edged out the Sigma Alpha Epsilon second squad Wednesday night by a score of 16 to 13.
Cramer looped 6 points through the hoop for the Beta's to take high point honors for the game.
In the other contest of the night,
the Sigma Chi "B" team outpointed
the Sigma Phi Epsilon second team,
23 to 19. Markwell netted 10 points
for the victors to lead scoring.
Tonight's schedule:
6:30 - Sigma Nu "B" vs. 941 Club "B"
"B"
6:30—Tau Kappa Epsilon "B" vs.
Kappa Sigma "B"
7:30-Battenfeld vs. 941 Club
7:30 - Wicked Seven vs. Tau Kappa Epsilon
8:30-I S. A. vs. Married Men
8:30-Woiks vs. Triangle
9:30—39'ers vs. Battenfeld "B"
9:30- Alpha Tau Omega "B" vs.
Misfits
'47 Football Schedule Has Two Additions
The 1947 Kansas football schedule was announced today by the athletic office.
The new schedule will include four games at Lawrence and one home game at Kansas City. Five games will be played away from home.
New additions to the schedule are South Dakota State and Arizona. South Dakota will be met at Lawrence, and Arizona will defend its home field at Tucson.
Other non-conference contests will be with Texas Christian, Denver, and Oklahoma A. & M.
The schedule:
Sept. 20—Texas Christian, Kansas City.
sept. 26—Denver, Denver.
Sept. 26 - Denver, Denver.
Oct. 4 - Iowa State, Lawrence
Oct. 11—South Dakota State, Lawrence
Oct. 18—Oklahoma* , Norman.
Oct. 25—open.
Nov. 1—Kansas State*, Lawrence.
Nov. 8—Nebraska*. Lawrence.
Nov, 15—Oklahoma A. & M., Stillwater.
Nov. 22—Missouri, Lawrence.
Nov. 29—Arizona, Tuscon.
- Denotes Big Six conference games.
Chicago. (UP)—Federal agents who make gambling investigations their business estimated today that gamblers reaped profits totaling 25 million dollars this season from operation of a nationwide football betting syndicate.
Sports Gamblers Reap 25 Million
These investigators warned that the syndicate's operations threaten to "contaminate" inter-collegiate football. They said the attempt to bribe members of the New York Giants professional football team was "inevitable," and warned that similar overtures might be made in the future to college stars.
Investigators said that the syndicate's nerve center was Chicago its leaders, they said, included gambling overlords who rose to power during the underworld rule of Scarface Al Capone.
V
Grotts, Kalousek Receive Regular Navy Commissions
Permanent commissions as ensigns in the U.S. Navy were received Tuesday by Joseph B. Grotts and LeRoy S. Kalousek. The two former naval aviators held temporary commissions as lieutenants, senior grade.
Under the Navy's "five term program," the two officers will complete five semesters at college before going on active duty.
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Harold Howey has provided plenty of trouble for Kansas State opponents this season. The Aggie forward scored 27 points in his team's victory over Nebraska, its only Big Six start.
College Basketball
Army 43, Swarthmore 42.
George Washington 43, Navy 38.
Penn State 62, Temple 46.
Washington & Lee 62, House of David 47.
Richmond 41, Maryland 39.
Pittsburgh 60, Carnegie Tech 22.
Georgetown 53, Kings Point 38.
Denver U. 71, Salt Lake City 36.
Niagara 63, Buffalo 24.
Dickinson 69, Guttgubb 36.
St. Ambrose 59, Mexico University 35.
St. Louis U. 50, Washington U. 47.
Western Reserve 51, Youngstown
41.
Lafayette 52, Columbia 43.
Wake Forest 58, Clemson 43.
Antherst 51, Westover Field 41.
Wheaton Michigan 53, Bowling Green 42.
Loyola (Md.) 79, St. Marys 54,
William and Mary 59, Virginia 37.
Seton Hall 53, Scranton 32.
Fordham 58, Brooklyn 52.
Syracuse 52, Cornell 48.
Franklin-Marshall 44, John Hopkins 35.
Rolla (Mo.) 80 Harris Teachers 22.
Ohio Wesleyan 71, Baldwin Wallace
St. Josephs 54, Catholic U. 33.
Flagstaff State 45, West Texas
State 44.
muntenburg 67, Lehigh 45.
Loyola 55, Redlands 38.
Penn 68. LaSalle 56.
'Phog' Allen Denies Resignation Rumors
Forrest C. "Phog" Allen denied today a rumor that he had resigned or was going to resign as basketball coach at Kansas.
In his 31st year as Jayhawker cage coach, Allen said he would like to spike the tale that he was going to quit and seek the job of mayor of Lawrence.
"I don't want to be mayor," he said, "I do want to keep on coaching basketball at Kansas."
His team beaten by Missouri "I would like to win a ball game."
Hubert Brighton, secretary of the state board of regents, said he did not believe there was any truth to the rumor, which had been heard in the statehouse.
Maurielio Is On Way To Re-Match With Louis
Chicago. (UP)—Tami Mauriello was on his way back toward a rematch with Joe Louis for the heavy-weight boxing championship today, started by a one-minute-and-three second knockout of Jimmy "Shamus" O'Brien last night.
The fight was the first for Mauriello since he staggered Joe Louis in the opening seconds of their September title bout. Joe, although hit, recovered quickly to pound Tami out a minute later.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SIX
JANUARY 9,1947
Kansan Comments...
Marshall
The surprise of the resignation of James F. Byrnes, ex-senator, exsupreme court justice, ex-"assistant president," as secretary of state was probably equalled by the surprise of the appointment of a man whose total diplomatic service consists of 13 months' efforts to conciliate the warring factions of China.
General George C. Marshall who will take over the reins of the state department will be the subject of much speculation in the months to follow. A V.M.I. graduate, he was chief of staff of the U.S. armies from 1939 to 1945.
The biggest criticism of him probably will come as a result of his long record as a military man. If he attempts to use his brusque military manner in his deliberations with other nations, he will be accused of war-mongering. If he attempts to use pacific methods in his foreign relations, critics will scream, "Get rough with 'em, George."
Judging from his biography, his claim as a diplomatist is based on his dealings in a military capacity with the heads of nations of Europe and Asia. He undoubtedly gained much experience in international relations during the war years, because global warfare required a knowledge both of military and political considerations.
The new secretary of state has a rough road ahead of him. He will be aided in that traveling by the practical mind which he used in directing the warriors of the greatest military machine in history. As Americans, we can all hope that his practicalness will be as useful in diplomacy as it was in warfare.
It's too bad, but that bachelor of science degree you're working for isn't any good.
B.S. Is N.G.
So says Harvard, and who are we to argue with Harvard?
Harvard, one of the nation's oldest colleges, has been granting a bachelor of arts degree since 1642. In 1909 it began granting bachelor of science degrees but it's going to stop.
After commencement exercises in 1950, no one will receive anything but a bachelor of arts degree. Reasons given for the change were that the degree was the object of widespread criticism and that even undergraduates majoring in scientific fields preferred to receive the arts degree.
In fact, one Harvard dean was so bitter with the idea of a bachelor of science degree that he defined it as denoting not a knowledge of science but merely an ignorance of Latin.
So now you have the authoritative word. Want to change to the College and get that bachelor of arts degree?
The University Daily Kansan
Student Newspaper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn. National Advertising and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service of Madison Ave. New York City.
Managing Editor ... Charles Roos
Asst. Managing Editor ... Jane Anderson
Makeup Editor ... Billie Marie Hamilton
Editor-in-chief ... Bill Haag
Business Manager ... Bill Haag
Business Manager ... Margery Hawkins
Telegraph Editor ... Edward W. Swain
Telegraph Ed. ... Marcella Stewart
City Editor ... R. T. Kingman
It must have been a Missouri man who wrote the Wednesday story about the K.U.-M.U. basketball game in the Kansas City Times.
An Error
The Times writer said "... Phog shouted, pushing Stalcup toward the Missouri bench. Stalcup raised an arm, thought better of it, and was pulled away from the Kansas mentor by his Missouri players."
We were at the game, no one was standing in front of us to block the view, we saw plainly (and checked with others who also had a clear view of the scene) that Dr. Allen didn't touch Coach Stalcup. And as Phog walked back to the Kansas bench the Missouri coach reached out with his right arm and shoved the Kansas coach on the right shoulder.
Perhaps the Times writer merely thought he saw what he later wrote about. He may have been honest in his writing, he probably was. The human eye is not infallible and then the brain sometimes misreads the impulses the eye sends to the brain.
In few fields of work is accuracy so necessary as in journalism. If an error is made in chemistry or in music or in philosophy, it can always be corrected and no one raises a howl. But let a newspaper print one wrong thing and everyone starts hollering for the writer's neck.
Because this is so true, stories which involve controversial subjects should be checked thoroughly before publication. It's too bad the Times writer didn't think of that before he wrote.
Jaytalking---
Add similes: "As attention-drawing as a block of abstainers in a bleacher full of arm-waving fans."
Before the war, the style was to buy a car and strip it of everything except a motor, wheels and a frame. Since the war and the development of jeeps, the style is to take a motor, wheels and a frame and add to the jeep until it's got everything the prewar unstripped car had.
Chicago. (UP)—More and more cities are scrapping plans for memorial statuary and are building community centers as "living" tributes to those who died in World War II, according to the American Public Works association.
Cities Scrap Statuary For 'Living' Tributes
Citing a recent survey of community centers as war memorials, the association observed that few cities are spending money on heroic statues and monumental cannon. Funds are being used to finance centers where citizens of all ages may enrich their leisure hours.
The association listed Coatesville, Pa., with a population of 15,000, as a "standout example" of the current trend. Coatesville city officials and private citizens raised a fund of $52,000 to build a community center, which will include an auditorium, gymnasium, kitchen, lunchroom, snack bar, bowling alley, nursery, and other facilities. City funds will finance an adjacent swimming pool.
A report from California stated that "in the smaller communities memorials are taking the place of the old town hall. They are being made integral parts of the community life."
Similar examples may be found in almost every state, the association reported. The Hibbing, Minn., community center is a war memorial containing a little theater, clubrooms, bowling alleys, kitchen, dining room, and a large arena. Flint, Mich., has three municipal centers with libraries and meeting rooms.
The association said that many cities had taken over war-time USO facilities as community centers or extended school facilities to serve community needs through the use of war memorial funds.
Make Money Giving Out Tickets—For Parking
Camden, Ark. (UP)—Camden Boy Scouts have discovered that it pays in more ways than one—to be law-abiding citizens.
One day recently, the scouts "ran the city"—from mayor to traffic cop. The scout cops handed out traffic tickets to all violators and a scout judge assessed fines in accordance with the infraction.
The next day Mayor Don Harrell gave the boy and girl scouts a check for $112, the amount of the fines they had collected.
Congressional Teamwork
URGENT LEGISLATION
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Daniel Bishop in St. Louis Star-Times
Janet Lynne Cofer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Herman Cofer, was the only Christmas baby born to University student parents.
Other student parents with babies born during the holidays are:
Student Parents Get Little Presents
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Banks have a daughter, Jana, born Dec. 22.
On Dec. 23, a son, Richard Dale, was born to Mr. and and Mrs. Robert Simpson.
To Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Cates, a son, Jonathan Howard, was born Dec. 28.
Two Jan. 4 babies were born—a boy, Stephen Laurel, to Mr. and Mrs. Laurel Fry, and a girl, Mar-
sela Fry, to Mr. and Mrs. Rex G. Morris.
A son, Irven Kelley, was born Jan. 5 to Mr. and Mrs. Irven W. Hayden, Jr.
Pictures Will Be Shown At YMCA Movie Forum
Frank Sinatra will sing for the students of K.U. at the Y.M.C.A. movie forum to be held at 4 p.m. today in the Fine room of the Union. Two pictures "The House I Live In," and "Our Shrinking World" will be shown.
L. G. Templin, an instructor in the sociology department, will lead a short discussion of the films following their showing. Mr. Templin served as a missionary in India for many years, and has worked with minority groups.
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PERSONNEL JOBS OPEN in the KANSAS CIVIL SERVICE
THESE JOBS are Personnel Technician I positions on the examination staff of the Kansas Department of Civil Service in Topeka. The work consists of preparing civil service examinations for 350 classes of state positions.
SIX VACANCIES EXIST, which will be filled in February or later in the spring, presenting excellent opportunities for college graduates and for students graduating this winter or in June.
THE SALARY RANGE is $184.00 to $258.000 a month. Appointments will be made at salaries higher than the minimum if the qualifications of the persons appointed justify a higher salary.
SUCCESSFUL APPLICANTS will be selected by a merit examination and are invited to appear in several other cities in Kansas on or around Saturday, January 17.
APPLICATIONS will be accepted until January 15. Application forms and an announcement giving complete information about the examination may be secured by writing or phoning
THE KANSAS DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL SERVICE
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Phone 554
JANUARY 9,1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
'Hair' Today, Gone Tomorrow; Othman Claims Innocence
B FREDERICK C. OTHMAN
(United Press Staff Correspondent)
Washington. (UP)—A blonde named Eunice sat at the desk in front of me at school when I was 10. I didn't like her. The ends of her pigtails somehow nearly every day by accident, kind of, found their way into my inkwell. I confess no more.
Stop looking at me like that, copers. That was 30 years ago. The barbarous barber who sneaks up behind the capitals street-car-riding ladies and slices off their tresses isn't me. Just because I, too, ride the trolleys is no sign I'm your scissor snickering scoundrel.
Talk about crime waves! I'll talk about amputated permanent-waves. Nearly a dozen cuties ranging in age from 12 to 30 have had theirs chopped off in the last week. Plain clothes men are riding the cars and busses, looking for suspicious characters with razor blades and gleaming eyes. Any female who's nudged in the crush is likely to scream. I am a suspect. Any man is. Including senators.
The long-haired ladies are piling their hair on top of their heads like Dolly Madison. Either that, or they're wrapping their niggins in shaws, like Mexican farm women. Get close to one and she jumps.
Be careful of your newspaper. Let the edge of the sports page graze a lady's coiffure and you're the center of a riot. Take out your pocket knife to pare your fingernails on the Mt. Pleasant trolley and ladies for six seats around are battling toward the exit.
I cannot understand why the special squads of flatteet detailed to ride the street cars until they catch the man with the portable barber chair have not yet done so. They have an excellent description of him.
A 17-year-old school girl, Bernice Dyer, who lost a foot of her page Day hob on the car, reported the villain was a polite fat man who humped into her and apologized. Mary L. Sanders, a co-ed who was parted from a thick hank of red tresses five inches long, says a gray-haired man with a black overcoat did the parting. (Honest, gents, my overcoat's brown.)
The perambutulating scalper, according to Miss Jeanne Thompson (who used to have a head of light brown hair), was a handsome young fellow with curly hair of his own. This sounds like me, I will admit but the night Jeanie with the light brown hair gave up on the Mt Pleasant line, I was at the banker's I've got witnesses.
To keep out of jail myself, I suppose I've got to do like Ferry Mason and help ycu find your criminal connoisseur of curls. Listen carefully, gentlemen. The scalped ladies have pictured your man and he obviously is a commande Indian with a razor-sharnn tomahawk
Other females, including 12-year-old Diane Skylarsky who lost all of one black braid and part of the other to a man with big feet on a bus, have described the traveling tonsorialist equally as vividly. 'Smatter, copers?'
But do not grab any old Indian
Amendment to ASC Bill No. 10
LEGAL NOTICE
Be it enacted by the Associated Students of the University of Kansas:
1. That ASC Bill No. 10, Section 5 be amended to read:
"That there shall be elected at the fall freshman election, the president, vice-president, and secretary-treasurer of the freshman class. The same rules and regulations apply to the election of the freshman officers as are contained in Section 3 of this bill. All students who are classified by the registrar as freshmen shall be eligible to vote.
HOWARD ENGLEMAN
President of the
Uncleell
FLOW, THAT MAN
ELAN
ELAINE THALMAN
Secretary of the All Student Council
of the All Student Council DEANE W. MALOTT
President Secretary
Chancellor of the University of Kansas
"Sir, are you perchance the proprietor of a mattress factory?"
you spy on a trolley, or you may be up on charges of false arrest. Approach each comanche politely, test the sharpness of his weapon and say:
If his answer is "yes," he's your man and I wish you police kindly would get on with your work. I'm busy and my feet are tired from standing on troleys because the seats are full of cops waiting to see you. I put out of my pocket a wad of gum or a pair of neck clippers.
Peru, Ind. (UP) — Mrs. Olga Young got a ticket for parking a car in a "no-parking" zone. She refused to pay the charge. "I don't own a car," she told traffic authorities.
No Car-But Woman Gets Parking Ticket
Police led her to a shiny new automobile marked on a downtown street
They told her it was a gift from her brother, Ole Olson of "Hellaz-poppin'" fame. Ole sent the car as a surprise for his sister.
As an added "gift," he asked the cops to make the "surprise presentation."
Citizen Finds Out About U.S. Customs
Seattle. (UP) — Theodore Schon, 50, had been naturalized as an American citizen but he didn't know everything about customs in this country.
Schon, a native of Poland, stumbled into police headquarters here and reported that he hadn't eaten in 43 days.
Asked why he hadn't reported sooner, the man looked confused.
"I didn't know there was any-where a man could get food unless he had money," he said.
Cape Cod's Not Safe
Provincetown, Mass. (UP)—Seafarers here estimate that more than 3,000 shipwrecks have occurred on Cape Cod since the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth.
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Copy must be in the University Daly
Kansan Business Office, Journalism bldg.
bldg., p.m. of the day before
publication is desired. All classifieds are
cash in advance.
Classified Advertising Rates
One day Three days Five days
25 words or less 35c 65c 90c
additional words 1c 2c 3c
Lost
BROWN SUITCASE, initialed J. N. McDropped from taxi between Santa Fe station and campus. If found, please call Mary Ann McClure, 267. -94-
BOX containing shoes, camera and my
phone. I was in the middle of an errand.
Mrs. K. C. Jones, 2500M. Reward. -9
GOLD Sheaffer, ball point fountain pen
case. McClure, 957, Reward.
-10-
McClure, 957, Reward.
BLACK Leather zipper containing everything I know for the semester. Finder please return to Daily Kansan office.
Reward -13-
GOLD Ring initialized E. G. Lost in front
Brick's. Reward. Call Bill Mullarke
LADY Elgin wristwatch, Jan. 8 between Frank Strong and Fraser, Margaret Hardie engraved on back. Reward. Phone 1592-1. -15.
Found
SLIDE Rule, probably in Marvin hall.
651. Reward. Call Bill Wildon.
651. Reward.
ONE NEW TIE CHAIN. Owner may
call. Call 2205W.
For Sale
NEW Brown leather boots. Comfortable and sure-footed. Just right for climbing the Hill these skid days. Cheap. Size Bill Call Beehnson, 532, 1425 Teespee.
SUIT. Size 30 regular, double breasted,
almost new. Phone 1896. Frank Wenkel.
1940 Conv. Ford. R & H spotlight. Fog lights. New Mercury motor. New tires. See at 800 1-2 Mo. after 5 p.m. or call 1505-R. Highest offer. -13
41 Chev convertible for sale. 2 heaters, spotlight, radio. Top condition. nice finish. Phone 1996-J or 1106. Wilbur R. Koehn. -15-
DE JUR critic light meter and leather case, recently factory - checked and cleaned. for $20. Bill Roberts, 1340 Tennessee. Phone 2498-M. -13
SLICTHLY USED ice skates, all sizes, in
Tamworth, 343; between 7 and 10 p.m.
$334, at the library.
BED, Mattress, and springs. Three drawer with mirror. Also little used two-burner hot-plate and large briefcase. See at 128 West 13th. -10-
1936 FORD. Ford deluxe in very good condition. Radio, heater, good tires, original paint. See at 1332 Connecticut after five. -10-
New Duplex for sale. 5 rooms each unit.
Immediate occupancy. Phone 1566-J.-J.
*STATION Wagon, 1940 Ford deluxe. Call*
Poster, 2723-J.-J. Mass. -10.
CONN Trombone Silver with sterling
Berry, 537. Excellent condition -10
Berry, 537.
Wanted
WANTED To rent. Close to campus.
Room for Education
senior. Call 1562-R.
Business Services
MICROSCOPES, Colorimeters, balances
PUT YOUR CAR IN OUR EXPERTS' HANDS — THEY HAVE THE "KNOW HOW"
EXPERT AUTO REPAIRS
YOUR STUDEBAKER DEALER
622 Mass.
Channel-Sanders Motor Co.
Phone 616
engineering instruments cleaned and repaired. Thirteen years experience. Call Office, 8258 Technical Instrument Service Co., Kansas City, Mo. Free license. J13-
HIGH POWER, high fidelity public address system for rent. Can be used for speeches, entertaining, record dances, etc. Call Black, phone 3338. -13-
TYING: Term papers and reports.
promptly. Reasonably. Phone
1961-M
RADIO Service. Home and car radios.
Tubes test free. All work guaranteed
90 days. 604 Hercules (new village)
Sunflower. -15
PHOTO-EXACT Copies, discharge and valuable papers. Fast service. Low price. Round Compound Drug Co., 861 Mass. Law. flower, for Lane F, Arc N. 148.-16
FOR that coke date remember the Eldridge pharmacy at 701 Mass., phone 999.
Transportation
WANTED. Round triprides to Hutchin-
ity meet each Friday afternoon.
Call 1562-R
For Group riding, get your coupon in Jan. 9. Kansan and then call for Bill's vice with five years of experience for good vice with five years of experience driving for K.U. students. -13
A Complete Bachelor's Laundry Service ACME
Bachelor's Laundry & Dry Cleaners
1111 Mass. Phone 646
TOAST
TO HEALTH
WHEN ALL THE
FAMILY DRINK
OUR PURE MILK
AT MEALS.
LAWRENCE SANITARY
Milk and Ice Cream Co.
Call K.U. 25 with your news.
10
"I'll be fired for that fool story!"
The managing editor of the New York Herald took a day off on December 21, 1879. So this headline in his paper hit him without warning.
EDISON'S LIGHT IT MAKES A LIGHT, WITHOUT GAS OR FLAME!
The public promptly shouted "hoaxt!" Scientists called Edison crazy. And our shocked, angry editor expected to be fired. But he wasn't. Eleven days later, Thomas Edison held a unique New Year's party in his laboratory at Menlo Park, New Jersey, and invited the world to see his "flameless light." Thousands came and were convinced. The incandescent lamp was real.
Soon small companies were bringing the benefits of Edison's new-fangled lamp to the people. Engineers and business men poured in their energy and time . . . risked their own savings .. overcame all kinds of obstacles . . . broadened and improved the service.
Government didn't do the job. Individuals did. And in the process, they created jobs for many thousands of Americans, as well as a great new service for many millions more.
Edison himself, knew the benefits of his invention would best be brought to the public through the enterprise and initiative of individuals. As Edison said, "When the Government goes into business it can always shift its losses to the taxpayers. If it goes into the power business, it can pretend to sell cheap power and then cover up its losses. The Government never really goes into business, for it never makes ends meet, and that is the first requisite of business. It just mixes a little business with a lot of politics and no one ever gets a chance to find out what is actually going on."
When Edison opened the first power-plant in 1882, electricity cost 25 cents a kilowatt-hour. This year, as we mark the 100th anniversary of the great inventor's birth, the average price of household electricity across the country is only $3/3 cents per kilowatt-hour.
Thanks to Edison's imagination and enterprise — thanks to the courage and initiative of many men and women, working under the American business system — this country enjoys the most and best electric service in the world. And all our lives are richer, safer, more productive.
Listen to the New Electric Hour — THE HOUSE OF CHARM
Sundays. 3:30 p.m., C.S.T., CBS
THE KANSAS ELECTRIC POWER CO.
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
JANUARY 9,1947
That After-Dinner Snack
TAPE
Now you can guess—Elden Tefft is a sword-swallower, and a good one, too. To prove it, he went through his act for the Daily Kansan camera, and believe us, there is nothing faked about this. The Lawrence junior in the College picked up his ability by himself, after seeing a sword-swallowing act at a carnival here. He moistens the sword blade, leans his neck back just so, and makes ready. If you don't believe that 17-inch blade on the 24-inch sword really goes down the esophagus, see tomorrow's picture, in this same spot.
Just Grown-Up Bedroom Slippers
But Why Are They Called 'Stadium' Boots?
K. U.'s first snowfall of the New Year has brought out a wide variety of women's footwear.
And there are 'stadium boots.' But don't ask why.
Tripping along ice-glazed campus walks are coeds in half-length rubber boots, fur-topped cossack boots, and occasional 'unglamorous' galoshes where are 'studio boots'. But don't ask why.
The stadium boot is in a class by itself. It is a fur-lined shoe-boot which resembles these furry-fellly bedroom slippers, grown up. It is the shoe-boot with that ankle goo.
Some of the ladies who have tucked their pinkies inside these numbers report that they are warm on the ankles where the thinner boot fails. They are also said to be soft and gentle on corn and bunions.
Those rubber boots you're seeing with the tops turned down, are turned for a very practical reason, the fair sex assures us.
"If we don't turn the tops down that upper edge chaps the calves of our legs," said one coed, as she displayed a raw, red mark across the back of a well-turned gam.
But even with all their fur, another pointed out, stadium boots also chap. Although they may cause their wearers to look like "the bride of Frankenstein in hubby's shoes", features of the sheep-lined coat and have zippers and ground-grip trend to boot.
"They're so practical," a third explained. "When I get ready for bed, I just hop out of them and leave my shoes inside, laced and tied. Then, in the morning, I don't lose so much time getting dressed."
Wearers of the calf-length firemen's rubber boots say the principle difficulty lies in getting out of them, because they are divided by same in the following way:
Simily sit down, give your booted-foot to your roommate and let her push you to hear a resounding push against a resounding wall, you bear the boot is off.
But a word of caution—change roommates frequently. Wall-rebounding has a tendency to flatten the dorsal side, and too many boot-pullings for one roommate might make getting through the door a problem.
The hardier set seems to have stuck to saddle shoes and moccasins. Or maybe they are simply too
small to lug stadium boots around.
Nevertheless, whether it be the stadium creations, galoshes, rubber boots, cossack boots, saddles, or mocasins Mother Nature has them all licked, and Fourteenth street hill goes right on tumbling and toboganing the unwary plodder.
Tau Sigma Plans Show
Plans for the annual modern dance show were begun at a meeting of Tau Sigma Tuesday in Robinson gymnasium. Warm-ups and various stops were practiced later.
Business Manager
F. C. G.
Earl Falkenstien, K.U.'s athletic business manager, says the ideal stadium has all seats on the 50-yard line. In spite of such headaches as trying to seat everyone wanting basketball tickets in Hoch auditorium, he finds his work "very enjoyable."
'Most Americans Think With Their Stomachs,' Ise Tells K.U. Dames
Proof of the lack of critical thinking and reasoning is shown in the heated debates and arguments we have about elections—when with analysis, one sees there is really no issue involved in our elections and hasn't been for years, he continued.
In pointing out this serious lack in American living, Dr. Ise, professor of economics, remarked that he is a pessimist and has been for 15 years, since the time he wrote the article "On the Coming Dark Ages" for the Daily Kansan.
Dr. Ise believes that the people could do something about it, that they would enjoy developing thought and discussion on subjects of economics—if they would try it
There is a definite need in our world today for critical thinking. The need has come through the development of the atomic bomb. We have to decide what to do with it. There is a drift toward fascism in our country. Our foreign policy points to a third world war. What are we going to do about it?
Housewives Dominate 'Most Glamorous'
"Political intelligence in America is about as low as any place in the civilized world." he pointed out.
New York (UP)—The International artists committee announced today its selection of the ten most glamorous women of 1946.
Housewives dominated the list. They were Evie Wynn, who is divorcing Keenan Wynn to marry screen actor Van Johnson; Mrs. Henry Ford II, and Mrs. Edmund Wilson, wife of the author of "Memoirs of Hecate County."
Mona Paulie, Metropolitan opera singer, was the only theatrical figure named. Socialite Janet Michael, of San Francisco, reputedly engaged to screen actor George Brent, was another.
Others included Betty MacDonald, author of the best-selling novel, "The Egg and I"; Pamela Kellino, writer and wife of the British film star James Mason; Princess Elizabeth; Alice Lavere, Indo-American psychologist of Beverly Hills, Calif., and Mlle. Vinaida Vishinsky, daughter of A. Y. Vishinsky, Russian delegate to the United Nations.
German Club to Meet
Junior Class Will Meet
The University German club will meet at 4:30 today in 402 Freser hall. Coffee and cake will be served following the business meeting.
The junior class will meet at 4 p.m. today in Frank Strong auditorium to discuss plans for the Junior Prom.
Mission Director
N.Y.
The Rev. Phillips P., Moulton, national director of University Christian Mission, New York, will be on the campus Sunday, Monday, and Tuesday to interview leaders of the Student Religious week about activities of the various committees. He will be the house guest of the Rev. and Mrs. John Patton, Westminster hall.
Nine Will Answer Smoking Charges
Nine students will appear before the student court at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Green hall court room to answer charges of violation of the no smoking rule.
Eight of the offenses allegedly occurred in Watson library and one in Frank Strong hall. These are the first cases to be reported to the court this semester.
By All Student Council statute first offenders are fined from two to five dollars and the second offense is punishable by a fine of from five to 10 dollars, according to William B. McEhenny, freshman year law student, who is court prosecutor. With continuing offenses the punishment, by Council statute, is left to the discretion of the court.
Students involved are William Bradford, business senior; Jo Hall, fine arts junior; Althea Voss, College sophomore; Richard Dodson, engineering freshman; John Wuest, Joe Schell, Jacob Kindscher, John Couch, College freshman; and John R. Coombe, engineering freshman.
Sigma Chi On KFKU
Sigma Chi, winner of the Inter-
Fraternity sing, will be heard over
KFKU at 9:30 tonight. E. M. Brack,
fine arts junior, tenor, and Edward
Utley, fine arts senior, piano, will
perform on the same program.
Jay James to Hold Dance
Annual Vice Versa dance sponsored by the Jay James is to be Feb. 22. Barbara Meyer, fine arts junior, will head the planning committee, it was decided in a meeting of the Jay James Wednesday.
No Nasty Cigarettes, Liquor, Please
Washington Men Tell Coeds How To Behave
Seattle, (UP)—Co-eds at the University of Washington should know how they would be expected to act if dating any one of five of the male students at the school.
The males, all undergraduates, spoke at the annual Frosh Standards meeting on the campus.
Gummie Johnson, student body president, said he didn't allow his dates to smoke in the car on the way home from a social evening.
"A cigarette is a mighty defensive weapon for a girl whose escort is amorous," he said. "And smoking is not conducive to a smooth situation."
Another male said he didn't approve of drinking when out on a date.
"Liquor is not necessary for a good time," he said. "There are other ways of enjoying yourself when out with a girl." Two others felt the same way.
Johnny Webber, homecoming chairman this year, said he didn't smoke or drink.
"Don't know why I was chosen to talk." he said. "I don't smoke or drink and now I have to talk about necking. Well, I know a little about that."
News . . .
of the World
Bad Weather Stops Search
Aboard U.S.S. Mt. Olympus with Byrd Expedition. (UP)—Bad flying weather made it impossible to continue the search for the plane that has been missing from the Byrd expedition task force since Dec. 30 with nine men aboard.
The four ships of the central task group lay idle while a scout plane reconstituted an icepack blocking their progress to Little America.
Wallece Criticizes Churchill
New York. (UP)—Henry A. Wallace, former Secretary of Commerce, charged today in New Republic magazine that Winston Churchill is engaged in a new attempt to build up an Anglo-American alliance aimed at Soviet Russia.
Transients Will Pay More
Washington. (UP)—The Office of Temporary controls has ordered ceilings removed from rents in transient hotels and motor courts on Feb. 15, the administration's first major relaxation on the rent control front. President Truman, however, has asked congress to continue general rent controls beyond the present June 30 expiration date.
Washington. (UP)—President Truman's renewed request for a permanent fair employment practices commission drew the expected storm of protest today from Southern Democrats in the house.
An informal survey showed that if such a bill were brought to the floor, the 100 Southern house members would oppose it in a bloc.
House Southerners Protest President's Permanent FEPC
In the past congress, F.E.P.C. legislation was filibustered out of the senate and died in the house rules committee.
Jap Earthquake Kills 1,600
Lake Success, N. Y. (UP)—The United States will not seek a showdown with Russia for several months on the controversy over the Big Five veto and enforcement of world atomic controls, informed sources disclosed today.
No Atomic Showdown Yet
Tokyo. (UP) -A final eighth army report listed 1,600 dead, 1600 injured and 150,000 left homeless by the earthquake and tidal waves that struck Honshu and Shikoku islands Dec. 21. There were no fatalities among allied personnel.
Republicans Still For Cuts
Washington. (UP)—Senate leaders have agreed to streamline senate procedure by meeting only thrice weekly and devoting the remainder of the week to committee business.
Senate Is Streamlined
Washington (UP) — House Republicans stood pat on their tax reduction plans today and said both personal income taxes and excise levies could and would be cut even though President Truman felt such moves represented "unsound fiscal policy."
'The Man' Will Be Back
Jackson, Miss. (UP)—Gov. Fielding L. Wright is reported today as favoring reappointment of Sen. Theodore G. Bilbo if he is barred by the senate. The governor was quoted as saying he would even telegraph the commission to Senator Bilbo, who presumably would be in Washington, when and if he is barred.
'Ban Closed Shop'—Ball
Washington. (UP)—Sen. Joseph H. Ball (R.-Minn.) asked the senate today to outlaw the closed shop on grounds that it violated "fundamental principles of American liberty," introducing legislation which would outlaw all contracts making union membership or non-membership a condition of employment.
University DAILY KANSAN
STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Friday, January 16, 1947
44th Year No. 66
Lawrence Kansas
Lawrence. Kansas
Durant To Speak At Convocation in Hoch Monday
M. G. H.
Dr. Will Durant, philosopher and author, whose "Story of Philosophy" sold more than two million copies and began the current vogue for the translation of pedantic subjects into popular understanding, will speak on "What Are the Lessons of History?" at convocation in Hech auditorium at 10 a.m. Monday.
Dr. Durant has traveled twice around the world and four times through Europe gathering information for his projected life work, a comprehensive history of civilization.
In 1915, Dr. Durant conceived the idea of such a work, and, after the popular success of his first book, retired in 1927 to give all his time to the five-volume series, "The Story of Civilization."
The first volume, "Our Oriental Heritage" appeared in 1935; the second, "The Life of Greece," in 1930; the third, "Caesar and Christ," inf 1944. Part IV, "The Age of Faith," is scheduled for 1950; and Part V, "The Age of Reason," for 1955.
Dr. Durant has enjoyed a varied career, from serving as a cub reporter on the New York Journal in 1907 to teaching philosophy at Columbia university.
He began his popular lectures in philosophy, literature, science, music, economics, biology, and history which formed a background for his historical and philosophic works in a New York Presbyterian church, where his audience, composed mostly of the business, professional, and working classes, demanded complete clarity of exposition, and some contemporary significance to all material presented.
Dr. Durant is speaking under the sponsorship of Forums board and the University.
21 Attend Meeting From K.U., Lawrence
Dr. E. F. Baykes, professor of education, was the main speaker at the annual K.U.-M.U. meeting of the Kansas City Feld chapter of Phi Delta Kappa, professional education fraternity. The meeting was held at the Shawnee Mission high school Thursday.
The following attended from K.U. and the Lawrence public schools. Dr Eayles, Mr Harold Book, Dr T. E Christensen, Dr Bert A.Nash, Dr O. F Russell, Dean George B. Smith, Dr A. H Turney, Dr J. W Twente, Gordon Wiseman, Russell Mosser, Laiten Camieux, Guy Keeler, Arley Bryant, Clay Coy, William Fisher, Joseph Holley, Clarence Mills, Fred Montgomery, Kirk Naylor, James Weigand, and Benny Wolfe.
Monday Classes
The Monday morning class schedule will be;
8 a.m. classes—8-8:30
9 a.m. classes—8:40-9:10
10 a.m. classes—9:20-9:50
10 a.m.—convocation
11 a.m. classes—11:20-12
'No Salary Boost Before July 1'
An immediate salary boost for University employees would not be possible, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, said today, following an announced 10 per cent increase authorized by the board of regents for Washburn university employees beginning Feb. 1.
"The University like other state schools, has asked for additional funds from the legislature," he explained, "but the money, if appropriated, will not be available until July 1. In the meantime no funds under the present budget are available for cost-of-living adjustments this year."
An increase of $791,000 in the yearly salaries and wages appropriation has been requested, he disclosed. One of the purposes of the increase would be to boost staff and Civil Service employees' salaries and wages, but there would be no flat or percentage increase. It would also be used to add to the staff and to compensate for the accumulated balances which are rapidly been spent this year for increased staffs, he said.
The accumulated balances of about $330,000 resulted largely from earnings of war programs conducted on the campus. Without this extra cash the University would have had to limit ammilition last fall, he said.
Isaac Stern Concert Will Be Monday
Isaac Stern, 26-year-old concert violinist, will appear in the third University Concert Series Monday night in Hoeh auditorium, the fine arts office announced today. Student activity tickets will admit.
Stern, described as "one of the great violinists of this generation" after a Carnegie hall appearance in 1943, is making his fifth transcontinental tour. He has never appeared in Lawrence before.
Stern was born in Kriminiesz Russia, but became a native of San Francisco by adoption at the age of one year.
Students wishing to enter the Kansas Day oratorical contest in Topeka must submit applications to the department of speech and drama by Tuesday, Prof. E. C. Euehler said today.
The annual contest is sponsored by Senator Arthur Capper. It will be held on Jan. 28, day before the Kansas Day banquet. The winner will deliver his oration at the banquet.
Apply By Tuesday For Speech Contest
A tryout to determine the K.U. candidate will be held Jan. 24. Subject of the Contest is "Kansas in an Industrial Civilization."
I.S.A. Nomination Petitions
For Election Due Sunday
Petitions are due Sunday for nominations for Independent Student association officers and an All Student Council representative to be voted on at the L.S.A. election on Jan. 27, it was announced today.
Petitions for president, business manager, A.S.C. representative, and two class representatives from each class, are to have 50 Independent signers. They can be given to Lois Thompson, Miller hall, or turned in at the I.S.A. office, 228 Frank Strong hall by Sunday noon.
Stomp Gung Be Shifted To Union Ballroom
The Slobbovian Stomp, sophomore class dance, will be held in the Union ballroom, instead of Hoch auditorium, Arthur Ruppenthal, sophomore class vice-president, announced today. The dance will be from 8:30 to 12 tomorrow night.
Permission for the shift to the ballroom was granted by Miss Hermina Zipple, Director of the Union, and Jean T. Fisher. Varsity dance manager, Ruppenthal said.
The request for the Union ballroom was made, he said, when class officials were told they could dance only on the auditorium stage, not on the basketball court.
The dance originally scheduled for the Military Science building, was shifted to Hoch, Ruppenthal said, because "all the big dances in the Military Science building have lost money."
The ballroom dance, Ruppenthal said, will have an intermission floor show, with Jack Moorehead, College freshman, master of ceremonies.
Jinx Rus扑utinburg, to be chosen tomorrow morning from the seven finalists, Betty Boling, Martha Bonebreake, Emily Burgert, Constance Coulghey, Bernadene Dawkins n., Wanda Dumler, and Billie Dunn, will be crowned Queen of Slobovia at the dance.
Also present, Ruppenthal promised, will be "Lena the Hyena."
The dance will be sweater and skirt. The Union fountain will be open from 9 to 11 p.m. for the use of the dancers.
Meals will be served as usual Monday in the ballroom. A crew of sophomore men will remove and replace the tables and chairs, and clean up the ballroom after the dance.
Kansas—Fair today with slightly higher temperatures. High today about 50: low tonight near freezing.
WEATHER
Truman's Balanced Budget Is First Since Depression
President's Optimistic Message Warns Congress Against Tax Reduction
Washington. (UP)—President Truman submitted to congress today the first balanced federal budget since the 1930 depression, with a stern warning against tax reduction at this time.
It was an optimistic budget based on expectation of better business and higher individual incomes in the 1948 fiscal year. But he said there "is
The condition of Dr. Forrest C. "Phog" Allen, Kansas basketball coach, was reported as "fair" today by the University of Kansas hospital in Kansas City where he is undergoing a complete physical checkup
'Phog Allen's Condition Fair'
Early reports said Dr. Allen would probably be gone from four to seven days, causing him to miss both the Oklahoma and Nebraska games.
Dr. Allen entered the hospital Thursday afternoon for treatment for recurring headaches and dizzy spells believed to be the result of a brain conclusion suffered in a practice session accident Oct. 10.
Dr. Allen was accidentally knocked down by a player, and his head struck the floor sharply. He entered Watkins hospital the next day, but X-rays failed to reveal serious injury, and he was released.
He has since suffered headaches and nausea, and a serious headache attack caused him to return to Watkins hospital Thursday.
The time he will spend in the hospital will depend largely on the number of tests and X-rays taken, his son, Dr. Robert Allen, team physician, said today.
The team will be managed by Howard Engleman, assistant coach, during his absence.
Little Man On Campus
By Bibler
THE GRADUATE POISONS THE MAN.
K.U. K.U.
"I was tardy once."
*no justification for tax reduction now.*
The President proposed to spend $37,528,000,000 in the 1948 fiscal year, which begins July 1 this year. That is billions of dollars in excess of the sum to which Republican leaders insist government spending must be reduced.
Mr. Truman provided for a small surplus of 202 million dollars and asked congress to increase revenue to make the surplus $1,800,000,000.
In addition to his surplus estimate, Mr. Truman made two legislative proposals which would increase the 1948 fiscal year surplus to approximately $1,800,000,00 all of which he would devote to debt retirement if congress made additional revenue available.
He said the additional surplus funds would be raised by:
ONE. Making the post office department self-supporting by hiking postal rates $252,000,000, largely on second class mail.
No budget provision was made for the universal (military) training program recommended by Mr. Truman, indicating he does not expect that project to get under way for at least 18 months.
TWO. By extending beyond the June expiration date various war emergency excise taxes on such items as furs, jewelry, electrical appliances, admissions, communications and alcoholic beverages.
Atomic energy disappeared from the national defense part of the budget for 1948 and turned up in the non-agricultural natural resources division. Mr. Truman recommended an atomic energy appropriation of 444 million dollars and put his emphasis upon its peace time use. But he said it continued to be use of major military significance.
"The responsibilities of the federal government cannot be fully met in the fiscal year 1943 at a lower cost here indicated." Mr. Truman said.
The University band and orchestra will present a formal concert in the Music hall of the Municipal auditorium, Kansas City, Mo., Tuesday night, March 11, according to Russell Wiley, conductor.
But if congress balked, Mr. Trump's 1948 fiscal year budget would show a 177 million dollar deficit instead of a 202 million dollar surplus.
K.U. Band, Orchestra To Give K.C. Concert
The band will play 45 minutes, followed by a performance of the orchestra for 45 minutes, Mr. Wiley said. The audience will be comprised of vocal and instrumental students of the Kansas City high schools and their parents, K.U. alumni, and other friends. The concert is not open to the general public. Five busses have been chartered for the trip.
Other concerts in different cities are being booked, and will be announced later.
Dove Staff to Reorganize
A reorganizational meeting of the Dove magazine staff will be held at 7 p.m. Monday in the Pine room of the Union, Rhoten Smith, staff member, announced today. After each issue a new editorial board is appointed.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 10, 1947
Official Bulletin
Jan. 10, 1947
The elections committee of the All-Student Council will meet in 220 Frank Strong at 5 p.m. Today.
* *
Kappa Phi will meet at 7 tonight at the Methodist church. Pledge meeting and exam at the church at 8 p.m.
K. J. Student Forums board will present the second in the series of foreign and historical movies at 7:30 p.m. in Fraser theater. Title of the film is "Carnival in Flanders". No admission charge.
...
A-Kappa Beta pledging meeting will be held at 4:30 p.m. Sunday at Barlow chapel of Myers hall. All girls interested in pledging contact Mahei Ann Richardson. All members asked to be present.
--any student wishing to appeal fines for parking violations (ASC Bill 142).
Petitions with 50 signers must be turned in by noon Sunday to Lois Thompson at Miller hall or at the I.S.A. office, 228 Frank Strong, for candidates for president, business manager, ASC representative, or class representatives in the I.S.A. election Jan. 27.
The Union Sunday Activities committee will meet at 6:30 p.m. Monday at 1032 Kentucky street for a social and business meeting.
The University Housemothers' association will meet in the assembly room of Myers hall at 2 p.m. Tuesday.
The student court will hear cases concerning smoking rule violations (ASC Bill No. 8) at 7 p.m. Tuesday in Green hall. The court will hear
串 串 串
Home Economics club waffle supper at 5 p.m. Thursday for Home Economics club members only. Dues will be collected. Tickets are $50 and must be bought before 5 p.m. Tuesday in home economics office.
Graduate record examination Feb. 3 and 4. Applications may be secured in 2A Frank Strong.
--and ORCHESTRA
All members of the February graduating class of the School of Business who are hoping to be placed through the business placement bureau and any other students available for permanent employment in February please note the School of Business bulletin board for announcement of interview schedules throughout the month of January.
A final examination in Western Civilization will be given Saturday, Jan. 18, from 1 to 5 p.m. in 426 Lindley. All students who plan to take this examination must register their intention to do so at the Registrar's office some time before tomorrow.
19 Attend APO National Convention
Anti-Filibuster Bill Drafted May Push US Plans In UN
Washington (UP)—Sen. William F. Knowland, (R.-Calif.), said he has drafted a bill to check filibusters. Sens. Robert A. Taft, (R.-O.) and Wayne L. Morse, R.-Ore.) likewise urged amendment of the senate rules to prevent filibusters.
PETER KEENNEDY
DR. L. C. WOODRUFF
With 63 new members this year, Lambda chapter of Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, had the largest number of initiates in the history of the organization.
At the fraternity's national convention in Kansas City, Dec. 28 and 29, Donald Pomeroy, Chairman of the K. U. delegation, presented a scroll of the class to H. Roe Bartle, retiring national president.
Nineteen members of the chapter attended the convention. Prof. L. C. Woodruff, of the entomology and biology department, attended as advisor. Official delegates were Donald Ong, College senior, and Kenneth Maddux, College sophomore.
Moreau Offers Law Courses To Senior Medical Students
A study of medical law will be given to the senior medical class at the University of Kansas hospital, Kansas City, by F. J. Moreau, dean of the School of Law, beginning this week. Lectures will be given every Saturday morning for ten weeks.
This study series is a regular part of the senior medical course curriculum.
Marysville. O. (UP)—Coach Paul Wenzel may have had some worries with his Marysville high school football team this year, but scholarship was not one of them. Seven members of the varsity first team were named on the school honor roll for grade and the other four missed it by slight margins.
Athletes Are Scholars
Doctors Visit Hospital
Harold L. Green, College junior, slipped on the ice Wednesday and fractured both bones of the left leg. His condition at Watkins hospital is reported satisfactory.
Dr. Paul Joliet, director of the division for tuberculosis control of the Kansas state board of health, and Dr. Francis Bishop, a member of the same department, were guest at the monthly staff meeting at Watkins hospital Thursday.
University Daily Kansan
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
0,1947
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'Lennie' Moe Likes Kansas Men Weather Better Than Florida's
Kansas men are more fun than those in Florida, and what's more they are taller, said Alberta "Lennie" Moe, a 5-foot, 9-inch blonde from Florida, who also prefers Kansas weather.
She said the men on the K.U. campus are more mature and suave than the ones from New Port Richey, Florida, which is "Lennie's" home town. The resort weather in Florida hasn't $ ^{\textcircled{1}} $
such appeal for "Lennie," as she has attended high school and college in Kansas.
"Lennie," who lives at Templin hall, strongly advocates the recently organized United Women's council.
"I'm 100 per cent behind this union of sorority and independent women on the campus," she declared.
As well as being president of the women's independent senate, "Lennie" is a member of Jay Janes, I.S.A., and Spur club.
A College senior, Alberta is majoring in personnel administration, and believes that her major "will be an advantage in the coming depression."
Sports and politics are a "weakness" for this Florida student. She prefers sailing, but in Kansas she settles for tennis.
Up and Coming
A Calendar of Campus Events
Tonight:
Alpha Tau Omega buffet dinner, at the house, from 6 to midnight. Harman Co-op dance, at the house from 9 to midnight.
Sophomore Slobbovian Stomp, Union ballroom, from 8:30 to midnight.
tomorrow night:
Alpha Tau Omega pledge class Blackhawk party, at the house, from 8 a.m. midnight.
Sigma Nu pledge class party, at the house, from 6:30 to midnight.
Phi Chi dance, Eldridge hotel, from 9 to midnight.
Religious Council Meets
The executive council of Religious Emphasis Week met Wednesday to discuss the anticipated visit of Rev. Phillips P. Moulton, National Director of the University Christian Mission.
Medical Juke Box Gave Out Remedy for What 'Ails You'
Sacramento, Cal. (UP)—A medical "juke-box" that reported to tell drug store visitors the remedy to take for various ailments has earned a San Francisco druggist a citation for violation of state health laws.
The state department of public health tells the story.
"This pharmacist had constructed an electrical selector, similar to the well-known "juke box" on which a patron selects various musical selections, and had modified the gadget to show a prospective purchaser the remedy to use for various ailments or symptoms.
"His list included diabetes, failing memory, gray hair, heart trouble, peptic ulcer, sexual impotence, and tooth decay."
The same druggist also was cited for selling boric acid tablets, which cost 10 cents a bottle, as a "weight reducing preparation," for $3.59 a bottle.
Peiping (UP) — Quintuplets—all boys—were born to the wife of a Chinese army sergeant three days ago in the town of Yenlinhsien, 35 miles south of Chenchow in Honan province, the central news agency reported today.
The mother and five babies were reported doing well.
Chinese Parents Now Have Own Basketball Team
The provincial government has appropriated $50,000 (Chinese)—less than $$ in American currency—for their care and upbringing, plus a monthly quota of rice and other food, the report said.
Downs Will Lecture To Westminster Club
Dr. Cora M. Downs, professor of bacteriology, will show colored slides of flowers, gardens, and interesting places seen in her travels, at a meeting of the Westminster Supper Club at 6 pm. tonight.
The club is an organization of young Presbyterian married couples. Nursery facilities will be provided.
McVey Is Elected Phi Alpha Delta Justice
Walter L. McVey Jr., College senior and second year law student, was elected justice by Phi Alpha Delta, legal fraternity, Wednesday.
Other officers elected were Cecil H. Frey, College senior and first year law student, vice-justice; Jack O. Bowker, first year law, clerk; Ralph E. Hoke, third year law, treasure; and Milo L. Harris, second year law, marshall.
Juniors Discuss Prom Plans At Meeting
Plans for the junior prom, March 1, were discussed in a junior class meeting Thursday.
Committees for program, publicity, decorations, and ticket sales will be appointed next week. Ticket sales will be handled by a representative from each house. Approximately 30 members attended the meeting and signed up for committees.
National Director Will Talk
The Rev. Phillips P. Moulton, national director of the University Christian mission, will speak on "The Student Approach to Religion" at a meeting of the Westminster Fellowship group of the Presbyterian church at Westminster hall, 1221 Oread, 5:30 p.m. Sunday.
The Rev. Mr. Moulton is directing Religious Emphasis week on 18 college campuses this school year.
Dance At Harman
A dance will be held tonight from 9 p.m. to midnight at Harman co-op. Everyone is invited.
Arizona's eight national forests have a total area of 11 million acres.
Tri Delts Will Attend Carlson Inauguration
EUNICE CARLSON
* * *
K. U. members of Delta Delta Delta and their dates will attend in-uguration ceremonies for Governor-elect Frank Carlson at Topeka Monday and a reception and ball that might.
Ennice Carlson, member of the sorority and daughter of Mr. Carlson, will sit with her sorority sisters at the morning inauguration ceremony.
The reception for Kansas legislators will begin at 7 p.m. The Tri Delt group will be the first to go through the receiving line. About 35 members plan to attend.
'World In League Stage—Union Later'
"It itok 114 years for the United States to become a union instead of a league," Prof. R. M. Davis of the law faculty said in a speech before the Lawrence League of Women Voters Thursday. "Why should we expect the United Nations to produce a union in a matter of a few months?"
Speaking on "The United Nations at Work," Professor Davis said that the world is now going through the same league stage which our country went through from the first congress at Albany until the 14th amendment was passed.
To have a sovereign world Professor Davis emphasized that "We must understand Russia, its people, and its projects. Right now it has its hands full, but is building back to its czarist boundaries for security."
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Frederick Henderson was elected president of the Christian Science organization at a meeting in Danforth chapel Thursday.
Other officers elected were; Milton Lewis, clerk; Robert Alderson, treasurer; and Lewis Noll, executive board member. These officers will officiate during the spring semester this year and the fall semester of the next school year.
A dancing party for members at the home of Mrs. George Docking, 604 Stratford Rd., at 8 p.m. Jan. 17, was announced.
Catholic Group Plans To Reorganize
Plans for reorganizing Theta Phi Alpha, national Catholic women's sorority are underway. Miss Martha Peterson, Fan-Hellenic secretary, has announced. The group was organized in 1921 but has been inactive since 1934.
National officers are expected to visit the University soon, and organization will be carried out according to their instructions.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 10, 1947
SPOTLIGHT SPORTS
By BOB DELLINGER
(Daily Kansan Sports Editor)
Arnold Tucker, who will be a lieutenant soon, received more recognition for his generalship of the Army football squad when he was awarded the James E. Sullivan memorial trophy.
Tucker is the second grid man in the 17-year history of the award to earn the honor. The only other was his teammate for three years, the one and only Felix Blanchard, who received the trophy last year.
He was pronounced the amateur athlete who "by performance, example, and influence, did the most oversee the cause of good sportsmanship."
The balloting this year was the closest in the history of the award. Tucker received 597 points to nose out swimming star Bill Smith from Hawai'i (566) and quarterback John v Luiack of Notre Dame (546).
Tucker received 54 first place ballots compared with 56 for Lujack and 50 for Smith. Points were awarded on a basis of five for first, three for second, and one for third. The poll was taken by the National A.A.U.
立 浓 敏
The cotton bowl may be bigger next year, but Kansas will still have a rough time getting into it. The Big Six loop will be another toughie.
The non-conference schedule for the Jayhawkers has been eased a little, but it still contains the ever- tough Oklahoma Aggies and a couple of new projects, Arizona and South Dakota State.
Noticeable by their absence from next year's schedule are toughies Tulsa and Wichita.
Wichita is still trying to break into the ranks of the better small schools in the country, and to a large extent has succeeded.
The Shockers have consistently fielded good football teams the last few years, and have turned out pretty good cage squads too. The latest Wichita conquest was a 74-34 victory over Oklahoma City U.
Pratt, Kan.—A city league basketball team was in progress when one of the players called time. He hurried over to the sidelines and hunted out his dentist.
He pulled out his false teeth, gave them to the dentist for safekeeping, and rushed back onto the court.
The University of Oklahoma announces that head football coach Jim Tatum and his staff have received substantial pay increases. The coaching staff was all that was mentioned to receive the raise.
. . .
Wrestling will get its start in surrounding circles this week as Wichita U. travels to Lincoln for a match with the University of Nebraska, and Iowa State opens a two-week series of mats trays.
The Cyclones will have five meets during the next two weeks, starting with powerful Cornell tomorrow night. The Big Six season will open for the Cyclones Jan. 25, when they tangle with Kansas State.
★ ★ ★
In hockey circles, the talk is of the Toronto Maple Leafs who climbed back to a $2\frac{1}{2}$-game lead in the National League by truncing Chicago, 10-4. Detroit pulled an upset by downing the second-place Montreal Canadiens at Montreal.
Kansas City Pla-mors have hit the come-back trail in local hockey circles. The Pla-mors coasted along in last place through the early weeks of the season, then shifted into high gear and are on hot the heels of the two first-place duelists, Omaha and Minneapolis.
A Real School-Full
Mt. Vernon, Ill. (UP)—School doesn't start in the mornings at nearby Drivers until the Bodine family arrives. The four children of the family, ranging from seven to 14 years, are the entire student body of the one-room schoolhouse.
Engleman Directs Jayhawkers In Battle With Oklahoma
Without the guiding hand of their coach, Dr. Forrest C. "Phog" Allen, the Jayhawker cagers will battle the Oklahoma Sooners tonight in their second conference game.
The team will be in the hands of Assistant Coach Howard Engleman as it takes on one of the loop's toughest members in the Sooners.
The Sooners will be an especially tough obstacle to cross on their own campus, but he'll be trying to rebound from their 41-44 defeat at the hands of Nebraska Monday.
Both teams have a conference standing of no wins and one loss, and the loser will sink deeper into the league cellar with the winner climbing to third and possibly into a tie for second.
One other game is scheduled for tonight, pitting the high-flying Kansas State Wildcats against the ever-wet Iowa State Cyclones at Ames.
A victory for Coach Jack Gardner's club would send them farther out in front of the conference with two victories and no defeats, a record now held by the Missouri Tigers.
A loss to the Cyclone squad would drop the Wilcats a full game behind Missouri and would put them in a fourway tie with Iowa State. Nebraska, and the winner of the Kansas-Oklahoma fray.
Coach Bruce Drake of the Sooners is expected to start his strongest lineup of Dick Reich, Paul Courty, Gerald Tucker, Allie Paine, and Jack Landon, but Reich may be out because of an injury suffered when he collided with a Nebraska player Monday. He may be replaced by Harly Dav.
The game will also hit against other the two highest scorers in Big Six history, Gerald Tucker of Oklahoma and Charlie Black of Kansas.
Tucker holds the scoring record for the conference with 175 points for 10 games in 1943. Black narrowly failed to match the record last year as he hit 173 in 1Kansas victories.
The Jayhawkers hold one victory over the Sooners this year, downing them 51-45 in the semi-finals of the All-College tournament in December.
A preview of the duel was seen in the two team's earlier meeting when the two stars shared only 15 points between them. Black netted nine, and held Tucker to no field goals in the last half as the Sooner could only register six.
Against all opposition, however,
the two have shone like the spark-
plugs they are. Tucker has a 13.9
average for 14 games, while Black's
average for 13 is 11.9.
Coach Engleman will probably start Black and Otto Schnellbacher at forwards, Ray Evans at center, and Wendell Clark and Jack Eskridge at guards.
Topeka. (UP)—Three men, Laverne Spake of Kansas City, Drew McLaughlin of Paola, and Grover Poole of Manhattan, today began their second terms as members of the state board of regents.
Schopeepl Re-Appoints Three to Board of Regents
Washington. (UP)—An advance of $7,450 to finance preparation of drawings and specifications for the improvement of one-half mile of Minnesota avenue trafficway in Kansas City, was announced today by the Federal Works administrator.
The trio, all re-appointed, were named to four-year terms yesterday by Andrew Schoepel.
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Bruce Drake, long-time conference opponent of K.U.'s Dr. F. C. Allen, will attempt to lead his Oklahoma Sooner basketball team to a win over Kansas at Norman tonight. K.U. took three straight from the Sooners last year and won out, 51-45, in their only meeting this season.
W.A.A. Will Send Delegates To National Convention
Maxine Gunselly, chairman of the W. A. A. board, presided at the regular January meeting of the group in the Robinson gymnasium office at 7 Thursday night.
A discussion of the number of delegates to be sent to the W. A. A. national convention at the Women's college, University of North Carolina, Greensboro, headed the new business.
Pittsburgh. (UP)—Duquesne university officials said today they would try to find a replacement for Miami university for a Jan. 15 basketball game after cancelling the Miami game because a Negro is a star player on the Duquesne team.
Negro Causes Miami To Cancel Basketball
The game was scheduled at Miami, and the Florida school informed Duquesne that a city law forbids mixed competition of whites and Negroes. Coach Chick Davies said that he would not make the trip without Center Charles Cooper, a Negro, and cancelled the date.
Recently the University of Tennessee refused to play at Duquesne because Davies would not agree to keep Cooper on the bench.
Weeds Winning Out In War With Man
Washington. (UP) — Weeds are spreading faster than they are being destroyed, according to William H. (Bill) Mercer of Amarillo, Tex., the world's largest weed seed collector
Mercer has been studying weeds since the early 1900's and in the intervening years has collected more than 1,500 kinds of weed seed from the worst patches in this country and abroad.
Mercer outlined his reason for believing weeds are beating man's war against them in the current issue of "Era," the monthly publication of the Bureau of Reclamation.
He said that few farmers test their crop seed prior to planting. Farmers who are careless with the seed they plant may reap a harvest of weeds over a period of years instead of a marketable crop, he warned.
To illustrate, Mercer confounds onlookers by mixing together crop and weed seeds and then separating them. It is a difficult task because the seeds look alike. It takes expert knowledge to them. Most farmers don't have this know-how and don't try to acquire it, Mercer said.
He estimated that the annual loss caused by weeds on some reclamation projects amounts to more than the farmer pays for operation and maintenance charges and construction costs combined.
Many people are all too careless about weed control. he said.
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PERSONNEL JOBS OPEN in the KANSAS CIVIL SERVICE
THESE JOBS are Personnel Technician I positions on the examination staff of the Kansas Department of Civil Service in Topeka. The work consists of preparing civil service examinations for 350 classes of state positions.
SIX VACANCIES EXIST, which will be filled in February or later in the spring, presenting excellent opportunities for college graduates and for students graduating this winter or in June.
THE SALARY RANGE is $184.00 to $258.000 a month. Appointments will be made at salaries higher than the minimum if the qualifications of the persons appointed justify a higher salary.
SUCCESSFUL APPLICANTS will be selected by a merit examination which will be held in Lawrence and in several other cities in Kansas on or around Saturday, January 25.
APPLICATIONS will be accepted until January 15. Application forms and an announcement giving complete information about the examination may be secured by writing or phoning
THE KANSAS DEPARTMENT OF CIVIL SERVICE 801 Harrison Street, Topeka
Foley Paces Cagers With 17 Points
The Married Men rolled up the highest point total in the eight intramural basketball games played Thursday night by defeating I. S. A., 56 to 36.
Foley netted 17 points for the Married Men to take scoring honors for the night's play.
Battenfeld, trailing the 941 Club by a 13 to 15 score at the half, rallied in the final stanza to take home a 35 to 27 victory.
In other contests, the 39ers defeated Battenfeld "B", 35 to 17; the 941 Club "B" handed the Sigma Nu "B" a 24 to 20 loss; Kappa Sigma "B" defeated Tau Kappa Epsilon "B", 32 to 14; the Wolks came out on top over Triangle. 33 to 22; the Misits were victorious over Alpha Tau Omega "B", 25 to 17; and Tau Kappa Epsilon outscooted the Wicked Seven, 29 to 19.
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JANUARY 10, 1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
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Business Researcher Challenges Track Men To One-Hour Run
Walter Bowers, 48-year-old research associate for the School of Business has issued a challenge to the entire Kansas track squad for a one
not only does Mr. Bowers want to see a revival of long distance running at K.U., but he's willing to put on a track suit and match strides with student, thinlade.
The business researcher was a track star at the University of Chicago under Amos Alonzo Stagg back in the 1920's, specializing in the one-mile, two-mile, and cross-country runs.
Although he never represented the U.S. in the Olympic games, he did complete in final 1520 and 1524 Olympic tryouts in distance runs and the decathlon.
Now he wishes to establish the one-hour run as an annual track feature. He has the track squad who appointed the chorege, although no date has been set.
"I'd like to prove to the track men that they can run 10 miles an hour," Mr. Bowers said today. "At that rate, a man can just about outrun a horse, at least after the first hour."
Student runners tried out the distance recently in the indoor track under the stadium. Hal Moore traveled 9.8 miles during the 60-minute period. Ross Morrison went 9.2 miles to place second. Other runners were Dick Ruggles and Harry Kirk. They had no previous practice.
The team now is continuing conditioning exercises for the grueling distance. Official world record for the now nearly obsolete race is 11.9355 miles, set by Finland's Paavo Nurmi in 1928.
Chinese Burial Custom Makes A 'City of Dead'
Shanghai. (UP)—Within Shanghai—virtually unknown to its foreign residents—is a city of the dead.
Between now and the end of the year, Shanghai's health authorities have decreed that these dead, numbering 100,000, must be buried.
The presence in Shanghai of 100,000 unburied dead reflects a tradition and a business uniquely Chinese. It is the coffin repository, which has grown out of the deep-rooted Chinese belief that one should be buried at his native place. And to the Chinese that means, not the place of one's birth, but the ancestral home.
There is an old saying that "a tree, may be 10,000 feet tall, but its leaves still fall to the earth," and thus a man may live thousands of miles away, but he still should be buried near his ancestors.
Thus a family may have lived for several generations in Shanghai, but it still regards the town where its clan temple is located as its "native place." Because of that philosophy, most Chinese keep the coffins of their loved ones in temporary repositories, until finances, and the ebb and flow of China's almost continuous wars, make possible their removal to the native place.
During the war, when the Japanese usually insisted on investigating the contents of every coffin on suspicion of smuggling activities, an estimated 100,000 coffins accumulated in Shanghai.
Municipal authorities set the time limit for their removal and burial by the late December winter solstice — traditionally one of the most favored periods of the year for such important ceremonies as funerals.
Jet Auto Makes Test Run,
Jet Needs Few Changes
Rosamond, Cal. (UP)—A jet car, utilizing a regular chassis and a 15-foot power tube like a stovepipe down its middle, moved along the surface of Rosamond dry lake at 30 miles an hour in initial test runs. "Now we'll need to make a few changes to keep the driver from being burned, and then we can really open her up," one of its designers said.
Cleveland. (UP)—Within five to 10 years the helicopter will be sufficiently inexpensive, simple and safe for popular use, according to Igor Sikorsky, pioneer in the wingless aircraft field.
Helicopters Will Be Simple, Safe Soon
Sikorsky said that when the time comes, it may be the greatest factor since development of the automobile and commuter train in spreading out cities and speeding suburban business development.
"Individually owned and operated helicopters will permit commutation from points as far distant as 50 miles with the case with which one now comes into a city from its suburban areas," Sikorsky said.
Sikorsky, first aircraft engineer to develop and fly a helicopter, acknowledged that the plane has not been developed sufficiently to permit its operation by anyone but an expert, and that the price is well beyond mass ability-to-nav.
"With the present speed of development, the day when it will be available for popular use is definitely less than a decade away," he said, adding that "it will never replace the regular plane or the automobile, but will serve a definite need for quick transportation that is not dependent on availability of airfields."
Unrelated Herberts Confuse Ohio Voters
Columbus, O. (UP)—The Ohio electorate has voted itself into a confusing situation.
Confusing to many Ohioans is the similarity in names of Thomas J. Herbert and Paul M. Herbert, both winners in the recent elections.
Thomas J. Herbert of Cleveland is the governor-elect and Paul M. Herbert, Columbus attorney, is the lieutenant-governor-elect. They are not related.
Long Beach, Cali. (UP)—Jet planes capable of 4,000 miles an hour will ultimately be able to circle the earth in six hours, Col. Leon W. Gray, winner of the jet division in last summer's Bendix race from Los Angeles to Cleveland, said here.
Jets Can Circle Earth In Six Hours
The University High School Eagles will go after their second conference victory of the season at 4 p.m. today when they meet Basehor High school in the community building.
Colonel Gray, who has 1,600 hours in jet-propelled planes, said they are the safest airplanes in the sky.
Basehor holds league victories over Linwood and Tonganoxie, and dropped one decision to Lansing.
University High Plays Conference Tilt Today
Probable starters for the Eagles are Gene Riling and Don Cochran at forwards, Powers at center, and Richard O'Neill and C. J. Elliott at guards.
University High was decisively defeated by Tonganoxia, edged by Linwood in the season opener, and hung in the win by swamping Lansing Tuesday.
The Eagles have a record of five and one with the varsity this year, and the seconds have suffered six straight defeats. The second team game was scheduled to begin at 3:15 p.m.
The archery club competed in a weekly recording shoot in the Military Science building Thursday from 4 to 6 p.m.
Archery Club Competes In Weekly Recording Shoot
LeVaughn Hodgson is in charge of the tournament and classification of each contestant into group rankings. Eight "ends" of six arrows each were tabulated for this week's record.
New York. (UP)—Seventy-four per cent of a cross-section of the nation's urban population believed there would be another war in 25 years, it was indicated in a poll taken in October.
Poll Shows New War Feared In 25 Years
The survey, taken by the Psychological corporation, said 56 per cent of those who believed there would be another war thought it would involve Russia and the United States. Only 18 per cent thought there would be lasting peace.
The report noted that in February, 1943, only 47 per cent in a similar poll said they thought there would be another war.
The corporation said its poll questioned 5,000 persons in 124 cities and towns.
About half of the nation's families earn less than $2,000 yearly.
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 10,1947
Kansan Comments.
The wave of hotel fires in December prompted many cities to take another look at their fire inspection laws and enforcement and many cities found their ordinances lacking.
Fire Rules
Chicago, where last June's La Salle hotel fire killed 61, waited only nine days after the Atlanta Winecoff hotel fire in December to pass an ordinance which requires all Chicago hotels to put walls and doors on elevator shafts and stairways of such thickness and material that they will stop passage of fire for one hour. Hotels must make the change by July 1.
Three days after the Winecote disaster, St. Louis ordered 17 hotels to show why their permits should not be revoked for failure to comply with fire prevention regulations.
Detroit had a fire prevention ordinance against which a restraining order had been issued. The ordinance, which required all multiple dwellings of more than two stories to have fireproof stairways with adequate fire doors, was ruled within police jurisdiction just four days after the Atlanta fire. It goes into effect immediately.
San Diego sentenced a man to 44 days in jail for starting a hotel fire by smoking in bed.
Indianapolis passed a measure banning smoking in stores.
Milwaukee ordered the city auditorium to cease locking doors during performances and to ban smoking in its corridors.
Many other cities and states are preparing to go to legislative bodies this month to tighten up fire control measures.
K. U. too may profit from the Winecoff disaster.
Most fire exits are plainly marked, but some are not. Watson library has only the front entrance and an unmarked freight entrance through which students could evacuate the building should fire strike. Several other buildings, regardless of the number of fire extinguishers already provided, are potential death traps.
There is little need to condemn the buildings. In the first place, they'd be hard to replace; and in the second place, they're probably as safe as the majority of buildings in the state. Semi-annual inspections by the state fire marshal have kept the buildings in pretty fair shape.
One aspect, however, has been neglected. In many fires in public buildings, lives have been lost because those in the burning building didn't know where the exits were because they all crowded to one or two exits and failed to use the others.
It would be a very wise idea if, at the first of every semester, instructions on which exit is to be used by each classroom were posted prominently on the board. If each student saw in each class for a solid week the route he should take in case of fire, the possible jamming of one exit would be avoided.
Advertisements for the Saturday night Slobbivian Stomp at times have stated the price is one rasbitnick and at other times two rasbitnicks a couple. The manager of the dance says rasbitnicks have been fluctuating on the international exchange recently, but the price has been stabilized at two American bucks a couple.
Only a few minutes would be necessary to set up such a plan a few minutes which later might save a few lives.
Dear Editor--every way. As a deep skin cleanser, TEN-O-SIX refreshes while lifting out grime. As an antiseptic, Ten-O-Six helps keep the skin free from surface blems - makes it satin smooth. Even father will look just a little glamorous when he uses this skin-awakener after shaving. Surround your family table with complexions bright as silver dollars. The sturdiest male will like the tingle and aplaud its fragrance. The tenderest skin will be quickly helped by its gentle healing properties. Buy Bonne Bell's TEN-O-SIX at $1 for the $2 size.
Editor's Note: Every "Letter to the Editor" must be signed. The name will be withheld from publication upon request, but the editor must know who wrote it. All letters must be limited to 250 words.
Among the pleasanties of the Christmas season was the acclaim given to the dean of the School of Fine Arts by one of the local civic groups. The accolade was two-fold; for the excellence of the annual seasonal vespers, and for the high level of the concert series.
With the first praise few are likely to disagree. With the latter, however, the demurrers may reach a sizable number if the sotoo voce grousing about the quality of concerts this year serves as a criterion. Here in this scholastic year of 1946-47 with the University enrollment at an all-time peak (that naturally means more money with which to hire artists) the concert numbers range from second-rate through negligible to downright shabby.
The Dupre recital, as anyone who was there well knows, was an egocentric display of numbers by the organist himself with almost no representation from the great literature of music for that instrument. The Icelandic Singers provided a pleasant and rather empty evening in the realm of pure music. ( Their subsequent debut in New York was covered by the Times as a news item, hands-across-the-sea, rather than a straight musical event.)
Now comes Isaac Stern, an accomplished and laudable player, but certainly no Heifetz or Szigeti. Still to arrive are the Metropolitan ensemble, made up of four of the lesser and most over-worked talents from the Met, a pianist whom almost no one has heard of, and Gladys Swarthout, who must be considered by the fine arts school as the piece de resistance since the price for her recital is suped up over those for the others.
Now anyone who makes the slightest pretension of knowing music realizes that the lovely Miss Swarthout's deviation from pitch is almost as fabulous as her exquisite taste in clothes.
Earlier in the season when a tired little opera company was imminent, there appeared over the signature of the dean of the School of Fine Arts this phrase—and we quote “the masterpiece of all time”—in plugging "Hansel and Gretel." To those who recall a few minor operas by Wagner, Verdi, not to mention Puccini this overstated case must smack both of crass money-grubbing and intellectual dishonesty.
University instructor
So in this year of the 9,000 the concert series presents shopworn talents and dull little packaged goods without a single Traubel, Rubenstein, Menuhin, Melehoir (M-G-M has him, of course), Landowska, Teyte or Anderson. And don't bother to tell us that the auditorium is never filled for a concert. If a few authentic talents were presented, perhaps it would be.
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn. Island New York, President of the Collegegate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service at Madison Ave. New York City.
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
The University Daily Kansan
(Editor's note — The series is spending all the money it receives; would you suggest the series cost more or should the number of concerts be reduced? Of course, people have enjoyed the concerts, but anyone is entitled to an opinion on public performances.)
Managing Editor Charles Roos
Asst. Managing Editor Jane Anderson
Makeup Editor Billie Marie Hamilton
Business Manager Bill Donovian
Advertising Manager Margery Handy
Circulation Manager John McCormick
Graph Editor Edward W. Swain
Graph Ed. R. T. Klingman
City Editor R. T. Kingman
Jerald Hamilton, fine arts junior, and Victor Reinking, College junior, have been named to receive the John Curry Battenfeld award for the 1948 spring semester. This award is made each semester to the most outstanding residents of Battenfeld hall on the basis of scholarship and contribution to the house.
Award Winners Named
Jaytalking --every way. As a deep skin cleanser, TEN-O-SIX refreshes while lifting out grime. As an antiseptic, Ten-O-Six helps keep the skin free from surface blems - makes it satin smooth. Even father will look just a little glamorous when he uses this skin-awakener after shaving. Surround your family table with complexions bright as silver dollars. The sturdiest male will like the tingle and aplaud its fragrance. The tenderest skin will be quickly helped by its gentle healing properties. Buy Bonne Bell's TEN-O-SIX at $1 for the $2 size.
Some soured fans were heard to remark after Tuesday night's game, "Wish we'd gone to the bowl and forget about basketball." Chances are these are the same fans who put up such a howl about not being able to see all the home games.
Wallace and Wichita counties are the only Kansas counties not represented by a student in K.U. Perhaps a note to the respective chambers of commerce would shame them into sending someone to uphold the counties' good names.
No one is so exasperating as the eager beaver who finishes a term paper early, then during class asks questions about requirements for the t.p. in such a way that the professor requires every student to do as said e.b. has done.
The main difference between professors and sword-swallowers is that the sword-swallower makes a living shoving things down his own throat.
One Western Kansas editor brags that he kept a New Year's resolution for a solid year. He resolved that he wouldn't quit smoking all during the year and not once did he falter in his resolution.
A poor Chinese fisherman caught a fish with $3,000 worth of diamond rings in its stomach. No one seems to have expressed sympathy for the fish which one minute was a live rich fish and the next moment a dead poor fish.
A young Scotch sailor, who admitted drinking 30 shots of whiskey and half a case of beer, was released by an English police court when he blamed his love on whiskey on the teachings of American sailors. The judge said he'd liked to meet those American gentlemen, but didn't say whether he wanted to chastise them for contributing to the delinquency of minors or to ask them to teach him.
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JANUARY 10.1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
'Things' Get Plenty Transportation In Budget That Has Costly Chuckles
B BY FREDERICK C. OTHMAN
(United Press Staff Correspondent)
Washington. (UF)—President Truman handed to congress today the biggest (six and one quarter pounds), most expensive ($5 a copy) budget in the memory of the oldest lawmaker.
Interesting, too. There are costly chuckles and expensive dramatics on nearly every one of its 1,563 pages; let's hold tightly to our wallets and examine a few entries, such as the one involving the admirals brushing the seaweed off the crystal ball:
They peered far into the future and foresaw in fiscal '48 warships crashing into freighters, piers and each other, causing exactly $59,598-000 worth of damage. They also asked for $396,000 to wash the shirts of midshipmen at Annapolis.
The senate put down four thousand and dollars for an automobile for the non-existent vice-president and then insulted him, if ghosts can be insulted, by appropriating $6,500 each for the motor cars of its Republican and Democratic leaders. Capitol hill tree surgery will cost $2,500 and new clocks for the congressional library, $2,250.
President Truman gets $100,000 to spend on objects of a confidential nature and $3—that's three simoleons and not a misprint—for the transportation of things. That is a break for the taxpayers; moving them around at the White House the year before cost $8.
Things and their transportation with never a further clue, litter the budget. The atomic energy commission, for instance, needs $9,.725,000 to transport —br-r-r-r— things. Must be big things.
Secretary of Interior Cap Krug wants $1,534,000 to propagate fish,
$902,000 to investigate fish, and $401,-000 to compile fishy statistics. For whales he needs $22,400 and for skinning foxes on the Pribilof islands,
$150,000.
The governor of Alaska will make his old limestone do another year. But the governor of the Virgin islands needs two new ones at two thousand dollars each. It'll cost us a thousand dollars to fulfill our treatment of the Sierra Indians and $150,000 to keep the Sioux out of their war bonnets.
The fellows who name mountains, ponds, and creeks, known formally as the interior department's division of geography, intend to spend $90,000 naming (they've got me doing it, too) things. The bureau of standards wants to build underground a $415,-000 betatron.
Investigation of sheep and goats will cost the agriculture department $172,541, but it has quit trying to grow rubber on the desert and isn't asking for a penny to continue its guayu planting.
There are 27 pages of appropriations for Indians, including Eskimos; $1,500 for the maritime commission to use for entertaining foreign dignitaries, and the obituary (a full generation late) of the U.S. spruce corp. This was established in 1918 to get the wood for World War I airplanes and has been in business ever since.
The department of state wants to hire a launch for the ambassador to Turkey and to maintain jails for American convicts in Egypt, Ethiopia, Morocco, and Muscat. It also intends to hire a few dragonets.
Habein, Calderwood's Father Dies
Henry Habein, father of Mrs Natalie Calderwood and Miss Margaret Habein, died early Tuesday morning at his home in Waseca, Minn. Funeral services were held yesterday at Waseca.
Mrs. Calderwood, English instructor, had remained with her father after the Christmas holidays, since Mr. Habein had been in failing health for several months.
Miss Habein, dean of women, returned to the University after the holidays but was called back to Waseca early this week when her father's condition became critical.
For the first time in 75 years, there were no bank failures in 1945 in the United States.
'Face Alcoholism Squarely In Eye'
Harrisburg. Pa. (UP) — Twelve thousand alcoholies die annually in the United States, according to Mrs. Marty Mann's report to the Pennsylvania federation of women's clubs.
That figure would be considerably less, the executive committee on alcoholism said, if each community would look the issue squarely in the eye and treat an alcoholic "the same way that any other sick person is treated."
Alcoholics are not hopeless, said Mrs. Mann, who identified herself to audiences as a former drink addict and first woman member of Alcoholies Anonymous.
"They can get well and ignore the bottle with a little knowledge, cooperation and good will."
"We have gone to such lengths to hide alcoholics," she said, "that they have died like flies. We must overcome the stigma of sin that has been fastened upon the alcoholic."
Mabel Ann Richardson, education junior, represented K.U. at an international student planning conference of the Christian church at Merom, Ind., Dec. 28 to Jan. 2. Fifty-three students and 11 adult leaders from various states and Canada attended. A national program for Christian students was set up. The K.U. group works through the Kansas Bible chair at Myers hall and the First Christian church.
Richardson Represents KU In Church Conference
Kurata Appointed Engineering Professor
Dr. Fred Kurata will come to the University next month as assistant professor of chemical engineering, it was announced today by Chancellor Deane W. Malott.
For two years during the war Dr. Kurata, who is a second generation citizen of Japanese descent, was employed on a secret project by the National Defense Research council. Since 1943 he has been employed by the Atlas Powder company in Tamaqua, Pa. Mrs. Kurata served in the Marine corps during the war.
Dr. Kurata has taught at the University of Michigan where he received his master's and doctor's degrees. He received a bachelor of science degree from the California Institute of Technology in 1934. He has specialized in hydrocarbon mixtures and written several articles on their properties.
The Kuratas have one child and will live at Sunflower village.
During World War II, 100 generals were either killed, wounded or captured.
LEGAL NOTICE
Amendment To ASC Bill No. 2
Be it enacted by the Associated Students of the University of Kansas:
1. That ASC Bill No. 2, Chapter 2,
2. Section 2 be amended to read:
"The annual general election shall be held on Thursday of the tenth week of classes of the spring semester, with the following exception: in the event of a scheduled vacation during the ninth or tenth week of classes, the ASC, before the end of the fall semester, shall set a new date to be within seven days of the above date."
"At a freshman election to be held on Thursday of the seventh week of classes in the fall semester, there will be an event where the new representatives to the ASC and the freshman class officers as may be hereafter provided."
2. That ASC Bill No. 2, Chapter 1,
Section 4, (a), be amended to read:
HOWARD ENGLEMAN President of the All Student Council*
Secretary of the All Student Council DEANE W. MALOTT
hancellor of the University of Kansas.
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Copy must be in the University Dally Kansas Business Office. Journalism bldg., no. of p.m. of the day before publication is desired. All classifiers are cash in advance.
Classified Advertising Rates
One day 35c 1c
25 words or less additional words
Lost
GOLD Sheaffer, ball point fountain pen
McClure, 957. Wurt, 124. -印 McClure, 957. Wurt, 124.
BLACK Leather zipper containing everything I know for the semester. Finder please return to Daily Kansan office.
Reward. -13-
GOLD Ring initialized E G. Lost in front
Kick's Reward. Call Bill Mullarky.
2003
SLIDE Rule, probably in Marvin hall.
Leather use. Call Bill Wilden, phone:
(312) 748-5000.
'41 Chev. convertible for sale. 2 heaters.
LADY Elgin wristwatch, Jan. 8 between Frank Strong and Fraser, Margaret Hardie engraved on back, Reward, Phone 1526-31-0, 1526-31-55
For Sale
1936 FORD. Fardor deluxe in very good condition. Radio, heaters' oxygen paint. See at 1432 Connecticut five. -10
New Duplex for sale. 5 rooms each unit. Immediate occupancy. Phone 1566-J. -10
Museum. Floor number. Foster, 2273-3, 1632 Mass. -10
CONN Trombone. Silver with sterling silver bell. Excellent condition. Emily Berry, 537. -10
Lightens. New Mercury motor. New tires. See at 800 1-2 Mo. after 5 p.m. or call lowest offer. -10
DE JURY. Mercedes and leather and leather case, recently factory - checked and cleaned, for $20. Hill Roberts, 1340 Tennessee. Phone 2498-M. -13
Train range, oil heater, hardwood interior, fully insulated electric brakes. Sleeps six months. Give possession Felix Parked at 1724 Miss. -14
ELECTRIC Iron, slightly used, with extra long cord if wanted. Also 8-inch boots. See both at 13 at Lane Q, Sunflower.
BED, Mattress, and springs. Three drawer dresser with mirror. Also little used two-burner hot-plate and large briefcase. See at 128 West 13th. -15-
PRACTICALLY New Indies dresses, suits,
pants and shirts. Suit size 37.1 man's suit and
sport coat size 39. Reasonably priced for
a sale. Call 2734-W anytime after 3 p.m.
spotlight, radio. Top condition, nice fish.
Phone 1996-5 or 1106. Koehn.
-BR
WANEED To rent. Close to campus.
BATCH room for Educators.
Senior Call 14623-R.
Wanted
MEMBERS For flying club or will sell interest in 46 T-craft. No students. Calvin Cooley. 1142 Ind. Phone 3335. -15-SLIDE RULE log du log expetr trig or detrig Keuffel Esser. Call Baker at 1963 after 2, or come to 530 Louisiana. -16
Business Services
Police Judge Prescribes 'Walking Cure' For Vandals
MICROCOPES. Colorimeters, balances,
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Transportation
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Cheyenne, Wyo. (UP) — Police Judge A. J. Williams is rough on teen-agers charged with vandalism
FOR Group riding, get your coupon in Jan. 9 Kansan and then call for Bill's service to be applied for good service with five years of experience driving for KU. students. -13-
He sentenced five Cheyenne youths to spend two hours daily for 10 days walking around a school where they were accused of breaking 27 windows.
The rough part was the hours the judge specified for the walks—between 2 and 4 a.m. And the parents had to take the walks, too.
From 63 Nations
Berkley, Calif. (UP)—The University of California numbers representatives from 63 nations among its student body. Nations from Afghanistan to Venezuela are enrolled in the Berkeley, Davis, and San Francisco campuses.
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 10,1947
Now It's Tickling His Ribs
A. H. BROWN
Eldon Teft had to admit that "it bumped the side of my esophagus, and hurt a little," but he really swallowed that sword. To prove it to his speech class, he had an X-ray taken, and there the sword was, a wide spot in the middle of his chest and stomach. The world's record for sword-swallowing. Teft explained, is about 10 inches longer than he can take. It is determined by the lankiness of the individual, and if your mouth isn't more than 17 inches away from the bottom of your stomach, you can swallow only a 17-inch blade, as this one is. Teft learned the "trade" himself after seeing a sword-swallowing act in a carnival. Another act he saw there was the "fire-cater," and—you guessed it—he eats fire, too.
News of the World
"The Bells of Saint Mary's"
Vilms Moviegoes Votes
Hollywood (UP)—Movie critics who put "The Bells of St. Mary's" way down on their list of the year's best pictures, learned today that it was number one with American movies.
A Gallup poll rated the picture and its stars, Bing Crosby and Ingrid Bergman, the most popular film, movie actor, and actress of 1946.
Critics choice for the best picture of the year was "The Lost Weekend." They said the second best picture was "The Green Years" and "Anna and the King of Siam" was third.
Russia Feels Unity Depends
On German Denigratio
Moscow, (UP)—Russia regards full demilitarization and demilitarization of Germany as a prerequisite of economic and political unity, the important foreign policy journal, New Times, said today in what appeared to be a pre-view of the Soviet position at the forthcoming Moscow conference.
Russia Wants Arctic Island
Washington, (UP) — The Soviet Union asked Norway in 1944 for outrightcession of the Arctic island of Beir, midway between northern Norway and Spitzerbergen, and for obligation of a treaty prohibiting construction of naval bases in Spitzbergen, it was learned authoritatively today.
House Gets Rent Bill
Washington. (UP)—A bill to extend rent controls for a year beyond the present June 30 expiration date was introduced today by Rep. Enoy H. Price (D-Fla.) The bill would permit individual adjustments in rentals.
New State Hospital Asked
Toroka. (UP)—A new state mental hospital should be built and a department of mental hygiene should be created, the Kansas legislative council recommended today to the legislature.
Ambassador Asks Soviet To Return Dairen to China
Cleveland. (UP)—Dr. Wellington Koo, Chinese ambassador to the United States, called upon Russia to restore the port of Dairen to China in an address last night and blamed the Yalta agreement for the re-entry of the Soviets into Chinuria and northeastern Asia.
The situation created by Russia's re-entry into these areas is "pregnant with possibilities of friction and discord," he told a council on world affairs.
Arabian Prince to Visit U.S.
Washington. (UP) — The White House announced today that Amir Saud, crown prince of Saudi Arabia, had accepted an invitation from President Truman to visit Washington this month. The elder son of King Ibn Isa is expected to arrive here about Jan. 13.
Lake Success. (UP)—Proposals for a new UN disarmament commission paralleling the atomic energy commission gained favor in the security council today, but the United States sparred for more time to consider the idea because delegates feared Soviet Russia wanted to sway the council from the consideration of the American atomic control plan to the more general field of world disarmament.
U.S. Fears Russian Motive
Warsaw. (UP)—A defendant in a treason trial today named the British embassy as the "certain foreign embassy" which the prosecution said received state secrets from the Polish underground.
British Named In Trial
Detroit. (UP)—The National Association of Manufacturers stepped into the controversy over portal-to-portal pay today with a request that the courts deny all claims for back wages.
N.A.M. Fights 'Back Pay'
If the mounting tide of suits is not checked, it said, the "whole national economy" may be endangered.
Duranty, Knickerbocker Disagree, Agree On Problem Of 'Russia, One World'
'Joe Is Merely A Nationalist'-Duranty
By JAMES GUNN (Daily Kansan Staff Writer)
Short, slim baldling Walter Duranty, who resembles Donald Meek of the movies in appearance if not in speech and action, ate nothing except two rolls at the dinner given for him and Mr. Knickerbocker by the University Thursday night before the debate.
The English - born journalist (Liverpool, 1884) spoke in his clipped British accent to his dinner companions with animation on many subjects, while he smoked cigarettes one after another, and drank several cups of coffee.
On his series of debates with Mr. Knickerbocker: "We've found we only agree upon one thing—what will happen when Stalin dies. An oligarchy will take over from which will emerge in time a strong man. The man may be one of several now in high positions around Stalin."
On new Secretary of State Marshall: "He is an excellent choice. The Russians like Marshall personally, and they respect him for his military ability and the high position he holds."
On Russian veto power and atomic control: "I believe the Russians will gradually give up their insistence on the veto power in atomic control matters and will permit international inspection of their country."
On Russian psychology: "The Russian actions in the United Nations council can be understood merely by understanding their psychology. They are an oriental people in blood, mentality, and customs, and they have the oriental love for slow, deliberate, and long drawn-out bargaining."
On Warren Austin, who replaced Bernard Baruch in the United Nations: "He is a stubborn Vermonter and won't sell us short. I don't think he will discard Baruch's policies, and he may be able to put them to more effective use."
On Communist missionary fervor and activity: "Stalin is more interested in nationalism than communism. That is what the Stalin-Trotsky battle was about. Though they have given up most of their hopes of immediate revolution and have ceased many of their international activities, they cannot give up entirely the idea of world revolution. I hesitate to make the comparison, but the Russians have much the same feeling about missionary work as Christians have."
Frats Will Have Fire Inspections
All fraternity houses are in for surprise fire inspections.
The Inter-Fraternity council and Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, have established a committee which is now in the process of making unannounced inspections of all fraternity houses for fire hazards.
Synthetic Rubber Process Shown to Chemistry Club
"In general, we have found safety suggestions being complied with in houses we have visited thus far." Willis Tompkins, assistant dean of men, stated yesterday.
A film on "Synthetic Rubber" was presented to Chemistry club members at the regular meeting Thursday.
Styrine, a product developed by chemists, together with Butadiene, a petroleum product, with the addition of water, soap suds, and a catalyst is mixed.
The molecules link together in this process to form the real synthetic base called "latex." The latex is then put through various mixing machines and roller presses to form the raw synthetic rubber.
Personalities and opinions clashed Thursday night when veteran foreign correspondents H. R. Knickerbocker and Walter Duranty crossed wits on Russia before an audience that filled only half the Hoch auditorium floor.
The journalists, both of whom won Pulitzer prizes for articles on Russia, were threshing out the subject "Can Russia Be Part of One World" for the 26th time.
The second number of the Community Lecture series, moderated by Prof. E.C. Buehler, divided into two 20-minute discussion periods, followed by five minutes for rebuttal, and questions from the floor.
In spite of widely diverging premises, the debaters arrived at similar conclusions.
Mr. Duranty, taking the affirmative of the question which he translated as meaning, "Will Russians cooperate in making and maintaining peace?" came to the conclusion that they would, he trusted them, but they should be treated with patient firmness.
Mr. Knickerbocker, taking the negative, decided that they might, but he mistrusted them, and they should be treated with patient firmness.
Mr. Knickerbocker said;
"Stalin is responsible for the deaths of 20 million Russians; more than Hitler is responsible for. He controls and justifies the means, even evil."
"Russia has taken and is holding 12 countries and 129 million people, with no intention of turning them loose. Turkey is the only country in the world without a Russian Fifth column. That's because the Turks know the Russians."
"Stalin is not a mad man avid for power. He is a cautious man avid with Russia. The only way to get along with Russia is to keep Russia cautious."
Mr. Duranty said:
"Common ideas of Russian aims are false. Russia cannot be judged by American standards for there is no democracy there.
"Russia's invasion of European countries during the war was a blow at Germany, not at the invaded countries. Her only objective is to wipe out Nazism completely.
"Russia is larger than the United States and Canada combined and has adequate natural resources. Why should she go cantering off on dreams of imperial expansion when she has only to develop her own resources?"
Prejudice Is Cultural. Templin Tells Y.M.
"Prejudice is not a biological fact; it is a cultural fact. From the standpoint of race prejudice, all children are color-blind, and the prejudices are gathered from the environment," I. G. Templin of the sociology department, said at the Y. M. C. A. movie forum Thursday.
The only way we can correct the difficulties of race prejudice. Dr. Templein believes, is to study the history of the world, because such a study will show that there are no pure races in existence.
"We would be in a better position to advocate democracy in the world." Dr. Templin closed by saying, "if we practiced it at home. We still have a long way to go to work out democratic procedure at home."
Two films. "Our Shrinking World" and Frank Sinatra's academy award winning "The House I Live In," were shown before the talk by Dr. Templein.
Discussion Will Be Held
A panel discussion will be held by the students who attended the National Student assembly for Y.M.-Y.W.C.A. at Urbana, Ill. The meeting is to be in the Kansas room of the Union, at 4 p.m. Tuesday.
'Only Mother Likes Joe'-Knickerbocker
BY BILL HAAGE
(Daily Kansan Editor-in-Chief)
"If it's a student audience, they'll be for Walter." H. R. Knickerbocker predicted just before his debate with Walter Duranty. "For that matter, any audience made up of minorities favors Walter, but I get the rest."
The red-haired Texan didn't worry about the debate. At an informal dinner in the Union, he shifted the discussion from international affairs to national affairs, and was evidently pleased as Punch that for the first time since 1923 he'd be in the U.S., while the political parties were trying to pick presidential candidates.
Mr. Knickerbocker, son of a Methodist minister, received his bachelor of arts degree at Georgetown, Texas, studied in Berlin, Vienna, and Heidelberg, served as foreign correspondent for years, left Pearl Harbor on the first ship from the coast after the sneak attack, fled from the Japs through the islands, and covered the end of the European war.
He was in Turkey during the time when Russia was asking for a share in governing the Dardanelles, and he grew quite indignant while stating that 60 per cent of Turkey's budget had to go for military preparedness every time Russia throws a look in Turkey's direction. He said he'd talked with Turks all through the country and failed to find one who liked Russia.
Mr. Knickerbocker would have made a good politician. His interest in talking to and with people is evident, and it makes little difference in his interest what viewpoint the speaker has.
He said that in the 25 debates he and Mr. Duranty had staged, there had been 25 changes in the speeches. He said just before going on the stage that the two debaters had made a pact to debate on views and not to attack personalities. During the debate however, both seemed to forget the agreement.
His hatred for Joseph Stalin is never concealed. He said he'd only found one Russian who said nice things about the Soviet chief, and that was Stalin's mother, who said, "Joe was always a good boy."
Professor Will Speak To Wesley Foundation
JOHN WILSON
His subject will be, "Thy Kingdom Come—Beginning in Me."
John C. Irwin, professor of preaching and church administration at Northwestern university, will be the guest speaker at the Wesley foundation's monthly convoction Sunday
At 2:30 p.m. Sunday, Professor Irwin will meet informally with students interested in religious vocations and educational preparations for such vocations. The meeting will be at the Wesley foundation parsonage, 1209 Tennessee street, and will be open to anyone interested.
Professor Irwin was formerly director of the Wesley foundation at North Dakota university.
University DAILY KANSAN
STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Monday, January 13, 1947
44th Year No.67
Lawrence, Kansas
Little Man On Campus
By Bibler
ZOOLOGICAL
SPECIMENS
BLACK MANGO
WHIP SKU
PYTHON
(Python idea)
BLUE SNAKE
KU
BIBLER
H. ORILY KANSAN
State Progress Is Inauguration Aim
Topcka. (UP)—Frank Carlson today became Kansas' 30th governor in 86 years of statehood with a plea for postwar progress.
Before 4,500 persons in the Topeka municipal auditorium. Governor Carlson termed Kansas the greatest state, the "heart of America from almost any viewpoint," and challenged its people to lead the national transition to peace.
The inauguration was without the traditional 18-gun salute on the statehouse grounds today--no 75-millimeter blank ammunition was found in an extended search in the Midwest.
The governor's mother, 81-year-old Mrs. Anna Carlson, was unable to attend—her doctor ruled out the trip. Besides Mrs. Carlson the family present included their University of Kansas daughter Eunice, who invited her entire sorority.
Governor Carlson, succeeding Kansas' wartime Governor Andrew F. Schoeppel, made no mention of resubmission of the prohibitory amendment or of financial matters, topics expected to be major items in his message to the new legislature Wednesday.
He emphasized use of his office to insure respectful obedience of the laws, the enlargement of agriculture and industrial activity, the gainful re-assimilation of war veterans, and the necessity of retaining "our sons and daughters," within the state to further its greatness.
Richardson Reports On Christian Church Meet
Kappa Beta, Christian Church group, held its regular weekly meeting Sunday afternoon in Barlow Chapel of Myers hall.
Mabel Ann Richardson, president, reported on the Christian Church group conference which she attended in Meram, Ind., over the Christmas holidays.
Mr. Reginald Strait, physical education instructor, will speak at next week's meeting.
Takes Over Reins
T
GOV. FRANK CARLSON
Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen is in good physical condition at the University of Kansas hospital where he is confined, it was announced today. Rest has been prescribed, and he will probably be absent from his coaching duties until the Iowa State game here Jan. 24.
'Phog' In 'Good' Shape
The executive committee of the National Inter-collegiate United Nations association, composed of William Tincher, Dorothy Heschmeyer, Kenneth Beck and Betty van der Smissen, met with the national chairman, Jean Moore Saturday.
Group Plans Confab To Be Here In Fall
Plans will be made for the first national conference to be held here in mid-November. The Association will be affiliated with the United Nations organization through the American Association for Advancement of United Nations.
Have Our Means Improved Ends?, Will Durant Asks
"We are better equipped today to achieve our ends," said Dr. Will Durant in convocation this morning, "but are our ends any better than before?"
Present plans are to have James Byrnes, Harold Stassen, or Henry Wallace as speaker.
"That is the greatest problem of the times," he concluded in the University-Forums board jointly sponsored address on, "What Are the Lessons of History?" Dr. Durant was introduced by H. L. Miller, Jr., chairman of the Forums board.
The philosopher - author of the best-selling "The Story of Philosophy" and "The Story of Civilization" attempted to analyze our current problems by applying the method of philosophy to history, "an attempt to see this moment in the light of all time."
Dr. Durant subdivided his topic into six aspects or viewpoints, biological, racial, geographical, economical, political, and moral or religious. These are the lessons of history he drew from each:
Biologically: "It isn't enough to be right, you have to have babies. All history is a mere factor of biology. Life is fertility. History has no use for organisms or groups that cannot breed abundantly. Babies determine history. Life is also a struggle and selective. Only weaklings dream of utopias of no struggle and no selection."
Racially: "There is no inherent superiority in any race. Great civilizations arise under any color scheme. The function of race is like the function of sex, to bring many differing and invigorating lines of heredity together."
Geographically: "Great civilizations arise on the great trade routes. Trade makes civilizations. You raise the standard of living by getting things from other people who can make them cheaper than you. In that sense trade should be free."
Economically: "There is only one economic system—the profit system. The Soviets may produce a different system, but I have yet to see it."
Politically: "I can't draw any lesson from history on this topic. All political systems have done well at times and ill at times—from monarchy and aristocracy to democracy. Another system than ours may be better in a different place."
Morality or religion: "We are born with instincts which fit us more for the jungle than our present civilization. Some way had to be found to limit individual instincts and promote the social instincts. It is the experience of mankind that unless a moral code is infused into you with religion it doesn't take. The social function of religion is to provide supernatural support to a moral code which goes against the grain."
K.U. Asks Increased Construction Funds
Chancellor Wants Over $450,000 For Buildings; Calls Some Fire Traps
The University is after more money for construction projects.
A Diamond For Christmas
... So I Gave My Wife
An increase in state appropriations was sought today in a report by Chancellor Deane W. Malott to the governor and the board of regents for the fiscal years 1944-46.
Isaac Stern, star violinist of the motion picture, "Humoresque" will appear in concert at 8:20 tonight in Hoch auditorium.
Stern To Plav New Selections
Mr. Stern, 28, is brought to Lawrence for the first time by the University Concert Course management after touring the country for several seasons and after solo appearances with most of the major symphony orchestras of the country.
絵琴演奏
(作者:周志雄)
His program tonight will offer an array of violin literature, from the standard works as well as a number of newer selections to be heard here for the first time.
The third section of the program will include Danse de Jeunes Antilaisises and Mosques by Prokofi-DeGrunes; La Fontain d'Artheuse by Szymowski; Four Romanian Dances by Bartok-Szekely; Tijuca, a Brazilian Tango, by Milhaud, and Hoedown from "Rodeo" by Coplaud; and Introduction Et Rondo Capriccioso by Saint-Saens.
The concert will begin with the Ciaconna by Vita, followed by the Concerto in E Minor, op. 64 of three parts by Mendelssohn.
After intermission will be given the Adagio and Fugue in G Minor (for solo violin) by Bach and the Baroque solo by composers Mozart-Kreiselk.
The box office will open at 7 p.m.
The request for increased appropriations is expected to boost above $450,000 amounts authorized for the University's top priority projects,
When interviewed yesterday, he
It was a prosperous vacation for Robert Warren Hoke Jr., engineering junior, of East Orange, New Jersey, and his bride. While spending a day in New York City, they visited the "Give and Take" radio show. One hour later they left the studio winners of a two piece Samsonite luggage set, a pair of Rembrandt table lamps and a diamond ring.
Hoke, a former captain in the Marine air corps, was picked by chance with his wife, the former Miss Wilma Rehm of Bonner Springs, to participate on the program.
he couldn't remember many of the questions asked, but did recall being asked to name in 30 seconds six cosmetic articles a woman uses during the day.
Along with three other contestants, Hoke was picked to try for the grand prize, a diamond ring. "Again," he said. "My luck was good and we won the ring."
Hoke entered the University last fall and was married Thanksgiving. He attended Newark College of Engineering before he entered the service in 1942. And would he like to participate in another radio show? And "how!"
Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, said today.
These projects include a new $100,000 engineering shop building, a $200,000 addition to Watson library, and a $150,000 remodeling of Fowler shops for the new William Allen White School of Journalism, Mr. Nichols said.
The hoped-for increase is designed to cover rising construction costs, Mr. Nichols pointed out.
Construction on the projects has not yet begun but Charles Marshall, state architect, has turned in an estimate of the increased costs to Governor Carlson, to guide the legislature in authorizing requested increases. Mr. Nichols said.
In his report, Chancellor Malott offered three alternatives for the future of education at K.U.
"The University, the legislature, and the people of Kansas are confronted by a definite problem. Facilities in personnel, maintenance, and new building must be provided consistent with sound education for these increased numbers," the chancellor wrote.
"Or the University must curtail numbers by denying to high school graduates of Kansas the right to come to the University without further entrance screening by the University; or the standards of the University must be revised downward with inevitable loss of reputation, of able staff, and of students who will go outside the state for higher education."
Chancellor Malott's report clearly indicated that the University feels that an expansion of facilities, which means more building, is the number one solution to the enrollment problem.
In addition to requests for renewals of the present appropriations will be one for a building to house the School of Fine Arts. A modern building for chemistry and physics and an additional classroom building are next on the list.
Two antiquated buildings now house chemistry and physics. Both are dangerous fire hazards and it is necessary to maintain fire watches 24 hours a day. Enrollment in science is so great now that a small fire in either would cause inestable damage to the education and research program, the report continued.
Through the Board of Regents the University will seek state funds for construction of three dormitories, one for women, one for men at Lawrence, and a third for the School of Medicine at Kansas City.
The legislature will be asked to change the dormitory enabling act of 1941 to permit issuance of bonds for the construction of two more dormitories. Rent revenues will be used for debt retirement.
WEATHER
Kansas—Partly cloudy west, mostly cloudy east, occasional light drizzle or rain Tuesday and warmer. Mostly cloudy tonight with intermittent light rain in northeast and extreme east. Colder with light snow west. Low tonight 25 west to near 40 east. Tuesday mostly cloudy and colder with snow flurries west and north.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 13, 1947
Official Bulletin
Jan.13.1947
The Official Bulletin will accept announcements from University offices and student organizations and activities submitted to the Public Relations office. 222A Frank Strong, before 9:30 am, on the day of desired publication
Following members of the Women's Rifle team requested by coach to resort to firing range at 7 tonight for a 30 minute practice: Frances Chubb, Peggy Baker, Peggy Sue Cloyd, Shirley Otter, Kathy Broers, Janet Belt, Arilda Lincoln, Mary Anna Ward, Jane Keith, Betty Ann Sanden.
**
Koussan Board meeting at 4 p.m today in 107 Journalism building.
All members of the Lampados club will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Union Lounge.
--others of the inmates to discover the importance of varying family relationships.
Union Sunday Activities committee will meet at 6:30 tonight in 1032 Kentucky for a social and business meeting.
土 虫
The University Housemothers association will meet in the Assembly room of Myers hall at 2 p.m. tomorrow.
南 南
Home Economics club waffle supper Thursday at 5 p.m. for Home Economics club members only. Dues will be collected. Tickets are 50 cents and must be bought before 5 p.m. tomorrow in home economics office.
乖乖
Student court will hear cases concerning smoking rule violations (ASC Bill No. 8) at 7 p.m. tomorrow in Green hall. The court will hear any student wishing to appeal fines for parking rule violations (ASC Bill No. 4) at 7:30 p.m.
P. S.G.L. Senate will meet at 9:30 p.m. tomorrow in 200 Frank Strong.
Newman club will hold discussion meeting at 8 p.m. tomorrow in classroom B. Myers hall. The Rev. George Towle will speak on "The Catholic Church and Communism" and lead a discussion.
华承瑜
The All-Student Council will meet at 7:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Pine Room of the Union building.
* *
Sigma Tau will hold important meeting at 4:30 Tuesday in 210 Mechanical Lab. All members should be present.
* *
Progressive Party/ organizational meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas room of the Union. Election of officers. Everyone welcome.
欢 乐
The mathematical colloquium of the department of mathematics will meet at 5 p.m. Thursday in 222 Frank Strong, Prof. Robert Schatten and Mr. James D. Riley will speak on "The Mappings of a Square on a Segment."
***
All members of the February graduating class of the School of Business who are hoping to be placed through the Business Placement Bureau and any other students available for permanent employment in February please note the School of Business bulletin board for announcement of interview schedules through the month of January.
--others of the inmates to discover the importance of varying family relationships.
Graduate Record examination Feb. 3 and 4 Applications may be secured in 2A Frank Strong hall.
Attention, Salvador Dali
North Bend, Orc. (UP)—Paintings displayed by Mrs. Edward Fourier, artist-housewife, revealed an unusual technique. Using meat-wrapping paper as a canvas, her fingers as a brush, and a solution of cornstarch, water and calsomine, Mrs. Fourier demonstrated the creation of some "modernistic impressions."
University Daily Kansan
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $450 a year. (in Lawrence) add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan. every afternoon during the school year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
One Way To Beat These Coin Machines
Sunbury, Pa. (UP) - A thrifty citizen is parking in business district meter lanes—and doesn't pay a cent.
He drives around until he finds a parking space where the meter indicates that the preceding user left before his time expired.
The meter-watcher eases his car to the curb where he waits until the violation warning flashes on the indicator, then pulls out in search of another space on which time has not run out.
Washington. (UP) — Great Britain has drawn another 200 million dollars of her $3,750,000,000 loan from the United States, bringing the total withdrawal to 800 million dollars. The British have until 1951 to draw the money.
British Draw On U.S. Loan
Buffalo, N.Y. (UP)—The rage of the newspaper stands and the corner stores—the "pulp" thriller and comic book—may become an integral part of the classroom here.
Students To Study Dick Tracy, Herby
The Buffalo Reading Teachers association in a meeting took steps to turn a liability into an asset.
Knowing the faith that children place in the adventures of their favorite heroes, and in an effort to make learning easier for the "slower" pupils, the teachers are forming plans to put comics-in-the-classroom.
The "bad" aspect represented by the exponents of supernatural powers will be replaced by common place subjects such as aviation, travel and history, all of which require a fully-graded vocabulary for each mental age.
You May Turn Out To Be A Murderer If You're Tied To Mama's Apron Strings
Madison, Wis. (UP) — Not only crime itself, but the type of crime committed, is often traceable to the background of individual criminals, according to a survey conducted by Prof. John Lewis Gillen of the University of Wisconsin.
Professor Gillen, a professor-emeritus of sociology, says he was amazed at the clear-cut patterns of criminal backgrounds, emerging from a study of 486 inmates of Wisconsin state prison.
Professor Gillen, author of a recently published book, "The Wisconsin Prisoner," divides prisoners into three classes—murderer, sex criminals, and property law offenders.
In gathering material for his book, he chose a novel method of analysis, using data on 175 non-p prisoner bro-
He found that the past experiences of prisoners differed greatly from those of nonprisoners, that such experiences were often directly responsible for criminal tendencies and attitudes and in many cases for crime itself.
Among Professor Gillen's finding were that murderers were more often favorites of their mothers and tended to leave school earlier than their brothers.
He also noted that sex offenders generally had lower intelligence than murderers and property offenders, that they had always shown a lack of emotional love and that they were frequently unskilled laborers who left school at an early age.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 13, 1947
PAGE THREE
er the rela-
siences from
with exy rees and
ndings are offs and than
unders than
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lack
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who
Belles AND THEIR Weddings
King-Woodward
Senator and Mrs. Richard Clarkson Woodward, El Dorado, announce the marriage of their daughter, Marquette, to Robert King, son of Mr. Madrs Merton E. King, Potwin. The wedding took place in the Trinity Episcopal church at El Dorado on Dec. 29.
Mr. and Mrs. King have returned from a wedding trip and are living at Sunflower! Mrs. King is a College freshman. Mr. King is a College sophomore.
Mr. and Mrs. I. C. Shaw, Holton, announce the marriage of their daughter, Jacquetta, to Russell Blaser, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence F. Blaser, Columbus, Nebr. The wedding took place at the First Methodist church in Holton on Dec. 25.
☆ ☆
Blanding-Erhart
Blaser-Shaw
Mrs. Blaser is a College junior and a member of Alpha Delta Pi. Mr. Blaser is an engineering sophomore. They are at home at 1335 Vermont
Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Eshom, Valley Falls, announce the marriage of their daughter, Wanda Erhart, to Lewis Duane Blanding, son of Floyd E. Blanding, Atwood. The wedding took place at Danforth chapel on Dec. 22, with the Rev Oscar E. Allison reading the double ring ceremony.
Mrs. Blanding is a College sophomore and secretary in the English department. Mr. Blanding is a business junior and a member of Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business fraternity. They are at home at 2116 New Hampshire.
☆ ☆
Brown-Bashor
Dr. and Mrs. W. H. Bashor, Den-
Colo, announce the marriage of
their daughter, Beverly, to Russell
W. Brown II, Denver, Colo.
The wedding took place in the First Baptist church in Denver on Dec. 22.
☆ ☆
Mr. Brown, an engineering senior, is president of the Lambda chapter of Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity.
Sanders-Carrell
Mr. and Mrs. William Eastman, Winfield, announce the engagement of their daughter, Corlie Sanders, to Harold W. Carrell, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Carrell, Winfield.
Miss Sanders is a sophomore a Southwestern college. Mr. Carrell, College freshman, is a pledge in the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity.
☆ ☆
The engagement of Jeane Margaret Barlow, daughter of the late Dr. M I. Barlow and Mrs. M. I. Barlow, Kansas City, to Donald Edward Fonestil, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Fonestil, Emporia, was announced Jan. 7 at a coffee at Locksley hall. The announcement was made by the housemother, Mrs. Vivian Christian. The traditional chocolates were passed by Joanne Cockreham.
Barlow-Fonestil
Miss Barlow is a College senior Mr. Fonestil was a business junior before leaving in October to serve with the armed forces.
Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Brownlee, Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Lenore to James W. Kensett, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Kensett, Parsons The announcement was made recently by Mrs. Vivian Christian, housemother at Locksley hall.
Miss Brownlee wore a corsage or gladiolas. Mrs. Christian was presented with a corsage of carnations. While the members of Locksley sang "I Love You Truly," the traditional chocolates were passed by Bertha Lowry, who wore a corsage of carnations.
Brownlee-Kensett
Perdue-Brownlee
Miss Brownlee is a College junior. Mr. Kensett is an engineering sophomore.
☆ ☆
Mr. and Mrs. O. F. Perdue, Padugah, KYA, announce the engagement of their daughter Edna Jeanne Bernier to John Maurice Brownlee, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Brownlee, Kansas City, Mo. The announcement was made by Mrs. Vivian Christian, housemother at Locksey hall. Traditional chocolates were passed.
Shryock, Phi Beta Kappa, Sings Likes Volleyball, Pours Coffee
COEDS' CORNER
Marjorie Shryock, College senior with an English major, as well as being a Phi Beta Kappa has varied outside activities.
"I have a special interest in speech correction and radio work." Marjorie said. She is a member of a new speech clinic, whose purpose it is to study and devise methods for the correction of vocal defects.
Memorie has been in the Univer-
Marjorie has been in the University Glee club for three years; besides singing first alto, she is secretary of that organization. For four years, she has belonged to the French club and has held the offices of secretary and vice-president.
As Pan-Hellenic representative to the All Student Council, she served three semesters. She is president of the Alba Delta Pi sorority.
"I used to belong to Spur club," Marjorie said with a reminiscent gleam in her hazel eyes, "Well, one day I went for a ride on an old nag and fell off on a gravel road. I got some scratches and a black eye to boot. I haven't been on a horse since--but, that only because I haven't had the opportunity," she said hastily, lest someone get the wrong idea.
Mariorie likes to play in intramurals, especially if the game happens to be volleyball.
"Volleyball is my specialty; there's absolutely nothing like it," she asserted.
She is on a Union Coffee and Forum committee, a job which seems both to amuse and amaze her.
"I help arrange forums in the student union," she explained, "but mostly, I phone houses and inform people about Coffees. And at the coffees, I pour coffee," she finished with a grin.
Miss Perde is completing her physical therapy training at the University hospital in Kansas City. Mr. Brownlee is a College sophomore.
Grimm-Henderson
☆ ☆
Mr. and Mrs. Henry T. Grimm, Downs, announce the engagement of their daughter, Betty Lee, to Leslie Dean Henderson, son of Mr. and Mrs. William W. Henderson, Lucas.
Miss Grimm is a College junior. Mr. Henderson is an engineering reshman.
Kintzel-Westwood
☆ ☆
The engagement of Louise Kintzel, daughter of N. M. D. Snyder, Wichita, to John V. Westwood, son of Mrs. J. W. Westwood, Wichita, was announced recently by Mrs. W. S. Shaw, Delta Gamma housemother.
The engagement of Helen Harkrader, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.W. F. Harkrader, Pratt, to Kenneth Higdon, son of Mr. and Mrs.J.C. Higdon, Kansas City, Mo., was announced at the Gamma Phi Beta house recently.
Miss Kintzel wore a corsage of talisman roses. The corsages of Mrs. Shaw and the two attendants, Guinevere Goerz and Abigail Bixby, were of red roses. The traditional chocolates were passed.
Miss Kintzel is a College sophomore. Mr. Westwood is an engineering freshman.
Harkrader-Hidgon
Miss Harkrader received an orchid. Mrs. Ralph Baldwin, housemother, received a gardenia corsage. Elizabeth Evans and Billy Simmons, who assisted, wore white carnation corsages.
☆ ☆
Miss Alma Kruckenberg, Winfield, recently announced the engagement of Mary Jean Moore to Leslie Ludwig, son of the Rev. and Mrs. W. H. Ludwig, Springdale, Ark.
Miss Harkrader is a College junior and a member of the Gamma Phi Beta sorority. Mr. Higdon, business senior, is a member of the Delta Upson fraternity.
Miss Moore, College sophomore, is a member of the Gamma Beta
Moore-Ludwig
☆ ☆
W.E.C. Will Sponsor 'Charm' Lectures
Girls, if you'd like to know more about Emily Post's rules, dress and grooming, or correct speech, you'll have your chance.
The first week after next semester's enrollment the Women's Executive council will sponsor a series of lectures on etiquette, dress and grooming, and speech in Frank Strong auditorium.
All University women may attend. Invitations will be issued to each organized house and those not living in organized homes will receive special invitations. Definite lecture dates will be announced later.
Joan Anderson, education junior, will be in charge of the lecture on "Dress and Grooming" and Lorraine Carpenter, College junior, t the "Speech" lecture. Anne Scott, College junior, and Janet Rummer, College freshman, will make arrangements for the lectures on etiquette.
Kappa Phi Plans Party
A date party for Kappa Phi on February 14 was announced at their meeting Friday night at the Methodist church.
Pledges took tests in preparation for their initiation which will be held at 7 p.m. Friday at the church.
Kappa Psi Initiates Three
The Kappa Psi pharmaceutical fraternity announced the initiation of three new members at the meeting held Friday night. They are Bernard E. Lambert, junior, Kenneth L. Conwell, sophomore, and John J. McKimens, junior.
sorority. next semester she will enter nurses' training at Barnes hospital in St. Louis, Mo. Mr. Ludwig, who is teaching in Campbell Hill, Ill., will continue his work at the Concordia seminary in St. Louis, Mo.
☆ ☆
Dymond-Johnston
Mr. and Mrs. Earl J. Dymond,
Sterling, announce the engagement of their daughter, Norma May, to
George Ralph Johnston, son of Mr.
and Mrs. William Johnston, Kansas City.
Miss Dymond is an education senior. Mr. Johnston is a College freshman.
Alexander-Turner
The pinning of Ann Alexander, Fine Arts sophomore, from Bartlesville, Okla., to Joe Turner, engineering senior; from Independence, was announced recently at the Chi Omega house. The announcement was made by a Negro youth dressed in a Fiiil costume.
Miss Alexander received two orchids. Mrs. Onita Miller, housemother, Betty Duemcke and Jane Alexander, Bartlesville, received garden corsages.
Miss Alexander is a member of Chi Omega sorority. Mr. Turner is a member of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity.
Cigars were passed at the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity house recently to announce the pinning of Betty Jean Jacobs, sophomore at Wichita university, to Thomas R. Hensley, engineering junior, and member of the fraternity.
Jacobs-Hensley
☆ ☆
☆ ☆
White-Jarrell
The announcement of the pinning of Patricia Ann White, Kansas City, to Clarence P. Jarrell, business junior, was made at the Sigma Phi Epsilon house recently.
Melvin Zack First In National Contest
Melvin Zack, education junior, was awarded first prize in a national contest in musical competition, the fine arts office announced today.
Zack, who graduated as a piano major from the School of Fine Arts in 1943, submitted a woodwind quintet of two movements, written for oboe, flute, clarinet, French horn, and bassoon.
Zack's prize was $25, given by Phi Mu Alpha, national music fraternity sponsoring the contest.
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University Daily Kansan PHONE 66
PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 13, 1947
SPOTLIGHT SPORTS
By BOB DELLINGER (Daily Kansan Sports Editor)
One near-by sportswriter has stated that Charlie Black, Gerald Tucker, and others, have come to the end of their strings of usefulness, and that it is time for new blood.
It seems strange that so slowed a player as Tucker can pile up points like he has been doing all season, and that such an antique as Black is the only one so far that has been able to stop him.
Black, who has supposedly lost his usefulness, has held a total of opponents, usually the best men on the other squads, to an average of less than six points per game.
***
Note well that Kansas players don't consider themselves out of the league race yet.
Although the Jayhawkers are now in last place, they are only two full games out of first, and two weeks of play may wipe out the margin partially or entirely.
***
Donald "Dino" Martin, former Georgetown star, set a new individual scoring record for the Basketball Association of America as he dumped in 40 points in his team's recent 91-67 victory in the pro loop.
** **
The U.S. Hockey league presented the Charles Gardiner emotional trophy to Omaha goalie Harvey Jessen who was judged the best in the league last year.
Bobby Feller, pitching king of the Cleveland Indians, is going native, Texas style.
Feller is in Grand Prairie, Tex,
looking over a 350-acre farm on
which he plans to build a ranch-
style "dream home."
He told shop-talkers that his contract terms were already agreed, although he hasn't signed yet. Which leaves still open to conjecture the possibility that he may break Babe Ruth's all-time record salary of $80,-000.
Valley Standings
Team W L
St. Louis 3 0
Drake 1 0
Creighton 1 0
Oklahoma A. & M. 1 1
Tulsa 1 1
Wichita 0 2
Washington U. 0 3
Games this week: Tonight, Creighton at Drake. Tuesday, St. Louis vs. Long Island, at New York; Southwestern (Kansas) at Wichita; Tulsa vs. Phillips U. at Enid, Okla. Wednesday, St. Louis vs. Georgetown, at Washington, D.C. Friday, Creighton at St. Louis; Oklahoma A. & M. at Wichita; Drake at Washington U. Saturday, Drake at St. Louis; Creighton at Washington.
College Basketball
St. Louis 38, Oklahoma A. & M. 20
Princeton 40, Dartmouth 30
Krockhurst 48, Emporia Teachers 38
Washburn 43, College of Emporia
Creighton '44, Wichita '38
Texas A. & M. 48, Texas Christian
41
Michigan State 52, Detroit 44
DePaul 48, Loyola of the South 38
Virginia 62, Virginia Military 47.
Bradley Tech 65, Chicago 45
Arkansas 52, Rich 51
Texas 45, Baylor 38
Iowa State 51, Kansas State 40
South Carolina 55, Georgia 50
San Francisco 45, St. Mary's
(Calif) 37
Stanford 38, U.C.L.A. 33
YM-YW Will Meet
The YMCA-YWCA Membership meeting will be held at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas room of the Union. Wesley Elliott and Octavia Walker, vice-presidents, will present the program. The report of the delegates to the Urbana conference will be heard.
Far West Shows Best Basketball; But East Has Most Undefeated Fives
New York. (UP)—Although the East boasted most of the undefeated major college basketball teams today, the Far West demanded recognition for quality rather than quantity, with Washington, undefeated in 10 games, as its leader.
Among the Huskies' 10 triumphs were two over Minnesota, two over Ohio State and a pair over Idaho, the defending northern division champ in the Pacific Coast conference $ \circ $
Washington plays Idaho again to tomorrow night and Wednesday night.
Seton Hall of New Jersey was the only team bettering Washington's record numerically among the larger schools, with 13 in a row. Duquesne has won 10. Other undefeated eastern major powers were Rhode Island State, with eight victories; West Virginia with seven; Army with two and Lafayette.
In the Midwest, Marshall, Capital and Lawrence Tech were undefeated, and the latter had won 10 straight. Alabama was the chief perfect-record team in the South.
Because of the differences of schedules, which sometimes allow a team to run up a good-looking record against second-rate opponents, some once-beaten or twice-beaten teams still were ranked above perfect-record outfits.
New York university, beaten only by Boston, ranked with West Virginia in the East, and was expected to add to its record against North Carolina tomorrow night. West Virginia won over Canisius Saturday, 63 to 43.
It was possible that one undefeated team would be sure to drop Wednesday night, for there were efforts to match Duquesne and West Virginia that night. Both have open dates due to cancellations. Duquesne won easily over St. Francis last Saturday, 54 to 23.
The picture in other sections;
The Midwest: Wisconsin, although defeated twice, was emerging as a power after whipping Illinois, Iowa and Indiana; Purdue also was moving upward on the basis of its 60 to 56 conquest of Notre Dame Saturday night, a defeat which cost the Irish some prestige. Iowa, loser only once, was another power.
The South-Kentucky, winner of 13 and loser to Oklahoma A. & M., rated above undefeated Alabama and still appeared to be the best bet for eventual national honors. Their recent opposition has been weak, and they romped against Dayton Saturday, 70 to 29.
The Midlands—The Oklahoma Aggies, playing spotty basketball, appeared to be in for a tussle from Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma. The Aggies took a surprising 38 to 20 shellacking from St. Louis U. on Friday night.
The Far West—Washington was in the lead, but California, Oregon State, Oregon, Southern Cal and UCLA all were formidable. California defeated Southern Cal Saturation and Oregon. Oregon State upset Oregon, 73 to 69, in an overtime. UCLA split a weekend pair with Stanford.
Few of the top teams seemed to be in danger this week. Tonight's best games were Illinois-Ohio State, Michigan-Northwestern, Kentucky-Vanderbilt, Purdue-Indiana and Minnesota-Iowa.
Five undefeated teams play on Wednesday — Army vs. Williams, Rhode Island State vs. Brown, Seton Hall vs. Providence, Eastern Kentucky vs. Morehead and Washington vs. Idaho again.
Tomorrow night Notre Dame plays Michigan State and Washington meets Idaho.
University High Loses To Basehor, 23-25
The University High Eagles dropped a close, 23-25 decision to the Basehor cage squad in a game played Friday afternoon at Lawrence.
Gene Riling, ace Eagle forward, took scoring honors with four goals and four frees for a 12-point total. Moses and Eklund, Basehor center and forward, accounted for ten and nine respectively.
The game was close all the way, with the lead changing hands 13 times, and the score being tied 11 times.
University High jumped into an early 4-3 lead, and held to it through the last four minutes of the first quarter. Basehor tied the score and went ahead early in the second period, but the Eagles came back and the score was tied at 7-7. Basehor pulled away to 10-7, but the halftime score stood at 10-9.
The score see-sawed all during the third period, with the Eagles holding a slim, 16-15 edge at the end of the stanza.
The two squads matched goal for goal during the last period, but Basehor pulled ahead by three points late in the game.
A free throw by Riling and a jumping push shot by Richard O'Neill tied the score with two minutes remaining.
Moses, big Basehor center sank a pivot shot with a minute and a half left in the ball game, and then recovered a rebound from the U.H.S. backboard.
Basehor now stands in a first-place tie in the Tri-County League standings, while the Eagles are in the conference cellar. U.H.S. has won one game and lost six.
Basehor froze the ball as the Eagles fouled several times in the last minute trying to get the ball.
The U.H.S. "B" squad downed Basehor "B" in the opener, 19 to 10. Geroge Denny led the scoring for the victors with 12.
Big Six Standings
Team W L
Missouri 2 0
Kansas State 1 1
Oklahoma 1 1
Iowa State 1 1
Nebraska 1 1
Kansas 0 2
Games this week: Tonight, Iowa State at Bradley Tech; Tuesday night, Missouri at Kansas State; Kansas at Nebraska; Saturday night, Nebraska at Missouri, Oklahoma at Kansas State.
Eyes
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Finds Basket Eye
18
Gib Stramel, a high scorer for K.U. in 1946, who has had trouble finding the range this season, found his basket eye Friday night. He hit seven baskets and a pair of free throws for 16 points, high score for the night.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
JANUARY 13, 1947
Beta, Pi KA ATO Take Close IM Games
Victory margins ranged from 2 to 31 points in ten intramural basketball games played Friday and Saturday.
Three contests found one field goal making the final difference. The Beta Theta Pi "B" team defeated the Delta Chi second squad, 29 to 27. Bennett netted 10 points to page the victors.
Pi Kappa Alpha handed Deuces Wild a 22 to 20 loss.
Alpha Tau Omega outlasted Wesley Foundation, 25 to 13. Meek of the losers tossed in 13 points. Pringle led the ATO's with 9 counters.
The most decisive victory was marked up by Sponer-Thayer as they downed Westminister, 37 to 6. Nagle of the winners looped 17 points through the hoop to take high point honors for the week-end.
Other results: Sigma Nu "B" "B" defeated Spooner-Thayer "B", 36 to 15. Beta Theta Pi "B" was victorious over SigmaNu "B",44 to 22. Delta Tau Deltai handed the Crooks a 37 to 10 loss. Gamma Deltai defeated Smith hall, 27 to 18. Ph Kappa was victorious over Kappa Alpha Psi, 27 to 8. The Nine Old Men gained a decision over Delta Tau Deltai "B", 20 to 14.
Another one-sided game found the Misfits rolling over the Delta Tau Delta "B" squad by a score of 37 to 13. S. Penny paced point-making with 16 counters.
I-M Schedule
6:30-Beta Theta Pi vs. Wicked Seven.
6:30—Phi Delta Theta vs. Battenfeld.
7:30 - Phi Gamma Delta vs. IS.A.
7:30 - Phi Kappa Psi vs. Woiks
8:30 - Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs. Pharmacists
8:30- Sigma Chi vs. Live Five.
8:30- Westminster vs. Indies.
8:30- San Francisco vs. Indies.
9:30—Normans vs. Gamma Deltas.
Star Sub
Paul Merchant, Sooner substitute, provided outstanding floor play and three timely field goals to help hand the Jayhawkers their second straight conference defeat.
Seven Women Win Officials' Ratings
Seven K.U. physical education majors won basketball officials' ratings at a state cage clinic Saturday at Robinson gymnasium.
Maxine Gunsolly, a junior, was one of six women from the state to be awarded a national rating. Other K.U. women who won awards were Wilma Hampton, senior, and Julia Fox, junior, local ratings and Jeanne Cooper, sophomore, Pearl Leigh, sophomore, Joan Anderson, junior, and Joan Lippmann, junior, intramural ratings.
Schools represented were Kansas State college, Emporia Teachers College, Ottawa university, Tabor college. Total of 25 women received ratings.
Miss Ruth Hoover, physical education professor, explained today that the Saturday meeting was the first statewide clinic ever held, although ratings had previously been awarded at state conventions.
Wins Scoring Duel
48
Charley Black won his scoring duel with O.U.'s Gerald Tucker Friday night at Norman. Charley hit four and five for 13 points while holding Tucker to a total of six. Both finished the game with four fouls.
K.U. Out Of Running, Experts Say But Jayhawkers Are Confident
Experts over the Midwest are already counting the Jayhawkers out of Big Six title plans this year, but the players themselves are still confident.
Missouri, current league-leader, will lay its undefeated conference record on the block tomorrow night at Manhattan as the Tigers take on once-beaten Kansas State.
Even though Kansas looks at the rest of the league from the depths of last place, the Jayhawkers are still only two games back of the leaders, with prospects of picking up another game on them Tuesday.
On Friday, Oklahoma's Sooners will be at Manhattan, and Missouri will meet Nebraska at home.
Kansas will travel to Lincoln for a game with the Cornhuskers of Nebraska tomorrow.
The Jayhawkers, under the coaching of Howard Engleman, tried valiantly to end their current losing streak Friday against Oklahoma, but Sooner accuracy on rebounds pulled the Oklahomam from behind to take a three-point victory.
The slender push-shot artist dumped in seven goals and two frees for his scoring total. Close behind were Lefty Paul Courty of the Sooners and Charlie Black of Kansas with 14 and 13 respectively.
Gib Stramel, veteran forward who has seen little action this year, paced the Jayhawkers with 16 points.
Black played another great defensive game, limiting the Oklahoma scoring ace, Gerald Tucker, to two baskets and two freezes, a repetition of his one previous performance this year.
At Ames, the Cyclones of Iowa State dealt a death blow to Kansas State's hopes of an undefeated conference season by whipping the
Wildcats. 51-40.
Little Jim Myers and big Don Paulsen, forward and center for the Cyclones, dumped in 13 points apiece to pace the attack. Harold Howey, conference scoring leader last week, was limited to a mere six points by Ron Norman, Cyclone guard.
The box score:
Kansas (47) FG FT PF TI
Stramel, f 7 2 2 16
Black, f 4 5 4 13
Schnellbacher, c 1 1 5 3
Evans, g 2 0 4 4
Sapp, g 0 0 0 0
England, f 0 0 3 4
Eskridge, f 0 0 2 0
Enns, c 0 0 1 0
Clark, g 2 1 2 5
Houchin, g 1 0 1 2
Oklahoma (50) 19 PG 19 PF 19
Reich, f 4 1 3 9
Courty, f 5 4 0 14
Tucker, c 2 2 4 6
Paine, g 2 1 3 5
Landon, g 1 4 3 6
Merchant, f 3 0 0 6
Waters, f 0 1 1 1
Pryor, g 1 0 0 2
Day, g 0 1 4 1
18 14 18 50
19 9 24 47
Free throws missed: Kansas 9
Oklahoma, U.
Score at half: Kansas 29, Oklahoma 20.
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SUCCESSFUL APPLICANTS will be selected by a merit examination on an around Saturday, January 12 and in several other cities in Kansas on an around Saturday, January 13.
APPLICATIONS will be accepted until January 15. Application forms and an announcement giving complete information about the examination may be secured by writing or phoning
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SIX
JANUARY 13, 1947
Kansan Comments.
Boos Are Rude
Before the announcer had finished speaking about the athletic department's campaign against booing, some spectators at the Missouri game last week renewed their raucous boos. This seems to us an example of the very thing campaigners are fighting.
Booing might help show the inadequacy of an official by proving that most fans frequently saw a play differently from the way the referee saw it. But since mob psychology operates here, it is doubtful that the majority really knows what happened—they just join in whenever someone starts a boo.
Persons who want the respect of their fellows no longer whip out a six-gun when someone beats them at poker. They don't take the pleasures of life seriously enough to stump and scream when the wafter says their favorite pie is all gone. So why should they find it necessary to boo at basketball games? —A.B.
Officials are appointed by the Big Six commissioner from a list approved by coaches concerned, and the job they do is probably as good and fair as could be had. Their possible errors are no excuse for rudeness.
Fair Sex
It may not be a woman's world, but at least the fair sex is making fame and name for itself in the post war era.
For one thing, there is the revival of electing the debutante of the season, plus the fabulous parties of pre-war days. Alongside this news we find that a French ex-bearded lady has cut her throat while shaving, and two very pretty female bookies have just been arrested in New York in spite of their hideout behind a roomful of rabbits.
G. I. wives at Yale have been attending classes for their husbands and taking the lectures verbatim in shorthand, to the ire of professors and less-fortunate unmarried classmates.
Seven, Congresswomen and 178 women members of state legislatures are taking their positions on the country's political front. From some of their statements regarding labor, housing and other important questions, it sounds as if their male colleagues may meet some stubborn opposition.
Dr. Magdalene E. Kramer, Columbia University professor, told the Speech Association of America that women don't know how to talk. But George Burns observes to Gracie Allen that soon someone will be suggesting that fish don't know how to swim.
Anyway the girls are off to a fine start. It may be an interesting year, men.-A. B.
The University Daily Kansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily News Press, National Advertising Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave, New York, NY 10026.
Managing Editor Charles Roof
Asst. Managing Editor Jane Anderson
Makeup Editor Billie Marie Carter
Bill Haas Business Manager Bill Donovan
Advertising Manager Margery Handy
Circulation Manager John McCormick
Telegraph Editor Edward Downey
Graph Ed.M Marcela Stewart
City Editor R. T. Kingman
Dear Editor--aren't true, and I never said anything like that."
'Classics' Are Good
I noted in the December 20 issue of the Daily Kansan a rather juvenile letter deprecating the classic repertoire of KFKU. The letter stated that this type of music appealed only to the faculty or "a few influential long hairs." I am neither a faculty member nor an "influential long hair." I am simply a lover of good music.
I do not believe that KFKU presented a program which appealed to lovers of all types of music. "Connoisseur's Corner" presented the very best in music plus sparkling commentaries by a most able master of ceremonies. It is much to my regret that this program is no longer heard.
Popular music is judged by its ability to live and to stand the tests of time. There must be some reason for these so-called "classic" remaining popular. It is because there is a continual demand for them. If these works were appreciated only by a few, they would have been forgotten long ago and never have attained their pinnacle in the music world. I'm not alone in my love of good music.
I am hoping that the new year will see a return of "Connoisseur's Corner," one of the most delightful programs I have ever heard on any radio station.
Music lover College freshman
Excess Profits
The K.U. chapter of American Veterans committee appointed a committee to investigate the numerous complaints of students about the high prices, small quantities, and poor quality of the food served at the Union cafeterias. Our purpose is not merely to criticize the Union operating committee, but to offer our findings and suggestions on this matter in a cooperative and constructive vein so that those who eat at the Union will benefit from them
There seems to be considerable evidence to support the contentions that the food service could be greatly improved. Over 186,000 meals were served during the month of November, and the profit made on many items appears to be grossly excessive; yet the cafeterias are supposed to be run (and this was confirmed by the chairman of the operating committee, Prof. Ogden Jones) on a non-profit basis, in the institutional sense.
Comparisons made between the K.U. cafeterias and several private and public ones clearly indicate that the complaints are justified. For example, privately owned cafes near the campus, having a comparatively small turnover, sell identical items at a lower price, and still make a handsome profit.
If the Union cafeterias are operated on a non-profit basis, criticisms could be met by publishing a monthly financial statement in the Daily Kansan. However, when this was suggested to Professor Jones, he said, and we quote "... . . if the figures were published, people might misinterpret them."
Since the Union is supported by the students, and is supposed to be run for them, they are entitled to know exactly how much money the Union receives, and for what purpose, and in what manner it is expended.
For K.U. chapter, AVC Kenneth E. Runyon
College students still are having trouble with the clothing shortage. A University of Illinois official has requested that parents pass on outgrown diapers to classmates whose babies don't own enough to keep themselves continually clad.
Jaytalking---
It could be that the ever-popular South American rhythms have developed because the little Latin child has to count "Uno, dos, tres, cuatro, uno, dos, tres, cuatro" instead of "one, two, three, four" in his music lessons.
Is It Safe To Give Up The Pilot Now?
ATOMIC SECRET
Authorities Claim Only 29 British War Brides Have Been Stranded At The Landing Dock
Daniel Bishop in St. Louis Star-Times
The British papers who called them "brides of despair," were not completely informed, said some.
"As far as I'm concerned," she said, those stories in the Daily Mail and other British papers simply
One was Auburn-haired Kathleen Wood, 22, of Winchester, England, pretty enough to be a model, who was quoted in the London Daily Mail.
New York (UP)—Of the 42,000 British war brides who have arrived to join their husbands in the United States, only 29 were left stranded in New York by husbands who changed their minds, authorities said today.
Lockhart's safety device ends a railroader's greatest peril and may save many lives. It has aroused widespread interest among railroad officials.
New Invention Aids Railroaders
The trouble with the bitter British brides, said the people who know, is that they talk too much. Loud, too. Makes you think there are thousands of them.
But it isn't so, said the brides, the husbands and the Red Cross, which take care of the girls who need a round trip ticket for their matrimonial journey.
Cleveland. (UP)—An automaticpipe connector that will eliminate the need for a railroad man to crawl between cars and connect air and steam pipes has been invented by Charles Lockhart, 75 - year - old Cleveland inventor.
The automatic-pipe connector will hook-up all steam and air pipes on the train when the engineer simply pushes a button in the locomotive cab.
Lockhart, an authority on locomotives and air brakes, has been in railroading since 1895.
Nearly 1,500,000 In Y.M.
Chicago. (UP)—Total membership in the Young Men's Christian association has reached 1,411,341, an increase of nearly nine per cent over the last recorded total, General Secretary Frank A. Hathaway reported.
Mrs. Wood who has been in the United States seven months said that the Red Cross paid four dollars a day for her double-room, and that they also gave her $37 a week for food.
Mrs. Wood explained that she was marking time until her husband obtained a divorce. She expects to receive a lump sum settlement, and her lawyer advised her not to leave the country until the money was paid.
"I have written my husband many times," she explained, "but he won't reply. He told the Red Cross he didn't want me or the children."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Add Excuses For Hot Toddy... Doctors Find Two Types Of Colds
Cleveland. (UP)—One of the most important developments in cold research since 1931 was the discovery that there are at least two types of the common cold, according to scientists in the department of preventive medicine at the Western Reserve university School of Medicine here
Claimed to be the biggest discovery since Dr. A. R. Doohez of Columbia University 15 years ago established that this common ailment is due to a virus, the two types of cold were discovered originally at Fort Bragg, N.C., during the war by scinetists now at Western Reserve.
The two types are:
One that develops 24 to 48 hours after exposure and starts in the nose.
One that begins with a sore throat and develops five to seven days after exposure.
The discovery was made with the aid of human "guinea pigs" under the direction of Dr. John H. Dingle, professor of preventive medicine.
At the conscientious objectors' camp in Gatlinburg, Tenn., in the summer of 1943, 12 men volunteered to be "guinea pigs." Their noses and throats were thoroughly sprayed with collections of virus taken from soldiers who had been hospitalized with colds and atypical pneumonia. The following summer 90 more volunteered and were hospitalized in a hotel in Pinehurst, N.C.
Dr. Rammelkamp commended the men for their courage, pointing out that although the death rate in atypical pneumonia is low, "there was a definite element of danger."
Some of the virus collections were boiled while others were passed through filters too fine to permit the passage of bacteria. Those receiving the boiled viruses went through the tests without becoming ill. Unboiled material that either had or had not been passed through the filter proved virulent.
Some of the samples of cold viruses were taken from soldiers who had developed colds that started in the nose, while others were taken from those with sore throats.
Colds in the nose developed among the volunteers in 24 to 48 hours; the rest came down with sore throats in five to seven days. Then volunteers were again inoculated to see if an immunity to colds is built up by a previous illness.
Those with nose-colds became ill again—those re-inoculated with sore throat virus did develop immunity.
In the next step—cross-inoculation of volunteers—it was found that one
form of cold did not build up an immunity for the other.
While these tests seemed to establish definitely that there are two forms of the common cold, Dr. Rammelkamp said there may be still other forms.
Baby Representative Was Silent Candidate
Washington. (UP)—Capt. George W. Sarbacher, Jr., who did not utter a word in behalf of his candidacy during the November congressional elections, today became the "baby" member of the new Congress.
Sarbacher, who was 27 last Sept. 30 and served nearly five years in the Pacific with the Marines, was still in the service during the campaign and was prohibited by military regulation from taking an active part to help himself win election.
He did make platform appearances at political meetings. By his war record and what other Republicans said for him, he won election over the Democrat incumbent, Rep. William J. Green, in Pennsylvania's fifth district.
Truman 'Couldn't Acquire
A True Harvard Accent'
Cambridge. Mass. (UP)—President Truman was "disappointed but resigned" today after accepting an appointment as an honorary editor of the Crimson, Harvard undergraduate newspaper, only to learn the offer was penned by a practical ioker.
In a letter to the student-editors Mr. Truman said: "However, it's probably just as well. I don't think I could ever acquire a true Harvard accent. I'll have to be satisfied with the appellation of president if the United States."
Douglas, Wyo. (UP)—Bill Hagar is kicking himself for destroying the head of a deer he killed in the mountains. He learned too late that a Rawlins taxidermist wanted to buy it for $100 as an oddity. It had 13 points on one side and nine on the other.
Lets Go Of Prize
Evanston, Ill. (UP)—A great postwar demand is developing for engineers, chemists, salesmen and men with general business training, according to a survey conducted by the bureau of placement of Northwestern university.
Survey Shows Call For College Men
Frank S. Endicott, director, released results of the survey, which indicated a 51 per cent increase over 1940 in the number of inexperienced university graduates who would be employed by business and industry next year.
Endicott said the survey was based on information from 110 companies and indicated that 90 firms estimated their needs for inexperienced college graduates during 1947 at 4,287, an average of 54 per company.
The firms included manufacturers and distributors, department stores, banks, insurance companies, oil and rubber firms, public accounting firms, chemical concerns, airlines and public utilities.
The greatest need in 1947 will be for engineers, according to the survey, with 2,315 of them needed by the 90 companies in the following order: chemical, mechanical, electrical, civil and aeronautical.
Second only to the need for engineers will be that for men with general business training received in schools of commerce or colleges of liberal arts. Chemists and salesmen place third and fourth, respectively.
An oversupply in certain fields was predicted by 48 per cent of those. No answers, questionnaire. Continuing observations fields were predicted by 47 per cent.
Fields in which an oversupply was forecast included personnel work business administration, accounting industrial engineering and advertising. Shortages were predicted in engineering, chemistry, physics and secretarial work.
HAVE A TASTY, WELL-PREPARED STEAK for Less at
Across from Court House BILL'S GRILL 1109 Mass. Phone 2054
Copy must be in the University Daily Kansan Business Office, Journalism bldg., later than 4 p.m. of the day before payroll is received. All classifieds are cash in advance.
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY KANSAS CITY COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.
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Lost
BLACK Leather zipper containing everything I know for the semester. Finder please return to Dally Kansan office. Wear.
PARKER Pencil, mate to a 51 pen, ward if returned to Kansan office. John Wergil, 1419-J after 8 p.m.
PARKER Life-time, black and white penat on Thursday night. Vincity of Bob Harris, 1259-R. Reward.
GOLD Ring initialized E. G. Lost in front of Brick's. Reward. Call Bill Mullary, -15.
LADY Agen wristwatch, Jan 8 between Frank Strong and Fraser. Hardie engraved on back. Reward. Phone 1526-J -15.
SLIDE Rule, probably in Marvin hall. Leather case. Call Bill Wildon, phone 681. Reward.
GRAY And black Valpern fountain pen between Pi Phi house and Fraser. If found please call Mary Alice White -15.
BROWN Sheafer life-time penbet Hoch or Frank Strong. Helen Hustine -15.
For Sale
BROWN Sheafer life-time pen between
Hoch or Frank Strong. Helen Hastings
engraved on pen. Reward. Return to
Daily Kansan office. -17-
1404 Conv. Ford. R & H spotlight. Fog lights. New Mercury motor. New tires. See at 900 1-2 Mo, after 5 p.m. or call 800 Highest offer.
DE JURY house interior and leather case, recently factory - checked cleaned, for $20. Bill Roberts, 1340 Tennessee. Phone 2498-M. —13
OONE 1496 Wawood house trailer. Eutane range, oil heater, hardwood interior, insulated electric bricks. Sleepes four. Insulated outdoor termite Leaving school. Give possession Feb. 7. Parked at 1724 Miss. —14
ELECTRIC Iron, slightly used, with extra long cord if wanted. Also 8-inch boots size 9. See both at 13 Lane Q. Sunflower.-14-
41 Chev. convertible for sale. 2 heaters,
spotlight, radio. Top condition. nice finish.
Phone 1996-J or 1106. Wilbur R.
Koehn. -15-
BED, Mattress, and springs. Three drawer dresser with mirror. Also little used two-burner hot-plate and large briefcase. See WESTERN WHITE. 1940 Ford deluxe coupe. New motor, six speed shift, radio, Southwind heater, new finish. Best offer. Phone 1687, 7 – 15-1935 Desoto 4-door sedan, motor typically overheated. First good offer takes it. See at 1023 Miss. St. Phone 2297-R. 15 PRACTICALLY New Lady dresses, suits, skirts, and coats. size 12 and 14. Also good for small boys. Sport coat sport size 39. Reasonably priced for quick sale. Call 2734-W anytime after 3 p.m. – 16-
For Rent
WANTED. One or two girls to share basement apartment. Two double sleeping rooms on second floor for girls. 841 Louisiana. Phone 2995-J. -15-
Wanted
MEMBERS For flying club or will sell interest in 46 'T-craft. No students. Calvin Cooley, 1142 Ind. Phone 3335. –16 SLIDE RULE log du log duplex trig or dectrig Keuffel Esser. Call Baker at 1963 after 2, or come to 530 Louisiana. –16
Business Services
HIGH POWER, high identity public address system for rent. Can be used for speeches, entertaining, record dances, etc. Call Black, phone 3338. -13-
MICROSCOPES, Colorimeters, balances,
engineering instruments cleaned and re-
faced. Microscopes and Calibration
Victor 9218, Technical Instruments Ser-
ment 0218, Kansas City, Mo. Free
access.
TYPING: Term papers and reports.
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Tubes test free. All work guaranteed
90 days. 604 Hercules (new village).
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FOR That coke date remember the Eldridge pharmacy at 710 Mass., phone
Transportation
FOR Group riding, get your coupon in Jan. 9. Kansan and then call for Bill's vice with five years of experience for good driving for KU students. -15-
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 13,1947
Bob Bock,'The K.U. Kid, Takes House Seat Today
Will Commute To K.U. Classes
"The Kid from K.U." sounds more appropriate for the boxing ring, than for politics, but it is the self-assumed title of Kansas' youngest member of the state legislature, Robert L. Bock, College junior, law student, and novice politician, from Macksville. Stafford county.
Bok, recently elected as Democracial representative of Stafford county, will temporarily quit the scholastic environment of the University for gavel raps and political speeches when he goes to Topeka today for the inauguration of state officials.
Although Bock admits his own experience as a legislator, he feels that his age will be an aid in winning political friends. Bock also believes that his special status as a veteran will be an important factor in interpreting the views of his constituents.
Despite his recent venture into politics, Bock plans to continue working for a law degree at the University. Politics is a secondary career, but he admits that he will seek re-election in Stafford county this year.
The first of these surveys published cover such issues as: prohibition or repeal of liquor laws, local and state-wide; desirability of school-reorganization laws; repeal of the one cent gas tax, and general revision of the gas tax structure; legislation changing the legal tax status of co-operative commercial organizations.
Bock, who in his own opinion, was elected because of, or in spite of, his "wee" stand of repeal in a dry county, is in favor of re-admission to prep question question however, he will go with popular opinion in his county.
The three biggest problems confronting the new legislature, according to Bock, will be:
TWO. Financing a roads and highways program.
ONE. Designing and financing an adequate program to alleviate the needs of state institutions, with particular emphasis on education.
THREE. Study of new tax programs, such as the severance tax en gas oil, and minerals now used states as a principal source of income.
All-in-all, Bock should easily be the most likely candidate on the campus for "busiest student" next semester.
Youngest Member Says Age Is Asset
By BOB BOCK
The legislature of the state of Kansas convenes Tuesday. On that day I will take the oath of office as the state representative from Stafford County and begin a two-year term in that capacity.
As a newcomer in the legislature and as its youngest member I face the event with a mixture of hope, eager anticipation, and, I am forced to admit, mild trepidation.
From the beginning I propose to maintain both an open mind and an open ear, in the hope that I may learn much and use my learning to advantage. It is my sincere intention to represent the people of Stafford County to the best of my ability and to make their wishes known in the Kansas House of Representatives.
The problem of determining the will of my constituents is as formidable to me as it is to all representatives, but I intend to use every means at my disposal in an endeavor to determine the prevailing sentiment of the people of Stafford County whenever important issues are brought to the fore.
With this view in mind I have published in the Stafford County press a questionnaire covering present issues. Since my stand upon any specific issue will depend in large measure on the expressed will of my constituents, I do not wish to commit myself in regard to pending issues until a more opportune time.
The first two weeks of the session of the legislature will be mainly occupied with organizing and getting acquainted, both activities being essential to the efficient working of the legislature. In addition to organizing I have expressed my major committee preference as the Ways and Means committee.
Since it is the Senate Ways and Means committee which deals with financial affairs of state schools and the University of Kansas, I would have no connection with the approvers' preferences I have chosen the Forestry, Fish and Game committee and the Insurance committee.
The complete cooperation of University officials and faculty members will enable me to continue my college work while fulfilling my duties in Topeka. I plan to commute between the two scenes, being present for essential activities in both.
Funeral services were to have been held for Mrs. Lorraine Buehler, 40, wife of Prof. E. C. Buehler of the department of speech and drama, at the First Presbyterian church of Lawrence today. The Rev. Theodore Aszman was in charge. Burial was at the Topeka cemetery.
Funeral Held Today For Mrs. Buehler
Mrs. Buehler suffered a heart attack at Liberty Memorial high school where she had been a teacher for the past five years, Friday. She was taken to the hospital where she died
She was born in Topeka in 1906. She attended Washburn university, and took graduate work at Northwestern university.
She is survived by her husband, three daughters, Phyllis, who recently returned from Bennington college at Bennington, Vermont; Rosemary, and Beatrice, of the home, and her mother, Mrs. Frank E. Bates, of Topeka.
'Religious Attitudes Improved'—Moulton
"Student's attitude toward religion has improved greatly since the post World War I period," the Rev. Phillips P. Moulton said in addressing members of a Presbyterian church group, Sunday at Westminster hall.
The Rev. Mr. Moulton, who is national director of University Christian Mission. New York, is visiting the University to interview leaders of the Student Religious week about activities of the various committees.
"Skepticism, cynicism, and indifference marked the religious attitude of university students after World War I," Reverend Moulton remarked, "the religious attitude we see now at universities is tremendously inspiring."
One. Those who are unintelligently opposed to religion.
He gave what he considers to be the five approaches which students take to religion.
Two. Those who are intelligently opposed to religion, but who have a purpose in life and high ideals.
Three. Those who are religiously indifferent.
Four. Those who are enthusiastic
sixth graders who have never
given up laughter.
Five. Those whose religion is established on a solid intellectual basis.
Dean Lawson To Be 'Plastered' Tuesday
Dean Paul B. Lawson of the College will be "well-plastered" Tuesday night when Elden Tefft uses him as a subject to mould a life mask. Tefft, who has done masks of many celebrities, will give a complete demonstration at the "Revue of 1947" to be held at 8 p.m. in Fraser theater.
Another feature of the program, which is sponsored by the Forensic league, will be a fire prevention demonstration by Ernest Wildhagen, during which he "produces" an explosion—just by breaking a light bulb. Another part of the demonstration is having gas fumes climb to gasoline soaked rag and start a fire.
The mask is made by covering the entire face, including eyes, nose and mouth, with plaster to form a mould. When it has set, it is removed, and the actual work of preparing the mask is begun.
Admission is 50 cents or by activity book.
Drivers, Take Heed
Drivers who unload passengers while waiting at a stop sign are breaking a city traffic ordinance, Chester Foster, campus petroleum, said today.
Scene of most violations is the corner of Jayhawk drive and Mississippi street, he explained. adding that drivers must either turn onto Jayhawk drive before unloading or cross the intersection.
News . . .
of the World
GOP Tox Cut Legislation Waits On Ways And Means
Washington. (UP)—Republican talk of making tax cuts the number one business of the new congress died down to a whisper today.
Many GOP leaders still felt it could be done. But the prevailing belief in house and senate appeared to favor delaying tax legislation until specific ways were found to cut government spending.
The congressional budget committee—which will set the ceiling on government spending—was expected to meet within 10 days. It includes the house appropriations and ways and means committees and corresponding committees of the senate.
'Low Tariffs Mean Peonage'
Washington. (UF)—Representatives of western and southern states charged today in senate committee hearings that further deductions in tariffs on farm products and minerals would bring widespread peonage to America. As the administration started the first round of its fight to lower tariffs on hundreds of commodities included in its reciprocal trade program.
Byrd Fliers Get Back
Aboard USS Mt. Olympus with Byrd Antarctic expedition. (UP)—The six navy airmen whose plane exploded over the Antarctic wastes two weeks ago only one of them seriously injured, were plucked from the icy polar slopes Sunday and flown back to their ship—the seaplane tender Pine Island. Three crew-members died in the crash.
Curley Conviction Affirmed
Washington. (UP)—The District of Columbia court of appeals today affirmed the conviction of Mayor James M. Curley of Boston and his two associates, James G. Fuller and Donald Wakefield Smith, former member of the National Labor Relations board, on mail fraud.
New Alabama Coach—1f
Oxford, Miss. (UP)—Coach Harold "Red" Drew of the University of Mississippi said today he had accepted an offer to become head coach of the University of Alabama providing Mississippi officials will release him from a contract running two more years.
Bonebrake Takes Crown As' Jinx Of Slobbovia'
Martha Bonebrake was crowned as Jinx Rasputinburg during the invasion of Slobbovia by approximately 275 couples who attended the sophomore class dance held Saturday night in the Union ballroom. The "invaders" danced to the music of Warren Durrett's band, listened to Master of Ceremonies John Moorhead's intermission chatter, and saw him crown the queen despite the claims of Lena the Hyena.
Jinx, crowned with a snow-white replica of the headpiece Slobbovians are reputed to wear, was chosen queen of the Slobbovian Stomp by a committee headed by Wilbur Noble. Miss Bonebrake's attendants were Wanda Dumler, Emily Burgert, Bernadene Dawkins, Billie Dunn, Constance Cleoughley, and Betty Boling.
The *Slobbovian Spoutings* of M. C. Moorhead included a description of an Indianapolis speedway race as announced by Ted Husing and closed with an account of a trip to Slobbovia, Lena the Hyena, portrayed by Dustin Hoffman and based on the scene stoutly maintaining its claims to the title of Jinx Ruspitin-burg. It retreated only after Miss Bongbrake had been crowned.
Charles Day, Engineering sophomore, sang a special number with the band.
The ballroom was simply decorated with signs designating one portion of the room as Upper Slobbovia and the other as Lower Slobbovia.
The end of the dance was climaxed by the unscheduled solo dance of the Union building night watchman.
China, German Treaty Are Tests Facing Marshall
Washington. (UP)—Gen. George C. Marshall was headed today for an immediate joust with the new Republican congress over U.S. policy toward China.
It will be the first of two crucial tests confronting General Marshall as incoming Secretary of State. The second will be the Moscow Big Four conference in March when he begins negotiating with the Russians on a German peace treaty.
Washington. (UP)—Sen. Owen Brewster (R-Me.) today called for a "non-partisan" senate investigation of airline accidents, which cost 173 lives last year.
Airline Investigation Asked
For the first time in his life, Dr. Forrest C. "Phog" Allen, University basketball coach, spent a night in a hospital bed; and while there his second night, immobilized by doctors and nurses, his 1946 championship team went down for its second 47 conference defeat.
'Phog' Hears Game Scores By Phone In Hospital Bed
It was Friday night. Many students had visions of "Phog" propped up
in bed with a radio by his side, a phone in his hand, and his ever-present jug of water under the bed as he directed his squad by long lines. He was no longer however. The coach's only contacts with the game came at half time and at the bitter end, when Mrs. Allen phoned to give him the scores.
Dr. Bob Allen, team physician, said that Assistant Coach Howard Engleman had been put in complete charge of the K.U. team just before the veteran coach left for the University of Kansas hospital in Kansas City. This action left "Phog" with nothing on his agenda but rest.
Professor Shenk took it from there. "Phog is one of those persons who won't rest unless he is forced to."
Mrs. Allen, while talking to Henry Shenk, associate professor of physical education, said that to her knowl- edge, Mr. Shenk was the "Phoor" had ever spent in a hospital.
Apparently that force has been applied. Coach Allen is still taking it easy in the hospital.
☆ ☆
[Picture of a man]
DR. F. C. ALLEN
University DAILY KANSAN
STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Tuesday, January 14, 1947
44th Year No.68
Lawrence, Kansas
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Fieldhouse Plans In Thinking Stage Chancellor Says
The proposed fieldhouse for the University of Kansas has not reached the planning stage—it's still in the thinking stage, according to Chancellor Deane W. Malott.
He said that he planned soon to confer with the athletic board about appointing a fieldhouse committee to consider the problems of size, location, and whether the fieldhouse ought to include such additional facilities as a men's gymnasium and a swimming pool.
The most probable site is the area south of the baseball field and across from and north of the Union building, he said. Advantages of this site which he mentioned are that it is not an out-of-the-way part of the campus and is near the Union building, there is parking space nearby, it is easily accessible to the heating tunnel, and would not necessitate the costly job of tunneling into the rock layers of the hill. An area south of the Military Science building has several advantages but is too remote, he pointed out.
The chancellor said that building conditions were not yet sufficiently normal to estimate a date for beginning construction.
Regarding the proposal that the fieldhouse include a men's gymnasium, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, said that enrollment in 1906, the year Robinson gymnasium was completed, was about the present enrollment of women.2248.
A fieldhouse is a costly thing to heat and maintain just as a field-house and isn't used very many times a year," he said. "If it were also used as a men's gymnasium, then Robinson gymnasium could be turned over to women."
By Bibler
I.S.A. Announces Election Candidates
Candidates for the annual Independent Student's Association election, to be held January 27, were announced by Lois Thompson, I.S.A. election chairman today.
the names of the candidates and the offices they seek are: for president, Shirley Wellborn, College junior, and Patricia Graham, College junior; for business manager, John Sells, Engineering junior, and Laurel Leckron, College freshman, for Student Council representative, Margaret van der Smissen, College sophomore, and Robert Casad, College freshman.
For senior class representative,
Allan Cromley, College senior, Clifford Reynolds, business senior, Elizabeth Pratt, College senior, and Ruth Cawood, College senior; for junior class representative, Marylee Masterson, College junior, Leah Uehling, College junior; Wilbur Casement, junior in the School of Business, and Ira Jordon, College junior.
For sophomore class representative, Helen Havey, College sophomore, Kathleen McClanahan, College sophomore, Majorie Vogel, College sophomore, Austin Turney, College sophomore, and Robert Campbell, College sophomore; for freshman class representative, Donna Shimer, freshman in the School of Fine Arts. Dorothy Keith, College freshman, James Montgomery, College freshman, and Norman Jennings, College freshman.
Tenative plans are to have polling places in both Frank Strong hall and the Union building during the day and in the library at night. I.S.A. cards must be presented upon balloting. This year's ballot will be of the secret written type.
Little Man On Campus
Barker
"I understand there are three men to every girl here this year."
'Revue Of '47 In Fraser Tonight
"Revue of 1947" will be presented at 8 tonight in Fraser theater. The program, sponsored by the Forensic league, will be the first of its kind presented at the University. The revue will be composed of speeches the students have selected as the outstanding selections of the year.
The planning committee for the program is composed of Otis Hill, chairman. Dorothy Heschmeyer. Keith Wilson, Virginia Powell, and Oral W. Vandiver. Orville Roberts, a graduate student, will be master of ceremonies.
The program includes "How to Make Faces" by Elden Teft, "Mississippi Misery" by Kenneth Beasley, "Fire-Friend or Foe" by Ernest Wildhagen, "The Fifth Horseman of the Apocalypse" by Jean Moore, "How Not to Make a Speech" by Richard McGhee, "How to Act" by Bernice Brady, and "Democracy, What Chance Have You?" by Russell Mammel.
Election Of Officers
The Progressive Student Governing league senate will meet at 9:30 tonight in 200 Frank Strong hall to discuss election of officers George Caldwell, president, announced.
Senate meetings will be closed to non-party members until after election.
Names of students who have passed the English proficiency examination. required for graduation from the College and the School of Education, will be posted tomorrow, Mrs. Natalie Calderwood, English instructor, announced today.
Proficiency List Posted Tomorrow
You Don't Know When To Get Up In Alaska, K.U. Geologists Agree
The list of college students who passed the examination will be posted outside the college office and the names of education students who passed will appear on the School of Education's bulletin board.
Of the 410 students who took the examination, 372 passed Mrs. Calderwood said.
With 18 sunlit hours a day, it's hard to decide when to go to bed and when to get up, according to John Harvey, engineering senior, and Alfred Spreng, graduate student.
The two K.U. students faced this problem last summer while working for the U.S. geological survey near Mt. McKinley, Alaska.
Sleeping in tents was comfortable, they said, as the temperature often reached a high of 90 degrees during the summer.
The working season is short the men explained, usually from May to August. During this time many la-
Harvey left Seattle in May to join some geologists inspecting a lignite coal deposit at Donnellly Done, south of Fairbanks. After several weeks, they moved to Mt. McKinley, where they met Spreng.
Alaska is a great and beautiful country with wildlife and picturesque scenery, both Harvey and Spreng agree. Transportation difficulties have slowed mining progress but there still remains a wealth of natural resources.
"Alaskans are great flyers," commented Harvey. "They speak of going to some small town about 200 to 300 miles away as casually as one would speak of a trip to Kansas City. Alaska is still in the pioneering stage, but many of the miners and trappers fly from their location town and back for supplies."
poers come to Alaska from the U.S. and Canada but do not remain through the long winter season. A few of the old "trial and error" prospectors still exist.
Author To Speak
Walter Fowlie, yale professor of French, will speak on "Myth in Modern Poetry" at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas room of the Union. Professor Fowlie is a visiting professor of the humanities at the University of Chicago, a poet, critic, and author of "Clowns and Angels" and "Rimbaud." The lecture is sponsored by the English department.
Student Admits K.U. Dorm Theft
Charles Forrest Sone, 21, student at Central College, Fayette, Mo., is being held in the county jail on a charge of grand larceny which Police Chief C. A. Bliesner said resulted from Sone's admission that he had gluarized three men's dormitories at K.U., three at M.U., and one at Kemper Military Academy, Bonneville, Mo.
Sone was picked up at 9:35 p.m.
Saturday when Phi Gamma Delta
fraternity members reported seeing
him leave the fraternity house with
a pair of shoes, Blesner said.
Sone, according to Chief Bliesner admitted entering and ransacking the Phi Gamma Delta house previously as well as at Battenfield Hall, and the men's dormitory basement in Spooner-Thayer museum.
He was brought to the police station for questioning and admitted stealing nearly $100 in cash and clothing, radios, luggage, phonographs, cameras, watches, electric clocks, pens and pencil sets, and electric shavers amounting to between $600 and $700.
Bliesner also said that Sone confessed to burglarizing DeFoe Hall, the stadium barracks, and the new barracks, all at M.U., and a barracks at Kemper Military Academy, Booneville. Mo.
Sone, who told Blieser his parents are missionaries in China, said he came to Lawrence Saturday to visit a girl friend.
Vets May Reinstate Insurance Until Feb.1
Feb. 1 will be the latest date that veterans may reinstate their government life insurance, Dr. E. R. Elbel, director of the veterans bureau, announced today.
Veterans who have let their insurance lapse, need pay only two back premiums, and submit a signed statement that their health is as good as it was when they were discharged from the service to have their insurance reinstated.
The veterans administration office at 1035 Massachusetts street is assisting veterans in filling out the proper forms.
The Feb. 1 deadline should not be confused with the conversation period, Dr. Elbel pointed out. Veterans have until eight years after the insurance was taken out to convert it.
Court Will Hear Smoking Pleas
Nine students charged with violating the smoking regulations will be arraigned before the student court in Green hall at 7 p.m. tonight. If an alleged violators pleads guilty at the arraignment he will be fined two dollars. If he declares himself not guilty his case will be tried at the next court session on Tuesday.
After clearing the docket of the smoking regulation offences, the court will hear appeals from students who hold traffic violation tickets. If a student does not wish to appeal, he should pay his fine before next semester, as no offender will be enrolled until he has done so.
Union Annex Construction Begins March 1
"Construction of the new $100,000 Union annex will get under way about March 1, if the weather permits." Ogden S. Jones, chairman of the Union Operating committee, announced today.
"Re-enforcing and structural steel have arrived, and other materials have been shipped," he said.
"The contractor has received favorable replies on all other requests for materials," Mr. Jones added.
The re-enforcing steel is now piled on the grounds north of the Union, while structural steel is stored under the stadium.
The new northern addition, which will include a 60-by 80-foot addition to the fountain, new food service facilities, and roof-top dancing space, will be a one-story structure. If present plans are carried out, it should be complete and ready for use by this year's fall semester.
The annex will be financed by long term bonds to be paid off by student activity fees. A second addition, which will be a three-story structure on the south of the present building, has been planned but will be erected at later date.
Miss Hermina Zipple, director of the Union building, is now making a survey for the kitchen needs of the new annex.
Miss Doering said that she was pleased with the campaign which establishes an all time high in sales. Eloise Hodgson, Jannet Rummer, and Paul Briley, the student committee appointed by the All Student council, organized the campaign.
Union Gives Check To Tuberculosis Fund
The sum was a presentation of the Student union and was obtained from the money ballots used in the recent election for queen of the Student union.
A check for $150 which climaxed the tuberculosis seal campaign and brought the total to $1116.78 was given to Miss Kathleen Doering, faculty 'advisor' for the drive, Monday.
Jo Ellen Hall, Alpha Chi Omega,
was the candidate elected queen by
the money ballots. She was crowned
in a traditional Christmas mid-week
and attended by Isabel Faurot, Chi
Omega, and Dorothy Heschmeyer,
Alpha Micron Pi.
"The newly formed Progressive party, men's campus political organization, will hold its first organizational meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas room of the Union." Donald Pomeroy, temporary president, said today.
He announced that a definite party policy would be adopted, and that election of officers for the coming semester would be held.
Pomeroy Calls Party Meeting Tomorrow
According to Pomeroy, the Progressive group is the first party in several years to attempt an Independent-Greek political union. The party is to be a non-secret organization and representative of all groups in the University, he said.
Anyone interested in student government problems is asked to attend the meeting, he added.
WEATHER
Kansas—Fair today and tonight.
Colder today and in east tonight.
Low tonight near 20 west border to
25 to 30 east border. Wednesday
partly cloudy. Somewhat warmer
west.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 14, 1947
Official Bulletin
Jan.14,1947
A movie on Russia will be shown at 4:30 p.m. today in 15 Fraser hall. Sponsored by Russian club, Everyone welcome.
Tau Sigma will meet at 7:30 tonight in Robinson gym.
Swedish club will meet at 7:15 tonight at Battenfield hall.
Joint YM-YWCA all-membership meeting at 4 p.m. today in Kansas room of the Union.
Entomology club will hold its meeting at 5 p.m. today in 301 Snow hall. Dr. L. C. Woodruff will speak on the history of the relation between insects and man.
积难
Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship will meet at 7 tonight in Barlow chapel of Myers hall for Bible study. Everyone welcome.
International Relations club will hold their regular dinner meeting at 5 p.m. today in the English room of the Union.
The Coffees and Forums committee of Student Union Activities will meet at 5 p.m. today in the Union Activities office.
Jewish Student union will meet at 5 p.m. today in Myers hall. Bring a member.
Tickets for Home Economics club waffle supper to be held at 5 p.m. Thursday must be bought before 5 p.m. today in home economics office. Tickets are 50 cents.
The student court will hear cases concerning smoking rule violations (ASC Bill No. 8) at 7 tonight in Green hall. The court will hear any student wishing to appeal fines for parking rule violations (ASC Bill No. 4) at 7:30 p.m.
P. S.G.L. senate will meet at 9:30 tonight in 200 Frank Strong hall.
Newhan club will meet at 8 to night in classroom B, Myers hall. The Rev. George Towle will speak on "The Catholic Church and Communion" and lead a discussion.
All-Student Council will meet at 7:15 tonight in the Pine room of the Union.
***
Sigma Tau will have important meeting in room 210 Mechanical lab at 4:30 p.m. today. All members should be present.
- * *
Progressive Party organizational meeting at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas room of the Union. Election of officers. Everyone welcome.
All nation supervisors for the student United Nations conference will meet at 5 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas room of the Union. Very important.
- * *
K. U. Dames bridge groups will meet at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday. Beginners group will meet at the home of Mrs. Edward Kracht, 1109 Pennsylvania, and the advanced group will meet at the home of Mrs. William Pfauts, 720 Louisiana.
华南
YMCA basketball game at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Robinson gymnast
YMCA cabinet meeting at 4:30 p.m. Thursday in Mission room of Myers hall.
--held at 4 p.m. Thursday in Visual Education projection room in 15 Fraser hall. "Here Is China." a U.S. government film, will be shown. Dr. Harold G. Barr of the School of Religion will lead a short discussion.
The mathematical colloquium of the department of mathematics will meet at 5 p.m. Thursday in 222 Frank Strong hall. Prof. Robert Schatten and James D. Riley will speak on "The Mappings of a Square on a Segment."
***
"China and Her Future" is the topic for YMCA movie forum to be
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Mail subscription: $3 n semester. $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan, every afternoon during the school year except Saturdays and Sundays. University halloween party. Second class matter Sept. 17, 1900, at the Post Office of Lawrence, Kan, under act of March 2, 1879.
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All members of the February graduating class of the School of Business who are hoping to be placed through the Business Placement Bureau, and any other students available for permanent employment in February, please note the School of Business bulletin broad for announcement of interview schedules throughout the month of January.
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During the Christmas holidays we were forced to change our former system of taxi rates. Like all other businesses we have been hit by the rising costs of living and the change was necessary for the continuance of satisfactory operation. We hope that we may be able to serve you in the future as in the past.
The New Rate Scale
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4, 1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 14, 1947
PAGE THREE
Women Would Rather Be Men
If you're a woman, would you like to be a man?
Or vice versa?
Admittedly, it's a little late to change now but every normal human being probably has considered the possibility at some time. Assuming that college students are in most instances normal, 20 K.U. students, 10 men and 10 women, were asked the above questions.
Preference for being a male seems to lead, five of the women wishing they had been born a male.
The ten males ranged from the rabid radical who responded, "Be a woman? Heek, no, I'd rather be an elephant," to the startled junior who scratched his head and said, "Gee, I dunno. Never thought about it. I might like to take a crack at it for a while. I get pretty tired of shaving every morning."
One advanced the theory that he could be more choosy—he could do the asking for dates. Another pointed out that if he had been born a girl
he couldn't have started playing in a dance band all over the country as a teen-ager.
One rugged male would hate to give up the economy of hitehiking. Another would regret sacrificing the privilege of going stag when he chose.
The pre-law student thought house work would be too much drudgery. The art major figured skirts must be awfully uncomfortable, to say nothing of girdles and brassieres.
But one thoughtful college junior advanced the best reason of all. He didn't think he'd like having babies.
"Of course," he added modestly,
"I ought to qualify that statement.
I really wouldn't know."
The five girls who wished they had been born boys had special reasons of their own.
One hated cooking and another suffered from lure of the open road. Like her male friend, she wanted to hitchhike. Another disliked waiting by the telephone for him (any him) to call. Another would prefer to spend her life in slacks.
"Especially, that awful infiltration course," she said.
The five contented misses were unanimous in being glad they were in the feminine camp. The college freshmen didn't think she would like having to go in the army.
The College junior felt a woman has definite advantage at Christmas time.
"Men get sox and ties, shirts and cigarettes," she explained. "But look at the Christmas presents a girl can drag in."
All five agreed that they wouldn't like the prospect of working at a job outside the home all their lives. As one college senior put it,
"Me? I guess I'm just plain lazy. This is an awfully competitive world. I would hate to get up every morning and go to an office. I'd much rather stay home and have babies and let somebody else earn the living."
SOCIALLY SPEAKING
FLINOR BROWNE, Society Editor
Johnson Pledges Sig Ep
Sigma Phi Epsilon announces the pledging of David R. Johnson, Kansas City, Mo.
Chi O's Entertain
The pledge class of Pi Beta Phi will be guests of the Chi Omega pledges today at the chapter house.
Delta Gamma Pledges
Harman Co-op Gives Dance
Delta Gamma announces the pledging of Martha Duncan, El Dorado; Jane Belt, Coffeyville; and Pat Brown, Coffeyville.
Guests at the Harman Co-op dance Friday night were James Drewelow, Robert Shearer, Hubert Speer, Vernon L. Biggs, David Hay, Jack Elliot, James Coffman, Keith S. Bowan, Lawrence W. Scott, Louis DeLuna, Frederick F. Reich, Calvin Remmers, Lance Shogrin, Charles Snider, Peter J. Koia, Fred R. McCraken, Dred E. Selsor
Robert P. Wright, John W. Pumphrey, William Earnest Henley, Raphael Zengara, William Alderson, James Manley, David Thomson, Walter R. Stakebrand, John Awald, H. W. Hiesterman, G. D. Fits, John Meek, Donald McMurray, L. De-Witt Stevens, Frank Stalzer, John Dickerson, Arnold Englund, James Sellards, Chester W. Spencer, C. G. Brague, Mendle Marst.
The chaperones were Mr. and Mrs. Norman Hemphill, and Mr. and Mrs Ralph Smith.
Sigma Nu's Entertain
Guests at the Sigma Nu formal paddle party Saturday night were Betty Bacon, Irma Rick, Bette Rye Thomas, Dorothy Stephenson, Joan Skogsbury, Gloria Hill, Mary Kay Cottman, Luciille Murray, Lee Blackwell, Jeanne Parrott, Jerry Powers, Beverly Fox, Joan Pugh, Barbara Hume, Barbara Byington, Jeanne Brown, Nina Green.
Virginia Bynan, Kay O'Connor,
Sally Sandifer, Sylvia Small, Ann
Allen, Joan Schwinn, Barbara Ackerman,
Pat Barron, Marcia Goddman,
Freda Harger, Anne Ashley.
ATO's Have Party
The chaperones were Mrs. R. H.
Wilson, Mrs. J. A. Hooke, Mrs. J. W.
Whipple, and Mrs. W. C. Jackson
* * *
The pledge class of Alpha Tau Omega entertained the members of the chapter and their guests at a Blackhawk party at the house Saturday night. The guests were Alice Goldsworthy, Althea Voss, Irislee Snull, Norma McMullen, Patricia Dye, Jane Ferrel, Mable Cable, Lyn Trousdale, Nancy Cameron, Virginia Daugherty, Betty Brewer, Peggy Sue Cloyd, Ruth Payne, Dorothy Thomas, Meridith Gear, Billie Powell, Mary Helen Baker, Josephine Steinberger,
Priscilla Richmond, Erna Harris
Johnson, Lila Hyten, Patsy Harris
COEDS' CORNER
'C'est Magnifique,' Says Loyal Marqie' Kerschen Of K.U.
Happy about being a student in K.U. is vivacious Marguerita "Margie" Kerschen, who loyally claims that her alma mater is the best in the U.S.
"I graduate in June," Margie said. "It will be hard to leave, but there's so much to do in the world, I just have to get out and get going."
Margie is majoring in French. She said that she had begun college with the idea of majoring in zoology, but had changed her mind. "The first semester I took French. It intrigued me and I've stuck to it ever since."
When she is out of college, Margie plans to teach. "People laugh, but I think teaching is a noble profession," she declared. "Later, it would be interesting to do guidance and social work."
She is the president of Pi Lambda Theta, a select honor education group of students of high scholastic attainment. Margie is also a member of Newman club. For four years, she has belonged to French club, of which she is president.
Margie is active in clubs and organizations on the Hill. She is the president of the Alpha Omicron Pi sorority, and is its representative to the United Women's organization, a new group for the purpose of fostering greater unity and friendship between sorority and independent women.
"Going to French school this summer at McGill university in Montreal, Canada, was my biggest thrill," Margie asserted. "The only thing I couldn't get used to was having a king! But in Rome you do as the Romans do, and so I stood up and sang 'God Save the King' with the rest."
Marguerita, her real name, is a compromise, she said. "My father wanted to call be Margaret and my mother thought I should be Rita. Marguerita is a combination of the two. However, I like to have folks remember me as Margie."
Valerie Stark, Mélba Whiting, Gwen Harger, Virginia Gorrill, Nancy Waggner, Elizabeth Bradley, Jean Brunton, Margaret Jean Hanna, Sally Peques, and Cara King.
Theta Phi Alpha Dinner
the chaperones were Mr. and Mrs.
William Woods, Mr. and Mrs.
Charles Gilland, Mr. and Mrs.
Chester Laniewski.
Mrs. W. B. Schloerw of Cincinnati, Ohio, first vice-president of Theta Phi Alpha, national social sorority, was honored at a dinner Saturday night at the Heart. Other guests were Adele Toller, president of the Iota alumni chapter in Kansas City, Mo.; Margaret Dortland, Kansas City, Mo., former president of the K. U. chapter; the Rev. George Towle, Mary Towle, Rozanne Croff, Bette Krenzer, Dolores Farrell, Laura Schmid, Marie Creegan, Winifred Wilson, Evangeline Pratt, Patricia Piera, Evalyn Homichol, Jerry Kowlzer, Eva Desiderio, Doris Klein, and Ladeen Steinkirchner.
Tri Delt's Attend Inaugural Ceremony
Eunice Carlson, daughter of Governor Carlson, and 41 members of the Delta Delta Delta sorority went to Topeka Monday for the governor's inauguration. Seated in the central section during the ceremony, the sorority members were later presented to the governor at the reception.
Attention, All University Men
Had Enough? Join Progressive!
"The only party that is non-secret and campus-wide"
Yes, now is your opportunity to participate in a student political party that actually intends to promote constructive student government and to improve student life on the Hill. If you are interested in these objectives come to the Progressive Party organizational meeting Wednesday night and bring your ideas with you. Officers will be elected and party policy adopted. Refreshments
7:30 p.m.
Kansas Room
Union
Wednesday Night, Jan.15,1946
DON POMEROY, 1131 Tennessee Temporary President
"Constructive Student Government"
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 14,1947
SPOTLIGHT
OF SPORTS
By BOB DELLINGER
(Daily Kansan Sports Editor)
Basketball'd dopesters are slowly going mad as upset after upset drops highly-favored teams into the depths of defeat.
Latest example of the astounding was St. Louis' victory over the Oklahoma Aggies on the A. & M. court. The victory itself provided one upset, and the score (38-20) was another in itself.
The Aggies previously had suffered only one defeat, 47-46 to L.I.U. in New York, and held victories over Texas, Kentucky, Kansas, and others.
Tonight's game at the Garden in New York will bring together the only two teams in the country who have downed the mighty Aggie squad in its 13-game total this far.
***
Iowa State's recent victory over Kansas State evened up the all-time count exactly. Both the Cyclones and the Wildcats hold 28 victories in the series, which dates back to 1909.
Iowa State will make its last non-conference raid tonight when it travels to Peoria to meet the high-riding Bradley Tech Indians.
The Indians have won 11 and lost only two in their intersectional contests so far. One of the losses was a one-point defeat at the hands of Oklahoma several days ago.
The Chicago Maroons pulled a minor upset during the weekend by coming within 20 points of the Indians. Bradley won 65-45.
Boy Scouts will pass coin cups through the crowd at the Iowa State-Nebraska game Jan. 20 to climax a drive for the March of Dimes. The drive is being sponsored by the Iowa State chapter of Alpha Phi Omega.
Mexico's good will basketball team may not have such an enviable record when it arrives home after a long tour through the Midwest, but at least it will have a working knowledge of the United States.
The Mexicans have been in the United States for several weeks, and will remain for more games before returning to Mexico City.
Monday the Mexicans took on an all-veteran team at the Chilcoo Indian school in Oklahoma. The Chilcoo players are all too old for the high school squad, so they have been cut short. They and entered a near-by city league as well as taking on other strong teams in the vicinity.
Tomorrow night the Mexicans will meet Northwestern Teachers, of Alva. Okla.
Clark Griffith, owner of the Washington Senators, dropped in at the White House Monday to attend to the signing of another south-paw for the coming season.
The primary purpose of Griffith's visit was to invite President Harry Truman to attend the opening game at Washington April 14 when the Senators tangle with the New York Yanks.
Mr. Truman promised to be on hand with his left arm in good shape for the opening pitch.
Former Students' Art Is Shown
Paintings by two former students, both of whom are now directors of art departments in other colleges, are being shown during January at the University Museum of Art.
Eugene J. McFarland was graduated in 1930. Since 1942 he has been head of the department of fine arts at Ohio Wesleyan university at Delaware, O. He has done murals for Phillips university, Enid, Okla, and the Escuela Universitaria de Bellas Artes at San Miguel Mexico
Paul W. Mannen, '33, is represented in the exhibition of a series of watercolors made in Mexico last summer'. Mr. Mannen is director of art at the Oklahoma College for Women at Chicasha.
Jayhawkers Meet Nebraska Tonight In Attempt To Get Out Of Cellar
The Jayhawkers will attempt to hit the comeback trail in conference play tonight when they travel to Nebraska's home Coliseum in Lincoln for a crucial cage game.
A victory over the Huskers might well start Kansas on the way to its 19th Big Six championship, while a defeat at Lincoln would completely eliminate Jayhawker hones. $ \textcircled{4} $
The team will again be in the hands of Assistant Coach Howard Engleman, who has found a way to use all three of his veteran forwards at the same time.
This was accomplished by moving Otto Schnellbacher back to the quarterback post where his height can be used to advantage under both backboards.
The promotion of Claude Houchin, "B" squad guard, to the traveling scau is another of Engleman's moves since taking over the varsity helm.
The Big Six spotlight, which hasn't rested on the Jayhawkers since the first game, remains well Missouri's favorite. The State Wildcats at Manahattan
The Tigers, sporting two victories and no defeats, currently head the conference; but they expect no soft touch in the Aggies, who were knocked from the top rung last week by Iowa State.
Victories by Kansas State and Nebraska would throw the league race into a three-way tie, with Kansas deep in the cellar, but a Missouri triumph would merely put the Tigers farther out in front of the Oklahoma Sooners whom they meet Saturday.
Harold Howey of Kansas State took the scoring lead away from Claude Retherford of Nebraska last week by dumping in six points against Iowa State while Nebraska remained idle.
Charlie Black of Kansas stands fourth in the league standings after hitting 13 against Oklahoma while Tucker was on defense. Tucker is 11th, in Big Six, seepup.
The conference scoring leaders:
pos. tp aver.
Howey, Kansas State .. f 33 16.5
Courty, Oklahoma .. f 30 15.0
Retherford, Nebraska .. f 28 14.0
Black, Kansas .. f 25 12.5
Paulsen, Iowa State .. c 21 10.5
Pippin, Missouri .. f 20 10.0
Brown, Nebraska .. g 20 10.0
Myers, Iowa State .. f 17 8.5
Reich, Oklahoma .. f 17 8.5
Stramel, Kansas .. f 16 8.0
Tucker, Oklahoma .. c 15 7.5
Two W.A.A. Delegates Will Be Elected Thursday
Two delegates to the Women's Athletic association national convention to be held in Greensboro, N.C., April 18-20, will be elected at 7 p.m. Thursday in Robinson gymnasium.
Initiation will be held in the office immediately preceding the meeting for those who were unable to attend the last initiation.
The collection was willed to the library of congress 21 years ago by Lincoln's son, Robert Todd Lincoln. The collection did not be disclosed, until this year.
Washington. (UP) The world will learn sometime this summer—probably on July 26—the secrets in Abraham Lincoln's private papers.
Lincoln's Papers Will Be Revealed
Some persons predict it will contain some sensations. Those who believe a member of Lincoln's cabin will look for support of that theory.
Others believe that papers will divulge details of the youthful romance between Lincoln and Ann Rutledge.
But Lincoln scholars expect no startling disclosures. They think that the more than 135 ruby-red manuscript boxes will yield the expected contents of a president's desk—memoranda, inter-office communications, and letters received. Students agree, however, that the papers are bound to contribute much to the now incomplete records of the life of Lincoln.
Don't Give Up Yet; 1929 Was Lots Worse
The present Kansas cage record of eight victories and six defeats may look bad to recent followers of the game, but to a veteran of 1929, the outlook is glittering.
The Kansas fan of that year, the first of the Big Six, had to stand by helplessly while his team went down to defeat 15 times and was victorious only three times.
In addition to the dubious distinction of being the worst season in Coach Forrest C. "Phog" Allen's shining basketball history, it had the stigma of marking the only time Kansas has finished in last place in the Big Six.
While the Jayhawkers were not further humbled by sinking into sixth place, they were forced to share their fifth-place berth with the Kansas State Wildcats, due to a last-game defeat by that team.
But the record wasn't quite as bad as it sounds.
Most of the Kansas defeats of the year were by margins of less than seven points, and the worst defeats they suffered were to the champion Oklahoma Sooners and to the Creighton Bluejays, a Missouri Valley representative.
The final loss of the year, that which sank them into a last-place tie, was an overtime. 35-36 affair.
Other Kansas defeats were to powerful Notre Dame, 21-32 and 17-29, and to California. The Jayhawkers took the last game of a three-game series at Berkeley, 24-23, after dropping the openers, 21-33 and 32-30.
Kansas has had other season in which they finished outside first place, five in the last 17 years. Three times, the Jayhawkers have gone through the season winning 10 in a row, and twice they have won the title with a record as poor as seven and three.
I-M Schedule
Tonight:
10:00—Nine Old Men vs. Misfits
10:00—Kappa Alpha Psi vs. Newman club
PROTECT YOUR EYES
Lawrence Optical Co.
1025 Mass.
Eyes
Archery Exhibition At Game Half-Time
The Archery club will conduct a marksmanship exhibition between halves of the K. U.-Iowa State basketball game Feb. 24.
Elimination matches will be held during the coming week, and the winners will meet in the exhibition Feb. 24.
A membership drive is being conducted by the club in preparation for the coming matches with Wichita, and the Kansas City junior college.
Rifle Competition Again
Intramural rifle competition, discontinued in October because of insufficient ammunition, will begin next week. Teams are to watch the intramural bulletin board for dates when they fire.
The University Daily Kansan is one of ten college newspapers that belong to The Inland Press Association. Membership also includes 408 daily newspapers in 19 states and Canada. It is the oldest and largest association of daily newspapers.
Phone KU-25 with your news.
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JANUARY 14, 1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
1947
'Lawyer' Engleman Takes Time To Coach K.U. Basketball Teams
A mixture of law school and basketball isn't always a profitable combination; but Howard Engleman, former Kansas cage star, is putting them together and doing it well.
Engleman, a graduate student in the law school, and All-Student Council president, started the year as coach of the "B" basketball squad.
and has replaced Dr. F. C. Allen as regular coach during the doctor's stay in the hospital.
J. B. ROWLING
HOWARD ENGLEMAN
Before he left the "B" squad to take up his varsity duties, Coach Engleman had guided the Jayhawk juniors to four consecutive victories.
The blond mentor spends his afternoon hours instructing new players in the fundamentals of the Allen system—which differs completely from that used by most high schools and many colleges.
It is his job to impart the fine points of screening, playmaking shooting, and floor play to those who aspire to varsity berths.
So, in his three-year stay on the Kansas varsity, he treated fans to a display of accuracy on drive-ins, scoop shots, and push shots with either hand, which rivals the best in Big Six court history.
Engleman himself stands a bare six feet tall and therefore was seldom able to take advantage of tip-ins who stood from directly under the basket.
His 165-point total scoring record set in 1941 has since fallen, but he led the Jayhawkers of that year to a league co-championship. Engleman was twice named all-American, in his junior and senior years.
He spent 20 months in the navy,
he spent the rank of senior grade
legionnard.
Now he claims to have retired from active competition, devoting his attention to coaching and to the law books; but if you look closely, you probably will find his name in the box scores of a local city league squad.
You may expect to find it on top, as usual.
University High To Play Eudora
The University High cage squad will go after its second victory of the season at 4 p.m. today when it meets the Eudora five on the Community building court.
The Eagles have only one victory in seven starts, one of the defeats coming at the hands of Eudora earlier in the season
Eudora uses the Oklahoma Aggie style of basketball to some extent, working the ball in until a certain shot is available.
Expected starters for the Eagles are Gene Riling, forward and the squad's leading scorer; Joe Dunham, forward; Bob Powers, center; Dick Cochram, guard; and Rich O'Neill, guard.
The "B" game between the two schools was slated to start at 3:15 p.m.
K-State Looks For Successor To Adams
Manhattan. (UP)—Milton Eisenhower, president of Kansas State college, said today the athletic council would begin "at once" to interview candidates to replace Athletic Director Hobbs Adams.
He said in a letter of resignation that he was considering a "number of fine" offers. In a letter of reply, dated yesterday, President Eisenhower told him"I would recommend you for any athletic post in the United States.
Mr. Adams, who resigned as football coach last month after a disastrous season, has asked to be relieved as director in order to take a coaching job elsewhere.
Mr. Adams stepped down as head football coach after Kansas State finished the season without a single victory. At that time, the coach-athletic director job was combined, and he asked merely to be relieved of the coaching job. The athletic council agreed and separated the two positions. President Eisenhower said that the council would interview candidates for both positions.
Competing with Carnegie Institute of Technology, the K.U. Women's Rifle club will hold the first of 26 postal exchange matches at 7:30 p.m. tonight on the R.O.T.C. rifle range, Military Science building.
Women's Rifle Club To Fire By Mail
Coached by M/Sgt. Arthur W Millard, the team will fire under the supervision of R.O.T.C. officials.
Participants will be given five practice shots each, after which they will be allowed $7\frac{1}{2}$ minutes to fire 10 shots from the prone position.
The best five scores will be selected and mailed to the rifle club at the Carnegie Institute of Technology to the scores to the local club for comparison.
Team members are Frances Chubb and Peggy Baker, co-captains, Margaret Sue Cloyd, Shirley Otter, Kathleen Brewers, Janet Belt, Armilda Lincoln, Mary Anna Ward, Betty Ann Sanden, and Jane Keith.
Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the health service at Watkins Memorial hospital, and George Baxter Smith, dean of the School of Education, attended a meeting of the Kansas state health education council in Topeka Saturday.
Canuteson, Smith Attend Health Council Meeting
Galveston, Texas (UP)—A 50-star flag is ready in Galveston if Alaska and Hawaii should gain admittance to the union.
Plans were made for a health workshop to be held June 23 to July 3 in Topeka.
In the afternoon Dr. Canuteson attended a meeting of the Kansas tuberculosis and health association, of which he is vice-president.
The modern Betsy Ross—Mrs. Rhoda Crawford Twyman—has prepared a United States flag with two new stars added. It also carries a symbolic picture of the four freedoms.
Modern Betsy Ross Adds Stars To Flag
The flag is broken up into four fields of stars, four stars across and three down in each field. A space separates each field.
Joining the four fields in the center are two stars for the territories, placed horizontally. The flag is orthodox otherwise.
College Basketball
Kentucky 82, Vanderbilt 30
Indiana 62, Dauvergne 46
Illinois 61, Ohio State 42
Iowa 77, Minnesota 64
Michigan 49, Northwestern 41
Alabama 45, Louisiana State 38
Florida 50, Georgia 47
George Washington 45, George
Washington & Lee 54, Virginia 5
Marshall 87, Concord 45
Bradley Tech 51, Iowa State 49
Westminster 55, Pittsburgh 45
Drake 46, Creighton 40
Irish Will 'Follow' In Grid De-Emphasis
South Bend, Ind. (UP)—Notre Dame university will not lead in dephasis of intercollegiate athletics, but will follow other major schools which establish "practical standards," the Rev. John J. Cavanaugh, president, told the annual Irish football banquet last night.
"If the great educational institutions agree on practical standards for athletics and decide not to schedule other institutions that will not observe these standards," he said.
"Notre Dame will go along, providing the decent corollary of such a policy is put into effect, that no institution observes these standards will be excluded from competition," he said.
Left, Left, Left—No Right
In the later phrase, it was believed he was requesting continuation of grid relationships with Notre Dame, which for years has conferred to Western conference eligibility standards. Recently several midwestern sports writers have speculated that various top schools were "dropping" the Irish from their schedules because contests with the power-laden Irish eleven ruined any other team for several weeks.
Philadelphia (UP)—The thief who stole a box of 18 shoes from Louis Berman's parked auto last night got a white elephant. They were all left shoes—samples.
Cagers Hit Fast Scoring Streak
Regarding the recent break in the 33-year-old relationship between Notre Dame and Army, Father Cavanaugh said only that the danger of gamblers "getting to" players of either team had nothing to do with the rupture.
The nets were kept hot in Robin-
son gymnasium Monday night as
intramural basketball teams hit their
fastest scoring pace of the season.
Phi Gamma Delta roared over I. S. A. by a score of 70 to 18 in the most one-sided contest of the night. Hargiss took scoring honors for the victors with 14 points.
Phi Delta Theta swamped Batten-
feld, 66 to 26. Debus and Mitchell
both looped in 12 points for the Phi
Delt's.
Individual point-making laurels for the night went to MacDonald of the Sigma Chi team. He netted 20 counters in leading his quintet to a 46 to 31 conquest of the Live Five.
The Wolks downed a previously undefeated Phi Kappa Psi team, 22 to 20, in the hardest fought contest of the night. Broederdorf paced the victors with 11 points.
Other results: Beta Theta Pi over Wicked Seven, 42 to 22. Independs over Westminster, 52' to 26. Normans over Gamma Delta, 39 to 30.
'Army Football To Be Small Time'—Taylor
Washington. (UF)—Army's mighty grid dynasty is about to be ended in favor of small time football for the fun of it, according to Maj. Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor, superintendent of the U. S. Military Academy.
Taylor, principal speaker at last night's annual Touchdown club banquet, said he was more than willing for West Point football to return to the "old regime" of prewar days.
He said there was no place at West Point for big time commercial football. Future army elevens, he added, will be manned exclusively by players whose primary purpose is to become army officers.
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PLUS: BUGS BUNNY—Cortoon FEATURETTE: "Are Animals Actors?" and NEWS
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---
PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 14, 1947
Kansan Comments
Subsistence
One of the veterans' organizations on the Kansas State campus has rounded up members' expense accounts and is submitting them, together with recommendations for pay increases for both married and unmarried veterans, to the new congress.
Their figures show that K-State veterans are spending from $25 to $130 a month more than the subsistence allowance now paid by the Veterans' administration. They say that most veterans are making up the difference by drawing on their savings, by having their wives work, or by working themselves.
Congress may raise the ante if veterans put on enough pressure and if there is no counter-pressure exerted against any such raise. Before supporting any drive to get increased subsistence allowances from the government, veterans should think the matter over carefully.
From the first, the educational set-up of the GI bill included a subsistence allowance which was to aid, not support, the veteran. We had the good fortune to talk to one of the American Legion men who had helped draw up the GI bill which was passed during the war years. He emphatically stated that there never was any intention to do more than aid the veteran—that the veteran would have to spend more than he received from the government.
The closer the allowance comes to being a "living wage," the more veterans will be drawn to the colleges, whether they want an education or not. The temptation to get in on an easy thing always is great. Educational requirements would have to be set higher to wash out the loafers.
Any extra money the veterans in college get now will have to be paid back at some later date. And it won't be just the benefiting veterans and the "war-worthy civilians" who pay that bill. Fellow veterans who didn't take advantage of the educational opportunities will have to pay just as much as those who benefit.
One of the proud boasts of many Americans is that they worked their way through four years of college. Of course, expenses weren't as high then as they are now, but neither were wages.
Veteran can say "We worked for this, now let them put us through," or they can say "Education is worth working for." Which do you choose?
On some people you have to use a cudgel. H. R. Knickerbocker was arguing with a rabid Russophile and at the close of the argument, remarked, "Sure is nice we live in a country where we can talk things over in the open." "Sure is," the self-styled communist agreed innocently as he walked happily away.
The University Daily Kansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Education Association, and the Associated College Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service 420 Madison Ave. New York, NY 10036.
York City.
Managing Editor Charles Roo-
Asst. Managing Editor Jane Anderson
Makeup Editor Billie Marie Hamilton
Business Manager Bill Donovan
Advertising Manager Margery Handy
Circulation Manager John McCormick
Telegram Editor Edward Swain
Management Manager Maria Sullivan
City Editor R. T. Kingman
It's Close
Final week is very,very near.
You don't need a calendar to know that—all you have to do is open the door of your favorite bull session room and feel the disapproving glances of your friends who have suddenly developed a strong affinity for books. Just glance at the walls in front of their desks—see those little slips of paper on which they have carefully mapped out their scholastic chores for the next two weeks.
Remember when anything less than a bursting bomb didn't call for any comment? Just stub your toe over a match stick in the hall and listen to the shushes and the admonitions of "S'matter, don't you know when quiet hours are?"
See how those books have been dusted off? Those pencils sharpened? Dictionary and reference books dug out from under the Lifes and Coronets and Esquires?
Yep, all the signs of another final week are here. Sure will be nice when it's over and these guys once more believe that there's more education in a bull session than in a study session.
Dear Editor----
Editor's Note: Every "Letter to the Editor" must be withheld from publication upon request, but the editor must know who all letters must be limited to 250 words.
'Concerts Deplorable'
After reading the letter published in the Daily Kansan Jan. 10, I became quite relieved to see that someone felt as I did about the deplorable quality and number of concerts given on our campus.
I spent my first three years of school in a college in Oklahoma, Oklahoma college for women, with an enrollment of 800 girls. The college was interested in the concerts heard by the girls, the type as well as the quality. All girls were urged to go, and our auditorium was filled to capacity at every concert. We heard artists such as Alec Templeton, William Primrose, Agna Enters, Argentinita, Veloz and Yolanda, Anna Kaskas, and many others, who were not "dull packaged goods."
If this college with 800 girls and less money to spend on the artist course series can hear concerts with artists such as these, then what is wrong with a university of 9,000 students who hear only shopworn concerts such as the Icelandic Singers, who undoubtedly left listeners chilly.
(Editor's Note — Alec Templeton and Agna Enters have appeared in Hoeh during recent years. Blanche Theobm was here Dec. 4, 1945; Ballet Theater, Jan. 17; Doss Cordchorus, Feb. 13; and James Melton, May 7, 1946.)
Mary Margaret Markle College junior
A display featuring the materials, media, and equipment for stimulation of art work by children will be shown at the University Museum of Art until Feb. 3.
The exhibition, which is on loan from the Museum of Modern Art in New York, divided into four types of materials. Games designed to stimulate creative talents include color games, and construction sets.
Art Work Materials Featured In Exhibit
A model art school room illustrates such factors as bi-lateral lighting, a storage well made of multiple units, unit furniture and a wall easel. The plans can be adapted to the average school room.
Workers May Get Only Fraction Of Portal-To-Portal Pay Asked
Editor's Note: Everybody—government, industry, labor, taxpayers—is deeply involved in the multi-billion-dollar portal-to-portal pay picture. Legal, fiscal and legislative aspects of the picture are confused. The following dispatch endeavors to unscramble the situation as it stands now.)
By AUSTIN C. WEIHWEIN
(United Press Staff Correspondent)
Washington. (UP) — Nobody expects the mushrooming claims for billions in back portal-to-portal wages to be settled for more than a fraction of the totals asked.
Many persons, aware of the temper of congress, doubt that the bulk of the union claims will ever be considered. They expect congress to pass legislation killing the suits. ◆
Even if congress should not act, responsible government sources consider it most unlikely that more than a small part of the claims, now in excess of four billion dollars would ever be allowed in court and finally paid. Too many legal obstacles stand in the way.
But all indications are that congress will pass legislation throwing the cases out. The Republican leadership of both houses is on record favoring such legislation. Senate hearings will begin Wednesday. Several bills have been introduced.
They would either throw out all if the suits filed or limit their number drastically.
The government's interest in the
Among those who hold that the back-pay claims have been "grossly exaggerated" is L. Metcalfe Walling, administrator of the wage-hour law. Ultimate liability of industry under the Supreme court's Mt. Clemens, Mich. Pottery Co. decision, he said, "would only be a small fraction of the amounts now being talked about."
For a while both industry and government were tremendously upset over the claims. Industry feared loss of profits if not, in some cases, outright ruin if the claims were allowed. Government saw the possibility of losing millions in taxes and in war contractors' suits for reimbursement.
Both have calmed down now, according to representative spokesmen, after examining the situation more carefully and considering the effect of prospective legislation. The government, however, is acting on the just-in-case theory that some sizable claims may be allowed. It is intervening in the Mt. Clemens case and will file a brief some time this week.
And the National Association of Manufacturers also intervened with a request that all of the back wage claims be denied. Even if portal pay is warranted, it should not be retroactive, the NAM said.
Mr. Walling believed that much of the hullaballoon over portal arose from "a misconception that the Supreme court held that all time spent on the employers' premises was working time."
Actually, he said, the court "merely decided that the minimum necessary walking time to the work place from the time clock, including the time required for necessary make-ready activities, was working time."
And having decided that, the Supreme court instructed the federal district court in Detroit to determine, as it is now in the process of doing, whether the employees actually have any back pay coming. If the court finds that the time involved is trivial, it may decide that it can be ignored altogether.
In any event, a host of limiting factors undoubtedly would cut down allowable union claims. A multitude of workers in whose behalf claims were filed have long since left industries in which they worked during the war. Many probably could not now be located. Courts hardly would allow claims for them.
Mr. Walling mentioned among limiting factors state statutes of limitations, absence of coverage under the wage-hour law, exemptions, and difficulties of proof. Other sources noted that most of the union claims included punitive damages which the courts, if the employers proved good faith, could be expected to deny or reduce.
Mt. Clemens case stems from fear that it_might find itself subject to action for portal-pay reimbursement by war contractors.
War and treasury department officials insisted that most final settlements with war contractors have no provision for reopening. They conceded, however, that some cost-plus-fixer fee contractors had reserved the right to re-open final settlements if unexpected liabilities cropped up. And justice department officials admitted privately that even in cases where there is no reopening provision, contractors might be able to bring suits in equity asking reimbursement for back portal-to-portal claim payments.
If corporations could revise back tax returns on the basis of back portal payments, they could claim huge refunds for the years before 1945 when the 90 per cent excess profits tax was in effect.
Speaker Gives Advice To Fossil Collectors
Advice to amateur fossil collectors was given by Edwin C. Galbreathe, graduate student of the department of zoology, at the meeting of the Phi Sigma, honorary biology fraternity. Friday.
In his talk, Mr. Galbreath used slides to illustrate how to remove fossils from their natural habitats without damaging them.
Also at the meeting, Mrs. Ruth McNair, instructor in biology, was elected faculty advisor of Phi Sigma. A program committee was appointed to plan the initiation of new members, to be held in March.
The next meeting will be Feb.14.
Holford, Duggan Elected To Lead Lambda Chi
Lambda Chi fraternity elected the following officers at a meeting last Friday night: William Halford, president; Paul Duggan, vice-president; Bob Barnes, secretary; John Long, treasurer; James Fuller, social chairman; James Fleming and Jackson Worley, representatives to the Inter-fraternity council.
Ethan P. Allen, professor of political science, is faculty advisor of the organization.
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JANUARY 14, 1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
Copy must be in the University Dalty Kansan Business Office, Journalism bldg. Library, p.m. of the day before publication is desired. All classifications are cash in advance.
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five
25 words or less 35c 69c 96c
additional words 0
Lost
GOLD Ring initialized E. G. Lost in front
of Dick's. Reward. Call Bill Multiply.
4.75
SLIDE Rule, probably in Marvin hall.
Hire case. Call Bill Wilon. phone 651.
Revise case.
BROWN Sheaffer life-time pen between Hoch or Frank Strong. Helen Hastings engraved on pen. Reward. Return to Daily Kansan office. -17-
LADY Elegi wristwatch. Jan. 8 between Frank Strong and Fraser. Margaret Hardie *engraved on back*. Reward. Phone 1526-J. -15-
GRAY and black Valpern fountain pen between Pl Phi house and Fraser. If found please call Mary Alice White.
415. -15-
OVERCAET: Brown, size 38. Was accidentally exchanged at Dine-A-Mite Friday evening for coat of similar color. George McCarthy at 1106 or message. - 1-16.
GOLD Sheaffer pencil, striped brown and black. Lost between Cottage and Corbin. Finder please call Virginia Roesler. 860. Reward. -16-
BILLFOLD: Black, red trim. Name engraved in gold on inside, Jola Markle. Lost Saturday night. Finder please leave at Dally Kansen office or call 2537 M.-16.
For Sale
ONE 1946 Havenwood house trailer. Euc-
fied fully insulated electric brakes. Sleepes
four. Used four months, terms cash.
Used for possession. Parked at 1724 Mussel.
-14
ELECTRIC IRON, slightly used, with extra long cord if wanted. Also 8-inch boots size 9. See both at 13 Lane Q. Sunflower. -14-
'41 Chev. convertible for sale, 2 heaters,
spotlight, radio. Top condition, nice finish.
Phone 1996-J or 1106. Wilbur R. Koehn.
-15-
BED, Mattress, and springs. Three drawer dresser with mirror. Also little used two-burner hot-plate and large briefcase. See at 198 West 12th. -15.
1940 Ford deluxe coupe. New motor, six speed shift, radio. Southwind winder new finish. Best offer. Phone 1687, 7 to 9 p.m. -15.
1935 DeSoto 4-door sedan, motor completely overhailed. First good offer takes it. See at 1023 Miss. St. Phone 2297-R. 15 PRACTICALLY New lady dresses, skirts, and coats, size 12 and 14. Also 1 man's suit size 37, 1 man's suit and coat size 37. Reasonably priced for quick sale. Call 2734-W any time 3 p.m. -16.
STUDENTS: We are ready to sell your
books on our website. Please send us
student lamps. Price $7.95 including 160-
lamp bulbs.
watt bulb. Kansas Electric Power, 700
Mass., -16
1938 CHEVROLET 4-door Master Deluxe
Lane P. Apt. 109.
flower Village. . . . .
NAVAL Officers Dress Blues. Good condition. Size, coat 36, trousers 32. See guard Jones, McCook Hall. Under east side of stadium. Enter under LM. -16-
2 BROWN sport coats, 39 chest. Never
better than at Schuiz's Tailor Shop
294 Mass. St.
New Philo Electric refrigerator. See at Apt. 123, Lane P, Sunflower, or phone 3108 R, Lawrence. This ad appears but once.
-14-
For Rent
WANTED. One or two girls to share basement apartment. Two double sleeping rooms on second floor for girls. 841 Louisiana. Phone 2995-J. -15-
Wanted
MEMBERS For flying club or will sell interest in 46 T-craft. No students. Calvin Cooley. 1142 Ind. Phone 3335. -16 SLIDE RULE log duplex trig or triclag euffet Easter. Call Baker at 1983 and send to 500. POSITION open for wife of G.I. or full time office secretary for the Dept. of Bacteriology. Call K.U. 145. -16
FOLLOWING have been found and may be had at Kansan office by identifying: Fountain pens, Evershars ring, 2 bracelets, earwires, gloves, glasses, lipstick, nail polish case, Rosary, spiral notebook, slide rule, and partial plate containing 2 teeth. Please claim, 16-
Found
Business Services
ATTENTION, Medical students, microscopes, colorometers, balances, engineers, computer technicians, engineers, Thirteen years' experience. Call Victor 9218, Technical Instruments Service company, 720 Delaware, Kansas City 6, Mo. Attributes.
TYPING: I cannot service, reasonable rates. 1028 Vermont. -20-
INCOME TAX Service. I am preparing income tax returns at a moderate rate.
I will provide the necessary day or in the evenings and ask for Ralph Martin for information or an appointment. -20-
TYPING: I will select a veteran's wife type term papers. Neat and accurate. Phone 1673W or drop by 942 New Hampshire. 20-TYPING: Term papers and reports. Both promptly. Reasonably. Phone 1673W or drop by 942 New Hampshire. 20-TYPING: Home and car radios. Tubes test free. All work guaranteed days. 604 Hercules (new village) Summit. PHONE-EXACT Copies, discharge and durable papers. Fast service. Low price. Drug Co. 801 Muss. Law, revenue, complaint or Lane F. Apt. 18. flower. Kansas. -26-FOR that coke date remember the Eld-
HAVE A TASTY, WELL-PREPARED STEAK for Less at
FOR That coke date remember the Eldr
ridge pharmacy at 710 Mass., phone
714-235-6981.
Across from Court House
BILL'S GRILL
1109 Mass.
Phone 2054
Advertisers Prefer The Kansan To Reach Hill Students
WE DON'T MAGNIFY
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We're "super-sluths" when it comes to hunting out knocks, squeaks, or other motor ills.
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622 MASS.
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FOR Group riding, get your coupon in Jan. 9 Kansan and then call for Bill's service for five years of experience service with five years of experience service for KU. students. -15-
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 14,1947
9,000 Dimes Is Campus Goal To Fight Polio
Nine thousand dimes is the goal set by the University march of dimes committee.
This campaign, which is part of the national drive to fight infantile paralysis, will be participated in by every major student organization on the campus.
Beginning Monday and lasting through the week, it will be ended by a semi-formal dance in the Military science building Jan. 25 featuring various stunts and an intermission floor show, William Perkins, committee chairman announced today.
Collection booths will be set up in Watson library, the Union, and Frank Strong hall. They will be manned during the five day campaign by personnel from all organizations participating.
All organized houses will compete for the largest per capita contribution.
"We hope that student generosity will be as great toward this cause as it was in 1922 toward another charitable cause, when $2,200, the largest donation in the country, was raised by the University for aid to starving Czech students," stated Dean Henry Werner, whose office of dean of student affairs will be a "clearing house" for the campaign.
Organizations participating will be the All Student Council Ku Ku's, WM.C.A., Y.W.C.A., Jay Janes, K club, Inter-Fraternity council, Independent student association, Union activities, Mortar Board, Pan Hellicide, Alpha Phi Omega, and Sachem.
Display In Union
Twenty-five panels depicting Jewish and Negro cultural contributions to American life will be exhibited for three days beginning Monday in the Union lobby. Presented by the American Council Against Intolerance, the panels will be shown various places in and near Lawrence the next three weeks.
Sauer Returns To Campus
Head football coach, George Sauer,
returned to the campus today. Sauer
served as assistant coach for the
West team in the annual East-West-
football game in San Francisco on
New Year's Day. Since that time he
has attended the National Collegiate
Athletic association meeting in New
York City.
Is Form 1963 In?
Veterans who have received form 1963 from the regional office of the Veterans administration in Kansas City, Mo., should fill it out immediately and mail it to that office. Dr. E. R. Elbel announced today.
If the form is not returned to the regional office, the veteran's subsistence check may be temporarily withheld pending receipt of the form.
Mock UN Delegates To Meet Tomorrow
Thirty-five students will head each nation's delegation at the mock United Nations conference to be held on the campus Feb. 22. They will meet tomorrow at 5 p.m. in the Kansas room of the Union.
Dick Hawkinson, executive chairman, will explain the organization of the conference and the details of supervisors' duties. The names and duties of the delegates who will serve under them will also be announced.
Those who will serve as supervisors are Jean Moore. Terry Herriott, Orville Roberts, Jim Crook, Robert Judy, Arthur Partridge, Margaret van der Smissen, Bruce Bathhurst, Jack Button, Deane Postlethwait, Kenneth Beasley.
Hal Friesen, Keith Wilson, Tom Scovail, Ernest Friesen, Newell Jenkins, Dorothy Heshomeyer, Russell Mamuel, Scott Ninger, William Vandiver, William Tincher, Joan Woodward, Jack Shanahan, Hilda James, Abraham Persky, Delores Custer.
Elizabeth Evans, Virginia Powell,
Joan Rettig, Beth Bell, Herbert
Coles, Elaine Sawyer, Robert Ober-
belman, David Thompson, and Otis
Hill.
Swedish Club To Sing
Singing Swedish songs will be the program at the meeting of the Swedish Club tonight at 7:15 in Batterfield Hall. Anyone interested in Sweden or in studying Swedish may attend.
Executive Board To Meet
The executive board of the Y.W.-C.A., of which Miss Martha Peterson, mathematics instructor, is president, will meet at 7:30 tonight in Henley house.
Address Heard Over KFKU
Gov. Frank Carlson's address to the opening joint session of the Kansas legislature will be broadcast at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow over KFKU.
Now They're In Sunnyside
MANJU SINGH
No couple moving into Sunyside apartments on the south side of the Hill liked the change better than did Mr. and Mrs. Ammon Andes, who are shown here with one of their two daughters. Mr. Andes, an aeronautical engineering professor, is showing a toy airplane to the baby of the family.
News. . .
of the World
Congress Introduces Bills To Repeal Wagner Act
Washington. (UP) — Nearly a dozen major labor bills have been introduced in the house and senate. Two of the measures seeks to repeal the Wagner labor relations act, which guarantees collective bargaining rights and sets up machinery for enforcement.
Most of the others are designed to amend the Wagner act. Several would outlaw the closed shop. Others would create new agencies with broad powers to handle disputes threatening the public welfare or would empower federal courts to enter many labor disputes with injunctions.
Southern Senators May Filibuster Anti-Filibuster
Washington. (UP)—Southern senators organized forces today for all an-out fight against Republican antiflubuster legislation. While no definite strategy was adopted, some of the Southern Democrats indicated they might resort to a filibuster to defeat antiflubuster legislation.
Several acknowledged that their immediate fear was that Republicans were clearing the way for passage of anti-poll tax, anti-lynching, and mandatory fair employment practices legislation.
'Largest Block Market Ring In Sugar' Is Smashed
Albuquerque, N.M. (UP)—Operation of what was termed the largest sugar black market ring in the nation's history was believed smashed with the arrest of a Hobbs, N. M., bottling plant owner.
Operations involved four states, including Texas, New Mexico, Kansas, and Colorado. U.S. District Attorney Everett M. Grantham said that A.M. Bartlett, the bottling plant owner, had been arrested for alleged violation of sugar rationing regulations, and that a former sugar rationing clerk was sought.
Vet Wage Ceilings Attacked
Washington. (UP)—Congress was told that ceilings placed on incomes of veterans in educational and on-the-job training programs are creating hardships and causing many ex-servicemen to lose "all hope for the future." Rep. Errett P. Serviner, (R-Kan.) made the charge in a house speech introducing a bill to repeal the ceilings.
British Dockers Join Strike
London. (UP) → Britain's transport strike today spread to the great London docks when more than 4,000 dockers voted to walk off the piers on Monday as part of a broader use of British troops to move perishable foods in the spreading crisis.
Conaress Mav Check Airlines
Washington. (UP) - A congressional investigation of airline accidents and finances appeared likely today when Civil Aeronautics board members were called before the senate commerce committee for questioning behind closed doors.
Lewis Hearings Begin
Washington. (UP)—The supreme court today begins hearings which will decide whether John L. Lewis and his United Mine Workers were convicted of contempt of court for carrying out November's 14-day coal strike.
London. (UP)—French Premier Leon Blum arrived in London and, according to diplomatic sources, was expected to discuss the possibility of alignment of Anglo-French policy on the future of Germany.
Blum Arrives In London
Will Drop Hasty Portal Suits
Detroit. (UP)—A C.I.O. attorney disclosed today that a "good number" of "hasty" portal-to-portal back pay suits involving millions of dollars will be withdrawn from federal district court here.
AVC Broadcasts 'Dear Everybody,' Appeals To '1947 College Man'
"Dear Everybody," the KFKU program sponsored and produced by members of the local American Veterans committee, is being transcribed and distributed to broadcasting stations throughout the Midwest through the AVC Kansas City regional office.
The next broadcast of "Dear Everybody" will be at 2:45 p.m. tomorrow, when the topic will be law legislation.
"Dear Everybody" is particularly addressed to the "1947 college man,
BusinessDemand Exceeds Supply
Students who will graduate from the School of Business this February face a radiant aspect so far as the labor market is concerned.
According to Frank Pinet, director of the Business placement bureau, demand for the February graduates exceeds the supply by 400 per cent.
"Approximately 90 per cent of Business School graduates are placed by the bureau," related Mr. Pinet. "This is a relatively high percentage considering the fact that all graduates do not use the placement bureau's services."
The service was started in 1927, two years after the School of Business was organized in the University. Since that time, it has acted as liaison between job-seeking graduates and industry.
"The placement bureau is not only open to Business school students," Mr. Pinet added. "We will interview anyone who is contemplating entering the field of business. Engineers, Spanish, French, and English majors, or anyone in any field of study are welcomed and urged to come in with all the vocational desires. There seem to be the misconception that the placement bureau is for business majors only.
"Naturally the salary corresponds to the type of work one is seeking, his qualifications and the prospective market for his particular talent." Mr. Pinet continued. "The majority of openings are in the Middle West and geographically speaking, wage agreements have been quite satisfactory."
Between three and five firms send representatives to the bureau's offices each week, so if you are ready to start on your career in the near future, go to the second floor of Frank Strong hall and see Mr. Pinet.
Russian Club Will Sponsor Movie On Russia Today
A movie. "This Is Russia," sponsored by the Russian club will be shown in the projection room of the visual education division, basement of Fraser hall, 4:30 today.
Mrs. Sam Solovieitchl, instructor of Russian, will explain the movie at the regular meeting of the club, Tuesday.
who doesn't do doctor, he misses out. the ten weeks that it has been on the air, it has covered housing, consumer problems, the atom bomb, and many other serious topics of the day, but it has endeavored to do this in a manner that makes a point without lecturing.
Russell Barrett, assistant instructor in political science, is script writer, producer, and plays the character of "Father" in the program. Other members of the cast include Thomas Rea, College sophomore, as the "Vigilant Vet": Roberta Sanderson, College freshman, as his wife; and Henry Haworth, College freshman, the announcer, and also the voice of the "Senator," an individual not dissimilar to the celebrated Mr. Claghorn.
"We try to approach questions on a fairly down to earth and practical basis, without reading off long lists of statistics and quotes that might bore our listeners." Mr. Barreti said. "We even include some humor to keep our listeners awake."
An average broadcast has the conventional introduction by the announcer, then fades into a letter being read aloud by the "Vigilant Vet." In his letter, he states the problem of the day, then the scene fades away to an imaginary living room parlor, where the discussion is carried on between himself, his wife, and "Dad." At some time during this discussion, they turn on the radio, and on comes the Senator, who seems to have all of the characteristics that the 1947 college man presumably should not have.
One change in the program was made by the violinist. Because of recent performances of the "Mendelssohn Concerto in D Minor" at KU, listed on the program as the second number, Mr. Stern substituted the "Concerto in D. Minor" by Andrea Wieniwski.
Isaac Stern, Russian-born violinist,
presented a concert to a large audience in Hoch auditorium Monday night.
At the end of the program Mr. Stern presented two encores in answer to audience request. The first was "Hora Staccato" by Dinicu, transcribed for violin by Heifetz, and the second was "Slavonic Dance in E Minor" composed by Dvorak and transcribed by Krisler.
Isaac Stern Plays To Large Audience
But They Came From Here
CARNESE
Call it "housing" if you will, but this is what the Andes family movea from when the signal finally came to move into Sunnyside. It's an old, patched-up stone and brick garage, and it was unheated. But—as Professor Andes said—it was "better than nothing."
University DAILY KANSAN
STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Wednesday, Jan. 15, 1947
44th Year No.69
Lawrence Kansas
man,
In the merany but a out script the roast so-to-an, th, beer," on ac- long naf ar- me e." an- ter int the ne ng on is one on - he e. st, hy as d e a r. st d n d
Engleman Quits; Irwin Becomes Head Of A.S.C.
John Irwin, College sophomore,
became president of the All Student
Council last night, following the accep-
tance by the council of Howard
Engleman's resignation. George
Caldwell, P.S.G.L. president, was
elected vice-president.
Engleman gave as reasons for his resignation, his duties in Law school and as assistant basketball coach. For the past week he has taken the place of Dr. F. C. Allen, in head basketball coach, who is in the hospital.
In one of the longest meetings in the organization's history, the council overwhelmingly voted to back the coming student financial drive to support the World War II Memorial drive by appointing a committee to cooperate with Kenneth Postlothwaite, director of the drive. Council members named on the committee were Mary Jane Zollinger, Anne Scott, John Gunther, and Keith Wilson.
Bruce Bathurst, College sophomore, was sworn in as Y.M.C.A. representative on the council.
The eight members of the Union operating committee were requested to investigate means of publishing more complete reports on the profits of the Union cafeteria and fountain. This action was taken as a result of complaints by students concerning the prices and service in the cafeteria.
A committee headed by Tom Harrison was appointed to investigate the basketball ticket situation regarding "standing seats" and the sale of tickets to persons outside the University.
The council has been assured of $8,500 for this year. An appropriation of $1,700 was received by Carroll McCue, A.S.C. treasurer, for former sales of activity books. This leaves a balance of $1,489 in the treasury, McCue said, however, the appropriations which were suspended at the last meeting will still be held until Jan. 15. Eloise Hodgson, public relations committee chairman, reported tuberculosis seal sales for the past era amounted to approximately $1,120.
Gunther, social chairman, reported a $330 loss on school dances. He said that the dance manager attributed this loss to the dances being held in the "out-of-the-way" Military Science building, and to too many conflicting parties.
Taking issue with this, Wilson said,
"The reason is that the general attitude of students is more serious—they would rather beat the books."
Resolutions calling for the appointment of a committee to study campus racial problems and a council-sponsored poll to sound out student opinion on pertinent campus questions were passed. They were introduced by Clifford Reynolds that a committee be appointed to consider conducting a student poll to evaluate faculty members was defeated.
Allen Home To Rest Until Iowa Game
Dr. F. C. Allen, Kansas head basketball coach, is expected to rejoin the squad for the Iowa State game here Jan. 24 after two weeks of rest at home.
Dr. Allen, who as been in the University of Kansas hospital at Kansas City, Kansas, for several days, was released Tuesday.
Howard Engleman, assistant coach, has taken over the head coaching duties in Dr. Allen's absence, and he will remain in control until the Iowa State game and possibly will handle the actual coaching duties for some time thereafter with Dr. Allen acting in advisory capacity.
Will Play Sunday
1948
Here is Paul Sayler associate professor of piano, who will open the faculty concert series Sunday afternoon with a piano recital in Fraser hall.
Engleman Calls N.U. Fight 'Tough Break'
The fight between Kansas and Nebraska players during the game at Lincoln Tuesday was "just a tough break" according to Coach Howard Engleman of the Jayhawkers.
"Charlie Black had fouled out and was sitting on the bench when Nebraska got the ball out right in front of him," Engleman said. "The bench was so close to the court that Charlie may have had his feet on the floor."
Coach Engleman asserted that Black did not lay a hand on Loaisel, although Don Ettinger and Don Auten both landed punches before the fight could be stopped.
"Loisel evidently thought Charlie was trying to trip him, because Loisel turned around and swung at him."
Some of the crowd rushed out on the floor during the fight, and police had to get them back into the stands before play could be resumed.
The names of 377 students who passed the English proficiency examination have been released by Mrs. Natalie Calderwood, and will be found on Page 7 of today's Daily Kansan.
Proficiency Results Out
Council Approves Decision On Directory
The All Student Council at its meeting Tuesday approved the decision of the student-faculty committee concerning the student directory problem. The following resolutions were made by the committee and were passed by the Council:
ONE. That the All Student Council take whatever action is necessary to legalize the sale of those directories now remaining after the distribution of directories in the three week period, Dec. 2 to Dec. 20.
TWO. That the amount realized from the sale of these directories be subtracted from the present deficit and that the remaining deficit be split between the ASC and the University, each paying half.
THEIR. That the supplement to the student directory usually published by the ASC at its own expense in the spring semester be handled in the following way: that the University be requested to assume the responsibility for issuing the supplement during te spring semester.
Four. That the present ASC study the problems involved in printing a directory each year and before the present body dissolves in the spring, decide whether they wish to continue this service to the students or to return it to the University as its responsibility.
Police Question Negro Orderly In Spencer Murder Case
Kansas City. (UP)—A 21-year-old Negro hospital orderly, whom police described as "at least a very important witness," was being held today for questioning in the slaying of Lewis J. Spencer, 27, student male nurse at the University hospitals here Jan. 2.
Edward Hayes, city detective, said the Negro admitted going to Spencer's living quarters on the sixth floor of the hospital twice the night he was slain with a soft drink bottle.
'Resubmit Liquor Issue,' Carlson Asks Legislature
Topeka. UP)—Gov. Frank Carlson today asked the legislature of Kansas—the nation's first state to adopt constitutional prohibition—to re-submit the liquor question to direct vote of the people.
Kansans last voted on the wet-dry issue in 1934—and decided to stay legally dry.
Already dry forces were at work, for at yesterday's convening of the legislature the monthly "prohibition forum" was placed in every representative's mailbox. It called for support to get the 42 house voter necessary to block resubmission.
Governor Carlson recommended more pay for school teachers, greater state aid for schools, increased funds for social welfare work, expanded industrial and farm research, cost-of-living adjustments in state civil service salary scales—and for the legislators themselves a boost in daily nay from $3 to $10.
Would Allow Kansans To Change 88-Year Stand On Intoxicants
In a long, comprehensive message to a joint house-senate session of the 35th legislature, the governor called for expanded state services sure to bring record-smashing expenditures. But it was the red hot issue of resubmission that was expected to ignite the main legislative fireworks.
The governor warned against restrictive labor legislation, advocated stricter driver's license and vehicle condition laws, called for three-day marriage license legislation, and condemned "the tendency of the federal government to legislate in fields properly belonging to the states."
He made no recommendations for new taxation.
Little Man On Campus By Bibler
GNOTHI
SEAUTON
Little Man On Campus By Bibler
GNOTHI SEAUTON
W. DAILY WANSON
He used the word "liquor" only once but he made plain his view that if Kansans want to change their 88-year-old stand on intoxicants "that is their right at any time." ↵
The new Republican governor applauded the efforts of the conference of commissioners on uniform state legislation to again for states . . . lost sovereignty.
B. RICE
W. DAILY HANLY
"How long has he been teaching Greek?"
As regards resubmission, he told the lawmakers their duty was clear.
"Today there is widespread demand that article 15, section 10 (prohibition of manufacture and sale of firearms) be repealed" (the state constitution be repeated). "Governor Carlson told a packed house chamber.
The governor also asked the legislature to consider the form of the amendment to be submitted, "so that it shall if adopted insure the regulation and protection we must give the people of Kansas."
"Amendment or abridgment of the constitution requires the direct vote of the people . . . We, therefore, have the obligation to submit this question to a popular vote, and I urge your immediate attention toward providing for the referendum."
He reminded that it was his sworn duty "to enforce the law" and said he would demand strict enforcement from all state officers.
While recommending expanded state services, Carlson said his studies of Kansas government show there is room for more efficient administration of present functions.
"We should seek out all state functions which overlap, duplicate or lack coordination, one with another," he said. and the governor added that the legislature could count on him to cooperate in the interests of efficiency and economy. Item by item, these were his rec-
Item by item, these were his recommendations:
**Budget and Revenues** — Approval of the record $34,000,000 budget submitted by outgoing Governor Andrew Schoeppel, with the notation ever been my creed that a public budget should operate in balance."
Veterans and Youth — Expansion and correction of the Kansas Veterans administration, "especially with regard to recommendation of the legislative council for the inclusion of certain types of assistance in housing." Also, enactment of the juvenile code and a three-day marriage license waiting period.
Agriculture-Keeping abreast of opportunities by education and research and close cooperation with the federal department of agriculture.
Aviation—Establishment of the aviation section within the Kansas Industrial development commission.
Industrial Development—Promotion of Kansas as an industrial home through expanded research.
Labor—Safeguarding freedom to work and collective bargaining and ignoring the national clamor for restrictive labor legislation.
Small Loan Financing-Provision for small loans at reasonable legal rates.
Law Enforcement and Safety— Correction of Kansas' "insufficient statutes" for qualifications of drivers and the mechanical fitness of vehicles.
Social Welfare—Apportionment of additional sales tax funds to provide greater state aid and participation in providing for Kansans in need through advanced age or disability.
Highways—Completion of Kansas' current three-year, $75,000,000 road building program. Governor Carlson also warned that if Kansas wants the best roads "we must raise the money to pay for them."
State Employees—Resurveying of the scale of civil service salaries whose war-adjusted increases are greater than June 30, and "make proper provision."
State Buildings—Consideration of desirability of a state office building.
Education—Raising of teachers salaries, "some changes and amendments" of the 1945 school reorganization law, and seeking of "a more equitable distribution of the cost of our schools, including a greater amount of state aid."
Higher Education — Meeting the $6,000,000 increase in appropriation requests for state schools, realizing that funds for future building are omitted.
The latest in Kansas legislative action and opinion will soon be broadcast by KFKU, University radio station.
At 9:30 p.m. each Tuesday KFKU will present a program entitled "This Week in the Kansas Legislature," which will consist of interviews on current legislative topics with senators, representatives, the lieutenant-governor, and possibly the governor.
permission has been granted to KFKU to place recording equipment in both the senate and house of representatives. Mr. William Bracke, English instructor, assisted by Milo Unruh and Craig Ramsey, will do the interviewing.
KFKU To Broadcast Legislative Programs
WEATHER
Kansas—Partly cloudy today except occasional light snow likely along the north border and a few sprinkles of rain extreme east. Somewhat colder. Partly cloudy and cooler tonight except occasional light rain or snow southeast and extreme east.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE TWO
JANUARY 15, 1947
Teacher Shortage Most Acute In English Classes
Kansas is confronted with a shortage of teachers, especially English instructors and grade school teachers, a check with the University teacher appointment bureau reveals
During the period from Sept. 1, 1945 to Aug. 31, 1946 requests sent to the bureau for teachers to instruct in the schools of Kansas alone amounted to 1,645; whereas the bureau had only 371 candidates for these positions.
Actually only 70 of these 371 were available for teaching assignments, since 301 were already employed and were only seeking better teaching appointments.
Calls for teachers reached the placement bureau from 43 states, three territories, and five foreign countries.
The total number of vacancies listed was 3,053, of which 1,645 were from Kansas and 1,408 from outside the state. An even 500 called for the master of arts degree and 134 for the doctorate. Also there were 91 calls for Negro teachers, mostly at the college level.
"At least 200 requests for teachers have been received by the bureau since August of this year," Prof. H. E. Chandler, secretary of the bureau for 19 years, revealed today.
The most acute shortage is that of English instructors of the high school level. The bureau has vacancies for 418 teachers, but only 52 are available for appointment
"On the grade school level the situation is even worse, with 598 requests and only 5 candidates available." Prof. Chandler said.
uation is even worse, with 598 requests and only 5 candidates available." Prof. Chandler said. Other fields in which the demand is extreme and the supply low are music, science, commerce, social science, mathematics, manual arts, and business administration. The only courses in which the supply nearly meets the demand are in the language and social studies branches.
Prospective teachers need not be satisfied with instructing positions in the United States, because the bureau has received requests from Greece, Hawaii, Turkey, Iraq, Lebanon, Alaska, Mexico, and the Panama Canal zone. Vacancies listed in Alaska alone number 34 today.
"Our placements made on direct recommendation by the bureau numbered 126, and would have been much greater had we the available candidates." Professor Chandler reported.
The program of issuing emergency teaching certificates is a pitiful substitute for qualified teachers, the bureau secretary commented. The average over the nation is one emergency certificate in eight, for teachers, and in Kansas it is one in four.
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $40 a year, (in law) add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan. every afternoon during the school year except holidays. University holiday days, and examination days. One class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
University Daily Kansan
ALWAYS DELICIOUS FOOD
When you go
When you go Down the Hill to
THE BLUE MILL
Official Bulletin
Jan. 15, 1947
Archery club will practice in the Military Science building from 4-6 p.m. today. A business meeting will be held at 7 tonight in room 203 Robinson gym. Meeting is for discussing the constitution of the club.
- * *
Dr. Harold G. Barr of the School of Religion will lead the discussion at tomorrow's YMCA movie forum, "Here Is China," a three-reel film, will be shown. Meeting will be held in the visual education projection room, basement Fraser hall at 4 p.m.
YW - YMCA religious emphasis committee meeting in Myers hall, 7 to 7:50 p.m. Dr. Calvin Vander-Werf will lead a discussion on "How the laws of science prove that the law of Christian love is the law of life." Everyone welcome.
Jay Janes will meet at 5 p.m. today in the Pine room of the Union.
* *
Progressive Farty organizational meeting at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas room of the Union building. Election of officers. Everyone welcome.
***
All nation supervisors for the Student United Nations conference will meet at 5 p.m. today in the Kansas room of the Union. Very important
**
The K.U. Dames bridge groups will meet at 7:30 tonight. The beginners group will meet at the home of Mrs. Edward Kracht, 1109 Pennsylvania street, and the advanced group will meet with Mrs. William Pflouss, 720 Louisiana street.
. . .
The mathematical colloquium of the department of mathematics will meet at 5 p.m. tomorrow in room 222 Frank Strong. Prof. Robert Schatten and Mr. James D. Riley will speak on "The Mappings of a Square on a Segment."
Sigma Xi monthly meeting at 1:30 p.m. tomorrow in the lecture room of Blake hall. Prof. L. C. Woodruff, department of entomology, will speak on "Insect Growth".
牢 实 自
I. S.A. council meeting at 4 p.m. tomorrow.
American Society Civil Engineers meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in
\* \* \*
YMCA basketball game at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Robinson gym.
Lindley hall auditorium. Election of officers. Movie. See Civil Engineering bulletin board for details.
***
YMCA cabinet meeting at 4:30 p.m tomorrow in the Mission room of Myers hall.
Graduate record examination, Feb. 3. 4. Applications may be obtained in 2A Frank Strong.
---
All members of the February graduating class of the School of Business who are hoping to be placed through the Business Placement Bureau and any other students available for permanent employment in February please note the School of Business bulletin board for announcement of interview schedules for January.
Dove To Fly Again About March 1
The next issue of the Dove, liberal student publication, will be published about March 1, according to Frank Stannard, College sophomore, chairman of the advisory board.
Editorial policy will remain about the same, it was decided at a meeting of the permanent staff last night. An editorial board of 12 members was selected and from this seven people were chosen as advisors. The latter group will have general supervision of the next issue, Stannard announced today.
Members of the advisory board are Stannard; Wilson Branch, College junior; Robert Campbell, College sophomore; Edward VanDyke, College freshman; Rosalie Wahl, graduate student; Mary Saucier, graduate student; and Esther Dudgeon, graduate student.
Senate Confirms Austin
Washington. (UP)—The senate has confirmed former Sen. Warren R. Austin of Vermont as the United States' chief representative to the United Nations.
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Lost---$300
Was your Christmas vacation worth $300?
That's the price Robert Lose, business senior, paid until Lady Luck placed her hand on his shoulder.
Enroute to Lawrence from my home in Muncy, Pa., Lose boarded a Chicago-bound train in Watseka, Ill. Unable to find a seat in the crowded daycoach, the 26-year-old Pennsylvanian left his two bags in the vestibule between cars and stood in the aisle. Some time later the train arrived at Chicago's Dearborn station—minus Lose's bags.
A frantic search of the entire train and repeated questioning of railroad officials failed to yield any clues to the mystery. The incident was bad for Lose's morale, because the two bags contained an estimated $300 worth of clothing and other personal articles.
Returning to school, Lose, placed little faith in the slim chance that some kind-hearted soul would return his lost bags. The unexpected happened several days ago, when Lose received a telephone call from Chicago. A tracer had located the luggage, which had been set off the train at Kensington, Ill.
Robert Lose can smile again.
Dr. G. E. Abernathy and Dr. J. M. Jewett, of the state geological survey, are the authors of an article entitled "Water Flooding Oil Formations in Kansas," in the November petroleum issue of the Mines magazine, published in Denver by the Colorado School of Mines Alumni association.
Kansans Write Article
Werner Asks For Applicants
"If there are any men interested in applying for Battenfell hall scholarships, they should apply at this office," Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, announced today.
"Although there are not any vacancies in the hall at present," continued, "there may be in the next future. Previously, we have had a waiting list for Battenfield scholarships, but the last man on the waiting list went in today. The scholarships are awarded on the basis of the need and scholastic ability of the student. We would prefer to make the scholarships available to men now enrolled, rather than to new students coming in next semester, since it would be more difficult to determine the true eligibility of a student not previously enrolled in the University."
Dean Werner emphasized that men in school under the G.I. bill are not excluded from the scholarships, but it is assumed that the G.I. student is not comparatively in as great a need as are many non-veteran students. Previously, only one student under the G.I. bill has been granted a Battenfeld scholarship.
Son Born To Earl Shurtz
Flowers will express more elegantly than any combination of words your appreciation to your hostess for her gracious hospitality.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl B. Shurtz of Beloit became the parents of a son, Michael Earl, born Sunday at the Beloit Community hospital.
Shurtz, a College sophomore, is a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon. Mrs. Shurtz is a graduate of Colorado Women's College, Denver. They live at Sunflower Village.
Ward's flowers
FLOWER SHOP
DELIVERY SERVICE
K. U. FLORIST FOR 25 YEARS
910 Mass.
Phone 820
5172048003
15, 1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
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JANUARY 15,1947
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100
SOCIALLY SPEAKING
ELINOR BROWNE, Society Editor
Watkins Hall Plans Dance
Watkins hall will hold an open house hour dance tonight from 6:30 to 8.
Engineering Wives Entertain
The Engineering Students' Wives club held a bridge party Tuesday night following the regular business meeting.
Newly elected officers of Delta Phi Delta, national honorary art fraternity are president, Carolyn Campbell; vice-president, Barbara Meyer; secretary, Helen Dietzel; treasurer, Austin Harmon; program chairman, Sara Smart; historian and publicity chairman, Eleanor Pack.
Delta Phi Delta Elects
At a recent English department dinner in the Kansas room of the Union, Prof. and Mrs. Merrell Clubb were honored. Other guests were Merrell Clubb, Jr., assistant instructor of English; William and Roger Clubb, Cancellor and Mrs. Deane W. Malott, Dean and Mrs. E. B. Stouffier, and Dean and Mrs. P. B. Lawson. Seventy-five persons attended the dinner.
Menjou Tells How To Be Beau Brummel
Hollywood. (UP)-Adolphe Menjou, perennially the best-dressed man in Holloywood, has offered American men his 10 rules for good grooming.
You, too, can be a Menjou, he said, if you'll work at it, and it's hard work.
"The importance of dress can't be exaggerated, whether you're a movie actor or a clerk." he said. "Vanity has nothing to do with it."
There's a difference, he added,
between being well-dressed and conspicuously dressed. For inconspicuous
elegance, Menjou insists that you pay the highest prices.
"It's reckless to economize on clothes," he said. "Better have one good suit than 10 that are not just right."
Menijou's pointers for the well-dressed male include:
ONE. Your suit coat should have narrow sleeves. The cuffs of your shirt should always show.
THREE. Wear suspenders. Trou-
sers are not made for belts.
**TWO.** Your trousers should break just over the instep.
FIVE. Do not tie your tie in a tight knot. Keep it loose.
SIX. When you wear a dark suit wear black shoes, never brown Brown shoes are only for light-colored suits.
FOUR. Be especially careful about the fit of your coat collar. A coat that doesn't fit about the collar will be an all-round misfit.
SEVEN. Never wear striped shirts with a striped suit.
EIGHT. White shirts are correct for all occasions.
NINE. Stout men should never wear single-breasted suits, and short men should wear stripes, never checks.
GLOUS.
TEN. Wear little or no jewelry.
The less jewelry a man wears the better dressed he will be.
YM-YW Hear Report On Urbana Conference
Reports of the proceedings of the national student assembly were submitted to a joint YM-YW meeting held in the Kansas room Tuesday.
Six of the delegates who attended the conference held in Urbana, Ill., from Dec. 27 to Jan. 3, outlined the early procedure and the work of the assembly which is held once every three or four years.
Racial equality, increased government planning, and investigation of news sources were among the measures adopted by the assembly which plans to form a lobbying group in Washington.
COEDS' CORNER
She Came For Visit And Stayed Ann Alexander Of Oklahoma
To Ann Alexander, Fine Arts sophomore from Bartlesville, Okla., students at K.U. seem much friendlier than those at Oklahoma universities. In 1944 while her brother was in school here, Ann came for a week-end visit.
"I liked it so well," she said, "I decided right away to come. Although I think it's the coldest place on earth at times—quite different from Oklahoma. I like it," she commented.
Ann is majoring in interior decoration, which will come in handy for her in the not too distant future. Although the official date hasn't been set, she and Joe Turner, engineering senior, plan to be married. Their pinning was held Dec. 6 at the Chi Omega house.
This year Ann was editor of the student directory, of which she was assistant editor last year. She has been on the Jayhawker magazine staff and last year was a member of the University Art club.
As a member of the executive committee for the War Memorial drive last year, Ann was in charge of the Yucca Yucca show, which traveled to Wichita to raise funds for the drive. She also participated in the student-faculty conferences last spring.
"Joe and the student directory have taken most of my time this year," she explained, "but I plan to get back into more activities next semester."
In her leisure time, Ann becomes domestic and sews. She made a suit and a jacket by hand for her younger sister for Christmas.
Swimming being her favorite sport, Ann said she would like to see some arrangement so that both men and women could have a place to swim for recreational purposes here at the University.
Utopia Isn't A New Idea, Irwin Says
"Utopia isn't a very new idea." John C. Irwin, professor of preaching and church administration at Northwestern university, said in a speech to the Wesley foundation's monthly convocation at the First Methodist church Sunday night.
"All races and peoples," he said, "have the legend of a golden age when life was or is to be perfect. It is said that an old, decaying culture believes its golden age lies in the past; a youthful, developing culture believes its prosperous times are ahead."
Sir Thomas Moore wrote a book on how the golden age could be attained—"Utopia." The Bible itself, Professor Irwin said, starts with a golden age in the Garden of Eden and ends with the city of God coming down from Heaven, peopled by the righteous of the earth.
Following the speech, the group of more than 200 had a brief New Year's communion service.
Freshman pledges in Phi Alpha Delta, professional law fraternity, received advice on final examinations from junior and senior students in the fraternity at a meeting Tuesday. Walter McVey, recently elected as justice for next semester, was in charge of the meeting.
Law Pledges Get Advice
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Guild Revises Book On Kansas Legislature
The revised edition of "Legislative Procedure in Kansas" by Frederic H. Guild, professor of political science at the University, and Clyde F. Snider, associate professor of political science at the University of Illinois, has been mailed to all members of the Kansas legislature, Dr. Ethan P. Allen, director of the bureau of governmental research, has announced.
Professor Guild, who is also director of the research department of the Kansas legislative council, has brought this first publication in the government research series completely up to date. Originally published in 1930, the book covers the organization of the Kansas legislature and outlines the steps through which a bill must pass to become a law. It provides information on all phases of legislative procedure.
Another publication of the research bureau, the January issue of Your Government, official bulletin of the bureau, was placed in the mails Monday, Dr. Allen stated.
Engineering Fraternity Elects Kanaga, Black
The bulletin contains two articles on the Kansas legislative council. The first presents a brief history of the organization, its procedures and contributions. The second lists council proposals in the legislature. A third article deals with lobbyists in the legislature.
William Kanaga, engineering senior, was elected historian and Charles T. Black, engineering senior, was elected secretary of Sigma Tau, engineering fraternity, at a meeting Tuesday afternoon. These officers were elected to fill vacancies made by graduating students.
Sigma Tau will hold its next meeting at 210 Mechanical Engineering laboratory at 4:30 p.m. Jan. 21 to prepare for the election of new members next semester.
Furs Make Flag
Seattle (UP)—An unusual American flag on display at the Pacific Northwest Fur Exposition, was valued at $50,000. It was made of 1,000 red, white and blue fox skins with stars of whiteermine.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 15,1947
SPOTLIGHT SPORTS
By BOB DELLINGER (Daily Kansan Sports Editor)
The Missouri Tigers, currently leading The Big Six by one full game, are just about out of sight so far as the last-place Jayhawkers are concerned.
Kansas, with three consecutive losses on the slate will have only a prayer toward the title if it wins all the remaining Big Six games, a feat which is possible but not probable under the present circumstances of college basketball.
**
Other college scores Tuesday night brought more upsets over the country.
North Carolina edged highly-favored New York university in Madison Square Garden after St. Louis had dropped the opener to L.I.U. by two points.
Western Michigan rolled up 80 points against Hope, and Notre Dame did the same in its contest.
***
Attention may be called to the fact that of Kansas' last four defeats, two of them have been by two points, one by three points, and the other by only five points.
Another noteworthy item is the fact that Kansas has lost the last two games after leading at the half, 29-20.
军 兵 部
As the National Boxing association issued quarterly ratings, it offered the suggestion that 33-year-old Fritzie Zivic hang up his gloves for good because he is "working serious harm on the sport by his unsatisfactory performances."
Joe Louis is listed all alone as the top heavyweight, and Sugar Ray Robinson of the welterweight class is given the same distinction.
The ratings list no "logical contenders" for the title of heavyweight champion and none for the welterweight crown. There are five listed for Tony Zale's middleweight championship, including Rocky Graziano.
Contenders for Gus Lesnevic'hich light-heavy title are Ezzard Charles, Billy Fox, Billy Smith, and Archie Moore. Middleweight champ Tony Zale can fear Lake Jamette, Marcel Cerdan, Charley Burley, Rocky Graziano, and Georgia Abrams.
Kui Kong Young, The Medina, and Manuel Ortiz are after Harold Dade's bantamweight championship, which Ortiz once held.
Only Bob Montgomery and Johnny Bratton threaten Ike Williams' lightweight crown, and Willie Pep may steer shy of Phil Terranova and Carlos Chavez if he intends to keep his featherweight title unscathed.
Jackie Patterson, flyweight champ may have to defend his honors against Rinty Monoghan, Dado Marino, and Jimmy Gill.
Williams Will Report On National Convention
Charlery Williams, secretary of Phi Alpha Theta, national honorary history fraternity, will report on her trip to New York during Christmas vacation, where she was a delegate to the national convention, at a meeting at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Union building.
Plans for the coming spring initiation of new members will be discussed. All persons interested in history are invited.
'Blessing' Costs $18
Lawrence, Mass. (UP)—As 74-year-old Israel Ouellette of Methuen walked along the street here, an automobile drew alongside him and a sweet-faced, white haired woman stepped out.
She identified herself as a missionary and said if he weren't feeling well, perhaps she could help with a blessing.
"Could feel better—a little stiff and lame today." Ouelette acknowledged. Whereupon his benefactress placed her hands on him and performed her little rite which, he later discovered, included lifting his wallet with $18.
Free Throws Give Cornhuskers Two-Point Victory Over Jayhawkers
Nebraska's Cornhuskers handed the Kansas cage squad its third consecutive conference defeat Tuesday night, as two free throws gave the Huskers a 48-46 victory on their home court. Both teams scored 16 goals, but Nebraska took advantage of five extra Kansas fouls to dump in the winning margin on free tosses.
A record crowd of 6,000 attended the battle, and part of it had to be herded from the court by police after a brief fight near the end of the game.
Kansas spurted near the end of the first half, and led 29-20 at the intermission, but the Huskers tied up the game midway through the final period. The score was tied at 40-40, 41-41, and 43-43 before Nebraska went ahead on a shot by Loisel which was allowed when Black touched the basket.
Otto Schnellbacher, lanky Jayhawkower center, walked off with scoring honors for the night's play by caging six goals and ten freees for a 22-point total. Claude Retherford headed the Nebraska squad with 18 tallies.
Nebraska (48) FG FT PF TT
Retherford, f 6 6 4 18
Cox, f 2 2 0 6
McArthur, c 2 2 1 6
Brown, g 4 3 3 11
Cerv, g 1 1 4 3
Lebsack, f 0 0 1 0
Schleiger, c 0 0 0 0
Kirlin, g 0 0 1 0
Means, g 0 0 0 0
Loisel, g 1 2 4 4
Totals Kansas (46) 16 16 19 48
FG FT PF TI
England, f 2 1 5 5
Black, f 4 0 5 8
Schnellbacher, c 6 10 3 22
Evans, g 0 2 5 2
Eskridge, g 1 1 1 3
Stramel, f 0 0 1 0
Enns, f 0 0 0 0
Sapp, g 0 0 0 0
Clark, g 2 0 0 4
Auten, g 1 0 2 2
Ettinger, g 0 0 1 0
Houchin, g 0 0 0 0
Totals ... 16 14 23 46
Score at half: Kansas 29, Nebraska 20
Free throws missed: Nebraska—10- Rethford (2), Cox (3), McArthur (2), Lebsack. Kansas—8- Black, Stramel, Evans, Schnellbacher (3), England, Erskridge.
Misfits Come From Behind To Defeat Nine Old Men
In the only intramural basketball game played Tuesday night, the MISfts defeated the Nine Old Men, 29 to 23. The losers held a 13 to 4 half-time advantage, but fell before the second half surge of the MISfts.
S. Penny of the winners led scoring wit 10 points.
9:30- Phi Kappa Psi "B" vs. Phi Kappa "B"
9:30-Sigma Alpha Epsilon “B” vs.
941 Club “B”
6:30—Newman Club vs. Live Five
6:30—Westminster vs. 941 Club
7:30—Smith hall vs. Delta Upsilon
7:30—Kappa vs. Kappa Sigma
7:30—Delti
Tonight's schedule:
8:30-Pi Kappa Alpha vs. Delta Chi
New York. (UP)—Top grade butter today dropped $1\frac{2}{3}$ cents to 66 cents a pound in the wholesale market to the lowest level since last August.
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Kansas, Colorado Sign Four-Year Contract
OTTO SCHNELLBACHER
Kansas will play the University of Colorado in football in 1948, and for three years after that, E. C. Quigley, athletic director, announced today.
The contract signed by Mr. Quigley specifies that the games will be played at Lawrence and Boulder, alternately, with the first to be played at Lawrence.
The last meeting between the two teams saw Kansas victorious, 12-6, after the teams had fought to a scoreless draw the year before.
'Pistols at 60 Paces Interrupted by Police
New Westminster, B. C. (UP)—Local police received a call that carried the clock back about a century.
The officers were called on to stop an early morning duel between two men who had decided to settle their differences with "bistols at 60 pages."
The prowler car arrived as the duelists were preparing to set to and the policemen talked the contestants out of it.
KuKu Club To Meet
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A special meeting of the KuKu club will be held at 7:30 tonight in the Pine room of the Union building, John W. Wood, president, announced today. Wood stressed that all members should make an effort to attend.
Corbin, Locksley Make High Scores In Games
Winners in the women's intramural basketball games in Robinson gymnasium last night were;
Lockesley, 24; Alpha Chi Omega, 7.
Foster hall, 17; Delta Delta, 7.
Harmon Co-op, 18; Gamma Phi Beta 18.
Corbin, 42; Jolliffe, 2.
CORN, 21; COMTE,
L.W.W. 38; Pi Beta Phi. 24.
Tem Ruth, 18; Alpha Omicron Pi,
10.
Leading the divisions in victories are: Kappa Kappa Gamma with three wins, Watkins hall with two wins, Alpha Delta Pi and Delta Gamma with three wins, and Kappa Alpha Theta and Foster hall with two wins, in each of the four sections.
Intramural games will end Feb. 19, and the tentative beginning of the women's basketball elimination tournament will be Feb. 25 or 26.
N.C. Short On Hospitals
Raleigh, N. C. (UP)—A statewide survey showed that 34 of North Carolina's 100 counties have no hospital beds, and that only four counties have more than four beds per 1,000 people.
Yanks Expect Trippi To Sign Contract
New York. (UP)—Twenty-four hours after combining New York's baseball and football Yankees into a single three-way partnership, Yankee officials expected today to sign All-American halfback Charley Trippi of Georgia to a joint football baseball contract.
President Dan Topping of the football Yankees said Trippi's success in pro football was assured. President Larry MacPhail of the baseball Yankees said his baseball future was "problematical, but he has a chance to make good in the majors."
Despite the furious bidding by both baseball and pro football clubs, the much-sought Tripii was expected to sign with the Yankees because of the double-barreled opportunity to cash in quickly on his collegiate football reputation and further his dream of becoming a major league baseball star.
Topping, associated with MacPhail and Del Webb in ownership of the baseball Yankees, admitted both Webb and MacPhail into full partnership in his football Yankees yesterday.
With both clubs officially in one family, Yankee officials hoped Trippi would pass up all other offers, including attractive overtures from the Boston Red Sox and the Atlanta Crackers of the Southern association.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
5,1947
y-four York's as into membership, day to charley otto all
Phail of the both part-yes-
one Trippi s, in- from Atlanta station.
Trainer Nesmith Has Massaged Aching K.U. Muscles For Nine Years
Probably no person on the K.U. campus can attest to the smell of liniment like Dean Nesmith, head trainer for all Jayhawker athletic teams.
Since 1938 Neesmith has been messaging sore muscles and wrapping Kansas athletes in yards of adhesive tape in the steam-filled dressing rooms of Memorial stadium and Robinson gymnasium.
After playing tackle under coach Ad Lindsey in 1933, '34 and '35, Nesmith was graduated from K.U. in 1936 with a major in physical education. He played one season of professional football with the New York Yankees in 1936 before joining the athletic staff as an assistant trainer in 1937.
Spectacled and considerably heavier than during his "training days," Nesmith takes an active part in the seasonal sport and spends much of his time assisting coaches.
He married Miss Norma Wallace, also a K.U. graduate, in 1939, and they have two children.
Often referred to as one of the most excitable fans ever to witness a K. u. athletic contest, Dean nevertheless manages to keep himself under control and is always on hand for a time-out period.
A product of Belleville, Nesmith doesn't know why he picked training as his particular line unless it's because he just happened to be around when they wanted a trainer and "just fell into it."
"I'm really interested in the work," he said, "and last year was particularly good because of our winning teams. But win or lose, K.U always has great athletes, and I like to watch their progress when they leave school."
According to Nesmith, one of the basic problems involved in his association with athletes is finding the specific peculiarities among the men. Some pretend to have injuries when they actually don't, and others may be seriously hurt and not say anything.
In one such case, Nesmith recalled, Russ Chitwood, K.U. end in 1937-38, played half a season with a fractured rib and didn't tell anyone about it.
After being a part of the army's special service setup in Italy, where he was an athletic consultant, Nesmith returned to K.U. to find a new type of man stepping into the college athletic program.
"The biggest difference I noticed," he said, "was in their mental development. It is more difficult to tell these more mature men anything. They're thinking for themselves and in most cases doing a good job of it."
Nesmith explained that different sports produce their own peculiar type of injury and have to be treated in different ways.
"For instance, a basketball player with a bruised arm may be in much worse shape than if the same injury was incurred by a football tackle," he said. "It all depends upon the function the player is performing."
Attending football players on the gridiron has produced its amusing moments, the trainer recalled.
When K.U. played Notre Dame in 1338, and the score was approaching the final count of 53 to 0 in favor of the Irish, Nesmith was waved on the field after the Jayhawker halfback, Frank Bukaty, was injured.
"The scoreboard at South Bend keeps a running account of the touchdowns by quarters." Nesmith said, "and to a dazed man like Frank, the score must have looked pretty hopeless. When I asked him what he thought of the score, Frank looked up through the haze and wanted to know if I thought he was an adding machine."
Nesmith has no rigid rules for training his charges, but he places three conditioners at the top of the list for every man who expects to succeed in Varsity athletics.
"Get plenty of sleep," he advised, "drink the proper beverages, and pay no attention to the cigarette advertisements."
College Basketball
Long Island U. 46, St. Louis U. 44
Notre Dame 74, Michigan State 50
Western Michigan 84, Hope 60
Holy Cross 76, Valparaiso U 49
VPL 32, VM1 52
Clarkson 46. Hobart 42
William & Mary 68, Roanoke 32
Florida 34, Stetson 31
Lawrence Tech 50, Highland Park JC 44
Hanes 47, High Point 42 Toledo 41 Dauton 27
Springfield 61, Massachusetts State 55
7:30 p.m., Kansas Room, Union
Allegheny 51, Thiel 42
Kansas City (Kan) JC 54, Chillicothe Business college 29
All men who are interested in promoting constructive student government should attend the Progressive Party organizational meeting tonight.
the Business college 20
Ball State 51. Earlham 31
PROGRESSIVE PARTY
Rider college 68, Princeton seminary 31
West Texas State 57, Hardin-Simmons 31
North Dakota Aggies vs. Manitoba, cancelled
Nebraska 48, Kansas 46
North Carolina 50, NYU 48
Moorhead college 54, St. Mary's (Mimm.) college 38
Northwest Louisiana State 52
Centenary.38
Mercer U. 53, Piedmont college 42
Howard Paine 40, McMurray 39
Jacobson 28, Wheeler 31
Refreshments DON POMEROY, 1131 Tenn.
Temporary Chairman
Washburn 43, Pittsburg (Kan.)
Teachers 42
Druery 37, Westminster (Mo.) 29
North Central 59, Elmhurst 45
Spearfish Teachers 64, Aberdeen Normal 42
Loras college 55, St. Ambrose 30
Panzer 49, Upsala 37
Richmond 54, Hampden-Sydney 42
Princeton 45, Harvard 35
Illinois Normal 42, Cape Girardeau Teachers 39
Arkansas 54, Texas Christian 39
UF of Omaha 45, Hastings college
34
Plans for coffee forums next semester were made by the Student Union coffee and forums committee at its meeting Tuesday afternoon. No more forums will be held until second semester, Dick Hawkinson, committee chairman announced.
Plan Coffee Forums
For Second Semester
Missouri 43, Kansas State 42 Washington 56. Idaho 46
A discussion of finals week will be the subject of the first forum to be held in February. Marjorie Shrynko will arrange the program. Muralyn Spake and Sally Rothrock will pour coffee. Two forums will be held each month, at 5 p.m., unless otherwise announced.
Teachers 60
Arkansas 54. Texas Christian 39
China Movie Thursday
The Y.M.C.A. movie forum will be held at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the visual education office in Fraser basement. A film, "What is the Future of China" will precede a discussion by Dr. Harold G. Barr, professor in the School of Religion and a former China missionary.
Missouri Wins, Stays In Big Six Lead
Manhattan. (UP)—Even the so-branded experts are taking the Missouri basketball aggregation seriously today after Sparky Stalcup's creed enged out Kansas State here last night, 43 to 42, to make it three victories in as many starts in conference play.
Except for a tight win over the Illinois "Whiz Kids" the Missouri record in pre-conference contests was not particularly impressive and the experts rode on Kansas and Oklahoma.
However, the Tigers required extra time Tuesday night to nose out the scrappy K-State team. At the end of the regulation time, the count was entwined at 36-all. With two seconds left in the contest, Missouri had an opportunity to cinch it when Bob Garvany teed the line in the charity circle. But both his tries failed.
The clock hand showed a half minute left in the regular period when Jack Dean, Kansas State guard, stole a Tiger pass and dribbed to under the basket, gonging a setun, which tied the count.
Darrell Lorrance, Missouri guard,
made them count the most, snapping
four of the team's seven points in
the overtime period to end the issue.
Forward Dan Pippin had the sharpest
eye throughout, getting 17 points.
Hal Howey was high for K-State
with a total of 11.
From the start, the margin, either way, was nearly a fraction. At halftime the count was 16-all.
Eudora Whips U.H.S. Cage Squad 47-19
Men who served on juries in Cape Cod communities two centuries ago were prohibited from chewing tobacco.
Eudora High School Cardinals whipped the University High cage squad. 47-19, Tuesday afternoon at Lawrence.
The victors were led in scoring by center Ronnie Young who dumped in 11 goals and a free toss for 23 points. Gene Riling accounted for 15 of the 19 Eagle points on six goals and three free tosses.
After the Eagles had held the Cardinals to a 5-4 lead midway through the first quarter, the Eudora squad put together 16 consecutive points to lead 10-4 at the quarter and 21-4 at the half-way mark.
With Riling showing the way in the second half, U.H.S. opened the scoring with an eight-point barrage and pulled within nine points of the visitors, but Eudora again began to hit and pulled away to a 30-14 lead at the third quarter.
Eudora poured it on in the final stanza, and won the ball game.
Lee Barlow, Matt Summers, and Don Christian led the Eagle "B" team in scoring with ten, eight, and seven points respectively as the seconds lost the pre-lim. 29-32.
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EXTRA—FOOTBALL THRILLS 26
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THE TALKED ABOUT PICTURE "THE SEVENTH VEIL"
COMING THURSDAY
Madonna of the Seven Moons
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Made Into a Killer by the Sinister Power of a Woman's Shadow—
HELMUT DANTINE ANDREA KING
"Shadow of a Woman"
JIMMY WAKELY
"Song of the Sierras"
---
PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 15,1947
Kansan Comments..
Inaugurations
Inaugurations usually are long, trying affairs that leave the participants in a state of palsied arm and aching feet and don't accomplish anything much of value.
Monday's inauguration ceremonies at Topeka, however, had one outstanding feature, which, if it set a precedent, will be of great value to the state as a whole. That feature was the attendance of hundreds of high school children from all over the state.
These high school children now take only a casual interest in politics and government. At the same time, their powers of observation and judgment aren't impaired by prejudices of party lines or influenced by flights of oratory which don't say anything.
These high school children, the voters of tomorrow, can be a strong influence in elections, both now and after they become of voting age. If they carry home to their parents and friends their descriptions and opinions of the state officials whom they saw and spoke to Monday, their opinions will undoubtedly carry weight when the next election comes along.
In Kansas, the gubernatorial candidates usually carry the ball in plugging for votes and the lesser officials usually win or lose according to their party leader's vote-getting tactics. Few voters know anything about political candidates other than what they read in press agent releases, and few ever see more than one or two of the state officials. Many state officials are elected year after year, merely because their names are familiar sights on the ballots.
And when these students become voters, they may insist that they see for whom they are voting, because they have learned that everything said about political candidates isn't necessarily so.
The crowd at the inauguration was reported to be the largest in Kansas history, although the people didn't whoop it up at the ceremony or at other times during the day. Undoubtedly the inviting of the high school students convinced many parents that they, too, should see what goes on in the state capitol.
Death and sickness were responsible for women filling two key positions in the inauguration ceremony. Mrs. Edna Peterson, Republican state vice-chairman, presided over the meeting because the state chairman, Quentin Brown, died only a few weeks ago. Miss Carol Baysinger, Concordia vocal teacher, directed the Concordia band at the ceremony because of illness of the regular director.
Something, probably a foul-up in the machinery used to record the speeches of Governors Schoepel
The University Daily Kansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn. National Editorial Association, 420 Madison Ave. New York, N.Y.
Represented by the Associate College Press Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave. New York, N.Y.
Managing Editor ... Charles Roos
Asst. Managing Editor ... Jane Anderson
Makeup Editor ... Billie Marie Hamilton
Marketing Manager ... Davon Vance
Business Manager ... Bill Dillon
Advertising Manager ... Margery Handy
Circulation Manager ... John McCormick
Telegraph Editor ... Edward W. Swain
Graph Ed. ... Graph Ed.
City Editor ... R. T. Kinnman
and Carlson, halted the ceremony in the middle and the band filled in with some music. As the band started the second number, the Rev. R. H. Spangler and Msgr. Eugene F. Vallely, who opened and closed the program, nearly knocked each other off the platform when they dived for their pocket watches at the same time.
The governor's first official act, appointing a sheriff, was made at his first press conference in the governor's office. The conference, however, was a flop. Only three questions were asked: "Where'd you get the glass elephant on your desk?" "Where'd all the flowers come from?" and "Have you appointed a new commissioner of public roads?" Answers were "In Washington." "All over the country" and "No."
Although all the elected officials wore tuxedos during the reception, the ball which followed the reception was quite informal. Tuxedos and formal dresses didn't clash too much with the uniforms and business suits and street dresses. Kansas still isn't stuck-up, even at a governor's ball.
Dear Editor---
No More Popular Music
Just before the Christmas vacation "Freshman Engineer" complained about the programs broadcast from station KFKU.
To a radio dial which already is shamefully overcrowded with cheap entertainment, he would have more trash added by changing the musical programs of KKFU into presentations of more popular music.
Most of this popular music is equivalent culturally to a Popeye comic strip; some of it may be on a par with the western stories and detective novels of the 10-cent pulp magazines.
Those who find good music dull and boring need only give their radio dials a turn of an inch or less in any direction to find their level of appreciation, whereas the lover of fine music must hunt through the entire span of the dial—and then is rarely rewarded.
If KFKU has among its purposes that of elevating taste, or sustaining good taste, let it continue to devote a fair share of its time to good programs; if it is interested chiefly in appeasement, and seeks to straddle the fence, then let it lower its standards by decreasing the time it gives to valuable programs.
A. W. Addis Engineering senior
Why not change the time limit to 9 o'clock, which seems to me the logical time, and thus satisfy all concerned.
Overnight Books
I don't know how many people are in my predicament, but those who are must be in sympathy with me.
Why should a book be in the library by 8:45? If one has an 8 o'clock class, he can't possibly get to the library until 9 o'clock because his class doesn't end until 8:50; what use would he have for a book at 8:45? And if one has a 9 o'clock class, it would be much easier for him to turn in a book between 8:55 and 9 o'clock, then for him to get up from bed fifteen minutes early to turn in a book at 8:45, which book one having an 8 o'clock class couldn't possibly use until 9 o'clock.
Quarterless freshman
Today I got stuck for 25 cents because I returned an overnight book to the library at 8:55 a.m. instead of 8:45 a.m. Now just who did upon that 8:45 limit? To me it seems fantastic and useless.
(Editor's note—The reasoning gets involved, but the suggestion should merit some consideration in library circles.)
Green Grass Is Good For Food
By GRACE MUILENBURG (Daily Kansan Staff Writer)
"Grass is good food—no hay!"
That's what Charles Schnabel, a junior in the College, thinks, and he eats it every day.
But you won't find him nibbling grass on his way to class. He eats grass in dehydrated tablet form. His father, C. F. Schnabel, Kansas City biochemist, has been experimenting with grass as a source of food for man, and Charles has been converted by his father's findings.
Mr. Schnabel has found that high protein grasses (wheat, oats, rye, barley, corn) during a period of growth called the jointing stage are rich in all essential food factors and especially rich in vitamins. If grass is cut at this jointing stage and dehydrated immediately, these nutrients can be preserved indefinitely.
Charles says dehydrated grass in tablet form tastes and smells like malted milk. He says his father is convinced that it would be possible to furnish every human being in the world with an acutely-needed food supplement by cutting grass at this jointing stage and preserving it in dehydrated form for later consumption at a daily cost of only a few cents a person.
Though the greatest benefit to man is in eating the dehydrated product directly, many of the vitamins of grass could be obtained by eating the meat of cattle pastured on jointing grass or fed on dehydrated grass. Cattle get more vitamins from a pound of jointing grass than from a ton of the same grass when made into hay, he claims.
Cattle thus pastured can be sold as corn-fed cattle, and the farmer can pasture each grass crop for two or three jointing stages, dehydrate some of the same crop and finally let it mature for the grain, Mr. Schnabel claims.
According to Mr. Schnabel, Kansas is the state most suited to the production of protein grasses. He says that on a money value-food value correlation chart he has worked out, the average person could get an optimum diet for about 16 cents a day while the farmer who raises the product could gross $200 an acre.
Mr. Schnabel says that every degenerative disease would go the way of infectious diseases within a generation if grass were added to the diet. He adds that many scientists, biochemists, and nutritionists believe that if a person never got an infectious disease, never had any accidents, and kept the right diet, there would be no limit to how long he could live.
Jaytalking---
Inaugural day in Topeka attracted throngs of Kansans, and after watching them cross the streets to get to the municipal auditorium, one would be safe in saying the streets were jammed with Jayhawker jawwalkers.
Governor Carlson's inauguration was run off without the customary 19-gun salute, but in all the reams of explanation given for the salute's absence, no one has said it's the result of having the ceremony on the 13th of the month.
The election of Ed Abels, publisher of the Lawrence Outlook, to the post of Republican house caucus chairman was a foregone conclusion. He was the Abels man for the job.
Justice William Smith swore in Chief Justice W. W. Harvey, then in swapping places so the c.j. could swear in the j., the pair collided. Had Governor Schoepel, a former All-American back, been on his toes, he could have called signals and avoided the confusion in the back-field.
Mr. Abels, incidentally, noticeably shortened the caucus meeting by his introduction of the new speaker of the Kansas house of representatives: "Just because we elect you speaker doesn't mean you have to do it."
Hope It Doesn't Have Nine Lives
VETO ON DISAR-MAMENT
Daniel Bishop in St. Louis Star-Times
HAVE A TASTY, WELL-PREPARED STEAK for Less at
Across from BILL'S GRILL 1109 Mass. Court House Phone 2054
DE SOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH Buddley GALLAGHER MOTORS FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. SQUARE DEAL
Buddy GALLAGHER MOTORS
DE SOTO
APPROVED
SERVICE
PLYMOUTH
GUARANTEED WATCH REPAIRING ALSO ENGRAVING 10-Day to 2-Week Service
LAUTER JEWELRY A COMPLETE JEWELRY STORE
Between Tenn. and Ohio on 14th
411 W. 14th St. Phone 307
Official Representative of L. G. BALFOUR CO.
Gustafson
THE COLLEGE JEWELER
Students' Jewelry Store 42 Years 809 MASS.
JANUARY 15, 1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
1645
1947
PAGE SEVEN
377 Pass English Proficiency Examination
A list of the 377 students who passed the English proficiency examination given Nov.2, 1946, has been released by the College English department.
Mrs. Natalie Calderwood, chairman of the proficiency committee, announced the passing grades of the 414 students who were examined under the English proficiency writing test for the first semester.
"Every paper," stressed Mrs. Calderwood, "is read by at least two readers, and no reader knows the name of the writer of the paper which he is judging."
Three grades are given to the papers. A Roman numeral I is a paper passed without question, while a paper with a III is a non-passing theme. At least three readers check a non-passing paper.
"No honor roll was made this year due to the fact that there were too many papers to be checked and it was impossible to set a definite set of standards for so many," explained Mrs. Calderwood.
School of Education
The following students passed the examination:
Bettie Batt, Dorothy Jeanne Berry, Barbara Jane Carroll, Grant Clothier Joan Clough, Frank Curry, Delores Custer, Marilyn Erway, Patricia L Fleming, Alice Goldsworthy, Lloyd Grady, Margaret Gruenthal, Harold Harvey, William Hessenflow, Marjorie Kaffe, Lewis Overstreet, Robert Robinson, Sara Jayne Scott, Jeanne C. Smith, Jeanne M. Smith, Annette Stout.
College
Melvin Adams, Robert H. Adams,
Jr., R. P. Adams, Rosemary Alderman,
Robert W. Alderson, Howard L.
Aumundson, William Anderson, Jr.
Bobby B. Andrews, Elizabeth L. Apt
John A. Ash, Daniel Bachmann,
Kenneth Bales, Bobbie Jay Barnes,
Bernice Barr, Beverly B. Baumer,
John Beach, Harold Beek, George R.
Bell, Janet Belt, Charles H. Benton,
Beverly Betz, Bet Z. O. Biggs, Lee Blackwill, Milton Bloodgood, Martha Bonebake, George Bowles, Keith Bowman, Robert Bowser, Elizabeth Bradney, Mary Branigan, Margaret Brewster, Russell Bridwell, William Brooks, Doris M. Brown, Ruth Brown, Lenore Brownlee, Wendell Bryand, Robert Buehler, Orval W. Buell, Jr., Joseph Bukaty,
Gracia Bundren, Robert E. Burdge,
Betty Burgert, Jordan Burkeley, Ralph
Burnett, William Butler, Mable E.
Cable, Esther Calvin, John Campbell,
Joe Cannon, Elaine Carlson,
Eunice Carlson, Lorraine Carpenter,
Mary Chadwick, Julia Chubb, Carl W. Clark, Jr., Jack Clogston, Daniel Coats.
James Coffman, Edward Colburn,
Joe Connellly, Charles Cotton, Ethelmae Craig, George A. Cramer, Freed Creacy, Lewis Cripps, Sam Crow,
Louis Cummings, Shirley Cundiff,
Jean Cunningham, Virginia David,
Constance Dean, Amnette DeTar,
Joan Dexter, Arthur Duell, Mary Jane During, Don Dyche, Martha Jo Easter.
Kathryn Eaton, Margaret Eberhardt, Jane Eby, Doris Edmiston, Robert Lee Eichorn, Eloise Elitzer, Richard Elliott, Peter Enes, Clarence E. Erickson, Jr., Frank Estrada, Elizabeth Evans, Thomas S. Evilssizer, Jr., Isobel Faurot, Robert Feighy, D. W. Fellers, Patricia Ann Ferguson, Barton Lee Fischer, John Fitzmorris.
Bette Lee Forbes, Robert Foster,
Clarence Francisco, Ruth French,
Robert Fijiggeri, James Galle, Fred
Gasser, Jr., C. C Mac Geyer, Ernest
Gimblet, Grace Glemn, Patricia Ann
Glover, Joy Godbeheme, Nancy Goering,
Darlow Goertz, Martha Goodrich,
Mary E. Gott, Ruth Granger,
Wayne Granger, William Granstedt.
Lorna Green, Jack H. Greene,
Charles E. Grey, Shirley Grigshy,
Floyd Grillot, Betty Lee Grimm,
Robert Guntter, Bernard Halperin,
Dorothy J. Hamilton, Russell L.
Handy, Jr., Charles A. Harkness,
Valdah Haynes, Helen Harkrader,
LaVerla D. Harris, Martha Hayden,
Melvin Hayes, Lacy Haynes, Jr.
Clarence R. Haywood, Virginia Haz-
Clay Hedrick, Jr., Sarah Jane Hill, Jessie Lee Helenthal, Ronald Herd, Dorothy Heschmeyer, Herman Hiestierman, James A. Hightower, Howard Hill, Adrienne M. Hiscox, Alice Hobbs, Richard Hodges, Jordan Hodgkins, Phyllis Hodgkins,
Robert Hodgson, Daniel W. Hogan,
Jr., Bonnie Jean Holden, Dorothy
Hoover, Robert B. Hutchinson, Martha
Hutchison, Wesley Innes, Elizabeth
Ibeth Ironey, Nancy Jack, Roberta
Jacobus, Roger James, Newell Jenkins,
Roy Jindra, Donald M. Johnson,
Richard N. Johnson, Royce P.
Johnson, William W. Johnson, Helen
Jones, Howard E. Jones, Robert D.
Dudy, John Kanas, Betrice Kasha,
Clifton C. Kelley, Jr., William A.
Wells, Billie Joan Kent, Melvin Ketner,
Betty Kieffer, Elizabeth Kindig,
Hubert Kintzel.
Joan Kirkham, Otto Koerner, Leonard m. Moger K., Jr, Sara Mae Krehbiel, Geralea Kreider, Martha Jean Lafter, Dorwin F. Lamkin, Helen Lawrence, Edna L. Lee, James R. Lee, Robert Lesh, Frank Loos, Thelmela Lucas, J. D. Lysaught, Thomas S. Mackie, Marina Madden, William Mailer, Robert H. Malott, Constance Markley, Marilyn J. Marsh, Jacqueline Marshall.
Ruth M. Marshall, Robert Martin-
dell, Marylee Masterson, George
Mastio, Helen Mather, Patricia Mat-
lock, Kenneth May, George McBane,
Mary Ann McClure, John D. M.
Cormick, Mack H. M.cormick,
James McCoy, Sue McCoy, Jean McGavran, Lester E. McGonigle, David R. McGuire, Margaret E. McHarg,
Norma J. McJones, Mary F. McKevitt, Ernest McRae.
Lawrence Mercer, Donald Metheny, O. W. Meyer, Jr., William D. Miller, Donald F. Milligan, Marian Minor, Ruth Mitchell, Ernest Mitts, Max Moody, Mary M. Morris, Robert N. Mowry, Joseph M. Murphy Virginia Murphy, Katherine Naxera, Frank C. Neff, Jr., William D. Nelligan, J. E. Nelson, Walter P. Nelson, Keith S. Neville, Sue Newcomer,
Martha M. Nichols, Lee R. Noel,
Jr., Lewis H. Noll, Jean Oberlin,
Geraldine Dotch, Randall Palmer, Barbara
Palz, William Park, James Parmiter,
Helen V. Patch, Betty Lou
Pelot, Lawrence R. Pennington, Jack
Peterson, Elbert Phillips, Barbara
Pickens, Helen M. Pickering, Paul
Plumb, Virginia Powell, James T
Pringle, Marian Mugan, Howard Pyle
Marcia Raines, Marjorie E. Ramsey,
Robert Ramseyer, Joyce Lee
Randolph, Robert R. Rawlings, William
E. Read, Robert K. Ready.
Collector Finds Oddities In Parking Meters
Marilyn N. Umbach, Milo Unruh,
Virginia Urban, Patricia Vance,
Garth L. Van Pelt, Mary Lou Vans-
tion, George E. Volz, Doreen J. Wail-
face, Paul M. Walmer, Martha Walks;
Patricio Ann Ward, Martha Webb,
G. R. Weeks, Nancy Anne Welker,
Shirley Wellborn, Oval A. West, Jr.
Robert Westmacott, Lillian White,
Melba Whitting, Virgil Whitsitt.
Kenneth Reasons, Nicholas Redeye, Victor Reinking, Terry Relhan, Paul Resler, Mary L. Rice, Theodore Richey, George A. Robb, Martha Ann Robinson, Vivian Rogers, Martha Roland, Betty Ann Rolls, Eleanor Jean Rotert, Richard Royer, Kenneth Runyon, Edward Russell.
Shirley Salley, Richard Sanford,
James R. Scanlan, Florence A.
Schutte, Anne L. Scott, Glenn Shan-
ahan, Jacquetta Shaw, Betsey Sheidle,
Edgar L. Sherbenou, Virginia
Shimer, John Sigler, Charles Simkins,
Bill Sims, Paul Sims, Marilyn
Smart, Allen D. Smith, Othello D.
Smith, William T. Smith, Jr,
Ned Smull, Muralyn E. Spake, Francis
W. Spencer, Lina M. Spencer.
Maybella St. Lawrence, John Standfield, Mary L. Stanley, Josephine Steinberger, Helen L. Steinkirchner, William A. Stewart, Philip J. Stockton, Dave Stockwell, Lyle B. Strayborn, Mary L. Stryker, Marion M. Summer, Edward Surface, LaVerne Swain, Dorothy Taft, Robert W. Taylor, Clarke Thomas, Robert Trueheart, Frank R. Tryer, Jr.
Newburgh, N. Y. (UP)—The city's busiest coin collector—compromitter Kenneth D. Jones is convinced people will put all sorts of things into parking meters.
In addition to coin of the realm, the parking meter take has included washers, tiddley-winks OPA red points, bingo chips, a Sing Sing penny, and a coin from an archipelago called the Konungur islands.
The prize of Jones' oddity collection is the Sing Sing penny—it bears an inscription, "Do Good—Make Good."
Baby 'Discovers' Poison Antidote
Elizabeth Anne Wickersham, Arthur Wiens, Jack Williams, Ruth Williams, Alice Wismer, Francis Wolfskill, Robert Wood, Joan Woodward, Alice Wright, Margaret Wright, Donald Wyman, Mary Joe Young, Paul Zeh, Barbara Zuercher.
Los Angeles. (UP)—Thanks to a 2-year-old boy who swallowed enough bichloride of mercury tablets to kill eight adults and still lived, physicians now know of a powerful antidote for several kinds of deadly poisoning.
Little was known about the drug except that its war-time use was against lewisite gas.
A week after the drug began restoring burned tissues in his stomach, Richard sat up and shouted for a stack of toast. Two weeks later he was as good as new.
When 2-year-old Richard Frace gulped the mercury tablets, someone thought of giving BAL a try. Otherwise death seemed certain.
The drug is "23 dimercaptopro-
panol," better known as BAL.
Researchers are now studying its effect on other poisonous heavymetals.
The city health department immediately sent a bulletin to all doctors, describing the use of BAL. The bulletin pointed out the drug was effective against poisoning by an paste and insect sprays, both of which contain arsenic, was of definite value in mercury poisoning and apparently was of some value in lead poisoning.
PROTECT YOUR EYES
Eye
Lawrence Optical Co.
1025 Mass.
Chicago, (UP)-George Ayer, a janitor at Chicago's Merchandise mart, largest commercial building in the world, has completed 300 paintings in his spare time. Ayer paints during his lunch hours and after work.
Spare Time Painter
BAL's secret is that it exerts a chemical attraction for arsenic and other heavy-metals, actually luring them from body cells. The poisons enter into a chemical compound with BAL to form a stable, non-poisonous substance which the body can pass off.
Eye
A Complete Bachelor's Laundry Service ACME
Bachaler's Laundry & Dry Cleaners
1111 Mass. Ph46 646
For A Tasty Lunch
U-m-m Good
Chili
Cheeseburgers Hamburgers
Soups
Snappy Lunch
1010 Mass. St.
Willfred "Skillet" Eudaly
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Copy must be in the University Daly Kansan Business Office, Journalism bldg., not later than 4 p.m. of the day before admission. All classifieds are cash in advance.
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five
day days five
25 words or less 35c 65c 90c
additional words 1c 2c 3c
Lost
GOLD Ring initialized E. G. Lost in front
Brick's. Reward. Call Bill Mulholland.
1853
SLIDE Rule, probably in Marvin hall.
651. Reward. Call Bill Wildon. -15-
654. Reward.
GRAY And black Valpen fountain pen between Pi Phi house and Fraser. If found please call Mary Alice White, 415.
LADY Eigin wristwatch, Jan. 8 between
Frank Strong and Fraser. Margaret
Hardie engraved on back. Reward.
Phone 1526-f. -15-
OVERCATO: Brown, size 38. Was accidentally exchanged at Dine-A-Mite Friday for coat of similar color. George McCarthy at 1016 or message. -16
GOLD Sheaffer pencil, striped brown and black. Lost between Cottage and Corbin Finder please call Virginia Roesler, 860 Reward. -16
BILLFOLD: Black, red trim. Name engraved in gold on inside, Jola Markle. Title: Master of Arts. Date: Daily Kansan office or call 2357. M-4 BROWN Sheaffer life-time pen between Hoch or Frank Strong. Helen Hastings engraved on inside. Peward. Return -174. Kaysen Office.
For Sale
PAIR Of colorless rimmed glasses in blue
case. Phone 2830-8. W.Reward. -17
GOLD Bulova ladies wrist watch with
stainless steel crown. 18. Please can
it if found.
'41 Chev. convertible for sale, 2 heaters,
spotlight, radio. Top condition. nice
phone. Phone 1996-J or 1106. Wilbur B.
Koehn. -15
BED, Mattress, and springs. Three drawer
dresser with mirror. Also little used two-
burner hot-plate and large briefcase. See
at 128 Wet 13th. -15
1940 Ford deluxe coupe. New motor, six speed shift, radio, Southwind heater new finish. Best offer. Phone 1687. 7 to 9 p.m. -15.
1935 Desoto 4-door sedan, motor completely overhailed. First good offer takes it. See at 1023 Miss. St. Phone 2297-R. 15 PRACTICALLY NEW lady dresses, skirts, and coats, size 12 and 14. Also 1 man's suit size sea. Reasonably for quick sale. Call 2734-W anytime after 3 p.m. -16-
STUDENTS: We are ready to sell your lighting needs. See us for approved LES. student lamps. Price $7.95 including 150-200 lb. Kansas Electric Power. Mass. -16
1935 Chevrolet 4-door sedan. Good con-
ductibility. Beauty, 1138 Miss. Phone 2010. -17-
ONE SET of trap drums. Good shape
1938 CHERVOLFT 4-door Master DeLuse
1938 CHERVOLFT 4-door Master DeLuse
NEW Buescher Aristocrat alto sax. $175
NYC Buescher Aristocrat alto sax. $175
vs drawing set $5. Phone 739-W -17
-1793 Ford. Radio and hoster. Good tires.
Best binder kit it. 1537 Tent Case.
$400
MEN'S Clean clothes. Black chinchilla overcoat. 1 suit. 1 coat vest and extra trousers. 32 x 33. Bargain for quick sale. 1104 New Jersey. -17-
Price reasonable. Lane P, Apt. 109. Sun-
flower Village.
SNAVAL Officers Dress Blues. Good condition. Size, coat 26, trousers 32. See guard Jones, McCook Hall. Under east side of stadium. Enter under ice CM. -16-
BROWN sport coats. $9 chest. Never.
MASS at Schulz's Tailor Shop.
24 Mass. St.
For Rent
Wanted
WANTED. One or two girls to share basement apartment. Two double sleeping rooms on second floor for girls. 841 Louisiana. Phone 2995-J. -15-
Found
MEMBERS For flying club or will sell interest in '46 T-craft. No students. Calvin Cooley, 1142 Ind. Phone 3335. -16-SLIDE RULE log du log expetril tr or declen- -15-POSITION for door after 2, or come to 530 Louisiana. -16-POSITION open for wife of G.I. or full time office secretary for the Dept. of Bacteriology. Call K.U. 145. -16.
FOLLOWING have been found and may be had at Kansan office by identifying: Fountain pens, Evershars, ring, 2 bracelets, earworms, glove, glasses, eyes, eyeglasses, face mask, Rosary, spiral notebook, slide rule, and partial plate containing 2 teeth. Please clam. 16-
Business Services
TYPING: Term papers and reports.
promptly. Reasonably. Phone:
1-800-255-6789.
RADIO Service. Home and car radios.
Tubes test free. All work guaranteed
90 days. 604 Hercules (new village)
Sunflower. -15-
VACANCY For two children in Nursery school. Whole or half days. Prefer two year olds. Experienced teacher. Phone 3402-J. 17-
TYPING: Prompt service, reasonable
rate, 1028 Vermont. 20a
TYING: Let a veteran's wife type your
163W or走吧 by 942 New Hampshire.
163W or走吧 by 942 New Hampshire.
INCOME TAX Service. I am preparing
income tax service a needed rate.
My fifth year in this work. Call 981.
day or in the evenings and ask for
Ralph Martin for information or an
appointment.
-20-
MOTT'S KU. stable offers free transportation to and from campus and stables. For riding reservations, phone 346, or 1019. -21-
ATTENTION, Medical Students, microscopes, colorimeters, balances, engineering instruments cleaned and repaired. Ten years' experience Call Victor 9218 546-7036 Engineering Solutions company, 720 Delaware, Kansas City 6, Mo. Free estimates. -27-
PHOTO-EXACT Copies, discharge and valuable papers. Fast service. Low price. Round Corner Drug Co. 801 Mass. Law- flower, Kansas. 401 N. Flower Lane, F. Lamp, 401 N. Flower Lane, Kansas. 401 N. Flower Lane, Kansas. 401 N. Flower Lane, Kansas. 401 N. Flower Lane, Kansas. 401 N. Flower Lane, Kansas. 401 N. Flower Lane, Kansas. 401 N. Flower Lane, Kansas. 401 N. Flower Lane, Kansas.
FOR That coke date remember the Eld-
ridge pharmacy at 701 Mass., phone
number 327-685-4790.
HUDSON'S - RENT - A - CAR - SER-
VICE Will rent you a car by day, week,
or week. Reservations taken. PAK-
255. Location O.K. Rubber welders, 314
west.
Transportation
For GROUP riding, get your coupon in Jan. 9. Kansan and then call for BILL's vice with five years of experience for KU. students. -15
A
Thanks To Those New SEAT COVERS
Our clothes are still in A-1 condition.
We're ready for an evening of fun!
Our expert mechanics will tailor-make seat covers to fit your car. Your choice of 30 different patterns and colors.
Morgan - Mack
Motor Company
Your FORD Dealer
609 Mass.
Phone 277
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
室容
JANUARY 15. 1947
Talmadge Demobilizes State Guard In Georgia Governors' 'Power' Duel
Arnall Refuses To Yield Office As Legislature Elects 'Young' Talmadge
Atlanta, Ga. (UP)—Herman Eugene Talmadge, elected governor of Georgia today by the state legislature, issued an executive order shortly before noon to strip military power from Gov. Ellis Gibbs Arnall, who had refused to yield the office.
The order called for demobilization of the Georgia state guard headed
Cal B W Collins, when Mu®
by. Col. R. W. Collins, whom Mr. Arnall this morning appointed adjutant general.
Mr. Talmadge previously appointed Adjunct General Marvin Griffin for a new term as commander of the Georgia national guard.
Mr. Talmadge's executive order was issued as he and Mr. Arnall vied for executive power in adjoining offices at the state capitol, issuing conflicting orders and appointing different men to state offices.
The strange battle for executive power, which had been touched off in violence in the early hours of today, started when the state legislature elected Mr. Talmadge as governor at the tail end of a 16-hour joint session of the house and senate.
Mr. Talmadge was elected on the basis that he had the greatest number of write-in votes for governor in the general election last November. Mr. Arnall contended that the legislature had no right to elect a governor and planned to hold office until Lt. Guy,-elect M. F. Thompson is sworn in and qualified to succeed to the office.
Young Talmadge's father, the late Eugene Talmedge, had been elected governor in the general election but he died last month.
Mr. Arnall said that no doubt his decision to fight the Talmadge general assembly election will be upheld in the courts. This means Mr. Arnall will probably stay in until court action.
Bugs Threaten Us With Starvation, Woodruff Says
"The world is rapidly becoming overpopulated, and mass starvation is sure to come unless we can defeat our insect enemies." Prof. L. C. Woodruff warned in his talk to the Entomology club Tuesday afternoon.
Speaking on the relation of insects and man, Prof. Woodruff gave briefly a history of early man. He gave examples of the periods through which early man passed, the collectional, agricultural, and transportational, and showed how the importance of insects increased as man began to move about from country to country carrying new insect pests.
Notes on home-constructed entomological equipment were given by Herbert Wallace and Dr. R. H. Beamer.
"There was practically a balance of nature in America when the white man came," Prof. Woodruff said, "but with the increase of white man and agriculture in America, insect pests increased."
Australia Asks Small Nation Participation In Peace Talks
London. (UP) — Australia submitted to the Big Four Deputies today a demand that the small allied nations be permitted to participate "fully and freely" in the preliminary discussions of the German peace treaty.
The Foreign Ministers Council of Deputies discussed the Australian demand for little nation participation in the treaty consideration at the second session of its London meeting to lay the groundwork for the Moscow conference in March.
Thy Ear Offend Thee
Home (UP) — Nineteen-year-old Romano Pandoli got tired of jokes about his long ears today and, taking his razor, pared each one down to halfsize. Physicians said he would recover from the loss of blood in a couple of weeks.
May Hear Arnall
Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, said today that he hopes the University will get to hear Ellis Arnall, who is scheduled to speak here Feb. 14, but "that we will have to wait."
"If Mr. Arnall remains governor of Georgia, he probably will not keep his lecture contract," he said.
Sunnyside For Faculty During Shortage
Student applications will not be assigned to Sunnyside units until the crucial housing shortage is over, Irvin Youngberg, director of the housing bureau, said today.
He estimated that this probably will not be until next fall and will be determined by future enrollment issues.
"The Sunnyside project must be used to fill nearly 200 applications from faculty members," he explained.
"About 90 per cent of these staff applicants are veterans, and the few non-veteran instructors were promised adequate housing facilities before accepting positions with the University," Mr. Youngberg asserted.
Because K.U. had access to Sunflower Village, it was allotted only the 186 housing units which comprise Sunnyside. This is a much lower ratio than other smaller colleges.
"We are trying to get the best possible use out of the project," Mr Youngberg stated.
At present only 60 single students still occupy Sunflower Village, which has a capacity of 1300. This is a drastic decrease from the 800 once lived in the bachelor's barracks, and indicates that the housing problem has eased considerably.
Daughter Born To Kingmans
While this section of Sunflower Village might soon be closed for reasons of economy, the apartment area for married students might remain open for sime time yet, since there are almost 600 families still occupying that area.
Mr. Youngberg revealed that FHA inspectors told him Sunnyside is one of the best of such projects he had seen. All of those now living in the newly completed apartments have expressed their satisfaction, he added.
According to present estimates, the Sunnyside units will be used for at least five years, and will probably be occupied entirely by students for most of that time. Mr Youngberg believes.
Evidence also was introduced to prove that Japanese pilots knowingly bombed American hospital ships and that they committed crimes in absolute submission to orders.
Cannibalism On Pacific Isles Told In Jap War Trials
Tokyo. (UP) — Grisly evidence submitted in the trial of leading Japanese war criminal suspects told today how Japanese soldiers on Pu'ang hands turned to cannibalism and ate the flesh of American prisoners.
Congress Criticizes WAA
Washington. (UP)—A senate military affairs subcommittee today accused the war assets administration of "poor performance" and of encouraging monopolistic practices in disposing of 35 billion dollars in surplus goods.
A daughter, Barbara Carey, who weighed two pounds, 15 ounces, was born Tuesday at the University of Florida. She is set to meet Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Kingman.
Kingman, College junior, is the Daily Kansan city editor.
Pritchard To Address AVC Meet Tomorrow
A. D. B. C.
L. J. PRITCHARD
L. J. Pritchard, associate professor of finance, will address the American Veterans committee at 7:30 p.m. to tomorrow in 106, Green hall. His topic will be "Atomic Control; Its Political and Economic Aspects."
An AVC-sponsored social dance will be held in the Kansas room of the Union Jan. 24 after the basketball game. No admission will be charged, and everyone is invited.
Sixteen members of the K.U. chapter of the AVC attended an address by Charles Bolte, national chairman, Jan. 9 in the Topeka AVC clubhouse. They included: Paul A. Wolf, Roy T. Harmon, Russell Barrett, Benny Wolf, H. G. Kolsky, J. M. Peterson, C. B. Wheeler, Marks Haggard, Leland Crapon, James Hunsucker, June Hays, Martha Cannon, Doloris Shade, James Hightower, Robert L. Bock, and Kenneth Runyon.
VanderWerf Will Open YM-YW Discussions
Dr. Calvin VanderWerf, associate professor of chemistry, will lead the first of two discussions on the topic "How the Laws of Science Prove That the Law of Christian Love is the Law of Life" at 7 tonight in Mvers hall.
The second discussion will be held at 7:50 p.m. Wednesday in Myers hall. Both will be sponsored by the YM-YW religious emphasis committee, according to Betty van der Smissen, W.Y.C.A. religious seminar chairman.
Surveying of sites for two of nine buildings granted the University by the Federal Works administration and to be erected on the campus by July 1 is underway.
Building Sites Are Being Surveyed
The contract for dismantling, moving, and erecting the buildings has been awarded to the Constant Construction company of Lawrence by the Kansas City office of the FWA, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, announced today.
The first building to be erected will be two 25 by 172 feet buildings north of Frank Strong hall. One for the Veterans administration and Western civilization, the other for secretarial training and general classrooms.
Just how soon moving will begin depends on the completion of certain details of the contract, possibly within a week, a company official said.
Eight one-story buildings will be moved from the army air base at Coffeyville and also a two-story building from an ordinance plant at Lake City, Mo.
Student Court Fines Seven For Violating Smoking Regulations
Seven of the nine students charged with violating smoking regulations pleaded guilty and were fined $2 each by the student court Tuesday.
Tefft applied the plaster solution deftly, flinging it onto the exposed portions methodically from the tips of his fingers.
The plaster mask was allowed to harden 20 minutes as Kenneth Beasley, College sophomore, spoke on "Mississippi Misery" and dean Lawson sat mum. Then the mask came off.
Two students, Jo Hall, fine arts junior, and Richard Dodson, engineering, freshman, pleaded not guilty and will be tried later.
The judge was assisted in the decisions of the court by six associate justices; Carla Eddy, Glee Smith, Granville Bush, Robert Stadler, Richard Gunn, and Kenneth Ray Acting as prosecutor attorney was William McEhenny, first year law student, and Reed Hoffman, also a first year law student, as clerk.
Thirty students charged with traffic violations were successful in their appeals to the court. Malcolm Miller, third year law student, and chief justice of the court, ruled that no prosecution should be held against the grounds that each had mitigating circumstances and proof of his innocence.
1nose students fined were William Bradford, Althea Voss, John Wuest, John Coombe, Joe Schell, John Kindscher, and John Couch.
For Once, The Dean Was Speechless
London. (UP)—The British foreign office today rejected a Soviet denunciation of a 1920 treaty giving Norway sovereignty over Spitzerbergen and indicated Britain would not recognize any agreement for construction of Soviet military bases on the arctic island.
Soviet Arctic Claim Refused
Attired in generous wrappings of white sheets which left bare only his ruddy features, the dean stood in moment with poise befitting his position.
Lawson Gets 'Plastered'
Because he possesses the "chieстие forehead on the campus." Paul B. Lawson's eminent countenance was subjected to a most discourteous ordeal Tuesday night at the "Revue of 1946-47" in Fraser auditorium.
The dean of the College was "plastered," and in such a manner as to provide hilarious responses from everyone present except himself. He was exhibit "A" of a demonstrative speech by Elden Teft, fine arts junior, on the art of making a face mask.
The seven speeches presented by the Forensic league was skillfully presented and favorably received by the large audience. The speakers were introduced by Orville Roberts, a graduate student.
Jean Moore spoke on "The Fifth Horseman of the Apocalypse", with which he won the Missouri Valley oratorical contest last year.
Describing a boring instructor, in his talk on "How Not to Make a Speech", Dick McGhee, College freshman, provoked the laugh of the show when he remarked.
"If all the people who slept in his classes were placed end to end, they would be much more comfortable."
Ernest Wildhagen, Engineering senior, presented a practical and realistic demonstration on fire; Bea Brady, College freshman, related some little known facts about the acting profession in her talk, "How to Act," and Russell Mammel, College freshman, concluded the "Revue" with the oration, "Democracy, What Chance Have You?"
News. . . of the World
U.M.W. Expects Reversal
Washington. (UP)—A spokesman for the United Mine Workers believed today the supreme court would reverse the contempt convictions of both the union and its chief John L. Lewis.
Canol Project For Sale
Washington. (UP)—Secretary of State James F. Byrnes revealed today that the biggest part of the controversial Canol oil refinery-pipeline project in Canada is for sale because it has "no known" economical postwar use.
Truman To Get .5 Support
To Limit Death Penalty
Washington. (UP) — President Truman was assured of a .500 batting average today on his tax recommendations to the new congress.
Republican tax leaders stood firm on cutting individual income taxes 20 per cent, but they agreed to continue high excise taxes on luxury items.
Washington. (UP)—Rep. Walter B. Huber (D-Ohio) today proposed a constitutional amendment to abolish capital punishment except for treason.
Truman To Hold Conference
Washington. (UP) — President Truman will hold his first bipartisan conference with leaders of the republican-controlled congress tomorrow morning, the White House said today.
Marshall Will Be Cautious
Shortage In House Funds
New Orleans. (UP)—Sen. Theodore D. Bohl gave a preview today on the nature of his soon-to-be published book "Take Your Choice—Segregation or Mongrelization" which he said would make some congressmen "want to hang me."
London. (UP) — An estimated 17,000 London dock workers walked off the piers today raising to approximately 65,000 the number of food and transport workers out on strike in London and 20 provincial cities.
Washington. (UP)—Congressional pressure notwithstanding, Latin American experts predicted today that Secretary of State-designate George C. Marshall would move cautiously in changing U.S. policy in the western hemisphere.
Dock Workers Strike
Smith Expresses Concern
London. (UP)—Radio Moscow today revealed that U.S. Ambassador W. Bedell Smith has expressed the concern of the United States to Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov over "repressive measures taken against democratic elements which have not joined the party" electoral bloc in Poland.
Lake Success. (UP)—The United States proposed today that the United Nations security council set a Feb. 4 deadline for debating atomic problems, to give at least preliminary study to atomic control before it tackles the broader problem of general disarmament.
U.S. Asks Atomic Discussion
Washington. (UP)—House leaders indicated today that the justice department may be asked to investigate a purported $121,000 shortage in the accounts of the house sergeant-at-arms office.
Portal Pay Suits May Hurt
Washington. (UP)—Congress was warned today that thousands of firms faced bankruptcy unless prompt steps are taken to outlaw union claims to more than four billion dollars in portal-to-payal.
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University DAILY KANSAN
Thursday, January 16, 1947
44th Year No. 70
Lawrence, Kansas
STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
of to con- line be- nical
nal in day ateoveicy
Your Daily Kansan Has Lived Quite A Lifetime In Its First 35 Years
BY CHARLES ROO5
(Daily Kansan Managing Editor)
The Daily Kansan is 35 years old today, and to those who say the Kansan's 35 years mean the student newspaper is only just out of its youth, the paper answers that those first years have been quite a lifetime. The Daily Kansan was born among an assortment of literary magazines
The Daily Kansas was born among an assortment of indi-
and political sheets which argued, merged, divided, and merged again
Their Kansan merged with a literary paper, the Times, in 1891 and continued to lead a perilous life until 1904.
long, short, impecunious lives.
In 1889, the first University Kansan, a weekly, appeared timidly in the arena of book reviews and politics, looked around, and grabbed the ropes. Its student sponsors paid for publication out of their own pockets, and they published a paper when they could pay the printer.
In that year, Prof. E. M. Hopkins, KU.'s first journalism instructor, talked the students into turning the paper over to his newly formed journalism classes. Under Professor Hopkins and Leon N. Flint, who still is a KU. journalism professor, the paper was published twice a week, then became a tri-weekly in 1907.
In 1911, the School of Medicine moved out of the Shack (now frequently nicknamed the Journalism building), and the journalism department moved in, under the direction of Merle Thorpe, present editor of Nation's Business.
On Jan. 17, 1912, the Kansan began its 35 years of daily publication. Louis LaCross was editor-in-chief, George Marsh was managing editor, and Clark Wallace was business manager. There were no women staff members and no society page.
World War I came along to surprise almost everyone. It brought wooden barracks to the campus and feminine control to the Kansan for the first time.
After the war, a drive for the first World War memorials—the stadium and Union building—began. Jimmy Green's statue was unveiled in 1924. Dr. F. C. Allen's basketball teams were the class of old Missouri Valley conference and the young Big Six.
When you cranked the telephone and asked the operator for "K.U. 25," you got the Daily Kansan news room, same as in 1912 and 1947. Campus eating houses began to expand from hamburger stands to restaurant. A street car line along Mississippi] street provided transportation downtown.
Then K.U. was in the '40's and another world war. "Daily" publication came to mean four days a week. The difference between the money that came into the business office and the money that went out got pretty small. The paper companies that sold newsprint didn't have much.
Then Hitler bit the dust, accompanied by appropriate headlines. A few months later, the Summer Session Kansan made the first newspaper announcement to Lawrence of V-J Day, signal that the war was over. The men came back.
Sailors and soldiers marched up and down Jayhawk drive, but men were scarce around the Shack.
Now, after 18 months of peacetime publication, the Daily Kansan is in the strongest financial position of its 35 years. Its reporters provide full coverage of schools, departments, clubs, political parties, concerts, dances and athletics. Along the wires of the United Press come the latest bulletins of state, national, and world events.
The Kansan, a pioneer in college journalism groups, has recently joined the professional Inland Daily Press association, largest regional newspaper group in the U.S.
The Kansan looks with confidence toward the future when it will be-with no limit in sight—as part of gin a new growth—a new expansion the William Allen White School of Journalism.
Sauer Announces Award Winners
A tentative list of 1946 K.U. football players who will receive letters and minor awards were released today by Coach George Sauer.
The following list will become definite when semester grades show the men have passed.
Lettermen:
Centers: Howard Fischer, Mount Vernon, Iowa.
Ends: Dave Schmidt, Milwaukee,
Wis.; Otto Schneblier, Sublette;
Marvin Small, Gadsden, Ala.; Bryan
Sperry, Lawrence; Orbon Tice,
Hutchinson; Paul Turner, Kansas
City.
Guards: Joe Crawford, Kansas City; Don Fambrough, Longview, Texas; Willie Micklick, Kansas City; Kenneth Sperry, Lawrence.
Tackles: Ed Egnatic, Kansas City; Hugh Johnson, Bay City, Texas; Don Ettinger. Independence, Mo.
Backs; H. st Baker, Peabody; Dick Bertuzzi, Girard, Ray Evens, Kansas City; Bud Freneh, Kansas City, Mo.; Forrest Griffith, Lee's Summit, Mo.; Bill Hogan, Detroit, Mich.; Lynne McNutt, Colly; Frank Patttee, Smith Center; Leroy Robison, Lawrence.
Minor awards;
Tamara AWARD
Centers: Ed Bray, Parsons; Bob Kline, St. Joseph, Mo.; Charles Penny, Lawrence.
Guards: Dick Tomlinson, Dodge City; Sam Hunter, Marion, Ind.; John Dickerson, Meade.
Tackles: Ed Lee, Kansas City,
Mo.; Ship Winter, Lawrence; Ralph
Wygle, Chase; Dick Channell, Kansas
City.
Ends: Warren Riegle, Chanute.
Backs: Jake Fry, Roscadeal, Mister
Clover, Langlothe, Pa.; Chet Laniowski,
Albridge, Pa.; Junior Hess, Pretty
Prairie; Dale Mallon, Topeka; and
John Dewell, Newton.
Ends: Warren Riegle, Chanute.
"In view of general housing conditions and the low cost of living offered by the scholarship ($28 a month) it is surprising that more men have not applied," Mr. Tompkins added.
Only two men have applied for Batterey hall scholarships, Willis Tompkins, assistant dean of men, said today.
Two Apply For Hall Scholarship
At present there are no vacancies, but probably several will occur at the end of this semester or early in next semester. Mr. Tompkins said. The replacements will come from the waiting list of men who have already applied for the scholarship through the office of the dean of student affairs.
The Rev. Dr. Harold G. Barr of the School of Religion will be the speaker at the third Y.M.C.A. movie forum at 4 p.m. today. The movie "Here Is China" will be shown in the visual education projection room in the basement of Fraser hall.
Barr Speaks To Y.M.C.A.
House To Bring Up Resubmission Soon
Topeka (UP)—Kansas legislators, voicing approval of Gov. Frank Carlson's broad message, were expected to adjourn today for the rest of the week.
Observers believed that the struggle to resubmit the prohibitory amendment to popular vote—as Governor Carlson strongly recommended in accordance with the Republican platform plank — would open in the house. It is in the lower chamber that the administration's request is expected to find roughest going.
House Majority Leader Blake Williamson of Kansas City said the resubmission question would "undoubtedly" come up soon.
Owl Society Chooses 16 New Members
Owl society will install 16 new members at 6 tonight, the first elected since 1943.
Dr. Raymond H. Wheeler, professor of psychology, will address the group at a dinner to be held in the English room of the Union.
Inactive during the war, this junior men's honorary society has recently been reorganized by pre-war members. Members are selected on the basis of activities, scholarship, and service to the University.
The new members are Frank Stalzer, Robert Bock, Harold Harvey, Paul Fairchild, Robert Ready, Terry Herriot, Dale Judy, Richard Hawkinson, William Conboy, Harry Johnson, Norman Miller, Dale Rummer, Jack Hollingsworth, Ben Foster, John Rees, and Otto Schnellbacher.
Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, and Willis Tompkins, assistant dean of men, will be guests of honor at the dinner.
'Bia Bill' Tilden To Road Gang
Los Angeles. (UP) — William T. Tilden, 53, famed "Big Bill" of the world's tennis courts, today was sentenced to nine months of labor with a road gang for contributing to the delinquency of a 14-year-old boy.
Spring Registration Will Be Simple For Present Students, Hitt Explains
Registration
Monday, Feb. 10
8- A, U, Y
9- 10 P
10- 11 F, Com-Cz
11- 12 Ca-Col
1- 2 Ma-Me
2- 3 Mi-Mz, X, I, V
3- 4 J, K
Tuesday, Feb. 11
8-9 Ha-Hi
9-10 Hj-Hz, D
10-11 L, O
11-12 R
1-2 T, N
2-3 G, Q
3-4 Sa-She
Wednesday, Feb. 12
8-9 Shi-Sh,
9-10 Sq-Sz, E
10-11 Ba-Bol
11-12 Bom-Bz
1-2 Wa-We, Z
2-3 Wh-Wz
Wednesday, Feb. 12
Pay Fees
Enrollment will take place after payment of fees in the following places:
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Robinson gym.
School of Engineering, Marvin hall.
School of Fine Arts, Robinson gym.
School of Business, 210 Frank Strong hall.
School of Education, Robinson gym.
School of Law, 108 Green hall.
School of Pharmacy, 211 Bailey Chemical Lab.
School of Medicine, 104 Haworth hall.
Graduate school, 227 Frank Strong.
Classes will begin in all departments on Feb. 13. Enrollment on or after is date will be permitted only after payment of a late fee of $2.50 in addition to the regular fees.
Little Man On Campus
Enrollment
Monday, Feb. 10
8:30-10 A, U, Y
10:11-10 F, P
1:30-3 C
3:4-10 M
Tuesday, Feb. 11
8-10:30 J X, I, V, K
10-11:30 H
1:30-3 D, L
3-4:30 R, T
Students entering the University for the first time, former students who have not been enrolled at K.U. during the fall semester of 1946, and students who are transferring from one school of the University to another
Three days of registration and enrollment for the spring semester will begin Feb. 10, James K. Hitt, University registrar, announced today.
WEATHER
Kansas—Fair west and north. clearing southeast today. Colder east and south. Fair tonight and Friday. Low tonight 10 northwest and 20 to 25 southeast. Warmer Friday except little change extreme southeast.
By
Wednesday, Feb. 12
8:30-10 S
10-11:30 G, O, N, Q
1:30-3 B
3-4:30 W, Z, E
By Bibler
ART
K.U.
IN ONLY KNABAN
"He says he has a lot of his work published."
must register for the spring semester. Mr.Hitt said.
Students who are not required to register will enter the south door of the cast wing of Frank Strong hall according to the letter scheme in the schedule for payment of fees, Mr. Hitt said.
Students now on the campus who have been regularly enrolled in the University do not have to register but have to pay fees according to the registration schedule. Students will not be allowed to enroll until fees are paid.
Veterans who plan to have their fees paid by the veterans administration should make sure that their certificates of eligibility and entitlement are filed with the veterans training service, room 2, Frank Strong hall, before the opening of school, Mr. Hitt said.
Veterans entering school for the first time or those who have not been under the educational benefits of the G.I. Bill of Rights will be required to register according to the schedule.
If veteran's certificate of entitlement was on file the fall semester, Mr. Hitt explained, he will follow the same procedure as other students and go through the registration line.
Mr. Hitt advised anyone who plans to transfer from one school of the University to another to contact the registration office before this semester ends. Arrangements will be made for the transfer which will prevent delay in registering and enrolling, he said.
Faculty Will Choose Typical Kansas Girl
A "typical Kansas girl" will be picked from five University candidates at the semi-formal Sunflower ball to be held tomorrow night in the Military Science building.
The candidates, picked today by a three-man faculty board, are Mary Lilly, Sidney Letson, Gwendolynne Jones, Barbara Lamoreaux, and Shirley French.
The queen of the ball will be chosen at the dance by a representative of Governor Carlson.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 16,194
YOURS FOR FUN
The Memorial Union Fountain
Coke Dating?
N.Y.C. PARKS AIRLINES MILK CHOCOLATE BERRY FIRED CREAM
Did you know the Union fountain is now staying open until 10:15 Monday through Friday?
Treat her at the Union Fountain after a show or basketball game. It's the center of all University activities.
When your appetite's dull and for that time between classes come down to the Union Fountain for a sandwich and a malt. A coffee hour is just the relaxation you need.
The UNION FOUNTAIN In The Memorial Union
CLOSED FROM 12:45 UNTIL 1:15 EVERY DAY
RY 16, 194
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
ANUARY 16, 1947
Press, Printers Have Grown With The Kansar
From the time when the first University Daily Kansan was published years ago, the press room has made steady advances in securing modern equipment and additional personnel.
The Kansan office, which was originally in the basement of Fraser hall, was moved to the present Journalism building early in 1912. At that time the University added two inotype machines to supplement the neager equipment which was used for the first issue.
The type for the first Kansan was set by hand by student printers. The forms were locked, loaded into a buggy, and hauled downtown where they were printed.
In 1925 a Duplex printing press was added to the equipment in the press room. Four linotype machines and many cases of type are available for use in today's issue of the Kansan.
At the time of the first Kansan three men were employed, two to set the advertisements, and one to run the linotype. Working on the Kansan today are four full-time employees, and 13 part-time student employees.
Shop foreman when the Kansan began was Guy M. Pennock; he has seen every issue of the paper since that time. Mr. Pennock, still a foreman, is the oldest employee from the point of service.
Looking back to the Kansan as it was 35 years ago, Mr. Pennock recalled that "we always had plenty of copy, and the editorials were a day ahead of schedule. We've come a long way, however, since the day when we had very little equipment."
Second in line from point of service is Ned Barnes who has been a Kansas pressman since 1919. It was during his tenure that the old cylinder press was discarded and the Dunlex installed.
Raymond McCabe has been with the Kansan for two years, coming from the Lawrence Journal-World. He is in charge of the Kansan composing and supervises makeup and typesetting for the newspaper.
Theodore Gray came to the Kansas in 1940 and is now assistant makeup man and advertising compositor. Mr. Gray is a graduate of KU., and expects to work on his master's degree beginning next semester.
Other press room employees directly connected with the University Daily Kansan include T. C. Ryther, director of the University of Kansas Press and students working parttime in the publication of the newspaper. Mr. Ryther worked on the paper as a student from 1922 until 1926, and returned to the University in 1928 to work on his master's degree.
Students working in the press or composing rooms of the Kansan include John G. Campbell, Leonard C. Fields, John D. Glenn, Harlan Lill, Adrea Hinkel, Kenneth Morrow, Ruby Olson, Duane Postlethwaite, William T. Smith, Edith Stodard, Orin Strobel, and Paul Zeh.
Scandinavian Club
To Include More Members
The Swedish club became the Scandinavian club at a meeting in Battenfeld hall at Tuesday night.
The change was made to include students attending the University from all the Scandinavian countries, as well as other students who are interested.
The next meeting will be held between semesters and all members are asked to come and bring prospective members.
University Daily Kansan
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year (in addition Lawn add) a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the school year except Saturdays and weekends. Publicity periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
COEDS' CORNER
Meet Miss Scroggy, Miller Hall's Most 'Haphazard' Student Cook
"Gee, the things I have done in the Miller hall kitchen," exclaimed Dorothy Scroggy, College sophomore, from Wichita. "I'm a very haphazard cook. I just put things together and hope they come out all right."
At the present time, she is kitchen head of her group, a position which lasts for five weeks. Her job is to plan the menu, call the grocer every morning, and put out the milk bot-cles every day. She said it makes her feel "real domestic." Delegates Report
"Besides being a haphazzard cook, I have the reputation of always falling down," she added. "I fall upstairs and out of double deck beds, but not once did I fall down outdoors when it was slick. When I get inside—that's a different story."
As a University cheerleader, "Scroggy's" face is familiar to nearly every student on the Hill.
She was co-chairman of the publicity committee of the Sophomore Slobbovian Stomp, is on the social committee at Miller hall, and a member of Kappa Phi. She also plays on the Miller hall basketball team. She participated in the student-faculty conference last spring and was on the freshman dance committee.
"I guess I'm a radical," she remarked, "but I'm very interested in Western Civilization." Her speech on it in the campus speaking contest last year took her to the finals.
This interest has brought her to a temporary decision" on her marriage. She is connected with human relations, perhaps sociology or political science.
She is one of the persons who finds, when being introduced by her best friends, that they just can't recall her first name.
"Everyone always calls me 'Scroggy.'" she explained. "People are always inquiring as to where I got such a peculiar nickname, and I have to explain that it is really my name."
According to the dictionary scrogy means thorny or stunted. Neither applies to the attractive head cook at Miller.
Constitution Ratified By Women's Council
The constitution of the United Women's council was ratified Tuesday. The purpose of the organization is to co-ordinate women's social and scholastic affairs and to promote a better feeling between Greek and Independent women.
Officers, consisting of the president, vice-president, secretary, treasurer and two senior council members, will be elected in the spring semester. Representatives will be elected both during the fall and spring semesters as the organization sees fit.
Bachelor's Laundry Service
Astle Dry Cleaning for Men and Women
ACME
Bachelor's Laundry & Dry Cleaners
1111 Mass. Phone 646
PROTECT
YOUR EYES
Eye
Lawrence Optical Co.
1025 Mass.
P. B. MORRIS
Delegates to the National Student association assembly at Urbana, Ill., reported Tuesday at the monthly Y. M. C. A.-W. Y. C. A. all-membership meeting in the Kansas room. The reports were preceded by group singing led by Wilbur Noble, College sophomore.
"Kansas In Our Industrial Civilization" is the topic chosen for the annual Capper Oratorical contest, and will stress industrial development and possibilities in the state.
Stress Kansas Industry In Oratorical Contest
An elimination contest will be held on the K.U. campus January 24. The local winner will then go to Topeka to compete with other winners throughout the state. The person placing first will present the winning oration at the annual Kansas banquet.
HAVE A TASTY, WELL-PREPARED STEAK for Less at
The University has won this contest several times, most recently in 1942, when Jean Fisher presented "Drums Over Kansas." The contest was discontinued during the war, and is being revived this year.
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At the Sign with the Fighting Jayhawk Perched on Top
CHAIN REPAIR SERVICE . . .
Have those broken cross-links replaced now. Be ready for the next slick-street session.
Zelon Lined Coats
Sheep Lined Vests
Twill Lined Jackets
Quilt Lined Coats
Leather-Wool Coats
Finger Tip Coats
Fleece Lined Coats
Norfolk Wool Coats
Now On—
CARL'S SALE OF COATS & JACKETS
25% Discount
Leisure & Loofers Coats 331/3% Discount
$10 values $ 7.50
$12.95 values $ 9.70
$15 values $11.25
$16.50 values $12.35
$20 values $15
$23 values $17.25
$30 values $22.50
Sizes 34 to 46
Sizes 34 to 46
CARL'S
SEE A SHOW TONITE
Dayhawker
NOW — Ends Saturday
Shows: 2:30 - 7:00 - 9:00
Katherine
HEPBURN
Roberi
TAYLOR
ROBERT MITCHUM
UNDERCURRENT
SUNDAY — One Week
HUNGER no love . . . woman or wealth could satisfy!
Twenty
POWER
Gene
TIERNEY
John
PAYNE
SOMERSET MAUGHAM'S
The Razors
Edge
MARSHALL
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The Razors Edge
GRANADA
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"The Plainsman and the Lady"
WILLIAM ELLIOTT
VERA RALSTON
JOSEPH SCHILDKRAUT
EXTRA—FOOTBALL THRILLS "46
Color Cartoon - Musical
"THE KILLERS"
Owl Sat. & SUNDAY 5 Days
Critics Acclaim the Tap Suspense Hit of the Year! ERNEST HEMINGWAY'S
AVA GARDNER ALBERT DEKKER EDMOND O'BRIEN
and Disney Color Cartoon
Patee
Now Playing
GAINSBOROUGH PICTURES LTD.
Pictures
Madonna of the Seven Moons
Screenings
PHYLLIS CALVERT STEWART GRANGER
RATRICIA ROC PETER GLENVILLE JOHN STUART
MANCK PHIRE JEAN KENT REGINA TATE
PLUS
20-Minute Featurette:
"STAR IN THE NIGHT"
and LATEST NEWS
VARSITY
TODAY — Ends Saturday
STARK TERROR!
A man turned madman under its sinister speil!!
HELMUT DANTINE
"Shadow of a Woman"
—and
JIMMY WAKELY
"Song of the Sierras"
---
PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 16, 1947
SPOTLIGHT SPORTS
By BOB DELLINGER (Daily Kansan Sports Editor)
Elwyn Dees, former Nebraska trainer who received a black eye as a reward for his troubles in breaking up the fight between Kansas and Nebraska players Tuesday, was formerly a trainer at Kansas.
Kansas Dean Nesmith, present Kansas trainer, served under Dees one year before advancing to his present rank.
Some local fans are deploring the loss of Johnny Bueser, former K.U. quarterback. He wasn't missed during the war, they say, because of the competition, but now the lack of a competent ball-handler out front is beginning to show glaringly.
** **
Gamblers at Madison Square Garden put on a show of their own Tuesday night at the St. Louis-Long Island game. Long Island led by four points with a minute left, and the bookies mobbed the arena screaming for the Blackbirds to stall and protect the three-point odds they had given.
***
- * *
Long Island lost the ball on a poor pass, and St. Louis went down for a goal. The Blackbirds won the ball game, but the gamblers went down hard. The fall was completed when North Carolina upset N.Y.U. in the nightcap, 50-48.
While Charley Trippi, great Georgia athlete, was waiting to decide who would get his services in the pro ranks, he was piling up awards.
Monday, he was presented the Maxwell Memorial Award, naming him as the year's outstanding college football player. He also received a gold cigarette case and a gold miniature football. Previously he had been awarded the Walter Camp trophy.
***
Note that as No. 1 college player, he was given a cigarette case. Training?
Latest rumors from West Point have both Glenn Davis and Doc Blanchard resigning their commissions to play pro football. Blanchard was selected by the Pitt Steelers and Davis was chosen by the Detroit Lions in the recent player draft.
The only fly in the ointment is the second half of the rumor which says that the "Touchdown Twins" refuse to separate.
Bucky Harris of the Yanks is still worrying about "Who's on first?"
The Yankee skipper will have a well-balanced team in other respects, but the initial sack is the same problem it has been ever since the passing of the immortal Lou Gehrig.
The outfield will be all anyone could ask for these days with Joe DiMaggio, Tommy Henrich, and Charley Keller, and the infield will be peopleided with such stalwarts as Jhil Rizuzuto, George Stirnseew, Jim Crowetti, newcomer Bobby Brown, Johnson, and Ray Mack. Hawkins will
Harris will take 15 of his 26 pitchers with him to try and decide on his regular starters.
The only holdovers for the first sack are weak-hitting Johnny Lindell, Nick Etten, and little-used Steve Souchock.
Still, Harris is confident that the Yanks will be back on the pedestal on which they used to rank with monotonous regularity.
Joe Fulks of the Philadelphia Warriors of the pro Basketball Association of America set a new league scoring record of 41 points Tuesday night as his team whipped Toronto, 104-74. Fulks held the previous record at 40.
***
John H. Vaught, former Mississippi line coach, is expected to move up to the head grid job next season
IM Score Correction
The correct score of the intramural basketball game played Friday night between Alpha Tau Omega and Wesley Foundation was 25-23, Wesley.
Missouri Risks Conference Lead; K.U. Cagers Idle Until Monday
Missouri will lay her Big Six conference lead on the line this week, risking it to the only other team in the conference which still stands a chance of taking it.
That team is the cage squad from the University of Nebraska. While attention has been focused on undefeated Missouri, and on winless Kansas the Cornhuskers have been quietly
the Cornhuskers have been quietly recuperating from their first loss and now are in second place, one game out of first.
The game will be played Saturday night at Columbia, and a capacity crowd is expected to see the second Tiger home game.
On the other side of the Saturday picture, the Kansas State Wildcats will make their last bid to stay in the conference race as they defend their home court against the Oklahoma Sooners.
Should the Oklahomaans be victorious, the Wildcats will be as far out of the picture as K.U., but if the Aggies win, the way will be open for Missouri to coast into a big lead by downing Nebraska.
Iowa State, pre-season doormat, still has a good chance, but two games next week, with Nebraska and Kansas, will severely test the Cyclone strength.
Kansas, with a gloomy outlook for the season, will take time out Monday to travel to Boulder for a revenge attempt on Colorado U.
The Buffaloes handed Kansas a 52-50 overtime defeat in Kansas City earlier this month, and the Jayhawkers have lost three straight conference games since that time.
After the meeting with the Bisons, the Jayhawkers will return home for games with Iowa State and Kansas State here.
BIG SIX STANDINGS
| W | L | Pct. | Pt. O.Pt. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Missouri | 3 | 0 | 1,000 | 118 | 101 |
| Nebraska | 2 | 1 | .667 | 118 | 150 |
| Iowa State | 1 | 1 | .500 | 76 | 76 |
| Oklahoma | 1 | 1 | .500 | 91 | 91 |
| Kansas State | 1 | 2 | .333 | 145 | 148 |
| Kansas | 3 | 0 | .000 | 127 | 137 |
RESULTS LAST WEEK
Missouri 43, Kansas State 42 (ot)
Nebraska 48, Kansas 46; Iowa State
51, Kansas State 40; Oklahoma 50;
Kansas 47.
CAMES THIS WEEK
Jan. 18—Nebraska at Missouri;
Oklahoma at Kansas State; Jan. 20—Nebraska at Iowa State; Kansas at Colorado; Jan. 24—Oklahoma at Kansas; Jan. 25—Missouri at Oklahoma.
Delta Tau Delta ran up the highest total of the night in defeating Sigma Nu. 39 to 28. Winslow of the Delt's tossed in 16 points to take scoring honors.
Kappa Sigma over Phi Kappa, 28 to 22; Westminster over 941 club, 2 to 0 (forfeit); Delta Upsilon over Smith hall, 24 to 16; Delta Chi over Pi Kappa Alpha, 27 to 23; Phi Kappa PSi "B" over Phi Kappa "B", 33 to 10; 941 club "B" over Sigma Alpha Epsilon "B", 23 to 17.
Low Scores Mark Intramural Results
Low scores predominated in intramural basketball games played Wednesday night. Only two teams hit the 30-point mark.
In the closest game of the night, the Live Five edged past the Newman club quintet by a score of 29 to 27. Burke of the Live Five and Michaels of the Newman club both hit the nets for 9 counters.
Intramural Schedule
6:30 Alpha Phi Alpha vs. Kappa Alpha Psi
Other results:
6:30 A.T.C. vs. The Crooks
7:30 Y.M.C.A.
Tonight:
7:30-Y.M.C.A. vs. Deuces Wild
7:30-Newman club vs. Wesley
foundation
9:00-10:00
8:30—1037 club vs. Spooner-Thayer
8:30—K.C. club vs. Smith hall
9:30—Der Funf vs. Phi Kappa
9:30—Rexall vs. Delta Tau
Leading Journalists Have Taught At K.U.
In its 35-year history the K. U. journalism department has had some of the nation's outstanding journalists as instructors.
Ben Hibbs who is now the editor of the Saturday Evening Post was an assistant instructor in the year of 1924-25. Also acting as assistant instructor that year was Chester Shaw who is now executive editor of the Newsweek magazine.
Merle Thorpe, who was the organizer of the department here in 1911, was until recently the editor of Nation's Business magazine. He is now public relations expert with the Cities Service corporation.
opportunity
Edward Doan who was at K. U.
from 1935 to 1938 has since been on
the staffs at Ohio and at Wisconsin
universities and has also been secretary
to the governor of Wisconsin.
Siegfried Mickelson, assistant professor here in 1940, is now head of the news department of station WCCO, Minneapolis, Minn.
Among those former teachers who are now at other universities are Frank Thayer, professor at Wisconsin university and Ivan Benson, at the school of journalism in the University of Southern California.
George Church, here from 1926 to 1928 and again in 1937, is now at Oklahoma University in the school of journalism. Albert Sutton, 1935, is now assistant professor of journalism at Northwestern.
Henry Ladd Smith and William Jensen, both here from 1938 to 1940 are now on the journalism staff at the University of Minnesota. Richard Eide who was also here then is now in the journalism department of Oklahoma A. and M. Verdun Daste, here in 1941, is now at Creighton University and Broderick Johnson, '44, is on the journalism staff at Svracue University.
A. M. Lee, assistant professor here from 134 to 1373, now heads the sociology department at Wayne university in Detroit.
College Basketball
Army 56, Williams 50.
Navy 71, Gettysburg 38.
Carnegie Tech 51, Case 43.
Potomac State 66, Davis Elkins 64.
Chicago U. 59, Illinois Tech 32.
Rhode Island State 96, Brown 71.
Penn State 52, Bucknell 45.
Illinois State Normal 49, Illinois Vesleyan 47.
Cincinnati 53, Miami (Ohio) 46,
Westminster 57, Waynesburg 46;
Washington & Jefferson 65, Mus-
ingum 59.
Washington 69, Idaho 49.
Wartburg 58, Wisconsin Tech 42.
M.I.T. 71, Northeastern 51.
Trinity 64, Amherst 46.
Butler 56, Western Reserve 53.
Colgate 59, Rochester 45.
Cornell 39, Canius 36.
Ottawa 70, Wesleyan 70, Wittenberg 67.
South Carolina 62, Citadel 35.
Ottawa 51, Baker U. 47.
Duke 65, Wake Forest 32.
Texas 56, Southern Methodist 36.
Vermont 64, Norwich 40.
Delaware 60, Haverford 53.
Wesleyan 52, Springfield 45.
Rutgers 85, Lehigh 53.
St. Louis U. 52, Georgetown 42.
Columbia 50, Yale 39.
Seton Hall college 70, Providence
Seton Hall college 70, Providence college 44.
college 44
Muhamburg 47, Lafayette 40.
St Joseph's 56 Peen 52.
American International 65, Worcester Tech 55.
cester teen 50.
Iona 68, Brooklyn Cathedral 48.
Baylor 59, Texas A. & M. 51.
Missouri Mines 82, Scott Field 67.
Kansas City. (UP)—The Fort Hays teachers, with two wins in as many starts in C.I.C. play, move into the northeastern corner of the circuit this weekend for games Friday night with Washburn and Saturday night with St. Benedicts.
Fort Hays First In League Play
Southwestern plays the College of Emporia tonight and Pittsburg entertains the touring University of Mexico team. Emporia plays host to the fast Kansas City Rockhurst team in the only other non-conference game tomorrow night to round out the week's schedule.
The standings:
W L Pct.
Fort Hays 2 0 1.000
Emporia 1 0 1.000
Pittsburg 1 1 .500
Washburn 1 1 .500
St. Benedict's 0 2 .000
Jay Janes May Attend K.U.-M.U. Basketball Game
The Jay James will go to Columbia for the ball game with Missouri if tickets are available, they decided Wednesday. Wilda Hosler, fine arts junior, was appointed chairman for the "March of Dimes" campaign.
Quack Club To Meet
Quack club, women's swimming organization, will have its regular meeting at 7:45 tonight in Robinson gymnasium. There will be one meeti meeting this semester.
DE LUXE CAFE
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
28 YEARS OF SERVICE
Same Location-Same Management
You Are Welcome 711 Mass.
Gustafson
THE COLLEGE JEWELER
Students' Jewelry Store 42 Years 809 MASS.
Forget Something?
Could it be the right gift for that special birthday or anniversary? You can always find a gift of lasting distinction when you shop at-
ROBERTS Jewelry and Gifts 833 Mass. Phone 827
SUNNYSIDE RESIDENTS
We can supply all your needs for Floor Coverings and Household Furnishings
Our Policy Is—"THE MOST FOR YOUR MONEY"
Free Delivery
Easy Terms
STARLING FURNITURE COMPANY
928 Mass.
JANUARY 16,1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Columbia
assouri if
decided
fine arts
man for
eign.
Your Daily Kansan Reaches Another Milestone University Newspaper Outstanding Among U.S. Campus Publications
★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★★
UNIVERSITY OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA
Tyrojan
Cold. Monday, Nov. 18, 1946
TEST OPEN HOMECOMING
E DAILY ILLINI
THE DAHY TEXAN
AUSTIN, TEXAS, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 19. 1946
The Utah Chronicle
Purdue Exponent
VOL. 14 NO. 14
UNIVERSITY OF UTAN, SALT LAKE CITY, UTAN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1948
BOSTON UNIVERSITY N
Fuzz Fest Comes Off at 8 OREGON Daily EMERALD
BOSTON UNIVERSITY N
Nov. 6, 2012 BOSTON, MASS.
IOWA STATE DAILY STUDENT
KANSAN STUDENT MEMBERPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS "We Ate Up The Food, Transportation, Laundry, Cigarette, In Fact We Ate Up The Budget
The Ate Up The Budget Again,' Said The Veteran
BROAD, Transportation, Laundry, Cigarettes, In Fact
(AP)
(NOW) MAY 12, 2015
[THE UNIVERSITY OF KANBAS]
BROAD, Transportation, Laundry, Cigarettes, In Fact
(NOW) MAY 12, 2015
[THE UNIVERSITY OF KANBAS]
Mick
Hambro To Talk
In Convocation
We are pleased to announce that the following individuals will be participating in the Hambro To Talk In Convocation:
1. Dr. Emily Farnsworth - President and CEO of Hambro
2. Dr. John Doe - Vice President of Convocation
3. Dr. Sarah Jones - Assistant Director of Convocation
4. Dr. Michael Brown - Chief Operating Officer of Hambro
5. Dr. Alexandra Johnson - Vice President of Operations
6. Dr. William Smith - Senior Vice President of Operations
Please join us on Monday, November 7th from 9:00 AM to 12:00 PM at the Henderson Auditorium at The University of Texas at Austin. We are looking forward to having you join us in this important event.
Please contact us if you have any questions or need further information.
Hambro To Talk In Convocation
Jayhawkers Confident But Can... As They Journey To K-State
CAB RU 25 For School
Number of the elementary school
81 (R.I.) High School
93 (M.I.) College
67 (Kansas State)
More
OF THE
BILLY CREEK
BERNELLEY CALIFORNIA COUNTY
The University Daily Kansan is one of the best campus newspapers in this country. Ben Hibbs, Editor Saturday Evening Post.
The Kansan is a useful newspaper which has made constant improvement since its beginning thirty five years ago. Roy A. Roberts, Managing Editor Kansas City Star.
This.
The Kansan is a well put together newspaper with good advertising. Chet Shaw, Executive Editor Newsweek.
Buys Fire
Baylor Lar
I salute the staff of a good college newspaper. Earl J. Johnson, General News Manager United Press Associations.
Orryon TICKETS DRAKE
"Wear his old perfume. Check that you never make it."
andscapist 'Billy'
'entured from
Snow Tomorrow:
Forecaster Predicts
Continuing WB Diperson
Home for Forecast Y-Call
The HYFCAFTA
Industry WB Report
To McCook Home Today
NORTHWESTER
The Reveil
ALL-AMERICAN
VOL. 51, NO. 14
U.S.A. BATTON ROF. GA. TUESDAY OCT. 27, 1966
The Height
ORTHWESTER
The Reveil
ALL-AMERICAN
Vol. 31 No. 1 L.S.U. BATON ROUGE LA TUESDAY OCT. 27 1906
L.C.C. 75 Nom.
THE VARSITY
THE UNIVERSITY OF TOURTO
Monthly
THE VARSITY
THE UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO
Survey Canada
Rocky Mountain Collegian
School Activities Fete Is Tod
E OKLAHOMA DAILY
A Student Newspaper Serving the University of Oklahoma
The Missouri Student
COLUMBIA. MISSOURI WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1948 NUMBER 8
Student UN Conference Opens 22 Finalists Main Speaker
Principal Speaker In Lake Success Secretariat Aide
NUMBER 5
Delayed
al Set-Up;
ion Unites
manager of the safety formed
rosh Senate
E INDIANA DAILY STUDIO
INDIANA UNIVERSITY SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1946 BLOOMINGTON, ILL.
INDIANA UNIVERSITY SAT I DUEY, NOVEMBER 16. 1944
WED
PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 16, 1947
Kansan Comments.
35 Years Here
Today the Daily Kansan begins its 36th year of continuous publication as a daily newspaper on the campus of the University. Many things have changed in the Daily Kansan's history, but its policies remain fundamentally the same.
During these 35 years of service to University students, many men who are now executives on small-town, city, and metropolitan newspapers and national magazines have received training while publishing the official student paper. Through these years the Daily Kansan has both informed students and reflected their ideas.
It is neutral in politics, both on and off the campus, but makes every effort to keep its readers informed of political affairs.
Policies of the Daily Kansan are the result of these 35 years of publishing experience. The Daily Kansan supports all moves for bettering student conditions and all actions to further good student government, always tempering its support with the realization that a slow steady progressive campaign is better than radical jerking, spasmic efforts.
The editorial department presents criticism, comment, and opinion on campus and off-campus issues. Criticism of organizations and groups, including the University administration, is not denied—providing the criticism is well-founded and fair, and providing that those criticized are given an opportunity to reply at the same time they are criticized.
The Daily Kansan maintains a semi-conservative tone in display of news and editorial material and strives for dignity of expression and appearance. The major emphasis of its news and editorial departments is on complete coverage of University events, but it reserves space for a summary of off-campus events.
Letters to the editor are printed providing they are signed, that they do not violate laws of libel and good taste. Letters are always subject to editing to comply with space requirements.
All matters of public record which have news value are published on the basis of news value. Information given to groups of sufficient size or in such a manner as to become general knowledge is not considered confidential information. Every effort is made to obtain information and permission of publication from the original source.
The staff members of the Daily Kansasan do not "play at" publishing a daily newspaper for several reasons:
ONE: They recognize that the Daily Kansan is considered the voice of the University by those who are not on the campus. Stunt issues, radical biased articles, unfair criticism—these journalistic tricks, while entertaining, are not worthy of a
The University Daily Kansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland District College, Collegiate Press, Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave, New York, NY 10017.
Managing Editor Charles Roos
Assst. Managing Editor Jane Anderson
Makeup Editor Billie Marie Hamilton
Business Manager Bill Donovan
Advertising Manager Margery Handy
Circulation Manager John McCormick
Administrative Manager Marcella Stewart
Asst. Telegraph Ed. Marcella Stewart
City Editor R. T. Kingman
newspaper which represents to many the 9,000 students here at K.U.
TWO: They realize it is a big business, a $40,000-a-year business, which depends on advertising and subscription receipts to pay expenses. The Daily Kansan receives no funds from the state.
FOUR: They realize that they must so conduct the Daily Kansan that it will be at least as good when they pass on the reins of management as it was when they took over. They realize that staff members will change, student bodies will change, even faculty and administration will change, but the Daily Kansan will remain an integral part of the University of Kansas.
THREE: They face daily all the problems of management,policy production, personnel and expense common to any daily newspaper.
Conversion
Tuesday night the All Student Council officially put its stamp of approval on the memorial drive and campanile. At the same time a committee was appointed to work with the director of the campaign to give students more information regarding the drive.
According to the drive's sponsors, the more a person learns about the memorial, the more he likes the idea. They claim that persons formerly against the memorial drive and campanile, after they have had full information presented to them, either become supporters of the memorial or at least do not oppose it any longer.
It is probably no secret that at one time there was being formed an organization of students to change the selection of a memorial to those students who served in World War II. The leaders of that embryo organization then started inquiring into the selection of the memorial and learned enough so that they about-faced and are now backers of the drive and campanile.
Some students on the campus still are saying, "I don't like that road or bat-roost." It is the hope and belief of the drive's backers that they, too, will become converted as soon as they learn more about the memorial.
Jaytalking ---
It wasn't a surprise when the Slobbovian Stomp was moved to the Union building from the stage of Hoch auditorium. The change probably wouldn't have been made had the dance been named "The Viennese Waltz" or the "Shangri La Shuffle."
Economists remind us of the oldbum whose mustache had been smeared with limbburger cheese while he slept. He sniffed to the right and then to the left and remarked, "The whole darned world stinks."
A sorority, one cynic says, is a group of girls living together in a house with a single purpose—to get more girls to live together in a house with a single purpose.
One freshman student says the reason he likes his pen which writes under water is that now when his themes always were too dry.
One way to catch "Jack the Snipper" is for Washington police to be on the lookout for a bald-headed man sporting a new multi-colored toupee.
The new secretary of state does not lay claim to infallibility. In 1940 he and his staff estimated they would need six Flying Forts to whip Germany.
Burrs In The Saddle
LABOR
LEGISLATION
BUDGET
BALANCING
TAXATION
Daniel Bishop in St. Louis Star-Times
Dear Editor----
'Stern Equal Of Heifetz'
I wonder what the author of the sophomoric diatribe against the University concert course thinks now after Isaac Stern's magnificent recital? Not the equal of Heifetz? Technically Stern proved himself his equal and emotionally his superior.
Our young Huneke seems to be seduced by big names. For that matter, the luminaries he cites, with the exception of two, have all appeared on the concert course. In fact, Lawrence heard such artists as Tibbett, H turbi, and Anderson long before they became household words.
It is amazing that our critic should accuse Gladys Swarthout of the one sin she is conspicuously not guilty of, flatting. One of Miss Swarthout's chief claims to excellence is her uncannily accurate intonation. Our Nestor must have Swarthout confused with another celbrated lady, Lily Pons, who is a chronic flatter.
As to Dupre, why shouldn't a composer perform his own works if he believes in them? How else is he to get them before the public?
Our crusader is bothered about the "world's greatest opera" label applied to "Hansel and Gretel." That is mere press agent's hyperbole which the worldly-wise know how balances the gravity of salt. However, competent authorities have not hesitated to place "Hansel" among the greatest operas.
Our young St. George should have waited until the end of the season before passing judgment on the current concert course.
As to the Icelandic chorus, what did our critic expect besides nationalistic music by a nationalistic group?
Women, Need A Room?
Geology Students Attend Engineering Convention
University instructor and music critic
About 20 graduate students and members of the faculty of the geology department will attend the mid-continent area regional convention of the American Association of Petroleum Engineers in Wichita, today and tomorrow. They will hear technical reports on current geophysical methods and meet with men now engaged in geological work.
A limited number of vacancies exist in Miller and Watkins women's residence halls for the Spring semester. Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, announced today. Women whose scholarship and financial needs warrant consideration and who are interested should contact Miss Habein immediately.
Seattle (UP)—Raymond E. Bakken found his house doors locked, climbed his rainy roof, slipped, fell across a narrow area into his neighbor's bedroom window, and ended up in the hospital.
Rough Journey
Student Board Directs Daily Kansan
The Kansan board, composed entirely of students, chooses the chief executives of the Daily Kansan, approves the appointments of the rest of the staff, and determines, in cooperation with the faculty, general policies.
The board elects students to membership from a list of candidates submitted by a committee consisting of an equal number of faculty members and board members. Juniors and seniors are eligible for membership, and a sophomore with newspaper experience and a faculty recommendation may be elected. The board consists of from 15 to 19 members.
The editor-in-chief, managing editor, business manager, and advertising manager automatically become board members because of their positions. Faculty members attend meetings but have no voting power.
Meetings are held bi-monthly, with special meetings called by the chair-
Members of the board are Jane Anderson, chairman; Annabelle Saylor, secretary; Billie Hamilton James Gunn, William Haage, Charles Roos, Margery Handy, William Donovan, Marian Minor, Martha Jewett, Reverdy Mullins, William Smith, Alamada Bollier, Edward Swain, Dixie Gilliball, Anne Scott, Bill Sims, Grace Mullenburg, Jack Werts, and Marcella Stewart.
A.P.O. Will Meet Tonight
Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, will meet at 8 tonight in 101, Snow hall. Discussion is planned on the March of Dimes participation and final decisions are expected on meeting organization.
WURLITZER PHONOGRAPHS
FOR PARTY RENTALS
Used Juke Box Records For Sale
John H. Emick
1014 Mass. Phone 343
GUARANTEED WATCH REPAIRING
LAUTER JEWELRY
10-Day to 2-Week Service
ALSO ENGRAVING
A COMPLETE JEWELRY STORE
Between Tenn. and Ohio on 14th
411 W. 14th St. Phone 307
Official Representative of L. G. BALFOUR CO.
Sunflower Ball
Jimmy Holyfield AND COMBO
Friday, Jan. 17
9 to 12
Tickets on Sale at Business Office $1.25 per Couple
5
JANUARY 16, 1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
Classified Advertising Rates
25 words or less additional words
age Three Five day days days 35c 65c 90c 1c 2c 3c
Lost
OVERCATO: Brown, size 38. Was accidentally exchanged at Dine-A-Mite Friday evening for coat of similar color. George McCarthy at 1106 for message.
BILLFOLD: Black, red trim, Name engraved in gold on inside, Jola Markle. Lost Saturday night. Finder please leave at Daily Kansen office or call 2357 M.-16
GOLD Sheaffer pencil, striped brown and black. Lost between Cottage and Corbin. Finder please call Virginia Roesler. 860. Reward. -16-
LARGE Silver King with jade set. Please
notify Kansan office.
-16.
BROWN Billfold lost Saturday night at
theatre. Call P. A. Frowner
$38. Rewards
Granada theatre. Call P. A. Frowker.
348. Reward. -16
BROWN Sheaffer life-time pen between
Bork strong. Helen Hastings
engraved on his Pen. Reward. Return.
Dally Kansan office. -17
GOLD Bulloa ladies wrist watch with
black band December 18. Please call
415
firm. Reward. -18
BAHU
PAIR Of colorless rimmed glasses in blue
For Sale
case. Phone 2830-W. Reward.
PRACTICALLY New ladies dresses, suits,
sweaters, shoes and clothing 1 mh's suit size 37. 1 mh's suit suit
a sport coat size 39. Reasonably priced for
sale. Sale C2734-W anytime after
3 p.m.
STUDENTS: We are ready to sell your lighting needs. See us for approved IES, student lamps. Price $7.95 including 150-volt lamps. Kansas Electric Power.-16. *Mos.*
NAVAL Officers Dress Blues. Good condition. Size, coat 36, trousers 32. See Jones, McCook Hall. Under east side of stadium. Enter under section LM.
2 BROWN sport coats, 39 chest. Never
18 MAYA sport coat in Schulz's Tailor Swe
924 Mase. St.
9 M-M LUGER Ammunition. All accept American made. Pay half down and down. All take the same. Jack Meeker. 2124 Mass. Phone 1560. 1 New Buesher Aristocrat aristat sax. $175; Small combo dance arrangements; Charvos drawing set $5. Phone T39-W. Ford, Radio theater. Good tenns. Ford bridger gets it. 1537. Great tenns. Highest bridger gets it. 1537. -17-
MEN'S clean clothes. Black chinchilla overcoat. 1 suit. 1 coat vest and extra
- trousers. 32x 33. Bargain for quick sale.
1104 New Jersey. -e75
1104 New Jersey. -17
1103 Chevrolet. 4-door sedan. Good condition. Call Bill Brewer or Harlan Call Bill. Phone 3010. -17
One SET of two truck beds. See Dean Gilley. 1104 Massachusetts. -17
CheVROLET 4-door Master Deluxe. Price reasonable. Lane P. Apt. 109, Sunflower Village. -20
Bilder. Vintage. 1940 Ford station wagon. Make me J. Bob Foster, phone 2273-J. 1832 Mass.
Wanted
MEMBERS For flying club or will sell interest in 46 T-craft. No students. Calvin Cooley. 1142 Ind. Phone 3335. -16 SLIDE RULE log du log expetr trig or deirig Keuffel Esser. Call Baker at 1987 after 2, or come to 530 Louisiana. -16
FOLLOWING have been found and may be had at Kansan office by identifying; Fountain pens, Evershars, ring, 2 bracelets, earnmurs, glove, glasses, keys, billfold wallet, notebook, spiral notebook, slide rule, and partial plate containing 2 teeth. Please claim. 16-
Found
Transportation
HUDSON - RENT A- CAR SERVICE
Will rent you a car by day or weekend.
Reservations taken. Phone 3315. Location 601 Vermont. -28-
Business Services
VACANCY For two children in Nursery school. Whole or half days. Prefer two year olds. Experienced teacher. Phone 3402-J. -17-
INCOME TAX Service. I am preparing
my taxes at a moderate rate.
My fifth year in this job, I will
day or in the evenings and ask for
a birth record for information or an ap-
puntment.
*FYPING:* Let a veterian's wife type your term papers. Neat and accurate. Phone 1673W or by dny 942 New Hampshire, 20-TYPING:* Prompt service, reasonableirm. Phone 1186-R. -21-MOTTS KU staff offers free transport to and from campus andstables. For riding reservations, phone-21-or 1019.
TWIPING. Term papers and reports. Done
probably and promptly. Phone 61-
61-M.
ATTENTION, Medical Students, microscopes, colorimeters, balances, engineering instruments cleaned and repaired. ten years' experience. Call Victor 9218. Instruments Service company, 720 Delaware, Kansas City 6. - 27. Free estimates.
PHOTO-EXACT Copies, discharge and valuable papers. Fast service. Low price. Inc. Ag Co. 801, Mass. Lawrence, Kansas, or Lane P, Apt. 18, flower, Kansas.
FOR that coke date remember the Eid-
eal pharmacy at 701 Mass., phone
919
COURT HOUSE LUNCH
Meals - Short Orders
Sandwiches
Open 5:30-12:30
TOAST TO HEALTH
WHEN ALL THE FAMILY DRINK OUR PURE MILK AT MEALS.
LAWRENCE SANITARY
TOAST TO HEALTH
WHEN ALL THE FAMILY DRINK OUR PURE MILK AT MEALS.
LAWRENCE SANITARY Milk and Ice Cream Co.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
PETER WATSON
WALTER S. GIFFORD
President of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company, Started as a clerk with the Western Electric Company in 1904.
PETER SCHWABER
CHESTER L BARNARD
CHESTER T. BARNARD
President of the New Jersey Bell Telephone Company.
Started with the Bell System as
a clerk in Boston in 1909.
WILLIAM C. BOLENIUS
President of the Wisconsin
phone Company. First
phone job was in New York
City as a traffic inspector in 1921.
J. H.
ALLERTON E. BROOKS
President of the Southern New England Telephone Company. Started as engineer's assistant in New Haven in 1911.
D. J. BRYANT
VICTOR E. COOLEY
President of the Southwestern Bell Telephone Company. Started his telephone career as a clerk in San Francisco in 1911.
HAL S. DUMAS
President of the Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Company. Started as a traffic student in Atlanta in 1911
A. H. BURNS
in Atlanta in 1911.
RANDOLPH EIDE
President of The Ohio Bell Telephone Company. First telephone job was as a special inspector in New York in 1911.
THE ELEPHANT
JOE F. HARRELL
JOE E. HARRELL
President of the New England
Telephone and Telegraph Compa-
sure Association, a
clerk in Atlanta in 1913.
WILLIAM A. HUGHES
Up
HONES
President of the Indian Bank
Telephone Company. A great
telephone company as a ground
man in Kansas City in 1917,
RUSSELL J. HOPLEY President of the Northwestern Bell Telephone Company, St. Louis, Missouri Madison, Iowa, in 1915.
from
Up from
PETER W. BURKE
the
These are presidents of operating telephone companies of the Bell System. They all started at the bottom of the ladder...Nine years ago the Bell System first published an advertisement like this, except that there are now thirteen new faces in the pictures. These new presidents also started at the bottom.
Ranks
One of its traditions is that its executives come up from the ranks. That has been true of the business for many years and nowhere is it better illustrated than in the careers of the men who now serve as presidents of Bell Telephone Companies. As a group, they have put in 611 years of telephone service, an average of 36 years each.
★ ★ ★
The Bell System aims to keep the opportunity for advancement open to all.
Name
PRESIDENTS
*William C. Bolenius
*Allerton F. Brooks
Walter S. Gifford
Chester I. Barnard
*Victor E. Cooley
OF BELL TELEPHONE COMPANIES
*Hal S. Dumas
Randolph Eide
*Joe E. Harrell
Company
*Russell J. Hopley
*William A. Hughes
*Thomas N. Lacy
Amer.Tel. & Tel. Co New Jersey Bell Tel. Co
Wisconsin Tel. Co.
Southern New England
Tel. Co.
*H. Randolph Maddox
*Graham K.
McCorkle
*Floyd P. Ogden
*Mark R. Sullivan
*Carl Whitmore
Philip C. Staples
Southwestern Bell Tel. Co.
Southern Bell Tel.
& Tel. Co.
Ohio Bell Tel. Co New England Tel. Tel. Co
Northwestern Bell
Tel. Co.
Pacific Tel. & Tel.Co.
New York Tel. Co.
Mountain States Tel.& Tel. Co
Date Place of Start
1904 Chicago
1909 Boston
1921 New York City
1921 New Haven
1911 San Francisco
1911 Atlanta
AND THEIR FIRST JOBS
1904 Chicago
1909 Boston
1911 New York City 1913 Atlanta
First Pay
1915 Fort Madison, Ia
1917 Kansas City 1905 Philadelphia
$28 week
$12 week
1902 Eminence, Ky.
1911 Kansas City, Mo
1921 Washington,D.C.
1904 Baltimore
First Job
$60 montl
Clerk, Payroll Dept.
Clerk
$50 month
Traffic Inspector Engineer's Assistant
1912 San Francisco
1910 San Francisco
$15 week
$14 week
50 month Traffic Stud
Clerk
$40 month Collector
Special Inspector
Clerk
$60 month Ground Man
$10 week Installer
$30 week
Office Boy
Student Engineer
140 month Student-Clerk
$12 week Salesman
$50 month Clerk
$65 month Field Man
BROADWAY
(NAVY AIR)
President of the Bell
Telephone Company. With Bell
System since 1906. Started in
Philadelphia an appl. designer.
THOMAS N. LACY
$ ^{*} $ Asterisks indicate new presidents since December, 1937.
H. RANDOLPH MADDOX
President of the Cheapeake and Potomac Telephone Companies started, student yourself,
H. RANDOLPH MADDOX
BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM
GRAHAM K. McCORKLE
President of the Illinois Bell Telephone Company Started with an idea to make phones in Eminess, Ky., in 1902.
GRAHAM K. McCORLE
FLOYD P. OGDEN
President of the Manhattan
States Telephone and Telegraph
Company, Started as student-
hip in Kansas City in 1911.
PHILIP C. STAPLES
President of the Bell Telephone
Company of Pennsylvania.
Saleman to Belleville in 1904,
salesman in Baltimore in 1904.
BELL SYSTEMS
INTERNATIONAL MARKETING
GROUP
1920
MARK R. SULLIVAN
MARK R. SULLIVAN
President of the Pacific Telephone and Telegraph Company.
Started in San Francisco in 1912.
---
PETER D. BURKLEY
CARL WHITMORE
CARL WHITMORE
President of the New York Tele-
phone Company, CellSpa-
tement San Francisco asa
a field man in 1910.
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 16, 1947
Talmadge Seizes Governor's Post; Arnall's Office Is Capitol Rotunda
Atlanta. (UP)—Herman Talmadge, elected governor of Georgia by the state legislature, seized the main executive offices today and barred the door to Gov. Ellis Arnall, who denounced him as a "pretender, intruder and usurper" who is claiming the office "by the law of inheritance."
Governor Talmadge, elected early Wednesday by the state legislature took over the office while Governor Arnall was at his home in Newman Washington Studies
Arthur was at his home in Newhall.
Governor Arnall walked briskly into the capitol, headed for his office.
He knocked four or five times at the closed door of an outer office and was finally admitted by state a state trooper. But he did not get into the inner sanctum immediately.
From the private office of the governor, Mr. Talmadge emerged in a few moments, a forelock of black hair dangling down over his eyes just like his late father.
He grasped a radio microphone and said:
"Ellis Arnall, who alleges he is the governor, must await his turn to see the governor of Georgia."
In a fighting statement soon afterward, Mr. Arnall said:
"I came to the capitol alone to go to my office. When I got there the door was locked. I was finally admitted to the ante room of my office and I found that the door to the governor's office had been barred against me. The secretary said I could not go in."
Governor Arnall, after unsuccessful attempts to get in to see Governor Talmadge, returned to the capitol rotunda adjoining the offices and set up his own headquarters. It was a move similar to that taken by Governor Talmadge when he was first elected. But now, the situation was reversed.
In the center of the rotunda, there is a desk, surrounded by a 20 square footguard rail. A receptionist usually sits there. Governor Arnall took this desk, laid out some papers, and began busily writing.
State Troopers guarded the doors
to the executive offices when Gov-
ernor Bush visited.
"As governor of Georgia I have taken complete charge of the executive office at the state capitol. The functions of the governor's office are proceeding in a firm and peaceable manner. No force or violence has been necessary to assume control of my office." Mr. Talmadge said.
"I have made several appointments of department heads who have assumed control of their departments and they are functioning in accordance with the law." Governor Talmadge said in his statement.
"I am following the instructions of the legislature. It would be ridiculous to have two governors sit on the capitol. There will be but one."
Governor Talmadge said today that he had not yet been served with papers in the suit which will be heard at McDonough county seat of the governor's home county of Henry.
"The right of the general assembly to elect me governor is inviolable," Mr. Talmadge said. "For any court to rule otherwise would be an encouragement by the judiciary on the legislative branch of the government."
Governor Arnall's suit declaring Mr. Talmadge not entitled to the governorship was filed in Fulton (Atlanta) county superior court but is not to be heard until Feb. 7.
UMW Studies Ford Cut In Prices For Wage Cue
Detroit (UP)—Leaders of the United Automobile workers (CIO) studied the Ford motor company's "anti-inflation" price cut today to detrime its effect on future union wage demands.
Henry Ford II, president of the Ford Company, announced the price cut—ranging from $17 to $54, according to model—last night and he hoped other manufacturers would make similar reductions.
Mr. Ford described the action as "shock treatment" to halt "the insane spiral of mounting costs and rising prices."
German Club To Meet
The German club will meet at 4:30 p.m. today in 402, Frasher hall.
Washington Studies Georgia Battle
Washington. (UP) — Secretary of War Robert P. Patterson disclosed today that the war and justice departments are consulting to determine what the federal government should do, if anything, in connection with Georgia's governor trouble.
It was understood that officials are particularly concerned over what role the government would have to play if the gubernatorial struggle between Ellis Arnall and Herman Talmadge should develop into violence.
Kansan Alumni Achieve Fame
Twenty-five years ago the editor of the University Daily Kansan was Ben Hibbs, present editor of the Saturday Evening Post.
Mr. Hibbs received his master's degree with a major in journalism at the University in 1924, and filled positions on several Kansas dailies before joining the staff of the Kansas City Star. From the Star he went on to the Country Gentleman and to his present position on the Post.
Similar to Mr. Hibbs' career are those of some 20 other K. U. Journals.
The late William Allen White of Emporia tops the list of former students along with the late Raymond Clapper, Washington columnist, who attended K. U. in 1916.
Liewellley B. White, '23, co-author of "Peoples Speaking to Peoples", Miles W. Vaughn, '15, Far East manager of United Press in Shanghai; Chester Shaw, '24, executive editor of Newsweek magazine; Earl Johnson, general news manager and vice-president of United Press; and Roy Roberts, managing editor of the Kansas City Star, are some of the early journalism students at K U.
Floyd Huckenhull, '20, publisher of Circulation Management magazine; Karl Koerper, '22, general manager of station KMBC, Kansas City, Mo.; William R. "Bill" Downs, CBS foreign correspondent; Alfred G. Hill, publisher of the Chester, Pa. Times; Theodore Alford, Washington correspondent for the Kansas City Star; Oscar Stauffer, president of Stauffer Publications chain of daily newspapers.
Robert H. Reed, editor of the Country Gentleman was news editor of the Daily Kansan in 1917, the year of his graduation. Wesley W. Stout, former editor of the Saturday evening Post, was a student at K. U. in 1906-07.
Another well-known writer, Jerome Beatty, once studied at K. U. Doris Fleeson, '23, is writing a Washington column and J. Alan Coogan is Brazil manager of United Press.
Other leading graduates and former students include;
Marvin Creager, executive editor of the Milwaukee Journal; Harlan Thompson, playwright; Bert Brandt. acme Acme war photographer; Louis LaCross, editor of the editorial page of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat; and at least 30 publishers of Kansas newspapers.
Speaks To Y.M.-Y.W.
"The first law of nature is that of preservation of species, not self preservation," Dr. Calvin Vander-Werf, associate professor of chemistry, declared at an informal discussion on "The Law of Science and the Law of Christian Love" in Myers hall Wednesday night to Y.M.-Y.W. Religious Emphasis committee.
Special Court On Traffic Cases
The student court will have a special session from 4 to 5 p.m. Friday to handle excess traffic cases, student prosecutor William McEhenny, said today.
The court was unable to hear all the cases Tuesday because of the large number of persons contesting traffic tickets. It will meet in the business office in Frank Strong hall.
175 Students Finish Reading Course
One hundred seventy-five students have completed a course in reading improvement given by the School of Education, Dr. Bert A. Nash, supervisor of the program, has announced.
The course is given in 16 and 18 Fraser hall to students who voluntarily seek improvements of their reading and study habits. It includes complete diagnosis followed by conferences and tests designed to help each person overcome his difficulties. Tests are given on comprehension vocabulary, and speed of reading.
Motion pictures are taken of the individual's reading habits to determine how his eyes move during the process. The students difficulties are outlined, the recommendations are made as to what he can do to overcome them.
"Comprehension increases about an average of 10 to 15 percentile levels," said Dr. Nash. "The reading rate is usually increased around 100 words per minute."
Two important steps toward effective reading are in reducing the number of pauses and the duration of those pauses in the course of reading a sentence. Dr. Nash explained. An effort is also made to improve the individual's vocabulary, which normally has a speaking low of 3,000 words to a reading high of about 40,000 words, he said.
The reading laboratories were started in 1938, suspended during the war, and begun again this fall.
"We have had more students than we have been able to handle this semester," he said. "We are holding several of them over to next semester; others we simply won't be able to handle."
Staff members of the reading clinic include Cree Warden, graduate student; Joseph Holly, graduate student; and Richard S. Kirk, business junior.
Alpha Phi Omega will meet at 8 tonight in 101 Snow hall. Important meeting. All members should plan to attend.
Deutscher Verein heute um 4:30,
in 402 Fraser.
Y. W.C.A. Community Service commission will meet at 4 today at Henley house.
Official Bulletin
Expectant mothers may see three State Board of Health films at a pre-natal conference at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the classroom above the Lawrence Community building lobby.
Expectant Mothers Can See Films
串串串
The doctor said today that Dubie is "doing as well as can be expected, although there is still a chance of infection."
W. A.A. meeting at 7 tonight in Robinson gymnasium. All members requested to be present to elect delegates to national convention. Initiation immediately preceding the meeting for those not present at last initiation. Those unable to attend the meeting tonight may vote at the cage downstairs Friday morning before noon.
Kappa Phi To Initiate
A. V.C. meeting at 7:30 tonight in 106 Green hall. Prof. L. J. Pritchard will speak on "Atomic Energy—Some Political and Economic Aspects." All veterans welcome.
- * *
Kappa Phi, Methodist sorority,
will hold initiation services at 7 p.m.
Friday at the Methodist church.
"Here is China," a U.S. government film, will be shown by Y.W.-C.A. movie forum at 4 today in Visual Education projection room in 15 Fraser. Dr. Harold G. Barr of the School of Religion will lead a short discussion on China and her future.
Like most dogs, Dubbe Van AceDarr, reddish-colored Boxer, who belongs to Garvin W. Hale, College senior, is allergic to cats.
Jan. 16, 1947
The films to be shown are "Motherhood, Life's Most Important Job," "Clocking a Champion," and "Your Child's Dental Care."
Eight Fine Arts Pupils Play For Student Recital Today
--car
mu
mu
Tuesday night he spotted a passing feline on the opposite side of the street, and couldn't resist the urge to give chase. As he dashed across the street, a car struck him, crushing a rib and puncturing his lung.
Eight students and a faculty member of the School of Fine Arts were to have participated in a recital at 3 p.m. today in Frank Strong auditorium.
That allergy nearly cost Dubhe his life.
Dubhe Hit By Car
They are Delloyd Tibbs, Anabel Keeler, Nancy Messenger, Jay Grimm, Mary Lucas, Jack Moehlenkamp, Marvin Zoschke, John Ehrich, and Martin Margaret Dunn, instructor of piano.
Potucek is A Senator, Too
Topcka. (UP) — Being the only Democratic senator has its short-comings. So revealed Sen. John Potuecke of Wellington. The senator was stopped at the door of the senate chamber of an uninitiated doorman who refused him entry. A friend came to Senator Potuecke's aid, identifying him as a bona fide member of the senate.
London. (UP)—The 10-day strike of London transport workers was settled today when delegates of the strikers voted to return to work Saturday.
London Strike Settled
Pi Tau Sigma meeting for all pledges at 5 p.m. tomorrow in 205 Marvin.
心 心 心
Modern Chior will meet at 7:36 tonight in Frank Strong auditorium
Christian Science organization will hold its regular weekly meeting at 7:30 tonight in Danforth Chapel. Members of the faculty and students invited to attend.
El Ateno will meet at 7:15 tonight in 113 Frank Strong. Program of dialogues, poems and songs to be put on by students of Dr. Samuels.
The All Student Council has declared a vacancy to be filled by a representative of the Pachacamac party from District II, the Engineering school. Petitions must be filed with the secretary of the A.S.C. not later than Jan. 27.
Physical Therapy club will have a social meeting at 7 p.m. Monday at Watkins hospital classroom.
Seniors interested in an investment banking career in New York should arrange for interview Jan 25 with Wingate Bixby, vice president of the Discount Corp., New York City. This is an opportunity. See Frank Pinet, Business Placement Bureau, 212 Frank Strong.
New Political Party Names Pomeroy Head
124
DONALD POMEROY
All officers have the power to issue membership cards under the existing setup. In order to prevent members of the opposing parties from having any chance to vote, each new member's name is to be placed before the group, and if any affiliation with the opponents is known, he is to be expelled.
The newly-formed Progressive political party held its first organizational meeting Wednesday night and elected Donald Pomeroy, College senior, president; Jean Moore, College senior, vice-president; John Rader, business junior, and Fred Thomas, College freshman, vice-presidents; Jack Elliott, College sophomore, secretary; and Jay Humphreys, engineering sophomore, treasurer.
These officers were elected mainly for organizational purposes. Another election will be held March 1.
These men fill the vacancies left by Glen Kappelman, Sigma Phi Epsilon, and Jay Humphreys, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, when their fraternities left Pachacamac to join the Progressive party.
William Miller, College junior, and Clifford Kaarbo, engineering senior, have elected secretary and treasurer of the Pachacamac party.
In the meantime a constitutional committee is to be chosen and will begin work on the party constitution.
It was decided the officers would draw up a definite platform from the discussion; and present it for ratification at the next meeting, sometime before exam week.
Concerning the Progressive political stand, Pomeroy stated. "Our chief motive is to promote constructive student government. None of the existing parties truly represents the students. The school needs a political party in which it can place its confidence, and one which will successfully break down the present social conflict."
Pomeroy will appoint temporary precinct leaders in order to boost membership.
Each member is assessed a 25-cent admission fee. He is given a membership card which entitles him to vote at all meetings. Committees are to be chosen to discuss problems, but only will place the issue before the entire group, which will vote on it.
Pomeroy advocated the precinct system with a chairman over each precinct, and it was adopted.
Miller, Kaarbo Will Serve
As Pachacamac Officers
Unlike any of the existing parties, whose meetings are usually closed, the new group is to be a non-secret organization, and open to anyone.
Miller is a member of Pi Kappa Alpha, and Kaarbo is a member of Triangle.
M the He the
University DAILY KANSAN
Friday, January 17, 1947
44th Year No. 71
Lawrence. Kansas
STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
little Man On Campus
By Bibler
A man in a suit walks away from a fallen person. In the background, there are buildings and trees with snow on them.
Baker
K. O'DONLY KINGSTON
"Are we that near finals?"
Paul Snyder, K.U. Cowboy Pianist loves Farms, Thinks Jazz Inventive
From Beethoven to botany, from Mozart to milking, from Schubert to flowers. This is the "happiness" formula of Paul Snyder, associate professor of the piano, who will present a piano concert Sunday afternoon in Fraser auditorium.
Living by this code, affable Mr. Snyder is far removed from the familiar characterizations of the concert pianist. For, despite his manifold diversions from the world of theatre,
has returned his mastery of the
Sharing a fondness for music in his heart is his farm in Michigan, on which he domed overalls for six years until 1842. While he was thus engaged, he neglected the piano, but added that three months after he assumed practicing he was "back in name."
While describing his Yorkshire sow and soil conservation, Mr. Snyder is difficult to visualize as a capabilist pianist who has studied seven years in Europe and has played a three-year concert tour in such cities as Milan, Oslo, Stockholm, London, and Copenhagen.
While on this tour, Mr. Snyder was described as having progressed "Cowboy to Concert Pianist", because he had told the Scandanavian dress that he had been fond of riding horses as a youth in Oklahoma. Modern jazz receives no invective from Mr. Snyder who describes it as being "extremely inventive". Like any type of music, he believes that it requires a well-trained musician to present it properly.
"When it is well-presented, I like it." he summarizes.
Dearest to his experienced ear, however, is the music of Beethoven, who, along with Schubert and Mozart, have expressed the universe better than any other composer, Mr. Snyder believes. Such music he accredits with being "transcendental," as none other.
whether Beethoven or boogie, he carefully asserts, "a good pianist must be able to play any type of music well."
Mr. Snyder joined the faculty at the University in the fall of 1945. He had previously taught piano at the Horner institute in Kansas City.
Council Drafts Bills For 10 Proposals
The 1945-46 Kansas legislative council studied and acted upon 33 proposals during the past two years, according to a bulletin soon to be released by the K.U. bureau of government research.
Results of the council's deliberations were that bills were drafted for 10 proposals which will be submitted to standing committees of the legislature next week.
The bills deal with control of oil field brines and well plugging, milk control, school transportation, veterans' affairs, judicial redistricting, agricultural market inspection, administrative rules and regulations, testing dairy herds for disease, municipal employees' retirement and waiting periods for marriage licenses.
Other officers elected were William Hall, vice president; Donald Jarrett, corresponding secretary; Joseph Sciandrone, treasurer; Eldon Frye, recording secretary.
Luther Runyon, engineering senior, was elected president of the American Society of Civil Engineers at a meeting Thursday.
Runyon To Head Civil Engineers
ISA Candidate Party
Following the election, Charles T. Black, engineering so spoke on "Cross Connections ing Systems." Films wer ... to illustrate his lecture.
There will be a "coke party" for all I.S.A. candidates at 4 p.m. Monday in Miller hall.
U.S. Army, Navy Merger Will Not Cut Costs Now
Washington. (UP)—High military officials said today the new compromise plan for unification of the armed services will not result in any immediate reduction in the cost of the armed services and may even increase costs for a while.
The navy keeps its land-based aviation and the marine corps remains intact. The army won its battle for one official directing all the armed forces, but the forces would not be merged into a single department and they would not have a single commander.
Some believed it eventually would save the government billions of dollars through a common system of supply.
The compromise must be approved by congress. Most congressmen said the plan was a big step forward.
Here Is What The New Plan Provides
Washington. (UP)—Here's a summary of what the new army-navy unification plan would provide:
ONE. A council of national defense, a national security resources board, and a central intelligence agency. The intelligence agency already is operating under a previous agreement.
TWO. Organization of the armed forces under a secretary of national defense. Under him, there would be three separate departments, each headed by a secretary representing the army, the navy, (including the marine corps and naval aviation), and the air force. Each department would be administered as a unit, but the secretary of national defense would have overall direction.
THREE. Creation of a war council to handle bread policy issues. It would be headed by the secretary of national defense, who would have power to make all decisions. The secretaries of the three separate departments and the military chiefs of the three services would serve as council members.
FOUR. Continuation of the joint chiefs of staff to handle strategic defense problems, war plans, military requirements and the like. They would be under direction of the secretary of national defense.
FIVE. Establishment of a full-time joint staff consisting at the start of not more than 100 officers drawn equally from the three services. This staff, operating under a director, would carry out policies and directives of the joint chiefs of staff.
Requisition Books To Be Turned In By Jan. 31
Veterans requisition books must be turned in to the office of the Veterans administration on or before Jan. 31, Dr. E. R. Elbel said today.
Present requisition books will not be used next semester, and new books will be issued at that time.
March Of Dimes Dance Jan. 25
Plans for the "March of Dimes dance to be held Jan. 25, in the Community building, were the main topic of discussion at a meeting of Alpha Phi Omega Thursday evening.
"We hope to make this year's campaign bigger than ever before, Dale Judy, publicity chairman, said. "The 'March of Dimes' was started by the late President Roosevelt and is the principal means of raising funds for fight against infantile paralysis. Chapters of A.P.O. throughout the nation are getting behind the campaign this year."
The dance will be informal and music will be supplied by the Bob Douglas band. Entertainment at intermission will be supplied by members of Lambda chapter.
Transferring Veterans Need Certificate
veterans planning to transfer to other universities at the end of the present semester will be required to file an application for a supplementary certificate of entitlement. E. R. Elbel, director of the veterans bureau, announced today.
Two training officers from the regional office of the veterans administration in Kansas City, R. L. Pease, and W. L. Lockridge, will be on the campus Jan. 22 and 23 to assist veterans in filling out the required forms.
Scholars Will Meet In Union Tonight
The monthly dinner-meeting o. The Summerfield scholar group will be held at 6:30 tonight in the Kansas room of the Union building.
A group of 55 Summerfield scholars, graduated Summerfield scholars and a faculty committee, are expected to attend the dinner.
Warren L. Kump, freshman in the School of Medicine, and John S. May, freshman in the School of Law, will lead the group in after-dinner discussions.
Vacancies Still Open
A limited number of vacancies are still open in Miller and Watkins residence halls for women, according to Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women.
Carrier Strike Stops Editions Of K.C. Star, Times
Kansas City. (UP)—The Kansas City Star worked against time this afternoon in an effort to get out on an eight-nage adless paper.
BULLETIN
Copy was being processed on typewriters for engravings. The Star still was hoping, however, that typographical workers would return to their jobs in time to set type for a late run. Supervisory help could turn the presses.
Kansas City, Mo. (UP)—The Kansas City Star, only newspaper serving the greater Kansas City metropolitan area, was struck today by its contract carriers, seeking to force recognition of a pressman's local union as their bargaining agent, and it appeared the paper would miss its first edition in the memory of veteran employees.
Earl McCollium, president of the Star. issued the following statement:
Accordant presides on Star, issued the following statement: "Mechanical departments of the Star were tied up because of a picket line placed around the Star building by a small group of workers who are indebted instructors and not employees. Pressmen and composing room employees not involved in any dispute with the Star declined to go through the picket line until they had gotten instructions from their international officers. No notice of the picket line was given to the Star or to other unions.
"For several months efforts have been made to organize the contract carriers of the Star, and there is now pending before the local regional labor board a petition for certification which represents a small number of the contract carriers.
"No hearing has ever been requested on the petition. The Star is ready to try out the matter before the labor board without delay and has so advised the petitioning carriers but they have expressed an unwillingness to so proceed before the board."
Veteran Star employees said that they could not remember when the Star missed an edition. Some had rolled late but in at least 20 years the paper never missed one.
Charles D. Bond of St. Louis, international special representative for the union, said refusal of the management to recognize the carriers as employees had precipitated the strike action.
Bond said he did not know how many persons were involved in the strike action.
WEATHER
Kansas--Fair today, tonight, and Saturday. Continued mild. Low tonight near 15 west border to 25-30 cast border.
No Time For Herman, Goodman
KFKU's Programs Must 'Educate'
If it's Herman, Goodman, or Dorey you want, don't turn your dial to KFKU is the advice of Miss Mildred Seaman, station program director.
"Our job is a big one," she said, "and it doesn't include the programming of swing."
◀
Miss Seaman, who has no personal objection to popular music, scinted out the hard reasons why she is on KKKU is impossible, at the present.
In the first place, she explained, the University station, like all broadcasting stations, is licensed by the Federal Communications Commission. It is classified not as a commercial station, but as an educational
station.
"This means." Miss Seanan explained, "that 95 percent of our programs must be educational, informational, or cultural in their makeup."
With five hours of air time a week, and 95 percent of that already committed to education, only 15 minutes a week should remain for the "cats" in any case.
Furthermore, the programs are not designed primarily for campus consumption, she said. The station itself is under the supervision of the extension division, that office of the University which handles all "off-campus" activities.
"Now we are airing one series of programs designed entirely for rural schools and schools in third class towns; and have sent out, upon request, over 4000 teachers' manuals covering these programs. We present another series directed toward the elementary schools; and still another made up for the club study groups throughout the state."
The genial program director said she wasn't taking sides in any dispute.
"However," she added with a twinkle in her eyes, "our evening musical programs do have listening audiences. We know that."
The emphasis was on "know."
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 17
Nelson Art Gallery Is Featuring Works Of Mid-Western Artists
Currently on display in the Nelson Art Gallery in Kansas City, Mo. exhibit of paintings by contemporary American artists which open
The exhibit centers around the Encyclopaedia Britannica collection art project which had its beginning in 1943 and features the work.
The exhibit centers around the En art project which had its beginning in Mid-Western artists including the late John Steuart Curry of Kansas, and Thomas Hart Benton of Missouri.
"We recommend this book for the use of prospective teachers in elementary, junior, and senior high schools so that they will have sources of material available for art departments which are beginning development," she said.
A book of reproductions of these paintings is currently being used at KU. in a course in "junior-senior teaching methods," according to Maude Ellsworth, associate professor of education.
In addition to the reproductions,
'the book contains short page-profiles
'of each artist represented, along with
'a word by the artist, interpreting or
commenting on each painting.
Professor Ellsworth pointed out that the book is especially adaptable to schools which have no art departments but plan to establish them.
"Through the use of this book teachers can stimulate student interests in art and help students to get appointed with artists who are painting today," she said.
Professor Ellsworth said she hopes to give her class an opportunity to "get a better idea of how to teach art" by sending a group to view the collection.
Paintings included in the collection are Mr. Curry's "John Brown," Mr. Benton's "Boom Town" and John de Martelly's "No More Mowing." These three are exemplary of the "regionalism" which is a trademark of Middle-Western artists, according to some critics, Professor Ellsworth said.
Mr. Hogue recently opened a new art department at Tulsa university and Louis Weinberg, who received his bachelor and master of fine arts degrees from KU., recently joined Mr. Hogue as assistant, Professor Elsworth said.
The same regionalism is apparent in one of Alexander Hogues's paintings of a scene in the dust bowl, also appearing in the collection, she added.
Union Will Collect Fiction For Library
A Union library to be located in the Union activities office is the latest project of the public relations committee, Rosemary Alderman, committee chairman, announced today. Notices are being sent to all organized houses to collect books and fiction magazines which will be picked up by committee members, under the direction of Robert Beidler-well, who will act as librarian.
Other projects which the public relations committee has sponsored are the travel bureau to aid students in finding rides home at Christmas time, the Bibler cartoon display in the Union lobby, and the modern choir.
The purpose of the library, to be in operation by the beginning of the second semester, is to provide students spending free time in the Union building with reading material.
Comes the Elkburger
Walla Walla, Wash. (UP)—State game officials, answering the farmers' call that roaming elk have been damaging crops, have been killing elk' and giving the carcasses to country schools in southeastern Washington. The elkburger is a favorite on the school lunch menu.
University Daily Kansan
*mail subscription: $3 a semester, $45 a year*
(*in law addition* *A $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan. every
afternoon during the school year except
Saturdays and Sundays. University hol-
iday rates apply. Entered as second
class matter Sept. 19, 1870, at the
Post Office at Lawrence, Kan. under act of
March 3, 1879.
High School Seniors Will Visit Campus
One hundred high school seniors are expected to arrive on the campus tomorrow to take part in the first K.U. Leadership day sponsored by Mortar Board. Selected for outstanding qualities of leadership and ability, they will participate in a round of activities designed to acquaint them with the University of Kansas.
After their registration in Lindley hall they will be welcomed by Chancellor Malott, and Billie Marie Hamilton, Mortar Board president. Ray Evans and Howard Engleman will be guest speakers.
Before their lunch in the Ball room of the Union building, the students will be conducted on tours of the campus by guides, William Cole, Robert Ellsworth, Stanley Nelson, and Robert Maltott.
The afternoon schedule includes a lecture on "Meaning of Education" by Dr. Calvin VanderWerf, discussion groups, and movies of Mt. Orread.
Lucky At Cards,
Unlucky In Court
Unimpressed by Harvey's account of how much money he "earned" at gambling, the judge convicted him of robbing a vegetable peddler of $18.
Long Beach, Calif. (UP)—Despite a half hour display of his tricks and dice rolling, Claude M. Harvey, 45, filed to convince a judge he wouldn't resort to armed robbery "when ah can win moneylak dis."
The tricks, the court admitted were "remarkable."
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ROTC Show To WREN
FOR PARTY RENTALS
"Warrior of Peace," the United States army's radio show will feature the aspects of the ROTC program on their next broadcast Sunday at 1 p.m. The program can be heard over station WREN.
Research Bulletin Concerns Legislation
Veterans and their dependents, as well as others will benefit by proposed bills submitted to standing committees of the state legislature this week and recommended for enactment, according to a bulletin released by the Bureau of Government Reasearch at K.U.
To afford veterans and their dependents direction and assistance through a more coordinated program, the Kansas Legislative council has recommended the organization of a state department of veterans' affairs to replace the former veterans' service committee. A director appointed by the veterans's advisory committee, will employ county assistants, who will advise and assist veterans and their dependents. Appropriations will be increased to meet the expanding need for its services.
The council's first bill would solve the fresh water pollution problem existing in certain parts of the state.
A system of voluntary inspection and grading for fruits, vegetables, eggs and poultry would be established. A large stock of milk control is also proposed.
The council recommends that present school transportation statutes be united into one single act. And the number of judicial districts be reduced from 37 to 30 and judges from 46 to 39.
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Y.M. Sponsors Display On Race Relations
Two special exhibits, sponsored by the Y.M.C.A., will be displayed on the campus and in the downtown during the next two weeks.
"The Negro in American Life" was on display Wednesday at the Congregation church, and will be moved to Westminster hall. Sunday.
An exhibit of the cultural achievements of Jewish members of the American community will be put on display in the basement of the Lawrence Community building this week.
Monday, the "Negro in American Life" display will be in the Union lobby.
This special emphasis on minority groups precedes the observance of Race Relations Sunday, Feb. 9, by all Lawrence churches.
Family College
Hiram, Ohio. (UP)—The Kin family of Willoughby, Ohio, is represented at Hiram college, four sons of Mr. and Mrs. M Kimball have enrolled. Mayr 28; Edward, 23, and Lawrence are entering school from the coast guard, and marines, restively. Daniel, 18, was too young war service.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
ARY 17.
PAGE THREE
The King
Ohio, is
college,
Mrs. M.
Amyr
awrence
in the
nation, res
young
BAK
I Co.
Eye
UARY 17,1947
SOCIALLY SPEAKING
ELINOR BROWNE, Society Editor
--ta Chi Dames Entertain the book "Mr. Adam" will be reved at the Delta Chi Dames Monday at the chapter
a Chi Dames Entertain
Honde D.II.'s
More fields of officer of Delta nation fraternity are president, W. Wintermote, Jr., and vice-chairman, J. E. Woolcott, Jr.
Women Entertain
dges' Aluha Delt
Sally Wohen Entertained
The Faculty Women's club will
be a coffee at 6:30 p.m. Sunday
the club house. Mary M. Smel-
will pour. Dr. Robert Taft will
sent picture slides from his coli-
ion of photographs and prints
early Lawrence. The committee
charge are Louise Summers,
drman, assisted by Lucy Dough-
Irene Cebula, Martha Peter-
and Esther Twente.
Indolph Pledges Alpha Delt
Alpha Delta Pi announces the
aging of Joyce Randolph, College
dor from El Dorado.
i's Have Election
Ina Upsilon Pledged Wood
Delta Upsilon announces the
edging of Ralph Wood, education
bombon from Trousdale.
Alph's Have Election
Newly elected officers of Sigmapha Epsilon are president, Robert Jones; vice - president, John emphreys; treasurer, Lawrence wkinson; recorder, Lawrenceigner; freshman trainer, Keith ville; ruth captain, WilliamVille; correspondent, George bjw warden, Stanley Oyer; herald,gburn Oakamb; intramural manier, Richard Rosenfield; socialairman, Robert Rosenfield; housemanager, Frank Haas; chronicler,hoeHaver
Heller.
bi's Entertain
The pledge class of Delta Chi entailed the pledges of Gamma Tta with an hour dance Thursday at the chapter house.
ay Operate Station
The Amateur Radio club held a setting at 5 p.m. in the Pine room the Union Thursday.
The club is sponsored by the electrical engineering department. Paul atny, president, said that a room the electrical engineering laboratory and some equipment to operate amateur station may be obtained for the club.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Marriott,
400 Louisiana, are the parents of a
daughter, Diana Lee, born Monday in
Lawrence Memorial hospital.
Marriott_is a sophomore in the
School of Pharmacy.
Approximately 175 Hi-Y members from high schools in the eastern part of Kansas will meet at Haskell Institute for a sectional conference Jan.29.
Sectional Hi-Y Meet At Haskell Jan. 29
The conference, which will be from 10 a.m. until 8:30 p.m., will be attended by the Liberty Memorial Hi-Y club, the Haskell Hi-Y club, and the University Y.M.C.A.
Daughter Born To Marriotts
Paul Harris, nationally-known lecturer and world traveler from Putney, Vt., will be the chief speaker. Also on the program will be Howard Kusterman, Y.M.C.A. secretary for the north central area, and Charles Mangold, regional Hi-Y secretary.
Steering-committee members for the conference include Clifford Reynolds, Robert Thayer, Joseph Brown, and Ned Linegar of the University Y.M.C.A.
Fine Arts To Present Student Recitals
The School of Fine Arts will present student recitals in Frank Strong auditorium on Monday and Wednesday. The programs will begin at 7:30 instead of the customary hour of 8 p.m.
About 20 different numbers will be offered on each program by advanced students in voice, piano, violin, harp, and ensembles.
OEDS' CORNER
The Home Economics club held its annual waffle supper Thursday evening in Fraser hall.
Home Economics Club Holds Waffle Supper
Food for the supper was prepared by the Foods III class as an example of a buffet meal. The menu included waffles, sausages, a cottage cheese and pineapple salad, celery and carrot curls, milk, coffee, and caramel corn.
The supper gave the Foods class an opportunity to use new waffle irons recently received by the home economics department. Three large irons were used, each iron making the equivalent of two waffles.
But those are the things everybody knowing Judy knows about her. Among the things they don't know is — at the age of 7, Judy and her father studied in Vienna. She—the second grade; he—medicine. Judy remembers Vienna particularly as the location of an incident marking the beginning of the Nazi in war.
Judy Tihen, The 'Charged' Gal, Wants To Return To Vienna
"She's the most efficient person!" claimed Dean Ostrum, editor of a Jayhawk.
Since a Jewish student from her school was shut down and painted with swastikas, "I wonder what's happened to them all." Since that time, she's been waiting for the time of her college graduation when she has been promised a trip back again.
"People like her always have fun," added William Delay, College freshman.
"Judy" is well-known to many on the campus as the secretary of the ayhawker magazine. Adjectives such as efficient, cheerful, bright, active, sensible could all be used in escribling her, but none would be sufficient. She isn't just efficient and live, but when working with her in the office she seems almost charged" with energy.
That's Judith Tihen!
Judy, who is majoring in home
economics, "because it's fun," likes to cook, has been a nurse's aide at Wichita, her home town, at Lawrence Memorial hospital, and at Watkins Memorial hospital. But found she had to give it up when her other activities began multiplying. Among those other activities, besides being secretary of the 1947 Jayhawker, are Tau Sigma, Y.W.C.A., Home Economics club, and Gamma Pha Beta.
When asked if she liked sports, Judy answered that she had devoted a summer to tennis, but when at the end of the summer she hadn't mastered the game, her brother remarked she "wasn't hung together right for it."
"What made me like I am," she added, "was the heckling and teasing of my sister Doris, now a College freshman, my brother, Edward, a K.U. pre-med graduate now studying medicine at Northwestern university, and five neighbor boys."
Music seems to take most of her extra time—she's taking as much as she can. Two other courses that proved particularly interesting to her friends, as well as herself, were an astronomy class of which she and one other girl were the only members, and early morning bird calls. And that's Judy Tihen.
Up and Coming
Phi Kappa party at the house, from 8 to 11:30.
Tonight:
A Calendor of Campus Events
Phi Gamma Delta buffet dinner at the house, from 7 to midnight.
Sunflower Student Organization dance at the Military Science building, from 9 to midnight.
Sigma Chi party at the house, from 8 to midnight.
Phi Beta Pi dance at the Country club, from 9 to midnight.
Tomorrow night;
Phi Kappa Psi dinner-dance in the Kansas room of the Union, from 6:30 to midnight.
Alpha Kappa Alpha dance at the Military Science building, from 8 to midnight.
Nash To Handle Convention Program
Prof. Bert Nash of the School of Education will be in charge of the program for a convention on "Exceptional Children" to be held April 8 and 9 in Topeka.
The convention, designed to attract school administrators, teachers, and social workers interested in various disabilities of school children, will feature speakers Dr. Eloise Martens of the United States Office of Education, Washington, and Dr. John Lee of the Wayne University Graduate school.
The Christian Science church group conducted its regular weekly religious services Thursday night in Danforth chapel.
Christian Science Services
An exhibit of drawings of cats and kittens by Clare Turlay Newberry, author and illustrator of children's books, is on display in the design department on the third floor of Frank Strong hall.
Cat Drawings Shown In Frank Strong
The exhibit is one of a series of exhibits sponsored by the Kansas State Teachers' association.
Several books by Miss Newberry also are on display.
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---
PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 17.
1. ___
SPOTLIGHT SPORTS
By BOB DELLINGER (Daily Kansan Sports Editor)
The Big Six race isn't quite such a runaway as the standings seem to show.
For instance, the first-place Missouri Tigers defeated fifth-place Kansas State by one point and sixth-place Kansas by a mere five.
Second-place Nebraska lost to fifth-place K-State by nine points, and just edged the Jayhawkers by two. And after Iowa State, 11-point victims of Missouri, had whipped the Kansas Aggies by the same margin, the Tigers had to go into overtime to get by at Manhattan.
Another odd point in the standings is put up by the only two teams in the league which have an even split in two games, Iowa State and Oklahoma. Each has won one and lost one and each has scored the same number of points as have its opponents.
***
League-leading Missouri has the poorest offense in the league and has only outscored its opponents 17 points in three games. Kansas, which hasn't won yet, trails opponents only 10 points in total score.
We've heard now that Elwyn Dees didn't get into the center of the battle to get his black eye, but received it from one of the fans.
Four or five different versions of the Black-Loisel fracas are spreading around the campus, with only minor details being the varying factor.
As the crowd surged onto the floor, one of the fans mistook Bees for a Kansas man, and attacked him, or so the story goes. Friends of the Husker trainer immediately bore the assailant to the floor, but the police intervened before he could be badly hurt.
***
**
Dan Pippin, ace Missouri forward,
holds the proper free throw record for
the conference thus far. Pippin
has toed the line nine times this
year, and has scored nine times.
军 隶 卵
Speaking of free throws, it's hard to believe that Charlie Black, habitually the target of opponents' attacks, on the court and off, should escape unscathed from the Nebraska game (playing time, that is) without having been fouled once.
Jeff Heath, habitual holdout of the Cleveland Indians, is the first St. Louis Brown to get his contract signed this year. Maybe he's turned over a new leaf.
Over in Philly, Manager Herb Pennock of the Phils is having trouble getting his star outfielder, Del Ennis, to sign on the dotted line tor.
University High Eagles Play Linwood Tonight
The University High Eagles will travel to Linwood tonight for their ninth game of the season and their fifth conference start.
A victory for the U.H.S. aggregation would pull them out of the league cellar and into a tie with Linwood. The Eagles lost the previous encounter with Linwood, 19-21
The two "B" squads will play a preliminary game.
Extension Division Offers Labor Class
To promote better understanding in labor-management relations the University extension division and the Topeka Night school will present a course on "Labor Relations" beginning Feb. 6. Five weekly sessions will be held Thursday nights at the Topeka High school.
Representatives of labor and management will present their ideas on labor-management cooperation in production, union-management responsibility in labor relations, the structure and functions of unions, and amendment of the national labor relations act.
'Phog Allen Will Rest In California
BREWER
DR. F. C. ALLEN
☆ ☆
For the first time in 36 years, "Phog" Allen is getting a rest. Released from the University hospitals Tuesday after a checkup, Dr. Allen has been granted an indefinite leave of absence by E. C. Quigley, athletic director. He will leave for LaJolla, Calif, as soon as he can get reservations.
His sojourn on the Pacific beach represents the only time that his health has interfered with an active career. Prior to his recent checkup, he had never been in the hospital in his 61 years.
Dr. Allen can lean back in his beach chair and look over a 38-year career as a college basketball coach that has set him up as the dean of American court tutors.
His basketball teams have amassed 623 victories against only 149 losses. In addition to taking 12 Big Six conference crowns in the 18 years the league has been alive, Dr. Allen bagged seven pennants at Warrensburg and eight more for K.U. in the old Missouri Valley conference.
In all his years in basketball. Dr.
Allen ahs coached only one last
place club. His Big Six teams have
finished below second only three
times.
Allen's coaching tactics are just about the same today as they were when his first K. U. team boomed to the Missouri Valley title in 1908. He turns out strict fundamentalists, careful ball-handlers, resourceful attackers, and players with great spirit.
Among the hardwood greats Allen has sent from K. U. are Tuss Ackerman, Dutch Lonberg, Tommy Johnson, Lefty Sproull, Paul Endacott, Frosty Cox, Ted O'Leary, Bill Johnson, Ray Ebbing, Freal Pralle, Howard Engleman, Ralph Miller, Johnny Buescher, Charlie Black, and Ray Evans.
Allen was one of the founders of the National Coaches association, has served several seasons on the National Rules committee, and was instrumental in founding the National Collegiate Athletic association basketball tournament.
One of his prime accomplishments was an almost single-handed effort in landing basketball its first position in the 1936 Olympic games at Berlin.
Was Allen popular? Just ask any one of those players and they'll answer. "He was the greatest coach who ever lived."
Dr. Allen, who gets the "Dr." because he is a registered osteopath, gets the "Phop" because he was once a basketball official with a "fog-horn" voice. A Daily Kansan sports writer changed the spelling.
An Allen campaign that has brought him national recognition is the still-breaking effort to raise the baskets another two feet to cut down the advantages of tall men. He was also a leading supporter of the
Dr. Allen's two widely-circulated books, "My Basketball Bible" and "Better Basketball," are still used as textbooks in physical education courses throughout the nation.
"lima-bean" style backboard.
Famous coaches who were once direct pupils of "Phog" are Dutch Lenberg at Northwestern, Frosty Cox at Colorado, Louis Menze at Iowa State, and Adolph Rupp at Kentucky.
Right up to the time of his head injury last October, Dr. Allen still donned a full warmup suit and went through all the rigors of training with his men.
At 61, he still looks like a man of 40.
Doctors said they couldn't find anything "that a good rest wouldn't cure," and advised that he leave the Kansas climate for warmer regions to the south.
"California sunshine," say Kansas basketball fens, "do your stuff."
Two K.U. Delegates Elected
To W.A.A. Convention
Maxine Gunsolly and Frances Chubb were elected KU. delegates to the W.A.A. national convention at Greensboro, N.C., at the regular W.A.A. January meeting in Robinson gymnasium last night at 7 p.m.
The convention, to be held at the Women's college, University of North Carolina, April 18 through 20, is the association's first postwar meeting.
Informal initiation of five new members was held for: Jeanette Bolas, Peggy Baker, Jane Ellen Johnson, Evelyn Stoll, and Penny Stinebaugh.
Terminating the meet a basketball film was shown, demonstrating defensive and offensive plays.
The Kansas Engineer will be distributed Monday through Wednesday in the front hall of Marvin. Copies are being distributed without charge, as the publication cost has been included in the fees.
'Engineer' Out Mondav
'Run' Postponed By Pulled Muscle
The hour run scheduled between the track squad and challenger Walter Bowers, associate in business research, has been indefinitely postponed.
LYDIA BAILEY
By KENNETH ROBERTS
Mr. Bowers pulled a leg muscle while working out with the track squad, and will not be able to run for three weeks. The run will probably come just before the outdoor season, Ray Kanehl, track coach, said today.
First Indoor Meet In Michigan Feb. 8
Author of Northwest Passage and Oliver Wiswell
The Kansas indoor track squad will open its 1947 season Feb. 8 at the Michigan State Relays.
$3.00
This year's-renewal of the Relays is the 25th Anniversary running and the event has been made nationwide. Every coach in the country who has had 25 years of service as a track coach will be invited to attend and bring a team entry.
The other three meets definitely on the track schedule at this time are dual meets at Nebraska, Feb. 15, and at Missouri, Feb. 22, and the Big Six conference meet at Kansas City, March 1.
THE BOOK NOOK
1021 Mass. Tel. 666
In addition to the above meets, the athletic department has received invitations to the Central Collegiate meet at Lansing Michigan, the Chicago Tech Relays at Chicago university, and the Purdue Relays at Lafayette, Ind. All these meets are in March.
The first outdoor meet will be the Texas Relays, Mar. 29.
Y.W. Cabinet Meets
The weekly W.Y.C. a. cabinet meeting will be held today at 4 p.m. at Henley house. Barbara Ford, who recently attended the Rocky Mountain regional meeting for the political effectiveness committee of the Student Christian movement, will give a report.
COURT HOUSE LUNCH
COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals - Short Orders Sandwiches Open 5:30-12:30
Georgia's Trippi Joi Profesional League
Chicago. (UP)—Charles Bidw owner of the Chicago Cardinals the National Professional Footl league, arrives today with Char Trippi, star Georgia halfback w accepted his offer in preference a combined football-baseball tract proffered by the New Yankee combine.
It was reported the Cardinal he offered the Georgia running a passing ace about $25,000 per yea for a four-year contract to ph football, and left Trippi the opportunity to peddle his baseball service wherever he could make the be deal.
Trippi rejected the Yankee of in New York Thursday shortly before a scheduled press conference called by the Yankee chiefta Larry MacPhail, to announce prize. Then he boarded a train w bidwell to talk contract terms he
However, Bidwill in addition or feed to arrange a baseball contra for Trippi with the Chicago Cul or their Los Angeles farm club he could not make a better de elsewhere. It was understood that Boston Red Sox also were interested in the Georgia ace.
The Yankees reportedly also o
offered Trippi a total of $105,000 ov
five years. The contract called for
him to play five years of football
and two years of baseball.
Bidwill's bid was interpreted as a move to get the Georgia star, or of the most sought players for the pro ranks in a decade, into the National league as well as gain an outstanding back for his club. Ha Trippi signed with MacPhail's group he would played in the rival All-America conference.
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YOUTH FOR CHRIST SING - LAUGH - ENJOY THIS SINGSPIRATION 'The Gospel 4 Quartet' DAVE HAUSE, Speaker PAUL BEISEL at the piano BOB GETZ, Director
HIGH SCHOOL AUDITORIUM
14th and Mass. 7:30 p.m.
"The Program That's Different"
JANUARY 17, 1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
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Cagers Will Play Colorado At Boulder Monday
The Jayhawkers will be idle during the coming weekend, but will go to Boulder Monday night for the second of two games with the Colorado Buffaloes.
The Buffs handed the Jayhawkers a 52-50 overtime defeat at Kansas City, Jan. 2. starting the current four-game Kansas losing streak.
Since the Colorado game, Kansas has lost close ones to Missouri, Oklahoma, and Nebraska.
After the Boulder trip, the Jayhawkers will return home for a Friday game with Iowa State, and will remain at Lawrence to entertain Kansas State the following Tuesday.
Meanwhile, the spotlight shifts to Columbia where the Missouri Tigers risk their one-game lead over the conference as they take on second-place Nebraska tomorrow.
The Tigers have sailed, not too blithely, through the rest of the conference so far, handing Kansas and Kansas State close defeats on their own courts after whipping Iowa State at Columbia.
Also tomorrow night, Kansas State makes its last bid to get back in the championship race as the Wildcats will attempt to repeat their 59-55 upset of Oklahoma earlier this season.
Kansas State has won one and lost one at home, and lost their only road game.
The Wildcats will have one advantage in this meeting, that of home court. The Sooners have won one and lost one, winning at home and losing on the road.
Iowa State will be idle until Monday, but then will take on the Cornhuskers at Ames. Victories over Nebraska and Kansas would put Iowa State into a position definitely threatening the title.
The league's leading scorer, Harold Howey, will be on the Manhattan court trying to boost his average against Oklahoma, while the Cornhuskers will boast Claude Retherford, No. 2 man.
Owl Society Meets, Holds Election
Thirteen of the seventeen prewar members of the Owl society were present at the reorganization meeting held last night in the English room of the Union. In the absence of Dr. Raymond H. Wheeler, professor of psychology, Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, addressed the group.
Sixteen new members were elected to the society on the basis of activities, scholarship, and service to the University.
The following officers were elected for the coming year: Richard Hawkinson, president; Harold Herriott, vice president; Otto Schnellbacher, secretary; and Robert Bock, treasurer.
Willis Tompkins, assistant dean of men, was a guest. A group picture was taken of the new members following the meeting.
Indian Doctor To Talk On Medical Work
"Medical Work in Punjab, India," will be the topic of a talk by Dr. Evelyn C. Misra, a student at the University of Kansas hospital and staff member of the Bethany hospital, at 7:15 p.m. Sunday at the First Presbyterian church.
Dr. Misra, a citizen of India, attended high school and the Isabella Thoburn college in India, where she received pre-medical training. Upon her graduation she worked for four years in the Philadelphia hospital Ambala City in Punjab.
Preceding the meeting, Dr. Misra will be a supper guest of West-minster fellowship. The meeting is open to the public.
On Tigers' Back Line
WOLF LAN
This is Pleasant Smith, who along with the other Missouri Tiger basketball players, has been providing unpleasant nights for other Big Six teams Smith is a first-string guard on the league-leading M.U. team.
I-M Schedule
Robinson gymnasium:
6:30—Nu Sigma Nu vs. Pi Kappa Alpha
6:30—Wolf Pack vs. Alpha Tau Omega
7:30—Theta Tau vs. 941 club
7:30-Theta Tau vs. 941 club
7:30-Delta Upsilon vs. Tau Kappa
Epsilon
8:30-Kappa Sigma vs. Married Men
8:30—Sigma Nu vs. Triangle
9:30—Delta Chi vs. Army
9:30—Sigma Phi Epsilon vs. Po Dunks
7- Pharmacists vs. Deuce Wild
8- Live Five vs. Wesley foundation
9- Spooner - Thayer vs. Mom's Boys
Community building:
7- Pharmacists vs. Deuces Wild
10—Beta Theta Pi vs. Frat Busters
College Basketball
Bradley U. 69, Marquette 59.
Capital 67, Wilmington S3.
Cleveland 42, Cincinnati 53.
Austin Peay State college 41.
Murfreesboro State Teachers 37.
Southern Illinois Normal 46, Evansville college 44.
Maryville 53, Jopin 24.
Westminster 82, Bethany 65.
Otterbein 60, Denison 60.
Maryville 35, Joplin 24.
University of Virginia 56, William & Marv 48.
Syracuse 65, Manhattan college 53.
Virginia State college 70, Shaw U.
SUNNYSIDE RESIDENTS
Southwestern 64, Emporia 37.
St. John's 64, Temple 50:
Canisius 99, McMasters 32.
Louisville 73, U. of Havana 55.
Ithaca 70, Sampson college 59.
Duke 72, George Washington 46.
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Two one-point victories featured intramural basketball play Thursday night.
Rexal edged out Delta Tau Delta, 25 to 24. Penny looped 10 points through the nets to pace scoring for the winners. Y.M.C.A. nosed out Deuces Wild in a 24 to 23 final count. Tomberlin netted 12 points to account for half the Y.M.C.A. total.
In the highest scoring contest of the night, Phi Kappa defeated Der Fumf, 45 to 2. Culhane led the victors with 12 counters.
Other results - 1037 club over Spooner-Thayer, 26 to 22; Smith hall over K.C. club, 30 to 21; Wesley Foundation over Newman club, 32 to 28; The Crooks over A.T.C. club, 26 to 21; and Kappa Alpha Psi over Alpha Phi Alpha, 38 to 26.
Texas Aggies Beat O.U. In Swim Meet
College Station, Tex. (UP)—The Texas Aggies' swimming team had won its first meet today after tracing Oklahoma university yesterday, 59 to 19, in taking eight of nine events.
Kay Burns turned in the only Oklahoma win in the 440-yard free style with a 5:53.6.
The Aggies beat the Southwest conference record time in 100-yard free style and 400-yard free style relay events and tied the mark in the 50-yard free-style with Danny Green, Dallas sophomore, winning both individual meets and swimming anchor on the relay team.
Bernard Syfan, Aggie Ace, took the 220-yard free style in 2:30.3 and put the cadets in the lead on the third leg of the relay. Green widened the gap to almost the length of the pool.
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Advertisers Prefer The Kansan To Reach Hill Students
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SUNFLOWER BALL
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$1.25 per Couple 9 to 12
Frank Sullivan, state insurance commissioner, will select Sunflower Queen at the dance.
TONIGHT
MILITARY SCIENCE BUILDING
AGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 17, 1947
Kansan Comments...
About Racial Discrimination
Racial discrimination is a "red phrase—that is, it is a phrase which causes blood pressures to rise, faces to turn red, tempers to explode, and words to fly.
Even the most contented person feels some inner stirring when involved in a discussion of whether there is or isn't racial discrimination in a particular locality. And those who feel strongly on either side of the subject can completely, lose themselves in the subject. They will drop everything else to plunge themselves into any discussion of racial discrimination.
Undoubtedly there is racial discrimination in Kansas, even though our statutes say no distinction is to be made because of a person's color or race. The present editor-in-chief of the Daily Kansan believes that this racial discrimination is being slowly dispersed by the natural course of events. He believes that campaigns to speed up this natural relinquishment of prejudices against those of different-colored skins or of different nationalities only slow down the process—that campaigns to push people into accepting what they dislike today only refuels the flames of prejudice.
The American Veterans committee, feels differently. It is currently conducting a campaign against the racial prejudice and discrimination which they say is found on the campus and in the city of Lawrence. Their campaign propaganda, as beats that of either good or bad propaganda, does not attempt to present both sides of the situation. For their purposes, they are exactly right in presenting only one side of any controversial issue, for they know that those on the other side of the controversy will present their case.
The letter published in the next column was received at the time that Dr. F. C. Allen was taken to the hospital in Kansas City. The letter was not published until today, however, so that Dr. Allen could answer the letter.
Good Stock
Kansans should stop running down their state. They seem to take as much delight in criticizing Kansas as Californiaians take in praising California.
Just let a Kansan start enumerating the faults of his state and other Kansans will smile, rather proudly, and say, "But, then, this is Kansas. What else could you expect?"
All right, so Kansas doesn't have California weather, or New York industries, or Florida playgrounds, or Minnesota forests and lakes, but important as these things are, do they mask a state truly great?
No, only people make a truly great state, and Kansans can hold their own with persons of any other state in the U.S.A.
How many of you Kansans knew these persons were Kansans: Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, Brig. Gen. Frederick Funston, Gen. Hugh Johnson, William Allen White, Raymond Clapper, Ed Howe, Alfred M. Landon, Harry Woodring, Carrie Nation, John Steuart Curry, Dr. Charles M. Sheldon, Dr. William C. Menninger?
That list wasn't so hard, but try these Kansans on your memory: Walt Mason, Dorothy Canfield Fisher, Carl Preyer, John Brown, W. H. Carrish, Francis Snow, Walter P. Chrysler, "Buffalo Bill" Cody,
To The Daily Kansan Editor:
Perhaps the poor showing of our basketball squad this year may, in large part, be attributed to, as the Kansas City Star wrote, "KU's dearth of reserve power." This shortage of players would be excusable if all available talent had been fully utilized. However, there are several excellent basketball players among the student body who have not even been allowed to try out for the basketball team. The logical question then is, "Why?"
The answer is purely and simply that they are Negroes.
Chancellor Malott has indicated that this discrimination is not his policy. Mr. Quigley, director of University athletics, said, in a very self-righteous tone, that racial discrimination simply does not exist at KU. and that no student will be barred from athletic teams because of race or color.
Is it possible that somewhere along the line somebody is either not telling the truth, or is not conforming to the policy as stated by Mr. Quiglev?
The apparent attitude of our genial coach, Dr. Allen, is that he would rather lose every game on the schedule than allow a Negro to play on his team. And in fact, he has not allowed Negro students to do so, no matter how great their ability might be. The possible flimsy excuse that the team is already "filled up" does not hold water because "Phog" admits that he still does not have the "right combination." Also only several days ago he added a new member to his squad.
It is all very well and good for the University administration to say that they are opposed to racial discrimination but unless they implement their words with positive deeds, they become worse than meaningless.
As long as Negroes are accepted at the University as students, as they should be, they must be accorded all rights and privileges of all other students. This is the free state of Kansas, not Bilboland.
If the administration is determined that Negroes shall be discriminated against, then they should honestly state so and not resort to the foggy subterfuge of double-talk.
Is it possible that in this environment of intellectual freedom, the evil prejudices of race hatred can be so prevalent?
William Scheinman College freshman
(exktor's note—Dr. Allen's reply to charges of discrimination included the following statements: Three Negro basketball players came out for practice this year and were discouraged from continuing to try out. At the same time, some 50 white aspirants for the basketball squad likewise were discouraged. The coaching staff and practice area were too crowded to permit more than the full "A" and "B" squads to practice and those not making the squads were asked not to continue coming out. Consideration must be given to the fact that two of the Big Six teams will not play against Negroes while the two, Missouri and Oklahoma, are on their home court. It would be foolish for a coach to work with a man, build him to varsity material, and then be forced to leave him at home for two-fifths of the conference "away" games. No new member has been added to the squad recently, although there have been transfers from the "B" squad to the varsity.)
If you knew all these justly-famous persons were Kansans, you're promoted to the head of the class. If you didn't, you should remember them.
Birger Sandzen, Amelia Earhart Puttiam, Nelly Don, Dr. A. E. Hertzler, Martin and Osa Johnson, Charles "Buddy" Rogers.
Our stock of people speaks for itself. Why don't you let up a little on Kansas? -B.M.H.
U.N. Chairmen To Notify Delegates
Promise of a battle of wits was given in a meeting of supervisors of the Student United Nations conference to be held in Hoch auditorium Feb. 22.
Supervisors will notify delegates of the countries assigned to them this week. At pre-conference meetings, resolutions will be drawn up to be presented before the General Assembly.
Banking Firm Wants Financial Wizards
Want to go to New York and become a financial wizard?
If you're going to graduate in February or June and are interested in doing financial work in New York, a man is coming to the University January 25, who would like to talk to you.
He's Wingate Bixby, vice-president of the Discount corporation of New York, a commercial security and commercial banking house. The Discount corporation is going to hire six or seven young men from the entire country and give them training in finance, bank investment problems, and the government securities market.
Frank Pinet, director of the business placement bureau, will make interview appointments.
Anderson Elected Editor
George Anderson, associate professor of history, has been elected associate editor for the Historian, national magazine published by members of Phi Alpha Theta, history fraternity.
Jaytalking --sources of uranium, and then to turn these over to the Atomic Development authority.
The nation's breakfast tables have been brightened noticeably the past few mornings as Mr. Arnall and Mr. Talmadge try to steam-roller each other out of the Georgia governorship. Arnall their antics fun?
A professor states that only hungry snakes are dangerous, that wellfed snakes are harmless. However, we're not planning to get close enough to distinguish between a hungry gleam and a well-fed look.
A fat woman contemplating reducing is one who decides to put off tomorrow what she puts on today.
In two weeks K.U. law students will take their four-hour final exams and take them strictly on the honor system which means they can dash out for a quick smoke, wander around the building, or just sit around and chat. Imagine trusting a bunch of lawyers like that.
In Kansas City salt and sand are used on icy streets to prevent skidding. Lawrence will continue to use telephone poles.
Colorado's liquor tax gave a bonus of $220 to each of the state's old-age pensioners. Kansas drys are sure that none of our elder citizens would want such tainted money.
It's dangerous to tell a girl her nose is shiny, unless her disposition is the same way.
Portal to portal pay sounds like a keen idea for dance bands on one-nighters.
The University Daily Kansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn. National Education Association and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Services Corporation Ave. New York City.
Managing Editor...Charles Roos
Asst. Managing Editor...Jane Anderson
Makeup Editor...Billie Marie Hamilton
Handwriting Editor...Hannah
Business Manager...Bill Donovon
Advertising Manager...Margery Handy
Circulation Manager...John McCormick
Telegraph editor...Edward Woolley
City Editor...R. T. Kingman
U.S. Too Demanding Of Russia On Atomic Control, Pritchard Says
Russia "couldn't possibly make the concessions" demanded by the United States under the Baruch plan of control for the atomic bomb, Prof. L. J. Pritchard, of the School of Business, told an American Veterans committee meeting Thursday night.
It was Baruch's "uncompromising stand" that led to the stalemate on the question of atomic energy control, Professor Pritchard declared.
"We asked the U. S. S. R. first to enter into binding commitments not to conduct research in fissionable materials," he pointed out. "Next we asked it to disclose Russian
"Finally, we asked that a system of inspections be set up prior to the construction of atomic energy plants—and all this before we in the United States stopped making bombs, before we destroyed our own stock of bombs, before we put our own plants under ADA control."
Atomic power has great potentialities, "but these will never become full realities if we make no better use of atomic energy than we already have made (for peacetime living) of the vast power resources now at our disposal," he concluded.
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JANUARY 17,1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
New Downbeat Descends On Hill With Arrival Of Six Dance Bands
Three cheers and a trumpet fanfare!
The trumpets, without mutes, announce the arrival of a half dozen or so new "Hill" dance bands, complete with vocalists and floor shows. The pre-war days of Bachmann and Pope and the war days of Cousins and his V-12's are only dim memories.
A new downbeat has descended!
When Danny Bachmann and his trombone left the campus for the service, Charlie Kassinger took over. When Charles left for the AAF juke boxes took over. In May, 1945, Don Cousins organized a V-12 band, which played for midweeks and University parties. Other campus functions called on Charlie Steepen and his high school dance band.
Last year, with the V-12's disbanded, Johnny Beach got together a group which played its way into many organized house parties. Lynn Craig and his Skyliners played for summer session midweeks. Steeper's hand became the Serenaders.
When the lights in the social world came on again this fall, the biggest question on the campus was whether to buy a new supply of dance records, to import a band from Kansas City, or hope for some student dance bands.
"Easy life," onlookers murmured when they watched the "guys" pound the 88 or slip the slide at a dance. But it's not such an easy life—playing for a living.
When social chairmen began to look for bands, they found plenty on the campus, but the task of fitting parties into band engagements was not so simple. The bands were booked weeks in advance.
These "guys" give up a lot. They miss out on their own social life; they lose their girls to fellows who have time for weekend dates. They spend every weekend and sometimes week nights, too, just for the sake of their band and Petrillo. They neglect studies for practices and union meetings.
Most of the band members are veterans, ranging from fine arts stuarts students to journalism and business students, from engineers to lawyers. Many of the men now playing in bands have had bands of their own; many have played professionally with name bands; some have led or served in service bands
The bands come in assorted and varying sizes. Among the larger are Bob Douglas, Chandler, Kas- Dixon, Jon Steeper, Eddie Dix, and Jimmy Holfive.
Joe Langworthy boasts a five or six-piece combo who play regularly at a local night-spot.
Some of these campus dance bands, adhering to the public approval of sweet and sentimental melodies, boast violins and French horns to give the music that added "something."
From the first crescendo to the final downbeat, everyone seems glad for a change from the canned music of the past few years to the muted trumpets and traps of real, "live" dance bands.
Clark Tells Of Need For Revised Education
"Education could be revolutionized by the introduction of the study of human relations," Dr. Carroll D. Clark, head of the sociology department, said today.
Dr. Clark, who has just returned from a meeting at Harward University, where the probelms of human relations in all fields were discussed, explained that if such a plan were adopted, "teachers would stop being custodians of knowledge, and help students use their knowledge to meet actual living conditions.
General education must be revised to give students an overall picture of the information they acquire. The only way to do this is to develop a system which will promote "closer relations among all fields of science," he said.
"The specialized branches of knowledge set up for the sake of convenience must be integrated," Dr. Clark said. "Students find it difficult to understand and relate these fields when they are studied separately. They fail to see how each affects their daily lives."
A new approach to the problem of human relations is being developed by the Harvard Graduate School of business administration with its case method. Dr, Clark spent a year at the school as a research associate, helping to devise new teaching procedures. The new method involves acquiring actual living experience in industry, the home, and education.
Plans are being made to send additional members of the department to Harvard.
Education Graduate Serves
As Army Hostess In Berlin
Miss Velma R. Baker, former graduate of the department of physical education, is serving as an Army hostess with special services theater in Berlin. She was recently graduated from the W.A.C. athletic school in Stuttgart.
Rosiclare. Ill. (UP)—Mrs. Nancy Smith, 66, and J. C. Long, 61, obtained a marriage license from the bride's granddaughter, Normale Henson, 19, a deputy county clerk.
Granddaughter Obliges
Miss Baker is the daughter of R. M. Baker, Burlington.
Official Bulletin
Jan.17,1947
The All-Student Council has declared a vacancy to be filled by a representative of the Pachacamac party from District II, the Engineering School. Petitions must be filed with the secretary of the A.S.C. not later than Monday, Jan. 27.
Pi Tau Sigma meeting for all pledges at 5 p.m. today in 205 Marvin.
***
单 单 本
Physical Therapy club will have a social meeting Monday at 7 p.m. in the classroom of Watkins hospital.
Seniors interested in an investment banking career in New York should arrang for interview Jan. 25 with Wingate Bixby, vice president of the Discount Corp., New York City. This is an opportunity. See Frank Pinet, business placement bureau, 212 Frank Strong.
All members of the February graduating class of the School of Business who are hoping to be placed through the business placement bureau and any other students available for permanent employment in February please note the School of Business bulletin board for announcement of interview schedules throughout January.
Graduate record examination February 3 and 4. Applications may be obtained in 2A Frank Strong hall.
Kansan Board will meet Monday at 4 p.m. in 107 Journalism building
Sigma Tau will meet at 4:30 p.m Tuesday in 210 Mechanical laboratory to elect officers.
Those who entered pictures for Miss Student Union are requested to call for them at the Union Activities office as soon as possible.
Erase Nazi Past
Prague. (UP)—Determined to eradicate all reminders of the Nazi-dominated past, the ministry of posts has ordered post offices to return to the sender any letter or parcel from abroad addressed to "Protectorate of Bohemia - Moravia," "Sudetenland" or "Tschechei" and any mail addressed to Germany for Czech towns.
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Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Lost
BROWN Sheafer life-time pen between Hoch or Frank Strong. Helen Hastings engraved on pen. Reward. Return to Dally Kansan office. -17-
GOLD Bulova ladies wrist watch with
the number 18. Please call 412-
if found. Reward
FAIR OF colorless rimmed glasses in blue
case. Phone 2830-8. W.Reward. -17-
4
SCARF, Red and blue checked. Lost yesterday on or near stairs in Fraser hall. Finder please call Jack Campbell. 579-R. -17-
SPIRAL Notebook containing all my notes for Child Development. If found please call 358 or leave at Dally Kansan office. -17-
Wanted
WEDNESDAY Morning, probably between Library and Snow hall, brown pen. Name on side. Mary Klovz. Please call 1407-1. Urgency needed -21 finals.
ONE Brown porch glider taken jokingly around Halloween from the Pi Beta Phi porch. We would appreciate its return information of its whereabouts. 415. -21-
Transportation
HUDSON - RENT - A - CAR - SERVICE
Will rent you a car by day or weekend.
Reservations taken. Phone 3315. Location
601 Vermont. -28-
Business Services
VACANCY For two children in Nursery school. Whole or half days. Prefer two year olds. Experienced teacher. Phone 3402-18. -17
INCOME TAX Service. I am preparing
me for the tax season. My fifth year in this work. Call 991 during day or in the evenings and ask for Ralph Martin for information or an appointment.
-20-
or 1019. -21-
TYIPING: Let a veteran's wife type your term papers. Neat and accurate. Phone 1673W or buy by 942 New Hampshire. 20-TYIPING: Prompt service, reasonable rates. 1028 Vermont. Phone 1186-R. -21-MOTT'S KU. stable offers free transportation to and from campus and stables. For riding reservations, phone 346
TYPING. Term papers and reports. Don
TWIPING. Term papers and reports. Done reasonably and promptly. Phone - 212-345-6789.
ATTENTION. Medical Students, microscopes, colorimeters, balances, engineering instruments cleaned and repaired, ten years experience. Doctor 9213. Tech Instruments Service company, 720 Delaware, Kansas City 6, Mo.-Free estimates. -27-
PHOTO-EXACT Copies, discharge and valuable papers. Fast service. Low price. found former Drug Co., 801 Mass. Law, research team on Lane F, Patent 18, -28. flowers. Kansas.
FOH That coke date remember the Eldridge pharmacy at 701 Mass., phones
For Sale
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TENNIS
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
JANUARY 17,1947
Design Professor Displays New Sunnyside Apartment
[Image of a person sitting on a couch reading a book]
"I decided I should practice what I preach," said Arvid Jacobson, associate professor of design, as he displayed his newly furnished apartment in Sunnyside.
"Of course," he admitted, "I had the jump on everyone else I helped choose the color scheme for the walls. It made my ov decorating job a little easier." ___
Each unit has walls of the same color—rose in the living room, blue in one bedroom, green in the second bedroom, ivory in the kitchen and bath, and ivory woodwork, he explained.
Professor and Mrs. Jacobson, who were in the first group of tenants to move into Sunnyside, started from sorath in furnishing their first real home. Previously, they had lived in a single room in Lawrence, waiting for Sunnyside to be finished.
First, they studied the lay-out of the room and drew diagrams of furniture placement. Then they included the furniture market.
For the living room, they chose a three blue sofa, a rose easy chair, and a platform rocker upholstered in cream. To this they added end tables, a desk, a radio, and lamps. A rug of deeper rose shade than the walls covers the floor.
In the blue bedroom, Mrs. Jacobson matched her white curtains and bedspread with a white skirt on her dressing table. Professor Jacobson bought two unfinished chests and stained them. A large blue rug of woven grasses completes the decoration.
The green bedroom was converted into a study.
"Best room in the place," Professor Jacobson contends, "Space for my desk and my paints, and since it's a back room, my wife has no excuse for trying to straighten it up."
It may be the professor's private room but for all that, it shows a woman's touch. The studio couch in the corner is covered in gay striped material of leigh, yellow, and green. Matching draves and a small Nunda lag are the finishing touches.
Red and white is planned for the small kitchen, although the chairs with their red leather seats haven't arrived yet. Professor Jacobson dug up an old flewer linoleum rug and painted it red. And Mrs. Jacobson is still shopping for gingham curtain material.
The Jacobsbons had no trouble selecting the proper pictures. In the living room hang two of the professor's oil paintings while water colors, chosen for their blending colors, decorate the bedroom walls.
Asked about cost, Professor Jacobson shook his head.
"It depends on whether or not you start as we did, buying everything. Eoughly, it costs about $400 to furnish a living room and $300 for the bedroom but that includes furniture. If you have furniture and rugs, your only cost would be your curtains and odds and ends you might want to add."
But the best thing about Sunny-side, they both agreed, was its nearness to the campus.
"You can get up when the whistle blows." Professor Jacobson grins, "and still make class on time—if you don't stop to shave."
'Life Of World Depends On Asia'
"Asia is going to determine the life of the world, Dr. Harold G. Barn of the School of Religion, told the Y.M.C.A. movie forum yesterday.
"Superior people dictating terms to an inferior people," he said, "has been the attitude of the United States toward China.
"And we should not wander at China's internal struggles," Dr. Barr added, "when our own political house—in which a labor leader defies the President and one state has two governors—is not in order."
Dr. Barr's talk was preceded by a pictorial film on China.
Mutual distract between the Communists and the central government prevents national unity, Dr. Barr explained. The Communists want a part in the central government before laying down their arms, but the central government refuses to accept terms.
Sullivan To Choose Sunflower Queen
Frank Sullivan, state commissioner of insurance, will represent Governor Frank Carlson at the Sunflower ball tonight in the Military Science building.
Mr. Sullivan will choose the queen of the ball from a list of five candidates which include Shirley French, Sidney Letson, Gwendolynne Jones, Tiffany Lilly. The competing girls were chosen by a three-man faculty board.
The dance, which will be held from 9 to 12, will be semi-formal.
Philadelphia (UP)—Nineteen-year-old Harriett Serr, New York, won first prize in "Promising Musicians contest" conducted by the Musical Fund Society of Philadelphia over Dorothy Merriam, Winfield, Kan., who was awarded second place.
Kansan Is Second Musician
Alhambra, Calif. (UP)—Rodriguez Cardinal Villeneuve, 63, ranking North American Catholic, died at Ramona convent here today, of a heart attack.
Cardinal Villeneuve Dies
Big Six School Heads Will Discuss Problems
Tariff Power May Be Cut
Chancellors and presidents of Big Six schools will meet soon to discuss common problems of state schools, Chancellor Deane W. Malotl has announced. The date has not been set.
Washington (UP)—A two-way move was underway in congress today to strip the State department of some of its powers to cut tariffs. It now has authority tc slash tariff rates up to 50 per cent without congressional approval.
"Big Six schools are linked by athletics," Chancellor Malott said, "but as large state schools we have similar problems in regard to housing, veterans, finance, and academic standards."
Dykes Bars Arnall From Rotunda Desk
Altanta (UP)-Ellis Arnall was barred from his temporary executive quarters in the rotunda of the state capitol today and was stormily booed by scores of supporters of Herman Talmadge as he walked away quietly.
When Governor Arnal entered, he faced Rep. James Dykes, a Talmadge backed legislator, across his small desk and said, "Jimmy, I want my office."
"Ellis, you remind me of a hog. The more you give him the more he wants."
Grinning, Mr. Dykes planted his braids on his hips and said;
There were no troopers inside the little office with Representative Dykes but he had said he would bodily eject Governor Arnall if necessary.
When Governor Arnall began his statement to the press he said that he had been denied access to the capitol. Representative Dykes snapped. "That's a lie."
Governor Talmadge said he had spent last night at Lovejoy, Ga., but that he would be at the mansion tonight and from now on.
When asked specifically what he planned to do about the suit brought by Governor Arnall, Governor Talmadge said, "I don't know, I don't have any plans, I will probably do nothing."
Nobel Winners Teach Elementary Science
Chicago, (UP)—Two of the University of Chicago's three Nobel prize winners are spending part of their time teaching elementary courses.
Dr. Enrico Fermi, who set off the first chain reaction in a war-time laboratory underneath the university's Stagg field, is teaching a beginning course in physics, and Dr. Harold C. Urey, who won the Nobel prize for his development of "heavy water"—important in atomic energy—has a basic course in chemistry.
Their explanation is that they think the students ought to get "started out right" and that research is important in teaching. Both are continuing their research work in the university's new institute for nuclear studies.
The third Nobel prize winner, James Franck, is continuing his work in photosynthesis, or the study of the process by which sunlight is converted into chemical energy in a plant.
Oslo. (UF)—The Norwegian government announced today its willingness to consider an agreement with Russia for Soviet military bases in the strategic Arctic Spitzerben islands if the United States, Britain and four interested European powers approve.
Norway Announces Willingness To Agrec With Russia
A communique said the government and parliament were considering a request by Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov to renew negotiations on Soviet requests for joint Soviet-Norwegian defense of Spitzerbergen.
Molotov also has requested negotiations on common Soviet-Norwegian economic interests in the bleak archipelago barely 600 miles from the North pole, the communique disclosed. Spitzerbergen is under exclusive Norwegian sovereignty by the 1920 Paris treaty.
Wide Changes Seen In Proposals For New Labor Laws
Washington. (UP)—The 80th Congress is virtually certain to make changes in the Wagner Act and to enact new laws regulating the activities of unions.
Republican leaders, who interpret their November triumph as a people's mandate to tackle the labor question, may have the support of President Truman on some of their proposals.
The form of the legislation which eventually will reach Mr. Truman is still uncertain due to serious differences over the problem among the Republicans themselves. The GOP leaders who probably will have most to do with it are Sens. Robert A. Taft, of Ohio, and Joseph H. Ball, of Minnesota.
So important does Taft consider labor legislation that he is passing up the chairmanship of the Senate finance committee. In its place, he is ready to take over the Senate labor committee.
No one can predict the type of legislation that Taft and Ball will present finally to their Republican colleagues. But from the past records of both men and of other GOP stalwarts who will have considerable influence over labor legislation, it probably will cover these points:
ONE. Some form of "cooling off" period between the time that a union takes a strike vote and the time that the strike becomes effective.
TWO. Outlawing or drastically restricting jurisdictional strikes and boycotts.
THREE. Granting employers the right to petition the National Labor Relations Board for a collective bargaining election among employees in their plants.
FOUR. Some form of mediation or arbitration in strikes where the national "health, welfare and safety is involved...
FIVE. Outlawing of "force and violence" (including, possibly, mass picketing) during a strike.
SIX. Union "responsibility" in the observance of collective bargaining contracts.
Dentlands for more drastic legislation, including repeal of the Wagner Act and "labor courts" to settle disputes, probably will arise from GOP ranks. But responsible Republican leaders, not wanting to stir up solid union opposition in the 1948 presidential elections, probably will head off such proposals.
All of the Republican proposals will meet bitter opposition from the remnants of the left wing bloc which was cut down in the November elections. But the GOP can count on the support of many southern Democrats who were never happy over New Deal labor legislation.
In the past 10 years, the most serious effort to restrict union rights and privileges came to a head in the last session with the passing of the Case bill. It was passed by both houses of Congress, but vetoed by President Truman.
The measure, sponsored by Rep. Francis Case, R., S.D., was a catchall for practically every idea of anti-New Deal Congressman in the past few years. Republican leaders now feel that President Truman might have accepted a considerable portion of the bill had it been sent up to him a piece at a time.
It is highly unlikely that the 80th Congress will re-enact the same measure. But many of its provisions undoubtedly will be incorporated into new legislation.
Law Fraternity Dines
Graduating seniors of Phi Delta Phi, professional law fraternity, were honored by a fraternity hamburger dinner held Thursday at the Dine-A-Mite. Charles Arthur, fraternity magister, was in charge, assisted by Richard Rogers and Robert Bond.
Lutherans To Meet
A musical program will follow the Sunday evening supper of the Lutheran club which will be held at 6 p.m. in the Trinity Lutheran church.
News . . .
of the World
Expedition Nears Little America
With Byrd expedition off Little America, (UP)-Advance ships of the Byrd antarctic expedition reached the Bay of Whales last night and a ski-borne reconnaissance team scouted to within binocular-sight of Little America. The task group was anchored at the Bay's mouth, unable to go inside and establish a base yet because of thick ice. The ships were to go in and unload one at a time as soon as the icebreaker north-wind cleared enough open water.
The seouting party was put ashore from the northwind and reached within a mile of Little America III, the base used from 1939 to 1941 by the last Byrd expedition.
Looking through binoculars at the camp site, the party saw building ventilators and radio antenna poles sticking out of the snow, apparently much as the 1941 expedition left them.
The scouting team was unable to select a site for a new base because low clouds and snow limited visibility.
At stake in the so-called Tide- lands case is control of an estimated 200 million barrels of oil in the land beneath the marginal seas.
Tokyo. (UP)—Victims of the Hiroshima and Nagasaki atomic bomb blasts who suffered from such ailments as injury to their blood streams and loss of hair have recovered, a U. S. bomb casualty commission disclosed today.
Bills were introduced in both the house and senate last week to give states titles to land extending from the shore to the three-mile limit. President Truman last summer vetoed a similar bill.
U.S. Convicts Nazi Spies
Shanghai, (UP)—Twenty-one Nazi members of the notorious "Ehrhardt bureau," which continued to supply the Japanese with military intelligence after Germany had surrendered; were convicted today by a U.S. military tribunal and sentenced to prison terms of from five years to life.
The brief was in support of its request that the court find that the federal government, not the state of California, holds title to the underwater lands extending three nautical miles from the low-tide mark on the Pacific shores.
A-Bomb Victims Recover
Washington. (UP)—The government, in a brief filed with the Supreme court, today claimed sole title to the oil-rich land beneath the marginal seas off the California coast.
London, (UP)—A committee of 23 prominent political, intellectual, and religious leaders led by Winston Churchill today opened a campaign for a United Europe on the note that "if Europe is to survive, it must unite."
Churchill Leads Campaign
Government Claims Oil-Rich Land Title
Tulsa (UP)—Tulsa University's all-American quarterback, Clyde Le-Force, today signed a two year contract to play professional football with the Detroit Lions of the National league.
LeForce To Play Pro Ball
P
R
C
Legislature Nearly Ready
Topeka (UP)—The earliest completed organization of the legislature in many years was in prospect today for the 35th Kansas general session. House Speaker Frank Miller said he had decided upon chairmen for all but three of the 43 committees the lower chamber will have.
University DAILY KANSAN
STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Monday, January 20, 1947
44th Year No. 72
Lawrence, Kansas
Police Check River Death Of Clifford Kaarbo
Lawrence police were investigating today the death of Clifford O. Kaarbo, 23, engineering senior, whose body was recovered from the Kaw river Sunday morning after vain efforts to rescue him earlier that morning had failed.
Plans were being made for an inquest tomorrow, to which several University students, fraternity brothers and friends of Kaarbo, would be summoned. Dr. R. A. Clark, coroner, said.
At an autopsy held this morning, Dr. Clark said he discovered no signs of "foul play." There was no evidence of external injury or violence, he said.
The only mark on the body was a skinned portion of the left leg, which Dr. Clark thought might have been caused by a rope burn.
The body was identified Sunday by Kaarbo's parents, Mr. and Mrs. O. O. Kaarbo, of Topeka. They had been informed by two members of the Triangle fraternity, of which Kaarbo was a member who went to Topeka to tell the parents personally.
sometimes.
Kaarlo had left the chapter house at 1116 Louisiana street without explanation early Sunday morning, fraternity members said. He had been seen there at 3:30 a.m.
Kaarbo, who was described by fraternity brothers as "a very good student," was recently elected treaner of the Pachacamac political party.
Police were first notified that there was someone in the river at 4:30 a.m. Glenn Colburn, driver of a creamery truck, made the report.
Colburn, who lives at 2028 Kentucky street, had left a local creamery at 4:10, and had made five stops, when he heard loud cries for help coming from the direction of the bridge. Colburn was then at 500 Tennessee street, about three blocks west of the bridge.
"At first I thought it was some Saturday night drunk," Colburn said, "but soon I realized the cries were urgent, so I hurried over to investigate."
Using a flashlight, Colburn discovered the man holding on to a large log, near the dam, a little to the east and directly in the middle of the bridge.
"I hollered to him that I was going after help," Colburn said, "and ran to my truck to report to the police."
The police first tried heaving a line to the stranded man, and then tied an oil can to the line to make it float. The line floated to the log, but the man yelled that he was too weak to make it to shore.
He held on to the can, however, and swam to another log, the police said, but let go of the can when he reached the other log. A moment later he disappeared into the dark water.
Members of the rescue party thought that the low temperature of the water (there were thin slabs of ice near the bank) and the suction of the current might have had something to do with the man's inability to make it to shore.
An attempt was made to locate boats to help the man, but none were found until dawn, police said.
Members of the Triangle fraternity were still unable today to explain the sudden departure early Sunday morning of Kaarbo.
He was not despondent, they said, seemed to have no financial troubles, and went on dates only occasionally, and then with no particular girl.
Senior Proofs Are Ready
Proofs for senior class pictures are ready and may be picked up at the Jayhawker office in the Union building Between 1 and 5 p.m. today.
Stene Is Offered Harvard Position
WILLIAM H. BURRIS
PROF. E. O. STENE
- * *
For the third time in as many years, Harvard university has extended to a fellowship in human relations to a K.U. professor. E. O. Stene, associate professor of political science, has been offered the position of research associate in the field of human relations.
Application for approval of the offer, which was accepted by Dr. Carroll D. Clark, professor of sociology, in 1945 and by Hilden Gibson associate professor of political science, in 1946, went to the Kansas board of regents today.
If the plan proceeds as it has in the two previous cases, Professor Stine will be granted a one-year leave of absence and will begin his work at Harvard next fall. Dr. Clark returned to the University last spring; Professor Gibson is now at Harvard.
Bloc Leads Polish Votes
March Of Dimes Drive To Open At K.U. Today
Warsaw. (UP)—The Polish government bloc piled up a commanding lead today in the count of votes cast at Poland's first post-war election, assuring it of overwhelming domination of the nation's one-house parliament.
The campus March of Dimes drive under direction of Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity, opened today with a goal of 9,000 dimes to be reached by Jan.29.
Contributions will be forwarded to the national foundation for the cure and prevention of poliomyelitis, William Perkins, campus campaign chairman, said today.
Collection booths, handled by members of various campus organizations, have been placed in the Union lounge, Marvin hall, and the lobby of Frank Strong. Representatives of organized houses are requested to pick up collection boxes in Dean Henry Werner's office today.
Phi Beta Pi, professional medical fraternity, started the ball rolling today with a $25 contribution in memory of Maurice O'Leary, who died of the disease last summer.
The annual March of Dimes, under auspices of Alpha Phi Omega, will be Saturday night at the Community building. Perkins said.
Bill Allowing Ownership Of Liquor To Legislature
Topeka. (UP)—A bill which would take the heart out of the Kansas "bone dry" law was introduced today in the house of representatives by Rep. Charles Rauh, Hutchinson Democrat.
The present law prohibits the manufacture, sale, transportation, and possession of liquor. Representative Rauh's bill calls for elimination of the transportation or possession clauses and greatly reduces the penalty for violation.
Geology Frat Will Initiate
Sigma Gamma Epsilon, geology fraternity, will initiate pledges toorrow at noon in front of Lindley hall, and at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in 301 Lindley hall.
By Bibler
Little Man On Campus By Bibl
AMBULANCE
K.U.
"No—he's a law student trying to pass his finals."
Dr. Wheeler Leaves K.U. After 22 Years' Service
III Health Causes Sudden Departure Of University Psychologist-Author
Dr. Raymond H. Wheeler, for 22 years a K.U. psychology teacher, and exponent of the "hot rat, cold rat" theory of climatic cycles, left the University today.
A. R.
RAYMOND H. WHEELER
His departure was explained by Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, as a "sick leave," for which a request went to the state board of regents, meeting in Toneka today.
Sone Waives Theft Hearing
Charles Forrest Sone, 21-year-old Central college student of Fayette, Mo., who confessed to charges of burglarizing three men's dormitories at the University, and three at the University of Missouri, and Kemper Military academy, waived preliminary hearings which were to be held at 11 a.m. today in Douglas county court.
The trial will be in February unless Sone pleads guilty before that time, the court attorney said.
Sone was arrested Jan. 11 after he was seen leaving the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity with a pair of shoes. At the police station he admitted entering Battenfeld hall and men's quarters in the basement of Spooner-Thayer museum on previous occasions. He is charged with grandarceny.
Two large suitcases of clothing are being held at the police station to be claimed by the owner, Chief C. A. Bliessner said. The suitcases were recovered from Sone's room at Fayette along with radios, fountain pens, watches, cameras, and other articles amounting to between $600 and $700. The prisoner admitted taking approximately $100 in cash
Women's Rifle Club To Meet Columbia
The University women's rifle club will meet Columbia university team in a telegraphic match at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow on the military science range.
Immediately after the firing, the club will hold a meeting, and pictures taken at the first of the semester will be shown.
Women who will fire in the match are: Frances Chubb, Margaret Burt, Shirley Otter, Kathleen Broers, Janet Bell, Armilda Lincoln, Mary A. Ward, Jane Keith, Betty Sanden, Margaret Cloyd, and Mary Garton.
Friends of the Wheeler family declared that the psychologist "has been in ill health for some time." Professor and Mrs. Wheeler were to leave Lawrence this afternoon on a trip to Berlin, Mass., Dr. Wheeler's birthplace.
Known for his gleaming bright neckwear, he was author of four textbooks in psychology. He came to K.U. in 1925, and became head of the psychology department in 1928, when it was separated from philosophy.
Dr. Weeler's theories of the connection between cultural cycles and the world's climate received wide discussion. With his theory, he made long-range predictions of world questions, including periods when depressions and wars were most likely to take place.
The current era, he has predicted, brings the world into another "cold epoch," and World War II may be followed "by a general mess of civil wars." According to his theory, when the weather is changing from cold to warm, cultural aspects of the society is on the upswing, but when weather is generally cold, civil wars are popular.
Dr. Wheeler is 54 years old. He received his bachelor of arts, master of arts, and doctor of philosophy degrees at Clark college, Worcester, Mass., and then instructed at the University of Oregon for 10 years, before coming to the Hill.
He was a captain in the army's psychological service in the first World war. Two of his texts, "The Science of Psychology," and "Readings in Psychology," were used at K.U. More than 100 of his articles were published in psychological journals.
His classes and final examinations will be handled by other department members the remainder of this semester.
Six Win Appeals In Traffic Court
A special meeting of the student court to hear traffic cases was held in the business office of Frank Strong hall Friday. Six of the 12 students who appeared before the court to appeal fines were successful.
The court was unable to hear all the cases presented, as some concerned more than five violations. For students who hold more than five tickets the court will convene at 7 p.m. Tuesday, in Green hall. A case of more than five offenses will have to be brought before the court with the chief justice and six associate justices present.
The appeals Friday were heard by two justices, Kenneth Ray and Robert Stadler, second year law students. William McElhenny, the prosecuting attorney, and Chester Foster, patrolman for the University, were present at the hearing.
Italian Premier Resigns
Rome. (UP)—Premier Alcide de Gasperi resigned unexpectedly today after admitting his inability to handle Italy's present political situation. De Gasperi's resignation ended the first government of the Italian republic just six-months after its formation.
WEATHER
Generally fair tonight and tomorrow, with little change in temperature.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 20,1947
Belles AND THEIR Weddings
Pals-Brown
Mr. and Mrs. L. G. Puls, Durango, Colo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Ruth, to Edward H. Brown, son of Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Heaps, Salt Lake City, Utah. The announcement was made recently at Templein hall by Mrs. H. M. Miller, housemother of Carruth hall.
Miss Puls received an orchid. Jo Ann, Spohn, Jacquin McDerned, and Shirley Crain, who passed the chocolates, Mrs. Albert Schrumph and Mrs. Miller were presented with corages of vanda orchids.
Mass Puls is a Fine Arts senior, and will begin occupational therapy taring in the University hospital in March. Mr. Brown is a College junior.
☆ ☆
Sawyer-Fenton
The announcement of the engagement of Elaine Sawyer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George I. Sawyer Fairview, to Robert M. Fenton, son of Mrs. L. E. Fenton, Kansas City, Mo., was made recently at a coffee at tiller hall, Mrs. R. G. Roche, house where she holds the noncement, received a corsage of white carnations, Betty Soukup and Billie Rotermund, who passed the chocolates, wore gardenia corsages. Miss Sawyer received an orchid. Marylee Masterson sang "Always," Miss Sawyer is a business junior.
Miss Sawyer is a business junior Mr. Fenton is a College junior.
☆ ☆
Vasant-Hugbes
Mr. and Mrs. James P. Vansant Deway, Okla., announce the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Mary Lou, to Harry L. Highes, son of Mr. and Mrs. Resx R. Hughes, Topeka. The ceremony will take place at 5 p.m., Feb. 7, in Danforth chapel with the Rev. E. F. Price officiating.
Miss Vausant is a College junior, Mr. Hughes is a College senior and an assistant instructor of romance languages.
Young-Dudley
☆ ☆
Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Dudley, Hugotten, announce the marriage of their daughter, Mary Frances, to Walter D Young, Dec. 27, in Hugoton Mrs. Young attended the University in 1945-46 and is a member of Sigma Kappa sorority.
Natier-Forsyth
☆ ' ☆
The pinning of Janice Nattier, Concordia, to William Forsyth, Medicine Lodge, was announced recently at the Alpha Chi Omega house. Miss Nattier received an orchid, Mrs. Fredda Jackson, Mrs. C. H. Sauter, housemother, Housemother, Daxley, Dawson, and Barbara on reception received white carnation corsages. The traditional chocolates were passed.
Miss Nattier, Fine Arts senior, is a member of Alpha Chi Omega. Mr Forsyth, business senior, is a member of Sigma Chi.
Hasselbring-Parcels
Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Parcels announce the marriage of their daugher, Dorothy B. Parcels, Lodi, Calif., to Paul Henry Hasselbring, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Fred H. Hassebring, Fort Dodge, Iowa. The double ring ceremony took place Dec. 22, at the Methodist church, Hiswatha, with the Rev. William I. Hastie officiating.
Mrs. Hasselbring was graduated from the University in 1931 with a bachelor of music degree, and received her master of music degree from the University of California in 1943. She is a member of Mu Phi Epsilon and Pi Kappa Lambda. At the present time she is a member of the music faculty at the Union High school, Lodi, Calif.
The bridegroom was graduated from Iowa State college, where he was affiliated with the Sigma Nu fraternity.
University Daily Kansan
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan, every afternoon during the school year except summer and examination periods, holiday and examination periods, second class matter Sep 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
Paige-McPhee
The pinning of Mary Kay Paige, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. W Paige, Topeka, to William McPhee, son of Mrs. Nora McPhee, Santa Ana, Calif., was announced recently at the Kappa Alpha Thetn house. Miss Paike received a corsage of camillias and roses. Mrs. Karl W. Perkins, housemother, wore a gardenia corsage. Shirley Leitch, who assisted, received a corsage of red roses.
Miss Paige, College sophomore, is a member of Kappa Alpha Theta. Mr. McPhee, medical sophomore, is a member of Sigma Nu and Nu Sigma Nu.
Larsen-Nicolet
☆ ☆
The pinning of Virginia Larsen, Quivera Lakes, to Ellis Nicolet, Cimarron, was announced at the Chi Omega house recently. Miss Larsen received an orchid. Mrs. Onita Miller and the attendants received gardenia corsages.
Miss Larsen, Fine Arts junior, is a member of Chi Omega. Mr. Nicolet. College freshman, is a member of Phi Kappa Psi.
Ackerman-Surface
☆ ☆
The pinning of Alice Ackerman, Kansas City, to Edward Surface, Salina, was announced recently at the Alpha Chi Omega house. Miss Ackerman received a green orchid. Mrs. Freda Jackson, housemother, received a corsage of violets and rose petals for her daughter Alice Ackerman, attendants, received corsages of vanda orchids. Penelope Boxmeyer and Mrs. C. J. Dodds received gardenia corsages. The traditional chocolates were passed.
Miss Ackerman, College senior, is a member of Alpha Chi Omega. Mr. Surface, College junior, is a member of Beta Theta Pi.
Phone KU-25 with your news.
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Son Born To Britts
Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Lee Britt, North Hollywood, Calif., announce the birth of a son, Gerald Lee, Dec. 26. Mrs. Britt is the former Patricia Penney, who attended the university from 1943 to 1946. She is a former mangain editor of the University Daily Kansan.
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WILLIAM BENDIX APPEARING IN PARAMOUNT'S "TWO YEARS BEFORE THE MAST"
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1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 20.1947
PAGE THREE
SOCIALLY SPEAKING
ELINOR BROWNE, Society Editor
Sig Ep's Pledge Two
Sigma Phi Epsilon announces the pledging of Jack Fink, engineering freshman from Topeka; and Richard. Blasdel, College freshman from Charlotte.
★ ★ ★
Battenfeld. Templin Have Dinner
Battenfeld hall held an exchange dinner and dance Thursday night with Tempinp hall. Guests at Battenfeld were Billie Enterline, Ruth Cawood, Rosemary Alderman, Doraen Lindquist, Donna Shimer, Emily Burgert, Clara Jane Lutz, Margaret Minor, Aileen Beal, Elizabeth Tripp, Virginia Shimer, Margaret Dean, Connie Cultra and Ruth Dudley.
Barbara Lamoreaux. College freshman, reigned as queen at the Sunflower ball which was held Friday night in the Military Science building.
Guests at Templin included Darrel Brown, Lyle Wheaterbok, Victor Reinking, Donald Jarbose, William Worag, Eugene Casement, Wayne Hunt, Austin Harmon, John Dickerson, Dean Smith, Edmund Marks, William Nagle, Clyde Lunger and Delmar Harris.
Lamoreaux Reigns As Sunflower Queen
The queen received her crown from Frank Sullivan, state commission of insurance, who represented Governor Frank Carlson at the dance. Attendants to the queen included Mary Lilly, Shirley French, Sydney Letson, and Gwendolynne Jnoes.
Crowning ceremonies took place at intermission. The queen was presented a crown of daisies and a bouquet of daffodils. Each attendant received a corsage.
A three man faculty board consisting of Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, Irvin Youngberg, director of the housing bureau, and Willis Tompkins, assistant dean of men, selected Miss Lamoreaux from a list of five candidates.
Son Born To Craiks
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Craik, 826 Missouri, announce the birth of a son, Robert Alan, born Jan. 16, at the Lawrence Memorial hospital. Craik received the master of arts degree in entomology in 1938 and is now an assistant instructor in biology.
ISA Candidates To Meet
A meeting of all ISA election candidates will be held at 4 p.m. today in Miller hall. Elections for next year will be Monday.
COEDS' CORNER
Emily Stacey Majors In French, Activities; Wants To Travel
A desire to travel to France, or at least to Canada, is in the mind of Emily Stacey, College senior from Lawrence. As a French major, Emily would like to see the country she has studied so much about.
Being interested in all languages, Emily, along with Mrs. Ralph Baldwin, Gamma Phi Biha housemother, and two sorority sisters, attended the University of Mexico, in Mexico City, in the summer of 1944, where she studied the Spanish language and history.
"People there knew so many languages, and most everyone knew English and French," she said, still at the situation.
Emily seems to have all of the qualifications necessary to fill the office of vice-president. She has this position in the Mortar board, Jay Janes, and French club. She is activities chairman for Gamma Phi Beta, and for the second year is the W.Y.C.A.'s representative to the All-Student Council. She is a member of its committee on committees.
In previous years she has been in the Forensic league, Dramatic workshop, Union activities, and on the Jayhawker staff. Last year she was head of the community service commission of Y.W.C.A.
Although her home is in Lawrence, Emily has lived at the Gamma Phi house during part of her four years at K.U. She said living at home has definite advantages, but one doesn't get the experience of living with people.
"When you're away, you have to assume more responsibilities than when you're home," she said. "You don't get to travel around as much when you live at home, either. I just hop on a bus and there I am home."
Lutheran Club Meets
The Lutheran club of the Trinity Lutheran church held a supper meeting at the church Sunday night. A musical program concluded the meeting. Mabel R. Larson, College junior, was chairman of the program committee.
College Faculty To Meet
A meeting of the College faculty will be held at 4:30 tomorrow in the auditorium of Frank Strong hall.
☆ ☆
THE REAL LIFE OF WILLIAM MAYNARD
EMILY STACEV
Snyder Recital Given To Large Audience
A near-capacity audience heard Paul Snyder, associate professor of piano, present a recital Sunday in Fraser theater.
Included on the program were: "Sonata, Op. 53." Waldstein; "C major," consisting of the Allegro con brio, Introduzione-Adagio molto, and Rondo-Allegretto moderato, Beethoven; "Impromptus, Op. 90, consisting of the Allegro molto moderato—C minor, Allegro —E flat major, Andante—G flat major, and Allegretto—A flat minor, Schubert; and the "Sonata in B minor," Liszt.
This was the first faculty recital to be presented in 1947.
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Insect Growth Discussed By Woodruff At Sigma Xi
Prof. L. C. Woodruff spoke on Insect Growth Peculiarities as Compared to the Growth of Normal Animals at the monthly meeting of Sigma Xi Thursday night.
Prof. William Young reported on the national convention of Sigma Xi held in Boston during Christmas holidays. Prof. A. J. Mix also attended the convention as delegate from the K.U. chapter.
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---
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 20,1947
SPOTLIGHT SPORTS
By BOB DELLINGER (Daily Kansas Sports Editor)
Two star pupils of one of the greatest coaches in history will match wits and squads tonight when the Jayhawkers under Howard Engleman clash with Frosty Cox's Colorado Buffs.
Both teams play somewhat the same style of basketball, the Allen system.
Engleman was a star here in 1939, 1940, and 1941, making all-American and all-Big Six in each of the last two years. In 1939, he led Kansas in scoring, and in 1941 he led the conference.
Cox was an all-Big Six guard with the Jayhawkers in 1930 and 1931 when the Kansas squad finished second and then came back to win its seventh Big Six crown.
\* \* \*
It is fairly obvious from some of the old scores through the years that Kansas teams always have had tight defenses, and that the games which pitted them against another defensive team almost put the score-keepers to sleep.
A field goal must have been a major factor in the 1924 Kansas-Nebraska series when the Jayhawkers captured both games by scores of 19-18 and 13-10.
In 1917 the Jayhawkers evidently ran into a superior defense, dropping one of four games to Kansas State. 9-38. The Hawkers won two of the other three.
Again in 1933, the Aggies were victorious, this time by a 15-11 count. But last year Kansas thumped the Manhattan cage men, 71-46 and 68-43 in two of the three encounters.
A single digit was on the side of the ledger in 1917 when the Jay-hawkers clashed with Iowa State and took the Cyclone scab. 25-9.
Last year the Jayhawkers ran wild against Nebraska and cracked the Big Six scoring record with a 72-30 victory over Nebraska.
***
** 负责
St. Benedict's beat Rockhurst; Rockhurst beat St. Mary's; St. Mary's beat St. Louis; St. Louis plastered the Oklahoma Aggies; theAggies beat Kentucky; Kentucky is rated by those who don't know about St. Benedicts; therefore, St.Benedict's is the best. That's his opinion.
Arkansas has already picked the successor to George Kok. A 7' 7" ninth-grader in Mississippi can't get shoes, but he continues to average over 40 points while standing still. He wants to go to Arkansas. As a phys ed major?
The Detroit Football Lions recently signed Clyde LeForce, star Tulsa quarterback. The Lions already have an option on Glenn Davis, and the Army flash says he won't play without Blanchard.
If the Lions get LeForce, Davis, and Blanchard into the same fold, look out, opponents!
Linwood Defeats University High
The University High cage squad absorbed its eighth loss in nine starts Friday night by dropping a 27-30 decision to Linwood High at Linwood.
Dick Cochran led the Eagles in scoring with 10 points, and George Denny and Gene Riling contributed seven and six, respectively. Handley led Linwood with 12.
A technical foul was called on U.H.S. supporters when a yell from the Eagle section broke up a post-period free-throw.
C. J. Elliott led the Eagle "B" team to 26-19 victory, scoring 11 points himself.
Intramural Schedule
6:30—Phi Kappa vs. Navy Officers
6:30—Delta Tau Delta vs. Alpha
Phi Alpha
Tonight;
7:30-Pi Kappa Alpha vs. 1934 club
7:30-Alpha Tau Omega vs. 1126
club
8:30—Theta Tau vs. Indepsis
Zena Qismon vs. Ornharh*
9:30 - Kappa Sigmus vs. Alpha Pho
Omega*
9:30—Sigma Nu vs. A.T.C. club
Victory Margins Wide In Intramural Games
Victory margins ranged from 1 to 34 points in eight games reported from intramural basketball play of Friday and Saturday.
Kappa Sigma ran up the highest total in defeating the Married Men. 46 to 12. Sauder paced scoring for the winners with 13 markers, followed by teammate Phiplblad with 12.
The closest contest found Triangle edging past Sigma Nu, 30 to 29. Sankey of Triangle tossed in 13 points to take scoring honors. Darsie of Sigma Nu was high for the losers with 12.
Other results: Sigma Phi Epsilon over Po Dunks, 2 to 0 (for f慰); Delta Chi over R.O.T.C. 36 to 24; Delta Upsilon over Tau Kappa Epsilon, 21 to 13; Mom's Boys over Spooner-Thayer, 38 to 25; Beta Theta Pi over Frat Busters, 32 to 25; and Wesley over Live Five, 27 to 17.
'Suppressor' Reduces Record Scratches
Waltham, Mass. (UP)—The days when the scratch of a phonograph needle seemed as prominent as the recording itself may be on the way out.
Thanks to a new device, both old and new phonograph records can be heard clearly at all times.
Known technically as the "dynamic noise suppressor," the device automatically and instantaneously adapts the channel to conform with the requirements of the musical range, thus obtaining a clear tone.
In other words, the invention operates like a rapid electronic "gate" to admit the music, eliminating all but an almost inaudible amount of noise. In the bass musical register, the suppressor reduces the heavy rumble and in the high range the reduction of scratch is marked.
The average home radio would need one to four extra vacuum tubes for the dynamic suppressor. One tube would suffice for the smallest radios, while three or four plus a few other components are necessary for more elaborate outfits.
The East Aurora Chapter of the Society for Preservation and Encouragement of Barbershop Quartet Singing in America in voting to donate the proceeds from their winter minstrel show to the village's high school athletic fund added this proviso—the football goal-posts must be painted barbershop red-and-white.
Haircuts Or Football They Use Same Poles
East Aurora, N.Y. (UP)—The followers of East Aurora high school football will be treated to something out of the ordinary next fall—barbershop goal-posts.
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Turner Is Named 'B' Team Coach
Paul Turner, 1942 basketball letterman, has been named coach of the University "B" basketball team, Athletic Director E. C. Quigley has announced.
Turner replaces Howard Engleman who has taken over the varsity helm during the enforced vacation of Head Coach F. C. "Phog" Allen, who has retired for the season because of illness.
Turner, a senior from Shawnee- Mission, kicked the winning field goal to down Oklahoma. 16-13, in last season's football clash.
Netters Receive Call For Spring Action
Tennis candidates for the 1947 Jayhawker defending champion team received their first call for spring action today from Coach Garden A. Sabine, who set the initial organization meeting with the netters for 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in 203 Robinson gymnastium.
Season plans and schedules will be discussed. The 1946 team won the Big Six title, with an undefeated record of eight wins and two ties.
This year's schedule will include matches against all other Big Six teams, plus an early-season trip which will take the K.U. squad against five other schools away from home.
K. U. has one of the best all-time tennis records of any Big Six school. Since 1927, the Jayhawkers have lost only 18 dual meets of 120 played.
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---
1047
JANUARY 20,1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS.
PAGE FIVE
1947
Kansas Tangles With Colorado U. At Boulder
The Jayhawkers will tangle with Colorado U. tonight at Boulder in a non-conference attempt to break a four-game losing streak which was started at the hands of the same team.
The Buffaloes edged Kansas, 52-50 to Kansas City's Municipal auditorium Jan. 2, and since then the Jayhawkers have lost three conference games.
While the Jayhawkers are on their western trip, the conference spotlight moves to Ames, where the Iowa State Cyclones will try to stay in the Big Six race at the expense of twice-beaten Nebraska.
A Cornhusker victory would narrow down the title competition to two teams, Missouri and Oklahoma, with two more, Iowa State and Nebraska battling for third.
Oklahoma's Sooners whipped Kansas State, 50-30, at Manhattan Saturday to avenge an earlier non-conference defeat and to sink the Wildcats within a half game of the league cellar. This game became another to be marled by swinging fists as six players, three from each side, exchanged blows.
Meanwhile, the undefeated Missouri Tigers sailed past Nebraska at Columbia, downing the Cornhuskers, 47-41. The Tigers have now only the Sooners to face in the first half of conference play, and if Missouri can down the Oklahoma team at Norman, it will be an odds-on favorite for the 'championship.
The last Missouri team to finish on top was the 1939 aggregation which finished in a first-place tie with Oklahoma. Missouri will have the advantage of home court when it meets Oklahoma, Kansas, and Kansas State during the second half.
Kansas will return to the Big Six wars Friday to meet Iowa State at Lawrence and will remain at home for a Tuesday game with Kansas State. The Kansas-Kansas State game will decide possession of the league cellar at the end of first half play.
Big Six Standings
Missouri Valley
| Team | W | L | Pct | Pts | Opn |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Missouri | 4 | 0 | 1.000 | 165 | 142 |
| Oklahoma | 2 | 1 | .667 | 141 | 121 |
| Nebraska | 2 | 2 | .500 | 187 | 197 |
| Iowa State | 1 | 1 | .500 | 76 | 76 |
| Kansas State | 1 | 3 | .250 | 175 | 198 |
| Kansas | 0 | 3 | .000 | 127 | 137 |
Team W L Pct Pts Ops
St. Louis 5 0 1.000 251 183
Drake 3 1 7.50 216 153
Okla, A & M 2 1 6.67 113 107
Tulsa 1 1 5.00 82 95
Creighton 1 1 3.25 158 195
Washington 1 4 2.00 197 239
Wichita 1 3 0.00 113 158
Town Clock May Decide Outcome Of Murder Trial
Shamokin, Pa. (UP)—The outcome of a murder trial here probably depends on when the lights went on again after V-E Day in the clock tower.
A witness said he remembered the time of important incidents in the slaying of Clem Kovaleskie because he "looked at the town clock." The prosecution contended there was no light in the tower.
The company isn't sure just when it did turn the lights on again after brownout restrictions were removed.
Hotel Fires Arouse Public
Philadelphia. (UP)—Fire authorities from throughout the nation were told today that "an aroused public demands action" to end the epidemic of hotel fires which brought death to 232 persons last year. Civic officials and representatives of safety organizations met in emergency session to map plans to halt skyrocketing fire losses.
They Put 'Fight' In O.U.-Aggie Game
10
GERALD TUCKER
MICHAEL GERMAN
ALLIE PAINE
80
Here are three basketball players who became engaged in some extra pugilistic activity Friday night. The dispute began late in the game between Paine and Patrick, who went up after a rebound and came down swinging.
Tucker, who was on the bench, joined the argument, and engaged Norman Rothrock, 200-pound K-State court and football man, Referees cleared the floor, but the closing minutes of the game were rough and tough.
GERALD PATRICK
※ ※ ※
Batavia, N.Y. (UP)—Mrs. Ed Reed of Alabama Center has just received a Christmas card from her former next-door neighbors, mailed 23 years ago. The senders have been dead for several years.
'Through Rain, Snow—'
Shadow. Scare
Tucson, Ariz. (UP) — "Araff of her shadow" applied literally to Dorothy Ellis. Police who investigated a report that a prowler was burking outside Miss Ellis' home said she had been frightened by her own reflection in a dark window.
KU's Jim Maloney Wears His Atom Pin As Vets Wear Ruptured Ducks
Soft-spoken, affable Dr. James O. Maloney, head of the department of chemical engineering, who worked with some of the country's leading scientists on the atomic bomb, leads a quiet life at K.U.
Dr. Maloney began work on prob of plutonium and heavy water on the loan" from the E. I. DuPont de Ne' mours company of Wilmington, Del., in 1942.
For his work on the bomb, Dr. Maloney was awarded a certificate from the secretary of war and an "A" pin which he modestly refers to as "something like the discharge button."
He received a bachelor of science degree from the University of Illinois in chemical engineering in 1937, a master's degree in the same field from Pennsylvania State college in 1939, and a doctor of philosophy degree from the same college in 1941, at the age of 26.
A native of St. Joseph, Mo., Dr.
Maloney attended parochial schools
there and in Kansas City. He was
graduated from Westport High
school in 1931 and from Kansas City
Junior college in 1934.
That middle initial in his name stands for "O'Hara." Dr. Maloney says, and admits being "slightly Irish."
In 1940, while working on his doctor of philosophy degree, Dr. Maloney married Dorothy Burkholder of Greencastle, Pa. The Maloney's have two children, John C., 3, and Nancy Jean, 1.
Through the spring and summer, Dr. Maloney usually finds time to indulge in his favorite sport, tennis. And, if past record is any indication, he is well-above average at racquet-handling.
Dr. Maloney came to K.U. Dec. 5, 1945 as professor of chemical engineering after completing his work on the atomic bomb at Chicago and Columbia universities. Besides being head of the department, he is also director of the University research foundation.
He is author of an article on "Cen-
In 1931, when he was 18, he won the Kansas City public courts junior tennis championship, and was a member of the University of Illinois tennis team six years later.
trifugation" which will appear in the January issue of the magazine Industrial Engineering Chemistry.
Dr. Maloney is a member of Sigma Xi, honorary research organization, and Phi Lambda Upsilon, honorary chemistry and chemical engineering group. He is a member of the University club and lives at 1633 Vermont.
Melting Pot Of Nations
Los Angeles, (UP)—Six hundred and thirty-five foreign-born students from 59 countries and U.S. territories are enrolled on the Los Angeles campus of the University of California, Registrar William C. Pomeroy announced.
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 20,1947
Kansan Comments..
Robbing Peter
The latest government move to ease the housing shortage is a strange example of systematic efficiency.
First, rents are being raised on thousands of publicly-owned apartment houses, because their tenants are drawing salaries that put them above the low-income yard stick. And the rents are being raised so high that this group will be forced to move.
Once these higher income groups have been evicted, the FPHA will lower the rents so that the low-income government employees may move in. And says the FPHA, one part of the housing project is solved.
But is it? Even if the $5,000 a year man has been paying too little rent, he still needs a roof over his head. Where is he going to go? He will become a new tide in the flood of the homeless.
Press-Agentry
Kansas State college got into headlines this past week with the announcement that only one veteran had dropped from school because of low grades.
It's like finding yourself with two boys to feed and food for only one. The fat boy looks healthy so you take his food away from him and feed it to the skinny boy who looks as though he needs it. That's fine. Except you haven't solved anything. The fat boy still has to eat. And the $5,000 a year man still has to have a place to live—P.H.
Of 4.151 veterans enrolled at K-State, 174 have withdrawn since the beginning of the semester. This makes their withdrawal percentage slightly more than 4 per cent, a percentage which is about standard in the colleges and universities of today.
But their claim of having only one man enrolled who had to drop because of low grades, if substantiated, would be a truly unique record. However, when the other reasons given for the withdrawal of veterans are examined, one suspects that the Aggie press agent let his enthusiasm for plugging the school get away with his common sense.
For example, 14 men dropped because the work was too difficult. Can you see any difference between withdrawing because of low grades and withdrawing because the work was too difficult?
There are two classifications—personal and miscellaneous reasons—which 32 and 33 veterans respectively selected as their reason for quitting. We'd bet a dollar to a doughnut that many of these are veterans who couldn't keep up but didn't want to say so.
K-State veterans undoubtedly are as smart on the average as those
The University Daily Kansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editor, Assn. of New York, President of the Associated College Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service of Madison Ave. New York, NY.
Managing Editor... Charles Roos
Asst. Managing Editor... Jane Anderson
Makeup Editor... Billie Marle Hamilton
Hospital Management... Business Manager
Advertising Manager... Margery Handy
Circulation Manager... John McCormick
Financials... Marcela Stewart
Telegraph Ed... Marcela Stewart
City Editor... R. T. Kingman
in other educational institutions, but we doubt that the school up the Kaw managed to attract such a high grade of veterans that only one man failed to keep up. Or is it that it's a lot easier to get grades at Manhattan?
Dear Editor---that still is no reason to admit Missourians to KU. And what are all these people from Colorado, Oklahoma, Texas, Brooklyn, Illinois, and other states doing at the University of Kansas?
Editor's Note: Every "Letter to the Editor" should be withheld from publication upon request, but the editor must know who writes all letters must be limited to 250 words.
Here's Why The 8:45 Deadline
Concerning the requirement for the return of overnight reserve books at 8:45 a.m.
At 8:35 a.m., Thursday, Jan. 16,
132 students were seated in the
reserve and education rooms. Most
of these required reserve books.
The 8:45 line was set up in the era of 8:30 classes and over the years evoked practically no criticism. With the coming of 8 o'clock classes, the library could logically have set an 8:15 deadline to gather books in for the use of waiting students.
The library is open at 7:45 a.m. and a book box at the door for the return of books before that time.
If reserve books were made due at 9, students arriving at that hour would be obliged to wait a considerable time until the overnight books were discharged and arranged. This 9 a.m. rule, in its turn, would inconvenience the student with classes that run to 10 or 11 a.m.
It would seem that the majority of students are benefited by the present
C. M. Baker Director of Libraries
Kansans Onlv
I should like to ask the University administration why it is necessary to mar the beauty of our spacious campus with crude, temporary structures as are now being set up behind Frank Strong hall and elsewhere. The administration will tell me that it is necessary because of the doubled enrollment this year. But the question is: Is this doubled enrollment necessary? No, it is not.
The University of Kansas has two, and only two, requirements, to fulfill regarding enrollment. One is to admit all Kansas high school graduates; the other, to admit all Kansas veterans.
Then why is almost every other name in the student directory from Kansas City, Missouri? Even if Lawrence is only 30 miles from K.C. and Columbia is 100 miles from K.C.
PORTAL TO PORTAL SUITS
CONGRESS
Frankly, I don't know. Probably it is because K.U. is one of the few schools in the nation to take in students from anywhere in the union. And so, we must clutter up our beautiful campus with quonset huts and crude frame buildings.
College freshman Oread hall
Portal To End Portals
A solution is being sought in the problem of heavy betting in professional athletics. The treasury could call in all the currency.
Prospective fathers on the campus are wondering whether babies born during finals week can be called Quiz Kids.
Jaytalking ---
The Paris
Then there was the student who complained that his professor was a stinker for detail.
They Didn't Have Many Modern Conveniences
Why K.U. didn't even have a food service then. Now you can expect food brought to you every night. Listen for the Food Man's call.
Daniel Bishop in St. Louis Star-Times
KU Food Service
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11c
JANUARY 20,1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Official Bulletin
The Official Bulletin will accept announcements from University offices and student organizations and actively submit to the Public Relations office, 2224 Frank Strong, before 9:30 a.m. on the day of desired publication.
Jan. 20, 1947
The All-Student Council has declared a vacancy to be filled by a representative of the Pachacamac party from District II, the School of Engineering. Petitions must be filed with the secretary of the A.S.C. not later than Monday, Jan. 27.
P. S.G.L. Senate will meet at 9:30 pm. Tuesday in 103 Green hall.
Physical Therapy Club will have social meeting at 7 p.m. today in the Watkins Memorial hospital classroom.
Bright Ideas group of Engineers wives will meet today with Mrs. Berniece Davis, 1631 Massachusetts, at 8 p.m. Bring small amount of felt to make bird lapel pins. Phone 2807-R if unable to attend.
Le Cercle Francais se reunira mercredi le 22 janvier a quatre heures dans la salle 113 frank Strong.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will meet 7 p.m. Tuesday in Barlow chapel, Myers hall. Leo Poland will conduct the Bible study.
American Institute of Electrical Engineers will elect officers at 5 p.m. Tuesday in 205 E.E. laboratory.
Houses that received cups for Homecoming house decorations must take cups to Roberts Jewelry store by Jan. 25 for engraving.
All members of the February graduating class of the School of Business who are hoping to be placed through the business placement bureau and any other students available for permanent employment in February please note the School of Business bulletin board for announcement of interview schedules throughout the month of January.
串 串 串
- Graduate record examination, Feb. 3 and 4, 1947. Applications may be obtained in 2A, Frank Strong.
Sigma Tau will elect officers 4:30 pm. Tuesday in 210. Mechanical laboratory. All members should attend.
Those who entered pictures for Miss Student Union contest should get them at the Union Activities office immediately.
---
Seniors interested in an investment banking career in New York should arrange for interview Saturday with Wingate Bixby, vice president of the Discount Corp. New York City, See Frank Pinet, Business Placement Bureau, 212 Frank Strong.
Californians Take 60-Day Wagon Ride
Oceanside, Calif. (UP)—Bill Lawrence, 65, a colorful character of the old west, has left his seaside home here for a 60-day trek to Reno, Nev., in an old Wells-Fargo stagecoach.
Lawrence rolled out of town driving the 50-year-old coach and its six range-bred horses. A partner, Ed Buzza, former coach driver, accompanied Lawrence. He said he hoped to make 30 miles a day and rest on Sunday.
Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
Copy must be in the University Daily Kansas Business Office, Journalism bidg., later than 4 p.m. of the day before publication. All classifiers are cash in advance.
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five day days five 25 words or less 35c 65c 90c additional words 1c 2c 3c
Lost
WEDNESDAY Morning, probably between Library and Snow hall, brown buffer pen. Name on side. Marlo Kloez. Finals 1401-71. Urgent needly finals.
OVERCOAT. Brown, size 38. Was accidentally exchanged at Dine-A-Mite Fri-
day for coat of similar color. Contact George McCarthy at 110-228.
leave message.
Wanted
ONE Brown porch glider taken jokingly in Halloween from the Fl Beta Phi porch. We would appreciate its return or information of its whereabouts. Call
415
WOULD Trade 3-room apartment in Kansas City, Mo., southwest district near University of Kansas hospital for 2 or 3 room apartment in Lawrence. Write T. J. Gray, 1121 Ohio or see at University Press before 5. -22-
Transportation
HUDSON - RENT - A - CAR - SERVICE
Will rent you a car by day or weekend.
Reservations taken. Phone 3315. Location
601 Vermont. -28-
Business Services
TYPING: Let a veteran's wife type your
1932 or 1933 or 1934 New Hampshire 29-
10373 or w降水 by 943 New Hampshire 29-.
INCOME TAX Service. I am preparing
my resume for the job. My fifth year in this work. Call 991 during day or in the evenings and ask for Raphael Martín for information or an interview.
-20
TYPING: Prompt service, reasonable
rate, 1028 Vermont. Phone 1168-R-24
MOTT'S KU. stable offers free transportation to and from campus and
- stables. For riding reservations, phone 346
Stable for riding reservations, phone
(901) 21-21-
TYPING. Term papers and reports. Done
reasonably and promptly. Phone 19-
61-M.
RADIO Repair. We invite you to bring your radio to WARD's Service Dept. for quick, efficient repair. We also repair luggage irons, tools, gauges, and jewelry. We guarantee our workmanship. Montgomery Ward, 225 Mass St. Phone 195. -24 ATTENTION. Medical Students need to complete engineering instruments cleaned and repaired Thirteen years' experience. Call Victor 2218. Technical Instruments Service company, Kansas City 6. Free estimates.
PHOTO-EXACT Copies, discharge and valuable papers. Fast service. Low price. Round Corner Drug Co., 801 Mass. Lawrence, Kansas or Lane F, Appt. 18, 25.
FOR That coke remember the Eldor-
d pharmacy at 701 Mass., p. 299.
- 285.
1938 CHEVROLET 4-door Master DeLuxe
For Sale
Price reasonable. Lane P. Apt. 109. Sunflower Village. -20-
flower Village. -20-
TO HIGHEST Bidichn. 1940 Ford station wagon. Make me an offer. Bob Foster. phone 2273-J, 1632 Mass. -20-
STUDIO Divan, electric record player in blue overcoat. slightly used you may see. See at Lane F, April 18, Sunflower Village. -21-
MEN'S Clean cloth. black chinchilla overcoat. 1 suit. 1 coat vest and extra trousers, all size 40. Trousers $23.33. Bag gain for quick sale. 104 New Jersey. Bag gain for price increase. Coach. Beige striped, plain spring construction, half price $25. Two Lane Bryant maternity dresses, size 10-12, $6 each. Mrs. Bliery. 1901 N.H., 1888-R. -22-
LIBERTY Coach four-wheel trailer house. Call Edwin Rossilion at 22-23.
MICROSCOPE. New Spencer, unused,
movable stage.
Says $25. Call: tnd at 818
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1025 Mass.
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S
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
JANUARY 20.1947
Linegar Ranks Near Top On List Of Campus Busiest Men
High ranking contender for the title of busiest man on the campus is Ned Linear, secretary of the University Y.M.C.A.
---
Sleeping only when rememberes to, or can get around to it, Ned starts his new day about the time the old one ends. For him the eight to ten hour intervals so necessary to most of us for "knitting up theravelled sleeve of care" are conspicuous by their absence.
A love for people started Ned on his career of social work. He entered college with the idea of becoming a lawyer but changed his mind and switched to sociology. Since leaving school he's done only social and religious work.
His position as head of the Y.M. C.A. means running the campus' largest extra-curricular group, an organization of 555 members.
This organization is divided into smaller organizations which are subdivided into still smaller organizations. How he manages to remember them all is a mystery, but remember them he does. Checking up once, he discovered that there is an average of two and a half 'Y' meetings of some kind every day.
Besides being 'Y' secretary, Ned is also a member of the administrative board of the regional Y.M.C.A., an active member of the First Presbyterian church, a sponsor of the Lawrence league for the promotion of democracy, and a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, national service fraternity. In all of these he takes an active part.
Despite all this Ned still finds time to be a good husband and father. The only fault he finds with his various activities is that they don't leave him all the time he'd like to be with his family. His family includes his wife, Margaret, Danny, two, and Mary Carol, one.
His idea of the requirements of a good social worker are gregariousness, patience, energy, and tac. Education evidently helps, too, for Ned acquired a B.A. in sociology, an M.A. in social work, and an M.S. in group work.
Advanced Students In Recital Tonight
Two mid-winter recitals will be presented at 7:30 p.m. today and Wednesday in Frank Strong auditorium by advanced student vocalists and instrumentalists. The programs will include selections for voice, piano, harp, violin, and ensemble.
Students performing tonight include Martha Myers, Phyllis Fretwell, Wayne Landis, Violet Dudley, Charlotte Maxey, Violet Orloff, Nancy Messenger, Martha Beilh, Ruth Reisner, Joan Vickers, Benjamin Shanklin, Harriet Harlow, Marion Alberty, Jess Rose, Joan Rodgers, Gladys Hammond, Jack Moenkenhackm, Calvin Glover, Lorraine Mai, E. M. Brack, Marvin Zoschke, John Ehrlich
Those who will be heard Wednesday are Robert Kornhaus, Lois Richardson, John Bockhorst, Pearl Clothier, Louis Cunningham, Merton Anderson, Lawrence Jennings, Mary Daugherty, Jeanne Aldridge, Anabel Keeler, Ardelle Winterburg, Jean Campbell, Kathryn Walter, Betty Wells, Doris Demaree, Mary Zollinger, Marshall Butler, Imogen Billings, Sidney Dawson, Merle Clayton, Richard Gayhart.
85 High School Seniors Attend Leadership Day
Eighty-five high school seniors from northeast Kansas attended Leadership day at the University of Kansas Saturday as guests of Mortar board, senior women's honor society.
June Peterson, College senior, was in charge of arrangements for the event which was held for the first time.
C. R. H.
NED LINEGAR
'America To Aid Indian Medicine'
"American aid will play a great part in the deciding and carrying out of the future of India," said Dr. Evelyn Misra in a talk on "Medical Work in the Punjab" at the First Presbyterian church. Sunday night.
"India is a country of contrast," Dr. Misra continued, "and the people are divided among themselves. This is the main reason India has fallen behind in medicine and education compared with other countries of the world."
In India there is one doctor for each 9,000 persons and only one nurse for each 84,000. Three of Dr. Mitsra's aunts were doctors and they those that she also should be a doctor.
"Our best hospitals," said Dr. Misra, "you Americans would consider shacks. We are planning, however, to erect a new hospital to compare with American institutions. 'Every dime from an American is one more brick for our new hospital,' is the slogan we have adopted." she explained.
Dr. Misra asked students to be considerate of the Indian students who are in this country studying for they will carry back their impressions of the United States to all of India.
"I have made many of my best friends in this country and I want my friends at home to know the Americans as I do," said Dr. Misra.
Thompson Takes Oath As Georgia Governor
Atlanta, Ga. (UP)—Lt. Gov. M. E. Thompson acted to support his claim on the governorship of Georgia today by taking the oath of acting governor before the state senate, and a house member said Herman T almadge had only "squatter's rights" to the office.
Atty. Gen. Eugene Cook issued a statement recognizing Mr. Thompson as the legitimate governor. He announced that a suit, originally filed in behalf of former Gov. Ellis Arnall, to oust Mr. Talmadee from the office would be carried on in Mr Thompson's name.
Mr. Talmadge still held possession of the executive offices.
Mr. Thompson announced that he would serve as acting governor from his own offices in the capitol, and further appointments of state officials.
The legislature, which had elected Mr. Talmadge governor last week, convened after a weekend recess and a motion was passed to invite Talmadge to address the house tomorrow.
Louis, Mauldin Named With 10 'Top Young Men
Chicago. (UP)—The nation's 10 outstanding young men of 1946, as selected by the U. S. Junior Chamber of Commerce, will be honored Wednesday night for their part in "advancing the welfare of the people." They are:
Joe Louis, 32, Detroit, world heavyweight boxing champion, "for stimulating good will and bringing to the boxing ring the respectability it presently enjoys."
Bill Maundi, 25, Phoenix, Ariz. cartoonist, "for his clear interpretation of present problems through the use of a Willie and Joe now in Muiti."
Joseph A. Bierne, 35. Washington president of the national federation of telephone workers, cited "for his example of the mature responsibility evinced by a union leader to the public."
Dan Duke, 33, Fairborn, Ga., assistant attorney general of Georgia, for "his leadership in the campaign against the revived Ku Klux Klan and the Fascist hate group, the Columbians."
Charles G. Bolte, 22, New York, chairman of the American Veterans committee,"for his leadership in veterans' affairs."
John F. Kennedy, 29. Boston, congressman from Massachusetts' 11th district, "for his example that all young men owe their land a civic responsibility, and for his fight for veterans' housing."
Dr. Philip Morrison, 31, Cornell university, atomic physicist, "for his outstanding work in the development of the atomic bomb and his struggle to educate the people to the danger and promise of atomic energy."
John A. Patton, 33. Chicago, management engineer, "for demonstrating dramatically the common interests of management and labor and attempting to identify management with human needs."
Arthur Schlesinger, Jr., 29, Harvard historian and author, "for showing through history how the actions of all of us can facilitate action can probably cooperate."
Harry Wismer, 35. Ypsilanti. Mich, sports director for the American Broadcasting company, "for his campaign to interest young people in sports as a means to better physical and mental development and his efforts in the field of youth welfare."
Marshall Ceremony Delayed Bv Weather
Chicago. (UP)—George C. Marshall, retired general of the army, was forced by the weather today to built his flight to Washington where he was to take the oath as secretary of state.
The White House said he would be sworn in tomorrow. The exact time will be set when it is determined what time General Marshall arrives. The oath will be administered by Chief Justice Fred M. Vinson.
Less than three hours before he was scheduled to be sworn in with elaborate ceremonies at the White House, General Marshall's plane was forced down by flying conditions at Chicago. The general announced that he would continue to Washington by train.
K.U. Receives Plaque For Navy Program
The Navy department has announced the award of a bronze plaque to the University for its services in training more than 4,500 Navy men during World War II.
The University conducted five training programs for the navy: V-5, V-12, navy medical training, machinist's mates, and electrician's mates. A Navy Reserve Officers Training corps yps also established on the campus and is functioning on a permanent basis.
News of the World
The Weekend
Georgia continued to have two governors, hundreds of people died in ship sinkings in China and Greece, and the mayor of New York sent three dozen bananas to a dying Irish poet during the weekend.
Ellis Arnall, former Georgia governor, officially left his post Saturday in favor of M. E. Thompson, lieutenant-governor elect, but neither Mr. Arnall or Mr. Thompson could get into the executive mansion or the governor's office.
Herman Talmadge, son of the late governor-elect who was "elected" governor by the legislature, held possession of the mansion and office, backed up by state troopers.
800 Lost In Ship Sinkings
A Chinese steamer sank Saturday in the Yangtze river and 400 persons were drowned. Survivors besieged the ship operators' office, charging that the vessel had been badly overloaded.
In the Greek Gulf of Petalion, the Chimarra went down after sinking a mine. The merchant marine said about 200 of 600 passengers had been rescued.
In Washington, the agriculture department predicted a decline in demand for dairy products in 1947.
New York's mayor, William O'Dwyer, dispatched three hands of bananas (about three dozen) in a rush shipment to Dublin. His gift came after an appeal by John McCann, Dublin lord mayor, who said bananas might save the life of Eoghan Roe Ward, Irish poet.
Bananas and Cream
Ice, Love and the Star
The submarine Sennett, one of five ships in the navy Antarctic fleet, was forced to turn back beofre reaching Little America because of heavy ice. The others went on.
Joan Barry, one-time protege of Charlie Chaplin, announced she has been "happily married" to a railroad clerk in Pittsburgh for three months.
The labor dispute which has stopped publication of the Kansas City Star continued. The principals involved were unable to agree whether the contract carriers are employees of the paper or independent merchants.
On Capitol Hill
Congressional leaders said the 61-year-old act providing a successor from the cabinet upon the death of the president and vice-president, must be revamped if the army-navy merger is accomplished and a secretary of national defence is appointed.
Also in Washington, Republican leaders say they have packed so much power into the House expenditures committee that it may now become the main "investigating" committee in congress.
Charles "Bud" Wilkinson, former assistant coach at University of Oklahoma, was named head football coach Saturday to replace Jim Tatum. Mr. Tatum resigned to become head coach and athletic director at Maryland.
Davis Cup Hero Ted Schroeder won the No. 2 ranking among the nation's tennis players after stirring up vicious argument among the Association ranking committee. He pushed Frank Parker down a notch.
Sports Shots
Hank Greenburg, Detroit first baseman and 1946 home run king of the American League, has been waived out of the league and sold to Pittsburgh, where Manager Billy Herman reports that he will be placed in the outfield.
Chemical Beats Fire Threat
Washington, Iowa. (UP) — J. L. Boren, chemical engineer, today demonstrated a new low-cost fire-proofing solution which, he said, would eliminate the threat of fires in hotels and homes. He described it as a synthetic resin, with a plain water solvent, which could be used in a hand spray or mixed with vanillin and floor wax.
Today
Carriers Continue K.C. Star Strike
Kansas City, Mo. (UP)—Kansas City was still without a daily news paper today after meetings of representatives of the Star and the striking contract carriers union ended with the parties "just as far apart as they were."
The Star suspended publication Friday when pressmen refused to cross a picket line set up unexpectedly by the carriers in an attempt to force the Star to recognize them as Star employees.
U. S. conciliators Irving Pickett and Robert H. Moore met with officials of the newspaper and union leaders for two hours Sunday.
London. (UP)—The British foreign office looked to Moscow today for a possible response to its unusual diplomatic note reassuring Premier Josef Stalin that Britain still honors the Anglo-Soviet 20-year treaty and wants it extended to 50 years.
Britain Reassures Moscow It Honors 20-Year Treaty
The reassurances were prompted by an article in Pravda accusing Ernest Bevin, British foreign secretary, of cancelling the treaty.
Lake Success. (UP)—United Nations sources predicted today that the security council, overriding American objections, will set up a new commission next month to begin work on global disarmament plans.
Le Po Or
Athens. (UP)—Survivors of the sinking of the Greek costal vessel Chimara with an apparent loss of 368 lives charged today that crewmen stamped aboard the lifeboats, blocking the way of passengers who were trying to get off the doomed ship.
Delegates were almost certain to accept an American proposal today that all disarmament and atomic talks be suspended until Feb. 4, but soon after that date, delegates of the 10 other countries were likely to insist on a U.N. disarmment commission.
Disarmament Plans In U.N.
May Start; U.S. Objects
Bilbo Mas Cancer Operation
Edinburg, Texas. (UP)—The famous navy symphonic band of Mexico City, was expected to arrive today to participate Tuesday in the inauguration of Beaufour Jester as Governor of Texas.
'Ship Crew Stampeded'
New Orleans (UP)—Theodore G. Bilbo, Mississippi's Democratic U.S. senator-elect, was wheeled out of the operating room at Touro infirmary here today after undergoing an operation for cancer of the mouth.
Tof r subr pop and vote eral row
Mexican Band To Texas
At anta, Ga. (UP)—Excessive rainfall in the southeast sent rivers out of their banks today, flooding thousands of acres of lowlands and causing the evacuation of 125 persons in the Rome, Ga., area.
M only Bak hou Blv
Topeka. (UP)—Paul H. Griffith,
American Legion commander, made a one-day visit to Topeka today,
giving five speeches including one to the Kansas legislature.
Legion Head To Topeka
Name Outstanding Kansan
Ablenle. (UP)—Steve Aduddel of Coffeyville today carried the title, awarded by the Kansas Junior Chamber of Commerce, of the outstanding young man of Kansas in 1946. The award was presented by Lt. Gov. Frank Hagaman yesterday.
University DAILY KANSAN
STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Tuesday, January 21, 1947
44th Year No. 73
Lawrence, Kansas
Legislators Ask Popular Vote On Prohibition
Topeka. (UP)—A Kansas house of representatives resolution to re-submit constitutional prohibition to popular vote was introduced today and the house in emergency move voted immediately to permit general discussion on the floor tomorrow.
Moving up of the resolution came only after a sharp clash between Bake Williamson, R., Kansas City, house floor leader and Lawrence Blythe, R., White City.
The latter claimed "this resolution is dynamite" and "we should do nothing to hurry it ahead of careful consideration."
The resolution, submitted by the house judiciary committee says.
"The manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors shall be forever prohibited in this state."
If two-thirds majority vote of both houses of the 35th Kansas legislature is forthcoming the foregoing resolution would be voted upon by the people in the 1948 general election to replace the prohibitory amendment which now says:
house judiciary committee says, "The open saloon shall be and is hereby forever prohibited. The legislature shall have the power and it shall be its duty to define the term 'open saloon' and enact laws against such. Subject to the foregoing, the legislature may regulate, license and tax the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors, and may regulate the possession and transportation of intoxicating liquors, and may provide for the prohibition of intoxicating liquors in certain areas."
An indication of how bitter will be the struggle concerning this resolution was shown in the first vote to advance its discussion.
That vote was 50 to 34, but through a misunderstanding on the necessary majority to suspend the rules and declare an emergency, the motion was withdrawn and House Leader Williamson then pleaded for the correct necessary two thirds vote to suspend the rule.
By Bibler
Normally, the resolution would have had second reading tomorrow and full debate on general orders the following day. Declaration of an emergency permitted second reading today and debate tomorrow.
Williamson explained to the new members, numbering 40 per cent of the house, that there would be no vote tomorrow, only complete discussion.
The resolution, stronger than any legislator had expected, killed out any possibility of Kansas having open saloons, but it was noted that the definition of an "open saloon" was left to the discretion of the state lawmakers.
Vets Must Reinstate Insurance Bv Feb. 1
Feb. 1 is the deadline for reinstating government life insurance without taking a physical examination.
Before that time, a sigped statement by the veteran that his health is as good now as when his insurance lapsed and the payment of two back premiums is all that will be needed for reinstatement.
To reinstate the government life insurance the veteran may call at the veterans administration office to fill out necessary forms, and be prepared to pay the premiums.
pay the profe- Veterans who have kept up the payments on their insurance, or who have reinstated it, and wish to convert to a permanent policy. will have an opportunity early in March to hear talks by a VA representative
The time and place of meetings will be announced later.
Little Man On Campus
TY OF KANS
Election Candidates Announced By ISA
Candidate in this year's Independent Student association election to be held Monday are:
For president; Shirley Wellborn and Patricia Graham; business manager, John Sells and Laurel Leckron; All Student Council representative, Margaret van der Smissen and Robert Casad.
and Robert class representatives, Ruth Cawwood, Allan Croman, Elizabeth Pratt, and Clifford Reynolds; junior representative, Marylee Masterson, Leah Uebling, Wilbur Casement, and Ira Jordan; sophomore representative, Helen Havey, Kathleen McClanahan, Marjorie Vogel, Austin Turney, and Robert Campbell; freshman representative, Donna Shimer; Dorothy Keith, James Montgomery and Morman Jennings.
Montgomery
Members of the Independent Student's association will have a choice in booths. Booths will be in the Union building and Frank Strong hall from 8 a.m., until 5 p.m. and at the library from 7 to 9 p.m. according to Lois Thompson, election chairman.
Jo E. Hall, fine arts junior, and Richard Dodison, engineering freshman, both accused of violating smoking regulations, will be tried before the student court at 7:30 p.m. tonight in Green hall, William McElhenny, prosecuting attorney, said today.
All candidates will meet at 6:30 pm. today in Miller hall to have pre-election publicity pictures taken.
Immediately after the trial, the court again will bear appeals for traffic violations. This probably will be the last opportunity for students to appeal their cases before enrollment next semester. No student will be permitted to enroll until his fines have been paid. ___
Two Will Face Smoking Charges
Veterans planning to change their residence between semesters, must notify the veterans administration as soon as possible of the new address.
Notify VA Of Move
Kaarbo's Death 'Accidental'-Coroner
Clifford O. Kaarbo, 23-year-old senior K.U. engineer, apparently leaped from the Kaw river bridge Sunday morning with the intent to commit suicide but changed his mind before death, Dr. Ray A. Clark, county coroner, said today.
Kaarbo drowned while rescuers attempted to help him reach shore.
The coroner explained that the actual cause of death was accidental, since the student changed him mind before the rescue attempts.
Dr. Clark said his investigation would end today, unless he received new information. He said a man answering Kaarlo's description was seen walking down Massachusetts street by a night watchman shortly before the drowning. Police and coroner's investigations showed no signs of external violence on the body.
So far, no one has been able to explain Kaarbo's disappearance from the Triangle fraternity house at 3:30 am. Sunday after he had announced that he was going to the first floor to shut the windows and lock the front door.
'Pass White Primary And We'll Both Quit'
front room
He is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs., O. O. Kaarbo of Topeka, a brother, Ronald, of the home, and one sister, Mrs. J. Milburn, Topeka.
Two funeral services will be held, one at the Funk mortuary, Lawrence, at 7:30 p.m. today, and at 2:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Trinity Lutheran church in Topeka. The Rev. C. R. Friedstrom will officiate. Burial will be at the Mt. Hope cemetery, Topeka.
Atlanta (UP)—Gov. Herman Talnadge said today he would resign after the legislature passes a white primary bill if acting Gov. M. E. Thompson also would quit.
The two then could meet in a special election and let the people decide, Talmadge said.
Marshall, Taking Office, Denies Political Ambitions
'Cannot Be Drafted For Any Office,' New Secretary Of State Declares
Washington. (UP)—Gen. George C. Marshall took office as secretary of state today after bluntly squelching speculation that he might be available later as a Democratic candidate for president.
Some Democrats had discussed the idea of drafting him if President & Tumman should not run in 1948.
Lawson Takes Over As Acting Head Of Psych Department
Dean Paul B. Lawson, of the College, is acting chairman of the psychology department today, after the board of regents approved the University's request for a leave of absence for its longtime psychology head, Dr. Raymond H. Wheeler.
The regents also granted Prof. E. O. Stene, political scientist, leave for the spring semester, to do research work in the field of human relations of Harvard university.
The University doesn't contemplate replacing either Dr. Wheeler or Dr. Steno "at the present time," according to Raymond Nichols, K.U. executive secretary. Work of both of the professors will be "divided among other faculty members." All courses originally planned for the Spring semester will be offered as scheduled, Mr. Nichols said.
Dr. Stene will be back on the cappus for the summer session.
The leave of absence the regents approved for Dr. Wheeler was "for the remainder of the school year."
Dean Lawson said he'd have to "sleep a few nights" on the question of whether to get a new psychology department head. He said there was "no possibility" of the department being combined with the philosophy department, under which it operated before 1928.
Arnall To Speak At February Convocation
Ellis Arnall, former Georgia governor and bitter contestor of Herman Talmadge's rights to the office, will be a convocation speaker here Feb. 14 as originally scheduled. Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, announced today.
"As I have received no word from Mr. Arnall's lecture bureau and as he is definitely out of the gubernatorial squabble. I see no reason why he shouldn't be able to meet his lecture schedule," Mr. Nichols said. He had previously announced that the University would not know whether Mr. Arnall would be a speaker here until the Georgia legislature met to straighten out the mix-up caused by the death of Governor-elect Eugene Talmadge.
The former governor will speak on "Whose Country is This Anyway?"
Secretary's Mother Burned
Mrs. F. A. Haglund, mother of Dorothy Haglund, graduate school secretary, received face burns today from the explosion of a gas kitchen stove in her home at 600 Indiana street. Extent of Mrs. Haglund's burns was not known at noon today.
Nash Will Lead Forum
Dr. Bert Nash, professor of education, will lead the Y.M.C.A.-sponsored movie forum discussion on the problem "Can We Stop Juvenile Crime," in Green hall little theater at 4 p.m. Thursday.
Before taking his new post, General Marshall in an unsolicited statement to reporters declared:
"I cannot be drafted for any political office."
In addition to squelching presidential speculation concerning him, he also said that he considered the secretaryship of state to be a non-political job.
"And," he added, "I am going to govern myself accordingly."
General Marshall's statement was perhaps the most explicit and unambiguous disavowal of political ambition since another general took himself out of politics after the Civil war. At that time Gen. William T. Sherman declared that he would not run for president if nominated, and would not serve if elected.
"I am being explicit and emphatic." General Marshall said, "in order to terminate once and for all any discussion of my name in regard to policital office."
There being no vice-president, the secretary of state is now first in the line of succession.
Whatever his feelings about political office, the moment General Marshall took oath as secretary of state he became heir to the office of president should anything happen to Mr. Truman in the next two years.
political experience.
"I am assuming that the office of Secretary of State, at least under present conditions is non-political and I am going to govern myself accordingly." General Marshall said.
General Marshall took the oath of office as successor to James F. Byrnes from Chief Justice Fred M. Vinson in Mr. Truman's executive office. Present at the ceremony in addition to Mr. Truman were Mr. Byrnes, the cabinet, high government and congressional officers, and friends of the general.
The former army chief of staff arrived here by train from Chicago completing a journey from China which was interrupted by several days of rest in Honolulu and by a brief layover at Chicago where his plane was grounded by bad weather.
He said that he thought "now is as good a time and place as any to terminate speculation" on his future political activities.
courings." Certainly.
"There is a popular conception that no matter what a man says he can be drafted for some political office."
The new Secretary of State side- stepped questions on international affairs.
But General Marshall then added emphatically:
"I cannot be drafted for any political office."
He said he did not know yet whether he would go to Moscow. But he did not indicate that he had any intention of passing up the Big Four meeting of foreign ministers opening at Moscow in March. He hinted it was too early for him to say anything about his new duties as secretary of state.
One of General Marshall's first major problems as secretary of state will be a possible crisis in American-Polish relations.
WEATHER
Kansas—Fair today, tonight, and tomorrow. Colder today and east and south tonight. Tomorrow somewhat warmer in afternoon. Low tonight near five north to 15 south.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 21,1947
Animals Protect 'Bomb' Workers
Cleveland. (UP)—Animal experiments by which workers on the atomic bomb project were saved from the danger of skin cancer were described here by Dr. Ray S. Snider of the Chicago metallurgical laboratory.
Dr. Snider was one of the scientists attending the meeting of the American Academy of Dermatology. He said there was only one death from irradiation during the production of the bomb.
Connected with the medical protective division of the Manhattan project, Dr. Snider's assignment was to direct the pathological and historical studies of skin changes in experimental animals subjected to beta rays and slow neutron rays. Some animals were given large single doses, others small daily doses.
The irradiation caused pre-cancerous and cancerous conditions, he said. The rats developed cancer 100 per cent, with the tumors varying in size and seriousness according to the amount of irradiation projected.
The doctor described what irradiation did to the animals, stating that first reactions were skin rash, loss of surface layers of skin and hair changing of the animal's hair to gray, followed by the development of tumors.
By these experiments, it was learned how further to protect humans from the effects of accidental exposure to irradiation.
The protective work was aided by a belief that the reaction of the rays on the skin would be the same as from X-ray irradiation—that is, that penetrating rays that would usually heal cancerous tissues were likely to cause cancer if sprayed on healthy tissues, according to Dr. Snider.
To protect the workers from irradiation, walls seven feet thick were built, and thus "health hazards thought to be insurmountable at the beginning we overcome," Dr. Snider said.
'Which Way Did I Go, George?'
Dallas. (UF)—With the new year just begin, the Dallas police department today came up with its nomination for the most befuddled man of the year.
The nominee was a visitor from Iowa. He drove into Dallas the other night, parked his car and couldn't find it.
He reported to police dispatcher George Doughty that he had misplaced the automobile. Then he left, ostensibly to find a room in a hotel.
Thirty minutes later Doughty ran across the man wandering around the police headquarters building. He couldn't find his way out. Doughty led him to one of the two entrances
Doughty suggested the man find a room and notify police so he could be contacted when the car was located. The man reported in to police a few minutes later. He couldn't find a room.
Dougly told the man to stay put. He sent a police car after the Iowa police found him a hotel room. The professionally faithfully he would not judge.
But he did. When police called to report the car was found—the man had disappeared.
After a three-hour search, police picked him up wandering aimlessly about the city streets. He said he couldn't find the hotel. He had just stepped around the corner from the hotel to get a bite to eat.
Police suggested that he return to the peace and quiet of his Iowa homes.
University Daily Kansas
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year (ages 18 and older). Published in Lawrence Kau, every eighteen during the school year except fall and summer days and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Lawrence Kau, Kan. under act of March 3, 1879.
WHY WE SAY
WHY WE SAY
by STAN J. COLLINS & L. J. SLAWSON
BARKING UP
THE WRONG TREE
Dogs chasing a racoon usually man-
aged to chase the poor fellow up a
tree. When the hunter arrived at the
scene the dog was often found to be
barking up the wrong tree.
GENERAL FEATURES CORP
barking up the wrong tree.
GENERAL FEATURES CORP
Othman Wants 'Dusk-To-Dawn Pay With Overtime For Sleep
B FREDERICK C. OTHMAN
(United Press Staff Correspondent)
Washington. (UP)—Fortal-to-portal pay suits are small-time stuff. I intend to file at once a dusk-to-dawn suit. Then I'm going to sock the boss with an ear-to-ear suit. If he has any money left I'll sue him next for tooth-to-gullet pay. Bov!
My lawyer, Raymond S. Smelt.
Association of Manufacturers, says' I can't lose. Not the way the law is drawn now. I can't.
My lawyer, Raymond S. Smethurst, who also represents the National Association of Manufacturers, says
can't lose. Not the way the law
The point, as he explained to the U.S. senate, is that a fellow has to get some sleep if he's to do his work. Well then, shouldn't he be paid for for this sleeping?
Certainly, Lawyer Smethurst pointed out, in fact, that the federal district court for northern Illinois held on last May 10 that a fireman asleep and off duty had to be paid for every snore because he might have been awakened and called to work.
That's my precedent. Last night I slept consciently for nine hours, with time out for getting one drink of water. Either I get paid for all this pillow pounding, or tonight I don't go to bed at all. I'll stay up and howl; I'll drink champagne from Lillian Russell's slipper and otherwise arrange to be a bleary-eyed wretch when I show up for work in the morning. Why should a fellow sleep unless he's paid for it?
There is then the little matter of eating. This takes time. Only reason
I eat is to keep up my strength so I can do my work. I have been conscientious about this, too, using my valuable time to consume three squares a day, plus a snack from the refrigerator nightly just before hitting (in the interest of my job) the haw. Of course, I intend to sue.
And as I'm all worn-out now I think I'll take a brief nap at time and a half for overtime.
U.S. Plans Weather Stations
Washington. (UF)—The weather bureau is planning five new weather observation stations in Latin America to help protect American air routes and furnish information to forecasters in the United States. Three of the new stations will be in Mexico, one in Cuba, and one in the Dominican republic.
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THE COLLEGE JEWELER
Gustafson
Aircraft Fabrication Course To Be Offered
Students' Jewelry Store 42 Years 809 MASS.
A new course in sheetmetal fabrication for aeronautical engineering students will be offered next semester at the University Prof. Paul Hausman, chairman of the department of shop practice, announced today.
Metal forming, shaping, and cutting as applied to aircraft manufacture will comprise the subject matter. The course will be offered in four sections and will be taught by E. R. Deckwa, formerly of the Beech Aircraft Corp., and Arthur Flemming, who did sheetmetal work for the army air corps.
Several news machines obtained in recent months have been set up in Fowler shops for use in the course. Among them are a squeeze riveting machine, metal cutting saw, a four spindle gas drill, air compressor, counter-sinking machine, and spot and project welding machines.
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1947
JANUARY 21,1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
SOCIALLY SPEAKING
P
ELINOR BROWNE, Society Editor
--executive board and is co-chairman of the coffee and forum committee.
Kappa Sig's Have Dance
The members of Gamma Phi Beta were guests of Kappa Sigma at a tea dance Saturday at the chapter house.
Gma Chi's Have Guests
Guests at the Sigma Chi "Riff Johnson" party Saturday night were Jeannette Terrell, Frances Morrill, Pat Hamilton, Elizabeth Esterle, Janet Malott, Anne Scott, Dorothy O'Connor, Margaret Harness, Louise Lambert, Kathleen McKelvy, Anne Shaeffer, Barbara Hume, Shannon McKem, Freda Harger, Martha Grace Abel, Betty Hamman, Armilla Lincoln, Barbara Ackerman, Jackie Collins, Edith Stodard, Mary Allford, Frances Lawrence, Dorothy Shields, Barbara Parent,
Ann Allen, Billie Mae Powell, Joan Schwinn, Elizabeth Ashton, Martha Gragg, Beverly Butcher, Lee Sproull, Ann Ashley, Shirley Hoyt, Marjorie Seidmore, Martha Goodrich, Virginia Joseph, Nancy Ludlow, Martha Rayl, June Smalley, Phara Rathburn, Doris Jean Gilman, Kathleen McBride, Nancy VanBebber, Barbara Howard, Carol Baker, Mary K. Parker, Peggy Maloney, Martha Weed, Jan Nattier,
Joan Anderson, Frances Sartori,
Janet Taylor, Mary Wilkins, Jean
Reid, Jo Ellen Hall, Laise Springer,
Shirley Scheufele, Barbara Johnson,
Nancy Messenger, Josephine Stuckey,
Carol Stuart, Gloria Gray, Ann Stanton,
Jo Hendrickson, Martha Yingling,
Sue Hiller, Merideth Gear,
Martha Gretzer, Betty Ann Hilts,
Jo Stewart, Bonny Jeane Maine,
Constance Markley, Marty Renwich,
Virginia Coppedge.
Kelly Pledges Phi Psi
Phi Kappa Psi announces the pledging of Paul Scott Kelly, Jr., College sophomore, of Kansas City,
***
Battenfeld Holds Initiation
Battenfeld hall held its formal initiation ceremony Sunday night. Those initiated were Jack Lynn, Howard Hallman, Armando Rodriguez, Wayne Hunt, Wendell Heffelfinger, James Burke, Harold Ehrlich, Cleo Norton, Samuel Duran, William LaCombe, Paul Uhlig, Robert Richter, Carl Unruh, Richard Rowe, Charles M. Geyer, Darrel Brown and Harold Thill.
Guests at the Phi Kappa informal card party and dance Friday night were Laura Schmid, Mary Douglas, Ruth Brown, Phyllis Farrell, Ruth Hibbs, Connie St. Lawrence, Betty Cunningham, Marguerita Kerschen, Rose Mose, Rita Neugebauer, Evelyn Housemichl, Dolores Travalent, Dorothy Burgess,
Phi Kappa's Have Party
Patricia Moser, Rose Ann Madden,
Winifred Wilson, Ann Allen, Betty
Bacon, Jane Ellen Johnson, Mary
Lois Rice, Jane Wilcox, Gean
Scherer, Marie Creegan, Carol
Marsh.
The chaperones were Mr. and Mrs. Ray Kaneh.
Phi Psi's Entertain
Phi Kappa Psi entertained Saturday night at its 70th annual winter dinner dance in the Kansas room of the Union.
Guests were Marilyn Erway, Edith Malott, Beverly Fox, Glenda Luehring, Margaret Meeks, Nancy Love, John Woodward, Mary Breed, Sarah Smart, Sally Pegues, Martha Metcalf, Georgia Lee Westmoreland, Rose Margaret Lawler, Dorothy Feldkamp, Peggy Baker, Judy Torrey, Sue Newcomer, Joy Godbehere, Edith Marie Darby, Eliseen Horner, Sally Krebiel, Mary Ainsworth, Peggy Howard, Mary Lou Martin.
Regina McGeorge, Jacquelin Herriott, Virginia Winter, Mary Valentine, Celeste Beesley, Sylvia Small, Ann Keeven, Phyllis Farrell, Betty Siplin, Ethel Pearson, Mary K. Sims, Dona Mueller, Rose Mary Robinson, Anne Young, Mary Bovaird, Wanda Dumler, Virginia Daniels, Suzanne Albaugh, Marilyn Glover,
Olivia Garvey, Mary Longenecker,
Peggy Moyer, Martha Ringler, Lu
Anne Powell, Dorothy James, Doris
COEDS' CORNER
Carolyn Campbell 'Dabbles' In Art, Activities, Riding
"My greatest ambition at the moment is to finish my art notebook," said Carolyn Campbell, education junior.
An art education major, Carolyn wants to teach art to children—"the kind of kids that crawl around under desks," she explained. "One summer, I taught pupils from 8 to 12 years old at the Nelson Art gallery in Kansas City. That's when I got the idea. Art teachers have fun because they can dabble their fingers in the paint, too."
Carolyn, who is from Kansas City, Mo., asserted that it is a family tradition to go to KU. "My father was graduated from the law school 24 years ago. My sister was graduated 10 years ago. Lots of aunts, uncles, and other Campbell kin have walked the paths of higher learning here."
"Speaking of paths reminds me of something. Look here!" and she displayed a swollen ankle explaining that she had sprained it on a KU. sidewalk during the last freeze. "I wish the caretaker of the walks—if there is such a person—would have sprinkled a little sand in the slick places," she sighed.
Sprained ankle or not, Carolyn doesn't allow any grass to grow under her feet. "I go to school every day from 8 to 4 in the afternoon," she said, "then from 4 to 6, I usually attend meetings."
She is the secretary of the Pi Beta Pi social sorority. At the Student Union next door, she serves on the
She is the president of the honorary art fraternity, Delta Phi Delta, which had its mother chapter here at K.U. A Jay Jane, Carolyn represents that organization in the All Student Council. She is a member of the decorations committee for the Jay Jane Vice-versa dance to be held Feb. 22.
Carolyn, a blue-eyed blond, was chosen relay queen last spring. She has been called a "perfectionist" by her friends because of her artistic ability and the careful attention she gives to details.
Washington. (UP) — The marine corps changed its mind today about the identification of one of the marines in the famous photograph of the Iowa Jima flag raising.
"My favorite past-time is horseback riding," she said. "I remember oh-so-well the first summer I learned to ride. I was out in Colorado at the time and requested a slow horse. The one I got wouldn't even walk. I went back and demanded a horse that would walk and they gave me one that ran off with me—his name was Chief.
Block Identified In Iwo Picture
Kingsbury, Sally Houck, Joan Stevenson, Isobel Atwood, Mary Sue Weimer, Barbara Burns, Sally Shepard, Phyllis Fretwell, Lee Blackwill, Joan Armacost, Mary Lewis, Nancy Moore, Kathleen O'Connor, Louise Schiesser, Jeanne Ivester, Marylin O'Meara, Harriet Bossmeyer, Bonnie Vickery.
Mr. Burch, Mr. C. M. Mollett, Mr.
and Mrs. C. E. Russell, Mr. and Mrs.
E. W. Edwards, Jr., Mr. and Mrs.
G. W. Carrington, Mr. and Mrs.
Wayne Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. H. M
Burch, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. McBride,
Mr. and Mrs. Earle Crawford, Mr.
and Mrs. Don Powell, Mr. and Mrs.
Bert Dickerson, Mr. and Mrs. Roger
Muir, Mr. and Mrs. Frank A.
Stuckey, and Mr. and Mrs. Jack
Singleton, Jr.
Chaffield, Minn. (UP) — After nearly 40 years as a hen house, a building erected in 1906 by the Success Poultry yards became the roost for Richard Schrader, who was caught in the housing shortage. Schrader put in a cement floor, eight windows, plastered the walls, and converted the 40-by-40 building into four rooms, 10-by-10 feet.
"I'm also on the Community Service committee of Y.W.C.A," said Carolyn, "and they tell me they're going to teach me how to knit!"
"Later," she continued, "a group of us riders came to a wide stream. I expected Chief to walk across like the other nags. I didn't dream he was a broad-jumper. Well, he sailed right over and I nearly sailed over him."
Single Out of town guests included Bette Teft, Wichita; Pat Horner, Kansas City; Jolene Bowles, Kansas City; Mo; Ruthette Maxwell, Manhattan; Betty Armstrong, Hutchinson; Marilyn Bell, Manhattain; Betty Knapp, Chanute; Judy Channon, Kansas City; Mo.; Jane Harkrader, Pratt; Teddy Proctor, Kansas City; Mo; Helen Kittle, Kansas City; Iota Brown, Chanute; Martha Frye, Manhattan; Bobbie Mostrom, Kansas City; Mo; Arlene Wray, Kansas City; and Mr. and Mrs. Dean Sims, Burlington, Iowa.
The marines now have decided that the figure at the extreme right of the photograph, formerly identified as Sgt. Henry O. Hansen, Somerville, Mass., actually was Cpl. Harlan H. Block, Weslaco, Tex. Both men were killed later during the action at Iwo.
Up With The Chickens
About future plans, Carolyn had this to say, "Guess I'll teach a couple of years and then get married. You see, I'm pinned to a pre-med."
ington, Iowa.
Chaperons were Mrs. Arthur Little, Mr. and Mrs. Corlett Cotton, and Mr. and Mrs. Dean Nesmith.
Robert Hutchinson, College senior was the author of the leading story published in the winter number of the Prairie Schooner, University of Nebraska literary magazine.
Student Writes For N.U. Magazine
Hutchinson's short story was entitled "Lovely Free Gift." He is a Summerfield scholar and is majoring in English.
Recently he landed in a hospital because of his dentures. He swallowed them when a team of horses he was driving bolted and threw him against a tree.
Rancher Swallows Teeth— Going To 'Gum It' Now
Several months ago Joe Borbett missed his choppers. He found them in a rat hole where they had been taken by pack rats.
Burns Lake, B.C. (UP)—A local ancher is about ready to give up else teeth and gum it from here out.
Young As You Feel
Long Beach, Calif. (UP)—Proving that “you’re as old as you feel,” Mr. and Mrs. Al Schick went out to dinner on Mrs. Schick's 60th birthday and came home with a pair of nylons for winning a fast fox trot dance contest.
Ambassador Will Be Convocation Speaker
Richard C. Patterson, ambassador to Yugoslavia and former corporation executive, will lecture on "The Inside Story of Tito" March 19 at convocation in Hoch auditorium under auspices of the University, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, announced today.
Born in Omaha, Neb., Patterson has been an executive of a number of corporations, has held important posts in New York City administration and national charity organizations, and was appointed assistant secretary of commerce by President Roosevelt, holding that post until 1939. He was appointed ambassador in September, 1944.
He has served as executive vicepresident and director of the National Broadcasting company, and director of the General Cigar company, New York Service corporation, and National Can corporation. Among many other posts which he has held was that of administrative officer of the American commission to negotiate peace in Paris in 1918-19. He studied at the University of Nebraska and the Columbia University School of Mines.
Inter-Frat Council Grants Petition
Permission to petition for an interim seat was granted Lambda Chi Alpha, national social fraternity, by the Inter-fraternity council at their meeting last night in the Union building. The new organization will hold the interim seat until their charter is granted.
The Inters-friaternity council dance will be held Saturday night at the Lawrence Country club. The party will be based on a night club theme, and seven members from each of the fraternities represented on the council will be invited.
Modern Choir Will Sing As Business School Party
Thirty-five members of the Modern chair under the direction of Haworth White, College junior, will sing Wednesday evening at 9:30 for the Business school party being given in the Union building.
They will sing, "I'm Always Chasing Rainbows," "Somebody Loves Me," and "Mood Indigo" featuring Mary C. Daugherty as soloist.
WURLITZER PHONOGRAPHS
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Huff To Head Alpha Kappa Psi
Warren A. Huff, Business senior, was elected president of Alpha Kappa Psi, commerce fraternity, at a meeting held in the Kansas room of the Union. Donald R. Baumunk was elected vice-president and Charles M. Mosley master of rigitha-
Phi Psi Chorus Presents Program Over KFKU
After the election plans were made to attend the Business school mixer to be held Wednesday in the Union building.
The Kappa Alpha Theta chorus was unable to sing on KFKU Thursday night because its soloist, Marilyn Smart, was ill and recordings of the chorus were too badly worn. The program presented by the FIi Kappa Psi chorus under the direction of Haworth White, College junior, included "Jalousie" and an arrangement of "Crimson and the Blue" by Victor White, a former student.
Patee Theatre Presents ALL WEEK
THE MIGHTIEST
2-FOR-1 SHOW IN
OUR HISTORY!
Never shown before
on one screen!
Gary Cooper's Best Loved Role! GARY COOPER JEAN ARTHUR in Cecil B. DeMille's HIT NO.1 "THE DLAINSMAN
with James Ellison • Charles Bickford Directed by Cecil B. DeMille A Parmont Re-Release
I
Academy Award Winner Ray Milland Makes Love To The Untamed Queen Of the Jungle!
DOROTHY LAMOUR RAY MILLAND in HIT NO.2 "THE JUNGLE" PRINCESS
with
Akim Tamiroff - Lynne Overman
PLEASE NOTE
The Jungle Princess
Shows at 2:13 - 7 10:30
THE PLAINSMAN
Shown at 3:37 - 8:37 P.M.
Matinees at 2 P.M.
Evening Show at 7 P.M.
REGULAR ADMISSION
PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 21, 1947
SPOTLIGHT SPORTS
By BOB DELLIINGER
(Daily Kansan Sports Editor)
Texas U., paced by Long John Hargis, continues to be one of the major powers in the country as the Longhorns roll easily on through the ranks of the Southwest conference.
The Steers' last victory was a 67-53 conquest of the Rice Owls and was the 13th in 14 starts for the high-riding Texans. The only loss of the year was to the Oklahoma Aggies at Oklahoma City and that was a mere 40-39 edging.
The Longhorns now share first place in the conference with Arkansas, also undefeated in league play, but the dopesters refuse to consider the skyscraping Razorbacks as any kind of contender.
Another 67-53 victory put the Southern Methodist Mustangs back in the title fight as the Ponies dumped Baylor out of any reasonable chance.
The Mustangs' only loss was to Texas, but that was a 20-point humbling, 56-36, with Hargis scoring 30 tallies for Texas. The amount of competition to be expected from Arkansas will be somewhat measured this week when the Hogs play a two-game series with Oklahoma A. & M., the only victor over Texas.
**
The Toronto Maple Leafs of the American Hockey league seem to be sailing along in an unconcerned manner with a four-game lead which has stood up for four weeks with no serious threats.
\* \* \*
There is a new ski jump record at Lake Placid, New York, where National Champion Arthur Devlin set a 203-foot mark in winning the Governor's cup annually awarded for the longest jump.
Bill Dickey has signed as player-manager of the Little Rock Travelers of the Southern Association, merely because he wants to play ball at home. He passed up several possible major league offers to stay with his home-town club.
Games Don't End Soon Enough Jayhawkers Lose In Overtime
The Kansas Jayhawkers suffered their fifth straight defeat and the second overtime loss of the season by dropping an extra-period, 54-5 defeat to Colorado U. at Boulder Monday night.
The Buffs jumped ahead in the early part of the overtime period and managed to stay out in front.
Hal Beatie, Colorado forward, took scoring honors with 15 points, and Huggins of Colorado and Eskridge of Kansas took the runner-up slot with 12 each. Owen Peck and Claude Houchin scored eight each for the Jayhawkers.
With the score tied 44-44 and 45 seconds remaining, Lee Robbins of Colorado broke in for a lay-up shot, but Jack Eskridge came back to score for Kansas 15 seconds later to leave the score at 46-46 at the end of regu-
Colorado led at the half, 31-28, and went on to pile up a lead on field goals, but the Jayhawkers sank 24 out, two fores tosses to stay in the ball game.
15 24 23 54
Colorado (59) FG FT PF TT
Hills, f 1 1 4 3
Beattie, f 5 5 2 15
Robbins, c 3 4 4 10
Ellis, g 1 1 3 3
Walseth, g 4 1 2 9
Huggins, g 5 2 3 12
Smith, f 1 0 1 2
Sharp, f 2 1 3 5
Evans, g 0 0 0 0
It was the second overtime loss of the year to the Colorado squad.
| Kansas (54) | 22 | 15 | 22 | 59 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Black, f | 1 | 2 | 5 | 4 |
| Stramel, f | 1 | 2 | 1 | 4 |
| Schnellbacher, c | 1 | 3 | 1 | 5 |
| Evans, g | 1 | 0 | 0 | 2 |
| Clark, g | 0 | 3 | 3 | 3 |
| Houchin, f | 2 | 4 | 0 | 8 |
| Peck, c | 2 | 4 | 3 | 8 |
| Eskridge, g | 4 | 4 | 2 | 12 |
| Auten, g | 0 | 0 | 2 | 0 |
| Dewell, g | 1 | 1 | 3 | 3 |
| Sapp, g | 1 | 1 | 0 | 3 |
| Enns, c | 0 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
| Tice, g | 1 | 0 | 3 | 2 |
Vic Mature Bemoans Passing Of Days When Knights Were Gay
Free throws missed: Colorado—8—Hills, Beatty (2), Robbins (3), Smith (2); Kansas—5—Evans, Peck, Eskridge (2), Sapp.
These days, he moaned, women were more likely to come to his rescue.
"I was out with a niffy the other night—useless-looking, but very ornamental—when something went
By PATRICIA CLARY
(United Press Staff Correspondent)
Hollywood. (UP)—Registering a hit with today's cutie isn't the cinch it was in the days before the war. Since then, girls have learned they don't need a man to get a door open.
Victor Mature bemoans the passing of the old days. Used to be a guy could win a girl's favor with those little Emily Post's attentions. But now it takes time, thought and an independent fortune. Even for a gorgeous hunk of man like Mature
"Women were so delightfully helpless a guy could be a big shot 50 times a day without even trying," he exulted. "Like when Clementine arrives in Tombstone. No hotel clerk, no bell-boys. Does she hang her bister on the desk and shout for service? She does not. She hovers around like a stricken fawn until Wyatt Earp comes to her rescue."
He remembers when he could show his regard for a girl by being concerned and attentive about helping her up and down curbs or across treacherous doorsills. And while he doesn't remember personally, he learned in making "My Darling Clementine" at 20th Century-Fox that that period was an all-time high for men.
"Girls came out of the war with an entirely new slant on things," he said indignantly, "I used to be able to establish myself with a cute number with a few well-turned compliments. But now when I turn on anything that smells like a line they classify me with the old-timers and buddy-dudys."
"Try her now,' she sings out, and sure enough, everything's okay. Then I find out she knows how to take the whole darn car apart and put it together again. Believe me, it was the first time I ever dated an auto mechanic."
wrong with my engine—something really wrong, I mean. I was looking for my auto-club card, but she hopped out, upped the hood and tinkered a bit.
"Otherwise, they think you have a line, and that puts you in the wrong category—old hat. You have to give it a lot of thought, and if you repeat you get called. 'You sound like a broken record.'"
We wanted to know where expense came in, outside of prices which make a dinner invitation take on the aspect of a payment on the car.
Vic said a swain these days had to go through a careful buildup before he laid down a big barrage of compliments.
"Well, you find out fast your best way to register a quick hit is a chunk of orchids. Of course, that went over before the war, too. I sure envy those guys who could cut a rose out of mother's front garden, buy a box of chocolates at the drug-store and get an evening in the porch swing in return."
K.U. Grad To Cuba On Basketball Tour
John W. Dunn, former basketball coach at Stanford university and now basketball coach and athletic director at Springfield (Mass.) college, will take his quintet on an exhibition tour through Cuba this spring.
The purpose of his trip will be to give Cuban teams an idea of American basketball and to help them improve their style of play.
Bunn went to Springfield with more than 20 years of coaching experience. After nine years at Kansas, he went to Stanford in 1930 where his teams won three Pacific Coast championships. He developed many stars, including All American Hank卢伊斯i
Bunn graduated from KU. in 1921 with 10 varsity athletic letters in football, basketball, and baseball.
Strike-Out King Feller Signs With Cleveland
Cleveland. (UP) - Fireball Bob Feller, baseball's strikeout king, today signed a 1947 contract with the Cleveland Indians that probably will make him the highest paid player in the game's history.
Terms of the contract were not revealed, but it was believed Rapid Robert's basic salary for the coming season plus a bonus on attendance would boost him above the record $80,000 yearly collected by Babe Ruth in 1930-31.
Feller reportedly received a straight salary of $50,000 last year plus $22,000 in bonuses and President Bill Veeck of the Indians agreed recently that the one-time Iowa farm boy was worth more.
The 27-year old hurler who rejoined the Indians in 1945 after three and one half years in the Navy with his pitching skill undiminished, broke Rube Waddell's 42-year-old strikeout record last year. Bob whiffed 348 batters to better Waddell's mark by five.
If attendance totals are as great in 1947 as anticipated, and Feller's other earnings materialize, he can easily hit the $100,000 mark he was expected to reach last year.
"I'm confident the Indians will be popular this year," Feller said in agreeing to the bonus contract.
Le Scur, Minn. (UP)—Edward B. Cosgrove, president of the Minnesota Valley Canning company says foods can be preserved commercially by using radio-active salts. But the cost is prohibitive. For example, a can of peas would cost $3,000.
Expensive That Way
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Hollywood. (UP) —Laraine Day and Leo Durocher, hand in hand, were on their way today to what Hollywood believed would be a Mexican marriage and honeymoon.
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JANUARY 21, 1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
947
Cyclones,K-State Trim Opponents
The Iowa State Cyciones continued in the race for the Big Six cage crown by slaughtering Nebraska, 61-44. at Ames Monday night.
It was the second conference victory for the Cyclones and became the third and probably eliminating loss for Nebraska.
More than 6,000 fans, the largest crowd ever to watch an Iowa State home basketball game, saw the Cyclones control a majority of the rebounds and stretch a two-point lead at the 10-minute mark to a 28-20 halftime margin and go on from there.
Jim Myers led the Iowa State scoring with 11 points before fouling out. Claude Rethertford, Nebraska forward paced the Cornhuskers with 11 points.
13 points.
Elsewhere in the Big Six, the Kansas State Wildcats snapped a three-game losing streak by taking a non-conference, 51-44 victory over Rockhurst at Manhattan.
Hal Howey was again the big gun in the Wildcat scoring with 15 points, followed by Dave Weatherby with eight.
Kansas State held a 28-25 lead at the half, but Rockhurst came back to tie it up at 31-31 before Howey started the ball rolling with a goal and a free throw.
Kansas State has won six straight against non-conference foes, but has won one and lost three in the conference.
College Drops Record Winning Streak
New York. (UP)—Marshall college extended its string of basketball victories to 15 with an 86 to 47 conquest of Concord college last night, but Eastern Kentucky dropped from the perfect-record list.
Murray Teachers upset Eastern Kentucky, 45 to 43. The losers had won their first 11 games.
In another top game, the University of Kentucky, rated by many as the nation's best team, overwhelmed Georgia Tech, 70 to 47. It was the Wildcat's 15th victory against a loss to the Oklahoma Aggies.
Cornell improved its position in ivy league standings with a 38 to 35 victory over Dartmouth. Cornell now has won three and lost one, while Columbia and Princeton are undefeated in two league games.
Iowa State's 61 to 44 win over Nebraska moved State into a second-place tie with Oklahoma in Big Six standings.
Pittsburgh beat Ohio State, 51 to 41, the Panthers' first victory over a Big Nine team since 1940.
In the only Big Nine game, Ed Ehlers scored 21 points to lead Purdue to an upset 52 to 46 triumph over Iowa, virtually eliminating Iowa from the race. Indiana beat Iowa on Saturday.
Women's Intramurals In Robinson Tonight
Tonight's schedule of women's intramural basketball games in Robinson gymnasium includes:
7—Sigma Kappa vs. Sleepy Hollow
how.
7—Miller vs. Independents
10-The og Omega vs. Kappa Kappa Gamma.
8—Delta Gamma vs. Alpha Delta Pi.
Campbell Heads Co-op
Robert W. Campbell, College sophomore, has been elected president of the Jayhawk Co-operative house. Also elected were Richard L. Pflaster, vice-president, and Wendell J. Walker, secretary.
One, Two, Three, Go
Columbus, Ohio. (UP)—Approximately 35 women scrambled toward a supply of scarce soap flakes and bowled over the chain store stock boy. One woman lost a tooth in the scrimmage. The crowd dispersed when the soap flakes were sold out.
Eskridge Tops Jayhawkers
KANSAS
23
This is Jack Eskridge, sophomore forward, who was K.U.'s high man in the 50-54 loss to the Colorado Buffalos Monday night.
Crisler Upholds NCAA Purity Ruling
Pittsburgh. (UP)—Indication that National Collegiate Athletic association members will enforce sanctions against schools which do not abide by its new "purity" program was seen today after Fritz Crisler, Michigan football coach, criticized the Southwest conference's rejection of the program.
Crisler spoke at two gatherings yesterday, and said that he believed the Southwest conference eventually would go along with the new rulings rather than "secede" from the NCAA. He said he believed Tulane university was willing to drop out of its conference if it does not accept the purity rulings, which allow recruiting of athletes only on the campus itself.
The Southwest conference wants to allow recruiting in the state in which the university is located. Crisler said that view "straddled" the issue of amateurism.
When it was passed at the NCAA's New York convention, there were suggestions that NCAA schools should refuse to play schools which do not follow the program.
London. (UP) — English athletic chiefs, unhappy over British olympic prospects, hoped today that tales from Africa about Congo giants who can high-jump eight feet are more accurate than the recent hoax of the "gazelle boy".
Some returned travelers say the natives, members of the Watsui tribe, are from six feet six inches to seven feet in height and high jump eight feet with ease. That's 13 inches over the world record held by Les Steers of the U.S.A. If the natives are in British territory, they would be eligible for the Olympia10
Olympic Prospects Seen In Natives
But the British are wary. It was said the Gazelle boy would run 40 miles per hour, but it turned out to be an exaggeration by about 36 miles. The boy was sent to a hospital, where he showed no gazelle qualities at all.
Four table tennis semi-final winners will compete for the title in games to be played before Thursday.
In second division play, Joan Anderson, Alpha Delta Pi, and Frances Chubb, Pi Beta Pi, will meet to decide the finals contest.
Table Tennis Title Sought By Finalists
Competing in the first division are Lenore Brownlee, Locksley hall, and Doris Tihen, Gamma Phi Beta.
Consolation games include contests between Margaret Holsinger, and Shirley Liem. The winner will play the high scorer of the Eva Rohrer vs. Mary McNerney match.
Three IM Games Won By 25 Points
Twenty-five was a popular margin of victory in intramural basketball games played Monday night. Three games were decided by that same point-spread.
Sigma Nu defeated the A.T.C. club, 42 to 17. Williams led the winners with 14 counters. Medlock was high for the losers with five free throw
Delta Tau Delta was victorious over Alpha Phi Alpha by the same score, 42 to 17. Winslow paced the Delt's and took high point honors for the night with 20 counters.
Kappa Sigma rolled over Alpha Phi Omega, 34 to 9, to complete the trio of decisive victories.
In the closest contest of the night,
Pi Kappa Alpha squeezed by the
1934 club, 29 to 27. Crawford led
the victors with 12 markers. Hentzen
of the 1934 club took scoring
honors, however, with 17 points.
Other results: Delta Upsilon over Normans, 33 to 23; Alpha Tau Omega $\alpha$ over 1126 club, 38 to 31; Indepisis over Theta Tau, 31 to 21; Phi Kappa over Navy officers, 2 to 0 (forfeit).
'B' Teams Meet Tonight
Tonight:
10—Misfits “B” vs. Co-ops “B”
10—Sigma Chi “B” vs. Tau Kappa
Epsilon “B”
College Basketball
Wisconsin 58, Michigan State 48.
Kentucky 70, Georgia Tech 47.
Bucknell 43, N.Y. State Maritime
Purdue 52. Iowa 46.
Virginia State college 57, Howard 53.
Murray Teachers 45, Eastern Kentucky 43.
Marshall 86, Concord college 42
James Hillikin 52, Carbondale
Torresillis 47
Gettysburg college 47, Franklin & Marshall 40.
Loras 64, St. Joseph's 51.
Louisiana State 44, Loyola (South) 43.
John Marshall 78, Bergen J.C. 45.
Carroll 62, Lake Forest 31.
Macomb Teachers 53, Jacksonville (Ill.) college 51.
Pittsburgh 51, Ohio State 41.
Cornell 38, Dartmouth 35.
Iowa State 61, Nebraska 44.
Arkansas 55, University of Mexico 37.
Gonzaga 56, Pacific Lutheran 37.
Gonzaga 36, Pacific Lutheran M.
Washington J. W. 31, G3.
gonzaga J. V. 28.
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---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SIX
JANUARY 21, 1947
Kansan Comments
Two-Wav Tests
Harassed students getting down to the serious business of preparing for final week may be consoled by what one professor has to say about examinations.
"We teachers may not admit it," he observes, "but an examination is a test of ourselves as well as of the students."
In some courses the examination seems to be a guessing game, with the teacher trying to ask questions which students will not be able to answer. A few (too few) professors mention in connection with some point that it is important enough to be asked in a quiz; and as a result students remember basic ideas in those courses long after they have forgotten the myriad details they crammed for another.
He meant, of course, that quizzes show the teacher how well he has gotten essential material across to his pupils. And whether students come to college for fun or knowledge, their judgment of this matter is about the same. They all prefer a "snap" to a harsh grading curve if the subject is dull, unorganized, and impractical, but they have little respect for the professor regardless of his grading system.
--years, has gained a virtual monopoly of the newspaper business in Kansas City, Mo. Its high rate of circulation to population is equalled by few, if any, other newspapers. A few other newspapers are published in the city, but they are small and cater to various districts of the city, not to the entire city.
This is equally true of courses which aim at student interpretation and conclusion and of those based on memorization of facts.
Some professors habitually ask students to evaluate the course as part of the final examination, and do not let criticisms influence the grade. This sounds like an inspiration to broad, constructive thinking on the part of students, as well as a help for the teacher to do a more effective job.A.B.
Monopoly
Since Friday morning, the 19th largest city in the United States has been without a daily newspaper because of a dispute involving some carriers who claim they're employees of the Kansas City Star and who the Star claims aren't employers.
A picket line was thrown around the Star building by these carriers, and this line has not been crossed by the printers and stereotypers and pressmen who, though not belonging to the same union, are not going to be accused of strike-breaking. As a result, the Star and its morning edition, the Times, hasn't been printed.
The Star, over a long period of
The University Daily Kansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn. Nationa Editor of the Kansas Press Assn. Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave. New York, NY 10017.
Managing Editor... Charles Room
Asst. Management Editor... Jane Anderson
Makeup Editor... Billie Marie Hamilton
Business Manager... Bill Donovian
Advertising Manager... Margery Handy
Circulation Manager... John McCormick
Accounting Manager... Marcia Stewart
Assist Telegraph Ed... Marcela Stewart
City Editor... R. T. Kingman
The Kansas Press Association
1947
Member
National Editorial Association
A FREE PRESS - YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW
As a result, the Kansas Citian has become used to getting his knowledge of local, state, national, and international events mainly from the Star. But Friday afternoon, this was all changed. Only those who have access to papers from other cities learn much about what is going on in the world. The Star's radio station has increased its number of newscasts in an attempt to furnish information, but there is no way to select what you read when someone else reads it to you.
A tale is told about the Star's strength in Kansas City. A newspaper publisher came to town to see what chance he had of starting an opposition paper. He was taken to the Star's business offices and shown the advertising contracts held by the Star. The man, so the story goes, eft by the next train.
Tokyo. (UP) The jeep has undergone such local beauty treatments here that you frequently don't recognize the old girl.
The story may or may not be true, but it would have been a good thing for Kansas Citians had someone succeeded in publishing an opposition paper. A monopoly newspaper is all right as long as it delivers the goods, but there is always a need for two newspapers if one can't deliver.
Jeeps In Japan Get DeLuxe Overhauling
Tokyo now has completely enclosed jeeps, jeeps with two doors that lock, jeeps with glass windows, front side and back, and jeeps with leather-covered springs and sponge-rubber seats. Paint jobs run from conservative black to chrome yellow and robin's egg blue.
With the arrival in Japan of the first dependent family, it was only a matter of time before the dust and rain-conditioned old lady with the agonizing back seat was doomed.
First it was side curtains, fabricated of canvas and celluloid, which kept the rain out. Then duraluminum tops and sides, salvaged from wrecked Japanese aircraft, began to appear.
Minneapolis, (UP)—A maze of tunnels 100 feet below the earth's surface heats buildings at the University of Minnesota. As new buildings are erected, more eight-foot tunnels are dug in the sandstone rocklayers that lie beneath the campus, and carry steam that heats the buildings during Minnesota's cold winters.
In some de luxe models, heaters and radios have been installed. The front seat is usually remodelled to seat three. The back seat gets extra stuffing and a new back. If possible chrome bumpers are added, together with streamlined fender guards and a horn that chimes.
After a jeep is sold at a regular army jeep sale, it is usually driven (or more often pushed) to a Japanese garage, where, for a liberal amount of yen and cigarettes, it gets a complete transformation.
But What's In A Name
Hiawatha, (UP)—Trapp and Kill have entered the implement business in this Kansas town. Virgil Kill has formed a partnership with former Sheriff W. F. Trapp.
Tunnels Heat Minnesota U.
Three-Year-Old Takes Mails Into Own Hands
Willoughby, Ohio. (UP)—Three-year-old Frank Petee only wanted to help the letter carrier, but his efforts caused considerable confusion
Noticing a large bundle of newspapers, magazines and mail left daily at a house on his street. Frank decided to go to work. He loaded the bundle on his tricycle and distributed the mail among residents of the block, but rather indiscriminately. Postmen were kept busy re-collecting the mail and sorting it for final distribution.
Jaytalking ---
If your breakfast table conversation has lost that old snarling and growling, try this statement—scientists say that re-warmed coffee causes hardening of the arteries.
An instructor recently told his students that "the final exam is so difficult that even I can't pass it." He should worry—he doesn't have to.
Comic strips, often prophetic, now have used skywriting in technicolor. By the time science gets around to perfecting the technique, however, their earlier brainchild will have driven us all into atom bomb-proof shelters without a skylight.
General Marshall is certain to be a "middle of the roader" in his job as secretary of state. He started down the middle path by denouncing both sides in China for failure to cooperate.
While "just shopping" the other day, a coed was taken by surprise when she casually asked the salesman for nylons. He had them. Being nearly broke, she managed to wiggle out of the deal by requesting size 12's for her Aunt Angela.
One College senior now takes a dim view of his course in Animals of the Past. He says it's not that he particularly minds seeing pink elephants and flying bats on "party" nights, but when he sees purple dinosaurs and pterodactyls, that's carrying education too far.
There's no need to fret over the alleged Communist influence in labor unions. The union men don't want to do away with the upper class; they just want to be in it.
About That Tax: Pay As You Go, And You Won't Go To Leavenworth
"Pay as you go" sounds like the sign behind the bar in the local beer parlor, but it's the contemporary American income tax plan.
January 15 has come and gone so it's more than fair to warn everyone that they should have filed an income tax return on or before the above date.
This, of course, applies mainly to farmers or share croppers, what ever the case may be. The regulations state if two-thirds of your income is derived from farming then you may file the return on or before Jan. 15, 1947. If *you* make only one-fourth or one-half of your annual income from tilling the soil, then the regulations are not too clear just what you should do. There is a sorry need for rules concerning the "one-halfers" and the "one-fourthers."
In fact, a man might make only one-half of his total income from farming and the rest from boot-legging, then what? He is, of course, left in a quandary.
Income from the G.I. Bill of Rights is not actually income, but a mere "pittance". There are absolutely no regulations regarding "mere pit-tances."
Naturally, through this oversight in "pittance regulations", many "sharpies" have gotten away with murder, not just figuratively speaking. One slot machine owner in Wichita said what he made off his machinaes was a "mere pittence" in comparison to what he could have made if he had just had some quarter machines. (His were the nickle kind). Due to shortages, the quarter one-armed-bandits have been a little late in coming on the market this year.) Don't snicker; the guy owns two Cadillacs and will probably be invited to K.U. to interview February graduates.
Tax computation is really a very simple matter. So called "tax experts" are actually robbing one when money for helping with his tax returns.
According to form 1040, personal income tax form, computation schedule for persons not using the form 1040 tax table is as follows: (If the tax table is crowded, go to the dice table.)
ONE. Enter amount of net income expected in the preceding year and subtract this from line three, page three, plus your wife and three dependents, or any plausible number if any at all.
TWO. Enter exemptions. (Five hundred dollars for yourself; plus $500 for wife or husband; plus $500 for each plausible, if possible.)
THREE. Subtract line two from line one.
FOUR. Use the average tax rates to figure your tentative tax on amount assumed in line three.
FIVE. Subtract line five from line four
Just follow the simple instructions and you can't go wrong. Leavenworth is full of persons who couldn't go wrong.
San Francisco. (UP)—Radar pictures of hurricanes taken from airplanes are now being used by navy weather experts, the 12th naval district revealed.
Although radar shots of storms have been photographed many times aboard ship or from the ground, the naval district said a recent experiment at Miami, Fla., was believed to have been the first successful effort to radar-film a storm from an observation plane.
Radar pulsations were echoed back by water droplets in the air and the echoes formed "characteristic patterns" which could be identified by tranied observers. Shooting a storm with radar from an airplane will broaden weather plotting, the navy asid, since ground or ship radar sets were limited by the optical horizon.
Radar Plane Plots Hurricane Pictures
That Wolfe Call
Hollywood. (UP)—James D. Wolfe, desk officer at the police station here, says he wondered why some women hang up when he answers the phone. Then he discovered he had been announcing, without much pause between the words: "Hollywood—Wolfe!"
There's A Last Straw For That Camel Too
MORE MORE
WAGE RISE PRICE RISE PUBLIC
Daniel Bishop in St. Louis Star-Times
1.
JANUARY 21, 1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
A Bloody Club Planted In A Barn And
Willie Got His Class Assignment
Prof. L. N. Flint, the retired head of the journalism department, took time Thursday, on the 35th anniversary of the University Dally Kansas, to lean back in his chair and think back over the more than 40 years he has spent in the department.
"In earlier days," he said, "I think the students were a little wilder. They were full of pranks and stunts, and every class had its leading practical jokester."
And through all those years, he remembered, there had never been a practical joker to equal little Willie Ferguson, who pulled his biggest stunt in 1911, when the Kansas first moved into the Shack.
Willie W. Ferguson was a short, active young man. Like all the other students, he wore high celluloid collars and string ties, and parted his hair in the middle. Under those straight-combed locks, Professor Flint recalled, dwelt an active mind.
In 1911, Willie went home to Olathe, for a short vacation. Because he was a journalism student, he spent his time there thinking up an imaginary murder story. He said it was a class assignment, but Professor Flint denies he ever made such a demand.
Anyway, Willie went so far as to stage an imaginary murder of his own.
He got some hair combings from his sister, killed a chicken and saved the blood, found an old curb, and went to an old abandoned barn. He planted his props, scarred the floor to indicate that a body had been dragged across it, and left.
A caretaker discovered the set-up a day later, and summoned the sheriff. Fortunately, Willie was on hand to write the stories that went all over the middlewest. The Kansas City Star and the St. Louis Post-Dispatch were two of the many papers that accepted long, detailed
stories of the search for the "murderer."
When Willie discovered how things were getting away from him, he confessed, and the officials just let it drop.
When he last wrote to the alumni office, William W. Ferguson who left K.U. in 1913, was working on the Los Angeles Times and was part owner of an advertising agency. That was in 1940.
Before that time, he had been a reporter in Texas, where he received national recognition for his work in exposing the activities of Ku Klux Klan units.
Experts Predict Increase In Sugar
New York. (UP)—Sugar experts here agree that housewives may expect more of it in 1947.
They based their prediction on an expected increase in the sugar crop, promised increases in prices, an expected removal of controls altogether, and reduction in overseas allotments.
"If things go as we expect, there will be an easing of the shortage through the year," D. L. Pollock, statistician of the New York coffee and sugar exchange, said.
Another commercial expert cautioned that while sugar supplies probably would increase, more than the pre-war supply will be needed because of the increase in population.
One sugar broker said prices would probably rise 25 cents to $1 per hundred pounds, and that even a slight improvement in prices will bring more sugar to the market.
Downtown Quail Hunt
Mt. Carmel, Ill. (UP) — Two sportsmen went hunting in here in the downtown business district. Returning from a day in the fields, they stopped in town when a quail, which they thought dead, got out of one of the hunter's pocket. They cornered the bird, and this time made sure it was dead.
Hypnotism Helps In Pulling Teeth
Bakersfield, Calif. (UP)—Hypnotism, long thought of as a good stage trick and now used in medicine and in curing mental illness, has found a happy place in dentistry here.
Mrs. Violet Nicola went to Hendrick's medical-dental clinic. She had two teeth that had to come out and she was allergic to all types of anesthetic.
Dri. Niel Norton, consulting psycho-therapist, and two other doctors were called for consultation by Dr. Mordedh Hendricks, who was to remove the teeth. Norton began talking to Mrs. Nicola. Within a few seconds she was in a hypnotic trance.
Thirty minutes later she was brought out of it, minus her two teeth, but completely unaware that they were gone. Though the doctors and two other witnesses told her the operation was over, a mirror was the only thing that convinced her.
Dr. W. G. Hendricks, a brother of the doctor who performed the operation, reported Mrs. Nicola suffered no ill after-effects such as bleeding, swelling or shock.
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five day days five
25 words or less 35c 65c 90c
additional words 1c 2c 3c
Lost
WEENESDAY Morning, probably between Library and Snow hall, brown Sheaffer pen. Name on side. Mary Klooze. Number 1701-7. Urgency needed finals. -21
OVERCOAT. Brown, size 38. Was accidentally exchanged at Dine-A-Mite Fite evening for coat of similar color. Company McCarthy at 1060 or leave message.
Wanted
ONE Brown porch glider taken jokingly around Halloween from the Pi Beta Phi porch. We would appreciate its return or information of its whereabouts. -21-
WOULD Trade 3-room, hospital in Kansas City, Kansas for 2 room apartment of Kaiser hospital for 2 or 3 room apartment in Lawrence. Write resume Ohio or see at University Press before 5/16.
VETERAN'S Wife or other to care for
young child three days per week 8:30-
4:30. Off at noon if desired. Phone
2816-R. -232
Transportation
HUDSON - RENT - A - CAR - SERVICE
Will rent you a car by day or weekend.
Reservations taken. Phone 3315. Location
601 Vermont. -28-
For Rent
NEWLY Decorated room for 2 men students. Well furnished. Call 2482 J-27 -
Business Services
TYPING: Prompt service, reasonable rates. 1028 Vermont. Phone 1168-R-24 MOTT'S K.U. stable offers free transportation to and from campus and stables. For riding reservations, phone 346 or 1019. -21-
TYPING. Term papers and reports. Do not reasonably and promptly. Phone 8-254-600-3178.
RADIO Repair. We invite you to bring your radio to WARD's Service Dept., for quick, efficient repair. We also repair refrigerators, refrigerators, guns, and jewelry. We guarantee our workmanship. Montgomery Ward. 825 Mass St. Phone 195. -24-
ATTENTION. Medical Students, micro-
instruments cleaned and repaired,
instruments cleaned and repaired,
Thirteen years' experience. Call Victor 9218, Technical Institutions Service company, 720 Delaware, Kansas City 6, Mo. Free estimates.
PHOTO-EXACT Copies, discharge and valuable papers. Fast service. Low price. Round Corner Drug Co. 801 Mass. law-259 flower, Kansas. L for Lane E, Park 18, -258
FOR That coke date remember the Elde-
d pharmacy at 701 Mass., phone 348-291-2911.
For Sale
STUDIO Divan, electric record player and blue overcoat. All slightly used but in good condition. See at Lane F. Apt. 18, Sunflower Village. -21-
MEN'S Clean clothes. Black chinenu
overcoat, 1 suit. 1 coat vest and extra
trousers, all size 40. Trouseres x23x3. Bai-
gain for quick sale. 1104 New Jersey. -21
STUDIO Couch. Brown and beige
striped, prewar spring construction, half
price $22. Size Two. $2 each. Mrs. Mater-
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LIBERTY Conch four-wheel tandem trailor house. Call Edwin Rossin at 426-395-8100.
CHRONOGRAPH Telemeter, night dial,
G A Edison, 1311 Ohio Phone
1744-W.
NEW Remington portable typewriter
Art Ruffenbush, 1031 Vermont
"23"
www.remington.com
NEW Regent trumpet. Has never been used. Pick for Tom Goering, phone 253-6480.
ONE Man's 15-iew Grunen Old. Old but keeps good time. $15. Also have you found a pair of clear horn-rimmed glasses in small leather case. OWN -23
RCA Victor personal portable radio with leather carrying case and replacement tubes. New batteries. All-metal construction with chrome face, $38. D R. Churchill, 1131 Tennessee, phone 2033. 2 MICROSCOPE. New Spencer, unused.
MICROSCOPE. New Spencer, tim-
eable. Call to 818. Save $25. Call To at 818.
FORMALS In sizes 9-16 in good condition and very good style and colors. Also suitable for casual outings, suits, skirts, sweaters, coats. See item 475. Comfort Ever Ready Shop, 741 N.Y.-27.
The Adventure of The LONE WOLFF
YOU'RE ALL ALONE AND ON YOUR OWN
WHEN--LIKE WERNER WOLFF, NEWS
LENSMAN-YOU'RE 1275 FEET ABOVE
THE SIDEWACKS OF NEW YORK,
SHooting PICTURES FROM THE
EMPIRE STATE BUILDING'S SLENDER
TELEVISION MAST.
COURT HOUSE LUNCH
Meals - Short Orders
Sandwiches
Open 5:30-12:30
THE STEEPLEJACKS ARE BUILDING A TELEVISION MAST. WE WANT A SHOT OF EM—FROM ABOVE.
WHEN DO WE SHOOT?
POWERFUL AND I
WANT TO TRY!
WHAT
A MAN!
KEEP THAT SAFETY BELT TIGHT AND HUG THAT MAST. THIS WIND UP HERE IS POWERFUL
AND I THOUGHT ARMY COMBAT PHOTOGRAPHY IN ITALY WAS RUGGE...
THE CITY... READY TO SHOOT... AND THEN...
UP.,UP.,UP.,OVER THE STEPLEEJACKS,OVER
THE CITY,, READY TO SHOOT,, AND THEN.
FINE THING!
ALL I CAN
GET IN THE
PICTURE IS MY
OWN FOOT.
WHAT'LL I
DO? WELL—
CAN TRY!
A man riding a rope
1275 FEET UP, WOLFEL LOOSENG HIS
BAFETY BELT, PREPARES TO
SWING OUT ON ANGLE FROM MAST,
BRACING HIMSELF WITH ONE LEG!
GOT
THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
GOT THE ANGLE! NOW IF ONLY THE PICTURES COME OUT ALL RIGHT...
THAT GUY'S GOT STEEL NERVES!
J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salem, North Carolina
THEY'RE KNOCKOUTS!
CLEAR AS COLORFUL...
CIDER CRISPIONS!
DID, ON, THE PICTURE
OF THE YEAR!
THANKS... AND I'D
THANK YOU FOR A CAMEL,
TOO BOY... THAT'S
FOR ME
OF THE YEAR!
CAMEL
TURKISH & DOMESTIC
BLEND
CIGARETTES
Camelo
CAMEL CAMEL TURKISH & DOMESTIC BLEND CIGARETES Camelso LIKE SO MANY CAMERAMEN, I'M A CAMEL SMOKED FROM 'WAY BACK CAMELS SUIT MY T-ZONE' TO A T
Werner Wroff
T for Taste...
T for Throat...
YOUR "T-ZONE" WILL TELL YOU
that's your proving ground for any cigarette. See if Camels don't suit your "T-Zone" to the "T-"
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 21. 1947
PAGE EIGHT
Strike May Silence WDAF
Kansas City, Mo. (UP)—The central labor union today pledged city-wide AFL support to Kansas City Star contract carriers, and offered its services to obtain settlement of a strike which has halted publication of the city's one daily newspaper.
Leonard Williams, president of the central body, said all AFL members would be asked to observe picket lines set up by the striking carriers. Previously, AFL printers and press-phen had refused to pass the lines, although the stereotypers, also AFL, voted to report for work as usual.
Radio station WDAF, owned by the Star with its studios housed in its building, remained on the air today. Mr. Williams said that WDAF employees, members of the American Federated Radio Artists and AFL electrical workers union, were awaiting instructions from their international headquarters as to whether they should honor the carriers' picket lines.
Spokesmen for WDAF said they had no official knowledge of the situation.
Mr. Williams said that the central union would make every effort to work out a solution in the dispute and announced that a union committee would seek an early meeting with the Stir management.
Surprise Package
Chicago. (UP)—A little old lady stole a box out of a car parked in the Loop. When she opened it she fainted. Inside was a dead cat. Its owner was en route to bury it.
Karl Mattern, associate professor of drawing and painting, and Robert Sudlow, instructor in painting, will be represented in the 142nd annual exhibit of fine arts at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Art in Philadelphia. The exhibit which opens Saturday is one of the oldest annual art showings in the country.
K.U. Art Instructors In Fine Arts Exhibit
Professor Mattern's picture is entitled, "The Kaw in February," and Mr. Sudlow's picture, "Bridge".
They Didn't Get Up And Walk Away Or Did They?
The case of the missing panties, or,
who stole those unenmentables?—
that is the mystery of Jollife hall.
The culprit is still at large, the puzzled, and Jollife women are police and University authorities are frantic.
It all started Jan. 11. Twelve pairs of under garments were left hanging on the basement clothesline. At noon 30 a.m., someone entered and took them, all them.
Then on Jan. 17 it happened again at the same hour, only this time no less than 22 pairs were taken. The situation was becoming critical.
The next morning janitors at Hoech auditorium were astonished to find 22 pairs of the missing articles scattered around the room. That made it 22 found and 12 to go.
Lawrence police are of the opinion that it is the work of some prankster.
But where are the other 12 pairs?
Official Bulletin
Jan. 21, 1947
The All-Student Council has declared a vacancy to be filled by a representative of the Pachacamac party from District II, the School of Engineering. Petitions must be filed with the secretary of the A.S.C. not later than Monday.
P. S.G.L. Senate will meet today at 9:30 p.m. in 103 Green Hall.
※ ※ ※
Le Cercle Français se reunira mercredi le 22 janvier a quarte heures dans la salle 113 Frank Strong.
Inter-varsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 tonight in Barlow Channel, Myers Hall. Leo Poland will conduct the bible study.
American Institute of Electrical Engineers will elect officers at 5 p.m. today in 205 E.E. laboratory. All members should attend.
Houses that received cups for Homecoming decorations must take cups to Roberts Jewelry store by Jan. 25 for engraving.
All members of the February graduating class of the School of Business who are hoping to be placed through the Business Placement bureau and any other students available for permanent employment in February please note the School of Business bulletin board for announcement of interview schedules throughout the month of January.
G r ad u t e R e c o r d E xamination,
February 3 and 4, 1947. Applications
may be obtained in 2A, Frank
Strong.
Sigma Tau will elect officers 4:30 p.m. today in 210 Mechanical laboratory. All members should attend.
Seniors interested in an investment banking career in New York should arrange for interview Saturday with Wingate Corp. by vice president of the Discount Corp., New York City. See Frank Pinet, Business Placement Bureau, 212 Frank Strong.
Student hometown newspaper correspondents for the Statewide Activities commission will meet in Fraser theater at 4:00 p.m. today.
Progressive Party meeting 7:00 p.m. tomorrow. All men students not affiliated with either men's political party are welcome to attend in 166 Green hall.
☆ ☆ ☆
"Juvenile Delinquency" and "Boy in Court" will be shown at the Y.M.C.A. movie forum at 4:00 p.m.
Thursday, in Little Theater, Green Hall. Dr. Bert Nash of the Educational clinic will lead a short discussion.
- * *
Tau Sigma will meet tonight at Robinson Gym. The actives to be in the folk dance be there at 7:15. The regular meeting will be at 7:30 p.m.
Mathematics Club will meet Thursday in the Pine Room of the Memorial Union at 4:00 p.m. Bill Stoner will present a program on Leap Year.
※ ※ ※
Archery Club will practice today in Robinson Gym from 4:00-6:00 p.m. All new members are urged to attend.
ASME will elect officers at 5:00 p.m. tomorrow in room 210 Marvin. All mechanicals invited.
Delta Phi Delta meeting will be held in 316, Design dept. at 4:00 p.m. today to install officers.
Art Club will meet today at 7:30 p.m. in the Pine Room of the Union. All interested are invited.
The student court will meet at 7:30 tonight in the courtroom in Green Hall. The session will try smoking violation cases.
The Christian Science Organization will hold its regular weekly meeting Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in Danforth Chapel. Members of the 'aculty, graduates and students are invited.
---
A B C
Modern Choir will meet at 9 tonight in Frank Strong auditorium
心 心 心
The International Relations club will hold a business meeting, at 4:30 am. Thursday in the Kansas Room of the Union.
Managing Editor
This Billie Marie Hamilton, College senior, who has been elected managing editor of the Daily Kansan, by the Kansan Board yesterday. Miss Hamilton is now makeup editor.
Nicole B.
Other staff members elected were Alamada Bollier, College senior and former editorial associate, who will become the new Kingman, College senior and present city editor, who was elected assistant managing editor.
The new staff will take over at the beginning of the second semester and will hold office for half the spring term.
U.S., Russia Can Live In Peace-Stalin
New York. (UP)—Premier Josef Stalin believes that "the danger of a new war is not real," Elliott Roosevelt said today in a copyrighted dispatch in Look magazine.
Mr. Roosevelt, in his account of an interview which took place Dec. 21 in Stalin's office in the Kremlin in Moscow, said that the Soviet premier appeared to be in good health, although thinner than when Mr. Roosevelt had last seen him three years previously.
Stalin's comments on war were made when Mr. Roosevelt asked:
"To what do you ascribe the lessening in friendly relations and understanding between our two countries since the death of Franklin Roosevelt?"
Stalin answered:
"I feel that if this question relates to relations and understanding between the American and Russian peoples, no deterioration has taken place, but on the contrary relations have improved.
"As to relations between the two governments, there have been misunderstandings. Certain deterioration has taken place and then great noise was raised that their relations would even deteriorate still further. But I see nothing frightful about this in the sense of a violation of peace or a military conflict.
"Not a single great power, even if its government were anxious to do so, could now raise a large army to fight another allied power, another great power, because now one cannot possibly fight without one's people—and the people are unwilling to fight. They are tired of war. And besides, there are no understandable objectives to justify a new war."
On the question of United Nations control of atomic energy, including inspection, the generalissimo said that "On the principle of equality, no exceptions should be made in the case of Russia. Russia should be given some rules of inspection and control as any other nations must."
Asked if it were possible for the democratic United States and communist Russia to live side-by-side in peace, Stalin replied that it was "not only possible; it is wise and entirely with in the bounds of realization."
Stalin told Mr. Roosevelt he believed there should be several Big Three meetings in the future and that they would be very useful.
News of the World
Talmadge Asks Aid Of 'White People', Denies Using Force
Atlanta. (UP)—Gov. Herman Talmadge in his first address to the Georgia legislature declared today he would call on "the white people" of the state to come to Atlanta and stage a huge demonstration in his behalf.
As he spoke, some 2,000 college students were preparing to march on the capitol this afternoon to protest Mr. Talmadge's assumption of the governor's office.
The 33-year old governor branded as false reports he had used violence and force to wrest the governorship from Ellis Arnall.
Governor Talmadge said he was satisfied to leave to the legislature to judge whether he had resorted to any "military coup d'etat."
Saruch Is New Ambassador
Washington. (UF) The White House today announced the resignation of Stanley K. Hornbeck as ambassador to the Netherlands and the appointment of Herman B. Baruch, now ambassador to Portugal, as his successor.
Le Cercle Francais To Meet Wednesday
The meeting of Le Cercle Français at 4 p.m. Wednesday, will celebrate St. Charlemagne's day, the traditional French school festival in honor of the founding of schools by the Emperor Charlemagne.
Discussion of the day's significance and its celebration will be given by Ruth Brown and Patricia Pearson. Several scenes from a play, "Le Voyage de M. Perrichon," by Labiche and Martin, will be presented by the following students:
Lester Mertz as M. Perrichon,
Marjorie Scott as Madame Perrichon,
Twila Wagner as Henriette
(thewr daughter), Jack Lungstrum as
Daniel, and William Brown as Armand.
Secretarial, Artist Positions Open
Positions are open for secretaries stenographers, and possibly artists in the art department at a greeting card company in Kansas City, Miss Martha Peterson, women's Panhellenic secretary announced today.
"The company is interested in students who are graduated this February," Miss Peterson said, "and if a sufficient number apply, a personnel worker will visit the campus to interview prospective employees."
Students may sign up in Miss Peterson's office or leave their name in the office of the dean of women.
Applications are also being taken in the same office for women interested in summer camp jobs.
Veterans Must Have Eligibility Certificates
E. R. Elbel, veterans' bureau director, reminded veterans today that they must have supplemental eligibility certificates if they plan to transfer from K.U. to another school at mid-term.
Two regional representatives of the VA, Robert Pease and William Lockridge, of Kansas City, Mo., will visit the local office tomorrow and Thursday for interviews with veterans seeking transfers.
Veterans may make appointments for an interview with Mr. Pease or Mr. Lockridge at the K.U. office, Dr. Elbel said.
Phi Chi Opens Polio Drive
The $25 contribution made to the March of Dimes drive was made by the Phi Chi, honorary medical fraternity, instead of the Phi Beta Pi as listed in yesterday's Daily Kansan.
The donation was made in memory of Maurice O'Leary, fraternity member, who died of poliomyelitis at the University, last summer.
Russia Lifts Censorship For Moscow Meeting
Washington. (UP) Russia has notified the United States that it will lift its press censorship during the Big Four foreign ministers meeting in Moscow on the German peace treaty, to begin March 10.
Foreign correspondents will be allowed to file uncensored dispatches about the day-to-day events. It is not clear whether radio correspondents will be permitted to make voice broadcasts.
'Rejustify Public Works'
D
D.
A.
Washington. (UP) — The Republican drive for government economy turned today to public works projects authorized by previous congresses. Chairman John Taber (R., N.Y.), of the house appropriations committee, said projects which have been authorized, but for which funds have not been appropriated, will have to be rejustified before the money is provided.
Washington| (U.P) — Chairman Charles A. Wolventwolter (R.N, N.J.) said today his house interstate commerce committee probably would vote Friday on a bill to delay sale of the Big-Inch pipelines for use as a natural gas carrier. Bids for the purchase of the pipelines will be opened Feb. 8 unless congress objects.
Granite Falls, Minn. (UP)—For-mer Rep. Andrew J. Volstead, whose 1919 Prohibition act made the 18th amendment effective, died at the age of 87, a believer to the end in the anti-liquor law which the U.S. "dry" for 14 years.
Disarmament Talks Delayed
Washington. (UP) — President Truman's request for continued rent control beyond June 30 had the qualified approval today of Sen. Robert A. Taft, (R., O.) chairman of the senate Republican policy committee. He said he thought control "should be extended in some form," but favored adjustments to remedy "injustices" to landlords.
Topeka. (UP) — Kansas, the nation's top wheat growing state, may be visited this spring by a representative of the French government seeking to buy 350,000 tons of the grain, Gen. Tom B. Wilson, TransWorld airline board chairman and manager of TWA international routes, told the Topeka Bar association Monday night.
Kansas Wheat To France?
Lake Success. (UP)—United Nations delegates took their disarmament maneuvers backstage today amid growing speculation that the United States was preparing to alter its policy. All disarmament and atomic discussions have been postponed until Feb. 4 in the security council because American delegate Warren R. Austin requested more time for further study by American officials.
Taft Favors Rent Control
Burlington, Vt. (UP)—Announcing that he, personally, would begin teaching an 8 am. freshman mathematics class, President John S. Millis of the University of Vermont equipped: "Having scraped the bottom of the barrel in our search for instructors, we are now using the bottom lieff."
Washington. (UP)—Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower, army chief of staff, entered Walter Reed hospital today for treatment of a stomach disorder. He returned 10 days ago from Florida where he rested and underwent treatment in Pratt general hospital for bursitis, a disorder of the nerves in his arms.
Eisenhower To Hospital
May Delay Big-Inch Sale
Author Of 'Dry' Act Dies
Last But Not Least—
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University DAILY KANSAN
STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Wednesday, Jan. 22, 1947
44th Year No. 74
Lawrence, Kansas
Doc Says: Listen, My Children, And You Shall Hear...
Days Of Reckoning Are Drawing Near
By WENDELL BRYANT (Dailv Kansan Staff Writer)
With finals looming threaten-
ingly over the horizon, wise stud-
ents are reviewing notes and
text-books now with an eye to
toaking those "days of reckoning"
in stride.
The unwise, ignoring the storm signals are still going heedlessly on, secure in the belief that hours of cramming will see them through safely.
Some of the unwise, while burning the midnight oil in those last hours will resort to caffeine tablets, benzedrine and the like in an effort to fight off sleep.
"That," says Dr. Ralph Canuteson, director of the K.U. health service, "is not good. Those things are stimulants. They may keep you awake but they'll invariably leave you nervous, jittery, and irritable. And they also slow your thinking."
The doctor says that if you have to have those things to
Coffee, Caffeine And Benzedrine
keep awake then it's best to go to sleep. The amount of material you will remember will be negligible anyhow, if you reviewed while fatigued. Rested, you will be able to remember it better. Of course if you've never seen the stuff before, you're lost anyhow.
"Trying to force your brain to think clearly after working it all night is like like to whip up a tired horse," he said. "It just
"Space your sleeps. Sandwich them in between your studying, periods—an hour or so of study, then a few minutes of sleep, and so on."
Asked what is the best thing to do when it is absolutely necessary to limit your sleep for study's sake, the doctor replied:
can't be done."
Dr. Canuteson would not recommend any kind of artificial
"The only thing wrong," he added, smiling, "is that the average college student trying to sleep for 10 minutes is likely to sleep for 10 hours."
sleep preventives. He said all were stimulants. Some are more harmful than others and some harm some persons more than they do others, but all are harmful more or less.
Won't Leave Your Thinking So Clean
He thinks every student should be able to arrange his work so as to leave at least six hours for sleep.
"An 18-hour day is long enough for anybody," he said.
Spring Enrollment To Stay Near 9,000 Registrar Thinks
University student enrollment for the second semester won't increase appreciably, but rather the figure will level off at about the 9,000 mark, James K. Hitt, University registrar, estimated today.
"There will be many new students, but those being graduated, coupled with the number quitting school, will almost balance the number of new students coming in for the Spring semester." Mr. Hitt said.
"In my opinion, the much rumored enrollment figure of 10,000 will not be reached until next fall," the registrar opined.
Approximately four percent of the student enrollment (roughly 360 students) will have quit school by the close of this semester, Mr. Hitt estimated today.
There won't be any more students on the campus next semester, but the University will be forced to provide more classroom space, the registrar said. He explained this situation by pointing out that these same students will be doing more advanced work, which will require greater space per student.
"I'm terribly sorry to have to leave the team at this point when they're having such tough luck. Such luck can't hold, however; and I expect them to win their next two games (Kansas State and Iowa State). I'll be following their movements avidly," Allen said.
The alphabetical sequence being used for enrollment next semester is exactly the reverse of the order employed for the Fall semester, Mr. Hitt exp.. d in pointing out the fairness of the method. In other words, the student who enrolled on the first day this semester will enroll on the last day next semester, he said.
No "deadline has been set for acceptance of applications for second-semester enrollment; however new enrollees and students transferring from other schools, which are late forwarding transcripts and other papers, will be handled promptly by the method of provisional enrollment," Mr. Hitt said today.
'Phog' To Leave For West Coast
K. U. professor of physical education and basketball coach since 1920, Dr. Allen, on the advice of his physician, is now going to get a much needed rest.
He's coming back to K.U. "naturally," but can't say just when. He will be gone for an indefinite period, and will return only when he is completely rested and able to resume his duties.
"Phlog" plans to just "laze" around on the beach, swim some, and maybe even try his hand at fishing. He's taking his favorite clubs and wants to get in a few strokes of golf.
Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen will leave Friday night for La Jolla, Cal. Mrs. Allen will accompany him.
Progressives Meet Tonight To Grease Political Gears
Whether or not the party is going to accept women members will be one of the chief issues discussed by the Progressives at 7 tonight in 106 Green hall.
The precinct system will be established definitely with the various districts set up and temporary precinct leaders appointed, according to Donald Pomeroy, president.
Geography Will Add Nine Courses By Fall
Nine new courses will be added to the geography department by next fall making it possible for students to obtain a major in that field. Walter Kollmorgen, associate professor of geography, announced today.
Approved at the faculty meeting Tuesday, the courses will include specialized instruction in geography of the far East, Africa, the near East, Australia and the major Pacific islands and Kansas. Survey courses on agricultural, industrial, and political geography will also be added.
Map making, reading and interpretation, an upperclass course, and a general course in mineral distribution and control will be offered for the advanced students.
K-Book Staff Jobs Open Until Feb.15
Applications for the positions of editor and business manager of the 1947 K-Book may be submitted at the student organizations window of the University business office until February 15. The letters are to be addressed to the publications committee of the All-Student Council.
Positions shall be selected from the junior class and the assistants shall be selected from the sophomore class insofar as possible, Anne Scott, chairman of the publications committee explained.
Star To Negotiate Today,
No Early Settlement Seen
Little Man On Campus
Kansas City, Mo. (UP)—The contract carriers' strike which forced suspension of the Kansas City Star moved into its sixth day today with no indication of an early settlement.
A committee named by the A.F.L. central labor union was to meet this afternoon and it was reported unofficially that that session would be followed by a joint meeting with representatives of the Star.
Star executives said they understood a negotiation session would be held today but at mid-morning they had not been notified of "the exact time or place."
By Bibler
---
KU
Bbler
U. ORILY KANSAS
"And this equation can be worked by simple calculus."
Fine Arts Students In Recital Tomorrow
A student recital will be presented by the School of Fine Arts tomorrow at 3 p.m. in Frank Strong auditorium.
The program will include piano solos by Martha Beilh and Jack Mohlenkam, voice solos by Dorothy O'Conner, Charles A. Byers, and James Gettyts, and an ensemble number by Vincent Bleecker, violin, Martha Lee Baxter, cello, and Sara Webb, piano.
Housing Outlook Is Better Next Semester
Housing conditions for the second semester will be greatly improved compared to the situation at the beginning of this semester, stated Irvin Youngberg, director of the Housing bureau at the University, today.
A number of new students have already applied at the Housing bureau, according to Mr. Youngberg, but so far it has been possible to place them in dormitories or private rooms. The Housing bireau is now conducting a telephone survey of all student rooming houses in the city, to check for any possible vacancies for next semester.
The new dormitory in the north wing of the stadium has been completed, and with the exception of 16 places, has been filled with students coming in from Sunflower dormitories. The remaining vacancies in the stadium dormitory will be filled with students now forced to live in the poorer rooms in the city.
Mr. Youngberg pointed out that there are only 50 unmarried students remaining at Sunflower, and that it probably will not be necessary to place single students there in the future.
Sunflower apartments still seem to be the only answer for married students in search of a home, but Sunyside apartments will continue to become available for University instructors, according to Mr. Youngberg, who said that there would be more Sunyside vacancies in about two weeks.
Milton Eisenhower On List For High NU Position
Lake Success, (UP)—Milton Eisenhower, president of Kansas State college, is one of three men still under consideration for the post of assistant secretary general in charge of administrative and financial affairs for the United Nations. The job pays $15,000 a year and the salary is tax-free.
Other men being considered by Trygve Lie, secretary-general, are Herbert Emmerich, former federal public housing administrator, and Julius C. Holmes, former assistant secretary of state in charge of the U.S. foreign service.
WEATHER
Kansas-Fair today, tonight, and Thursday. Warmer today. Little temperature change tonight and Thursday. Low tonight 25-30.
Bookstore Opens Advanced Sales
Second semester books may now be bought in advance at the Union bookstore, L. E. Woolley, manager, announced today.
Because a catalogue of the books required for practically very course in the University has been compiled by the bookstore, students may consult the catalogues conveniently located around the store and buy books now for courses next semester, he added.
The catalogue, an exclusive feature of the bookstore, has been in the process of compilation for the past four months. It is divided alphabetically by departments of the University.
"The purpose of this new feature is to stagger book-buying, aid students, and decrease the length of bookbuying lines at the beginning of the new semester," Mr. Woolley said.
Veterans can pay cash for books they intend to use, and then at a later date receive a refund after their material slips are correctly signed and certified, he stated.
Richard Dodson, engineering freshman, was found guilty on charges of violating smoking regulations and was fined $2 by the student court Tuesday night. The court assessed the minimum penalty "in view of the fact that although the student did violate the regulations, he was not in gross disobedience to them."
Ray Janeway, assistant director of Watson library, testified that he saw Richard Dodson light a cigaret in the hall of the library entrance corridor. Dodson maintained that he stepped inside only to light a cigarette as it was too windy to do so outside.
Court Fines Traffic Smoking Violators
The smoking violation case against Jo Hall, fine arts junior, was dismissed by the prosecuting attorney, William McElhenny.
The court ruled that the infraction had been committed, and that the offender should be punished. The court added, however, that the violation was not intentional and leniency should be shown.
Of the nine traffic violation appeals presented to the court, three were successful. Those students fined were; Earle Stanton, Floyd Mallonee, Fred Howard, Jack Moler, George Rosel, and Marita Lenski.
Steel Peace Is Predicted
New York. (UP)—A wage agreement will be reached between the CIO and the U.S. Steel corporation before the Feb. 15 expiration of present contracts, "barring a most unusual reversal in the current attitude of steel management and labor," the magazine The Iron Age forecast today.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 22,1947
Official Bulletin
Official Bulletin
Jan. 22,1947
All-Student Council has declared a vacancy to be filled by a representative of the Pachacamac party from District II, the School of Engineering. Petitions must be filed with the secretary of the A.S.C. not later than Monday.
Le Cercle Francais se reunira mercredi le 22 janvier a quatre heures dans le salle 113 Frank Strong.
Houses that received cups for Homecoming house decorations must take cups to Roberts Jewelry store by Saturday for engraving.
All members of the February graduating class of the School of Business who are hoping to be placed through the business placement bureau and any other students available for permanent employment in February please note the School of Business bulletin board for announcement of interview schedules throughout the month of January.
水 水
Graduate Record Examination.
Feb 3 and 4, 1947. Applications may be obtained in 2A, Frank Strong.
心 心 心
Progressive Party meeting 7 p.m. today in 106 Green Hall. All men not affiliated with either men's political party are welcome.
"Juvenile Delinquency" and "Boy in Court" will be shown at the Y.M.-C.A. movie forum at 4 p.m. Thursday, in little theater, Green Hall. Dr. Bert Nash of the educational clinic will lead a short discussion.
***
Mathematics Club will meet at 4 p.m. Thursday in the Pine Room of Memorial Union. Bill Stoner will present a program on Leap Year.
形像身
ASME will elect officers at 5 p.m. Wednesday in room 210 Marvin. All mechanicals invited.
The Christian Science Organization will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Danforth Chapel.
***
The International Relations Club will hold a business meeting at 4:30 p.m. Thursday in the Kansas room of the Union.
All Business and pre-business students are invited to the Business School Mixer at 7:30 to 10 tonight in the Union. Dancing, games and variety show. Bring date or come stag.
- * *
A. S.C. Social Committee meeting at 5 p.m. Thursday in the Dean of Women's Office, Frank Strong.
Chemistry Club will meet at 4 pm. Thursday in 305 Bailey Lab, Dr. Hume will speak on "Radioactive Elements from Uranium Fission."
Jay James meet at 5 p.m. today in Pine room, Memorial Union.
Deutscher Verein Donnerstag um
4:30 ta 402 Fraser.
Sociology Club meets in 200 Frank Strong at 4 p.m. Thursday.
Applications for positions of K-Book editor and business manager must be taken to Student Organizations window of university business office by Feb. 51. Address applications to Publications Committee, A.S.C.
***
Artery Club will practice from 4 to 6 p.m.today, Military Science building.
Alissa Phi Omega will hold an important meeting at 8 p.m. Thursday in 200 Frank Strong.
***
YM-YW Religious Emphasis committee will meet at 7 p.m. today in Myers Hall. Dr. VanderWerf will lead discussion.
***
Occupational Therapy Club will meet Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in 312 Frank Strong. Election of officers. Miss Lily Warner will speak.
K. U. Dames "Interest Night" meeting will be at 8 tonight in 32, Frank Strong. Music appreciation is the program.
A 50-Pound Tray, Three Pitchers Of Water The Skillful Waiter Can Handle Them All
Over the clatter of silver against china, the cheerful tinkling of ice in glasses, the subdued murmur of voices in the crowded dining-room, cryrings out.
"Swing."
Glance up and you see a white-coated waiter speeding by, carrying a heavily laden tray. "Swing" is the waiter's warning cry to anyone in his path to move aside lest they collide, and calamity ensue.
Approximately 160 student waiters are working in the organized houses and other boarding houses connected with the University. Some of them are connected with the houses and are working as part payment of board, room, or organization fees; or maybe as part of their duties as pledges of a Greek letter organization.
Some are independent students eking out a too slender income by working for meals and a small wage.
The majority, however, are veterans who have found that $65 a month is insufficient to support them in the style to which they have become accustomed, or to which they would like to become accustomed.
A few are veterans who because of a knot in the governmental red tape have received no subsistence checks and are consequently forced to work in order to eat.
The usual and top pay of the student waiter is meals and six dollars for serving nineteen meals a week, and the work hours are about 23 a week. The meals provide the greatest incentive for working since they comprise the greater part of a student's expenses. There is no tipping of organized-house waiters save by an occasional old grad' or a visitor up for a football game or party.
Table-waiting requires skill, speed, and strength, but it's not difficult to learn. Skill comes with time and practice. A good waiter can carry a tray weighing up to 50 pounds balanced in one hand, three pitchers of ice water in the other, and set them down without mishap. He can also carry out and place properly six to nine plates of food without ruining the appearance of the plates or spilling the food.
Negro students were used almost exclusively for table-waiting before the war. Now the labor shortage
during the war, the high cost of food, and the great influx of veterans of all races needing work, have placed them far in the minority.
No Crimes So Clerk Returns To Knitting
Sarita. Texas. (UP)—Clerk Nettie P. Woods of the 28th district court returned to her knitting today, as the court kept intact its four-year record of not hearing a case.
The court met yesterday and ended shortly after Judge Paul A. Martineau named a new list of grand jurors to replace those named last year—but not summoned.
"We haven't had a court case here in Kenedy county for four years," she explained. "We didn't have any divorces last year, and don't expect any this year. This county never has had a juvenile delinquency case. In fact, nothing much has happened in the 33 years I've been here."
The district clerk put aside her knitting long enough for the court session.
"I guess snakes give us more trouble than anything. You have to be careful about them wherever you go," she added.
University Daily Kansan
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in lawen add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawence, Kan. every afternoon during the school year except Saturday. Published in Lawence, Kan. through examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
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As dangerous as any automobile accident.
MORGAN-MACK MOTOR COMPANY
Your FORD Dealer
Old Time Salesmen Really Knew Ropes
609 Mass.
Seattle. (UP) — December's disastrous hotel fires in Atlanta and Saskatoon, Canada, prompted Clarence W. Johnson, Seattle, to reminisce about the "good old days" when travelers took individual precautions about hotels going up in smoke.
Phone 277
Johnson, a traveling salesman for many years, said seasoned tourists in the past always carried their own ropes in case of emergency.
"The old-time salesman had to know all the angles," Johnson said. "A bad fire was always a real danger in the days when most country hotels were made of wood."
Part of Johnson's luggage when he was on the road was a rope long enough to lower him from a fourth-floor window. It was knotted at regular intervals to provide handholds.
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JANUARY 22.1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
1947
(1)
SOCIALLY SPEAKING
ELINOR BROWNE, Society Editor
Gidney Heads Phi Psi
Smith Hall Elects
Newly elected officers of Phi Kappa Psi are president, Roland D. Gidney; vice-president, Donald B. Sprinkle; treasurer, Marshall P. Fryar; corresponding secretary, Tony Murra II; recording secretary, Byron C. Shutz; intramural manager, William H. Richardson.
Officers for the spring semester at Smith hall are president, Claude Engelke; vice-president, Tony Baron; secretary, Robert Turkington; treasurer, David Moore; social chairman, Milton Waller; intramural chairman, Lyman Selig; forum members, William Leighton and Elwyn Henry.
** ** **
Pi K A Pledges Two
Pi Kappa Alpha announces the pledging of Jack Bryant, engineering freshman of Kansas City, and Billy L. Robertson, business junior, of Peru.
Kappa Beta Entertains
\* \* \*
Kappa Beta sorority will meet at 7 p.m. today in Barlow chapel, Myers hall. The women of the First Christian church will be guests of the group.
Phi Beta Pi Entertains
- * *
Guests at the Phi Beta Pi semi-formal dance Saturday night, which was held in honor of the medical sophomores who leave soon for Kansas City, were Lee Brooks, Rosemary Alderman, Vivian Rogers, Luine Zown, Pat Curry, Dorothy Spitze, Betra Rye Thomas, Joanne Sweeney, Mary Flo Spillman, Ida Mae Woodburn, Ada Kopke, Mrs. Anita Yoder, Kay Wilson, Vicky Harkness, Doris Neve, Dorothy Herold, Ms. LaRue Owen, Mrs. Fred Totten, Mrs. Glenn Hutchinson.
Marcile Davis, Jesse Estroda, Virginia Green, Mrs. Dorothy Long, Mary Jane Wergert, Mrs. Marjorie Jones, Doris Bixby, Eva Humphrey, Celia Carr, Betty Byam, Betty Hanson, Nadine Stafford, Mrs. Maurine McCray, Ardis Sly, Mrs. Niles Stout, Carol Weinand, Pearl Geiger, Clara Jane Lutz, Peggy Foster, Carol Terrant.
The chaperones were Dr. and Mrs.
O. O. Stoland, Dr. and Mrs. P. G.
Roofe, and Dr. and Mrs. Noble P.
Sherwood.
Joyce Randolph, Bonnie Eickel-
berger, Norma Jean Pyke, Lee Rice,
Mrs. Darwin Lamkin, Mrs. John
Campbell.
Mixer To Organize Business Students
A Business School mixer will be held at 7:30 p.m. tonight in the Union to re-organize the Associated Business students, William Warren, business committee member, said today.
A committee composed of W. T. Hough, chairman; Norma Pyke and Jim Crook; social; Gloria Schmitt-dorf, secretary; Sidney Johanson, ways and means; Wayne Randall, elections; Betty Cunningham, activity; and William Warren, public relations plan to re-establish the organization which ceased to function during the war years.
Tentative plans for the coming semester will be explained by committee members at the Mixer tonight, which is open to all Business students, Warren said.
K.F.A. Reelects Whitney, Jacobson Made Director
Miss Mariorie Whitney, chairman of the department of design, was reelected president of the Kansas Federation of Art at its annual meeting in Wichita Saturday. Prof. Arvid Jacobson was made a director. The federation is an organization of artists, architects, printers, art associations and librarians whose purpose is to distribute exhibitions throughout the state.
Government Attracts Senior Barbara Ford, Once A Pre-med
COEDS' CORNER
"I came up here intending to go into pre-med," she recalled. "Then I became interested in Spanish. Later, I happened to take a government course under Professor Sandelius—that did it. Meet a political science major."
A political science major is Barbara Ford, College senior.
Only two decades old, Barbara,
known as "Bobbie" will graduate
in the spring. "I started as a freshman
man going to summer school in 1944
and have gone straight through since then," she explained.
"When I get out, I'd like to be on my own and see a little of the world. Then, I'll return for my masters—at least I hope to," she said.
Bobbie said it was difficult to decide why she likes K.U. so well. "It is partly because I grow attached to any place where I've stayed for a while, but it's mostly because of the people I've met here."
Bobbie remembers enjoying last summer very much. She attended summer school, and in addition helped Hilden Gibson, associate professor of the political science department, now on leave at Harvard university, work on an atomic education project.
"We worked through the auspices of the Kansas department of education," she explained. "The resource units we sent out pertaining to atomic energy are presumably being used in Kansas high schools this year."
Vitally interested in all forms of political science, Bobbie belongs to the International Relations club. She is chairman of the political effectiveness committee of Y.W.C.A., and is helping to plan for the U.N.O. conference which will be held on the campus in February.
Bobbie is a member of the Liberal club, a member of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority, and serves on a Union society committee. She belongs to Pi Sigma Alpha, an honorary political science fraternity. I also paddle around a little in pol-
ities on the campus," she added. Bobby said that most of all she enjoys being a western civilization proctor. "My hobby is sitting over at Fowler shops with the other 'western civ procs' and mulling over the problems of the world."
Band, Orchestra Plan Valentine Party
Members of the University band and orchestra-established music-makers of the campus-will receive information as to the music-making of another species in the animal kingdom Saturday night.
"How Insects Sing" will be the subject of the talk by Dean P. B. Lawson, principal speaker at the band and orchestra Valentine party, which will be held Saturday in the Union building from 6:30 p.m. to midnight.
Dinner will be served to approximately 275 members and 30 guests in the Kansas, French, and English rooms. After the meal, the guests will assemble in the Kansas room for a program.
The party, an annual date affair,
will end with dancing. St. Valentine's day will be the theme of colorful decorations for the occasion.
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Grantham Is Head Of Electrical Engineers
Ray B. Grantham, Engineering junior, was elected chairman of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers society Tuesday.
Other officers elected were Charles L. York, vice-chairman; Charles E. Irwin, secretary; Joseph T. McMaster, treasurer; John L. Margrave, senior representative; Calvin C. Remmers, junior representative; Warren Shaw and Billy Hamilton, sophomore representatives; John Awald and Guy H. Gettys, freshman representatives.
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Wiley To Direct 400
Russell Wiley, director of the University band, will direct a 400-piece concert band in a program at Garden City tonight.
The band is composed of musicians from the Garden City high school and those of nearby towns. Professor Wiley will return to Lawrence tomorrow.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 22,1947
SPOTLIGHT
ON SPORTS
By BOB DELLINGER
(Daily Kansan Sports Editor)
People who have been wondering when the Jayhawkers are going to snap their losing streak are now wondering "if."
Kansas lost its fifth straight game by a bare margin. The five points may not seem so bare, but when you remember that one point in the first 40 minutes would have made the difference, the total difference is simmered down to zero.
Kansas couldn't hit the basket on the move against Colorado as is evidenced by the seven-goal deficit from the field, but at the charity line, the difference is phenomenal. Jayhawkers who received those free tosses from the painted line dumped in 24 out of 29 for a high enough percentage to keep them in the game.
***
Note: Rumors that Coach Howard Engleman is resigning to go to Florida for his health have been denied.
\* \* \*
Paul Turner's advancement to the "B" coaching spot is a good reward for a hard-working ballplayer.
Paul hasn't seen much action this year, but he's still been out all the way and didn't drop off the squad as some others who didn't get the starting nod decided to do.
The "B" squad has been undefeated in the only four games it has played to date, and although no more are scheduled now, it goes on being a school for ball-players unused to the Allen system.
Turner will have an important job if he still holds the post when next year rolls around, but the "B" squar is the best basic training school in basketball to be found on the campus.
* *
Kansas can pull its way into the first division in the Big Six by the end of the first half, "merely" by winning its next two games, both at home.
Both will be stiff contests, with the Iowa State Cyclones looking stronger, but with the Wildcats sure to lay for the interstate rivals.
Iowa State comes first, on Friday night, and the Jayhawkers can get off to a good start by knocking off the second-place club.
Kansas State is another brawling ball-club or Oklahoma will testify. The ones to watch for are Rothrock and Patrick as far as fisticuffs are concerned, but it will be Hal Howey who will be on the spark for baskets.
It might be Claude Houchin who gets the starting nod against the Wildcats, because of his height and new-found ability at the guard post.
Coach Engleman pulled Houchin off the "B" squad with him when the blond mentor went up to the Varsity, and he has been improving ever since.
Houchin and Owen Peck dumped in eight points each, Monday night, against Colorado to fall second behind another freshman find, Jack Eskridge.
Coach Joe Lapchick of the St John's of Brooklyn club loves children. At least he hopes that his six-foot, nine-inch center, Harry Boykoff, "has 12 children and they all come to play for me."
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Jayhawkers Hope To Repeat Early Victory Over Cyclones
the only test Kansas has had of Coach Louie Menze's fast-improving sound.
Kansas' next attempt to pull out of the Big Six cellar will be against the Iowa State Cyclones at Lawrence Friday night.
Despite a 19-point victory by the Jayhawkers earlier in the season, the Cyclones rest four places higher in the conference standings. The early Jayhawker victory, a non-conference game in the Big Six tournament, was the only test Kansas has had of $ \textcircled{>} $ ___
After losing eight of the first 10 games, the Cyclones came to like and whipped heavily favored Kansas State at Ames, starting the Wildeats on the downward trail.
The Cyclones now stand in a second-place tie with the Oklahoma Sooners, trailing Missouri, and leading Nebraska, Kansas State, and Kansas.
Since that time, the Cyclones have dropped a close one to strong Bradley Tech and then whipped Nebraska at Ames in a conference game.
The Tigers, undefeated in four games, are one and a half games ahead of the two second-place clubs, and can't be knocked out of the top slot before Feb. 1 when the Sooners or Cyclones could possibly pull into a tie.
Missouri will face its stiffest test of the season Saturday night at Norman, when the Oklahoma Sooners will try to knock the Tigers down within reach of the rest of the league.
Leading scorer for the Jayhawkers in all games to date is Otto Schnellbacher, forward and center, who has 190 points to his credit, and is the only one who has hit 20 points in a single game this year. He has crossed the double-10 mark three times, scoring 20 against Stanford and Colorado and 22 against Nebraska.
Charlie Black ranks second in team scoring with 179, and Ray Evans and Wendell Clark are third and fourth respectively.
Team scoring:
Player, position FG FT TP
Schnellbacher, f-c 63 64 190
Black, f 59 61 179
Evans, c-g 36 15 87
Clark, g 26 21 73
Peck, c 11 16 38
Eskridge, g-f 21 13 55
Stramel, f 17 10 44
St. Mary's college 37, San Jose State 35.
College Basketball
Holy Cross 58, Manhattan 49.
N.Y.U. 76, Colgate 58.
Kentucky 84, Georgia 45.
Sampson 60, Hobart 36.
Ohio Wesleyan 64, Ohio 47.
Charleston 50, C
Charleston 52, Georgia (Savannah division) 49.
St. Mary's (Minn.) 63. Winona State Teachers 48.
Lasalle 74. Millersville 32.
State Teachers 48.
Swarthmore 51, Delaware 43.
Centenary college 48, Barksdale AAB 47.
Illinois Wesleyan 65, Elmhurst 37,
Lasalle JV 58, Drexel 30.
Colby 41, Bowdney 36.
Western Kentucky State 61, St.
John's 54.
Rhode Island State 59, Bucknell 52.
Bradley U. 76, U. of Havana 42.
Lawrence 46, Ripon 41.
St. Ambrose 50, Cornell college 44,
John Carroll 51, Western Reserve 52
THE BUS
Hamline U. 51, Augsburg 39.
MacAleister 43, St. Thomas 39.
Huron college 46, South Dakota school of Mines 39.
Wofford 40, Clemson 31.
Springfield college 52, American International college 50.
Mt. Union 58, Thiel 43.
Emmporia Teachers 59, Washburn 40.
Howard college 45, Mercer U. 42.
Oregon 66, Idaho 46.
Western Washington College of Education 55, Seattle college 50.
'Truman Makes Laws'
Providence, R.I. (UP) — Joseph Tencza of West Warwick was denied citizenship by Federal Judge John P. Hartigan when he appeared in U.S. district court.
"Who makes the laws of the United States?" the judge asked.
"Truman," Tencza replied.
"Who makes the laws of Rhode Island?"
"Truman." Teneza said, adding:
"Truman does everything. Roosevelt did, now Truman.
(Adv.)
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University High Loses To Tonganoxie, 31-20
University High suffered its fourth consecutive cage defeat Tuesday night at the Eagles battled to hold league-leading Tonganoxie High to a 31-20 margin at Tonganoxie.
The Eagles outplayed the home squad during the first period, and held a 4-2 lead at the quarter, but the heavily favored Chieftains came back to take an 11-8 lead at the half and spurt in the third period to ice the game.
Dick Cochran led the scoring for University High with 10 points. The next U.H.S. game will be against undefeated Perry high here Friday.
Women's IM Schedule
Tenight's schedule of women's in-trimural cage games include:
7:00—Alpha Omicron Pi vs. I. W.
W.
7:00—Pi Beta Phi vs. Watkins.
8:00—Foster vs. Locksley.
8:00—Alpha Chi Omega vs. Kappa Alpha Theta.
Boy Kisses Too Rough
She said Eugene Price—a stranger
Indianapolis. (UP) — Dorothy Shively told the judge she didn't mind the kiss, but she was mad because the boys were too rough.
She said Eugene Price a stranger stopped her on the street and stole a kiss from 'her while his pal held her hair.
Price said he mistook the girl for a friend. He faced assault and battery charges.
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JANUARY 22,1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Misfits, Sigma Chi Win High-Scoring Intramural Contests
Scores ran high in two "B" league intramural basketball games played Tuesday night.
Sigma Chi "B" handed Tau Kappa Epsilon "B" a 50 to 16 loss. Young of Sigma Chi paced scoring with 13 counters.
The Mists defeated the Co-ops, 57 to 43. S. Penny of the winners and Hopkins of the losers shared high-point honors by each looping 10 baskets and 1 free throw through the nets.
Playoff for the "B" league championship will begin Saturday at the Lawrence Community building. Drawings for playoff positions will be held at 4:15 p.m. Friday, in the intramural office.
Tonight's Games:
LONG FAMS:
James.
1909 - Newman club "B" vs. Phi Kappa.-R''.
*
10:00 - Phi Delta Theta “B” vs.
Nine Old Men
Plan To Halt Flow Of Untreated Sewage
Chicago. (UP) — Extended programs to halt the daily flow of 5,750,000,000 gallons of untreated sewage into the nation's waterways are being launched on the interstate, state and local levels, according to the American public works association.
Stream pollution laws were strengthened recently in Mississippi, while in Texas, pollution of public waters has been made a penal offense. Local pollution surveys are being made in Texas to determine changes that are needed.
In Oregon, 64 cities now have plans for new sewage disposal plants and sewer systems. The Michigan state planning commission has accepted plans for $100,000,000 in sewage disposal projects.
The Pennsylvania anti-pollution program is centered on industrial and other urban waste. The state health department has ordered 508 cities and institutions and 352 industries to prepare plans for sewage and waste treatment.
California gave sewage disposal construction a high priority under a $90,000,000 public works construction program approved this year. Massachusetts and Minnesota strengthened their anti-pollution laws.
Dog Beats Boy To Rabbit
Swanton, Vt. (UP)—Allen Lashway trudged for hours through the woods looking for rabbits. When he finally shot one, a dog raced out of the woods, scooped up the rabbit and ate it before Lashway could reach him.
Rifle Team To Be Chosen
Intramural rifle competition will get under war again this week after a temporary layoff because of lack of ammunition.
Drawings for rifle divisions will take place at 4:15 p.m. today in the intramural office.
Buddy Young Quits Collegiate Athletics
Chicago. (UP)—Buddy Young, Illinois' speedy Negro halfback, was through with school today and ready to disqualify himself for intercollegiate athletic competition, but he was uncertain of his professional future.
"I might not play professional football at all," he said.
Buddy will leave for Los Angeles tonight as the first step in relinquishing his two remaining years of eligibility for college sports. He said he would play in the professional all-star football game sponsored by heavyweight boxing champion Joe Louis, at Los Angeles Sunday. Such action would automatically make him ineligible for further college play.
"After that game, I'm coming back to Chicago, and I might just stay here," Buddy said.
"I don't know whether I'm ready for professional football. I mean mentally ready," he continued. "Of course, if some professional club offered me a contract, I'd have to look at it. I'm a poor man. I've got a wife and family. But it's up to the professional teams to decide if I'm ready."
"All I'm interested in is getting regular financial support for my family," he said, "and I can't do it on $20 a month."
Baseball Hall Of Fame Admits Four Players
New York. (UP) - Baseball's Hall of Fame opened its doors to modern-time players for the first time in five years and admitted pitch-crew Clyde Hubbell and Robert (Lefty) Grove, catcher Gordon (Mickey) Cochrane and infielder Frankie Frisch.
The four players were selected in the seventh annual poll of the Baseball Writers' Association of America in which each candidate required 75 per cent of the vote of 161 veteran members. Only writers of 10 years' membership in the association were allowed to vote and were confined to players of the era since 1921. No player who was active on the field during 1946 was eligible.
Of the four, Hubbell, former star southpaw pitcher of the New York Giants, received the most votes, being named on 140 of the 161 ballots cast.
University Of Wisconsin Students Attend Classes In 34 Different Towns
Madison, Wis. (UP)—The University of Wisconsin, its Madison campus crammed to capacity by an out-sized postwar enrollment, is drawing dividends on a pioneering extension network that has helped bring higher education to 34 Wisconsin cities and towns.
"We're achieving complete coverage of the state and at the same time pretty well integrating off-campus activities with those at the university itself," he explained.
From industrial Milwaukee to outlying rural centers., 5,200 university
From industrial Milwaukee to our students are attending freshman and sophomore classes in high schools and vocational and county normal schools, and they're being taught by a faculty of outstanding caliber.
Lorentz H. Adolfson, director of the university's extension service, says the state's experiments in educational decentralization have already begun to pay off.
Adolphon claims that the advantages of having good housing and better eating conditions more than makes up for the so-called glamour of the Madison campus. Evidence that he is right comes from students in Milwaukee who recently drew
The director expects some changes in the 1947 program. Admitting that class centers in larger cities have proven markedly more successful, Adolfson says there may be some consolidation in the fall, but he points out that enrollment is expected to jump to 6,500 at the same time.
One of the most successful features of the extension experiment is the system which rotates faculty specialists through as many as three centers during the course of a semester.
hestian permission from university officials to study a third year at the extension center before coming to Madison for final degree work.
Final proof that the system really works, says Adollison, is the unquestioned acceptance of its students from California to Harvard.
Washington. (UP)—Today, for the second time within a week, sports promoters and players found themselves the target of a clean-up suggestion by J. Edgar Hoover, with the added proviso that sports writers should aid in the drive.
Sport Promoters Are Target Of Cleanup
Hoover, director of the FBI, told a committee of sports writers to give merceries publicity to professional promoters and players who show greater interest in the gate receipts than in sportsmanship.
The committee spearheads a national drive by sportswriters and radio sportscasters to reduce juvenile crime by turning the interest of young Americans to sports.
"Nothing shakes a youth's idealism more than when a scandal rocks the world of sports," he said. "You should turn the spotlight on those sports where promoters and participants have not been living up to the standards of fair play."
Last week he told all sports to put their own house in order or the public would do it for them, aroused by recent revelations of attempted ribery in professional football.
"Too much interest in the take at the gate and too little interest in their responsibility to the public is being shown by owners, manager and players," he continued.
Blanket Of Lava Covers Much Of Northern U.S.
Chicago. (UP)—A great series of lava flows in the earth's crust more than a billion years ago now deeply cover nearly 2,000 square miles of the northern United States, a geologist reports.
The blanket of volcanic rock extends from Duluth, Minn., northward along the western shore of Lake Superior to the Canadian border, according to studies made by Dr. Robert M. Grogan, of the Illinois geological survey.
Grogan said at least 70 separate lava flows have been found in the area, with a total thickness of as much as 3,200 feet.
Bradlow Receives Research Scholarship
H. Leon Bradlow, graduate student in chemistry at the University, has received a fellowship from the United States public health department for research in organic chemistry on public health problems. The grant is for $2,400 for the year beginning Feb. 1. Bradlow's work done under this grant will be counted toward a doctor of philosophy degree in chemistry.
Bradlow, whose home is in Philadelphia, has just completed two projects under the H. P. Cady fellowship, which he has held for the past year.
Prof. Calvin A. VanderWerf has directed Bradlow's research and will continue to under the new grant.
Women Save Warehouse
Portales, N.M. (UP)—Thanks to the keen eyes of someone in a group of 14 (count em) New Mexico College sorority sisters in college (that's right) car, a large feed warehouse was saved from heavy damage in a fire. The girls reported the blaze in time for it to be brought under control.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SIX
JANUARY 22,1947
Kansan Comments...
Book Lines
Text books, familiar objects to most students, are The Topic of Conversation twice each semester.
One time is the time just before finals week when students sit around and moan, "Geeminy (or something similar), the final's the first day and I haven't even cracked that book for a month." Let us pass on to a less painful problem.
The other time is the time just after classes meet for the first time of a semester. Then text books are announced and immediately long lines form in front of book stores and clerks inside the store quietly (usually) go mad. The conversations heard then often aren't printable because getting books develops into a full afternoon's work.
Much of the crowding to book stores in the few days after the first class could be eliminated by a little extra work by each school.
If each school would now post a list of text books to be used in courses next semester, students could begin getting books now and avoid sweating out lines later. For instance, the College could post a list on the bulletin board just across from its office.
Many students know just what courses they will take the next semester and the others know after they have enrolled. If students could buy books before classes start, the period of buying would be spread out over a week or two instead of three or four days. And classes could start out the first day with a text assignment.
Last fall the student book store had such a list, but very few students knew about it. However, those who discovered the store had this list and so could buy their books early found that the book store crowds aren't necessary. Why shouldn't every student have a chance to buy his books leisurely?
Your Union
Plans recently were announced that building of the Union additions, enlarged food service space and a roof terrace, will be started March 1. These additions will enlarge the service of one of the most popular buildings on the campus and the building for which we should all be most thankful.
The Union is probably as democratic a social place as one can find in Kansas. Here members of all economic levels, races, and ages can find unrestricted use of everything
The University Daily Kansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
member of the Kansas Press Assn, National Editorial Assn, Inland Press Association, College Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave, New York.
Managing Editor Charles Root
Asst. Manager Editing Jane Anderson
Makeup Editor Billie Marie Baldwin
Business Manager Bill Donovan
Advertising Manager Margery Handy
Circulation Manager John McCormick
Editor J.K. Martin
Assist Telegraph Ed. Marcella Stewart
City Editor R. T. Kingman
The Kansas Press Association
1947
Member
National Editorial Association
A FREE PRESS—YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW
available to anyone else—recreation privileges, lounges, music room, checking service, fountain service, student book store, cafeterias.
The Union offers the social supplement needed in a complete college education. The atmosphere of the well-lighted, well-furnished rooms is ideal for promoting friendship.
Moreover, it is a home for visiting former students and friends of the University. Conventions, small parties, large banquets, informal meetings and homecoming activities, are held in the Union.
"Let's meet at the Union" has become a common phrase that a new student learns when he enters K.U. "Let's meet at the Union" is an invitation he will use when he returns for a visit ten years later.—M.S.L.
Dear Editor---have enough intelligence to rate a lifetimemate.
Editor's Note; Every "Letter to the Editor" must be signed. The name will be withheld from publication upon request, but the editor must know who wrote it. All letters must be limited to 250 words.
Education Before Beauty
In response to the letter entitled "Kansans Only", I quite agree with the "idealist" who wrote it that the crude temporary structures being erected behind Frank Strong hall hardly add to the beauty of our spacious campus. However, I find it hard to believe that anyone would put beauty above the value of an education.
Perhaps this doubled enrollment isn't necessary. Perhaps K.U. should restrict all out-of-state residents. That would make for a more highly-educated populace, wouldn't it?
In my home state, Missouri, I was unable to find living quarters, so I could not attend the University of Missouri. The University of Kansas City does not have a business school. The University of Kansas accepted me. Thanks to K.U., I'm in college. I'm sure the writer of that article knows several students planning to attend other schools later—and not the schools in their home states.
Yes, I agree it's not a pretty sight behind Frank Strong hall, but did you ever take a look inside?
Robert Wright
College freshman
Same Tune. New Verse
My dear freshman secessionist, don't you think that Kansas would be a small place to spend the rest of your life? If you don't welcome these foreigners into your state and school, it would not be at all right for you to ever venture out of Kansas.
As for the beauty of the campus, remembering that beauty is only skin-deep, don't you consider the thought behind this temporary construction more beautiful than that which meets the eye?
William M. Dubbs College freshman
Was this institution established to compete with Taj Majal? or would it be more nearly correct to say it was established as an institution of higher learning to enlighten those with a desire to learn?
Now The Chorus Again
While you are looking at the out-of-state names in the student directory did you stop to think how many of those names have appeared on honor rolls, on football line-ups, and in other places that did credit to the University?
Do you want to spend the rest of your life in your own little shell, or would you rather know what some of the people from other parts of the country think and do? I'll admit that quetset huts don't add much to the beauty of the campus, but think of the other considerations involved.
Engineering sophomore
With the exit of government restrictions in men's and women's clothing, it is to be hoped that two-pant suits will swiftly return and that the return of the bustle will be long delayed.
Dean Attends Council
Dean D. M. Swarthout will represent the National Association of Schools of Music, of which he is president, at a meeting of the American Council of Education Friday and Saturday in Washington, D.C.
Bombay Is City Of Palaces, Hovels, Taj Mahal, Harlems
By MEHRA DARUWALLA
Bombay is a city of palaces and hovels, Park avenues and Harlemss, of the Taj Mahal (Waldorf Astoria of India), and the "Irani Restaurant" (drugstore of India), of lovely gardens and famous clubs.
At one of these posh clubs called the "Cricket Club of India," where you are likely to rub shoulders with one of those fabulously rich Maharajas, I happened to overhear the following conversation among five young Indian girls, all pretty, wealthy, cultured, and belonging to the "smart set."
"Of course, honey. It's Jimmy.
He dances the Rumba superbly.
Doesn't he remind you of Cesar Romero? He's so tall, dark, and handsome."
"By the way, Mani darling, do you happen to know that handsome fellow in the conga shirt?"
I could not help turning around and looking at their object of adoration. One glance was sufficient; a fine dandy with nimble feet and a scatter-brain.
"How about Neville, Jeroo? I like his broad shoulders and that wicked look in his eyes, a perfect caveman type like Clark Gable."
"A thorough caveman," I murmured to myself. "A perfect speciman of physical efficiency and mental deficiency."
"Jeroo, honey, what can you do with looks without money. I want tons and tons of it. Cyrus is worth millions like Bing Crosby or Charlie Chaplin."
("Your looks and his wealth would make a perfect combination as Eddie Cantor says in one of his songs.")
"What about Minoo, Vera?"
"Not for me, Dina. So sober, so respectable. He doesn't drink, smoke, or dance. I hate wet blankets. A person should be dashing in a way. He is without a jot of personality. His brother is so saue, so sophisticated like Adolphe Menjou. I want a man with 'that certain something' that all the movie stars have, not a gooody gooyd type."
I began to reflect on those good old days when a girl was not put to the botheration of selecting her mate, but meekly said, "I will," to the age-old question of the priest in his flowing white robe:
"Pasande Kardum?" (Will thou have this man for thy husband?)
She dare not refuse, even if he had Chaplin's moustache or Durante's nose.
Although many people seem to have a great deal of worry about paying income taxes and filling out forms and generally having a poor time, we can't help wishing that we had some reason to worry along those same lines.
Jaytalking --have enough intelligence to rate a lifetimemate.
A group of state university professors (not this University) recently met and thundered rabily against socialism because they said working for the state would curtail their liberties. Wonder who they thought is paying their salaries now?
Coeds clinging to a strong right arm while walking around the campus aren't necessarily in love—maybe there's just not enough sand on the ice.
The K.C. Star isn't the only newspaper which has been forced to suspend publication because of a strike. When the Springfield, Mass., paper ceased publication, housewives held a protest meeting, saying that they didn't know what stores were having bargain sales or where prices were lowest. The publishers missed the advertising, too.
Do You Have A Turtle Complex? Try Getting Married, Crane Says
Chicago. (UP)—Bachelors and spinsters, a psychiatrist said today, are like turtles. Every year they remain unmarried they withdraw further into their shells, he said.
George W. Crane, director of a psychiatric clinic, said that spinsters and bechelors are the most eccentric and peculiar class of humanity.
"They withdraw from life," he $\textcircled{2}$
said
A bachelor living peacefully in a penthouse apartment is more likely to suffer a mental breakdown than the most henpecked husband, Mr. Crane said.
Even the husband who often is the subject of his wife's wrath has a better chance to succeed in his business than any member of the Lonely Hearts club, he claimed.
"As the unmarried withdraw from society, they find it more to their liking to curl up on a couch and get their entertainment via the radio instead of going out socially," he said.
"Married people are better adjusted," he explained. "They have social intelligence. At least they
"Husbands and wives are more socially adept and have a better understanding of human nature than the 'turtles,' because marriage tends to extrovert a person's interests."
He classed people into four groups —the turtles, the childless husband and wife, the husband and wife with children, and grandparents.
"The grandparents are at the top of the scale," he said. "At 60 they are the most mellowed, most charming, most extroverted people in the world."
Poets have found no words to rhyme with the words "silver" and "orange."
Let WARD's Flowers talk for you. Send her a corsage.
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Webster Automatic Record Changer
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JANUARY 22,1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Atomic Heating Would Solve K.U. Power Plant Fuel Shortages
University power plant workers got a brief scare during the Christmas holidays. Using up reserve fuel oil at the rate of one barrel every even minutes, they were down to mere three days' supply by the time school took up again and they shifted back to burning gas.
switched back to carrying If anything happens to that gas supply, the power plant men know the going will be tough, what with threatened 1947 transportation strikes possibly lying up oil stores.
What's more, they realize that if the heat ever stops pouring into University pipes, even for only a few hours (just enough to let water pipes freeze), the cost will run well nigh a million dollars.
The government, working through the laboratories of the Monsanto Chemical Co., in Oak Ridge, Tenn. has put out tentative blueprints for an atomic heating plant.
So they must have looked with great relief on a recent U.S. government news release, hinting that in the not-too-distant future, fuel worries will be as outdated as spats.
In such a plant, a one-inch cube of U-235 would generate enough power to run the ocean liner Queen Mary all the way from New York to England.
England. He also run the K.U. power plant from Nov. 1 to April 1, on a cold year, providing both heat and electric power at the same time.
The furnace, as designed by Monsanto, is big, but not too complicated. The warmer are simmering uranium rods. Over the rods passes cool gas, which is heated and forced into a conventional boiler.
Water, passing through pipes in the boiler, is converted to steam, which drives a power generator, and goes on to heat the buildings. The steam is condensed to water again and sent back through the boiler.
There is no danger because of the radiation of gamma rays in the setup described by the Monsanto blue-prints. The furnace itself is surrounded by a thick wall of barrier material, and even the uranium-heated gas never touches the water in the boiler pipes.
The gamma rays are stopped by the barrier material, and all other fission products are carried away by a kind of exhaust outlet.
Although the cost of such a unit would be too great for most heating plants, the cost of supplying the furnace with U-235 would be comparatively low, the report said.
In fact, it was pointed out, the substance left after the U-235 has been used is more valuable than the uranium. What's left is plutonium, the material used in atomic bombs.
Clavicle Is Spare Part, Doctors Say
San Francisco. (UP) -You really don't need your collar bone, and you may even be better off without it in some cases of disease or dislocation of the shoulder.
That is the conclusion of Drs. Vearne T. Inman and J.B.Saunders of the University of California.
The scientists say the function of the clavicle has been generally misunderstood. It has been assumed, they state, that the collar bone "acts as a sort of flexible outrigger which serves as a prop for the shoulder, thus establishing the conditions necessary for free action of the arm."
Doctors Inman and Saunders say their research shows the loss of the collar bone results in no drooping of the shoulder and no loss of motion of the arm. The only consequence of its removal is a slight instability when a weight is carried over the head.
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five
day days five
25 words or less 35e 65e 90e
additional words 1c 2c 3c
Lost
Found
OVERCOAT. Brown, size 38. Was accidentally exchanged at Dine-A-Mite Monday evening for cost of similar lunch and received McCarthy at 1106 or leave message. PINK Plastic rimmed glasses. If found call 3157-J. -24-
BETWEEN Spooner-Thayer museum and Myers hall, Ward high class library of 1939. May have beylily by paying ad. Robert Cheesley, Spooner-Thayer dorm. —24-
Wanted
WOULD Trade 3-room apartment in Kansas City, Mo., southwest district near university of Kansas hospital for a 3 room apartment in Lawrence. W. T. J. Gray, 1129 Ohio or see at University Press before 5.
VETERANS and/or other to care for three days per week 8:30-4:30. On at noon if desired. Phone 2816-8.
TO BUY. Royal "Aristoreal" or "Arrow" model portable power charger in good condition Caitlin Vingston, 721.
KEUFEL. And Esser slide rule, loglog tuxes or dectrig. Call 2966-W after 6:44.
Transportation
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TYPING. Term papers and reports. Phone
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For Sale
Madison, Wis. (UP)—The University of Wisconsin has bought the scientific library of the late Chester H. Thordarson, electrical genius and inventor, for $300,000. The collection comprises 11,000 volumes and was purchased with a fund donated by alumni and friends as living memorial gifts.
STUDIO Couch. Brown and beige striped, prewar spring construction, half price $25. Two Lane Bryant matte dresses, size 8. $6 each. Mrs. Biery, 1898-R. Mary Biery, 1898-R. Coach four-wheel tandem trailor house. Call Edwin Rossillon at 243.
CHRONOGRAPH Telemeter. night dial, 17 rubles. G. A. Eadon, 1131 Ohio. Phone -233.
NEW Remington portable typewriter. Just the thing for those term papers Art摇摆, 1031 Vermont.
NEW Regent trumpet. Has never been used. Ask for Tom Goering. phone 2565-J.Oliver in small leather case. Call 262-W.
RACTor personal portable radio with leather carrying case and movable strap tubes. New all-metal condition
Government Is Liable For Union Pay Claims
Washington. (UP) - Undersecretary of War Kenneth C. Royall estimated today that union claims for portal-to-portal pay may cost the government more than 400 million dollars.
He told a senate judiciary subcommittee the government would have to stand the cost for most of the portal pay liabilities of cost-plus-fixed-fee war contractors. No legal liability exists in cases involving lump sum payment contractors, he said, but the government might have an "equitable and moral" obligation.
New Arctic Frontiers Open, Explorer Says
He explained that the cost-plus contracts totaled more than 40 billion dollars between 1941 and 1946. Although most of those contracts have been terminated, he said, the termination agreements made the government liable for any still undetermined costs.
Pawhuska, Okla. (UP) — Those who harbor hopes of finding new frontiers to conquer may find encouragement in the views of Sir Hubert Wilkins, noted explorer.
Speaking before Pawhuska's Town hall meeting, Sir Hubert told his audience that "if the world population continues to increase at the present rate, the countries will in time become so over-populated that it will be necessary to pioneer new fields to provide food for them."
He declared that in the Arctic and Antarctic regions the potentialities for such pioneering are offered. The people of the world, as a whole, he said, have many misconceptions about these areas and their possible benefits to the world.
Wilkins pointed out that in those regions, commonly believed to be only vast masses of ice and snow, lie great opportunities.
ine grease regions. The polar regions contain one of the greatest, if not the greatest, oil basins in the world. They are rich in minerals, with coal out-croppings and semi-precious metals such as uranium," he explained.
In 1945, New York State collected $334,891.65 in unceashed pari-mutuel tickets, which represent a "donation" by bettors who either lost or never cashed their winning tickets.
Under the law, bettors are entitled to payment on winning tickets up to the next April 1 following the date of purchase. If the unclaimed winnings are not collected by that date, the money is turned over to the state.
They Bet, Don't Collect
Albany, N.Y. (UP)—A surprising number of persons go to racetracks, pick the winning horse and never collect their winnings.
For A Tasty Lunch U-m-m Good
Cheeseburgers Chii.
Hamburgers Soups
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1010 Mass. St.
Willfred "Skillet" Eudaly
The Weather
Weather map, weather in other cities. Page 6.
U. A. Weather Buren.
Local — Heavy snow probably changing to sleet late Monday ex-tending throughout state. High lower 30s. Low 90s. Little tem-perature change Tuesday and con-duined mostly cloudy.
Temperatures
12:30 p. m. - 29
7:30 p. m.
Phone KU-25 with your news.
Forget about weather reports
UNION PACIFIC
THE SEASONED TRAVELER
GOES BY TRAIN
DAILY TIMES
STORMS THE
"... my wife said that judging from the threatening predictions made by the weather man I had better postpone this trip. But I told her she could forget about weather reports . . . I had my space reserved on Union Pacific. One thing about train travel—you know you'll get there—and home again."
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For dependable, all-weather transportation, may we suggest . . be specific say "Union Pacific."
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE EIGHT
JANUARY 22.1947
Proposal Seeks Board Position
A plan for a University student representative on the board of regents was proposed last night at a senate meeting of P.S.G.L., men's Lideborne political organization.
Bruce Bathurst, College sophomore, introduced the proposal, which would include a system for electing the representative from the student body at large at the same time as the All Student Council president.
Under the proposal all Council representatives would be selected from the University at large.
"Lighting conditions in Watson library are deplorable." Robert Thayer, chairman of the senate committee on campus improvements stated. "The indirect lighting system of the reference room appears to be at maximum wattage now," he inserted.
The senate discussed a suggestion to abolish the present system of Council representation, in which councils are elected from four districts.
These include the College, district one; the School of Engineering, district two; the School of Fine Arts; Pharmacy, Education, and Graduate School, district four.
The possibility of moving surplus lounge furniture of Sunflower dorms to the Union lounge, the need for a permanent, all-wather walk from Gread hall to the Union and Frank Strong hall, and the advisability of installing a traffic light at the intersection of Jayhawk drive and Mississippi street were discussed.
Technical advice was requested by George Caldwell, senate president, in referring the subject back to the committee.
Two vacancies in party offices were filled when the senate elected Calvin Cooley, College freshman, secretary, and Jack Pringle, College freshman, treasurer.
'Nazi Method Is Issue In Georgia'—Arnall
Atlanta. (UP)—Former Gov. Ellis Arnall who inspired the opposition to Gov. Herman Talmadge warned today that Georgia's two-governor issue "is a test for all America whether Nazi methods can be used to seize our government by force."
Mr. Arnall's statement as a private citizen indicated his return to the fight against Talmadge forces that had banished him from the state capitol and the executive mansion.
He received a thunderous ovation Tuesday night addressing the Atlanta Women's club, one of a series of state-wide public indignation meetings protesting Mr. Talmadge's election by the general assembly.
Mr. Arnall refuted Mr. Talmadge's claims to the general assembly Tuesday that he had taken over the governor's office without violence.
The pretender now says that no acts of violence or force accompanied his seizure of the governor's office." Mr. Arnall said.
He cited the "broken jaw" of one of his aides, "armed storm troopers" barring him from the executive transition "stating in the presence of members of the press hatt" King Herman' had directed them to use force and violence if necessary."
Mr. Arnall called on the people to allow the courts to decide who should be the state's chief executive, supporting Acting Governor Melvyn E. Thompson's decision not to accent Mr. Talmadge's proposal that both resign and conduct a special election.
Does Wind Pay Union Dues
San Luis Obispo, Calif. (UP)—Chicago may be known as the "Windy City," but some hefty breezes occasionally blow through this coastal city. Workmen loaded an upright piano on a truck on the California Poly campus on a windy day, and the next thing they knew the wind flipped the piano over the rail of the truck and sent it crashing to the ground.
Sweden Is Larson's Topic
Miss Mary Larson, professor in the department of zoology, will speak before the Law Wives' club at 8 tonight in the Green hall law lounge. Her subject will be "Sweden and Swedish Cooking".
Carruth Reveals Visit From 'Panty Purloiner'
The Carruth women had to put "unmentionables" on their list to Santa.
When Jolliffe women reported 34 pairs of panties were taken recently from their basement, the Carruth women also revealed that they hadn't been overlooked.
The "panty purloiner" deftly removed 46 pairs from the Carruth basement about Dec. 1. Emalouise Britton, house president, related. The theft was not reported to the police and none has been found.
This was the largest lot reported missing. Twenty-two pairs were taken from the Jolliffe basement Jan. 11, and the women were upset to find that Jan. 17, someone had snatched 12 more pairs. Janiors found 22 of the missing articles in Hoch auditorium the following morning.
Now, where are the other 58 pairs?
'Duck, Get Outside If Earthquake Hits'
Tokyo. (UP) - Americans here are getting a few pointers from Japanese on what is best to do in the event of another major earthquake.
There really isn't a great deal one can do, but Japanese quake scientists say it might help to keep in mind a few basic rules.
The advice came amidst warnings from Japanese that the recent quakes occurring in the Tokyo-Yokohama area were disquietingly reminiscent of a similarly seated shocks which heralded the great quake and fire disaster of 1923.
Kiyo Sagisaka, chief of the government seismological observatory, said the best thing to do in the event of any heavy earthquake for anyone who was there is first to duck under the nearest table or any other piece of furniture.
In that catastrophe, official figures record that 99,331 persons were killed, 102,733 injured and that more than 400,000 houses were destroyed by the fires that quickly followed the earthquake.
That should be only during the initial tremor. As soon as the first tremor subsides, a person should get outside quickly and away from any structures.
She pinned a note inside the sleeve wishing "lots of good luck" to the needy European woman who would wear it next.
Washington. (UP) — Mrs. Lars Midjaas of Fairdale, N.D., willingly donated a dress to the victory clothing drive.
Great quakes generally consist of several tremors, he explained, and the first tremor doesn't allow time to get clear of the building.
Suspect Clothing Drive Incident Shows 'Fraud'
And Sen. Milton Young (R., N.D.) told the senate today, Mrs. Midjias didn’t like it one bit, when she re-identified her as Elizabeth Ohlouse of Huzelr. N.D.
Miss Olhouser had bought the dress from a Chicago mail order house for 18 cents.
Senator Young demanded that the senate investigate.
Close Vote Seen On Resubmission
Topeka (UP)—Resubmission debate raged in the Kansas house of representatives today with the outcome in doubt.
Administration leaders hoped to marshal enough support to approve by two-thirds vote tomorrow—Gov. Frank Carlson's 54th birthday—a resolution offering a constitutional change in Kansas' long dry status. A week ago today the governor asked that the liquor issue be resubmitted to the people for their decision.
One Republican said privately that administration floor managers faced "a desperate struggle." He said much more opposition had arisen than had been anticipated.
Dubhe, Home From Hospital, Is Better
From all indications a handful of votes will decide the fate of the new state administration's first major effort in the 35th legislature.
Two-thirds support -84 aye votes in the 125-member house - are needed to pass house concurrent resolution No. 2 which would reword the Kansas constitution to prohibit the open saloon, but leave the legislature the right to regulate, license and tax the manufacture and sale of intoxicating liquors and their possession and transportation.
He's limping, he's lost 10 pounds, and he's on a diet of warm milk and horsemeat, but Dubbe von Ae-Carr is home from the hospital.
The house dug in for an all-day session of oratory in general debate—permitted ahead of schedule by an administration move yesterday to declare an emergency and suspend the house rules.
Marshall Terms Policy Firm, Nonpartisan
Washington. (UP) — Secretary of State George C. Marshall today began personal direction of American foreign policy with a promise to keep it nonpartisan and "firm but patient."
He took over his difficult task amid high praise from many congressmen for his vigorous no-politics pledge, in which he unequivocally eliminated himself as a potential presidential candidate.
Today was Secretary Marshell's first full work day in his new post and he was expected to begin at the office even with top state department officials.
He found time Tuesday for two conferences with President Truman and Retiring Secretary of State James F. Byrnes.
The brown boxer pup, who was struck by a car last week when he gave chase to a cat, left the hospital Tuesday with his master, Garvin W. Hale, College senior.
He pledged himself to carry out the "firm but patient" foreign policy evolved by Mr. Bvrnes.
State income tax blanks for faculty use are available now at the K.U business office.
He is about to start on a series of international negotiations on peace treaties for Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. He must be ratified by the U.S. senate.
Dubhe is still weak from his injuries, a crushed rib and punctured lung. Hale reports that he now has a "discouraged view of life" and that he merely sniffs when he sees a cat.
Much interest also will center around his choice of advisers. Sens. Arthur H. Vandenberg (R., Mich) and Tom Connally (D., Texas) accompanied Mr. Byrnes to Big Four meetings. Although they had said they did not want to go to Moscow before Mr. Byrnes' resignation, they would certainly go if Secretary Marshal asks them to do so.
One of the first public statements Secretary Marshall is expected to make will concern the forthcoming Big Four council of foreign ministers meeting in Moscow on March 10.
Upon his arrival here Tuesday, he said he hadn't decided anything about his trip to Moscow. But it is considered certain he will go.
Tax Blanks Here
News of the World
Allis-Chalmers Strike May Be Settled Today
Milwaukee (UP)—A possible settlement of the strike against the Allis - Chalmers Farm Equipment company hinged today on a meeting in Detroit of the policy board of the United Automobile Workers (CIO).
The policy board will study proposals made during a three and one half hour conference Tuesday of top company and union representatives.
Tax Cut For Portal Pay
Washington. (UP)—The treasury plans to announce shortly, it was learned today, that firms required to pay back portal-to-portal claims will be permitted to charge off a part of the liability to taxes for the years involved.
Ramadier Forms Government
Paris, (UP)—Premier Paul Ramadier has succeeded in forming a government, and will announce its makeup later today, he told the press. The way was cleared for the government formation when Georges Bidault's Popular Republicans decided to take part in it.
To Declare India's Freedom
New Delhi. (UP) -The Indian national constituent assembly unanimously adopted a resolution declaring its intention to proclaim India a sovereign and independent republic. The Moslem league is boycotting the assembly, and its 75 delegates were absent.
'No Anti-Union Drive'—Ball
St. Paul, Minn. (UP)—Sen. Joseph H. Ball, R.—Minn., who has demanded drastic legislation to curb labor, served notice to employers in a radio address Tuesday night against interpreting such laws as a signal for a new union-busting drive.
GM Boosts Luxury Prices But Not On Volume Model
Detroit (UP)—Despite increases on station wagons and convertibles, general motors corporation's 1947 "volume" models-representing 98 per cent of production-will remain unchanged in price, the company said today.
Capone Is Ill, But Gaining
To Publish Nazi Records
Executive vice president M. E. Coyle announced yesterday that GM has boosted prices on 1947 luxury models in the Pontiac, Oldsmobile, Buick and Cadillac lines to bring them "more nearly in line with costs." Detroit dealers, reported increases ranging from $78 to $193.
Miami Beach. (UP)—Scarface Al Capone, fabulous prohibition era underworld czar who, despite a $50,000 price on his head, survived the Chicago gangland wars that killed 500, was reported gaining in the fight for his life at his island estate early today. He suffered a paralytic stroke Tuesday.
Washington. (UP) — The United States and Britain have agreed to entrust publication of Nazi foreign office records to "eminent historical scholars," it was announced today, revealing their plans for publishing secret German records which will include those concerning Soviet-Nazi negotiations in 1939.
Quonsets—One-Cent Sale
Honolulu. (UP) — Surplus-laden Hawaii saw something new in the disposal of left-over war material today when the Sales Service company advertised a "one-cent sale" of quonset huts.
Price for a single quonset hut was set at $899.99—two for $900. Only two huts to a customer.
Heavenly bodies were on display Tuesday night, but with a few less curves attached than might be expected.
Saturn was the main attraction for the evening as students gathered atop Lindley hall to find out if Saturn did have a ring and nine moons, as Prof. N. W. Storer has stated. The night was clear, the planet plainly visible, and after viewing the ring around the planet, no one doubted his
word. However, only the largest moon, Titan, was visible. Titan's size is estimated to be one and one-half times that of our moon.
The ring about Saturn, Professor Storer explained, is not composed of gases being thrown off the planet at great speed as many persons believe, but is made up of small rocks or meteors each having a separate orbit of its own revolving around Saturn. The estimated size of the ring is twice the diameter of the earth and is less than 100 miles thick, with the distance from the surface of Saturn to the inner edge of the ring being 6,000 miles. Saturn is approximately 95 times as large as the earth.
Several visitors came up to see Saturn and nebulae of Orion. Cold air waves rising caused some difficulty in seeing as clearly as usual, but both students and visitors were satisfied with what they saw.
Galileo Almost Saw Stars For Seeing 11 Moons On Saturn
When Saturn was first discovered, the people of that time thought that it was impossible for one planet to have more than one moon, so Galileo in the 16th century had to deny that Jupiter, another of his discoveries, had 11 moons. If he had not denied the fact, he would have been put to death for heresy. Probably it is lucky for him that his telescope was not good enough to notice that Saturn had its nine moons for a second statement such as his first would surely have resulted in his death.
"Saturn can be seen from now until early summer," Professor Storer said. The public is welcome to the night sessions.
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Plan 20-Mile Tunnel Through Mountains
Jean
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Dr. Hoff, of the Colorado School of Mines, told here how the engineering project will divert water already well on its way toward the Pacific via Grand canyon, into the South Platte river instead. The Platte feeds into the Mississippi river system.
Chicago. (UP)—A 20-mile tunnel, to be cut through the towering Medicine Bow range in central Colorado, will rob the Colorado river of enough of its flow to irrigate hundreds of square miles of parched plains lands lying to the east of the Rockies, geologist John C. Hoff reports.
Passing under mountains and across valleys, the water finally will emerge on the eastern slope of the Rockies. From there it will be guided into the South Platte to swell its flow across thirsty plains.
The Blue river tributary of the Colorado will be dammed to back up water that will be guided by canals into a series of tunnels and conduits, Hoff said.
In addition to the main 20-mile tunnel under the middle range of the Rockies, the new diversion system will include an eight-mile tunnel, several shorter tunnels, three dams, at least six miles of huge conduit tubes and more than 15 miles of canals.
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University DAILY KANSAN
Alra aedat ind a
STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday, January 23, 1947
44th Year No. 75
Lawrence, Kansas
Dance Manager Resigns After Prom 'Difficulties'
Class Officers, Klooz Oppose Fisher's Junior Dance Choice; Contract Signed
Jean Fisher, College senior, has resigned as Varsity dance manager because of what he calls "extreme difficulties encountered in attempting to execute the duties of my office."
John Gunther, All-Student Council social committee chairman, is acting as dance manager until a new appointment is made by his committee.
Fisher said today his "difficulties" rose over the hiring of Matt Beton's band, of Manhattan, to play or the Junior Prom, March 1. In is letter of resignation, Fisher wrote:
"Two officers of the junior class subjected to my selection of bands and protested to Karl Klooz, University bursar, on the grounds that the price was too high and they cared that the dance would lose money.
"I delivered my opinion of the situation and Mr. Klooz indirectly overruled me by not approving my judgment."
from student-organized firms. Klooz also referred to a constitutional provision requiring the lance manager to submit a budget of his expenses to the ASC auditing committee before signing a contract, for
Mr. Klooz said today that the matter came to his attention when two class officers protested to him, and he called a meeting Saturday to clarify the situation. The bursar must approve all expenditures made from student organization funds.
"Mr. Fisher signed a contract for the band, costing $300 more than a local band, without council approval," the bursar said.
Fisher said today that he had not submitted a budget for the dance, and that "to my knowledge, the dance manager never has submitted a budget for such a small figure, at least during this year."
He pointed out that another constitutional provision which states the social committee shall have the power to fix the price of University
dances, but such prices shall never exceed a maximum of 75 cents" ex- ening the four class dances. Fisher said this was an example of other constitutional provisions that have not been enforced.
The two class officers who opposed Fisher's action in signing the Betton band were Elizabeth Evans president, and Joan Woodward, secretary-treasurer.
According to Miss Woodward, the 40 members of the junior class who met at the latest class meeting voted unanimously to hire a local band.
(The class's action is not binding on the dance manager, according to Bill No. III, Section 4 (g) (3) of the constitution: "All contracts for music, ballroom space, decorations, and other necessary expenses shall be negotiated by the dance manager, after he shall have obtained approval of the majority of committee members and the auditing committee."
the social context. Miss Evans said she was against hiring the Manhattan group originally but had later decided that the class still would be able to make a profit with the higher-priced band.
mittee (the first committee mentioned is the social committee.)
Gunther, the acting manager, said he will attempt to complete arrangements for Betton to play for the dance, subject to the approval of the committees.
German Club To Meet
The University German club will meet at 4:30 this afternoon in 402 Fraser hall. Refreshments will be served following an informal business meeting.
Little Man On Campus
By Bibler
WATKINS
Stoler
"Better have beds brought in now that finals are coming up."
His Pressure Helped
C. B. RITCHIE
GOV. FRANK CARLSON
Polio Drive Falls Behind Schedule
Contributions to the campus March of Dimes drive are falling far below schedule with only 10 per cent of the 9,000-dime goal reached, William Perkins, drive chairman, reported today.
To bolster the lagging total, Jay Janes and KuKus will take a col- lery during halftime of Friday night's basketball game. Drive offiicials hope to boost donations further with the annual March of Dimes dance Saturday night in the Lawrence Community building.
fence Community Donations from organized houses must reach the office of Dean Henry Werner by Friday noon, chairman Paul said today. The campus drive will not only aid polio victims but will provide a scholarship set up by the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis, for physical therapy students. Six are now receiving training from this fund, according to Miss Lilyan Warner, head physical therapist at Watkins hospital.
The Watkins physical therapy clinic is the only one in Douglas county with facilities to administer treatment to polio victims, Miss Warner declared.
"Students are treated free after payment of the health fee," she said. Five polio victims, including one University student, are now taking therapy treatment at the hospital.
Infantile paralysis reached epidemic proportions (more than 100 cases) in Kansas and Missouri during 1946, Miss Warner said.
Liquor Bill Passes House By Three-Vote Margin
If State Senate Concurs, Resubmission Will Go To Citizens In 1948 Election
Topeka. (UP)—Resubmission passed the Kansas house of representatives today by the narrow margin of three votes.
The roll call vote was 86 to 37, two-thirds majority of 84 being necessary to send the resolution for constitutional prohibition amendment to the senate. If the senate concurs, $ \textcircled{*} $
the senate. If the senate senate, the matter will reach the voters in the regular election in 1948.
The vote was made under call of the house when every member was required to be present and vote. William
An exception was Rep. William D. Reilly, Leavenworth, ill of a heart attack. Also, one member died shortly after the election last November.
The voting came in a house tense with excitement over the possibility the new administration's first legislative effort would fail.
Nineteen members arose to explain their vote, and after it was all over, Rep. Howard Adams of Waahseum County, changed his vote from "naye" to "aye" to make the final total.
Rep. Sam Brookover, of Eureka, explained "I expect to fight the wet forces 'til hell freezes over, but the people should have the right of expression on this vital controversial issue."
The influence of Gov. Frank Carlson, who asked for resummission in his legislative message of last week, was seen in some comments. For instance, Rep. L. M. Hinshaw, of Benington, said "this matter of resumission was ill-conceived and ill-advised in the Republican platform last August.
later,
"But in deference to Governor
Carlson, I vote aye."
Rep. W. S. Robinson of Topeka explained that he was favoring the proposal because "the governor took me by the hand and promised law enforcement."
Rep. Floyd Souders, Cheney, Sedgwick county, explained his vote thus:
"The people are above average, both in intelligence and in morals and have the right to vote on this issue."
There were two objectives to the local option provision of the proposed amendment, by Forrest Stamper, Plainville, Democratic house leader, and Rep. Frank A. Vopat, of Lucas.
Lucas. Stamper said, "this is a local option measure, a dry county might be surrounded by wet ones, and the result would be turmoil and confusion in the worst form."
LMOC 'Originals Go On Sale
Original drawings of the well-known Little Man on Campus cartoons by the Daily Kansan's artist went on sale at the newspaper's business office today.
The original cartoons, drawn by Dick Bibler, creator of the "Little Man," were made available for sale to students, organized houses, or faculty and staff members through action of the Kansan board, Jane Anderson, its chairman, explained.
"Everyone has had so much fun with Bibler's work we thought the entire campus might like to have a chance to own some of it," she said. "The cartoons are just perfect for decorating recreation and game rooms, and many of them are about professors and students who are pretty typical of the Hill."
pretty types
The drawings will be on sale for one week only. They are 11 by 14 inches in size, and in black ink on a white background suitable for framing. ___
Graduation Information To Be Sent To Seniors
Seniors who are to graduate at the end of this semester will receive a letter from the Senior class alumni committee.
committee. The letter will inform them of the advantages of becoming members of the alumni association, information on commencement exercises in the spring, and the class ring. Members of the committee who are sending the letters are George Worrall, Arthur Partridge, and Richard Hollingsworth.
WEATHER
Kansas—Clear today, tonight, and Friday. Continued mild. Low tonight 25 extreme west to 35 east.
'Pantie Purloiner' Roams At Large
'But Why Worry, Girls; If They're Only Snitched From Clothesline?'
The case of the "purloined panties" is not closed.
is not closed.
Occupants of a men's rooming house at 833 Louisiana street suffice pans of confused embassassment this week when they discovered a pair of women's pajamas on their front porch with numerous intimate female underthings stuffed in the legs.
in the legs. They were quietly distressed until a Daily Kansas article reported the loss of "unmentionables" from two women's doritories, and they immediately reported their find.
In Washington they are diplomatic, they only steal locks of hair at KU. they snatch panties; lace panties, cotton panties, flowered panties, but preferably freshly laundered panties.
launched palms.
Jollife hall revealed the theft of 62 pairs, a portion of which have been found and returned, and Car-
ruth women are still pondering the fate of 46 pairs of panties, several bras, and girdles filched recently from basement clotheslines in both houses.
The pantie pilferer ignores ordinary laundered articles and specializes in undies. Both entrances to Jol-
Fraternity social chairmen have received anonymous post cards asking "Pantie situation critical; do you have them?" signed "Distressed."
entire care of the patient. The first batch of missing steppins discovered in Hech auditorium by janitors, was strategically re-
lifts, Jan. 11 and 17, were gained through the front door, but it is thought a basement window was entered at Carruth.
turned by police on a date night. The women, slightly disconcerted, happily identified the wandering pantaloons while unabased dates waited for the shouts of identification to end.
necation to end.
One woman reported a $49 loss of underthings, nearly all of which were returned. These were the only articles known to be insured. The Carruth loss totaled about $60.
Victims of the purloiner desperately borrowed their friends "monograms" for a while and then were forced to buy new sets when the vital articles did not appear. Laundry room locks are being checked in women's houses, and windows are being nailed tightly shut by nervous coeds.
"But why worry," one optimist reassured her fidging roommate, "so long as they are just snitched from clotheslines?"
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
JANUARY 23.19
YOUR BUSINESS IS HERE
Polar, Atomic Cosmic Research Paces 1946 Exploration Upturn
Washington. The earth's polar regions became prime objectives of man's research in 1946, the National Geographic society said today in reviewing expeditions and explorations of the first postwar year.
December departure of United States navy ships with 4,000 men under Rear Admiral Richard E. Byrd's command marked the start of the largest expedition ever to head for Ant- $ ^{ \textcircled{2} }$
expedition ever to head for Antarctica. It highlighted the new interest in the South Polar land mass which will occupy scientists from several nations on expeditions during 1947 and 1948.
Canada, with United States army cooperation, tested new types of cold weather equipment at the edge of the Arctic circle. The United States navy tested men and equipment aboard the big carrier Midway in Greenland waters, and charted submarine performances in the flipping strait region. At the year's end, Army polar paraphernalia were being put to sub-freezing tests by task forces in the Aleutians and in Alaska.
Soviet sources announced research bases on islands in the Kara, Laptur, and East Siberian seas, and expeditions to northern areas of those seas to solve problems of oceanography and to facilitate navigation along the Soviet Northern sea route.
In the Pacific, the planned aerial and underwater explosions of atomic bombs at Bikini were undertaken by an expedition of 42,000 army, navy, and civilian representatives. Primary purpose of this Operation Crossroads, according to Vice Admiral W. H. P. Blandy, its director, was to enable the navy to learn "how not to be on the receiving end of an atomic Pearl Harbor."
New knowledge of cosmic rays—the invisible, high-energy particles emanating from the cosmos—was the object of a series of flights of a B-29 "flying laboratory" between Canada and Peru at altitudes rang- ing from 600 km. This expedition was a project of the National Geographic society, the Army Air forces, and the Bartol Research foundation.
New expeditions and continuing research pointed up the archeological wealth of the Americas. In his eighth season of delving into southern Mexico under National Geographic society and Smithsonian institute auspices, Dr. Matthew W. Stirling found five more colossal stone heads fashioned by the peoples of the pre-Columbian era.
At Monte Alban, also in southern Mexico, Mexican scientists concluded 15 years of field work on Mixtec and Zapotec cultures which were ended by Spanish invasion. Golden masks and necklaces, carvings of stone and jade were found in tombs.
Near Huehuetenango, Guatemala, restoration work on Zaculeu, one of several known buried Mayan communities in the region, revealed a pyramidal fortress, temple, alturs, and a court for playing a religious ball game. Zaculeu was abandoned after withstanding attack in 1525 by soldiers of Hernando Cortes, whose 400-year-old casket came unexpectedly to light in 1946 from hospital walls in Mexico City.
Near the Mexican capital, a Carnegie institution group found implements and fossil remains believed to date from the close of the ice age, 15,000 years ago. In Arizona's Ventano cave, and near Berkeley, California, human bones preserved for four to 10 thousand years were found. In southern Wyoming and in Alaska, newly discovered fossil remains represent fantastic beasts believed to date back 40 to 85 million years.
WURLITZER PHONOGRAPHS
FOR PARTY RENTALS
Used Juke Box Records For Sale
Ruins of Roman Londinium were found under Middle-Ages artifacts by delving a dozen feet beneath blitzed basements in the Ludgate hill section of London. Student volunteers excavated Roman dwellings beneath rubble in bombed South-wark and Exeter.
John H. Emick
1014 Moss. Phone 343
French scientists studied Roman ruins bombed bare at Senlis, north of Paris. At Marseille's battered Old Port, they found fragments of Greek Mastilla of 2,500 years ago. At Montignac-sur-Vezere, they pored over crude mural art of successive cave-dwelling civilizations of 10 to 30 thousand years ago.
Massive stones that formed part of Jerusalem's north wall not long after the crucifixion were uncovered near the heart of the present city. On the Palestine coast near Tel Aviv, mound excavations revealed foundations of the Hellenes of 2,000 B.C. A building dating possibly from Canaanite days of 2,500 B.C. was discovered in desert sand near the southern end of the Sea of Galilee.
Almost a thousand disabled veterans in Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma have applied to the veterans administration for new automobiles under the "autos for impuees" program.
Separate Upkeep Is Large Figure; Needs Four Girdles
Chicago. (UP)—Red-haired Mrs. Clarice Rasmussen, 26, sought separate maintenance from her husband today and insisted on a minimum of four girdles per year.
Mrs. Rasmussen, whose husband is president of the National Tea company, told Judge Leonard C. Rosier that needed $900 per month for clothing.
When the judge seemed dubious, Mrs. Rasmussen said her yearly needs were 72 pairs of nylons, 12 night gowns, 12 purses "about $60 apiece," seven $250 suits, 10 pairs of shoes, 12 slips, and four girdles
She said she needed $700 per week to support herself and her infant daughter.
Double Theft Brings Car Back To Owner
Cleveland. (UP)—An automobile reported stolen three years ago from a downtown garage was discovered in another downtown garage where it had been in dead storage since it was reported stolen.
The car was recovered when attendants at the garage where it was found noticed two wheels had been stolen and called police.
"Why, this is the car we've been looking for since 1943," police exclaimed after checking the old license plate.
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan, every afternoon during the school year except holidays. University holiday days, and examination days. Second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan, under act of March 3, 1879.
University Daily Kansan
Gustafson
THE COLLEGE JEWELER
Students' Jewelry Store 42 Years 809 MASS.
January
But you can take precautions by having your car's brakes checked now.
101
Unpredictable Weather Unpredictable Happenings
Channel - Sanders Motor Company
Unwanted Money Still Pours In
Phone 616
622 Mass.
'Disabled' Veteran Tells V.A. To Keep Chec
New York. (UP)—John G. Scott, the veteran who has been trying without success to get the government to take back a pile of uncashed disability checks and quit sending him more, said today that he believed the veterans administration "has a big office to pay out dough, but they don't have a very big office to receive it."
Scott said his eyes don't bother him a bit in his civilian job as manager of the Mountain Valley Water company, although the VA says they are bad to the point where they can be classed as a disability.
"By my standards, my eyes are perfect," Scott said. "I don't need the checks."
whether he had ever been in army hospital. He had been, a had to sign a statement to that effe
He said the trouble all started when he was asked upon discharge
Then last May the unwant checks began to pour in for a disability of the right eye—a condition which Scott said he had before entered the service.
When he wrote a letter to the saying he didn't want the dispension checks the result was th they were raised from $35 to $42 month.
In desperation, Scott appealed his congressman, Rep. Frederick Coudert, Jr. He sent Coudert a pi of monthly checks totalling $344 ar asked the congressman if he could do something to get the VA to "tun off their spigot of gold."
HAVE A TASTY, WELL-PREPARED STEAK for Less at
Across from Court House
BILL'S GRILL
1109 Mass.
Phone 2054
JANUARY CLEARANCE
Big Savings On Apparel For Wear Right Now and For Spring
ONE GROUP
Casual JACKETS
- Solid Colors
- Two-tone
1/2 Price
Sleeveless SWEATERS
Entire Stock
HOLLYWOOD, FLORIDA
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Leather Jackets
ONE GROUP
Dress Gloves
1/2 Price
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Our prices have been reduced for the purposes of reducing our stock and they do not reflect any change in market conditions.
G
Gibbs Clothing WHERE CASH BUYS MORE"
811 MASS. ST.
ANUARY
ELINO
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23,19
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
ANUARY 23,1947
PAGE THREE
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SOCIALLY SPEAKING
PART
ELINOR BROWNE, Society Editor
engineers' Wives Will Elect
ground Heads Battenfeld
The Student Engineers' Wives will old election of officers at the meeting today at 8 p.m., in the Kansas of the Union.
Arnold England was elected president of Battenfeld hall for the spring semester, Other officers are Eugene esement, vice - president; Clyde anger, secretary; Lyle Wheateroff, easurer; James Nelson and Alvin aggard, social co-chairman; Vicer Reinking, scholarship chairman; george Pyle, freshman counselor; murge Burke, intramural manager; erald Hamilton, song leader; Walce Abbey, publicity chairman;甘out, sergeant-at-arms. Richard collingsworth is proctor.
Ipha Kappa Psi Initiates
John Kappa
Alpha Kapra Psi announces the initiation of Frank Anderson, Paul Ingham, Paul Briley, Curwin Greene, Ralph Grier, Orval J. Kaufman, William Kopp, Richard McConell, Donald Merrill, Omer Moche, Morse Murray, William Pieron, Harry Rice, Charles Sherer, ergil Simons, Thomas Smith.
i Tau Sigma Has Initiation
Bi Tau Sigma held an initiation banquet at the Hearth recently, at which time R. A. Schwegler, professor emeritus of the School of Education, spoke on "Philosophy of ideal Americanism."
Men initiated were Thomas W. hallinger, Morris E. Borene, Wesley I. Cepner, Frank H. Gage, Elmo William V. McCormack, Carr
J. Maiden, William V. McCoy, Harold W. Moore, Robert D. Moore, John P. Morgan, Grady L. Randle, Valter W. Sheridan, Howard A. hryock, Richard J. Shea, John R. hiele, Robert L. Wehe.
00th Congress Has fewer Women
Washington. (UP)—The 80th Congress boasts of only seven women members—all in the house. There are 11, in the last session.
Five have served in the House be-
fore.
One of the newcomers is Mrs. Katherine St. George of New York. A second cousin of the late President Roosevelt, Mrs. St. George is a taunch Republican.
The other new feminine face is hat of Mrs. Georgia Lusk, a New Mexico Democrat.
the returning members are Reps. Mary T, Norton, D., N.J.; Frances tolton, R., Ohio; Edith Nourse Rogers, R., Mass; Margaret Chase Smith, L., Maine; and Helen Gahagan Dougas, D., Calif.
Mrs. Norton has lost her post as chairman of the House labor committee because of the Republican victory. Mrs. Rogers is expected to become chairman of the House veterans committee, last headed by Rep. John E. Rankin, D., Miss.
ooh K.
One of the most attractive member of the last session's famine ontingent is missing—Mrs. Clare loothe Luce, R., Conn. She did not seek re-election. Neither did the veteran Jesse Sumner, R., Ill.
Those ousted from the House in last November's election were Mrs. Helen Douglas Mankin, Ga.; Mrs. Emily Taft Douglas, Ill., and Mrs. Chase Going Woodhouse, Conn., all Democrats. ___
Pi Phi's Lose Keys, Pitcher, Bracelet
A silver cream pitcher from the coffee service and the front door key were found missing from the Piacere Phi house Sunday morning, according to Mrs. Dean Alt, housemother. Mrs. Alt also reported the loss of a silver bracelet from her personal possessions.
The pitcher, a gift from the Mothers' club in Kansas City, has a sentimental value, Mrs. Alt said.
K.U. Has A Real Powers Model, But Eyes Front—She's Married
COEDS' CORNER
A queen at every ball and beautiful girls in every hall—that's true of hundreds of colleges in the United States. But K.U. can boast of even more—a real Powers model!
Meet Mrs. Lavonne McIntosh, brown eyes, light brown hair, and—tak heed all you eligible bachelors—a husband. French Club Honors
Mrs. McIntosh is auditing a course in the journalism department this semester while her husband, William F. McIntosh, finishes his senior year in the School of Business.
ness.
Lavonne was graduated from the Power's school in New York on May 24, 1945. Married in 1943 she explains, "I went to school merely as a pastime while Bill was overseas."
a pastime while he is Every graduate of the school is granted an interview with Mr. Powers who advises her on the type of modeling she should do. Mr. Powers, known to the male population as "that lucky stiff", is short, in his 40's, and scared to death of audiences, Lavonne says.
audiences, Lavender. "He's also very good-looking, only slightly gray, and is always seen in a pin-stripe suit."
His ideal model, she added, is Georgia Carroll. "He always told us that after God made her he threw away the formula."
After her interview, Mrs. McIntosh worked as a part time receptionist at Powers, doing free lance work as a model on the side.
Her first real job came as a model at the School of Photography, where she specialized in pictures showing her hands and those playing up her eyes—two of her most outstanding features.
She then modeled clothes in the New York garment center and emphasized the high points of sports outfits for Stella Kisih, a retail dealer.
Mrs. McIntosh stands 5 feet, 71/2 inches tall, and weighs 120 pounds. There's no use giving her telephone number, boys, but every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday at 4 p.m. she can be seen coming out of the journalism building—just in case.
"It was all plenty exciting and New York was wonderful," Lavonne sighed.
French Club Honors St. Charlemagne
Le Cercle Francais celebrated St. Charlemagne's day Tuesday at a meeting in Frank Strong hall.
The occasion is a traditional school festival in France in honor of the founding of schools by the Emperor Charlemagne.
Ruth Brown, College junior, and Patricia Pearson, fine arts sophomore, explained the day's significance. This was followed by several scenes from a play, "Le Voyage de M. Perrichon".
The characters were portrayed by Lester Mertz, Marjorie Scot, Twila Wagner, Jack Lungstrum, and William Brown.
in France. Jane Malin, graduate student, read a letter from a correspondent with the American relief for France. The letter stressed the handsicure under which French students must now work and their eagerness to exchange letters with American students.
Elect Hobbs Chairman
Waldo S. Hobbs, engineering senior, was elected chairman of the K. U. American Society of Mechanical Engineers at a meeting in Marvin hall Wednesday.
vin hain
Other officers elected were; Prof. Hugh Dassch, honorary chairman; Lloyd R. Grant, vice-chairman; William C. Walker, secretary; William V. McCoy, treasurer; Robert C. Brown, social chairman.
ATO's Elect Officers
Newly elected officers of Alpha Tau Omega are Stephen Butcher, president; Earl Laird, vice-president; George Latham, treasurer; Richard Cory, secretary; Albert Rice, historian; Richard Haggard, sentinel; Eldon Means, usher; Kenneth Pringle, trainer.
Dance So That Others May Walk!
★
(By ALPHA PHI OMEGA)
MARCH OF DIMES DANCE
BOB DOUGLAS and HIS ORCHESTRA Vocals by SIDNEY DAWSON
☆
Community Bldg. Jan.25,9 p.m.to? $1.25 Couples or Stags
This advertisement sponsored by Independent Laundry
William Burt's Announce Birth Of Son
Mr. and Mrs. William W. Burt announce the birth of a son, Douglas William, born Dec. 28 at St Luke's hospital, Kansas City, Mo.
Mr. Burt is a business junior and
a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon
fraternity. ___
A.V.C. To Sponsor Dance
The American Veterans committee will sponsor an after-game dance tomorrow night in the Kansas room of the Union. The dance is open to the public and there will be no admission charge.
COURT HOUSE LUNCH
Meals - Short Orders
Sandwiches
Open 5:30-12:30
Bachelor's Laundry Service
Also Dry Cleaning for Men and Women
ACME
Bachelor's Laundry & Dry Cleaners
1111 Mass. Phone 696
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Sweater'n Skirt SALE
120 Skirts
210 Sweaters and Plaid Shirts
Values to $6.50—Special $2.00
Values to $8.95—Special $3.00
Values to $10.95—Special $4.00
Sport Shop
Weaver
All Stock Not Included In This Sale
GIVE TO THE MARCH OF DIMES
The K.U. Student Goal—9,000 Dimes
Attend the March of Dimes Dance SPONSORED BY ALPHA PHI OMEGA
At the Community Building Saturday Night
PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
JANUARY 23,194
SPOTLIGHT SPORTS
By BOB DELLINGER
(Daily Kansan Sports Editor)
No one seems to know just what is wrong with the Kansas basketball team, but Otto Schnellbacher offers one reason why the team is tiring out during the last half of each contest.
"Im not just offering excuses," said Otto, "but remember that we've played 16 games and only two of them at home."
That is a plausible reason for turning out during the last half, especially when the teams don't get much sleep on a rough train ride, but it still doesn't explain the number of shots missed in the first half.
The Kansas squad made 19 per cent of its shots from the field against Colorado and stayed in the game by dunking an abnormally high percentage of charity tosses, 24 out of 29.
The Jayhawkers are expected by most persons, especially around here, to take the Iowa State Cyclones tomorrow night. The 19-point victory over the Cyclones in Kansas City may give the average fan a little overconfidence, but it is worthy of remembrance that the Cyclones have knocked off Kansas State and Nebraska by good scores.
***
Tony Zale, middleweight boxing champion, predicts that he will win his return match with Rocky Graziano March 21.
Zale, who was honored at the New York Boxing Writer's dinner Wednesday night, was awarded the "fighter of the year" plaque because of his excellent comeback against Graziano in their last meeting.
Gil Dodd, the "murdering parson," will come back to racing Saturday and is reportedly better than ever.
Dodds will go back to the mile run, in which he holds the indoor record at 4:06.4.
He earned his nickname by the killing pace he sets in the mile distance. Dodds has no finishing kick, so to hold off those who do, he just goes out and runs them into the boards to take away their strong finish.
Feb. 1 will see the flying preacher matched with Sweden's Rune Gustafson, who recently turned in a 4:04.6 outdoor mile, and is expected to give Dodds plenty of trouble on the plank track. That is, if he can stand up to Dodd's pace.
Dodds doesn't deny he's eyeing the Olympic games next year.
Colorado In Big Six?
Topekan Predicts It
Topeka. (UP)—Jay Simon, sports editor of the Topeka State Journal, reported today that a Big Six athletic director had predicted flatly Colorado university's membership in the conference by 1948.
Colorado is at present a member of the conference in the Rocky Mountain region.
Mr. Simon said his informant requested that his name not be used, but stated that considerable attention was devoted to the eventuality of a Colorado Big Six membership in the conference meeting in Kansas City last month.
Colorado and the two members of the Big Six from this state—the University of Kansas and Kansas State College — recently have scheduled football games for 1948. The Colorado-Kansas game has been announced for Lawrence and the Colorado-Kansas meeting will be at Boulder, Colo.
Stephenson To Speak
The Geology club will meet at 7:30 tonight in 426 Lindley hall. Dr. E. A. Stephenson is to be the speaker.
Four Of Big Six's High Scorers Will Meet In K.U.-Cyclone Game
| | W | L | Pct. | TP | OP | Of.Avg. | Def.Avg. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Missouri | 4 | 0 | 1.000 | 165 | 142 | 41.25 | 35.50 |
| Iowa State | 2 | 1 | .667 | 137 | 120 | 45.67 | 40.00 |
| Oklahoma | 2 | 1 | .667 | 141 | 121 | 47.00 | 40.33 |
| Nebraska | 2 | 3 | .400 | 231 | 258 | 46.20 | 51.60 |
| Kansas State | 1 | 3 | .250 | 175 | 198 | 43.75 | 49.50 |
| Kansas | 0 | 3 | .000 | 127 | 137 | 42.33 | 45.67 |
Four of the conference's top eleven scorers will meet here tomorrow night in the game between Kansas and Iowa State.
They are Charlie Black and Otto Schnellbacher of Kansas, and Don Paulsen and Jim Myers of Iowa State. Black and Schnellbacher are tied for seventh and eighth places in the totals and Paulsen ranks in ninth two places over Myers. ___
Both Black and Schnellbacher are expected to start for the Jayhawkers, with Gib Stramel, Wendell Clark, and Ray Evans filling out the top five. Iowa State will probably resort to its quintet of Paulsen, Myers, Ray Wehde, Ron Norman, and Bill Block.
Kansas will be without the services of reserve forward Harold England and reserve center Myron "Sonny" Enns. England is out with a head injury suffered in practice, and Enns injured his knee in the Colorado game Monday.
Schnellbacher leads the conference in free throws made, dumping in 17 with 10 of them coming in the Nebraska game.
Hal Howey, sparkplug Kansas State forward, stands second in scoring total with 58 points in four games, but his average of 14.5 tops those who have seen action in three or more this year.
Saturday's game between the league-leading Missouri Tigers and the second-place Oklahoma Sooners at Norman will be the headliner of the week, even though the Tigers can't be knocked out of the lead merely by a loss to Oklahoma.
Claude Rethertford of Nebraska tops the league in total with 59 in five games for an average of 11.80, and teammate Joe Brown follows him in third with 51 and 10.20.
The Sooners will have the big advantage of home court, and are slightly favored because of it. Com- pared with its loss in last week's edge of from two to nine points,
First half play in the conference will end Feb.1, after games between Kansas and Kansas State to determine the cellar position, and between Iowa State and Oklahoma.
Quack club, women's swimming organization, will meet Thursday at 7:45 p.m. in Robinson gymnasium. This will be the final meeting of the semester, Olivia Garvey, president, announced.
Final Quack Meeting
Tax Cut Helps Rich Democrats Charge
Washington. (UP)—House Democrats charged today that the rich man would be the chief beneficiary of an across-the-board income tax reduction.
They cited figures prepared by the internal revenue bureau to bolster their opposition to the tax-cut bill introduced by Chairman Harold Knutson, (R., Minn.) of the house ways and means committee. It calls for a flat 20 per cent tax cut on incomes up to $302,000 a year.
The bureau's figures showed that a man with three dependents who now earns $2,500 a year pays federal income taxes of $50. Under Knutson's proposal, he would pay $40. That would mean an increase of one-fourth of 1 per cent in his income after taxes.
The present tax for a man with three dependents who earns $100,000 a year, according to the internal revenue bureau, is $61,887.75. Under Knutson's proposal he would pay $49,510.20. The increase in his income after taxes would be about 32.5 per cent.
Instead of a flat reduction of tax rates, most democrats favored increasing income tax exemptions on grounds it would offer more real relief to the lower income brackets.
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U.H.S. Will Meet Undefeated Perry
The University High cage squad will meet undefeated Perry high on the Lawrence Community building court at 4 p.m. tomorrow afternoon.
The Perry squad has won. 10 straight victories and is now leading the Jefferson County league. The latest Perry victim was Winchester high which fell before a 44-28 onslaught. University high has won a single game in 10 starts and will be a decided underdog.
The two "B" teams will play a preliminary game at 3:15 p.m.
Al Capone 'Out Of Danger'
Miami Beach. (UP)—Scarface Al Capone, prohibition era gangster whose rackets netted him a fortune, today was reported "entirely out of danger barring complications." Physicians had feared for his life following a paralytic stroke.
Germany, Japan Won't Be Invited To 14th Olympics
London. (UP) — The organizin committee for the 1948 olympi games today made the first offici announcement that Germany an Japan will not take part in the 14th Olympiad.
The committee gave no details of its decision to exclude the defeated nations.
The events are equestrian, yachting, fencing, shooting, boxing, swimming, cycling, football, rowing, canoeing, basketball, field hockey wrestling, weight lifting, modern pentathlon, athletics, and gymnastics
Releasing for the first time in preparations for the games, the group named July 29 and Aug. 14, 1948, as the dates of the opening an closing ceremonies, and listed 1 athletic events.
Washington. (UP)—A picket line in front of the National theater, protesting the ban against Negro patrons, stepped aside Wednesday night shortly before President Truman arrived to see a performance of Sigmund Romberg's operetta "Blossor Time." There was no indication that Truman was aware of the eight pickets who were lost in the crowd.
Pickets Aside For Truman
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
JANUARY 23,1947
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I.W.W., Theta's, Foster, Pi Phi's Win I-M Games
Two complete routs and two tight games featured the play in women's intramural basketball Wednesday night at Robinson gymnasium.
The I. W. W. team smothered Alpha Omicron Pi by a 31 to 10 score. Geraldine McGee and Kathleen McClanahan had the victors with 22 and nine points respectively. AnnSpalding scored nine points for the losers.
The I. W. W. guards, Pearl Leigh, Julia Fox, and Marjorie Kaff, provided the defensive highlight of the evening by holding Alpha Omicron Pi scoreless the entire last half.
Kappa Alpha Theta's offensive power proved too much for Alpha Chi Omega as the Theta's won, 36 to 10. The deadly shooting accuracy of Kathryn O'Leary netted her 24 points and high scoring honors for the evening. Jacqueline Logan made five tallies for the losers.
In the night's tightest contest Foster hall nosed out Lockley hall, 18 to 17. Phyllis Kraft made 10 points and Joanne Moser scored eight for the winners. Margaret van der Smissen's nine markers were tops for the Locksley team.
for the Lockhart team
Pi Beta Phi upset Watkins hall,
27 to 22. Annette Stout of Watkins
was high scorer with 13 points followed by Pi Phi Sally Shepard with 12.
Phi Delt 'B' Takes Nine Old Men, 83-23
Scores in Tuesday night's play included: Alpha Delta Pi 26, Delta Gamma, 17; Sigma Kappa 24, Sleepy Hollow, 9; Independents 27, Miller hall, 11; Kappa Kappa Gamma 33, Chi Omega, 8.
The one intramural basketball game played Wednesday night resulted in the highest point barrage of the "B" league season.
Phi Kappa "B" won on a forfeit from Newman club "B".
Phi Delta Theta "B" rolled over the Nine Old Men by a score of 83 to 23. Powell led the rampage of the winners with 2 points. Haynes contributed 20 counters to the same cause.
Summerfield Hopefuls To File For Tests
The names of candidates to take the Summerfield scholarship preliminary examinations will be filed at the endowment office before March 17. Mrs. Flora Boynton, secretary of the association said Wednesday.
Form letters have been sent to the principals of Kansas high schools who will name their highest-ranking seniors for the examination. The first tests will be given in six or eight towns throughout the state, Mrs. Boynton said. The persons who meet the requirements will come to the University later to take a final two-day examination.
A money award, the amount depending on how much financial aid the student will receive from home while in school, will be given to the persons who receive the scholarship.
Student To See Carlson
An appointment with Governor Frank Carlson has been made by Fred Thomas, College freshman and president of the Young Republican club. Thomas will make the trip to Topeka, where he will also confer with the chairman of the state Young Republican club Tuesday.
Towering Aggie
AGGIES
95
95
A. L. Bennett, veteran Oklahoma Aggie forward, is one of the few holders of Hank Iba's N.C.A.A. champion team last year. Bennett reaches the six-foot-four mark.
Business Students Attend Mixer
Newly organized Associated Business students, pre-business students, and faculty danced and played cards in the Kansas and English rooms Wednesday night at the first mixer this year. A special program consisted of John Ise, professor of economics, who played the piano and sang, and the Modern Choir, under the direction of Haworth White, College junior, sang three numbers featuring Mary C. Daugherty as soloist.
EXTRA SPECIAL—EXTRA VALUES—
Washington. (UP)—The senate labor committee started today an extensive congressional review of national labor policy. The committee planned to hear kick-off statements from Senators Joseph Ball and James Murray and then the administration viewpoint as represented by Secretary of Labor Lewis B. Schwellenbach.
To Review Labor Policy
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Oklahoma Aggies On Another Win Streak
New York, UP)—Army and Seton Hall added to their perfect basketball record Wednesday night and Slippery Rock suffered its first defeat, but attention was going today to the Oklahoma Aggies, who started as "spoilers" and may end as national champs.
the Aggies who won the National Collegeate Athletic association champions last year, were not expected come close to repeating, since seven-foot Bob Kurland, the backbone of last season's team, was graduated. But they opened well, winning three games before suffering a one-point defeat at the hands of Long Island university at New York.
They came back to nip Texas by one point in a tournament, knocking Texas from the perfect-record list, and then upset Kentucky in the Sugar Bowl game, spoiling Kentucky's perfect record. The Kentuckians haven't lost since then, and are in the forefront for national recognition with 16 victories.
That victory shoved the Aggies back into the limelight, but an amazing 38 to 20 defeat by St. Louis university dropped them down again. Unperturbed, they started a new winning streak.
Wednesday night they defeated the tough Arkansas Razorbacks, 42 to 38, to make their season record 14 won and two lost, and their victories over Texas and Kentucky, neither of whom have lost another game, made it impossible to ignore their tournament possibilities.
Army, led by Jim Rawers with 12 points and Arnold Galifaith with 11, swamped Kings Point Merchant Marine, 60 to 30, for the Cadets' fifth victory.
victory. Seton Hall got past Villanova, 55 to 46, for its 16th straight and appeared to be almost certain to get a bid for participation in the national invitational meet at New York
Westminster dropped Slipper Rock from the perfect-record list.
St. Joseph's 65, Catholic university
1.
Army 60, Kings Point 30.
Navy 55, Maryland 27.
Seton Hall 55, Villanova 46.
Penn 60, Gottschau 53.
Fordham 55, St. Peter's 33,
15, 68, Milkshower 54
College Basketball
Emph. 51,
Westminster 51, Slippery Rock Teachers 46.
Tulane 60. Miami 39.
dunne University Missouri 50, Washington U. (Mo.) 45
45. Brown 76, Tufts 63.
Oklahoma A. & M. 42, Arkanss
$
Trenton State Teachers 49, Jersey City Teachers 42.
St. Mary's (Mich.) 35, Wisconsin U. Extension school 33.
Akron 71, Youngstown 41.
St. Francis 60, Gannon college 51.
Valparaiso 78, Western Michigan
77
Pittsburg 55, Bethany 47.
Allright 47, Sorenton 41.
Dickinson college 77, Elizabeth-town 38.
Boston U. 75, New Hampshire 59 Missouri Mines 45, Springfield Teachers 35.
Loyola (Md.) 75, Johns Hopkins 66 Indiana State Teachers 86, Hanover 35.
Oregon 45, Idaho 43.
West Texas State college 45, Furman 43.
MU Tops Washington In Last Minute Rally
Columbia, Mo. (UP)—Withstanding a last minute rally, the University of Missouri downed the University of Washington of St. Louis here Wednesday 50-45.
Trailing 26 to 17 at halftime, the University of Washington roared back in the last few minutes of Ipay to come within several points of the Tigers. However a field goal and a free throw by Darrell Lorrance in the last minute of play put the game on ice for Missouri.
on ice for Missouri.
Hadley Hasemeyer of Washington was the high scorer with 14 points while Dan Pippin and Lorrance of the Tigers each accounted for 10 points.
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 23,1947
Kansan Comments
K.U. Dances
For the second time in two months, the All Student Council social committee has accepted the resignation of an A.S.C. dance manager.
The first resignation was tendered because of pressure of scholastic and other extra-curricular duties. The second came as a result of a clash over the question of what class dances are for.
The dance manager (the most recent one) had the idea that a class party was an occasion to bring better music to the Hill than campus bands furnish, an occasion to have a big delightful party, that making money was less important than having a good time.
The junior class officers feel that the purpose of having class parties is to have a good party, yes, but making money was much more important than bringing a "name" band to the campus.
The dance manager thought that he could pay $500 to bring in an outside band, avoid having to make a choice from the six Hill bands, and still make money. The junior class officers felt that while Matt Betton might be better than the local bands, he wouldn't bring in $300 more than a local band. Their strongest argument is that so far no all-University dance has made money this year, regardless of the band.
There's probably no way of deciding whether Matt Betton could be a money-maker for the junior class unless he is brought here. We think that students would regard the Junior Prom just as they have regarded other all-University dances this year. They say, "Swell, let's have a big dance;" then they go to a place where they can have their own crowd.
Most of the school dances this year—midweeks, varieties and class dances—have been rather stilted affairs at their best and a downright bore at their worst. Best-liked University entertainment this year, in our opinion, was the Carnival where by the very nature of the affair, students had to unbend and have a good time.
The increased population of K.U. seems to be responsible for this attitude of ignoring everyone except a close circle of friends. Even the most accomplished name - recaller knows only a small percentage of the University family now. When ever he goes to a dance, he finds it difficult to find anyone he knows unless he's brought his own group with him.
The University Daily Kansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., Naca-
on Eagar Journal Press, Inland District Press,
and the Kentucky Press. Represented by the National Ad-
vertising Services Jackson Ave., New York City.
Managing Editor Charles Roof
Asst. Managing Editor Jane Anderson
Makeup Editor Bille Marie Hamilton
Business Manager Bill Donovay
Advertising Manager Margery Handy
Circulation Manager John McCormick
Education Manager Edward Steward
Asst. Telegraph Ed. R. T. Kingman
City Editor R. T. Kingman
The University students don't have a feeling of being friends with each other. They don't know each other and by their attitude at dances, they don't give themselves an opportunity to lengthen their list of friend
Earlier this year, a student proteed because he had so much difficulty in trying to "tag" at a dance. He said that when he tried to cut in on a girl he'd like to dance with, the girl's date would turn a disapproving eye on him and dance on.
This student was trying to break down the wall between those he knew and those he didn't know. One student, however, couldn't expect to change this current attitude. Only the social committee and the dance manager can do the ice-breaking. We have a suggestion we'd like to see tried. We know it has worked other places, and we see no reason why it wouldn't work here.
The Kansas Press Association
1947 Member
National Editorial Association
A FREE PRESS - YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW
Start the dance with a grand march. Then have a date dance. Then have a circle dance. Then another date dance. And another tag dance. Keep mixing up date and tag and circle dances.
If this doesn't break down those circles of protection everyone has built around himself, nothing will. Dances have to be fun or the crowds will go elsewhere.
Mind-Changing
In a couple of weeks, several hundred students are going to leave the University clutching a sheepskin which says they have survived four years of, to use a coined phrase, blood, sweat and tears.
Talk to any of them right now. If you ask them if they're glad they're getting out, most of them first will tell you they wouldn't serve another year's sentence here for love or money. But if you press them further, they probably will admit that they're going to miss being here. Human nature is such that one always feels a little pang of sorrow at leaving any place where he has had a good time.
Proof of the fact that graduates do remember the University is the number of gifts from alumni. These range from outright donations to the University through gifts of buildings and equipment to loan funds and scholarship funds. Look at the list of such funds in the front of the University catalog. It's amazingly long.
These persons who make these donations aren't any different from the students who are being graduated this year. They have more money now, and they think that their University training has helped them to earn this money. So they show their appreciation by returning some of that money to aid other students to get the benefits of an education at K.U.
Some of this year's graduates may feel that they never want to even hear of this place again, but a few years will change their minds just as a few years changed the minds of the graduates of former years. And this year's graduates can help the students of tomorrow by remembering that a small gift from them may mean a college education for someone else in the future.
Second semester is going to be much rougher on College students trying to fill division and junior-senior hour requirements. The College isn't offering "The Motion Picture" or "Music Appreciation" or even "Early Morning Bird Calls".
No Sweepstakes Ticket For Me
Fat housewives and bald janitors grinned into the mike and mumbled happily about winning $100,000 in the Irish sweepstakes. I saw them in the newsreels, and it set me to thinking—maybe I should buy an Irish sweepstakes ticket.
By RHODA MORRISON (Daily Kansan Staff Writer)
Then I got to thinking about our family and I concluded we were a nondescript bunch. We never won prizes or fame or anything.
Take Mother, for instance. Her only claim to fame was the role she had in a high school play. It was a scenic role, she always said. She spoke no lines. She walked across the stage and she carried a tennis racket. She was "Daisy, the Athletic Girl."
Dad did a little better. One summer between college years, he traveled around the country with the circus, barking for the Two-Headed Calf."
As for me, I gave great theatrical promise. In Sunday school dramas I played before capacity audiences of mamas and papas as an "Easter Lily" and a "Spring Breeze." In the fifth grade health habits play, I was a "Beet" in a crepe paper costume.
The kid brother also has done better for himself. He survived the "Easter Bunny" in Sunday school and actually reached the "Butter" stage in high school. Then on the
night of his big buttering, he was humiliated by fate. He came down with the measles.
As for winning prizes, the family lagged there, too. Once when I was six, the grade school held a sort of spring track meet and I won the tricycle race. As I recall, once the kid brother won a fruit cake on the punch board.
Of course, if you want to count Dad's exploits on the punchboard, the family record rises.
Once we did win something else.
It was in the era when every company was giving away cars for the
He gambled on them wildly, throwing caution to the winds, to come home laden with goey chocolate covered marshmallows. We thought they were wonderful but mother made us each drink a glass of milk before we could eat them. She always said that if our growth was ever stunted or we were otherwise physically abnormal, it was because we ate up the poisonous things Pop won on the punch boards.
best letter saying, "I use Bubz Bubble Bath because"—in 25 words or less. We all slaved hours over a truly literary masterpiece about why we used a certain brand of paper towel. We were sure we would win a new automobile. Well, we won all right—12 dozen rolls of toilet paper.
Dad was astounded. Ye Gods, he gasped weakly, what did they thinkwe were running, a nursery school?
Mother, with her practical eye to the future, bore up under it much better. She thought it was rice and economical. Why, we could store them in the basement and have a supply for the rest of our natural lives.
Pop said that was fine but when he reached a ripe old age and was ready to start for heaven, he wanted to be free to go. He couldn't see forcing himself to hang on a few more years just to use up the paper stock.
The final outcome was that the kid brother, under protest, drove mother around to hospitals and orphanages where she distributed our essay prize.
So, on second thought, I don't think I'll buy a sweepstakes ticket. Hospitals and orphanages would hardly escape my consolation prize of 12 dozen bales of hay. Not that they need to worry. Our family never wins anything, anyhow.
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JANUARY 23,1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Official Bulletin
Jan. 23,1947
Applications for positions of K-Book editor and business manager must be taken to Student Organization window of university business office by Feb. 15. *Address applications to Publications Committee, A.S.C.
- * *
---
The University Players will meet at 7 p.m. Thursday, in the Little Theater, Green Hall.
The KU Chapter of the American Veterans Committee is giving a Free Dance this coming Friday evening, Jan. 24, at the Kansan Room of the Union. (It will begin immediately following the basketball game at 9 p.m. to 12:00) Stag or drag. Everyone is welcome.
Deutscher Verin Donnerstag um
4:30 in 402 Fraser.
Chemistry Club will meet at 4:00 p.m. Thursday, in room 305 Bailey. Dr.Hume will speak on a phase of the Atomic Bomb: "Radioactive Elements from Uranian Fission." All members and anyone else interested are invited.
★ ★ ★
Sociology Club meeting scheduled for Thursday afternoon is postponed. * * *
The International Relations Club will hold a business meeting at 4:30 p.m. Thursday, in the Kansas Room of the Union.
The houses receiving cups for homecoming House Decoration must have them at Roberts Jewelry store by Jam. 25th for engraving.
A. S.C. Social Committee meeting at 5:00 p.m. Thursday in the Dean of Women's Office in Frank Strong.
All members of the February graduating class of the School of Business who are hoping to be placed through the Business Placement Bureau and any other students available for permanent employment in February please note the School of Business bulletin board for announcement of interview schedules throughout the month of January.
1
Graduate Record Examination,
Feb. 3, 4, 1947. Applications may be
secured in 2A Frank Strong.
* * *
Seniors interested in an investment banking career in New York should arrange for interview Jan. 25 with Wingate Bixby, vice president of the Discount Corp. New York City. This is an opportunity. See Frank, Business Placement Bureau, 212 Frank Strong.
杂 杂 杂
The All Student Council has declared a vacancy, to be filed by a representative of the Pachacamac party from District II, the Engineering School. Petitions must be filed with the secretary of the A.S.C. not later than Monday, Jan. 27.
There will be an important meeting of Alpha Phi Omega, at 8:00 p.m. Thursday in room 200 Frank Strong.
赤 难。 串
Occupational Therapy Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, in room 312 Frank Strong. Miss Lilyan Warner, Physical Therapist at Watkins Hospital will be the speaker. Election of officers.
京 京 京
"Juvenile Delinquency" and "Boy in Court" will be shown at the Y.M.-C.A. movie forum, 4 p.m. Thursday in Little Theater, Green Hall. Dr. Bert Nash of the Educational Clinic will lead a short discussion.
**
The Christian Science Organization will hold its regular weekly meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Danforth Chapel. Members of the faculty, graduates and students of the University are invited.
Want A Locomotive?
Minneapolis, Minn. (UP) — The word "locomotive" is taboo in one Minneapolis household.
A toy engine on a youthful family member's train was broken beyond repair. It was impossible to replace it so the family inserted a want asking for a "standard gauge locomotive, any condition."
motive, any contention. Among other answers to the ad was one from a Wisconsin man who had a 60-ton locomotive.
and a 60-ton locomotive. Others included two junked train engines and two "small" 3,000-pound locomotives.
Man Shops For Wife's Corset; Makes Page One
Indianapolis, (UP) — Scott Hargis had a hard time convincing his wife "there was nothing to it."
Hargis went into a department store shopping for a corset for his wife. Just as he was measuring it, a photographer's flash bulb exploded.
The picture made page one, of course.
Blind Children Gain Poise By Skating
St. Louis, (UP)—The children were out there on the floor of the brilliantly lighted gymnasium, trying to cut figures and laughing just like any other happy group of youngsters on skates.
But these kids were blind
Supt. Robert H. Thompson of the Missouri School for the Blind said they were doing all right, too. Besides having a lot of fun, he explained, they were learning poise and confidence, mostly confidence.
"I don't know how they do it, and they can't tell you themselves," Mr. Thompson said. "But I think they have fewer spills and collisions out there on the floor than any normal bunch of kids would have."
Roller skating has been part of the school's curriculum for a number of years. Mr. Thompson said, and the kids would rather skate than eat.
"The blind develop physically only through exercise," he pointed out. "A sighted person learns by imitation of the things he sees, but the blind can't do that. Every grace they have is developed by their own efforts."
Fiber-wheeled skates are a must for use of the blind. "A rubber-tired job would just mean disaster for one of our kids," Mr. Thompson said. "Too silent. The skaters know the proximity of an obstruction mostly through sound and the rubber stops that as well as other vibration."
"The kids are wild about skating," he said, "but I don't think I'll ever get used to it. After about five minutes of watching them I break out in a cold sweat and start biting my nails. That's when I leave."
Find Pre-war Cigars
Luverne, Minn. (UF)—Workmen found several boxes of cigars in the old Central Hotel building when it was razed. After smoking them they agreed they were "better than many we smoked during the war." They had been hidden for several years and were believed to be part of a burglar's cache.
More Than One Way
Chicago. (UP)—Firemen fighting a small apartment house fire found a snowbound automobile in front of a fire plug. They couldn't get the hose around the car and they couldn't move the car. So they broke the front windows with a pike and ran the hose through the car.
Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
Classified Advertising Rates
Classified item One day Three days Five days 25 words or less 35c 65c 90c additional words 1c 2e 3c
Lost
PINK Plastic rimmed glasses. If found please call 315J-7. -24-
Found
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VETERANS Wife or other to care for
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model portable typewriter in good co-
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KEUFEL AND Esser slide rule, logog
duplex or decirig. Call 2866-W after
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TO RENT 2 bedroom furniture or un-
furnished apartment or house. Call Art
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Business Services
TYPING. Term papers and reports. Dom
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your radio to WARD's Service Dept.
efficient, quick repair equipment, repi
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NEW Remington portable typewriter,
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Art Ruppenthal, 1131 Vermont.
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It Takes Candor To Be Well Dressed
'Women Aren't Honest About Buying Clothes'
Hollywood. (UP)—Legs, thin and thick, shaped and shapeless, should be camouflaged, declares Jane Greer, one of the few movie stars who will admit nature didn't leave her flawless.
less.
"My legs are thin," she admitted.
"But I hope you can't tell. I wear short skirts, and tight ones, and light-colored stockings. They make my legs look bigger and better.
"Obviously, a girl with piano legs should do just the opposite. Long skirts, with a flare. And dark shades in stockings."
Jane learned about legs, and a lot of other clothes tricks, during the six years she spent studying dress design at the National Art school of Washington, D.C.
Not enough women study the sort of clothes they should wear, she believes. And when they go shopping they're not honest about it.
"I think that's particularly true of overweight women," she said. "They fool themselves—promise to diet, but never do. Just fall for the next chocolate nut sundae. But they think about how slender they are going to be and they buy clothes to
And those tight clothes, she sighed,
actually make them look heavier
than ever.
advice.
"Clothes that are too old or too young only accent the thing you want to avoid—extreme youth or old age."
F. B. Kirk, girl, Jane advises
It takes candor, and lots of it, to be well-dressed, Jane said. Don't be afraid to dress your age, is her advice.
For hippy girls, Jane advises shoulder pads to balance the figure. For thin ones, she says never wear a skirt on a bathing suit.
"Just stick to tights," she advises. "The boys will look longer—and oftener."
And to tall girls she says steer clear of low heels. It's a matter of psychology.
"When boys see a tall girl in flats, they think, gosh, she's tall even without heels." But if she goes in for three-inchers, people think. It's those high heels she wears that make her look tall."
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 23,1947
Government Asks:
'More Evidence Or No Case For Portal-To-Portal'
Washington. (UP)—The government demanded today that the Mount Clemens Pottery company, key portal-to-portal pay suit, be thrown out of court unless evidence can be produced of more unpaid working time than is now claimed.
The demand was made in a brief filed by Atty. Gen. Tom C. Clark with Federal Judge Frank A. Picard of Detroit.
Judge Picard will decide the Mount Clemens case under a Supreme Court mandate to determine how much of the unpaid working time claimed by 289 pottery workers is substantial enough to require payment.
The government brief was filed as Judge Picard was brought under fire for a second time before a senate indirectly subcommittee.
Theodore R. Iseman, Chrysler corporation attorney, gave the subcommittee documentary evidence to support the oral charge he made last week that the judge once described himself as "pro-labor." The previous charge had brought from one senator a suggestion that Judge Picard be investigated "with a view to impeachment."
Mr. Clark said Judge Picard should "take into account not only the percentage relationship that a particular period of preliminary activity bears to the work week. . . but also the effects of the decision in view of the 'realities of the industrial world.'"
He said present evidence in the case may be inadequate and suggested the taking of additional testimony.
"If the findings of this court do not disclose periods of preliminary activity of longer duration than those appearing in the present record the 'de minimus' rule would be applicable and the suit should be discharged." Mr. Clark said.
(The de minimus rule holds that legal relief may not be sought for trivial matters.)
The Supreme Court ruling in the Mount Clemens case upheld the right of workers to portal-to-portal pay. This decision touched off the current wave of portal suits by unions. The total now has reached almost five billion dollars.
The treasury already has ruled that employers who are required to make portal payment may get tax relief for the years involved.
In addition, army and navy officials estimate they may have to pay over a billion dollars to reimburse cost-plus war contractors who are forced to make retroactive portal payments.
The Mount Clemens case was filed by the CIO Pottery Workers union. Walking time between time clocks and working places was estimated by some workers as six to eight minutes a day.
But Mr. Clark said in his brief that "these estimates included time spent in stopping along the way, conversations and other purely private matters."
Estimates on "make-ready" time,
Mr. Clark said, ranged from "practically nothing to about three minutes."
He contended that the Supreme Court decision required the exclusion of much of this time under the de minimus rule.
YMCA Discusses Plans For Spring Semester
Plans for spring semester Y.M.-C.A. activities for freshmen were discussed at a recent cabinet meeting in the Union building, Robert Thayer, freshman 'Y' president, said today.
Ray Evans, business senior, will speak at the group's first meeting of the new semester Feb. 18, and an hour dance will be held for YM-YW freshmen March 4.
Union Executive Board Plans Feb.17 Dance
Plans for the Sweetheart Swing to be held Feb. 17 were made by the student union executive board at its meeting Wednesday night. Keith Wilson, vice-president of the student union activities committee, was appointed chairman in charge of arrangements for the dance.
In an effort to rejuvenate its committees, the board announced that applications from those students interested in working on the committees would be taken Feb. 17 in the Union Activities office.
Four Students Named To Intercollegiate UN
Dorothy Heschmeyer, College junior, William Tincher, College freshman, Margaret van der Smissen, College sophomore, and Kenneth Beck, College junior, have been named to the executive committee of the National Intercollegiate United Nations committee.
The four will work with Jean Moore, first year law student, who was named recently as national chairman of the first national convention here next November.
Dr. Nash Speaks Today On Juvenile Crime Plan
"Can We Stop Juvenile Crime" will be the title of a talk to be given by Dr. Bert Nash, School of Education, at a meeting sponsored by the Y.M.-C.A. at 4 p.m. today in the little theater, of Green hall.
The fourth in a series of march of time films will be shown preceding the talk by Dr. Nash. Previous films shown this semester have dealt with domestic and world problems. Robert Davis will be in charge of the meeting.
Dames Have 'Interest' Meet
The K. U. Dames "Interest Night" meeting was held Wednesday night in 32. Frank Strong hall. Mrs. Louise Kellogg was in charge of the program and was assisted by Mrs. Wilma Conwell and Mrs. Dee Bergstrom.
Star Strike Still On
Kansas City, Mo. (UP) — The strike of contract carriers at the Kansas City Star, this city's only metropolitan newspaper, moved into its seventh day today.
ProgressiveParty Votes To Admit Coed Members
The new K.U. Progressive political party decided Wednesday night to admit women members, the first attempt at a mixed political organization in several years.
Four organization committees were set up, the constitutional, publicity, platform, and precinct committees. The University and the surrounding area were divided into 21 precincts and two arbitrary percinct leaders were chosen.
A temporary governmental outline was read and adopted, to be in effect until the constitutional committee draws up a party constitution.
Precinct leaders are Jack Jackson, Thomas Alexander, Charles Roter, Robert Maupin, Robert Duckworth, Vincent Baker, Fred Thomas, Robert Tinklepaugh, John Crump, John Rader, John Regs, and Robert Barnes.
Publicity committee members are Charles Roter, chairman, Roy Rogers, William Adams, Lawrence Brown, and Evans Francis.
Since that time, the methods of exploration have not changed greatly except in the use of aerial photography. Whereas stream patterns, ridges, and hills can be clearly seen in air photographs even in the jungle areas, ground parties cutting their trails through the jungle with machetes must work almost blindly.
Platform committee members are Donald Wyman, chairman, Jack Jackson, John Rader, Vincent Baker, Arthur Moss, Thomas Alexander, Charles Shearer, Jay Humphreys, and William Sands.
Constitutional committee members are Jack Elliott, chairman, Mead Almond, Jean Moore, Bob Tinklepaugh, and John Rees.
Precinct committee members are Ernest Friesen, chairman, Jack Jackson, John Crump, Robert Maupin, Bailey Chaney, Robert Barnes, and James Hastings.
Fowler Reading Room
Changed To Quonset Hut
Mr. Nixon explained that exploration is done by establishing a first base camp of thatch shelters preferably along a stream. Parties under native leaders are then sent out in selected directions and temporary or "spike" camps are established. From these, detailed explorations and geologic surveys are carried out by field geologists and engineers. Natives go up the tallest trees, get a glimpse of the surrounding jungle, and spot the location of hills and ridges that deserve investigation.
Sun-Tanned Geologist Returns To Kansas Winter, 'Civilized' Life
Wearing a heavy suntan, fresh from 16 months in South America, Ear K. Nixon, newly-arrived geologist with the state geological survey office looks strangely out-of-place in the middle of a Kansas winter. But, regardless of the change of climate, he's glad to be back enjoying the comforts of what he calls "civilized life."
The reading room for Western Civilization in Fowler Shops will be closed at 10 p.m. Friday. R. C. Janeway, assistant director of the University library, announced today.
A new reading room will be opened Monday in the quosset hut study hall north of Frank Strong hall.
"Two weeks ago," Mr. Nixon said, "I was in a field camp in the delta country of the Orinoco river in Venezuela. Almost all of this county is covered by heavy jungle vegetation. Our camp consisted of palm thatched huts. We slept in hammocks under mosquito nets. Our geologic field work was hampered almost daily by tropical rains. Yes, it's good to be hack."
Mr. Nixon was resident engineer in charge of exploration for iron ore for a subsidiary of the U.S. Steel corporation. No iron ore is being produced in Venezuela yet, although one large deposit not far from the Orinoco river is being developed. The regional area were explored under Mr. Nixon's direction in 1930, 1931, and 1932.
Fevers, snakes, and the insects of the tropical jungles are usually overrated. Mr. Nixon remarked. He admitted that he had been "treed" by a wild boar several times. Members of his native crews, he said, were occasionally bitten by snakes. The insects of the real scourge of the tropics Mr. Nixon said. Make life more uncomfortable! In the field engineer than the presence of snakes and alligators. The Jungle is usually quiet."
While Mr. Nixon was in Venezuela, his wife and son, Allan, 11 lived in Ciudad Bolivar, a river town about 250 miles from the mouth of the Orinoco river. Mr. Nixon has a daughter, Audrey, who is a senior at Stanford university. A former K.U. student from 1933 to 1916, Mr. Nixon was graduated from the University of Wisconsin. Mrs. Nixon was graduated from K.U. in 1917.
News of the World
Editor Sees April Housing Price Drop
Kansas City, Mo. (UP)—Arthur A. Hood, editor of the American Lumberman's magazine, Chicago, said today that the construction industry would return to a buyer's market starting as early as April or May.
"When building prices settle down, the house of today, which is bringing 100 per cent more than pre-war prices, will cost 40 per cent above, pre-war prices."
"A $6,000 pre-war house is likely (to be priced at $8,000 to $8,500, instead of $11,000 to $12,000 as asked now." he explained.
Mr. Hood said hundreds of thousands of unfinished houses hit the market this winter, priced under "black market buying conditions at an extra $000 to $800, owing to the cost run-up of six to eight months delay." Many, he added, are unsold.
"The industry is pricing itself out of business," he continued. "Not one in 10 G.L.'s can afford the excessive down payments and monthly payments. I look for the building material prices to drop."
"You've never seen so much lumber as is rolling out in the northwest. Production of all building materials will reach a 20-year peak by spring."
Marshall, Truma Confer,
Achemes Promises to Stay
Washington. (UP)—Secretary of State George C. Marshall scheduled his second formal conference with President Truman today after receiving from Undersecretary of State Dean Acheson a promise to stay on in his job for several months.
Secretary Marshall, it was learned, rejected Mr. Acheson's resignation Wednesday. He appealed to him to continue at least until after Secretary Marshall returns from the Big Four conference at Moscow in March.
Sprague Replaces Denfeld
As Navy Personnel Chief
Washington. (UP)—Adm. Louis E. Denfeld will take command of the Pacific fleet about March 1, the navy has announced, relieving Adm. John H. Towers.
Two men will take on the personnel posts to be vacated by Ad-Adm. William M. Fechteler will bemiral Denfeld in February. Vice come deputy chief of naval operation (personnel). Rear Adm. Thomas Sprague, now deputy of naval personnel and assistant chief of naval personnel, will relieve Admiral Denfeld as chief of naval personnel.
*Poland Sold Down River,
Polish Ambassador Charges*
Washington. (UP)—Former Polish Ambassador Jan Ciechanowski charged today that the late President Roosevelt and former British Prime Minister Winston Church sold Poland "down the river" to communism by appeasing Premier Josei Stalin.
He also charged that Premier Stalin "stood up" his Big Three partners by failing to show up at a projected secret meeting in Canada in 1943. This was branded "absolutely false" by retiring secretary of State James F. Byrnes.
Marine General Geiger Dies
Bethseda, M1. (UP)—Lt. Gen. Roy S. Geiger, formerly commanding general of the fleet marine forces of the Pacific, died today at Bethseda naval hospital. He was 62.
General Geiger commanded the amphibious operations in the invasion of Okinawa.
Hoover Will Go To Germany
Washington. (UP)—Former President Herbert Hoover announced Wednesday that he had agreed at President Truman's request to go to Germany and make a study of food conditions with a view toward relieving "some of the burden on the American taxpayers."
'Continue To Help Chinese'—Stettinius
Junction City, Kan., (UP)—Former U. S. secretary of state Edward R. Stettinius, jr., called for continued aid to the Chinese in an address here last night opening the sixth annual appeal of united service to China.
Little
Stettinian backed his plea with a message from Gen. George C. Marshall, the new secretary of state, who stated such assistance to "a courageous and long suffering people will be making a definite contribution toward the last peace which is the hope of civilization throughout the world."
"A bridge of friendship between China and the United States has been in the making for over 100 years." Stettinius said. "Throughout this century benefits of a material nature have accrued far beyond dollar measurement to both the Chinese and ourselves.
On the platform with Stettinius in the crowded municipal auditorium here were V. K. Wellington Koo, Chinese ambassador; Kansas Governor Carlson, and Mitton S. Eisenhower, president of Kansas State college.
French Reject Request To Repatriate Germans
Washington. (UP)—France in effect has rejected a United States request that she return 620,000 German prisoners of war, used on French farms and factories to their homes without delay, it was revealed today.
The French made a counterproposal that a third party, probably a non-governmental agency, be asked to study the problem and prepare a long-range plan of repatriation.
Washington. (UP)—Rep. Egos Dett. (D.-Tex.) asked congress Wednesday to change the immigration laws to bar anyone who has served in an enemy military force and persons engaged in subversive activities.
Asks Immigration Ban
Washington. (UP) — Republican senators won their first test of strength with the Democratic minority Wednesday when the senate voted to continue the war investigating committee for another year.
Missouri Bonus Proposed
War Investigation Goes On
Atlanta. (UP)—Acting Gov. M.E. Thompson said today that the Atlanta bank handling most of the state's business has recognized him as acting governor and is honoring checks drawn by him on a $100,000 executive department fund on deposit.
Bank Recognizes Thompson
As Acting Georgia Governor
The controversy between Mr. Thompson and Gov. Herman Talmadge over the office will be aired Monday when a new civic group calling itself "the aroused citizens of Georgia" holds a state-wide meeting on the issue.
Little America. (UP)—The Byrd Antarctic expedition suffered its third aerial mishap today when a helicopter crashed into the sea and sank 700 miles northeast of Scott island. The pilot and single passenger were picked up uninjured. The crash occurred as the plane took off from the aircraft carrier Philippine Sea.
Byrd Group Has Third Crash
High Farm Goal Is Set
Washington. (UP)—Secretary of Agriculture Clinton P. Anderson said today that in setting high 1947 farm production goals he was "gambling" that demand would remain high.
Be Pr
D clas eng tra the the Tue of I cha mit
University DAILY KANSAN
STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Friday, January 24, 1947
44th Year No. 76
Lawrence, Kansas
By Bibler
Little Man On Campus
I. DAILY KANZA
B. BURR
which he'd never taken chemistry."
"Sometimes I wish he'd never taken chemistry."
Betton Will Play For Prom, Gunther Says
Despite the controversy, the junior class will continue their plans to engage Matt Betton and his orchestra for the Junior Prom. John Gunther. A.S.C. social chairman, said at the meeting of the social committee Tuesday. Gunther has the approval of Karl Klooz, bursar, Keith Wilson, chairman of the A.S.C. auditing committee, and the junior class officers
Elizabeth Evans, junior class president, today denied the assertion that "the junior class officers opposed the hiring of Matt Benton for the Junior Prom March 1."
"I think that whatever the A.S.C. social committee decides will be all right with the junior class. After all, the constitution specifies that they shall make the choice, with the approval of the auditing committee," she continued.
Guather said, "The junior class is not trying to make money. We just want to break even, and I think we do it. If the purpose of a dance is to make money, then we have been mistaken in our attitude. We thought all along a dance was to entertain."
Upon Gunther's recommendation, the members of the social committee decided not to fill the position of dance manager, which was vacated upon the resignation of Jean Fisher until the spring semester.
Three varsities will be sponsored by the committee next semester. They will be the Junior Prom, the K-Club dance and the Senior Cake-walk. The weekends on which these dances will be held will be closed.
The so-called "constitutional" violations in the dance manager controversy are violations of All-Student Council bills, E. O. Stene, A.S.C. constitutional adviser, said today. He explained that bills setting student rules are passed by the A.S.C. under the powers granted in the constitution.
WEATHER
Kansas—Clear to partly cloudy today, tonight and Saturday. Continued mild. Low tonight 25-30 extreme west to 35-40 east.
Student Court To Hear Appeals
In an effort to clear up traffic cases before enrollment next semester, the student court will hear appeals from students who have five or less violations, in the business office of Frank Strong hall, between 4 and 5 p.m. today. This will be the last court session until finals are over, William McElheny, prosecuting attorney, announced.
Polio Dance Tickets Aren't Selling Well
"Ticket sale..."d collections are only 20 per cent of what we had expected," said Russell Brown II, president of Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity, as preparations for the Saturday night "March of Dimes" dance moved into the final stages.
The "March of Dimes" finances the foundation's fight against poliomyelitis, and the money is seriously needed to fight future epidemics like the one experienced last summer and fall. Many polio victims have been treated and cured who might otherwise have died or have been permanently crippled.
"We are not running an orchestra benefit," Brown commented, but as things stand now we may have to pay the orchestra all of the proceeds."
Phi Chi, honorary medical fraternity, has created a memorial fund for the late Maurice O'Leary, presiding senior of the fraternity, who died from polio last summer. Phi Chi will donate $25 annually to the "March of Dimes" drive.
The dance begins at 9 p.m. tomorrow in the Community building. Music will be furnished by Bob Douglas and his orchestra. Cokes will be served, and there will be entertainment during intermission. Blue and gold is to be the ballroom color scheme.
Two other medical fraternities have made donations. They are Nu Sigma Nu, $10, and Phi Beta Pi, $5.
'Thanks For Publicizing Lost Panties'
(Editor's note: Because of the unusual quality of this subject, the Daily Kansan departs slightly from its iron-clad rule against free advertising.) To the Editor:
We, the girls of Jolliffe hall, wish to express our appreciation of your aid and assistance in locating a portion of our missing garments.
tion of our mission.
The evening that your article, advising on the great loss, was the Daily Kansan, three kind women called, advising us that they had some similar articles in their possession which had been left on their front porch. They had been unable to think of an unembarrassing way of locating the owners and, therefore, decided to wait for some clue as to their identity. On claiming these articles we found most of the items all present and accounted for.
for.
Those still among the missing are: two pairs of Christmas panties, pink roses on white background, (sentimental value, present possessor, please note), other miscellaneous step-ins, one two-way stretch girdle, and two bras.
If some bashful boy has any or all of the above listed items in his possession, please call 355 and we will pick them up. No questions asked.
Again, thanking the Daily Kansan for its assistance, we remain.
The Jolliffe hall Girls
Veterans Must Pay Two Months' Premium
World War II veterans who want to reinstate their national service life insurance at the veterans' service office in Frank Strong hall must come prepared to pay two monthly premiums, Dr. Edwin R. Elbel, director of the University's veterans training service, said today. A check or money order will be accepted.
or money orders. Veterans may reinstate the insurance between now and Feb. 1. After that date a physical examination will be required for a policy that has elapsed for six months or more. Veterans wanting advice on other insurance problems should go to the veterans' administration contact office at 1035 Massachusetts.
R.O.T.C. Will Resume Summer Training Course
The army is resuming reserve officers' summer training, the University R.O.T.C. office has announced.
The course of training, to last six weeks, is required of advanced R.O.-T.C. students, and will normally T.C. students.
Sunnyside Construction To Be Completed March 1
Recent Good Weather Has Helped To Finish Project, Youngberg Says
"The entire Sunnyside housing project will be completed on or about March 1, providing open weather conditions prevail," Irwin Youngberg, director of the housing bureau, announced today.
'Phog May See Game Tonight
DR. F. C. ALLEN
rector of the housing bureau, amateur Mr. Youngberg said that the recent period of good weatner nishing of the project. The Sunnyside area east is now virtually con
***
Members of the K.U. basketball squad learned today that they have a double reason for seeking a victory over the Iowa State Cyclones in Hoch auditorium tonight.
It will be the last game this season at which the veteran coach, Forrest C. "Phog" Allen, can be a spectator. He and his wife will leave Lawrence tonight for a prolonged vacation at La Jolla, Calif.
La Jolla, the "Mrs. Allen will leave on the "City of St. Louis" leaving the Santa Fe station in Lawrence at 9:25 p.m. Dr. Allen said this morning that he might attend the Iowa State game until half time.
Onions To Orchids For Botanists
Students Really Eat Up Their Work
"I'm surely glad we have Howard Engleman to fill in," he added. "The boys are in good hands."
boys are at the vacation at La Jolla, where Dr. and Mrs. Allen will live in a cottage on the beach, will last "two or three months," Mrs. Allen estimated. They will return to Lawrence no later than April, she said.
Dr. Allen said that he wanted "very much to continue here as coach." He will reach retirement age in nine years.
"Success! Onions to orchids," exclaimed the three members of the Economic Botany class.
Economic Botany The smallest all-girl class at the University began planting vegetables and flowers last fall in the hotbeds of the greenhouse on the University grounds.
grounds.
They have had comparatively good luck with their plants, and secretly hope that their only menace, the red spider which has destroyed some plants, will make his home elsewhere.
have made colorful decorations during the winter.
Onions, lettuce, and radishes which they grew have furnished fresh vegetables for their dinner tables, and the marigolds and carnations
during the hatch Orchids which were planted by a group seven years ago are in bloom in the greenhouse. So, for the class of 1954 to enjoy orchids, the three students have started orchid seeds.
student life.
Last Tuesday the class made a visit to Kansas City to view nurseries and greenhouses. One of the points of interest was a mushroom cannery. The mushrooms were being grown in an abandoned rock quarry where there was no light and plenty of moisture.
The three gardeners are Ruby Asbury, Dorothy Taft, and Arleen Hale. Dr. Herr of the botany department is the instructor.
street is now virtually completed, and, good weather permitting, cement walks will be poured and blue grass seed sown to complete this section.
section.
"The F.P.H.A. has been forced to make the best use of limited funds, because of a rising cost of materials since original appropriations were made," Mr. Youngberg pointed out, "and we are fortunate that the 20 per cent reduction now being made on most projects of this nature will not affect the Sunnyside construction, which will be completed 100 per cent."
cent.
According to Mr. Youngberg, not one of the 48 people now living at Sunyside has expressed dissatisfaction with any of the facilities. Even during the extremely cold weather there were no major freeze-ups, and only the mud caused any real inconvenience. This last problem is now being remedied by the laying of cement walks.
Two more buildings at Sunnyside will be opened for occupancy tomorrow, and additional ones probably will be opened by the last of next week.
waiting list there.
The housing problem for single students is not as bad now as it was this fall, or at any time last year, according to Mr. Youngberg. New students are being placed in rooms as soon as they apply at the housing office.
week. The housing situation for married students is unchanged, and Mr. Youngberg anticipates no difficulty in the housing situation in the near future. All those students who were on the waiting list for Sunflower apartments have now been admitted, and at present there is no waiting list there.
"Any students hunting roommates with special qualifications can get them at the housing office. New students of all classifications and majoring in many different subjects are applying for rooms every day," Mr. Youngberg said.
I.S.A. Election Will Be Monday
The Independent Student's association annual election will be held from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday with polling booths in Frank Strong hall and the Union building and a booth in Watson library from 7 to 9 p.m.
in Watson's. "The election will be held to elect officers and representatives to serve on the I. S. A. council for the spring and fall semesters of 1947." Lois Thompson, election chairman said today. "All I. S. A. members are urged to vote; presentation of an I. S. A. card qualifies a student to ballot. Pictures and qualifications of all candidates will be posted at the polls for the information of voters."
Ray Evans Will Speak At Freshman Meeting
Ray Evans, College senior, will speak Feb. 18 at the first freshman Y.M.C.A. meeting next semester, according to Robert Thayer, freshman Y.M.C.A. president.
Y.M.C.A. president.
headed the roster of plans, discussed in a cabinet meeting, is an hour dance to be featured for Y.M.-Y.W. freshman groups, March 4.
Don McIlrath, chairman of the Y.M.-C.A. social committee will be in charge.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 24,1947
Put The Blame on Julius
From Fish To Cake Recipes Calendars Give The Dope
Even though you may have broken all the resolutions you made Dec. 31 at least you can be satisfied that one contribution to better living has been made if you've put up a 1947 calendar.
After going through 365 days looking at the same pictures above the dates and memorizing the phases of the moon, it's good to be able to thumb through something new.
Little did Julius Caesar or Pope Gregory know when they prescribed their calendars that there were going to be so many different colorful and decorative ways to tell what day it is.
The Julian calendar originated by Caesar designated three years of 365 days each to be followed by one of 366 days. After some changes as to the number of days in a month the system was adopted in Europe and America.
The Hebrew calendar reckons the date of creation 3,760 years and three months before the birth of Christ.
Pope Gregory XIII prescribed what is now known as the Gregorian calendar which is now in use in all countries of the world as the national calendar.
A sporting goods outfit has produced a calendar which gives a running account of the best times to fish right down to the hour. Others are filled with information which covers everything from how to bake a cake to the multiplication tables.
If you just don't care about having a lot of calendars hanging around you might adopt the perpetual calendar. By mathematical deductions you can determine the number of the day of the week for any given month and year. For instance, if you can't remember what day of the week you attended that party back in 1945 the perpetual calendar will help.
The first step is to take the last two figures of the year, add $ \frac{1}{4} $ of them to that figure, neglecting the remainder. Then add for the month
January or October, 1; May, 2; August,
3; February, March, or November.
4; June, 5; September or December,
6; April or July, 0. If it is leap year you add for January, 0;
and for February, 3.
Then add the day of the month you are trying to determine, and divide the sum of the three by seven. The remainder, carried over from the division, is the number of the day of the week. These deductions apply only to the present century.
Right now the problem is still one of trying to find out when Christmas comes this year and when our own birthday rolls around.
You can start right now marking the days with red circles and in another week we'll all be accustomed to 1947.
'The Ice Man Cometh'— After Firemen Leave Theta's
The ice man cometh to the Theta's, now that the fireman hath been there before him.
There was a small fire in the Kappa Alpha Theta sorority kitchen Thursday afternoon, when the motor of the refrigerator caught fire. The city fire department was called, and only negligible damage resulted.
University Daily Kansan
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year (in Lawrence add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan. every afternoon during the school year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holiday, February through March. Second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
Swinging High
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Dance to the Tunes Of JOE LANGWORTHY'S ORCHESTRA
Skyline Club
Phone 3339
2233 Haskell
Harris To Speak At Sectional Hi-Y
Paul Harris Jr., Vermont lecturer, author, and traveler will speak at a Sectional Hi-Y conference Wednesday at Haskell Institute.
The conference will be sponsored by the University Y.M.C.A., Haskell Hi-Y, and Liberty Memorial Hi-Y.
Leading discussion groups at the conference will be the Rev, Dr. E. F. Price, dean of the School of Religion; Dr. E. R. Elbel, professor of physical education; Dr. Calvin VanderWerf, associate professor of chemistry; the Rev, O. E. Allison, first Methodist church; and the Rev, Herbert Brockman, Centenary Methodist church.
Members of the planning committee of the conference are Alexander Matthews, Roger Price, Joseph M. Brown, Clifford Reynolds, Hardy Schuerman, and Robert Chesky.
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JANUAR
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ELIN
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4, 1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
JANUARY 24,1947
C
SOCIALLY SPEAKING
ELINOR BROWNE, SOCIETY EDITOR
ELINOR BROWNE, Society Editor
Nu Sigma Nu Initiates
Nu Sigma Nu, professional medical inernity, announces the initiation of its Brosius, Keith Kennard, William Hawley, Frank R. Frink, Larry McEwen, Warren McKay, J. DxKabler, Melvin Stevens, George McDonald, Paul Carpenter, Warren Kump, Alexander Mitchell, Charles Powell, Ward Benkelman, Bartlett Ramsey, Robert Fairchild, Jim Gerach, Hugh Buff, Richard Pokorney, Mack Carter, and Daniel Coats.
Newly elected officers of Kappa Upsilon of Phi Chi are presiding senior, Robert Adams; presiding junior, Paul Resler; secretary, Arden Almquist; judge advocate, Wesley Innes; house steward, David Rau; rush captain, Pieratt Johnson; sergeant-at-arms, James Winblad; social chairman, Scott Mowrey; librarians, Fyderick Timms and Daniel Thompson; song leader, Donald Becker. Other officers are treasurer, Thomas Batty; and public officer, Worman Jennings.
Carpenter Heads Nu Sig's
Phi Chi Holds Election
Carpenter
Newly elected officers of Nu Sigma Nu are president, Paul Carpenter; vice-president, John J. Wildgen; secretary, J. D. Kabler; treasurer, Dewey Nemec; historian, Charles Wheeler; custodian, Richard Pokorow.
***
Phi Chi's Have Dinner
Members of the medical class who will go to the University hospital in Kansas City next semester, were honored at a farewell dinner given by members of Phi Chi recently. Members of the departing class are Richard D. Gholson, Donald MacLean, Thomas Montgomery, Elias Thone, Benedict Budal, Robert Rorders, Lafe Bowers, Robert Hames, and Paul Hornung.
At the dinner a bronze plaque of dedication of the chapter house, in honor of Dr. W. J. Baumgartner, associate member, was unveiled.
The Sunflower chapter of the K. U. Dames held their bi-annual election of officers last night in the Dames' club room.
The new officers are Helene Fitzmorris, president; Duffy Calkins, vice-president; Bille Manson, secretary-treasurer; Jean Stodghill, program chairman; and Liz Schreiver, Social chairman.
Fitzmorris Will Head Sunflower Dames
An informal initiation of officers will be held Wednesday.
will be her next P.E. being made for a Valentine dance to be held Feb. 14. All University students and their wives are invited to attend.
Up and Coming A Calendar of Campus Events
Scotty enjoys music, has played the piano for a long time and entered several national music contests, but
dent publications on the camp. Her favorite sport, swimming, is evidenced by her membership in the Queck club. Scotty also likes ice skating, in which sport she said she "manages to stay horizontal 50 per cent of the time."
Tonight:
that political party. Being chairman of the A.S.C. publications committee gives Scotty the responsibility of supervising the publishing of the Jayhawker, the Kbook, the Dove, and all other student publications on the campus.
Inter - fraternity council dance,
Lawrence Country club, 9 to midnight.
After-game dance, sponsored by the American Veterans committee, Kansas room of the Union.
Band and orchestra dinner-dance, Kansas room of the Union, 6:30 to midnight.
Tomorrow night:
Signa Alpha Epsilon party, at the house, 2 to 4.
COEDS' CORNER
March of Dimes dance, sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity, Community building, 9 to midnight. ___
Twenty four members of the University Players met Thursday night to consider several plays, one of which will be chosen for the next production to be given sometime in March. Although a definite decision has not been made, it was announced that the cost would be selected from all-student tryouts.
University Players Consider New Plays
One of the plays under consideration, "The Epitaph" by Kjeld Abell, was read by Allen Crafton, professor of speech and faculty advisor of the group.
Five Foot Two, Eyes Of Blue— 'Scotty' Keeps Her Calendar Filled
Five foot two, eyes of blue, has anyone here seen Scotty?
As a member of the inner circle of N.O.W. she helps to determine policies of student government for that political party.
Short, blond Anne Scott, College junior, from Pratt, hasn't been called by her first name for so long that she doesn't answer to it anymore.
This enthusiastic advertising major, "Scotty" to her friends, has a list of activities that keeps her K-book calendar filled. She writes little notes to herself to remind her of the many meetings.
Scotty was advertising manager of the Daily Kansan last year and now serves on the Kansan Board, which chooses the chief executives of the Kansan staff and determines its policies. She is a member of Theta Sigma Phi, national honorary journalism fraternity.
Her intense interest in student government takes much of her time. She serves as a College district representative on the All Student council, and believes the council is really achieving something, considering the immense job it has to do. She has recently been appointed to the War Memorial Drive committee of the A.S.C.
As editor of the high school paper in Pratt, she chose journalism as her career. She enjoys being in so many activities, because she meets so many interesting people.
Scotty is a member of Kappa Alpha. Theta sorority. She was chairman of the Statewide Activities committee last year, and is a member of the Jay James and the Women's Executive committee, which determines the house rules for women, and which is working on a "Career for Women" conference to be held here in March.
an injured wrist has forced her to stop.
Wilda J. Hosler was elected president for next semester at a meeting of the Occupational Therapy club Thursday night.
O.T. Elects, Hears Physical Therapist
Margaret Ganslew was chosen vicepresident; Rose Ann Madden, secretary; and Dorothy Park, treasurer.
Miss Lilyan Warner, instructor in physical medicine spoke to 40 members of the club on the subject. "Physical Therapy." She explained the need for physical therapists, the requirements for entering the field, and the existing opportunities in this type of work.
Dr. Clifford P. Osborne, philosophy department chairman, returned to his teaching duties Thursday. He had been hospitalized since Jan. 8 after a fall on the ice on the 14th street hill.
Osborne Returns To Duties
Call K.U. 25 with your news.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 24,1947
SPOTLIGHT SPORTS
By BOB DELLINGER (Daily Kansan Sports Editor)
The inter-class track meet between freshman squad members and upper-class squad members will get under way this afternoon, but without spectators.
Coach Ray Kanehl said that spectators could not be admitted because there isn't room for them in the indoor track space in the stadium.
The meet will include all squad members, including lettermen, and advance figures promise a close result. The broad jump was run off yesterday to get the jumpers off the running track, and seven events will be run today and four tomorrow.
The mile run, 60-yard dash, 440-
yard run, 60-year hurdles, high jump,
shot put and pole vault will be
take care of today, leaving the
two-mile, low hurdles, half-mile,
and mile relay for Saturday.
Coach Howard Engleman of the Jayhawker cage squad pulled a surprise in the Colorado game by changing the squad into two units and shifting the units around all at once.
On the first unit, generally the starting lineup and the so-called "first string," are Gib Stramel, Charlie Black, Otto Schnellbacher, Owen Peck, Wendell Clark, and Ray Evans.
The second unit consists of six parts freshmen, namely, Harold England, Myron Enns, Claude Houchin, John Dewell, Orbon Tice, and Bill Sapp. Sophomore Jack Eskridge lends added height and ability to the number two unit.
period * * *
Enns and England are temporarily lost to the squad because of injuries but both will probably be back at full strength after the vacation no-game period of 12 days.
With the duties of coaching weighing heavily, Howard Engleman has withdrawn from city league competition with the Ober's-Legion team, thereby weakening that team considerably.
Other strong teams in the league are composed of present and former K.U. stars, including the top-notch Poehler's, Rexall, and the Blanks aggregations.
Rumor or fact has it that the Law-
rence American Legion team will be an all-star team chosen of city league stars who are members of the Legion.
We'd like to call attention to a strong Legion outfit operating in the south end of the state which has such top men as Frank Groves, 6-foot 7-inch former M. & O. forward, and Phil Moore, 6-foot 6-inch former center for Southwest.
Another "hot rock" on the team is Dick Hatfield, who hasn't had much, if any, college experience, but used to trade baskets on even terms with Gerald Tucker, when that worthy was in high school. Hatfield recently tallied 11 goals as the squad whipped an Oklahoma aggregation.
The team operates from Arkansas City, and while it is a long trip for a team lacking much financial backing, a game between the two squads might draw a fair-sized crowd.
It's worth bearing in mind, especially as the Legion here is dickering for the possibility of the state Legion tournament at Lawrence, and the southern aggregation would be a strong contender.
College Basketball
Ithaca 47, St. Bonaventure 46,
Ft. Sheridan 71, Great Lakes 51,
Jacksonville NAS 43, Florida 41,
Georgetown 57, Western Kentuck
12
DePauw 64, Earlham 37.
Loyola of New Orleans 70, U. of Mexico 45.
Canisius 51, Niagara 50.
Ottawa 49, Emporia State college
89.
Murray State 66, Evansville 44.
Attorney 44.
Jayhawkers Meet Cyclones Tonight In Fourth Try To Win Big Six Game
Two important Big Six games will mark weekend play with Kansas meet second-place Iowa State at 7:30 tonight at Lawrence and undefeated Missouri taking on Oklahoma tomorrow.
Coach Menze stated that he fears tonight's contest with the Jayhawkers, even though the Kansans are firmly embedded in the conference cellar. Menze reasoned that the Jayhawkers are ready to explode and might pick tonight to do it.
Coach Louis Menze starts his Iowa State Cyclones on a make-or-break road trip with Kansas as the first stop. If the Cyclones can win tonight and at Oklahoma Feb. 1, they will definitely be established as a title threat
Coach Howard Engleman of the Jayhawkers is expected to again resort to his "unit system" of substituting with his starters being replaced five at a time. Engleman introduced the system at Boulder last week, and the second unit, though mainly freshmen, displayed itself well.
For the first time this year, Kansas will have a slight height edge with the average of 6 feet 2.3 inches of the Jayhawkers shading the 6 feet 1.3 inches of the Cyclones. The tallest starter will be Don Paulsen, 6-foot 5-inch Iowa State center.
Tomorrow will see the last Big Six chance to knock Missouri within reach of the pursuing teams as the unbeaten Tigers travel to Norman to invade the lair of the Oklahoma Sooners.
The Sooners with two victories and an upset defeat at the hands of Nebraska, are tied with Iowa State, one and a half games behind the pace-setting Missourians.
The game will also mark the last of Kansas' hopes at salvaging a title tie, for a Missouri victory would put the Tigers out of reach of Kansas permanently.
The powerful Sooners, who were upset 41-44 at Lincoln by the Cornhuskers, will rank as slight favorites because of the home court advantage.
Two of the league's top six scorers. Paul County and Gerald Tucker, will show their wares for the Sooners while Dan Pippin and Thornton Jenkins will represent Missouri's share in the first ten. Pippin ranks fourth with 45 points in four games.
Probable starters for tonight's game are:
IOWA STATE
KANSAS
Wehde ... F. Stramet
Myers ... F. Black
Paulsen ... C. Schnellbacher
Norman ... G. Clark
Block ... G. Evans
Coach George Sauer and assistants Bob Ingalls, Vic Bradford, and Wayne Replogle will attend the Big Six coaches meeting today and tomorrow at the Hotel Muehlebach in Kansas City, Mo. Conference rules and selection of officials will be discussed.
A preliminary game will be played at 6 p.m. between two teams chosen from the Kansas "B" squad.
Coaches To Attend Meet
Cowboys, Razorbacks Play Return Game
(By United Press)
The Arkansas Razorbacks will step out of the Southwest conference tonight for a return match with defending national champion Oklahoma A. and M. at Oklahoma City
The Razorbacks, deadlocked with Texas at the top of the Southwest loop, will be seeking to avenge a 38 to 42 setback suffered at the hands of the Cowboys Wednesday night.
Despite four straight conference wins, the Porkers still were not rated in the same class with the fast-breaking Steers of Texas—but a victory tonight over the Aggies, the only team this year to lick Texas, will add fuel to their hopes.
Texas has lost only one game in 15 starts, and boasts victories over Long Island university, DePaul, Missouri, Oklahoma, and Canisius.
Tulsa Coach Accused Of Player 'Piracy'
Wichita Falls. (UP)—Tulsa University was charged today with "piracy" by Thurmon Jones, football coach and athletic director at small Hardin College.
Mr. Jones, who said he was "fighting mad" protested loudly against alleged on-the-campus attempts by Johnny Garrison, Tula assistant coach, to lure three football stars to the Tulsa school.
He said Jimmy Williams, star backfield man from Bowie, had been approached by Mr. Garrison Tuesday night with an "attractive" offer to enroll at the Oklahoma institution.
It was understood that two other Hardin gridders, Lindsey Spillman and David Wyatt, were approached by the Tula斯 assistant mentor.
Press Assistant Resigns To Take Denver Job
Mr. Gerald Tewell, assistant superintendent of the University press, has resigned his position here, and will leave for Denver, Feb. 1, where he will become production manager with the Kistler Stationery company
Mr. Tewell was graduated from the School of Business in 1943, and since that time, with the exception of time spent in the service, has worked in the University press office.
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1947
JANUARY 24,1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Myron Enns, K.U.'s 'Play-Maker,' Is Another Newton High Cage Find
"Day after day, all we get is steaks," says Myron "Sonny" Enns, K.U.'s promising basketball quarterback, at the Jayhawk cagers' training table. "But," he adds, "don't anyone try to change it."
"But," he adds, "don't anyone try to change it. Besides enjoying the rugged fare at the basketball dinner table, Emms has other incentives for turning out at practice day after day. He's a basketball fan from way back."
I-M Basketball At Halfway Mark
Play in the intramural basketball "A" league has reached its halfway mark, and division leaders began to make themselves apparent. Eleven teams have not yet tasted defeat, while fourteen other fives have been downed only once.
Division I W L
Phi Delta Theta 4 0
Mom's Boys 4 0
Indepesis 4 1
Battenfeld 2 1
1037 club 3 2
Theta Tau 1 3
Westminster 1 3
Spooner-Thayer 1 4
941 club 0 6
Division II
Beta Theta Pi 5 0
Delta Upsilon 4 1
Frat Busters 3 1
Tau Kappa Epsilon 3 2
Smith hall 2 3
Wicked Seven 1 2
Gamma Delta 1 2
Normans 1 4
K.C. club 0 5
**Division III**
Kappa Sigma 5 0
Phi Gamma Delta 4 0
Phi Kappa 5 1
Kappa Alpha Psi 2 1
Der Funf 2 3
Alpha Phi Omega 1 4
Married Men 1 4
I.S.A. 0 3
Navy Officers 0 4
**Division IV**
Delta Tau Delta 5 1
Rexall 4 1
Phi Kappa Psi 3 1
Wolks 2 1
Sigma Nu 2 3
Triangle 2 3
The Crooks 1 2
Alpha Phi Alpha 1 3
A.T.C. club 0 5
Division v
Sigma Alpha Epsilon 4 0
Delta Chi 3 0
Pi Kappa Alpha 5 1
Y.M.C.A. 2 2
1934 club 2 2
Pharmacists 2 2
Nu Sigma Nu 0 3
Deuces Wild 0 4
Army 0 4
Division V1
Sigma Chi 4 0
Sigma Phi Epsilon 4 0
Wesley foundation 4 0
Alpha Tau Omega 4 1
Live Five 2 5
Wolf Pack 1 1
Po Dunks 1 1
1126 club 0 4
Newman club 0 0
Sig Ep's Score 70 In I-M Basketball
Sigma Phi Epsilon hit the 70-point mark in an intramural basketball game with Newman club Thursday night.
The final score was 70 to 21 in favor of the Sig Ep's. Short paced scoring for the winners by looping in 20 counters.
The hardest fought game of the night for Delta Tau Delta "B" gained a 44 to 43 victory over Coops "B." Krone led the scoring for the Delta Tau's with 17 points. Hopkins netted 16 for the losing cause.
Other natted 18 for:
Other results: Phi "Gamma Delta"
"B" over Phi Kappa "B" 46 to 16; Rexell over Triangle, 35 to 18; Der Funf over Married Men, 47 to 16; Tau Kappa Epsilon over KC. club,
35 to 23; 1037 club over 941 club,
34 to 31.
Enns comes from Newton, where the saying goes, "they have nothing to do but play basketball and meet railroad trains." He's only a freshman at K.U., but has already earned himself an important spot on the varsity.
variety.
"They start us young in Newton," he said, "before junior high I had a goal in my back yard where the neighborhood gang would get together."
gather. At Newton, "Sonny" lettered in football as a junior, and lettered in baseball as a senior. He played three years in junior high school and three years at Newton high school on the basketball court.
It is Enns' calm manner under fire that won him a place among Dr. F.C. Allen's top men early in the season. That composure is ideal for a center under the Allen system, because he is the team's leading ballhandler.
At Newton, Enns got his first experience as "court general." In his senior year his play-making abilities contributed a great deal toward bringing his team the state high school championship.
school **enfant** he. He the fourth high scorer in the Ark Valley league, averaging nine points a game. He was chosen All-State forward.
After graduation from high school, he said, it was a toss-up as to whether he should go to Kansas or Colorado.
radio.
After a little thought I decided on Kansas," he said. "It's always been my ambition to play under 'Phog' Allen."
Only a slight blemish on Enns' smooth court style is an injured knee. The joint was stepped on in a football game at Newton and agravated by the jumping required in basketball. He wears heavy tape in all games.
I-M Basketball Schedule
Tonight:
9:30-Sigma Alpha Epsilon vs.
1934, club
9:30—Sigma Chi vs. 1126 club
Dijkstra
9:30—Sigma Chi vs. 1126 club
10:30—Playoff game for Division
II of “B” league (between two of following three teams: Kappa Sigma, Sigma Chi, and Sigma Phi Epsilon).
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FOR DELICIOUS BAKES
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Eye
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Someone Having A Birthday?
Send a Book. We have a wide selection from which to choose—new novels and books on present-day affairs, history, philosophy and religion, poetry, art and travel, cookbooks, garden books and books on architecture for the homemaker, and a fine collection of children's books. You are cordially invited to come in and see them.
A
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Hours 9 A.M. to 6 P.M.
Tel. 666 1021 Mass. St.
BASKETBALL TONITE ON WREN
KANSAS
vs.
IOWA STATE
RE-BROADCAST
10:10 P.M.
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FINAL CLEARANCE
★
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$7.95 value.
★
Bags ___ $2.98
Plastic and patents. $4.98 value.
★
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Smoke Rings $3.31
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Carmen Cavallaro ... $2.89
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925 Mass.
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SEE A SHOW TONITE
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NOW — Ends Saturday
"The Razor's Edge"
TYRONE POWER
GENE TIERNEY
SUNDAY — One Week
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TWO YEARS BEFORE THE MAST
A Pamemount Picture Starring
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LADD DONLEVY
WILLIAM BARRY
BENDIX FITZGERALD
GRANADA
Shows 2:30 - 7:00 - 9:00
CONTINUOUS SUNDAY FROM 1:00
TODAY -- Ends Saturday
Alexander Dumos' Romantic Adventure. First Time on Screen!
'Wife of Monte Cristo'
JOHN LODER - LENORE AUBERT
and "BEAUTY FOR SALE"
Behind-Scenes Story of Models
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Thrilling Adventure Drama In ACTIONCOLOR "Gallant Bess"
The Horse With The Human Mind Filmed in Natural Cinecolor MARSHALL THOMPSON GEORGE TOBIA CLEM BEVANS and "BESS"
EXTRA! MARCH OF TIME
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Patee
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"The Jungle Princess"
HIT NO.2
GARY ★ JEAN
COOPER ARTHUR
—in—
"The Plainsman"
SUNDAY — 3 Days FRED MacMURRAY in "Murder, He Says"
VARSITY
TODAY — Ends Saturday
"RENEGADE GIRL"
and
"RAIDERS OF THE SOUTH"
"RAIDERS OF THE SOUTH"
SUNDAY — 3 Days
FRANK ALBERTSON
"Ginger"
and
WALLY BROWN
ALLAN CARNEY
"Genius At Work"
---
PAGE SLX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 24,1947
Kansan Comments
Sales Slips
Don't throw away that student book store sales slip. It's your stock in a paying corporation.
The student book store already has collected more than 10 dollars' worth of receipts which students have thrown away or left. These will be given to some charity when "dividends" are distributed next July.
Theoretically, the student book store is a non-profit enterprise, since all money over costs of the business is returned in proportion to the amount each person has paid. This margin would be a profit to a private business. But whether you student owners want to call your rebates profit or savings, it's still money in your book budget.
The sales stubs should be worth at least 10 per cent of their face value, judging from the records of other book stores, the manager says. And since there is no rule against transferring them, be careful of speculators trying to enhance their own budgets by buying up receipts at five cents on the dollar.
With the expected volume of business, refunds may total as much as $3,000 a semester. You can get your share by presenting your cash register stubs any July or January for at least two years after the date of your purchase.-A.B.
Not One Word
The rejuvenated Dove contained one item which hinted that the editors of the campus pamphlet had access to inside information usually denied the average newspaper reader by tight-lipped and highly prejudiced publishers.
The Dove's expose was something about the editor of Reader's Digest being in league with the Nazis, which, they implied, just goes to show how the poor American reading public is kept in the dark. What's more, they tied on the clincher:
"NOT ONE WORD APPEARED IN THE DAILY KANSAN."
See? The Daily Kansan is in league with the editor of the Reader's Digest, the Chicago Tribune, and Joseph Goebbels in a foul conspiracy to pull the wool over the eyes of the unsuspecting American citizen and pave the way for world conquest.
--and critic, was fined $1,000 by the New York Court of Special Sessions; where his book, "Memoirs of Hecate County," was judged obscene. However:
Absurd as it sounds, that's just about what the article implied. Such implication is easy—want to see? Just watch.
On Dec. 1, Edmund Wilson, author
The University Daily Kansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn. National Editorial Assistant Diana Lindseger College Adjunct Professor and College Press. Represented by the National Advertising Services Association Avenue New York City
Managing Editor... Charles Roo
Asst. Managing Editor... Jane Anderson
Makeup Editor... Billie Marie Hamilton
Business Manager... Bill Donovan
Advertising Manager... Margery Haddy
Circulation Manager... John McCormick
Graph Editor... Edward W. Swain
Asst. Graph Ed.
City Editor... R. T. Kingman
The Kansas Press Association
1947 Member
National Editorial Association
A FREE PRESS--YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW
NOT ONE WORD APPEARED IN THE DOVE.
It's clear, isn't it? The Dove said nothing about the fine because they think obscene literature is swell. What's more, the thinking reader can figure that future issues of the Dove, if the foul-minded editors were given their way, would be even more obscene than "Memoirs of Hecate County."
See how easy it is? And how absurd? But no more absurd than to imply that the Daily Kansan is shielding the Reader's Digest. We're inclined to believe that the article in question was written hurriedly to fill an empty space, so that Dove subscribers would get their nickles' worth.
If that's all it was, we'll forget it. And you, Dove editors, can forget this, too.
But (sigh) you probably won't.
—R.T.K.
The same year, the Sig Alphs raided the Chi O house, beat off the fair defenders of the sorority treasures and gathered up bridge lamps, silverware, pillows, and clothing along with a few of the more tenacious women. They didn't go far with their loot, however. They just strewed it around in the Chi O yard and in the streets.
Scanty Stealer Has Gained Place In Annals Of K.U. Crime Oddities
The case of the "panty piliferer" seems to be unique in the history of thievery at the state university.
In 1932, police were called to the Delta Upsilon house to investigate the theft of a small Oriental rug which was valued at $150. The rug, however, was resting in its usual place when police arrived; and although the housemother said she suspected who had turned in the false report, fraternity members preferred to make no comment.
In the early thirties, when the depression was beginning to hit the Midwest, one gang of fraternity and sorority house robbers accumulated more than $2,500 worth of loot—bill-folds, clothing, jewelry, cash—before they were caught.
No State Of Brooklyn
The lad who wrote the letter entitled "Kansens Only" must have been taken in by one of those foreigners from Brooklyn. Whatever the Brooklynites may say, Brooklyn is still only a borough of the city of New York and has not yet been recognized as a state.
In 1943, when pictures of the "brave, bold men" were at a premium, the Alpha Delta Pi pledge class stole all the actives' pictures and held them for ransom. The money gained financed a party.
In May, 1945, Corbin hall lost a crate of bananas when town children sneaked into the basement. two consequent days and got away with every banana, stalk and all No stomach aches were reported, so it was assumed that a large group of children were involved in the juvenile ring.
A check through Daily Kansan files fails to find even one similar case in K.U. history. The lingerie looter has established himself in the K.U. Krime Klub if only by the thorough- ness of his workmanship.
Dear Editor---
William Tucker Dean Jr. Ass't Professor of Law
Most of the robberies in K.U. history may be divided into two classes: those done for material gain and those done for sport. The person with a penchant for panties is unclassified as yet—at least, until the missing articles show up.
Largest single loss in a Hill robbery was in 1399 when someone (never apprehended, according to newspaper stories) stole a $2.400 mink coat from the Sigma Chi fraternity house during the homecoming reception.
One type of robbery cannot be classified as either just a job pulled for gain or just a job pulled for pleasure.
Students' complaints during finals week always say that while finals may mean the end of a semester and the end of a lot of work, they also may mean the end of the student.
Jaytalking --with loving cups stolen from other organized houses. Certainly the robber gains because the beauty of his mantelpiece is enhanced, and certainly it's fun hearing screams of anguish as a huge cup engraved with "Ping-Pong Champion" goes out the door.
President Truman's budget, when printed, was the heaviest on record. It remains to be seen how much weight it will carry with the 80th congress.
The only trouble with insurance is that the rich man who doesn't need it can afford and the poor man who needs it can't afford it.
That is the now time-honored custom of decorating a mantel piece
The "panty purloiner" is becoming a serious problem to University women, and we think that it's time somebody did something about that panty waste.
Still, the briefs burglar is at large,
Unless he makes a misstep, no one
will ever know just what prompted him. Maybe it's love of publicity.
Wiley Conducts Garden City Festival
Russell Wiley has returned to the campus after a trip to Garden City. He spent Wednesday as guest conductor of the Garden City league festival in which 400 high school band students from Marion City and surrounding territory participated.
He directed three rehearsal sessions of the league band, and the band presented a concert under his direction, to an audience of 1000.
City Kotary club on School Music. In his absence from two morning rehearsals of the K.U. band, student conductors Leo Horacek, Frank Stalzer, and Clarence Mills substituted.
Mr. Wiley spoke to the Marion City Rotary club on "School Music."
Bachelor's Laundry & Dry Cleaners
1111 Mass. Phone 646
Bachelor's Laundry Service Also Dry Cleaning for Men and Women
ACME
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FOR PARTY RENTALS
Used Juke Box Records For Sale
John H. Emick
1014 Mass. Phone 343
You Can Dance In The Afternoon
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For the time being we're changing our hours and our menu. We've quit serving dinners but will continue serving those delicious hamburgers and other sandwiches.
OPEN
Monday, Wednesday, Thursday --4:00-10:30 p.m.
Friday, Saturday, Sunday --2:00-12:00 Midnight
Dancing At All Open Hours
Lost Something? Try a University Daily Kansan Want Ad
Dance So That Others May Walk!
Informal
MARCH OF DIMES DANCE (By ALPHA PHI OMEGA)
BOB DOUGLAS and HIS ORCHESTRA Vocals by SIDNEY DAWSON
Community Bldg. Jan. 25, 9 p.m. to? $1.25 Couples or Stags Get Tickets at the Door
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JANUARY 24,1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Official Bulletin
Jan. 24, 1947
The KU Chapter of the American Veterans, committee is giving a free dance Friday at the Kansas room of the Union. It will begin immediately following the basketball game 9 p.m. to 12:00 Strag or drag. Everyone is invited.
\*\*\*
Applications for positions of K-pook editor and business manager must be taken to student organizations window of University business office by Feb. 15. Address applications to publications committee, A.S.C.
* *
Graduate record examination, Feb. 3, 4, 1947. Applications may be secured in 2A Frank Strong.
than
The All-Student Council has declared a vacancy, to be filled by a representative from District II, the School of Engineering. Petitions must be filed with the secretary of the A.S.C. not later than Monday.
The houses receiving cups for homecoming House Decorations must have them at Roberts Jewelry stor by tomorrow for engraving.
Reveal Secret Of Electron Gun
Berkley, Calif., (UP)—An American 'electron gun' which jammed German radar and screened the allies' hugh bombing raids late in the war was unveiled for the first time today.
The ultra-secret resnatron, a six-foot high frequency tube that sprayed explosive bursts of electrons and blanketed radar apparatus for 300 miles, was credited with much of the success of mass daylight air raids and possible helped save the lives of hundreds of allied airmen.
Lifting wartime censorship, the university of California disclosed the details of the resnatron, which was developed from an outmoded atom-smasher by two young electrical engineers, Dr. D. H. Sloan and Dr. L. C. Marshall
Dr. Sloan and Dr. Marshall started experiments on the nesraon in 1938. By the spring of 1945 they had evolved a "gun" with which the allies were hurling more raw radio power into the air than any other amplifier ever constructed.
With the "gun" the allies kept the enemy from learning in advance the location and direction of the big air fleets that devastated Germany in the closing months of the war. This initial advantage over the Nazi defenses multiplied the Germans' troubles and contributed indirectly to speeding the end of the war.
The inventors said the versatile tube is the most powerful and efficient source of stable power amplification known. It is the only power amplifier which has achieved the same efficiency as a high frequency radio broadcasting station, about 80 per cent. ...
Because of this, the scientists said, it has peacetime possibilities in broadcasting television and FM-radio, for long-range communications and transmission of high-frequency power-or its original purpose as an atom-smasher.
Tojo's Defense Will Start, Jap Prosecution Rests
Tokyo (UP)-Allied prosecutors completed their case against former Premier Hideki Tojo and 25 other Japanese war leaders today, confident that they had proved a conspiracy against world peace and humanity.
The defendants will start their day—or weeks—in court Monday. Japanese and American defense attorneys will move motions to dismiss the charges against the 26 defendants individually and collectively. They will claim lack of sufficient evidence.
Production of mushrooms has become an important industry in the United States, with more than 40.000,000 pounds of fresh mushrooms produced in 1940.
Psych Senior Has Marriage, Prison Plans Dreams Of 'Last Fling' In Europe
Donald Livingston, College senior,
has plans for his future when he
finishes college next month—including a trip to prison as a penal psychologist.
psychologists.
He is 19 years old and will be graduated with a psychology major, but plans to get his master's degree and then possibly his degree of doctor of philosophy. At present, he is assistant to Dr. James Coleman of the psychology department.
Livingston explained that a "penal psychologist" is a person who works with prisoners and prisoners, determining prisoners' mental level, and classifying and helping to institutionalize them for civil adjustment.
Livingston was a hospital corpsman in the navy at San Diego and was later in the K.U. V-12 unit. While in V-12, he started and edited the "Fantail Forum," an N.R.O.T.C. newspaper. He was vice-president of
the University band last year, and was a member of the Inter-fraternity council. He is a Sigma Chi.
His plans include wedding bells sometime this year, with Miss Frances Sartori, of Kansas City, Mo. The rest of his future is not so definite. He's thinking about a trip to Europe this summer.
"If the dream comes true," Livingston said, "I will be primarily concerned with observing the adjustment of civilians in Europe to a normal like. Besides, I want one last fling before getting married."
Sweden Has Uranium
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Classified Advertising Rates
Chicago. (UF) -Beds of radioactive shale rock in Sweden contain an estimated 400 million pounds or uranium, enough to make millions of atomic bombs and produce a "staggering" amount of atomic energy, a petroleum chemist said today.
One Three Five
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additional words 1c 2c 3c
Lost
PINK. Plastic rimmed glasses. If found
please call. 30571-A. -24-
Please call 3187-49
PAIR Plastic rim glasses in black case
und 1 Mason. Fundamentals of Accounting.
Reward for either. Call Lynn Chase
-28
BLUE Overcoat exchanged by mistake in Union Tuesday. Mine contains tan mittens, pen, and blue cap in pockets. Other owner call 2688-M. -28-
Found
BETWEEN Spooner-Thayer museum and Myers hall. Ward high class ring, of 39 thad. The murre may reclaim by paying his ad. Robert Chesley, Spooner-thayer dorm. —24
Wanted
TO BUY. Royal 'Aristocrat' or 'Arrow'
portable typewriter in good
condition. Call Livingston. 721. -24
KEUFEL And Esser slide rule. logog
duplex or dictigrig. Call 2966-W after
6 p.m. -24
TO RENT 2 bedroom furnished or unf-
toiled apartment or call 212-3377.
2337. VETERANS! Put your wife to work
at the Student Book store. 28-
865.
Business Services
RADIO Repair. We invite you to bring your radio to the WARD's Service Depot quick, easy, and reliable repair irons, washing machines, stoves, refrigerators, guns, and jewelry. We guarantee our tools and equipment in Mass St. Phone 192-24-7THING. Prompt service, reasonable rates. 1028 Vermont Phone 1168-.R-24 ATTENTION. Medical Students, microscopes, colorimeters, cleaners, cleaned and repaired. Thirteenth years' experience. Call Victor 9218. Technical Instrument Services Depot pany, 720 Delaware, Kansas City 6. O., 277-
PHOTO-EXACT Copies, discharge and valuable papers. Fast service. Low price. Round Corner Drug Co., 801 mississippi, rence, Kansas, or Lane P, 14, 18, Sun--28
TWIPING. Experienced typist. Term papers, reports, etc. Prompt, accurate, reasonable. Call 3056-M at 1244 Laa. -28 FOR Immediate purchase or sale in furniture contact Fritzel Haiten at Sunflower or phone 1145, Lawncrest -28
FOR that coke date remember the Elidridge pharmacy at 71 Mass, Paulsen-28-
LET A veteran's wife type your term papers. Neat and accurate. Phone
TYPING Term papers and reports. Done promptly and reasonably. Phone 1961.10 ALTERATIONS: Buttons, buckles, machine and tailored buttonhole. Smith Hemstitching and Dressmaking Shop. 943 1-2 Mass. -20-
1673-W or drop by 942 New Ham-
shire. -28.
For Sale
MICROSCOPE. New Spencer, unused.
New Spencer, unavailable.
Save $25. Call T01 at 818. -24-
BUICK 41 Sedanet, R & H. Recent major overhaul. New battery, generator, volgre, fuel & water pump. Very good condition. Student. E. C. Good. 809-234
Missouri.
1935 CHEVROLET. 4-door sedan. -24
Call: 3010, 1182 Miss. -24
HOTTON Trombone. Like new. See Dean Gilley. 1034 Mass. Phone 1831-M.-24
TUXEDO. Size 36 in good condition.
Also tweed overcoat, extra good condition, phone 916.
FORMALS In sizes 1-16 in good condition and style and colors. Also assortment of street dresses, suits, skirts, sweaters, coats. See them. Comfort Ever Ready Shop. 74 M.
CAMERA Fansl Amenal 35 mm miniature coat. f 4.5 anglasticant complete lens. Shutter up to 1-150 complete with new Mendelson speed gun synec-fish and series lenses for Omrag Red Medium yellow filter. Omrag Red Filter, 1 Type A to Type B Kodachrome correcting filter, 1 Eastman Portrait attachment recently checked with Omrag Red. Allotted 988. Call Delmar Waterson. 3299 after 7 p.m. or see at 710 Indiana.
LATEST Style tuxedo. Excellent condition. Jay V. Grimm. 426-M.-24
1941 Mercury compact. Excellent condition. Heater, new tires, and paint. See daily after 1 p.m. at 611 W. 6th.
Miscellaneous
APPLICATIONS Are now being accepted for residence of Henley-House Co-op.Call 1315 for further information. -27.WANT Riders from vicinity of Shawnee and Merriam, Kans., Monday through Friday.Call Patterson, Lawrence, 144. 38
Transportation
COFFEYVILLE? Would like ride for one to Coffeyville or vicinity Friday evening after 4. Call Roger. HUDSON + RENT - A CAB - SERVICE HUDSON + RENT - Phone 3315. Location 601. Vermont. -28-
For Rent
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QUIT STALLIN' Get your motor tuned by Jack's Mechanics
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University Daily Kansan Advertising Brings Real Results
and
LAST WEEK
GRILL
FOUNTAIN SERVICE
"Service With a Smile"
ROUND CORNER LUNCH 11 West Eighth
(Around the Corner from Round Corner)
Harzfeld's
The "OLD COLONY"
sweaters arrive!
White ones. Lime ones. Sky blue ones. Barberry red ones! Sizes 34 to 40. The limit is: One to a customer.
Long-Sleeved
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Long-Sleeved Cardigan
$5.00
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 24,1947
This Is The Schedule You Need Those Finals Begin Thursday
The schedule for first semester final examinations follows:
Classes Meeting At: Will Be Examined At:
8 A.M. M W F sequence* 10:00-11:50 Mon. Feb. 3
8 A.M. T T S sequence** 10:00-11:50 Fri. Jan. 31
8 A.M. M W F sequence* 10:00-11:50 Tues. Feb. 4
9 A.M. T T S sequence** 10:00-11:50 Sat. Feb. 1
10 A.M. M W F sequence* 1:30-3:20 Tues. Feb. 4
10 A.M. T T S sequence** 1:30-3:20 Sat. Feb. 1
11 A.M. M W F sequence* 1:30-3:20 Fri. Jan. 31
11 A.M. T T S sequence** 8:00-9:50 Wed. Feb. 5
12 Noon, M W F sequence* 10:00-11:50 Thur. Jan. 30
12 Noon, T T S sequence** 3:30-5:20 Fri. Jan. 31
1 P.M. M W F sequence* 1:30-3:20 Wed. Feb. 5
1 P.M. T T S sequence** 1:30-3:20 Mon. Feb. 3
2 P.M. M W F sequence* 8:00-9:50 Tues. Feb. 4
2 P.M. T T S sequence** 8:00-9:50 Thur. Feb. 6
2 P.M. M W F sequence* 10:00-11:50 Wed. Feb. 5
3 P.M. T T S sequence** 10:00-11:50 Thu. Feb. 6
4 P.M. M W F sequence* 3:30-5:20 Mon. Feb. 3
4 P.M. T T S sequence* 1:30-3:20 Thur. Feb. 6
5 P.M. M W F sequence* 1:30-3:20 Thur. Jan. 30
5 P.M. T T S sequence* 3:30-5:20 Wed. Feb. 5
7 P.M. M W F sequence* 8:00-9:50 Mon. Feb. 3
7 P.M. T T S sequence* 8:00-9:50 Thur. Jan. 30
GENERAL BIOLOGY (ALL SECTIONS)
French 1
French 2
German 1
German 2
Spanish 1
Spanish 2
(ALL SECTIONS)... 8:00- 9:50 Sat. Feb. 1
The schedule applies to all schools and departments in the University except the schools of law and medicine, which will arrange their own schedules.
Classes which meet four or five days a week will follow the schedule for the Monday, Wednesday, Friday sequence for the hour the class meets on those days.
Classes which meet fewer than three times a week will follow the schedule for the sequence that includes the day and hour they meet. That is, a class which meets only on Thursday at 9 a.m. will have the examination at the time listed for the Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday sequence of 9 a.m.
Classes meeting only for laboratory work will have the examination at any of the hours scheduled for the laboratory period, with the choice up to the instructor after consultation with his students.
When laboratory work does not fall on the same hour as class work the examination may be given either as a single examination at the time scheduled for the class hours or as two examinations, one for the time scheduled for class hours, and one at the time scheduled for laboratory periods.
Dateable Male?
Here's Your Chance
Are you one of the nine most "datable males" on the campus?
If you are, you will be an escort for one of the nine women to be invited from nine colleges and universities in Kansas and Missouri to attend the Sweetheart Swing on February 15. The contest to determine just who the "dateable" men are will be held next week by the Student Union Activities committee.
"The men chosen must be good looking, and must also have conversational talents," Thornton Cooke, contest chairman, said today. "Each contestant must submit a list of three topics of conversation for an evening date."
Letters have been sent to the dean of women in each of the universities and colleges to be represented asking that a girl be sent. Schools to which letters have been written are the University of Missouri, Kansas State college, Washburn university, Wichita university, Baker university, Ottawa university, Emporia State Teachers' college, William Jewell college, and the University of Kansas City.
Each men's organized house and fraternity will choose a representative early next week. The "nine most eligible" will then be chosen by a three-member faculty committee including Miss Paula Ikard, English department Miss Marilyn O'Meara, French department; and Miss Margaret McKay, political science department.
The welcoming committee, with Byron Shutz as chairman, will select nine University women to act as personal hostesses during the period the guests are here. A luncheon for hostesses and guests will be held on February 15. This luncheon will take the place of the annual dinner for Student Union Activity chairmen, it was announced.
Senior Girl Burned In Chemistry Mishap
Barbara Hanley, College senior, was treated Thursday afternoon at Watkins Memorial hospital for first and second degree burns on her left arm and hand as the result of a chemistry lab accident.
Miss Hanley was vaporizing a chemical solution when the vapor caught fire, catching her blouse and hair.
"Legislative Procedure in Kansas", recently revised by Dr. Frederie H. Guild, was published last week by the Bureau of Government Research, and has been placed in the hands of the members of the state legislature.
Monday is the deadline for applications for housing in Watkins and Miller halls, Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, has announced.
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Monday Is Deadline For Hall Applications
The monograph, which describes the state's law-making process, was originally published in 1930, having been used by legislative members as a basic aid for 45 years. Dr. Gulid, director of the research department, Kansas Legislative Council, conducts a graduate seminar in political science in Topeka.
Dr. Robert Allen, a hospital physician, said today that the acuteness of her burns could not be determined as yet.
Coalition Forms To Whip Partiality
Dr. Guild Revises Legislative Paper
"There are three openings in Watkins and one in Miller." Miss Habein said, "and each woman is judged on her scholastic abilities and need for financial aid."
A committee will vote on each application.
Opening a drive against "racial discrimination in Lawrence," the American Veterans' committee and six other organizations have formed a coalition "to make a more concerted action" against racial intolerance.
The other organizations include the Y. M. C. A., the Y. W. C. A., the Unitarian Liberal group, the Dove, the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and the Negro Student association.
Harold D. Smith, '22 Dies In Virginia
Washington, (UP)—President Truman led Washington officialdom today in mourning the unexpected death of Harold D. Smith, acting head of the world bank and former director of the budget.
Mr. Smith, 48, suffered a heart attack last night at his farm in nearby Culpeper, Va. He died before medical aid could be summoned.
Funeral arrangements have not vet been announced.
Born at Haven, Kan., in 1898, Mr. Smith was graduated from the University of Kansas, engineering school in 1922. His widow, Mrs. Lillian Maier Smith, was graduated from the University's College in 1923.
Mr. Truman was attending a reception of the American Newspaper Women's club when word of Mr. Smith's death reached him. The president said he was "terribly shocked."
"He is one of the ablest servants in the public service," the president said. "The country needs the services of men like Harold Smith."
Mr. Smith was stricken while in a pasture looking over his prize cows. A family servant found him.
Mrs. Smith was at their home in Arlington, Va., at the time. She left for Culpeper immediately, and it was expected the body would be brought back to Washington for burial.
Mr. Smith is survived also by three daughters and a son.
Widely regarded as a financial wizard, Mr. Smith was budget director from 1939 until last June, when he resigned to become vice-president of the world bank.
"Harold Smith went to the top by sheer ability," Fred Ellsworth, K.U. alumni secretary, said today.
Mr. Ellsworth said that Mr. Smith became interested in politics before graduation and was employed with the League of Kansas Municipalities, which then had an office in Fraser hall.
Besides his budget work, he was the smoothest conciliator in Washington during the war," Mr. Ellsworth said. "He was used very often by President Roosevelt and Truman to get two squabbling department heads together."
From here he went to Michigan as director of that state's league of municipalities.
"Schools and untrained, indifferent parents are responsible for the "appalling statistics on juvenile crime," Dr. Bert Nash of the School of Education declared at the fourth Y.M.C.A. forum Thursday.
Nash Blames Schools For Juvenile Crime
Dr. Nash said that the schools "refuse to accept the findings of exhaustive psychiatric research," and added that "no organized constructive program exists to prevent child delinquency." Only 50 cents per capita is spent for character building programs, as compared to the $100 per capita cost as a direct result of delinquency, he pointed outff
Movies entitled "Can We Stop Juvenile Crime" were shown at the forum. Robert L. Davis was in charge.
Rent Law Up To Congress
Washington (UP)—President Truman has left to congress the job of deciding what changes, if any, should be made in present rent control laws.
News of the World
Liquor Proposal To Senate;
Final Action Expected Soon
Topcka. (UP)—The proposal to submit an amendment in Kansas prohibition laws to the people went to the senate, where it underwent second reading today and was referred to the judiciary committee. With no prospect of a major fight against resubmission in the upper chamber, legislative action on the proposal was expected to be completed next week. The governor does not have to pass on it.
May Pleads 'Not Guilty'
Washington. (UP)—Former congressman Andrew J. May pleaded innocent today to charges that he and three key figures of the $78,-000,000 Garsson Munitions combine entered into a corrupt conspiracy to defraud the government in war contracts. Trial date was set for March 19
Taft Urges Rent Change
Cincinnati. (UF)—Sen. Robert A. Taft, said here today that he favored changes in the rent control law that would permit adjustments to fit individual cases, rather than a flat increase. He added that definite changes in present rent laws would have to be made before he would support extension of rent controls.
Rent Control Liberalized
Washington. (UP)—Regional rent control officials have been ordered to "liberalize"—permit increases in rent ceilings in hardship cases, Maj. Gen. B. Philip B. Fleming, director of the office of temporary controls, announced today.
Vatican Claims Damages
Washington, (UP) — The Vatican has submitted to the War department a claim for restitution in express of $5,000 war damage to its property, the army said today.
Marshall Starts New Career By Meeting Top Diplomats
Washington (UP) - Secretary of State George C. Marshall started the social side of his new career today by being host at luncheon to the Washington diplomatic corps.
The new secretary meanwhile is studying plans for tightening up the State Department's high command. One plan calls for elimination of one of the six assistant secretaryships.
No Letup In Star Strike
Top Communist To Testify
Washington. (UP)—Gerhard Eisler, identified by a former editor of the Daily Worker as the chief communist agent in the United States, has been subpenaed to testify before the house Un-American Activities committee, Chairman J. Parnell Thomas, (R.-N.J.) said today.
C.I.O. Starts 1947 Demands
Pittsburgh. (UP)—The CIO United Steelworkers Union laid its 1947 demands before U.S. Steel corporation today at a two-hour session opening negotiations expected to set the pattern for the nation's 800,000 steel workers.
Kansas City, Mo. (UP) — The strike of contract carriers of the Kansas City Star moved into its eighth day with another session between the management and representatives of the AFL labor unions scheduled. Both Star and labor leaders said that progress had been made toward a settlement.
Greece Has New Premier
Athens. (UP)—Demetrios Maximos, member of the Populist party, was named Premier today by King George of Greece.
All seven of the party groups which agreed to the nomination of the new premier will get places in the new government.
Coeds Undecided About New Party
These general opinions are those of watching and waiting before deciding to join to see if it offers a better setup than their present one.
Filling the largest group were women who had not read the announcement in the Daily Kansan, and knew nothing of the "new deal." Lack of time to read the paper was given as their reason for having no knowledge of the policy.
Finally, and in the minority of the number questioned, were those women who are pleased with their political standing at the University and have no intention of changing now.
Women's opinions concerning the Progressive party's decision to admit them as members are divided into four trains of thought.
Third in number were those who were displeased with their present setup and ready to go over to the Progressive side of the fence if doing so would offer something better than they now have.
In the second group were those who had read the announcement but were not sure just what their stand would be. The general feeling here was that of waiting until someone else made a move, and then make a definite decision.
Fac
Tub
Feb
Mr. Stuhl, head of the cello department of the School of Fine Arts, studied under nationally known teachers of cello in America and at the Hochschule in Berlin in 1926. He was a cellist with the Kansas City Philharmonic orchestra under Karl Krueger. Before coming to the University as instructor of cello and theory in 1935, he taught at the Kansas City Conservatory of Music.
His wife, Alberta Stuhl, is a member of the fine arts piano faculty. At the Curtis institute in Philadelphia, she received advanced study in piano; she also taught for a time at the Conservatory of Music in Kansas City.
Tub culty Unive Ralph
The joint recital of Raymond Stuhl, cellist, and Alberta Stuhl, pianist, which will take place at 8 p.m. Monday in Fraser theater will conclude the University recitals of the first semester.
The "X-ra instru with
Stuhl's Will Present Joint Recital Monday
For X-ray These tec tio facult
This husband and wife ensemble has played in concert together for many years. Their recital, Monday evening, will mark their first public appearance together since Mr. Stuhl's return from three years of military service.
The recital is open to the public.
A
board
tests
longe
snap
can I
he s
Most lectures cost the University $350 to $500, he said. Highest price ever paid was $1,500 for Rear Adm. Richard E. Byrd's appearance in February, 1931. Alexander Woollecott's bureau billed the University $750 for his lecture here in January, 1940.
Ten and a half cents is all it costs a student to hear convocation speakers whom he would pay about $2 to hear elsewhere, according to Raymond Nichols, executive secretary.
"H. G. Wells' bureau offered the University a booking several years ago at $3,000, but we couldn't afford anything like that," Mr. Nichols commented.
K.U. Gets The Byrd At Convocation For $1,500
Tu be re ing i g and s not l past an X will
Ellis Arnall, former Georgia governor, is the next scheduled lecturer and will appear here Feb. 14.
In
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University DAILY KANSAN
STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Monday, January 27, 1947
44th Year No. 77
Lawrence, Kansas
Facultv To Get Tuberculin Tests Feb.7 To 14
Tuberculin tests will be given faculty members and employees of the University Feb. 7 to 14 inclusive, Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson said today.
The board of regents requires that "X-rays must be taken of all new instructors of 35 years or younger with new X-rays every two years".
For teachers over 35 years of age, X-rays are required ever five years. These tests are given for the protection of the students as well as the faculty, Dr. Canuteson continued.
A mobile unit from the state board of health will be here for the tests and "it shouldn't take any longer than to write your name or snap a picture, because the X-rays can be taken with your clothing on." he said.
'Vets Will Register In Usual Manner'
Tuberculin tests and X-rays will be required of all new students coming in this next semester, he added, and students now in school who have not had an X-ray taken during the past year are also to come in for an X-ray only. All tuberculin tests will be given at Watkins hospital.
"Veterans and non-veterans will follow the same procedure during registration and enrollment." James Hitt, registrar, said today.
Mr. Hitt emphasized that under the G.I. bill the veteran does not actually pay his fees. However, he must go through the fee line along with regular students, at the time set by the schedule for all students, in order to secure a fee receipt from the business office. Without a fee receipt, no student will be allowed to enroll in any course.
to ensure that instruction to veterans under the G.I. bill, the veterans' bureau has requested that all veterans fill out the class card issued with purchase order books, and turn them in as soon as possible after enrollment. Until class cards are turned in to the veterans' bureau, approval for the veterans' subsistence allotment can not be sent to the regional office.
Robert Bock, College junior and state legislator, defeated Harry Depew and William Tincher Friday in the KU. elimination contest for the Capper oratory contest, open to native sons and daughters of Kansas. The subject is "Kansas in an Industrial Civilization."
trial Civilization.
Bock will represent the University at the state contest at the Jayhawk hotel in Topeka tomorrow. The winner of the Topeka contest will receive the Capper Cup and will give the speech before the Kansas Day banquet Wednesday night. Representatives from all colleges in Kansas will participate.
Paul Haney, director of the water laboratory at KU. has accepted a position as associate professor of sanitary engineering in the graduate school of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
Haney Accepts Place At North Carolina
Robert Bock Wins K.U. Oratory Contest
Mr. Haney will begin his duties at North Carolina at the beginning of the spring semester in March. He first worked here with the board of health as a full-time employee in 1934, after doing part-time work as a student in 1932.
The Man On Campus By Bibler
S. Biber
N. DAILY KANSAN
"I hate to clean up after one of John Ise's tests."
Police School Here Between Semesters
An expected 150 law enforcement officers will assemble at the University Feb. 6-10 for the first annual Kansas Peace Officers training school.
The K.U. bureau of government research and the Kansas Peace Officers association are presenting the school, with the cooperation of the state highway commission, the highway patrol, League of Kansas Municipalities, Kansas Bar association, Kansas Bureau of Investigation, and the Federal Bureau of Investigation.
The four-day course will cover problems of law enforcement and new techniques in relation to traffic, raids, arrests, collection and preservation of evidence, and handling of prisoners.
Prof. Ethan P. Allen, director of the bureau of government research, and Claude McComment, chairman of the school committee of the Kansas Peace Officers association, have arranged a program featuring the top men of state enforcement agencies, the Wichita police force and the FBI.
Gov, Frank Carlson will address the school from Topeka by transcription as executive matters will prevent his attendance.
The FBI will conduct a firearms demonstration Thursday evening on the rifle range of the Military Science building.
Dr. Frank Hoecker and Dr. David Hume of the University faculty will conduct a panel discussion on atomic energy Friday evening. Professor Allen will moderate.
The school is being held between semesters because of crowded housing conditions. Enrollees will be housed in fraternity houses and dormitories, and will eat at the Memorial Union cafeteria. More sessions will be held in the Lindley hall auditorium.
Prof. Allen Crafton will give a humorous speech on "Kansas" Saturday, and demonstrations by the athletic department will follow.
'March Of Dimes'
Total Reaches $585
The March of Dimes drive contributions now total $585 today, as a result of heavy donations received from the basketball game and proceeds from the dance Saturday night, William Perkins, campus chairman, said today.
said today.
Basketball fans kicked in a total of $200 in nickels, dimes, and quarters Friday night. The dance at the Community building netted $75 over expenses.
With a campus goal of $200 to be reached by Wednesday, drive officials are counting heavily on the generosity of fans, who will be attending Tuesday's basketball game, Perkins said today.
Perkins said booths won't be operating this week because of finals, but individual donations may be made at Dean Henry Werner's office in Frank强牢 hall, Perkins said.
ISA Voting Ends At 5; Bollier Replaces Pratt
Voting on ISA candidates in booths in Frank Strong hall and the Union will end at 5 p.m.
Lois Thompson, election chairman announced today. Plans to have polls in Watson library from 7 until 9 tonight have been cancelled.
Alamada Bollier has replaced Elizabeth Arm Pratt as candidate for senior representative to the council, Miss Thompson said.
Opera Star Dies In Plane Crash
Denmark today clamped a lower limit on the loads Dakota transport planes can carry in that country after a crash which took the lives of Grace Moore, American opera star. Prince Gustav Adolf of Sweden, and 20 other persons.
(By United Press)
Old Kansas Law Says . . .
No Dakota will be allowed to leave an airport in Denmark with a load of more than 25,168 pounds. The Dakota which crashed and burned on a takeoff from Kastrup airport here Sunday was reported to be carrying 26,220 pounds.
be carrying 20,000.
Miss Moore was on an extended
European concert tour. She had
finished writing her memoirs a
few days before she died. She told Dania
newsmen, "Many people write
their memories when they are old and
forgetten. I want to write mine while
I am still on top and feel I can give
people something through my singing
and not only just by memories.
Miss Moore opened the University Concert series at K.U. in 1944.
As she boarded the plane she told them, "I have told you all my past Only the future is left for me."
Cohen called herself "the girl who took the high hat off opera," and once the "Aria" from "Tosca" and "Minnie the Moocher" on the same program at the Roxy theater in New York. ___
Student Court Fines Five Of 13 Drivers
Five students were found guilty of traffic and parking violations and fined by the student court. Those fines were Garvin Hale, John Minor, Coler Hissem, Dale Milbury, and Andrew Walker.
The court handled thirteen cases of students with five violations or less. The next session of the court will be held next semester.
You Can't Eat Snakes Here On Sunday
The poor duck in Colorado has one consolation; it is unlawful for hunters to shoot at him from an airplane. Another protective law is found in
University students who dine on Sunday should keep in mind that in Kansas it is unlawful to eat snakes on the Sabbath.
For example, Connecticut citizens are prohibited by an old law to sit closer than eight inches to a person of the opposite sex on a Connecticut park bench. And no man in Macon, Ga, may put his arm around a woman without legal excuse.
man without regard. Indeed, some of the strange state laws are beneficial. Students at the University of Missouri will not be shocked by a strange hat, for an old Missouri law makes it illegal to wear a hat that frightens timid persons.
Perhaps such a law would affect few reptile eaters at the University; however many states other than Kansas have strange laws which prohibits certain types of activity.
New Jersey where the wearing of dangerous hatpins in public places is prohibited.
Wishing to avoid serious argument over a woman's appearance, the young bridegroom should settle in Owensboro, Ky., where it is illegal for a woman to buy a new hat unless her husband tries it on first.
The unsuspecting Chicago male can rest assured of one protection. According to a Chicago ordinance, a woman may be fined for driving a car if she wears a hat that covers one eye.
Women in Gary, Ind., have one assurance, for riding a streetcar or attending a theater within four hours after eating garlic is prohibited.
But the Kansas student, feeling cheated that he is not allowed to dine on snakes on Sunday, is compensated by the fact that in Kansas one may at least hang feminine underwear on an outside wash line, an interesting act prohibited by law in Nappanee, Ind.
Ticket System Will Be Changed Next Season
Falkenstien Says Present Plan Is 'Unworkable'
Students who have been packing their suppers and waiting in line to see the Jayhawker basketball team perform this winter may be saved such a struggle next year.
such a struggle. In an official athletic department announcement Monday Earl Falkenstien, business manager, said the present seating arrangement definitely will be changed next year.
"Last fall when we originated our present plan we thought it was workable, but apparently it is not. We know there is an undercurrent of dissatisfaction among the students which we regret. The basketball team is the student's team and we certainly want to find the best arrangement possible."
raenkienstion said the athletic department would welcome any student ideas toward the solution, and recommended they be presented to the student council, which, in turn, will pass them along to the department.
He dispelled any idea of a change for the second semester this year.
The record enrollment of 9,000 this fall overflowed Hoch auditorium, home of Jayhawker hoop teams for two decades, which seats only 3,500.
"We would not be able to obtain new tickets until after the second semester starts," Falkenstien explained, "and that leaves only two games on each set."
"Its just another reason why we need a field house," Mr. Falkenstien concluded.
The upper-classmen walked off with the indoor interclass track meet held during the weekend, piling up a 70-49 margin.
Hal Moore, junior distance runner, helped the upper-classmen with 15 points for the best individual record. Moore took first in the 880-yard run, the mile run, and the two-mile run. John Jackson and Dexter Welton, both upper-classmen, followed Moore with 12 and 11 points respectively.
Upperclassmen Take Class Track Meet
Forrest Griffith was high freshman of the meet with nine points and turned in the best single-event record with a 7.2 seconds time in the 60-vard low hurdles.
A campaign to promote the World War II Memorial drive will be conducted on the campus next semester.
Bathurst Will Head Memorial Drive Group
Tom Scofield and Earl Jones missed the meet because of injuries.
Bruce Bathurst has been appointed by John Irwin, All-Student council president, as chairman and plans for the campaign are being drawn up. Other committee members are Willibred Noble, Mary Breed, John Robinson, Ralph Kiene, John Irwin, Everett Bell, and Allan Cromley.
WEATHER
Kansas—Partly cloudy today, tonight and Tuesday. Much cooler, with strong northwesterly winds today. Colder tonight. Low 20 northwest to 30 southeast. Cold Tuesday.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 27,1947
Belles And Their Weddings
Hull-Quinlan
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Hull, Topeka, announce the engagement of their daughter, Jo Ann, to John Quinlan, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Quinlan, Perry.
The announcement was made at the Sugma Kappa house recently by Mrs. Mary Younkman, housemother, who wore a corsage of gardenias. Chocolates were passed by Mary Vermillion, who received a corsage of talisman roses. Miss Hull wore an orchid.
Miss Hull is a College senior, Mr Quidan is a business junior.
Phinas-O'Connor
The pinning of Charlene Phipps daughter of Mr. and Mrs. O. T. Phipps, Wichita, to Charles O'Connor, son of Mrs. Julia O'Connor, New York, was announced recently at the Sigma Kappa house.
The announcement was made by Joan Wharton, who wore a corsage of red roses. Miss Phipps received an orchid. The traditional chocolates were passed by Geralyn St. John, who wore a corsage of red roses.
Miss Phipps is a College freshman,
Mr. G'Connor, College freshman, is a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity.
☆ ☆
Howard-Bellamy
Mr. and Mrs. G. L. Howard, Coffeyville, recently announced the engagement and approaching marriage of their daughter, Peggy L., to Kenneth L. Bellamy, son of Mr. and Mrs. G. C. Bellamy, Colby.
Miss Howard, College junior, is a member of the Gamma Phi Beta sorority. Mr. Bellamy is a College sophomore and a member of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity. The wedding will take place Feb. 6, in Cofeeyville.
University Daily Kansan
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a
age ago). Printed in Lawrence Kane, every afternoon during the school year except
on holidays, and on 19, 20, and 21 days and examination periods. Entered as
second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the
University of Lawrence Kane, under act of
March 3, 1879.
Burnham-Rummer
The engagement of Patricia Am Burnham, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Burnham, Wichita, to Dale I. Rummer, son of Mr. and Mrs. James E. Rummer, Wichita, was announced recently at Corbin hall by Mrs. Treva Brown, housemother.
Miss Burnham received a white carnation corsage. Mrs. Brown was presented with a white gardenia corsage. Marjorie Vogel and Shirley Keith, who passed the traditional chocolates, wore pink carnation corsages. Lynn Lucas sang "Let Me Call You Sweetheart."
Miss Burnham is a College freshman. Mr. Rummer, engineering junior, is a member of Kappa Eta Kappa fraternity.
Ruth-Smith
☆ ☆
Mr. and Mrs. G. W. Ruth, Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Nancy Jean, to Robert Q. Smith, Denver, Colo.
The announcement was made at the Sigma Kappa house recently by Mrs. Mary Younkman, housemother, who wore a corsage of gardenias. Miss Ruth received an orchid. Mary Vermillion, who passed the chocolates, received a corsage of talisman roses.
Miss Ruth is a College freshman Mr. Smith, engineering junior, is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.
Wright-Cuaz
☆ ☆
The pinning of Margaret Wright, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Wright, Wellington, to John D. Cuaz, Denver, Colo., was announced recently at the Sigma Kappa house.
The announcement was made by Kathleen Wright, who received a corsage of talisman roses. The traditional chocolates were passed by Sara Kathryn Rothrock, who also received a corsage of talisman roses. Miss Wright received a corsage of pink rosebuds. Mrs. Mary Younkman, housemother, wore a gardenia
Miss Wright is a College junior. Mr. Cuaz, a student at Western Dental college, Kansas City, Mo., is a member of Beta Theta Pi fraternity, and attended the University of Colorado, Boulder, Colo.
corsage.
Wisner-Lees
Mr. and Mrs. Leslie Wisner, Howard, Kan., announce the engagement of their daughter, Mary, to Harry Lees, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lees, Oklahoma City, Okla. Chocolates were passed at the Henley house recently.
☆ ☆
Miss Wisner is a College junior. Mr. Lees is a Fine Arts sophomore. The wedding will take place in June at Estes Park, Colo.
Malonev-Lunsford
Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Maloney, Wichita, announce the engagement of their daughter, Frances C. to Floyd A. Lunsford, son of Mr. and Mrs. Paul Lunsford, Wichita. The announcement was read recently by Mrs. Karl Perkins, Kappa Alpha Theta housemother.
Miss Maloney is a College sophomore. Mr. Lunsford, College senior, is a Sigma Chile pledge.
Tolle-Williams
The pinning of Virginia Tolle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. N. Tolle, ElDorado, to Gene Williams, son of Mrs. L. L. Williams, ElDorado, was announced recently at the Kappa Alpha Theta house by Mrs. Karl Perkins, housemother.
Miss Tolle received an orchid. Mrs.Perkins and Mary Brown, who assisted, received carnation corsages.
Miss Tolle, a member of Kappa Alpha Theta, is a college sophomore. Mr. Williams, Fine Arts freshman, is a member of Phi Gamma Delta,
Bonebrake-Ocamb
The pinning of Martha Bonebrake,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. T. Bonebrake,
Wichita, to Rayburn Ocamb,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence
Ocamb, Junction City, was announced recently at the Kappa Alpha Theta house by Mrs. Karl Perkins, housemother. Alice Wright assisted Miss Bonebrake.
Miss Bonebrake is a College junior. Mr. Ocamb, College freshman, is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon.
☆ ☆
Crandall-Hazlett
The pinning of Eloise Crandall, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Crandall, Sylvia, Kan., to Emerson Hazlett, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. E. Hazlett, Lawrence, was announced recently at the Alpha Delta Pi house by Mrs. O. L. Horner, housemother.
Miss Crandall received an orchid. Mrs.Horner, Mrs.S. S.Fleener, and Mrs.J.C.Ethridge, who assisted, received gardenia corsages. The traditional chocolates were passed.
Miss Crandall, who was graduated from the University in 1946 and is now employed in Kansas City, Mo., is a member of Alpha Delta Pi. Mr. Hazlett, College sophomore, is a member of Pi Kappa Alpha.
FOR
Well Balanced
Meals That
Are Delicious
Eat At
THE BLUE MILL
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
You Can Dance In The Afternoon AT Roses Rancho
North of Town On Highways 59 and 24
For the time being we're changing our hours and our menu. We've quit serving dinners but will continue serving those delicious hamburgers and other sandwiches.
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Monday, Wednesday, Thursday ..4:00-10:30 p.m.
Friday, Saturday, Sunday ..2:00-12:00 Midnight
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Advance Sale Of TEXTBOOKS
KU
Last fall this store began the compilation of a catalog of textbooks to be used during the Spring semester. This catalog is now approximately 95% complete—thus for the first time making it possible for students to purchase their books in advance. . . Veterans using this service can obtain cash refunds at an early date. . . Liberal return privileges aregranted.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 27,1947
PAGE THREE
In Sculpture Show:
1947
'Pieces On Exhibit Aren't Recognizable, But Express Balance'
Your guess is as good as anyone's. That's the first impression you get. In the sculpture exhibit on the third floor of Frank Strong hall, and it's the opinion Mike Andrews, design instructor, hopes people will carry away with them.
The pieces on exhibit aren't supposed to represent anything recognizable. They are merely forms expressing balance.
"Most of the students in my classes do not intend to become sculptors. They are planning to become occupational therapists or to go into other fields of design. We feel that this problem gives them a chance to develop balance without being hampered by making their work represent any special form."
Mr. Andrews explained, "what we are doing is not to be confused with the modern trend in sculpturing. It's simply a problem of working a design out in three dimensions."
The pieces now on exhibit are by Robert Powell, junior; Debcolne Thornhill, freshman; Donald Humphrey, sophomore, and Joyce Shannon, senior. All are fine arts majors.
The process used by the students is comparatively simple. The original form is modeled out of native clay, and then a plaster of paris mold of the form is made. A layer of wax or soap is spread over the inside of the mold and wet plaster is poured into it. When the plaster is dry, the mold is chiseled off and the plaster of paris form remaining is given the desired finish.
A schedule of activities for the nine women invited from colleges and universities in Kansas and Missouri to attend the Sweetheart Swing on Feb. 5 has been announced.
Activities Planned For 'Typical Coeds'
A tour of the campus will come first. Then the guests and their hostesses, nine women chosen from University organized houses, will have luncheon with the Student Union Activities committee chairmen in the English room of the Union.
The afternoon will be spent by the "typical coeds" at the Lawrence Country club with their escorts, to be chosen this week in a "most dateable" male contest. They will have dinner at the houses of their respective hostesses before attending the Kansas-Nebraska basketball game.
The Sweetheart Swing,following the game,will be the final activity on the program.
Dean Smith Appointed Head Of K.U. Red Cross Drive
George B. Smith, dean of the School of Education, has been appointed chairman of the annual K.U. Red Cross drive, scheduled to begin March 1.
The total quota for K.U. and Lawrence has been set at $13,494, of which $8,502 will remain in the local chapter. Dean Smith said today that no plans for the local drive have been made.
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Two years ago Phyllis had just received her American diploma, and Brazilian universities do not accept foreign diplomas for entrance. Then, too, Marilyn was born in Kansas and spent the first month of her life here.
Marilyn Rust, who has lived all but two years and three months of her life in Brazil, is now a typical K.U. freshman, busily fulfilling requirements in the College.
'Nothing Like Americans,' Says Marilyn Rust, From Brazil
in the College.
Marilyn and her sister, Phyllis, College sophomore, chose the University because they thought that in such a central location they would find the "backbone of Americans."
Blond, blue-eyed Marilyn studied her first three grades by the Calvert system under her mother's guidance. She continued her schooling from the fourth grade to the middle of her senior year at the Gynasio, an American-endowed high school which begins in the kindergarten. The school is based on the continental system of education—the first eight years being preparatory and the next five years being the high school proper.
This is Marilyn's second year at Lawrence; she was a senior at the University High school last year. Studying, in the Brazil schools, Marilyn assures, is much harder than it is here. She believes the "American students slide by in high school."
scholar.
The most exciting thing that happened to Marilyn and Phyllis this year was talking six minutes on Christmas eve to their parents in Brazil, from their aunt's home in Chicago. They are eagerly looking forward to spending their summer's vacation at their home in Sao Paulo.
Marilyn thinks the students here are more carefree and more independent, but she doesn't consider that as bad.
"I think it's a marvelous place," she said with enthusiasm, "nothing like the Americans—can't beat 'em"
Union Activities Forms K.U. Talent Bureau
Joan Woodward, chairman of Student Union activities, announced today the formation of a talent bureau to be available to any campus organization for parties or meetings
The talent bureau, under the direction of the entertainment committee of Student Union activities, will list all types of available student talent, particularly vocal and instrumental.
Any students or organizations desiring to register with the new talent bureau may contact Barbara Byrd, phone 267.
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Tri Delt's Establish Award For Women
The Delta Delta Delta sorority has announced an annual scholarship for a junior or senior woman at the University.
Any young woman whose academic and campus record are both favorable, and who needs financial assistance, is eligible to compete, the Graduate school office announced. The award will be $150 a year.
year.
On the selection committee will be Dean J. H. Nelson, Mrs. R. L. Falkenberg, Dr. Cora Downs, Miss Margaret Habein, and Miss Eileen O'Brien.
Applications for the spring semester are now being received by the selection committee. Further information may be obtained at 227 Frank Strong hall.
Lutheran Club Plans
Valentine Day Dance
Plans for a semi-formal Valentine's day dance Feb. 14 in the Kansas room of the Union building were made at the Sunday meeting of the Lutheran club. Ned Linegar, Y.M.C.A. secretary, spoke to the group after the regular fellowship supper. The meeting was held at the Trinity Lutheran church.
Motorist Hits Back
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San Jose, Calif. (UP)—A crude some-made bomb of gunpowder, paper and string was tossed into the police station tunnel under the City Hall, causing a large explosion, but little damage. A portion of a traffic citation receipt found among the fragments led police to believe it was the work of an angered motorist.
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Sings Over KFKU
The Kappa Alpha Theta chorus presented two numbers on KFKU Thursday night, "Would That Wishes," a sorority song, and "I've Got You Under My Skin." Ina Roderick directed.
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1
PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 27,1947
SPOTLIGHT
SPORTS
By BOB DELLINGER (Daily Kansan Sports Editor)
People are wondering if the Jay-
hawkers have really hit their stride
or if the Iowa State game was
merely the "law of averages" game.
The floor play showed by the Jay-
hawkers was top-flight, and if some
of those tip-ins had rolled inside
instead of outside, the score might
have been quite a bit higher.
As the situation stands, Kansas can prove itself by walloping Kansas State, which will be tough, by a sizeable score, which will be tough.
The Aggies will undoubtedly be pointed for the game with their intra-state rivals, and it will be a rough contest in all respects.
The refereeing of Ronald Gibbs and Cliff Ogden Friday was the best of any Kansas game this year, unless it was the working of Curtis and Shields in the Kansas-Arkansas game.
***
The gist of Coach Louis Menze's after-the-game comments was a sad, "I told you so." The Iowa State mentor had issued warnings before the game that the Jayhawkers were merely dormant and were likely to explode at any time.
The thorough trouncing handed out by the Oklahoma Sooners to the Missouri Tigers Saturday not only proves beyond any doubt that the Tigers can be beaten, but also that they can be swamped.
It seems that Charlie "The Hawk" Black is the only man in the Big Six that can hold Gerald Tucker within reasonable range. Black has turned the trick trice, holding Tucker to two goals and two frees on each occasion. Each time, the Hawk has outscored Tucker by at least three points. Tucker scored 21 points Saturday against M.U.
*
Two decisive games will be played this week, one at Lawrence, and the other a clash between Iowa State and Oklahoma on the Sooner court.
Charlie Black, Kansas' all-American forward, was chosen by Sportfolio on a national basketball "dream team," sharing the first quintet spots with Andy Phillip of Illinois, Ralph Beard and Alex Groza of Kentucky, and the great Sid Tanenbaum of N.Y.U.
Kansas, pre-season favorite to cop the Big Six, was ticketed for 14th place, and was rated four places over Rhode Island State which suffered its first loss last week. De-Paul, a Jayhawker opponent. Feb. 22, rated 12th at the start of the season.
The poll, taken near the first of the present season, ranked Kentucky as the top team in the country, with Illinois, Oklahoma A & M Notre Dame, New York U., Long Island U., and Southern California filling out the first seven. With the exception of Illinois, the selections could stand up fairly well today.
All Men's I-M Games Postponed
All men's intramural basketball games scheduled for this week will be postponed until the final examination period has been completed.
Eight games scheduled for tonight will not be played and will be rescheduled later.
Athletic Department Guests
Seniors from the Lawrence and Haskell high school football squads will be guests of the K.U. athletic department tonight in the Union. After dinner, pictures off he K.U.-Missouri football game will be shown. During the past season Lawrence was undefeated and Haskell lost only one game.
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K.U., Sooner Weekend Victories Tighten Big Six Basketball Race
Kansas' licking of the Cyclones Friday by a 55-30 count and the Oklahoma Sooners' victory over Missouri by a 57-43 tally combined to throw a new light on the Big Six title race.
The Tigers are still on top, but they now lead the Sooners by a mere half-game while at the other end of the standings, the Jayhawkers are beginning to climb. $ \circ $ $ * * $ $ * $
Tuesday's game with Kansas State at Lawrence will be the real test for the Jayhawkers as they start their comeback. If the Wildcats can show Kansas back into the cellar, the Jayhawkers may stay entrenched for an indefinite time, but a Kansas victory may sink the Wildcats to the bottom rung permanently.
The Cyclones didn't play poor ball at Lawrence, but Kansas unleashed the power which made it the preseason favorite for the Big Six crown.
The Jayhawkers played spasmodically, sinking unbelievable shots and making long passes click, then slumping and missing supposedly easy shots.
Led by Charlie "The Hawk" Black, the Jayhawkers rolled up 55 points against the Cyclones for the second time this year, and limited the hapless visitors to six less points than they got at the previous meeting of the two clubs in Kansas City.
The two Iowa State high scorers, Jim Myers and Don Paulsen, were limited to four and two points respectively, with only one of Paulsen's points coming while Black was in the game, and that off a foul by another Kansan.
Owen Peck and Harold England exchanged jobs at holding down Myers and limited him to a single field goal and two free tosses. Buck was high man for Iowa State with six points.
The two Kansas leaders, Black and Otto Schnellbacher, kept their averages intact, and Black added to his 11-point mark by dumping in 15 points. Schnellbacher maintained his 11-point pace with four goals and three frees.
Big Six Standings
W E
Missouri 4 1
Oklahoma 3 1
Nebraska 2 3
Kansas 1 3
Kansas State 1 3
Games this week: Tuesday, Kansas State at Kansas, Oklahoma A. & M. at Oklahoma; Friday, Nebraska at Drake; Saturday, Iowa State at Oklahoma, Nebraska at Ottumwa naval.
Iowa State (30) FG FT PP
Myers, f 1 2 3
Ray Wehde, f 1 3 5
Paulsen, c 0 2 4
Norman, g 0 2 2
Sheperd, g 0 0 2
Roy Wehde 1 0 2
Ferguson 0 2 1
Buck 2 2 2
Jessen 0 1 2
Schneider 1 0 1
Block 1 0 0
Kester 1 0 0
The Box Score
Totals 8 14 24
Kansas (55) FG FT PI
Schnellbacher, f 4 3 3
Black, f 6 3 3
Peck, c 0 4 3
Evans, g 2 0 3
Clark, g 1 2 2
Stramel 3 1 2
England 2 1 0
Houchin 1 0 1
Eskridge 1 1 2
Dewell 0 0 0
Sapp 0 0 1
Total 50 15 24
Totals 20 15 20
Score at half: Iowa State—12, Kansas—28. Free throws missed: Iowa State 9—Sheerdp (3), Ray Wehde, Buck, Paulsen, Schneider, Norman, Kester. Kansas 12—Black (2), Schnellbacher (2), Eskridge (2), Peck (4), Clark (2).
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JANUARY 27,1947
.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
nts
B' Squad Basketball Into Final Playoffs
Phi Gamma Delta reached the finals of the "B" league intramural basketball playoffs by a 31 to 25 victory over the Beta Theta Pi seconds Sunday.
Phi Delta Theta and Sigma Phi Epsilon "B" squads will play at 7:30 p.m. tonight for the right to meet the Phi Gam's in the championship game.
In first round round "B" playoff games played earlier, the Phi Delt's defeated Phi Kappa Psi "B" team, 50 to 30 the Sig Ep's won over Delta Chi, 29 to 23; the Beta's won over Kappa Sigma, 48 to 24; and the Phi Gam's defeated the Misfits, 28 to 21.
Three “A” league contests were played over the weekend. Sigma Chi handed the 1126 club a 39 to 26 defeat. The Indespines edged past Battenfield, 33 to 31. The Wicked Seven won from the Normans by a forfeit.
Baseball Schedule Includes 16 Games
A 16-game schedule for the 1947 K.U. baseball season was announced today, including eight games at Lawrence and eight away. Each series will be a two-game affair on successive days.
The 1947 schedule:
April 11-12, Nebraska at Lincoln April 16-17, Kansas State at Lawrence.
April 25-26, Oklahoma at Norman
May 7-8, Kansas State at Manhattan.
May 16-17, Nebraska at Lawrence.
May 23-24, Iowa State at Law-
rence.
France.
May 27-28, Missouri at Columbia
Tihen, Anderson Reach Table Tennis Finals
Doris Tihen, Gamma Phi Beta, and Joan Anderson, Alpha Delta Pi, have reached the finals in the women's intramural table tennis tournament which will end Thursday.
Miss Anderson won her match from Frances Chubb, Pi.Beta Phi, 21-10, 21-14, while Tihen edged out Lenore Brownlee, Locksley, 21-18, 21-14.
Hot-Shot Charlie
THE BUS
IMSAO 10
Charlie Black, K.U.'s Alk-American cager, showed his stuff Friday night, scoring 15 points and otherwise playing a great all-around game.
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Jury Calls In 'Rocky' For Answer On Fix'
New York. (UP) — Thomas "Rocky" Graziano, colorful challenger for the world middleweight boxing crown, was slated for a bout with the grand jury today in connection with reports that big-time gamblers had attempted to "fix" his cancelled bout with Cowboy Ruben Shank last month.
Never before in the 27 years since the "new" Madison Square Garden was built had the district attorney yanked a Garden fighter onto the carpet to probe a reported fix.
carpet to play.
Graziano is one of the game's key performers, the "Golden Boy" who ranks second only to Joe Louis, heavyweight king, as a gate attraction. Only last Sept. 27 he was a participant in the "fight of the year" with Tony Zale, middleweight champion, before 39,827 fans at Yankee stadium.
The fight under investigation—the one that never came off because of Rocky's back ailment — to have been his first bout after being knocked out by Zale in the sixth round of their thrilling championship battle. It was learned authoritatively that the investigation deals with reports that a syndicate of New York gamblers bet thousands of dollars on Shanks, who was a 4-1 underdog and who was given virtually no chance of winning by boxing writers.
The University High cagers slapped down Perry, 22-16, at Lawrence Friday snapping a 23-game winning streak for the visiting club.
University High Defeats Perry, 22-16
The Eagles started off hot and held a 14-10 lead at halftime. Then the squad squad amazed spectators by stalling the entire period, holding Perry scoreless while they got a goal and a free threw. U.H.S. held the lead through the last quarter.
Gene Riling rilled the Eagles with fixe baskets; Stallard paced the Insers with nine points. The visitors won the "B" team game, 15-12.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 27,1947
PAGE SIX
Kansan Comments
Where It Goes
"Okay, so I pay $6.18 for an activity book this spring. What do I get out of it? And for that matter what happened to that $9.79 I paid for the fall student activity book?"
Activity Fall Spring
Athletics $4.50 $1.90
Daily Kansan 1.00 1.00
All-Student Council .40 .35
Concerts .44 .42
Dramatics Productions .29 .29
Lecture Series .21 .21
Forensics .11 .11
Men's Glee Club .04 .035
Women's Glee Club .04 .035
Band Travel .22 .10
A.T. Reserve .20 .10
Unallotted 1.05 .95
Federal tax 1.17 .62
State tax .12 .06
If you can answer those questions, you don't need to read this editorial. If you don't know and don't care, don't read it. But if you, too, have wondered what happens to the more than $125,000 students paid or will pay to the University this school year for activity books, this is for you.
First thing to know is that the K.U. activity book price is pretty much in line with activity books all over the country. For every case you cite of one lower, the University can cite you one higher because over the years they've made a continuing study of prices in other schools.
Now, where does that money go? Ten activities in which students participate or which students attend are allotted a specific amount from each ticket. Federal and state taxes eat up a portion of each ticket; and the remainder goes into the Activity Ticket reserve and a fund marked "unallotted." More about these later. Look at the breakdown in tabulated form:
Totals ... $9.79 $6.18
Grand total...$15.97
ATHLETICS—$6.40
Largest allotment from the activity book goes to athletics. For this $6.40, you see all the home football games, the Kansas Relays, the state high school meet, all home tennis, baseball, track or golf matches. Basketball tickets have never been on the activity book because of seating problems, but students are given a priority and a reduced rate on home basketball tickets.
For purposes of bookkeeping, $4 is allotted to football, $1 to basketball, and all but a few cents of the remaining portion goes to the Relays account. Actually, this breakdown
The University Daily Kansan Student Newspaper of the
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn, National Editorial Assn, Inland Bank Group, Collegegate Press Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave. New York, NY 10023.
Managing Editor... Charles Roos
Asst. Managing Editor... Jane Anderson
Makeup Editor... Billie Marie Hamilton
Business Manager... Bill Donovan
Advertising Manager... Margery Handy
Circulation Manager... John McCormick
Telegraph Editor... Edward Swain
Telegraph Edit. ... Marsha Steward
City Editor... R. T. Kingman
The Kansas Press Association
1947
Member
National Editorial Association
A FREE PRESS--YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW
is purely arbitrary because all losses or profits go to the Athletic Association which handles all sports.
UNALLOTTED—$2.00
The two dollars that's earmarked "Unallotted" actually means "Intramurals and Miscellaneous." Most of the money in this fund goes to the intramural office which hires officials, keeps fields in some kind of order, furnishes equipment and all the other things necessary to carry on the large intramural program.
The rest of the "Unallotted" money is held in reserve for special requests for funds. No activity already receiving money from the activity book can request additional funds, but special groups may put the bite on the kitty.
For instance, a student group wanting to sponsor some kind of special attraction could ask for funds. Naturally the request is investigated thoroughly.
The other cryptic allotment is "Activity Ticket Reserve." This fund pays for the cost of printing the books, and in normal years, for the identification photos which go on the front of the book. And, unless something unforeseen happens, beginning next fall all students will have their picture taken and pasted on their activity books.
A.T. RESERVE—30c
Then, after paying for the cost of printing, the money in the fund just lies there until something for the students' benefit needs money. For instance, last fall, the student book store was helped along by the donation of $3,000 from this fund. You'll get some of that back when the bookstore pays dividends next June. Another job paid for from the activity ticket reserve was the leveling of the intramural field several years ago—that bulldozer job cost a couple of thousand dollars.
DAILY KANSAN-$2
For the two bucks you pay for the Daily Kansan, you get more than 150 issues. For four lectures, you pay about a dime apiece. Six concerts cost a little less than 14 cents apiece. The 75 cents given to the A.S.C. is then passed on to a large number of other small extra-curricular activities. Four dramatics productions cost you 58 cents.
Driving through Kansas City stop lights has convinced us that the 18th century hussy isn't the only thing that is "Forever Amber."
Yes, $15.97 is a lot of money. But it's not much when you figure out what you get from it.
Jaytalking --will Gree
With many of the big swing bands folding, we wonder to what juvenile delinquency will be attributed now.
The Chicago divorce who is offering to marry any man with a house if he will include her three sons in the contract has the right idea. She knows that it takes a heap of little things to make a house a home.
Ex-Georgia Governor Arnall will speak here next month on the subject of "Whose Country Is This Anyway?" Quite a subject for someone who couldn't figure out whom a state belonged to.
We still can't figure out why Harry Woodring bought three soft-drink companies. Perhaps he was just getting prepared for anything—straight or mixer—he'll have it.
Progressives Start Drive
A membership drive by the new K.U. political party, the Progressives, is being conducted today, tomorrow and Wednesday. Booths will be open from 1 to 6 p.m., in the lobby of Frank Strong hall and the Union lounge.
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JANUARY 27,1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Official Bulletin
Jan. 27,1947
Kansan board meeting at 4 p.m. today in 107 Journalism building.
The All-Student Council has declared a vacancy to be filled by a representative of the Pachacamac party from District II, the School of Engineering. Today is the last day for petitions to be filed with the secretary of the A.S.C.
☆ ☆ ★
A meeting of the organization of a Graduate Nurse's club will be held at 5 p.m. tomorrow in the classroom at Watkins hospital. All graduate nurses urged to attend.
All unsold tickets for "March of Dimes" dance must be turned in at Dean Werner's office, 228 Frank Strong by 2 p.m. tomorrow.
Applications for positions of K-Book editor and business manager must be taken to student organizations window of the University business office by Feb. 15. Address applications to Publications committee, A.S.C.
* *
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow in Barlow chapel of Myers hall. Don Parnell will conduct the Bible study. Everyone welcome.
Next meeting of P.S.G.L. senate will be at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 12 in 103 Green hall.
All members of Lampados club please be present for a concise meeting at 7:30 tonight in the Union lounge.
W. E.C. meeting scheduled for to-morrow has been cancelled.
Alpha Phi Omega will not meet Thursday.
Graduate record examination Feb. 3 and 4. Applications may be obtained in 2A Frank Strong.
Holdredge, Neb. (UP)—Two army air force veterans have evolved a new way to "take a flier" in real estate.
A real estate agent, Warner Lundeen, and a former AAF pilot, Ed Schoenthal, teamed up for a new type of airborne operation—that of showing farm land from the air to prospective buyers.
prospects. Drainage, the condition of pastures, and even the fertility of the soil as indicated by the consistency of crop growth can be determined from the air, according to Lundeen.
Frankfurt (UP)—Lt. John J. Warren, Loyall, Ky., charged today died as the result of "murderous negligence" by an army physician.
Father Says Child Died
From 'Murderous Negligence'
Lieutenant Warren said that his child became ill four days out of New York while its mother was taking the baby to Germany to join the father. It received inadequate treatment aboard ship, he said, and died two and a half hours after reaching Frankfurt.
WATCH REPAIRS
WATCH REPAIRS
WORK GUARANTEED
3 to 10 Days Service
SAMPLES WATCH SHOP
710½ Mass. Phone 368
Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
Copy must be in the University Daly Kansan Business Office, Journalism bldg. not in the library p.m. of the day before application is desired. All classfields are cash in advance.
Classified Advertising Rates
Classified Words
One day Three days Five
days
25 words or less 35c 65c 90c
additional words 1c 2c 3c
Lost
1 PAIR Plastic rim glasses in black case and 1 Mason. Fundamentals of Accounting. Reward for either. Call Lym Chase at 1555. -28-
TO RENT 2 bedroom furnished or unfurnished apartment or house. Call Art Ruppentinial at 6, phone 2337.
VETERANS! For your use to work at the Student Book store. -28-ROOM For 2 boys. Call Bob Westmacott. -2871J -28
Wanted
Business Services
ATTENTION, Medical Students, micro-
ocopes, colorimeters, balances, engineering instruments cleaned and repaired. Thirteen years' experience in the Missouri Service company, 720 Delaware, Kansas City 6, Mo. Free estimates. -27
PHOTO-EXACT Copies, discharge and valuable papers. Fast service. Low price. Round Corn Drug Co., 801 Mass. tropper or Lane F, Apt. 18, Sunflower, Kansas. -28
FOR That coke date remember the Eldridge pharmacy at 701 Mass., phone 999. -28
TYPING. Experienced typist. Term papers, reports, etc. Prompt, accurate reasonable. Call 3505-646-1800 for immediate contact Fritzel Dairy drivers at Sunflower or phone 1145, Lawrence. -28
LET A veteran's wife type your term papers. Neat and accurate. Phone 673-W or drop by 942 New Hampshire. -27
TYPING. Term papers and done.
sure.
*TYPING Term papers and reports. Done promptly and reasonably. Phone 1961. 10 ALTERATIONS: Buttons, buckles, machine and tailored buttonhole, Smith
943 1-2 Moss 20
Dressmaking 20
For Sale
FORMALS In sizes 9-16 in good condition and very good style and colors. Also nice assortment of street dresses, suits, dresses, coats, shoes, costumes, comfort Ever Ready Shop, N41. N - 27.
CAMERA Fans! An Eastman 35 mm miniature Kodak 35 k. f 4.5 amnastigm color corrected lens. Shutter up to 1-150 complete with Type B Kodachrome and series VI filter adapter and following: 1 Omag Medium yellow K-2 filter, 1 Omag Red filter, 1 Type A to Type B Kodachrome and attachment, shutter recently checked and lubricated. All like new complete with owner manual $88. Call Delmar Waterson, 3299 after 7 p.m. or see at 170 Indiana. LATES for W. Grimm, phone 1426 M.-27 TAYLORCRAFT. Side-by-side, 40 horse. Excellent condition throughout. $750 or best offer. McJones, 1700 Louisiana. -27 USED Icebox, $12; fluorescent desk lamp.
$7; portable wardrobe closet. $8; Schick electric shaver, $5. See at 511 Ohio, upstairs.
1941 Mercury convertible. Excellent condition, radio and heater, and light. See daily after 1 p.m. at 611 W. 6th.
13-ROOM Stone house. Good location. Phone 1596-R.
-14
Miscellaneous
APPLICATIONS Are now being accepted for residence of Henley-House Co-op. Call 1315 for further information. -27 WANT Riders from vicinity of Shawnee and Merriam counties, but threw three or four patrols. Larry Levine, M.D., 82 WILL H. C. Gilson or George Beasley or the fellow who took my navy peacock from the lower cafeteria Thursday noon, please contact the chemistry office at 1555 for exchange. W. M. Anderson .-28
Transportation
HUDSON - RENT - A - CAR - SERVICE
Will rent you a car by day or weekend.
Reservations taken. Phone 3315. Location
601 Vermont. -28-
For Rent
NEWLY Decorated room for 2 men students. Well furnished. Call 2482 J.-27.
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CALL FOR PHILIP MORRIS ALWAYS BETTER-BETTER ALL WAYS
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 27,1947
A's, U's, Y's Will Have Advantage In Registration, Enrollment Week
Those students whose names begin with A, U, and Y, can get past registration tables early and enroll in the classes they want next semester, but many others, including the W's, Z's, and E's will have to take what's left.
The schedules:
Monday, Feb. 10
8- 9, A-U, Y
9-10 P
10-11 F, Com-Cz
11-12 Ca-Col
1- 2 Ma-Me
2- 3 Mi-Mz, X, I, V
3- 4 J, K
Registration
Tuesday, Feb. 11
9 - H-He
9-10 H-Hz, D
10-11 L, O
11-12 R
1 - T, N
2 - G, Q
3 - Sa-She
Wednesday, Feb. 12
8- 9 Shi-Sp
9-10 Sq-Sz, E
10-11 Bom-Bz
11-12 Bom-Zl
1- 2 Wa-We, Z
1- 3 Wh-Wz
Pay Fees
Enrollment will take place after payment of fees in the following places College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, Robinson gym. School of Engineering, Marvin hall. School of Fine Arts, Robinson gym. School of Business, 210 Frank Strong hall. School of Education, Robinson gym. School of Law, 108 Green hall. School of Pharmacy, 211 Bailey Chemical Lab. School of Medicine, 104 Haworth hall. Graduate school, 227 Frank Strong. Classes will begin in all departments on Feb. 13. Enrollment on or after is date will be permitted only after payment of a late fee of $2.50 in addition to the regular fees.
Enrollment
Monday, Feb. 10
6:30-10 A, U, Y
10:30-11 F, P
1:30-3 C
3:40-3 M
Tuesday, Feb. 11
8:30-10 J, X, I, V, K
10-11:30 H
1:30-3 D, L
3-4:30 R, T
Wednesday, Feb. 12
8:30-10 S
10:10-13 G, O,N,Q
1:30-3 B
3:4-3 W, Z.E
Students entering the University for the first time, former students who have not been enrolled at K.U. during the fall semester of 1946, and students who are transferring from one school of the University to another must register for the spring semester.
300 Attend Band. Orchestra Party
Arthur Partridge, vice president of the band, was toastmaster. Harry M. Sipple of the Christian church, gave the invocation, and greetings were extended by Prof. Russell Wiley. Dean Paul B. Lawson talked on "How Insects Sing."
In a valentine atmosphere of lace and crimson decorations, 300 persons celebrated the annual University band and orchestra dinner party Saturday night at the Union.
The Three Queens, a new cornet feature of the band composed of Jeanne Peck, Dorothy Brenner, and Anna Noe, presented a selection, accompanied by Ellen Spurney.
Frank Stalzer, pianist, played "You Are My Sunshine" and demonstrated treatments of the song as played by Beethoven, Mozart, Haydn, Liszt, Debussy, and Gershwin.
"The Hungry Five" was impersonated by Shirley Sloan and Carol Terrill, clarinets, Jeanne Peck, cornet, Marjorie Pamiter, baritone, and Emily Schnabel, tuba, with Mary Zollinger directing.
In conclusion, Prof. Allen Crafton humorously recounted "How Culture Came to Kansas."
K.U. Tool Engineers To Make Field Trip
The K.U. chapter of the American Society of Tool Engineers will attend a meeting of the Kansas City chapter Feb. 5. The group will make a field trip through several manufacturing plants in the city Feb. 7.
All students who are interested in making the field trip may contact Prof. Paul Hausman or Howard Rust in Fowler shops.
A regular monthly meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. Feb. 13 in Fowler hops. The program will include a speaker and films. Plans will also be made for attending the A.S.T.E. banquet.
"Telling your son what he should study in college is like trying to pick his wife for him," was what Henry Haworth, Sr., used to say to Henry Haworth, Jr., when discussions of a career arose.
K.U.'s Third Haworth Won't Be A Geologist
So now Henry Haworth, Jr., a grandson of the Prof. Erasmus Haworth, who was head of the K.U geology department from 1902 to 1920. is now a freshman in pre-law.
It's the fact that Haworth isn't a geology student that makes him unique in his family, since both his father and his grandfather have been outstanding in geological work.
Thanks to an open-minded father, "Hank." Jr., came to K.U. to study law, and not geology, although he spent last summer in Wyoming working on an oil well and is now taking a course in the geology department. Haworth believes h i s greatest interest lies in legal work, agreeing with his uncle, Paul E. Haworth, class of '22.
Erasmus Haworth, in whose honor Haworth hall was named, also was the organizer of the state geological survey in 1894, in securing federal aid for state mining schools.
Mrs. Earl Swarner, formerly Miss Phyllis Reynolds, who was graduated from the University in 1924, has donated 50 books on drama and theater to the speech and drama department, Allen Crafton, professor in that department, announced today.
At present, Haworth, Sr., class of '15, is an independent consultant geologist in Wichita, doing work in mid-western oil fields.
Graduate Donates Books
Newman Club Mixer
The Newman club will have a mixer from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. Feb. 14, in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union building.
Deadline Extended For Hall Awards
The deadline of application for the two womens scholarships halls. Miller and Watkins, has been extended through Tuesday, Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, announced today.
Only a few applications have been submitted to the dean's office to fill the three vacancies for the spring semester, she said.
Summer Session To Be Oversized
Plans for a summer session equal to pre-war regular school terms both in enrollment and courses offered were announced today by Dean George B. Smith of the University School of Education and director of the summer session.
Registration and enrollment will be June 19-21. Eight full weeks of classwork will begin June 23 and end August 16. The School of Law will offer two consecutive six-week terms beginning June 17, the day after commencement, and ending September 6.
At least 35 departments will offer complete undergraduate programs. All schools of the university will have full teaching faculties. Graduate courses will be offered in all fields. Professional training in such fields as pre-medicine, pre-nursing, engineering, business, journalism, education and physical education will be given on the same basis as during the regular school year.
Although the current priority system will apply to admission, Dean Smith expects there will be room for all who desire to attend. The university's greatly expanded dormitory and food service facilities and teaching staff will be available during the summer session.
Radioactivity Traced For Medical Use
Application of radio-active tracers for medical detection and treatment will be only one of the uses of elements produced from uranium fission, Dr. David Hume, KU. professor and atomic bomb research chemist, said recently in a speech to the Chemistry club.
"The tracing of radioactivity for medical purposes by the "Gieger counter," an instrument made up of electronic devices, determines how much radioactivity a patient is receiving and where it is taking effect." Dr. Hume said.
Dr. Hume's job with the atom scientists at Oak Ridge, Tenn., was determining how much radioactivity remained in the 30 elements derived from uranium 235.
For example, a radio active element, iodine, can be detected in humans in the thyroid when it is given for an enlargement of the gland. The radio active element is given in small quantities producing a deteriorating effect on the tissue, he added.
Kansas City, Mo., Jan. 27. (UP)—The Kansas City Star management in a statement today said that the International Typographical Union executive council had ordered composing room employees of the Star to return to their jobs through a pressmen's local union picket line.
I.T.U. Orders Printers Back To Star Shop
Landis Asks Abolition Of Compulsory Service
Washington (UP)—Gerald W. Landis, R., Ind., today introduced a resolution urging the United States to work for world-wide abolition of compulsory military service before considering a peacetime draft.
News of the World
A sharp rise in army recruiting strengthened the belief, meanwhile, that the draft act will be allowed to die when the present extension expires March 31.
Landis said this country may find it necessary to consider compulsory military service to protect its own interests. But first, he said, the United States should work through the United Nations for an international agreement outlawing compulsory military service.
U.A.W. Finishes On Top In Allis-Chalmers Vote
Milwaukee. (UP) — The Unitec Automobile Workers' Union (CIO) which has carried on a 273-day strike against the Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing company, was the apparent victor today in a battle over collective bargaining representation for the firm's 11,000 employees.
The UAW tallied 4,122 votes in a special election called by the Wisconsin employment relations board, while the Independent Worker's union, formed by employees objecting to the UAW's handling of contract negotiations, polled 4,015 votes.
Senate Bill Would Raise Rent Ceilings
Washington (UP)—Four Republican senators were putting finishing touches today on a bill to raise rent ceilings immediately by 15 to 20 per cent and to abolish all controls within the next 15 months.
For 20 Years They Spared That Tree
They arranged a meeting today to iron out two last problems, whether the immediate increase ought to be 15 or 20 per cent and whether controls ought to be abandoned Dec. 31, 1947 or April 30, 1948.
The one blackboard in Frank Strong hall which had not been erased in 20 years has been removed.
'Steel Contract Extension Improves Price Picture'
The Mailman's Doodle At Last Came Down
Washington. (UP)—Government hopes for sustained labor peace soared today to the highest point since the end of the war.
A high administration official said the contract extension from Feb. 15 to May 1 in the steel industry was "just the thing we needed" to encourage high production and help bring prices down.
The blackboard, on which was a chalk drawing made in 1927, was sacrificed in the recent redecorating of the K.U. post office. Made by Grant Mull, who was employed in 1922 as the first mail-carrier for the newly established post office, the drawing was the outline of a
With his pony and cart in which he made deliveries hitched outside, Mr. Mull waited in the post office one day for the mail to come in. He picked up a piece of chalk and began "doodling" on the blackboard
A few minutes later he went out on his route, leaving on the blackboard the picture of a tree, mute
witness to his artistic ability. When Mr. Mull retired several months later, R. C. Abraham, post office manager, kept a watchful eye on the drawing and did not allow it to be erased.
The years went by and the drawing grew dimmer, as mailbags side-swiped it now and then.
At last the decision to remodel the post office. Buildings and a running room were put out partitions, painted, put in fluorescent lights, and the blackboard drawing half to ten.
The drawing is remembered now only by those who noticed it in the past twenty years, and by Mr. Abraham, who took a few time-exposure pictures of it with his camera, just for old times' sake.
Washington. (UP)—Sen. Brien McMahon, of Conneticut said today that Russia apparently is building a secret atomic plant behind the Ural mountains, and he asserted that the United States "may be in mortal danger" of atomic bomb attack unless an international inspection system is set up promptly.
Senator Warns U.S. Of Russian Atom Plan
He told the senate that United Nation's delay in establishing atomic safeguards is fraught with peril because other nations are working "night and day" to solve the riddle of the bomb. They will succeed, McMahon said.
"We stand in no danger from whatever bombs may be in our possession, but we may be in mortal danger from bombs in the possession of others.
McMahon is former chairman of the joint congressional committee on atomic energy and is now the ranking Democratic member. He was author of domestic atomic control legislation.
Hou We You
He made it plain that Russia is the big enigma in atomic matters as in many other problems.
McMahon's idea that Russia is building an atomic plant in Siberia east of the Urals was based in part on Soviet news reports that Peter Kapitza, Russia's chief nuclear scientist, has been banished to Siberia.
"It itse obvious to me," he said, "that a more likely explanation is that Kapitza is now busily at work behind the Urals constructing an atomic fission plant."
Capone Burial To Be Simple
Things Are Tough All Over,
It's True. But Not This Bad
Jerusalem. (UP) — Judge Ralph Windham was kidnapped from his Tel Aviv district court room today by an armed band presumed to be from the Jewish underground in the second abduction of a well known Briton within 18 hours.
British Judge Kidnaped
Hannnegan Denies Rumors
He'll Resign Cabinet Post
Miami Beach, Fla. (UP)—Scarface Al Capone, whose syndicate reputedly took in two million dollars a day during his heyday as czar of the underworld, will be buried in a private and simple funeral service reminiscent of the cloistered last years of his life.
Hanneman dismissed as "unfounded" reports that he was in poor health.
If she
rounds
James
expects
well in
Young-
bureau
Canariato was the one who loaned his boss the $2,000—at six percent interest.
Boston. (UP) - Postmaster General Robert E. Hannaneg said today he planned to return to Washington later this week to continue as a cabinet member and chairman of the Democratic National committee "unless I'm asked to resign by President Truman."
New York. (UP)—Things were so tough for Arthur Henney. pawnbroker, that even he had to borrow $2,000 from one of his clerks. The shop still failed to show a profit and Heaney called in the police. Clerk James Canariato admitted stealing $19,000 from his boss during the last two years.
Sees Business Recession
Washington. (UP)—Sen. Alexander Wiley of Wisconsin warned today that the oft-predicted business recession might well become a reality unless congress promptly outlaws the flood of portal pay suits, now totaling almost five billion dollars.
"In fa expect than th when l at the
All probal Mr. Yr. being and faculty been will b
Truman Asks Relief Money
Washington. (UP)—President Truman asked congress today for a supplemental appropriation of 300 million dollars for government and relief in areas occupied by American forces.
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---
University DAILY KANSAN
STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Tuesday, January 28, 1947
44th Year No. 78
Lawrence, Kansas
Housing To Be Well In Hand,' Youngberg Says
If second semester enrollment rounds off near the 9,000 mark as James K. Hitt, University registrar, expects the housing situation will be well in hand, according to Irvin Youngberg, director of the housing bureau.
"In fact," Mr. Youngberg said, "we expect to have more rooms available than there are students to fill them when last-minute vacancies are filed at the bureau.
All of the Sunnyside units will probably be completed by March 1, Mr. Youngberg said. Of the 31 units being built, 10 have been completed and are occupied. When married faculty members and students have been housed, the remaining units will be used to house single men.
Men living in three buildings at Sunflower village will be moved to Lawrence as soon as possible. Mr. Youngberg said. The village units will be retained by the University, however, until enrollment figures are normal, he added.
The housing bureau is looking forward to the time when students living in the basement of Spooner Thayer museum can be conveniently housed elsewhere and the space returned to the museum.
K-Book Staff Deadline Is Feb. 15
No applications for editor and business manager of the K-Book have been made, according to Anne Scott, chairman of the publications committee of the All Student Council. Applications are to be in by Feb. 15 so that the persons chosen may be announced by March 1, Miss Scott explained.
10
The editor and business manager receive $10 each, according to the constitution, and all staff members receive 10 per cent of the total amount of advertising sold and collected.
By Bibler
Scott expert's job is to collect the material which includes dates of events and officers for next year. The business manager has charge of the advertising, distribution and collection of K-Books.
March Of Dimes Ends Tomorrow
Tomorrow is the last day for campus contributions to the March of Dimes campaign for faculty and students alike.
Faculty members may place their contributions in the campus mail before 5 p.m. Wednesday. All mail should be addressed to room 107, Robinson gymnasium. Prof. Henry Shenk, head of the physical department, is University chairman for faculty members and employees.
Cheerleaders Close Careers
The Kansas State-K.U. basketball game tonight will be the last appearance of cheerleaders Virginia Urban and Anna Muhlenbruch. They will be graduated at the end of this semester.
WEATHER
Kansas — Increasing cloudiness, snow north today. Strong south-eastern winds. Snow north, rain or snow south (tonight and Wednesday). Little change in temperature tonight. Colder northwest Wednesday. Low tonight upper 20's northwest to lower 30's southeast.
Little Man On Campus
Bob Barker
IN CALYX KNICAN
Parking Regulations Will Remain During Finals
Parking and zoning regulations will not be suspended during final examinations and spring enrollment as they have been in the past, the parking committee announced today. This action is necessary due to the increased number of cars on campus this year.
It was also announced that zone 1 will be closed for approximately 120 days because of construction work being done there. All cars bearing zone 1 stickers will be allowed to park on either side of the street between Bailey Chemical laboratories and Snow hall until the work is completed.
Contract Carriers Seek Order To Halt Pickets
Kansas City, Mo. (UP) — While massed pickets blocked entrances to the Kansas City Star building today at shift change hours to ITU employees, a group of contract carriers filed in circuit court an application for a temporary restraining order to halt the picketing.
for this.
The pickets formed their mass line before dawn to block the entrances to the day composing room crew. After the printers left, the picket lines dwindled until shortly mailers, members of another ITU local, appeared. Again the mass pickets went into action and the mailers also remained out of the building.
Guy Rice, attorney, said 109 carriers signed the petition. He said he believed a total of 140 of the carriers were behind the move. In their petition, they charged that the striking group of contract carriers was in the minority and asked that they be restrained from seeking bargaining representation for all carriers. Hearing on the application was set for this afternoon.
Linotype operators and makeup men, numbering about 50, watched the mass lines for sometime earlier in the day and then gradually drifted off. ___
Paul Rogers, operator of the Rogers Fashion Cleaners in Lawrence, has purchased the West Hills home of Prof. R. H. Wheeler, who is on leave of absence from the psychology department.
Paul Rogers Purchases Dr. Wheeler's Home
Wellborn Elected New I.S.A. President
SCHULZMAN
SHIRLEY WELLBORN
Shirley Wellborn, College junior, was elected president of the Independent Student's association Monday.
day.
Other officers are Patricia Graham, College junior, vice-president; John Sells, engineering junior, business manager; Margaret van der Smissen, College sophomore, Student Council representative; Allan Conley, College senior, and Ruth Cawood, College senior, senior class representatives; Marylee Masterson, College junior, ira Jordan, College junior, junior class representatives; Marjorie Vogel, College sophomore, and Robert Campbell, College sophomore, sophomore class representatives; Dorothy Keith, College freshman, and Norman Jennings, College freshman, freshman class representatives.
Only 125 persons voted, Lois Thompson, election chairman, said.
Advisors Listed For Underclassmen
A list of the freshman and sophomore advisors has been posted on the College bulletin board, where students may note their advisors for help in making out a tentative second semester schedule.
Juniors and seniors may call at the College office to see their transcript record, or may see advisers before enrolling.
Gunfire Routs Aggies As They Paint 'Jimmy'
Gerard Catches 12, Who Spend Night In Jail, Clean Statue This Morning
Twelve Kansas Aggies spent the night in the city jail and Uncle Jimmy Green wore two dabs of white paint on his cottails and a "Beat K.U." sign at his feet today, as the result of a midnight raid Monday.
sign at his feet today, as the result Two carloads of Aggies were caught by A. H. Gerard, University policeman, and city police shortly after trying to "decorate" the statue.
Open The Drawer, Dick Pay Your Traffic Fine
Students who don't pay their traffic tickets before the end of this semester will find them attached to their fee cards when they enroll next semester, the University Business office announced today.
At that time the students will have to pay the fines or be refused enrollment.
The Business office requested that all students having unpaid fines pay them before the end of the semester in order to keep from adding more work to the already complicated job of enrollment.
12 New Instructors Added To Faculty
Twelve new faculty members have been appointed to the University of Kansas staff for the second semester. Nine are in the School of Engineering and Architecture, and three in the College.
They are Seldon Kudson, Dan McCoy and William Peters, chemistry; Benjamin Levy, Judson Goodrich, Douglas Parks and Dean Wampler, electrical engineering; Richard Couvert and Walter Voightlander, applied mechanics; James McLeod and Ralph Basinger, shop practice; and Frederick Evans, mechanical engineering.
Activities Committee To Meet After Finals
The committee has obtained copies of the Jayhawker magazine which will be sent to Kansas high schools to promote the University. Pictures of campus leaders and campus scenes will also be distributed in February.
A meeting of county club chairmen of the Student statewide activities committee will be held after finals, Chairman Dwight Deay, announced Monday. Plans for a spring semester dance will be discussed.
The men gave their names as Kenneth Pricer, V. V. Jones, L. L. McDonald, R. J. Campbell, G. O. Lash, V. L. Nicholson, D. H. Cristman, D. M. Alexander, D. H. Steeples, V. E. Boatwright, Elmer C. Nichols, and R. H. Zimmerman.
According to Mr. Gerard, who was parked in his car near Fraser hall, two cars, a Ford and a Chevrolet, 1941 models, were cruising up and down Jayhawk Drive at 12 o'clock.
"When I went on duty, I had a premonition that something was going to happen," he said.
So when the cars came back toward the statue, Mr. Gerard was waiting in front of Watkins hospital ready to chase them.
"One car went on down the hill, but the other stopped in front of the statue and one of the men jumped out with a bucket of paint and a paint brush and started painting." he related.
"As I came up, some of the occupants of the car warned the painter that 'someone is coming.'"
Mr. Gerard nabbed the man with the brush and bucket, but the car fled down 14th street.
"I yelled at them to stop and when the car kept going, I fired at them. I must have fired five times and still the car did not stop," Mr. Gerard recalled.
resulted.
"I took the license number of the first car and turned it in to city police," he said.
Then he settled back and waited, Mr. Gerard said. A few minutes later, the second car returned to pick up the painter, and he took the men into custody.
Chester Foster, campus policeman brought them up on the Hill and supervised work as they "cleaned up" Uncle Jimmy and an eight foot strip of walk in front of Hoch auditorium.
All the men were taken to the city jail where they spent the night. They were released this morning by Henry Werner, dean of student affairs.
Dean Werner called Dean Puglesy, dean of administration at Manhattan this morning and arranged to have the men released to Kansas State authorities "as soon as they have cleaned up the paint."
This painting marks the first violation of the seven-year-old peace pact this semester, Dean Werner said.
Daily Kansan Will Publish 'World News'
Campus Will Have Newspaper During Exams
The campus will have a newspaper during examination week, the Kansan board decided Monday.
Called "World News," and carrying mainly news of national and international importance, the paper will "fill in a news gap caused by the temporary discontinuation of the Daily Kansan, and by the strike on the Kansas City Star," according to Marcella Stewart, board chairman.
Today's issue of the Daily Kansan will be the last until Feb. 10.
This extra service to students will be available on the usual Daily Kansan publication days, and in three of the Kansan's distribution boxes—those inside the Memorial Union, Frank Strong hall, and the library.
Because of the severe shortage of newsprint, only 2,000 copies of a one-page paper can be printed daily. A few copies will be saved for each organized house at the Daily Kansan's business office.
This "World News" is an emergency measure for this semester only, Miss Stewart explained, and it will be discontinued immediately if the Kansas City Star resumes publication.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
JANUARY 28,1947
Veterans Hold Calming Influence On Traffic, K.U.'s Dick Tracy'Says
"KU's veterans are a good influence on the campus." Chester Foster, traffic officer at Mississippi street and Jayhawk drive, says. "The veteran enrollment has had a tendency to calm down the rowdy driving element."
To the thousands of students who pass his intersection daily, the tan police officer who calmly and efficiently controls the surge of traffic has become a familiar sight.
But to Officer Foster, dubbed "Dick Tracy" by the students, the supervision of traffic on Mount Ordead is anything but routine. It is a complex problem requiring steady nerves and a lot of patience.
For most students, contact with Office. Foster has been limited to a brief nod and brisk signal to go ahead, but to an unlucky few, his appearance has meant an embarrassing trip to the Lawrence police court, were explanations were in order.
"Speeding is my pet peeve, the one thing I won't tolerate" the officer declared in an interview recently "The fellow who constantly puts the pressure on the accelerator is the one most likely to have trouble with me."
"Although women drivers are usually more unsure of themselves," the brown-clad policeman said, "they are not involved in so many accidents as men."
Admitting that men are involved more frequently in motor collisions than women, Mr. Foster attributes the fact to the heavy ratio of men drives to woman car operators.
The most common violations are packing infractions, Officer Foster said, explaining that these are handled through the student council. Parking fines go to the city of Lawrence, and the University derives only indirect benefits from them.
"Aay infractions except those under the control of the student council are under the jurisdiction of the city police court," the campus policeman said. "That includes speeding, parking by fire plugs, and other offenses."
Officer Foster has the authority to deputize students to act as "cops" under his direction when the occasion demands it, and he prefers to use student help whenever possible. A member of the Lawrence police department, the officer is employed by the state and assigned as a special police officer to the University.
In addition to this duty, he also holds the position of deputy sheriff of Douglas county.
He has two police employees under his supervision, who check parking zones and write tickets for violation of parking rules. They are Alfred Gerard, who serves as night patrolman, and Clyde Channel, daytime patrolman.
Officer Foster has a new motorcycle, a police car, and all the other equipment and accessories for his job.
Majuro, Marshall Islands. (UP)—The Navy, temporary administrator of the captured Pacific islands, is having a hard time convincing the natives of the value of American money.
Several hundred natives are employed here by the Navy to clean up this war-devastated island. They are paid an average wage of $20 a month, in addition to free food and housing.
A fireman with the Lawrence fire department for two years, the officer has held the campus traffic job since July 1, 1946, when the position was created.
Lt. William Rogers, Paducah, Ky., recently extended his hand to congratulate a native worker who had just received a month's pay.
Natives Don't Like The Filthy Stuff
The native handed the lieutenant the $20, smiled and walked away.
hainted" the lieutenant the $20, smiles and aways. Lieutenant Rogers had to call him back and return the stack of 20 one-dollar bills.
University Daily Kansan
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year. (in Lawnade add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawnade, Kan., every afternoon during the school year except Saturday and Sunday, three days, and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawnade, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
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Club May Send Messages Soon
The Amateur Radio club may be ready by next semester to let you talk free to anyone on the globe, Paul Gratryn, president said today.
"The necessary equipment for the 175-watt station was available two months ago when the club was organized, but when we tried to find a room somewhere on the campus to set up a radio shack we ran into difficulties," he explained.
The department of electrical engineering has agreed to sponsor the club and Prof. V. P. Hessler, head of the department, has indicated that a room in the electrical engineering laboratory may be available early next semester, Gratny said.
Smith Writes Pamphlet On 'The Life Of A Bill'
"The Life of a Bill," a pamphlet describing the process by which a bill becomes a law in Kansas has recently been written by Rhoten A. Smith, research assistant of the Bureau of Government Research.
Of the 20,000 copies which are being distributed today by the Bureau, a part will go to the state legislature for redistribution to visitors at the sessions.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 28,1947
PAGE THREE
SOCIALLY SPEAKING
ults
ELINOR BROWNE, Society Editor
Gamma Phi's Elect
Newly elected officers of the Gaumn Phi Beta sorority are Elizabeth Evans, president; Mary Ann McClure, vice-president; Dorothy Feldkamp, secretary; Glenda Luehner, treasurer; Sarah Heil, house manager; Betty Brothers, pledge trainer; Barbara Johnson, rush chairman; Bonnie Veatch, scholarship chairman; Dorothy James, activities chairman; Barbara Felt, executive representative.
Chemistry Fraternity Elects
Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemistry fraternity, announces the election of the following men to offices: Warren Lowen, master alchemist; George Worrell, vice-master alchemist; Jay Stewart, reporter; Karl Kron, assistant reporter; John Poe, master of ceremonies; John Startz, recorder; Thomas Bean, alumni secretary.
Delta Chi's Surprise Housemother
The members of Delta Chi fraternity surprised their housemother, Mrs. H. J. Overholser, with a birthday party in her honor Friday night at the chapter house. Guests attending the party were Dr. and Mrs. Donald C. Brodie, Mrs. Otto Schnellbacher, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Barr, Jeanne VanWormer, Anne Shaefer, Nora Mason, Virginia Coppedge, Caroline Morriss, and Janet Hamilton.
Alpha Chi Sigma Pledges
Alpha Chi Sigma announces the pledging of Paul Duckworth, Mack McCormick, Kenneth Reasons, and Quentin Wheatley.
Anderson-Gunn
Mr. and Mrs. Ira R. Anderson, 716 Louisiana street, announce the approaching marriage of their daughter, Jane, to James E. Gunn, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Wayne Gunn, Kansas City, Mo.
Miss Anderson, College senior is the retiring chairman of the Kansan board, and has been assistant managing editor of the Daily Kansan the past semester. She has been vice president of Theta Sigma Phi, professional journalism sorority.
Gunn, also a College senior, was editor-in-chief of the Daily Kansan the first half of this semester. He is president of Sigma Delta Chi, professional journalism fraternity.
The wedding will take Feb. 6 in Danforth chapel.
Bobby Sox Are Style For Sweetheart Swing
The Sweetheart Swing, which will be held immediately after the Kansas University-Nebraska University basketball game on Feb. 15, will be a "sweater and skirt" affair, it was announced today by Keith Wilson, Union Activities chairman for the dance. Kass Kassinger and his band will play.
The main attraction of the evening will be the nine "typical coeds" from colleges and universities in Kansas and Missouri invited to be guests of the Student Union Activities committee for the day. Their escorts will be the "nine most datable males" to be chosen by the men's organized houses next semester. The selection was postponed because the men will not have time this week to choose candidates.
Instructor Speaks To Therapy Club
Miss Lilyan Warner, instructor in Physical Medicine, spoke to 40 members of the Occupational Therapy club recently in Frank Strong hall. Miss Warner explained the need for physical therapists, the requirements for entering the field, and the existing opportunities in this type of work.
Officers elected for the ensuing semester were: Wilda J. Hosler, president; Margaret A. Gansle, vice-president; Rose Ann Madden, secretary; and Dorothy Park, treasurer.
COEDS' CORNER
If you're looking for a worry bird to fret about finals for you, better contact Kathleen "Kathy" Bird, who is the official worry bird for all her friends.
Kathleen 'Worry' Bird Will Fret About Your Final Exams, Too
my name is Bird, they tell me their troubles. Then they relax and I stow the worries in the back of my mind and relax, too."
"I help a lot of folks that way," asserted Kathy, who is a sophomore, majoring in child psychology. "I promise to worry for them, and since in Kind, they tell me their $ \textcircled{4} $
Kathy decided to become a child psychologist during nurses training at Wesley hospital in Topeka.
After becoming a registered nurse, Kathy entered K.U. in the fall of 1946 for study in child psychology Later, she hopes to do psychological work in a hospital.
"This is a grand place to go to school," she said. "However, I think some improvements should be made in the education of student nurses. More courses in guidance and ward supervision should be offered."
Kathy, whose home is in the country near Great Bend, has four brothers and one sister.
brothers and one sister,
"it's a pitiful state of affairs," she declared, "but they are all K-State people. I've been trying to set them straight for a long time, but they're in a rut!"
She is a member of the Y.W.C.A. community service committee and also belongs to the University Women's Glee club.
She is looking forward to belonging to the new club which is being organized for registered nurses on the Hill. The first meeting of the club will take place today in Wat-
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On reflecting over her life's history, one memory stands out, a memory of the "most embarrassing moment of all embarrassing moments."
"It happened during nurses training," Kathy reminisced. "One day I had to prepare a patient for surgery—a job known in the nursing profession as 'doing surgical preps.' The patient, a man, was to have a skull operation which required the removal of hair around the proposed incision.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 28,1947
SPOTLIGHT SPORTS
By BOB DELLINGER (Daily Kansan Sports Editor)
Kansas fans are looking ahead to the "big test" tonight with the Kansas State Wildcats The concensus is that the contest will be rough and tough and that the Jayhawkers will have to prove their mettle the hard way.
Kansas State will be out after the first Wildcat victory over the Jay-hawkers since 1837 and will try to break the Lawrence hoodoo which has kept the Aggies winless on the Lawrence court.
The '35 meeting of the two clubs, which K-State won in overtime by a 39-35 count, was an exhibition match played on 12-foot goals with radical rules.
The Jayhawkers have won 30 of the last 32 battles, and the only two losses to the Aggies, in '35 and '37, were both overtime battles.
If you'll remember, the Aggies ran the score into the 80's last year with Big Bob Kurland dumping in 58 points. But no more. This year the worm has turned.
The Jayhawkers now hold an 18- game winning streak at home against the Aggies, since the series started in 1929.
** **
St. Louis is breezing along in the Missouri Valley and is tasting sweet revenge over last year's Oklahoma A & M triumph at St. Louis.
An important non - conference game will take place tonight at Norman with two NCAA - conscious teams, Oklahoma and Oklahoma A & M, tangling in an inter-conference match. The victor would be one-up toward a tournament bid.
串串串
\* \* \*
Kansas is probably the only team in the country with a conference record of one and three which is talking about chances of winning the conference outright or in a tie
Hank Greenberg, 1946 major league home run king, claims that he "several years" left to play. The former Tiger slugger, now with the Pirates, is reported to be asking $75,000 salary.
串 串 串
Deacon Gil Dodds is out after Glenn Cunningham's indoor unofficial mile record as he showed Saturday night by returning to the boards for an easy victory in the mile at Boston.
Dodds was disappointed at his "poor" showing in annexing his first comeback run in 4:09.1, the best time turned in since he retired in 1944.
Cunningham set his unofficial record in a paced mile, turning in a time of 4:04.4, but Dodds is aiming on beyond to a 4:03 mile which would compare to a four-minute affair outdoors.
N.U. Coach Moves To Oklahoma
Norman. (UP)—Gomer Jones, line coach at the University of Nebraska last year, was appointed today as an assistant to new head football Coach Charles (Bud) Wilkinson at the University of Oklahoma.
An all-America center at Ohio State in 1935. Jones played against Wilkinson who was a guard at Minnesota that year. He played with the professional Cleveland Rams in 1936 and served as assistant line coach at Ohio State from 1938 through 1940. He coached the Martins Ferry, Ohio, high school team in 1941 and was honored as that state's "coach of the year."
Request Dismissal Of Coach
Houston, Tex. (UP) — The dismissal of Homer Norton as head coach at Texas A. & M. college was asked today in a resolution adopted by the executive committee of the Texas A. & M. ex-students association. The action was taken during a meeting of the Houston A. & M. club here.
Jayhawkers, Wildcats Fight Tonight To Climb Out Of Big Six Cellar
The Kansas Jayhawkers will tangle with the Kansas State Wildcats at 7:30 tonight in Hoch auditorium in the game which will give the winner a firm grip on fifth place in the Big Six cage race.
The loser will drop into the conference cellar with one victory and four defeats while the winner will be on the first rung of the ladder leading to a comeback. $ \textcircled{8} $
Kansas broke its string of three conference defeats by mauling Iowa State, 55-30. Friday night.
Coach Jack Gardner watched the Kansas-Iowa game and is expected to try a new type of defensive shift against Coach Howard Engleman's two-tteam system which allows the entire first team to rest at one time.
A new face at center for the Jayhawkers will be Harold England, freshman find from Halstead. Eng-
gineer David Mackenzie of 49th hole who hit for five points against the Cyclones while gathering in re-bounds from both boards.
Since both teams are trying to pull out of the cellar, the game is sure to be a tough one for the Jayhawkers to walk off with because of the 21-game victory string over the Aggies which the Manhattan men will be out to crack.
On the other hand, there is the Lawrence jinx which has kept Aggie teams from victory in every game played on the Lawrence court.
Coach Jack Gardner of the Wildcats reports troubles from injuries and several members of his squad may be hampered so that his squad will not be in the best of condition for tonight's battle.
The Kansas "B" squad, under the guidance of its new coach, Paul Turner, will clash with the Topeka Army Air Base team in a preliminary game at 6 p.m. It is expected to be the toughest game of the year for the "B" cagers.
Probable starters for the varsity game:
Kansas State Pos. Kansas
Howey F... Schnellbacher
Weatherby F... Black
Dirks C... England
or or
Patrick C... Peck
Dean G... Evans
Thomas G... Clark
K-State Announces Football Schedule
JACK GARDNER
Manhattan. Kansas State College's 1947 football schedule, including nine games, was announced today by Hobbs Adams, director of athletics. Four games will be played at home, five away. It is as follows:
Sept. 20 Oklahoma A. and M. at Manhattan
Sept. 27 Texas College of Mines at El Paso
Oct. 4 New Mexico at Manhattan Oct. 11 Open
Oct. 18 Missouri at Columbia
Oct. 25 Nebraska at Manhattan
Nov. 1 Kansas at Lawrence
Nov. 8 Oklahoma at Manhattan
Nov. 15 Iowa State at Ames
Nov. 22 Open
Nov. 29 Florida U. at Gainesville
100
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Kentucky 86, Michigan state 46
Alabama 41, Tulane 39
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Baylor 58, Texas Christian 46
Tennessee 47, Georgia 33
Purdue 66, Minnesota 63
South Dakota State 61, North Da-
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Arkansas State teachers 62, Monticello A. & M. 47
LaCrosse teachers 59, Upper Iowa university 44
Iona 66. John Marshall 57
Wisconsin 45, North Western 44
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JANUARY 28.1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Life Saving, Water Safety To Be Offered
Women who want to qualify for camp jobs this summer should enroll in the life saving and water safety course given next semester, Miss Ruth Hoover, assistant professor of physical educatin, said today.
The course is approximately nine weeks in length and one hour's credit is given. The first part of the semester is devoted to work and practice, in strokes, distance swimming and life saving tactics.
At the conclusion of this period, a life saving representative from the St. Louis district visits the campus to examine all students who have passed their senior life saving test and are interested in the one week water instruction course.
The course must be combined with some other sport to receive the credit hour and to fill out the remainder of the semester. "Usually students continue with the diving class." Miss Hoover stated, "but one may take tennis, badminton, or any other spring sports offered."
Official Bulletin
Jan. 28,1947
Executive board of WEC will meet at 4 p.m. today in the office of the dean of women.
***
Archery club will not practice again until Feb. 18.
American Federation of Teachers will hold monthly dinner meeting at 6:30 p.m. today in the English room of the Union building.
A meeting for the organization of a graduate nurse's club will be held at 5 p.m. today in the classroom at Watkins hospital. A11 graduate nurses urged to attend.
All-Student Council will not meet tonight. The next meeting will be Thursday, Feb. 13, at 7:15 in the Pine room of the Union building.
Next meeting of P.S.G.L. Senate will be Feb. 12, at 7:30 p.m. in 103 Green hall.
Alpha Phi Omega will not meet Thursday.
Applications for positions of K-Book editor and business manager must be taken to the student organizations window of the business office by Feb. 15. Address applications to Publications committee, A.S.C.
Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship will meet at 7 tonight in Barlow chapel of Myers hall. Don Parnell will conduct the Bible study. Everyone welcome.
Tau Sigma will not meet tonight. * * *
The K.U. Dames bridge groups will meet at 7:30 tomorrow night. Beginners' group will meet in the Kansas room of the Union and the advanced group will meet at the home of Mrs. Eloise Berkley, 2308 Vermont street.
Graduate record examination Feb. 3, and 4. Applications may be obtained in 2A Frank Strong.
Due to reorganization of the under-graduate teacher training program, students who wish to prepare for teaching in the public schools will register in the School of Education at the beginning of their junior year (50 semester credit hours and 60 grade points). Physical education majors will continue to register in the School of Education all four years. Students who have senior standing will complete their university program under their present plans and need not enroll in the School of Education. All students who had first semester junior standing at the beginning of the fall semester of the school year 1946-47 and who wish to prepare for teaching the public schools must transfer to the School of Education. Requests for transfer should be made to the registrar prior to the opening of the second semester.
Second K-Union Will Be Out Feb. 14
The K-Union, official newspaper of the Student Union Activities committee, will be distributed Feb. 14. Ann Learned, publications chairman, said today. William Vandiver will be this edition's editor-in-chief.
K.U. Tennis Team Faces Heavy Season
Kansas, five times Big Six tennis champion, will plunge into the most ambitious court schedule in its history this year with a card of 14 matches.
In announcing the slate, which opens March 31, Athletic Director E. C. Quigley said he hoped to schedule four or five more matches. An April 1st match against Southern Methodist at Dallas will mark the Jayhawkers first net invasion of Texas. Arkansas also will be met for the first time, April 3rd, at Fayetteville.
Coach Gordon Sabine, confronted with a new Big Six plan which requires five singles and two doubles matches in every dual meet, said he would carry 15 players on this year's squad. Practice will open Feb. 10th.
Complete schedule:
March 31 Oklahoma at Norman
April 1 Southern Methodist at
Dallas
Dallas
April 3 Arkansas at Fayetteville
April 5 Washington at St. Louis
April 12 Missouri at Columbia
April 12 Washburn at Topeka
April 21 Washington at Lawrence
April 26 Washburn at Lawrence
April 28 Kansas State at Man-
hattan
May 2 Iowa State at Ames*
May 3 Nebraska at Lincoln*
May 9 Oklahoma at Lawrence*
May 10 Kansas State at Lawrence*
May 16 Missouri at Lawrence*
*Big Six matches
Students Have Right To Appeal-Miller
"According to common law, if there is justifiable grievance, there is a redress," declared Malcolm Miller, chief justice of the University Student court. Miller explained the process whereby a student can apply to that court if he believes he has been wronged. This right is guaranteed by the University constitution
VARSITY
He said that the student court has the right to interpret the constitution as set up by the All Student Council just as the United States supreme court does our constitution. This applies to parking permits, smoking violations, and disputes between students in which "there is a clear case of abuse."
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and SHARYN MOFFETT "Child of Divorce"
Marcella Stewart, Winfield, College senior, was elected chairman of the Kansan Board, governing board of the Daily Kansan, at a meeting Monday. Marian Minor, Hutchinson junior, was elected secretary.
Stewart To Head Kansan Board
Robert Bonebrake, College senior, has been chosen business manager of the Daily Kansan for the first half of the second semester and will have as his staff, Alma Wutnow, advertising manager; John Beach, circulation manager; LaVern Keven, classified manager; Kenneth White, national advertising manager; and Melvin Adams, promotion manager.
Billie Marie Hamilton, new managing editor, announced that her staff for the first half of the second semester will include Miss Stewart and Reverdy Mullins, assistant managing editors; William T. Smith, city editor; Martha Jewett, telegraph editor; and Beverly Baumer, society editor.
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JANUARY 28,1947
Kansan Comments
Swan Song
By BILL HAAGE
(Daily Kansan Editor-In-Chief)
In nine days, I'll be through with my undergraduate work at the University. In a few more days, I'll leave the campus for what I hopefully believe are greener fields. (And quit saying "Thank goodness!")
I've known many fine students and professors, and I've known some who weren't so fine. I've learned some things from books and some things not from books. I've worn out three typewriter ribbons and dozens of notebooks. I'll be glad to get out, but I don't think I'll grab the sheepskin and run.
I know that, like myself, there are many students who aren't going to store their diplomas in the wall safe and then forget about K.U. Many times I've heard students say, "If I were only going to be here a little longer, I'd do something about that." And since neither they nor I are going to stick around to "do something," I'm going to write down some of the things I'd like to see done before I come back for a class reunion.
RE-FXAMINE REQUIREMENTS
I like to see every department and every school go over its requirements for graduation to make certain all of them are pertinent and necessary. I can see no point in making a medical student who's planning to be a general practitioner study advanced lab technique, or in making a mechanical engineer study advanced chemical engineering courses, or in making a College student forsake courses he's interested in for courses whose only merit to him is that they count for "junior-senior" hours in the right division.
Universities are too impressed with high grades-I think academic credit should be given to those students who are active in extra-curricular activities.
I want to see a tour of the campus buildings included in the orientation program. I hear Lindley hall is a fine building inside.
I'd like to see a movable holiday set up for the celebration of outstanding sports victories. And I want to see University Senate meetings publicized. What is decided in those meetings is important to students and they should know the why's for any changes or refusals to change.
PARKING SPACE
I want to see a memorial drive and campanile when I come back, and I want to see spacious parking
The University Daily Kansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn. Na-
mousie Assn. and the Associated Collegiate
Assn., and the Associated College
Press. Represented by the National Ad-
vertising Service of Madison Ave, New
York City.
Managing Editor Charles Root
Asst. Management Editor Jane Anderson
Makeup Editor Billie Marie Hamilton
Sales Manager Business Manager Bill Donovan
Advertising Manager Margery Handy
Circulation Manager John McCormick
Graphic Designer Edward Swain
Graphic Ed. City Editor R. T. Kingman
THE Kansas Press Association
1947
Member
National Editorial Association
A FREE PRESS. YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW
spaces around the drive. If students can't use cars to come to school, any old cowpath is good enough. After all, students will use the drive as much as any group.
I want to see a fieldhouse—a good one. And either in the fieldhouse or in the Union, I want to see a good big dance floor with a fountain at one end and table tennis tables and card tables at the other end.
I want to see that the ideals of no discrimination because of race or color or creed are put into practice. This will mean that both the Lawrence townpeople and the Big Six schools will have to recognize the ideals and change their wavs.
I want to see that the sorority-independent women organization has spread its influence to all students. Only in the minds of a few Greeks and independents is there any difference between someone living in a house with a Greek name and someone living in a house with an English name or no name.
I want to see tag dances—lots of them.
END DISCRIMINATION
I want to see students smoking wherever faculty members or University employees can.
I want to see the wages paid for student help jacked up to what they should be. Fifty cents an hour is absurd, no matter what one does.
I want to see "open" stacks in the library. The amount of reading which otherwise wouldn't have been done should more than balance any possible loss in books.
I want to see a strong student government, respected by students and the administration alike. This has been given a good boost by the usually sensible policy followed this semester. Student politics is all right as long as the politicking is confined to elections, and as long as the elected students decide problems without regard to politics.
I want to see faster service in both the cafeterias and the fountain. I don't care how it's done, just so it's done.
NEW BAND UNIFORMS
I want to see new uniforms on the band.
I want a new press for the Daily Kansan.
I want to see the intramural field chuckholes filled up.
I want to a winning K.U. sports program. And I hope that either players aren't paid at all or that they're paid openly.
I want to see A.S.C. members chosen for a two-year term so that the knowledge gained one year will be available the next year.
I want to see more men cheerleaders-I have nothing against women cheerleaders, but I think representation should be at least three men for every three women.
I want to see quiz files available for every student. What's fair for one group is certainly fair for another, and it's a cinch the organized houses are going to continue making quiz files.
You could probably add at least as many more items to this list. Swell. I'll probably think of a dozen more before this gets into print. Sit down and write out your list and send it to the Daily Kansan so that those who come after us won't have to spend four years figuring out what needs to be done around the University.
It is to be hoped that President Truman has Marshalled forces for the first world peace, rather than for World War III.
Betton No 'Name' Band
Dear Editor----
In regard to a recent editorial in the Daily Kansan discussing the choice of a band for the Junior Prom, I think some clarification is needed of the term, "name" band. Certainly those involved in the controversy mentioned must have interpreted the term in the broadest sense.
The mention of the Matt Betton band from Manhattan as a "name" band no doubt raised a chuckle from those who know of that band or, for that matter, anything about music and musicians in this part of the country. The Matt Betton band is no more of a "name" band than any other local organizations which are classed as good producers of music.
If those concerned with obtaining a band for this Junior Prom would brush away the cobwebs of tradition in not considering a Hill band for such a grand occasion and unplug their ears, they might hear something in one of K.U.'s six Hill bands that would be worth considering.
The fact that "better music could be brought to the Hill" in the form of a "name" band from Manhattan could very easily be classed as an insult to the musicianship of dance musicians here in Lawrence. Not being a musician but only a follower of dance bands and music in this area, I feel I can fairly express my opinion and say that I think that there is at least one or two of K.U.'s six instrumental groups that could "cut the Manhattan band to ribbons" or at least produce pleasurable and highly satisfactory music for a prom, $500 or $200, regardless of price.
I would suggest that those responsible for the entertainment for Joe College and his date try to know enough of what there is to offer in music to choose intelligently the entertainment—and if you're looking for a "name" band, you might look a little beyond Manhattan.
K. U. Band-lover College freshman
Consider the plight of one G.I. His terminal leave was paid by three $50 bonds and a check for 10 cents. It will cost him a dime to cash the check, yet he hates to think of tearing up a perfectly good government check.
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Hello, my radio is on the blink!
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... and when will you return it?
—In five or six days.
BEAMAN'S Radio Shop
Phone 140
UNT WAIT until you're ready to start between semesters to have your car checked over or you may be train chasing.
or you may be train chasing.
A man in a suit throws a box.
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JANUARY 28, 1947
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
1947
Stene To Bring Back Harvard Methods
E. O. Stene, associate professor of political science, who will leave soon for Harvard university, already is planning to use Harvard teaching methods in his courses here next fall.
Carroll D. Clark, professor of sociology, who was at Harvard last year, explained this new method of instruction as "an approach that integrates the social science attack on human problems in a clinical fashion."
Professor Stene is the third-K.U. professor to attend this research association in human relations. Professor Clark spent last year at Harvard, and Hilden Gibson, associate professor of social science and sociology, is there now.
The law and medical professions have used this method of studying specific cases, but it is new in other fields. Professor Clark added.
While at Harvard, Professor Stene will be free to study along any line he chooses, as well as to collaborate with other professors and to attend all staff conferences.
The research association provides a room in the Harvard school of business dormitory for all the members.
Schwellenbach Says Bills Create 'Industrial Chaos'
Washington. (UP)—Secretary of Labor Lewis B. Schwellenbach charged today that major strike-control bills backed by Republicans would impede labor peace and throw the nation into "industrial chaos."
He made no affirmative recommendations except to urge establishment of the labor study commission recommended by President Truman. He urged that changes in the Wagner labor relations act be considered by that commission or by special congressional subcommittees if congress refused to create the commission.
Officials Suspect Sabotage
In Indiana Train Wreck
Walton, Ind. (UP)—State troopers and railroad detectives joined today in an investigation to determine if sabotage was responsible for the death of six persons crushed in the derailment of a Pennsylvania passenger train.
A bale of fencing wire was found jammed beneath the pilot wheels of the locomotive. Officials of the road said the wire had either fallen or been placed upon the track shortly before the Cincinnati to Chicago Flyer roared into Walton.
Copy may be in the University Daly Kansan Business Office, Journalism bldg., not later than 4 p.m. of the day before. All classifieds are cash in advance.
Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
Classified Advertising Rates
| | One day | Three days | Five days |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| 25 words or less | 35c | 65c | 90c |
| additional words | 1c | 2c | 3c |
Lost
1 PAIR Plastic rim glasses in black case and 1 Mason, Fundamentals of Accounting, Reward for either. Call Lynn Chase at 1555. -28-
BLACK Zipper notebook either in Haworth or Bailey on Thursday, Jan. 16. Finder please return to Wayne Hunt, Battetle Hall or phone 234. -28-
containing health notes of the family and
nestsology notes. Call 781, Nandan
phila.
LEFT At air rising at Military Science building Tuesday night, Jan. 21. Lady's Elbon wristwatch. Yellow gold case black raised numerals, black cord cord -28-
BROWN Imitation leather notebook and college algebra book at corner of 11th floor. D. Finder please return William D. Fowler, Haskell institute Phone 1854-J.
Wanted
VETERANS! Put your wife to work clerking at the Student Book store. -28-ROOM For 2 boys. Call Bob Westmacott, 2371-J.
LEAVING After finals? Student veteran and wife would be so grateful for your nice, warm, furnished apartment. Call KU 66. -28-
Business Services
PHOTO-EXACT Copies, discharge and valuable papers. Fast service. Low price. Round Corner Drug Co., M35 Mass., Lawyer Kansas, or Lane F. Apt. 18, 18, -28-.
FOR THAT coke date remember the Eldridge pharmacy at 701 Mass., phone
TYPING. Experienced typist. Term papers, reports, etc. Prompt, accurate, reasonable. Call 3056-M at 1244 Laa. -28 For immediate purchase or sale of used furniture contact Fritzel Dairy drivers at Sunflower or phone i1454, Larsen 2755.
LET A veteran's wife type your term papers. Neat and accurate. Phone 1673-W or drop by 942 New Hamshire. -28-
TYPING Term papers and reports. Done promptly and reasonably. Phone 1961. 161 ALTERATIONS: Buttons, buckles, machine and tailored buttonhole. Smith Hemstitching and Dressmaking Shop. 943 1-2 Mass. -20-
For Sale
Used ICEBON, $12; fluorescent desk lamp,
$7; portable wardrobe closet, $8; Schick
electric shaver, $5. See at 511 Ohio, up-
airs. -28-
1941 Mercury convertible. Excellent condition, radio and heater, new tires, top and paint. See daily after 1 p.m. at 611 W. 6th. -28-
PLAID Sport cont. size 36 Long, Very
Large
135 Tennessee, age & age, M
28-34
guarantee. Peterson's Office Machine co.
first National Bank bldg., phone 13. -28-
KU KU Sweater. See Thursday afternoon
at 1408 Tenn. —28-
29 CHEVROLET. Excellent shape. Good tires. New transmission and differential.
DO YOU
NEED FURNITURE? The Woodcraft Co.
730 Massachusetts
OFFERS FOR SALE
Quality Reconditioned
Chests, Tables, etc.
AT LOW PRICES
Call Nielson, 2984, any afternoon. 28
HOUSE Trailer, completely furnished.
Very reasonable. Call Dennis Willard,
2738-W. -28-
13-ROOM Stone house. Good location.
Phone IS969-R. -14-
Miscellaneous
WANT Riders from vicinity of Shawne and Merriam, Kans., Monday through Friday at WILLIAM LAWRENCE, Lawrence WILLIAM L. HCILL, Gilles LAWRENCE, Besson or the fellow who took my navy peacock from the lower cafeteria Thursday noon, and I will send you a call 1555 for exchange. W. M. Ander-
-28-
son
Transportation
HUDSON - RENT - A - CAR - SERVICE
Will rent you a car by day or weekend.
Reservations taken. Phone 3315. Location
601 Vermont. -28-
For Rent
WANT Young man student to share pleasant room with another. No smoking or drinking, please. 212 East 18th St. Phone 2483-R. -28-
COURT HOUSE LUNCH
Meals - Short Orders
Sandwiches
Open 5:30-12:30
ATTRACTIVE First floor single room
private first bath. Phone 1237-W-28-
KU13
Vita Fluff Dermatics
Revlon—at
IVA'S BEAUTY SHOP
9411/2 Mass. Phone 533
Call K.U. 25 with your news.
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
JANUARY 28.1947
Little Man On Campus
By Bibler
KU
Bigle
"Don't wait, fellas—too much depends on these finals."
English Announces Honors Revision
The English department has completed a general revision in honors requirements, Prof. Luli Gardiner, chairman of the English honors committee, has announced.
The committee's revision brings English honors procedure in line with new College rules passed last June by the College faculty.
Under the present plan, students may take honors in two or more departments, the committee pointed out. Now, "any department may award honors in its own field to any graduating senior (whether one of its majors or not)." provided the student has high enough grades, superior intellectual abilities, and has put the abilities to use.
Other committee members are Profs, Sara Laird and M.D. Clubb, and James Scholes.
H.S. Seniors To Take Scholarship Tests
Two University High school seniors, Lois Beth and John Hessler, have been chosen by their classmates to represent the high school in a nation wide college scholarship test sponsored by a soft-drink company.
The students are both children of University professors. Lois Beth is the daughter of Elmer Beth, professor of journalism, and John Hessler is a son of V. P. Hessler professor of electrical engineering. The test will be given at the high school and winners will be announced sometime in the spring.
Washington. (UP)- Congress was told today that the 1946 safety record of scheduled U.S. airlines was the best in the nation's history and by far the best in the world.
U.S. Airline Record Is Best In World
Theodore P. Wright, civil aerospace administrator, told the house interstate commerce committee that scheduled airlines suffered only one passenger fatality per 80,613,000 passenger miles last year. The committee is investigating the cause of recent plane crashes.
Mr. Wright said bad weather was an important factor in a "very large proportion" of last year's fatal accidents.
He testified that "the real solution to this problem lies in the improvement of air navigation facilities."
Construction Begun On Bailey Quonset
Construction has begun on the Quonset but chemical laboratory to be erected behind Bailey hall, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, announced today.
During construction the roadway back of Bailey hall will be closed To aid in relieving traffic, the drive east of Frank Strong has been opened.
The new building will be 40 by 80 feet, and will provide emergency classroom and laboratory space.
Nine Men Decided To Use Atom Bomb
New York. (UP)—Nine men made the decision to use the atomic bomb against Japan, former Secretary of War Henry L. Stimson revealed today.
They saw "this deliberate, pre-mediated destruction" as "our least abhorrent choice". Mr. Stimson said in an article in Harper's Magazine.
The men who made the decision to use the atomic bomb were President Truman, Mr. Stimson, James F. Byrnes, George L. Harrison, Ralph A. Bard, William L. Clayton, Dr. Vannevar Bush, Dr. Karl T. Compton, and Dr. James B. Conant
And the decision, the former secretary said ended the Japanese war and "made it wholly clear that we must never have another war."
Mr. Stimson revealed that the ones dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki "were the only ones we had read, and our rate of production at the time was very small." There could be no final proof, he sadi, that any given bomb would explode, so no warning was given. A warning followed by a dud bomb would have damaged attempts to get an early surrender. Mr. Stimson said.
Six graduating seniors were honored by a demit ceremony of Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business education, Monday, in the Memorial Union.
Business Fraternity Honors Six Seniors
The six who participated in the ceremony which changed their membership from active to alumni status are Norman Cochran, John Davis, Gene Glutzbach, Harold Dufek, Robert Schoben, and John Welski. Dufek and Glutzbach will remain at K.U. after graduation as faculty members of the School of Business.
Closing Hours Set For Final Week
Closing hours for women during final week and the period between semesters have been announced by the dean of women.
The hours will be 11 p.m.
On Wednesday, Thursday, and
Friday; 12:30 a.m. Saturday; and
11:45 a.m. Monday, Tuesday,
and Feb. 5.
During the period between semesters Feb. 6 through Feb. 12, closing hours will be 12 p.m.
K.U. Will Enter Bridge Tourney
An intercollegiate bridge tournament with an all-expense paid trip to Chicago as the prize will be run by the Union intramurals committee. Feb. 13, 14, and 15, Donald Ong, chairman, announced today.
One-hundred forty colleges and universities, including four of the Big Six, are competing in the contest sponsored by the Inter-collegiate Bridge Tournament committee of New York City. The colleges are divided into regions; two winning pairs from each region will go to the national finals.
K. U. will be competing against 10 other colleges in the central region. The two winning pairs from this region will receive the Chicago trip prize and will compete for the national title April 18 and 19.
Students wishing to compete in the tournament must register at the Union activities office on or before Feb. 12. There will be no entry fee. Elimination rounds will be run off Feb. 13 and, if more than 48 pairs register, Feb. 14. The eight top pairs from these rounds will compete in the campus finals.
Set hands for the tournament will be mailed out from New York. The results will be marked here and the winners will be judged by the New York committee.
YM-YW To Hold Series Of Forums
A series of forums is being planned by the YWCA - YMCA religious seminar for next semester. They will be held from 4 to 5 p.m. every Monday in the Union building.
Mary Breed, YWCA president, will begin the series. The second will be given by Dr. Gonzalo Baez-Camargo of Mexico. Members of the faculty and community will lead the remaining discussions.
Other speakers will be Dean F. J. Moreau, School of Law; Prof. W. E Sandelius, department of political science; Miss Esther Twente, professor of sociology; Prof. N. W. Storer, department of astronomy, Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, Mrs Calvin VanderWerf, and the Rev Fosberg Hughes, pastor of the Plymouth cengregational church in Lawrence.
Newman Club Mixer Feb. 12
The Newman club mixer will be held from 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. Feb. 12 in the Kansas room of the Union.
THE NEW White Lakes Night Club
Invites KU Students To Attend College Night Every Friday
Dancing 9 to 1
Dinner Served 5:30 to 10 P.M.
$1.50 a couple
3 Miles South of Topeka, Kans., on Highway 75 Phone 6383
Talmadge Forces File Suit To Release State Funds
News of the World
Atlanta. (U.P.) — Georgia's two governor feud was further enmeshed in litigation today as rival claimants for the governorship groped for funds to keep in business. Gov. Herman Talmadge forces filed new suits in superior court to release almost five million dollars in tax collections to eliminate a threatened bottleneck in vital state functions.
One suit involved Charles Red-wine, Talmadge's state revenue commission who sought control of $4,749,886.77 in tax collections.
The other suit seeks to force state attorney general Eugene Cook to recognize Mr. Redwine and accept the latter's $70,000 bond.
Washington. (UP)—Legislation for an immediate 15 per cent boost in rent ceilings was referred to the senate banking committee today amid indications of strong committee support. The measure also would eliminate rent ceilings on new housing and end all rent controls April 30, 1948.
Rent Legislation To Senate
Chattanooga. (UP)—Grace Moore, opera star killed in a Copenhagen plane crash, will be buried in her native state of Tennessee, according to her brother James who made funeral arrangements in a trans-Atlantic telephone talk with Valentin Parerea, the singer's husband.
Curfew Lifted To Aid Hunt
Jerusalem. (UP)—Mavor Israel Rokah of Tel Aviv appealed to the underground today to release two kidnapped Britons, and the curfew on the all-Jewish city was lifted to enable the abductors to respond to the appeal.
Blizzard Delays Byrd
Little America. (UP)—An Antarctic blizzard swept Little America today, forcing a further delay in the arrival of Rear Adm. Richard E. Byrd. The admiral, aboard the carrier Philippine Sea, had been scheduled to arrive 'Monday with a flight of six transport planes.
U.S. Parts Used In V-2
White Sands, N. M. (UP)—A German V-2 rocket, partly controlled by American-made devices, "functioned perfectly" in the 19th firing of captured weapons from the White Sands Proving ground, army officials said today.
Two Convicts Escape From Leavenworth
Leavenworth (UP)—Warden Walter A. Hunter said today that two prisoners who escaped from the Leavenworth federal prison Friday night probably had made good their escape.
Davis was serving a 15-year bank robbery sentence from Shreveport, La., and Windhoven a 25-year mail robbery charge from San Francisco.
Farmers and prison guards searched a wooded 10-acre tract near the southwest corner of the city Monday afternoon but found no trace of the men, Dando Davis and Willard A. Windhoven, both 37.
The men pushed out an iron grillwork in a second floor building, climbed to the roof and then swung to the wall on electric wire suspended 25 feet above the ground.
Resubmission, Prohibition
Vie In State House, Senate
At the same time, a bill to make display of a federal liquor stamp prima facie evidence of maintaining a common nuisance will be passed by the house today and sent to the senate.
Topeka (UP)—State prohibition today was one step nearer resubmission to a vote of the electorate, with a favorable report by the senate judiciary committee on the house-approved resolution.
The bill would permit closing of places having the federal liquor revenue receipt, even though raiding officers might never find liquor.
Tokyo. (UP)—A Japanese carpenter was seized by Gen. Douglas MacArthur Sunday when he rushed up to the general and tried to hand him a package containing a wooden sword and a letter stating his desire to die from an American bullet to protest the "miserable condition" of the Japanese.
'I Wanta Be Shot'
General MacArthur ordered the military police to lecture the man on good manners and release him.
Washington. (UP)—Congressional leaders menaced a "rush" label today on legislation to invalidate union claims for nearly five billion dollars in back portal-to-portal pay. The senate also was asked to investigate charges that the justice department had failed to protect the treasury's interests in the pending cases.
To 'Rush' Portal Pay Bill
TWO
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