947 University DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, April 1, 1947 44th Year No.113 Lawrence, Kansas STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS A Joyous Easter To All Students, Faculty Easter comes again! More than a season of the year, vastly more than an institutional observance, Easter is a vital experience. It signifies more than a Palestinian tomb reported empty. The fact of the matchless personality and timeless spirit of Jesus is greater than any reported empty tomb. The character of events in Christendom for nineteen centuries points, not to something mythical, but to something creatively real at the basis of it all. Easter is an affirmation of faith. Life is inescapably based upon faith, not contrary to fact, but venturing with reasoned confidence beyond "proof's boundary lines. To one who does not know in his own experience a measure of the life which Jesus lived, it is improbable that any logic of Easter's reported objective incidents has very convincing meaning. But life is greater than logic. And to one who in his own experience knows the meaning of true spirit-fellowship with this Master Spirit of the ages, what happened to the body of Jesus in the tomb outside Jerusalem matters little. The faith to which Easter invites still challenges our living. God is not dead! Where God lives,—in His universe, in the spirit of Nazareth, in any human spirit,—there is no death! Existence dies; life endures where with utter commitment of self it ventures with faith in the reality of the Spirit Eternal. Easter's message to your life and mine is: "With Christ invest life in Enduring Reality!" - EDWIN F. PRICE, Dean of the School of Religion. Easter Greetings From The Daily Kansan The editor-in-chief, the managing editor, and the staff of the Daily Kansan take this opportunity to wish the students, faculty, and administration members of the University a joyous Easter. In these days of worldwide stride and unrest, it is wise for University students, in charting with courage their steps toward a better life for themselves and for the world, to remember the words of the Prince of Peace to his disciples before his crucification: Easter is the great Christian festival of hope, when the forces of Christendom celebrate the immortality of man. “Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you; not as the world giveth, give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled; neither let it be afraid.” (John 14) It is the season of the year for serious thinking of man's responsibility on earth, of the supreme sacrifices which men have made for principles and ideals, in long succession and by countless thousands, since the beginning of the Christian era. As the Easter season approaches this year, there is a challenge in the air,-the challenge for firm and clear thinking, for a broad understanding on a global scale. Peoples everywhere are staggered by the thrust and shock of war, by political conflict, by economic exhaustion, and by want and hunger and disease on an unprecedented scale. We in the heart of America are living in one of the world's most favored places. We have more food, more luxuries, more freedom, and more security than any other of the world's peoples. We cannot, however, maintain our Christian status in this spring of 1947 without giving heed to the needs of other nations, to the anguished calls for help—calls not for sentimental and unthinking charity, but for tolerance, understanding, firmness and sacrifice, in order that each of us may lend a hand, both in substance and in thought, to the creation of an orderly world where other peoples, too, may gain a glimmering chance at some security and some nope for the years to come. —DEANE W. MALOTT, Chancellor. State Colleges Assured Of Funds Topeka.—(UP)—Gov. Frank Carlson said today a program to build at state colleges in Kansas next two years is a virtual certainty. He added he was "hopeful we can do some building at state institutions." He said he was solidly behind a bill to issue dorsitory construction revenue bonds by the board of regents and that it tied in with "some $1,800,000 available in the mill tax for buildings and contemplated direct appropriations." At a press conference, Governor Carlson said the chairmen of the house and senate ways and means committees would meet with him, probably today or tomorrow, to discuss what state money can be diverted to educational and institutional construction programs. Sen. W. A. Barron, senate ways and means chairman, exhibited a budget yesterday showing a tentative one million dollar appropriation for dormitory building, and said the amount may be higher before the legislature adjourns. ___ Union Party Tonight For Business Students Union building. The entire top floor of the Union building has been reserved. One room will be used for dancing to recorded music, and another for playing cards. An informal party for business students and their dates and faculty members of the School of Business will be held at 8 tonight in the Union building. The event is being sponsored by the Associated Business students, new social organization. A similar event last fall was attended by almost 400 persons. Norma Jean Pyke, business senior is chairman of the planning committee for the party. ___ Union Cafeteria, Fountain Close For Easter Recess The Union cafeteria and fountain will be closed during the Easter vacation. The cafeteria will serve its last meal at noon April 3 and will be closed until 11:00 a.m. April 7. 11:30 a.m. April 2 The fountain will close at noon April 2 and remain closed until 8:30 a.m. April 8. Petition To Bar Oklahoma A. & M Greek King Dies; From Big Six Taken To Governor Crisis In Athens Carlson Says He's Against Racial Discrimination But Has No Authority In Matter; To Give Malott His Views "I'm opposed to racial intolerance, but I have no authority in the Big Six," Governor Frank Carlson told a group of students in the statehouse yesterday, who presented a petition to bar Oklahoma A. & M. from the Big Six conference. "I'm from the country and don't know too much about the big cities, which may have much racial discrimination. But I believe that here in Kansas we are relatively free from intolerance," he said. Student Court Meets Tonight In Green Hall Robert G. Kurtz, freshman engineer, charged with destruction of University property, and Lawrence W. Brown, Jr., College sophomore, charged with breaking library rules, will be arraigned by the student court at 7:30 p.m. tonight in Green hall court room. Kurtz is charged with driving a jeep over University intramural fields. Brown is charged with obtaining two reserve books from Watson Memorial library under false names and holding them out for a period of several days. He was traced down by his handwriting, library officials said. The University guidance bureau has distributed 8,015 college aptitude tests to 255 Kansas high schools this year. About 50% of the high school seniors have taken the tests. transfer student to Ralph Dunn and George Cozad, College freshmen, will receive sentence for the same charge. Both pleaded guilty to the charge in a previous court session. ___ Ivan Moody and Edwin T. Mahood, both business seniors, will be tried at 8 p. m. on charges of illegally transferring parking tickets. Guidance Bureau Distributes Tests The tests consist of two parts. The first part measures scholastic aptitude and often indicates the likelihood of the student's success in college. The second part deals with vocabulary, and the level and speed of comprehension. About 6,863 tests were distributed last year. 9 The petition, which urges that no school be admitted which discriminate against Negroes in sports, had already been signed by representatives from 16 campus organizations and presented to the chancellor. As he rose, the governor said that he was glad to receive anyone from the University. He concluded with, "Till call Chancellor Malott and give him my views on the matter. Thank you for dropping in." The students who spoke to the governor were Frank Stamard, College sophomore; George Caldwell College junior; William m Scheinman College freshman; William Michener second year law; Roy Harmon graduate student. playing basketball Representative William Towers, Negro, Wyandotte county was sitting in on the conference He said, "You may not have final say in the matter, Governor, but you can use your position to lend a potent word of assistance." Governor Carlson asked if the University of Kansas had discriminated against Negro athletes. Stannard answered that two Negroes had been dissuaded from playing basketball last fall. Library To Be Open During Easter Vacation The library will remain open during vacation at the following hours: Wednesday, 8 a.m. through 5 p.m. Thursday, 9 a.m. through 5 p.m. Friday, 9 a.m. through 5 p.m. Saturday, 9 a.m. through 12 noon. Sunday, closed. Monday, 9 a.m. through 10 p.m. Monday, 9 a.m. through 10 p.m. All departments will follow the schedule, except during the full day periods when they will close from 12 to 1 o'clock. Racial Equality Group To Meet April 9 The Temporary Committee on Racial Equality will meet at 7:30 p. m., April 9, in Green hall, Frank Standard said today. A permanent committee to attack the problems of racial discrimination will be set up at the meeting. Play Rehearsals To Begin April 8 The present committee, with Stannard, College sophomore, and William Scheinman, College freshman, as acting co-chairman, is composed of representatives of the Y.M.C.A., Y.W.C.A., Negro Student association, Unitarian Liberal group, Lawrence League for the Practice of Democracy, National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, the "Dove," and the American Veterans Committee. Committee. The meeting is open to all persons. Rehearsals for the play, "Thy Kingdom Come" written by James Gunn, College senior, will start Tuesday night, April 8, in Green theater Ivan Sparling, graduate student and director, said today. All phases of the production are being handled by students. Members of the cast are Georgann Eyler, Douglas Jennings, Alan Gordon, Richard Brining, Bill Ogg, Adriane Aller, and David Brown, Colleague freshmen; Robert Bathurst, Dean Frazier, and David Davidson, College sophomores; Loren Kennedy, William Roberts, and Deane Tack, graduate students; Jack Labowitz, Fine Arts sophomore; James Nelson, College junior; and Merlyn Norris, Engineering junior. London—(UP)—King George II of Greece died in Athens today a scent six months after resuming his uncertain throne, and his troubled homeland immediately was plunged into a first class crisis. Exchange Telegraph reported from Athens today. The 56-year-old monarch died suddenly of heart disease. He had three times mounted the throne of Greece and twice had been forced to flee the country. Blow To Monarchists The King's death was a blow to the strongly monarchist government. Immediate fears were expressed that the strong leftist forces operating in the mountains of northern Greece might begin a renewed effort to overthrow the monarchist regime. His death headed the unsettled country into a fresh crisis. As he had no children, his brother Prince Paul will be called to succeed him. It was believed that Paul's political views generally were in line with those of George. George first reached the throne of Greece in 1922 when his brother Constantine abdicated. He was driven from Greece by Greek republicans in 1923, and he spent the next 11 years in exile. He returned in 1935 after a plebiscite. George died on the very day which Britain had fixed for the theoretical ending of her financial assistance which had been the bulwark of the monarchist government. Had Hectic Career Prime minister Gen. John Metaxas put Greece under an iron dictatorship nine months later and, although George remained in Athens until driven out by the Germans in 1941, he had little voice in his country's affairs. George spent the war years in London and until after the end of the war there appeared little chance he ever would see his throne again. However, his claims were strongly supported by Winston Churchill and with the institution of a strong monarchist government a new plebiscite was held last September and George again was called back to Athens. WEATHER Kansas—Partly cloudy, scattered showers, and thunderstorms south-east. Cooler central and east today. Generally fair tonight and Wednesday. Cooler east tonight. Low tonight 36 to 40 north to 45 to 50 south. Warmer central and east Wednesday. 1 PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 1, 1947 K. U.'s Little Church Around The Corner Seventy-five couples have been married here in Danforth chapel since it was dedicated a year ago to a life of leading students to aspire nobly, to adventure daringly, and to serve humbly. The chapel, situated at the top of 14th street hill and Oread drive, was given to the students by William H. Danforth, his friends, and faculty members. Danforth Sets 75th Couple On Way On Its Birthday We're having a birthday on the campus. Go April 2 Danforth chapel will be one year old. This year the chapel has become a meeting place for student religious groups. On this first anniversary the strains of the Wedding March will ring out for the 75th time in Danforth as Mary Wisner, College junior, and Harry Lees, Fine Arts sophomore, are married. The first couple to be united in the campus chapel, were Robert Fisher and the former Leone Sandow, who are still students at the University. Reservations For June Miss Doreus Rubley, secretary to the chancellor, who keeps the Danforth date book, reports that the chapel's popularity is not diminishing. She has made eight reservations for June. Only once during the 74 marriages did things go awry at Danforth. In the excitement of the ceremonies no one in the wedding party remembered to extinguish the altar candles. Melting wax overflowed to the floor and ruined a rug. Despite a heavy wedding traffic, there is time to fulfill the principal purpose of the little chapel, that of supplying a quiet place for meditation and a center for student religion and religious organizations use the chapel regularly for their worship and communion services. Daily morning services are held by the YM-YWCA. At 5:30 p.m. the Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship holds its vesper services, music, fine arts senior, presents an hour of restful organ music. On Sunday the Church of Latter Day Saints, having given up its own building for dormitory space, holds its regular services in the chapel. A student Christian Science organization meets there every Thursday. Chapel Work Of 3 Men William H. Danforth of St. Louis was the principal donor to the chapel. The electric organ was given by A. B. Weaver of Lawrence. Edward Tanner of Kansas City contributed his architectural services. It is to these men, the students, faculty members, and townpeople who contributed, that the University owes thanks for Danforth chapel, the University's church-on-the-campus. Trick of the Week Pittsburgh (UP)—Someone walked away and left his legs behind. Police report finding two artificial legs complete with socks, garters and shoes. The legs, they said, had been worn recently. 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 hall, and campus cafeteria. Second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. Cities Improve Labor Relations Chicago. —(UP)— Governmental and civic groups in six major American cities have organized units to improve relations between labor and industry, reports to the International City Manager's Association show. The association said 20 strikes have been averted in Toledo, Ohio, during the last seven months through the efforts of a municipal labor-management committee, and many additional cities are considering adoption of the Toledo plan to reduce industrial strife in their areas. The Toledo committee, which recently celebrated its first birthday, has handled 43 labor disputes since last July. City officials report that the city has been strike-free since Oct. 17 and that the committee's mediation services have helped reduce the average time of strikes during the last year to two weeks. Labor relations bureaus also have been created in New York, St. Louis and Louisville, and Kansas City is studying establishment of such a unit. In Boston, the Metropolitan Industrial Relations Council, which offers arbitration and conciliation services, is organized on the basis of volunteer membership. More than 100 industrial concerns and labor units are members. Jurisdictional disputes are not brought before the committee, however, unless all parties agree to abide by the decision. The Toledo committee, which serves as a "board of last resort" in particularly difficult disputes, consists of six representatives each of labor, management and the public. Cases handled range from mediation of a transit strike and warehouse and manufacturing disputes to averting a strike of city employees through recommendations for wage adjustments. The policy-making nucleus of the Boston unit is an executive committee of six members elected by labor and six by industry plus one representative of the public. Official Bulletin April 1. 1947 Tau Sigma will meet at 7:30 tonight in Robinson gym. Those taking exam please come as soon as possible. Women's Executive council will not meet tonight. *** Women advertising majors interested in forming Gamma Alpha Chi will meet at 5 today in advertising department of journalism building. Women's rifle club will not meet tonight. Rewolfnus s e m a d sdrawkcab enad, hetud henul dna rebli, thginot thgie. U. K. bule moor. Duffy Calkins, vice-president K. U. Sunflower Dames Emergency Progressive party meeting called by J. L. Rader, president, at 7 tonight in room 9, Frank Strong. To discuss current rumors. Mixer for all Business and Pre-business students from 8 to 10:30 tonight in Kansas room, Memorial Union. Dancing, entertainment and cards. Typist-Linguist Jobs Open, Shoemaker Says All-Student Council will not meet tonight. Next meeting, April 8. *** Student Branch, American Pharmaceutical association meeting at 7:30 tonight in 305 Bailey. A film on "Folic Acid" will be shown. Preliminary meeting for Student Institute on Human Relations, Henley house, 7:30 tonight. Petitions for P. S. G. L. primary election must be filed by 6 tonight Call Clarence Francisco for details. * * * Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship Danforth chapel, 7 tonight. W. K. Ramsey, dean of the Kansas City Bible college will speak. Commencement issue of Jay- hawker may be ordered at Jay- hawker office in Memorial Union. Copies will be mailed. The All-Student council has announced the following vacancies: In District IV, a vacancy to be filled by the Pachacamac political party. For freshman representative, a vacancy to be filled by the P. S. G. L. political party. Petitions must be filed with the secretary of the ASC not later than April 8. A knowledge of secretarial skills plus Spanish or French leads to openings in business and government service, Prof. W. H. Shoemaker, chairman of the department of romance languages, related today. Deadline for ordering senior invitations and folders is April 10. - * * University Women's club, morning coffee meeting, 10 to 11:30, Thursday, English room, Memorial Union. * * * Next Entomology club meeting 4 p.m., April 8, 305 Snow. Dr. Downs of bacteriology department will speak. "We have had many requests for linguists who can type and take shorthand, but we haven't been able to fill them because language majors haven't learned to take dictation," he explained. Miss Loda Newcomb, instructor in secretarial training, reports a heavy demand by firms engaged in foreign trade for secretaries who know one or more foreign languages. Pio Given Scholarship Jack D. Pio, education junior, has been appointed to a residence hall scholarship in Battenfeld hall, Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, announced recently. Four Students Give Recita Four men students appeared in the regular weekly recital of the School of Fine Arts Thursday in Frank Strong auditorium. They were: Gregory Simms, and James T. Gettys; voice; Gene Jeniings, and Jack Moehlenkamp, piano. - 3-day Cleaning Service 4-day Laundry Service . 24-hour Shoe Repair Leather and Garment Dyeing a Specialty. Open a charge account at FRANK'S Village Cleaners SUNFLOWER, KANSAS Opposite School Western Union—8 a.m.-9 p.m. or if you wish Pay 20% down and as low as $1.75 weekly or $5.00 a month. No interest or carrying charge. FRANK'S FURNITURE COMPANY Phone 834 FREE DELIVERY 834 Mass. ITS "APRIL FOOLS" DAY WE'RE NOT FOOLIN'! TONITE'S THE NITE Two Big Shows for The Price of One But---at the You're invited to attend our regular 9:00 o'clock show and remain in your seats when it's over as our guest to the big "APRIL FOOL" FOLLIES If you're unable To Accept Our Invitation You May Still Come In as Late as 12:00 o'clock and See the Complete Feature Picture Feature Picture BRING A DATE and DON'T BE LATE! You'll Enjoy It Twice as Much With the Girl Friend! Regular Prices Prevail Midnight Show GRANADA 1947 APRIL 1, 1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE ANCIENT MEDICINE SOCIALLY SPEAKING BEVERLY BAUMER, Society Editor D. U. Gives Party Delta Upson held a Transcontinental party Friday and Saturday. The chapter house was decorated to present the Diamond Horseshoe. Saturday afternoon dancing guests participated in skirts from well-known movies, and Saturday night, the scene was the Coconut Grove. Helen Harkrader was presented as Oscar for her performance Sunday afternoon. Toyota, Sally Shepard, Bakeer, Diane Stryker, Vanner, Dorothy O'Connor, Lee Apt, Carol Sogn, Virginia Foreman, Marilyn Franklin, Doris Neve, Marion Osmond, Martha Keplinger, Corinne Carson, Doris Tihen, Betty Compton, Carol Buhler, Sally Pequens. Pegues. Joan Woodward, Mary Jane Stewart, Judith Tihen, Shirley Garst, Barbara Howard, Helen Harkrader, Sara Webb, Billie Marie Hamilton, Eva Zumbriller, Dorothy Stephenson. Zimbabwe Constance Markley, Lorraine Cook Nancy Ludlow, Ruby Olson, Joan Bynan, Gail Bixby, Virginia Stephenson, Mary Lewis, Dice Gillibil, Darlene Zimmerman, Jean Sisson, Frances Schutz, Mary Kay Simms, Louise Meliure, Jola Markle, Shannon McKim, Joy Godhere, Eva Humphreys, Marilyn Sweeney, Eleanor Pack, Irma Lou Rick, Elizabeth Priest. Nina Green, Mary Jean Peet, Janet Taylor, Betty Martin, Patricia Harris, Virginia Coppedge, Eleanor Bradford, Marion Osmond, Joan Anderson, Martha Legler, Marjery Kaufman, Marilyn Glover. Marjorie Schidmore, Louise Scheisser, Nancy Jackson, Vivian Rogers, Sally Houck, Hariett Harlow, Arlene Feldkamp. Twyla Talbert, Nancy Smith, Patricia Norcross, Joan Rodgers, Lois Thompson, Jane Belt, Carolyn Wigns, Mary Ann Sawyer, and Marie Dinmore Joe Dinsmith Harrison, Hutchinson; Gladys Harrison, McConnell, Wichita; Dorothy Safford, Augusta; Jaime Hawws, Evely Vogt, Betty Matchett, Sue Jamison, all of Kansas City; Joan Sanders, Baldwin; Marjorie Hill, Peoria, Ill.; and Jacquie Timmons, Manhattan. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Houston, Mr. and Mrs. Bill White, Mr. and Mrs. Theodore McIntire, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Smith, Mr. and Mrs. William Hall, Mr. and Mrs. George Keene, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Curran, and Mr. and Mrs. Calvin Granger. ger. Chaperones were Mrs. R. G. Rocke, Mrs. O. L. Horner, Mrs. W. Harris, Mrs. Arthur Little, Mrs. Clark Mandigo, Miss Julia Willard, and Mrs. James A. Hooke. ☆ ☆ ☆ Alpha Delta Pi Gives Tee Alpha Delta Pi gave a tea in honor of Mrs. Lawrence Shipman, grand first vice-president, and Mrs. Thomas Harris, Jr., grand secretary-treasurer, at the chapter house Sunday. \* \* \* Delta Gamma Entertains Delta Gamma entertained Friday with their annual pinafore party. Guests were: Robert Andrews, George Francis, Jack Hansman, Wallace McKee, Herbert Heim, William Mahoney, Leo Smith, John Womack, Robert Beiderwell, William Pierson, Jerry Bales, James Scott, Dayton Molzen, Paul Brownlee, Samuel Hunter, Lynn Leigh, Charles Church, Frank Hass, George Johnston, William Bradford, Robert Wood. Wood. Gordon Church, James Roark, Maurice Mosher, Syd Bennett, James Roberts, Evan Ritchie, Wallace Foster, Duane Kraft, John Ferguson, Calvin Markwell, Jack Eskegun, Donald Patton, Robert Nichols, Clark Duncan, Dwight Deay, Bruce Goshorn, Maurice Beardmore, John Irwin, William Bunt, William Butler, William Roehl, Bill McGregor, Lloyd Barr, Harry Morey, William Beck, Kenneth Hampton, Harvey Barnett, Robert Knox, Fred Daneke, Jack Peeler, Harold Norris, Howard Joseph, William Richardson, Muir Rienkebaugh. Chapman were Mrs. W. S. Shaw, Mrs. V. C. Jackson, Mrs. C. A. Thomas and Mrs. H. J. Overholser, * * * Delta Gamma Elects Officers Delhi the Gamma elected and installed the following officers recently: Mary COED'S CORNER Fossil Hunter Wealthy Purrington Says Geology Is 'Romantic' "Geology is the most romantic occupation I know," says Wealthy Purington, one of the two women graduate students in geology. Propped up against a wall of fossil cases, she expounds with the zeal of a preacher, on rock-breaking, fossil-hunting, and mountain-climbing geology. rock-breaking, tossin-nunning, and that "Perhaps it's the antiquity of it that appeals to me," she said. "Here is earth history that can be figured out scientifically." 'Such Interesting Teachers' ◎ Wealthy can't remember why she majored in geology, says "it must have been because I had such interesting teachers." tertelling her bachelor of science degree from Brigham Young university in 1945 and came to Kansas last fall to work on her masters. "I don't believe in taking everything at the same university," she contends. contents. Her field of specialization is paleontology, which to the layman means fossils. means fossils. "I spend all my time collecting fossils in the field and working with them in the laboratory. By that I don't mean the people around here," she added hastily. "The geology folks have been the friendiest I have ever known." I have ever known Was A Girl Ranger Naturalist Last summer Wealthy was the only girl ranger naturalist in Zion National park. "I answered questions in the museum, guided nature walks, and gave illustrated lectures at night," she related. "The only thing that made me angry was when some tourist would rush up and ask, 'What's the quickest way we can see the park?'". see the park! A University of Kansas student, Roger Clubb, caused the most exci- cement in the park while Wealthy Belles AND THEIR Weddings Thalman-Messplay The engagement of Miss Jean Thalman of Kansas City, Mo., to Mr. Thomas Messplay, also of Kansas City, was announced Sunday at the Sigma Nu house. The wedding will take place this summer. Mr. Messplay is a sophomore in the school of engineering. Mahin-Van Dyke The engagement of Miss Joyce Mahin to Mr. Paul Van Dyke was announced recently at the Sigma Nu house. Miss Mahin is a former University student and was a member of Chi Omega sorority. Mr. Van Dyke is a senior in business. Mahin-Van Dyke Goshorn-Small The pinning of Sylvia Small to Bruce Goshorn was announced at the Delta Gamma house Saturday night by Mrs. W. S. Shaw, house-mother. Miss Small was assisted by Bonnie Oswalt and Mary Lou Matthews. the marriage of Marilyn Beck, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Mor- ton Beck, Kansas City, and George Charles Hann, son of Mr. and Mrs. James B. Hann, also of Kansas City, took place March 23 in Kansas City. Miss Small is a College junior. Mr. Goshorn, an Education sophomore, is a member of Sigma Nu fraternity. Hann-Beck The bride, who was given in marriage by her father, wore white organdy and net gown over a taffeta skirt. Alice Ackerman was maid of honor and Mary Lou Hann was bridesmaid. - * * bridesmaid. After a short trip the couple will be at home in Minneapolis, Minn., where the groom is working on his masters degree at the University of Minnesota. Mrs. Hann attended the University from 1944 to 1947, and was a member of Sigma Kappa sorority. "In attempting to climb the Great White Throne, a treacherous sandstone formation, Roger got stuck about one third of the way, and couldn't go up or down. He had to spend almost 24 hours on his precarious perch before the rangers could rescue him. They assigned me to telephone duty," Wealthy said. Mathews, president; Carolyn Nigg, vice-president; Donna Mueller, house manager; Harriet Harlow, recording secretary; Betty Hirleman, corresponding secretary; Sally Sandifer, social chairman; and Georgia Westmoreland, rush chairman. was there. When Wealthy can get away from Lindley hall and geology, she enjoys reading and listening to music. "I can't play an instrument, but I enjoy any kind of good music, mostly classical." Likes Music, Reading However, music is a winter pastime, and with the coming of spring, Wealthy is dusting off her jeans and wondering where she can find a new chisel, because, for her, it's fossil-hunting season and she is just itching to grab a hammer and a sample bag, and spend some exciting afternoons on the hillsides busting rocks. Sellers-Perry Engaged The engagement of Miss Bobette Sellers of Paola, to Mr. Howard Perry, also of Paola, was announced Sunday at the Sigma Nu house. Miss Sellers is a graduate of the University and was a member of Alpha Delta Pi sorority. Mr. Perry is a freshman in the school of engineering. Union Ready To Accept Arbitration In Milk Strike New Orleans,—(UP)—An A.F.L. union official said today that striking Louisiana milk producers are ready to end their war with distributors Smart-Stockton Pinned Kappa Alpha Theta announces the pinning of Miss Marilyn Smart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs Tom L Smart of Lawrence, to Mr. Sian Stockton, on Wednesday, March 26. The first Kansas territorial newspaper was published in 1835. Miss Smart, whose corsage was a purple orchid, was assisted by Virginia Winter. Miss Smart is a junior in the College. Mr. Stockton is a senior in business and also an instructor in mechanical engineering here at the University. He is a member of Delta Tau Delta fraternity. DESATO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH DESOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH Buddley GALLAGHER MOTORS Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL ''FOR HEALTH'' Try our Cottage Cheese on luncheon plates and salads Fritzel-Dayhawk DAIRY PRODUCTS 834 Vt. Chi Galloway Phone 182 CHOOSE YOUR CLEANER As Carefully as You Choose Your Clothes. CALL 432 CALL 432 INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners 740 Vermont Call 432 PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS APRIL 1, 1947 SPOTLIGHT SPORTS By BILL CONBOY Rumors are now flying about once again that the enlarged Big Six conference may decide to accept a hook-up with the Southwest conference for a post season football game in the Cotton Bowl on New Year's day. Two seasons ago, the Missouri Tigers appeared in the Cotton Bowl against the Texas Longhorns. They lost, 27 to 40, but the game produced the greatest offensive play ever seen in the history of the bowl. Following the contest, the Texas backers of the annual game were outspoken in their hopes that some permanent agreement might be reached with the Big Six. Big Nine Took Lead Precedence for such a move was certainly given by the Big Nine when it signed with the Pacific Coast conference to make the Rose Bowl the exclusive property of those two leagues. The Big Six has followed the lead of the Big Nine in most athletic matters through the years. It is reported that one deterring factor in making such a pact with the Southwest conference in the past was that the Big Six was smaller in number of participating schools. This argument has now been eliminated with the addition of Colorado. \* \* \* The one best means of bringing fine high school athletes to the University is not being used as well as it might be. Responsibility On Students The best single means of making a young football or basketball star want to come to K. U. is to make him feel that his friends are here, understanding instead of among strangers. Responsibility On Students The responsibility for letting Kansas high school stars know that they will be in a congenial group at the University doesn't fall on the athletic department, the coaches, or the faculty. They can't fail on the average students who were high school graduates themselves a year or so ago. In some eastern schools, it is the practice of students to organize and plan a campaign where every outstanding prep performer in the state competes against others factored by those in school who know him or come from his locale. In this way, an athlete feels that he will be continuing right along with the contacts and friends he had in high school if he attends the school giving him that attention. It is common sense. Other schools may offer big money. Other coaches may paint rosy pictures of bowl-game glory. But all that seems superficial if the high school star knows that he would be a stranger, an outsider, at a school where he knows no one. If K. U, students would decide to start talking up the University to their hometown athletes, chances are excellent that no other method would yield better results. Jayhawker Jobs Open To Applicants Applications for the position of editor and business manager of the 1948 Jayhawker magazine are now being accepted, Richard Carmean, business manager, said to-day. Applicants for either position must leave a letter, addressed to Karl Klooz, chairman of the Jayhawker advisory board, at the Student organization window of the business office not later than April 15. Letters of application must include three references. Two of these must be the names of faculty members, and the third a past employer or friend of the applicant. Harding Injures Ankle Otis S. Harding, College freshman, dislocated and fractured his ankle Monday afternoon when he slid into a fixed base in an intramural softball game. His condition at Watkins hospital today is reported as good. Sooners Hand K.U. Net Squad 4-3 Defeat In Season Opener The Oklahoma Sooners gave the Jayhawkertennis squad a fiery welcome at Norman Monday, defeating the visitors, 4-3, in the Kansas net season opener. Only the top two Kansas men, Dick Richards and Erwin "Bitsy" Busiek, could handle the Oklahoma speed and versatility on the court. Both won singles matches, although Busiek had to go three sets to take his. They teamed in the doubles to notch $ \textcircled{4} $ the only other Kansas Vet Busiek Thumps Draper Busiek, down 3-5 in his third set, matched consistency and the ability to lob to the baseline to take the match from Stanley Draper of the Sooners. Oklahoma's strength lay in depth Frank Gage and Roy Shoaf, K. U numbers 3 and 4 men, won only three games each in their matches. It was Shoaf's first defeat in Big Six competition. Bob Barnes, another returning letterman, fought to a 4-4 tie in the third set of his match with Charles Cunningham, but dropped the next two games and the match. To Meet SMU Today To Meet S.M.U. Todav The Jayhawers are in Dallas to meet S.M.U. today, and will travel to Fayetteville for a match with Arkansas Thursday. The Oklahoma match was a non-conference affair. Singles Results Dick Richards (K) defeated Walter Moore. 6-3. 9-7. Erwin Busiek (K) defeated Stanley Draper, 6-4, 2-6, 8-6. Bill Kessler (O) defeated Frank Gage. 6-2, 6-1. Jack Griggs (O) defeated Roy Shoaf. 6-3, 6-0. Charles Cunningham (O) defeatc ecesse 6-1, 1-6, 6-4. Doubles Results Richards and Busiek (K) defeat- ed Giggs and Moore $A \cdot A \cdot A$ Draper and Kessler (O) defeated Gage and Shoaf, 2-6, 6-2, 6-2. Golf Masters Meet For Winter Finals Augusta, Ga. — (UP) —Great names in golfing, including the newly starred Cary Middlecoff, who won the Charlotte open yesterday in a playoff driving for the Masters' tournament, climax of the winter swing. Middlecoff, former army dentist from Memphis, turned pro a year ago after a successful tour as an amateur, and won his spurs yesterday as he tied a course record while beating Schoux by nine strikes. Mid-September took a 64 for the 18 holes and Schoux, a pro at San Francisco, shot a 73. Jimmy Demaret, Ben Hogan, Sam Snead and other top professionals will compete in the four-day meet, which starts Thursday. The men had tied in the regulation 72 holes when Schoux missed a three-foot putt on the 18th green. Montgomery Kayos Flores In Third Round San Francisco. (UP)—Bob Montgomery, N. Y., lightweight champion, won his 45th kaye victory in 88 fights when he sent young Jesse Flores, California Mexican, to the floor in the third round of a scheduled 10-round non-title fight Monday. The New Yorker handed Flores, the pride of California, his first knockout in 42 encounters. Before Monday's battle, Flores had won 38, had three draws and a single loss to Rudy Cruz in Hollywood. The kayo came at two minutes of the third round when Montgomery suddenly lashed out with an explosive right to the chin that the crowd knew was the finisher. Flores was up at the count of 10, but referee Joe. Gorman already had raised Montgomery's hand as the victor. Montgomery weighed in at 138½ pounds, three and a half pounds over the light weight limit. Flores weighed 136%. Student Has Appendectomy Mary Huse, College sophomore, underwent an appendectomy Friday night at Watkins Memorial hospital. Hen condition is reported as good today. Kramer Favored In Tennis Tourney Houston, Tex.—(UP)—Top-seeded Jack Kramer, national indoor and outdoor champion, will swing into action today for the first time in the River Oaks invitational tennis matches. Ninth-seeded Eitsy Grant, three times River Oaks titlist, featured opening round play Monday with 6-love and 6-3 victories over movie star Phil Reed of Los Angeles. Also slated for action in the tourney's second day were Frank Parker, number 2, defending champion Gardner Mulloy, and Billy Talbert, runner-up last year. Bitsy Grant Handcuffs Reed Sam Match, seventh seeded from Rice, over Harry Tansel of Abilene, 6-love and 6-1. Eddie Moyland, Sugar Bowl champion pennants and North Texas. Lend 5-24. Other results yesterday: Clarence Mabry, southwest conference champion from Texas university, over P. M. Smith of Houston 6-0 and 6-1. Frank Guensey, Rice, over Phi Fritik of Texas university, 6-3 and 1-4 Ernie Sutter of New Orleans over Bob Foley of Rice. 6-1 and 6-4. KU's Dr. 'Phog' Allen To Return April 15 Dr. Forrest C. (Phog) Allen, veteran basketball coach at the University, who has been resting away from the game in California on doctor's orders, is expected to return to K. U. about April 15. Howard Engleman, former Kansas All-American, took the reigns in his absence. Allen will resume coaching in spring training, it was reported. The Kansas mentor and Mrs. Allen have been visiting a daughter in Palo Alto, Calif. He was ordered by his physician to get away from basketball at mid-season. The last spring football workout before Easter will be held today. Practice will be resumed again on April 8, with a big scrimmage game scheduled for April 12. Jayhawk Gridsters To Rest Over Easter "So far, spring practice has shown a lot of things we are pleased with," George Sauer, head football coach, said today. "We are well pleased with the showing many of the younger men have made. The blocking is not up to par, but the spirit is exceptional." Forty B-29's To Fly Over Campus April 5 A flight of 40 B-29's will pass over Topeka, Lawrence, and Kansas City between 9:30 and 10 a. m., April 5, enroute to a simulated bombing attack on Milwaukee in observance of Army day, Lt. Col. Kenneth Rosebush, associate professor of Military science, said today. The number of planes taking part in the celebration will be over 200 and the largest army air force fighter escort groups will contribute to the celebration. Set April 8, 10 As Dates Set Playoffs For Golf Team Qualifying rounds for members of the University golf team will be played April 8 and 10. The play-offs will be held at the Lawrence Country club, the 8th, and at Swoto park, Kansas City, Mo., the 10th. All matches will be 18 holes, and will be the basis for cutting the squad from 25 men to regular team strength. Zale, Al Timmons Slug It Out Tonight Kansas City, Mo. — (UP)— Co-managers of Tony Zale, world's middleweight champion, were due to meet here today to discuss the champion's plans to defend his title. Zale fights Al Timmons, Cleveland, in a non-title, over-the-weight 10-rounder in Kansas City, Kan., toonight. Sam Pian was due in today from New York, where he watched Marcel Cerdan, the Moroccan, in action. Pian conferred with Sol Straus, who is handling Mike Jacobs' duties, and Nat Rogers, the Garden matchmaker. Want Graziano Already here was Art Winch, co-manager of Zale. They wanted their man to meet Rocky Graziano in his next title defense but Graziano was banned in New York and it was obvious they wanted Zale's next fight in the Garden. The National Boxing association had directed Zale to defend his title. Whether he would go against Graziano in another city, or take on Cerdan in New York appeared the biggest challenge. Entitled, To Match. Winch said that Graziano was entitled to the first crack at the title and would be given a bout but that he didn't know where. For his part, Zale appeared to be in fine condition for his meeting tonight with the bigger Timmons, a fighter who has height, weight and reach on the champion but who appeared none too sharp against left hooks which the champion was expected to aim at him. Local Cagers Battle For YMCA State Title Two Lawrence teams, Rexall Drug and Ober's, will battle it out for the Y.M.C.A. invitational basketball title in Topeka tonight. These two teams are composed largely of University men. Poehler's, another Lawrence team made up partly of students from the University, will play the Capitol Federal team of Topeka for third place in the tournament. In the semi-final games Monday night, Rexall Drug defeated Capitol Federal 35 to 30 and Ober's slipped by Poehler's 50 to 48. WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinct Frames. Lawrence Optical Co. HUNSINGER MOTOR CO. Garage and Cab Co. 922 Mass. Phone 12 White Sox Need Power At Plate New York—(UP)—The Chicago White Sox finished fifth last season but unless they come up with power hitter and old age does take its toll they will be lucky to finish that high this coming year. Collectively, the White Sox hit fewer home runs last season than did one man—Hank Greenberg of the Tigers—and there has been no indication in spring training thus far that Ted Lyons, who took over the club last season for Jimmy Dykes, has found the long distance hitter he needs so badly. Jones Looks Best His chief hope appears to be Murrell Jones, the young first baseman, who hit three out of the park when he came up last year and played in 24 games. If he could keep up that pace through 1947, it would mean some 20-round trippers, which would be the closest thing the Pale Hose have had to long distance clouting in years. Some of the vets on whom Lyons is counting may begin to fade. Luke Appling is 38, Charles (Red) Ruffing 43, Earl Caldwell 41, Joe Kuhel 40 and Thorton Lee, 39. They are big question marks and can make or break the Sox. Ruffing May Hurl Sundays Ruffing, if he can make it, will take over the Sunday pitching berth which Lyons relinquished when he succeeded Dykes and Cald-well, who won 13 games last season, most of them in relief, plays a big part in Lyons' relief hurling plans. Lyons is well pleased with some of his rookie hurriers and it looks as if Bob Gillespie, the tall, 14-game winner with Dallas; Earl Harrist, the no-hit artist with Syracuse last season; Luke McGraw, the victory king of the class C West, Texas-New Mexico league; and Peter Gabrian, who won only one game with Albany last season, may make the grade. RUBINSTEIN Plays the immortal works of the Masters as the thrilling Background for one of the Screen's greatest romantic stories. . . . HEAR 2nd PIANO CONCERTO AND PRELUDE IN C SHARP MINOR Rachmaninoff AND MANY OTHERS SEE FRANK BORZAGE'S "I'VE ALWAYS LOVED YOU" Across from Court House (In Technicolor) GRANADA COMING SUNDAY Delicious JUICY STEAKS Our Specialty BILL'S GRILL 1109 Mass. Phone 2054 LAUNDERETTE Bendix Equipped 30 Minute Self Service—SOAP FREE Up to 10 lb. Washing (per machine)—25c 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.————Saturday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. 813 Vermont St. Phone 3368 Phone 3368 APRIL 1, 1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Still Uncertain On Robinson Havana—(UP) Jackie Robinson's status still was uncertain today after he great Negro athlete went back second base yesterday as his Montreal team lost a 1 to 0 "scrim-image" game to a hapazhard Brooklyn Dodger lineup. Robinson, publicly named by Doger officials as a first base candidate, hit two doubles off Vic Lombardi, a first-line Dodger hurler. Ralph Branca of the Dodgers pitched for Montreal. Monteira manager Clay Hopper said Robinson was sent back to his old second-base spot so that rookie Kevin Connors could try out at first St. Petersburg, Fla.-(UP)-The St. Louis Cardinals, cheered by the improvement shown by pitcher Johnny Beazley, were scheduled to meet the New York Yankees today. Beazley, troubled by a sore arm, exhibited some of his pre-war form yesterday as the Redbirds downed Cincinnati, 7 to 2. He pitched three innings and allowed three hits, showing a lively fast ball. The Yanks were scheduled to meet the Phillies at Clearwater yesterday but rain cancelled the game after the first inning with Philadelphia leading 1 to 0. Miami. —(UP)— The St. Louis Browns squad, cut to 30 by the optioning of seven players, prepared to meet the Philadelphia Athletics today, one of their most bother- some spring rivals. The Brownie players optioned to Toledo of the American Association yesterday were first baseman Chuck Stevens; catcher Hank Helf; infielders Owen Friend and Bob Wren, and pitcheres Chet Johnson, Jim Bilbrey and Raymond Shore. The Browns defeated the Pittsburgh Pirates yesterday, 7 to 5, as Terry White hit his sixth homer of the spring season. Lake Wales, Fla.—(UP)—The Cincinnati Reds, bolstered by the return of shortstop Eddie Miller, today were scheduled against the Kansas City Blues of the American association, a New York Yankee farm club. Miller signed his contract yesterday and then watched the St. Louis Cardinals pound Cincinnati veteran Johnny Vander Meer and rookie Elmer Riddle for 13 hits and a 7 to 2 victory. Miller said he might be ready for the Red opener. His contract contains a bonus clause based on the number of games he plays. St. Petersburg, Fla.—(UP)—The New York Yankees today sent 11 players to minor league club clubs and bought the contract of pitcher Don Johnson from Kansas City of the American association. Catcher Bill Deininger and pitchers Bill Wight, Carl De Rose, Red Bradley and Kent Sterling were sent to the Kansas City Blues, training at Lake Wales. Outfielder Allie Clark and pitchers Herb Karpei, Alex Mustakis, Dick Ames, Dick Starr and Mal Mallette were assigned to the Newark BeBars, training at Sebring. Phoenix. —(UP)—Rookie pitcher Bill Ayers, who appears to have clinched a spot with the New York Giants, today was named to start against the Chicago White Sox as the Ott men prepared to take their second game from the Pale Hose in as many days. The Giants returned to their home base here yesterday, coming up with a thrilling six-run rally in the last half of the ninth to nip the White Sox, 9 to 8. Clint Hartung and Willard Marshall hit homers off Earl Caldwell during the uprising, Marshall's circuit clout with one on winning the game. St. Petersburg, Fla. — (UP)—Arthr (Red) Patterson, secretary of the New York Yankees, said today that outfielder Joe DiMaggio "may be playing by May." Patterson denied that club president; Larry MacPhail had said that 32-year-old DiMaggto would be out two months. DiMaggio is awaiting the arrival of a specially-constructed baseball shoe which will protect his recently-operated heel. THE HOLIDAY CENTER If It's Hot, Go To Pot Or Potter Ah spring! It's that time of year again. Students as usual are tossing aside books and uniting in a "back to nature" movement. Here, sitting on the campus studying (they've got books to prove it), are Mary Margaret Huse and Ross Baker, College sophomores. 'Twas Long Time A-Cumin' But Prunus Tribola's Here Spring is a-cumin' in! In fact, it's here. (Pardon, while I blow that snow off my shoulder.) And the towering shrubs of prunus tribola, that's flowering plum to you, that shed their fragrance in the rotunda of Frank Strong hall are the first sign that campus flowers are busy. Just as soon as the weather seems ready to remain warm and balmy, the gardening crew will be out planting campus flowerbeds. The greenhouses are full and overflowing with petunias, narcissus, and potted geraniums. Mr. Reiter hopes the 17-below zero freeze of a few weeks ago won't affect the many flowering shrubs on the campus. The lilacs along the front of Frank Strong and on Lilac Lane, and the forsythia by Frank Strong will be among the first to blossom. Red bud, bridalwreath, and flowering wreath will also brighten the slopes of the Hill very soon. "We have a plant called the K.U. geranium, and I certainly wish we had a place to put it." Mr. Reiter said, as he recalled a special variety of geranium that had been developed and named by a gardener on the campus six or seven years ago. Mums-Narcissus At Green Hall Have A K.U. Geranium "We gave them red cannas one year and the hospital was so disappointed about it that since we have tried to keep their bed a constant factor, while we vary the rest of them," said James Reiter, head gardener. Narcissus and crysanthemums will be planted in the triangular flower bed in front of the law building. The flower bed at the western end of the campus will contain brilliant pink petunias. Flowers in beds on the campus are varied from year to year, with the exception of the bed in front of Watkins hospital. The staff insists on its bed of red geraniums, which gives them a mass of gorgeous red blooms each spring. Though the number of flower beds on the campus has dwindled from a dozen in 1940 to four at the present, the coming of spring means lots of spade work for the 13 men on the gardening crew. "If every plant blooms like it did last year, I'll be tickled to death," said Mr. Reiter, squinting at the sun as it slipped under a cloud and rain started falling. Three Political Science Men To Attend Meeting In Dall.. Three members of the political science department are going to Dallas April 4 and 5 to attend the Southwestern Social Science association meeting. They are Dr. Ethan P. Allen, chairman of the department, and Dr. Walter E. Sandelius and Dr. Herman B. Chubb. Dr. Allen will speak to the political science section about "Teachers of Government." Dr. Sandelius will speak to the history section about the Western Civilization course. The Chicago Stags today held undisputed first place in the Basketball Association of America's western division and the right to meet the powerful Washington Capitals in the loop's first place playoff series. Stags Down Bombers To Play Capitals Next (By United Press) Chicago and the St. Louis Bombers ended their regular season tied for the top spot and the Stags downed the Bombers last night, 73 to 66, in a bitter overtime game at Chicago. Chicago led at the half, 32 to 30, but the score was tied at the end of the third quarter and at the end of the regulation game. The first three teams in each division will begin playoff series Wednesday night for prizes totaling $85,500. If your car is in need of a last minute repair job before you go home over Easter vacation, bring it to us for immediate service to put it in proper condition. MORGAN-MACK MOTOR COMPANY YOUR FRIENDLY FORD DEALER Phone 277 609 Mass. MAKE DATE NITE SHOW NITE JAYHAWKER Ends Tonite THE JOLSON STORY Starts Tomorrow ONE ENTIRE WEEK HAPPY SONGS . . . STARS . . ROMANCE! FRANK SINATRA Sings 7 Great Songs KATHRYN GRAYSON Sings Love Songs to Her Guy PETER LAWFORD New Romantic Favorite JIMMY DURANTE A Riot of Laughs "It Happened In Brooklyn" GRANADA TONITE "APRIL FOOL" FOLLIES! WE'RE NOT FOOLIN' You'll Have Some Fun! JOHN CARROLL RUTH HUSSEY "Bedside Manner" "Bedside Manner" Now, Ends Wed. SHOWS: 2:30, 7:00, 9:00 Raymond Chandler's Harrison ROBERT MONTOOMERY AUDREY NOTTER LLOYD NOELAN LADY IN THE LAKE Coming Thurs. LARAINE DAY BRIAN AHERNE "The Locket" P atee NOW PLAYING THE MOST DARING PAIR DANGER EVER DESIGNED! SEE JAMES MASON MARGARET LOCKWOCD IN WickedLady Cartoon Musical News VARSITY Ends Tonite- "Scandal In Paris" "The 13th Hour" Wednesday, 4 days RUDY VALLEE BARBARA BRITTON "FABULOUS SUZANNE" AND EDDIE DEAN "Driftin' River" 0 PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 1,1947 Kansan Comments Man's One Hope Believe in Easter? Why should it mean more than a new hat, or a chance to catch up on sleep? For two thousand years nation has gone on rising against nation, the rabble has demanded the bold, unscrupulous hero rather than the mild leader who promises peace, and men are crucified on crosses of greed. The very earth trembles in fear of the terrible atom; and yet the meaning of Easter is not dead. Perhaps it should be called hope, for it must extend to all religions or non-religions. It pulsates in new leaves, spring rain, bird songs, regardless of the system of fundamentals on which an individual may base his faith. In this intensely materialistic world, the things Easter symbolizes often seem the only essential difference between man and brutes. The only reality, according to Plato, is outside the fleeting realm of time and space; and can any man ever disagree that he himself is the highest power in the universe? He can only strive to translate himself into forms of omnipresence and immortality. To believe in individual rights without individual purposes is self-contradictory; magnificent ideals are not furthered by petty actions. Until the sciences of both matter and mind can answer all the questions man ever had, faith is as essential as breathing. Believe in a religion, life, your fellow men, whatever satisfies your needs. But believe; cynicism is not an adequate means even to a selfish end. Believe in Easter? What else is there? ASC Training The two courses which the All Student council is recommending to be included in the College curriculum merit serious consideration by the faculty. If student leadership on the campus really is training for better citizenship, as we have been led to believe, this is an opportunity for mature and experienced persons to take an active part in that training. The proposed courses would be in polling public opinion, and in government. Laboratory work in both would be an aid to ASC efficiency; and the basic principles, although illustrated in terms peculiar to council action, would be applicable in community or broader leadership after graduation. One of the worst handicaps to student government is the fact that so few participants are sure of themselves in legislative procedure and the significance of proposals. Under the pressure of many other extra-curricular and curricular activities, they cannot afford to take time to learn. Surely the University, as well as the student, would gain if credit were offered. It looks as if the Allis-Chalmers workers have come down off their high horse and are going back to their tractors. Young representative Robert Bock was voted down on a measure he introduced in the house last week in Topeka, which provided for a tax on illegal 5% beer. Fellow house members should be reminded that he was only trying to fix it so the boys wouldn't have to sneak a qt. on the QT. Dear Editor---student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Enter Midwest Swim The University of Kansas doesn't have a swimming team—why? This question has been puzzling students on the campus all year. Four Big Six schools were represented in the conference swimming meet at Iowa State last Saturday, but Kansas was not one of them. ONE, the pool in Robinson gym will not permit adequate training. Some of the arguments for not having a swimming team put forth by Mr. Quigley are: TWO, there are not enough persons interested in swimming on the hill to warrant having a swimming team. THREE, there is no one on the staff qualified to coach an intercollegiate swimming team, and the athletic department disapproves of student coaches. These arguments are easily refuted by facts. At the conference swimming meet Iowa State retained its title which it has held since the beginning of the conference. That team has built its superiority in a swimming pool that is exactly 10 feet longer than our pool. Does that 10 feet put the Jayhawkers at a great disadvantage? Furthermore, there are several lettermen from other colleges on the campus. These men, along with the high school swimmers from Wichita, Kansas City, and Coffeyville, should make the nucleus of a fine swimming team. It is too late to do anything this year, but now is the time to start taking action to make sure that Kansas is represented in the Midwest conference swimming meet in 1948. Kansas had a team before the war, and swam intersectional matches—why can't they do it again? Senior, Business (Name withheld by request) "PLANE CRASH FATAL" Buzzing Is Dangerous Thursday's Daily Kansan could have read: PLANE CRASH FATAL "The pilot and six students were burned fatally and 11 other critically injured as a low-flying navy plane crashed on Jayhawk drive yesterday. . ." This buzzing of the campus may be lots of fun but everything has its limits. Thursday's exhibit of daring was not only in violation of both civilian and naval air regulations, but involved the safety of hundreds of students who at the time were changing classes. It doesn't take a genius to imagine the possibility and magnitude of such a catastrophe. Just one slight miscalculation could convert the plane into a meteor-like missile of destruction. When men risk their own and the lives of hundreds of others for a few seconds' thrill, judgment has ceased to exist. Sophomore, Engineering Verne S. Stevenson (Editor's note: If you can get the wing number of the airplane, you should report it to the Civil Aeronautics Authority at Kansas City; or if it is a navy plane you may report to the naval air station at Olathe even though you do not have the plane number, if you can describe it and give the time. If a black cat crosses the path of one of the campus speed demons, he's lucky—or agile. The University Daily Kansan Member of the Kansas Press Assn. National Editorial Assn. Association of College Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service 420 Madison Ave. New York, N.Y. Managing Editor ... Billie M. Hamilton Editing in Chief ... Alamada Boliller Assst. Man. Editor ... Marcella Stewart Assst. Man. Editor ... Reveren P. W. Smith Jr. William P. Smith Jr. Assistant City Editor ... John Finch Telegraph Editor ... Matt Dixon Wendell Bryant Assst. Telegraph Editor ... Marian Minor Art Editor ... Eloise West Business Manager ... Bob Bonebrake Managing Editor ... Almendra Circulation Manager ... John Boeh Classified Adv. Man ..LaVere Keevan Nat. Adv. Manager ..Kenneth White Adv. Manager ..Jason The Kansas Press Association 1947 Member National Editorial Association A FREE PRESS—YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW Phyllis Fretwell Wins Student Musicians' Contest Phyllis Fretwell, Fine Arts junior, won first place in a student musician's contest sponsored by the National Federation of Women's clubs in Topeka. She sang three numbers in "The Miracle," (Schubert), "Shepard, thy Demnor Vary," (Brown), and "Alleluia," (Mozart). Othed University students entered in the contest were Nancy Messenger, Mary Carolyn Daugherty, Elaine Rodgers, Harriet Harlow, and Helen Hastings. FOR PARTY RENTALS Used Juke Box Records For Sale John H. Emick 1014 Mass. 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CBS "INFORMATION, PLEASE" Listen in every Wednesday night 10.30 EST, COAST-to-coast Parker"51" GOPR. 1947 BY THE PARKER PEN COMPANY APRIL 1, 1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN When You're Bored With It All, Take Yourself A Trip On The Bus Hollywood, Fla.—(UP)—Across the nation today thousands of office workers and laborers went to their humdrum jobs with hearts a little lighter because of what William L. Cimillo did to escape the same kind oforedom that fills their ordered lives. Cimillo escaped in a bus—the one he drives for the Surface Transportation system in the Bronx, N.Y. It was simple. All he did was just "turr to the left" and in a twinkling he was rolling across the New Jersey countryside. Before him, stretching southward, was the broad white ribbon of U.S. highway no. 1. Behind him, the tall spires of Manhattan's skyscrapers rose out of the morning mist. Search Started Friday Camillo was picked up on Monday night by police after the wayward but was found parked at Gulfstream race track. It ended a search that started last Friday in New York when the 37-year-old driver checked his vehicle out of the garage as usual but never did show up on his route. He said he supposed that if he had turned to the right instead of to the left, he would be telling of his experience from a jail cell in Texas instead of one in Florida. Climillo did not know what came over him that day in New York. But it all seemed to have something to do with being bored with it all. A Long Adventure It's 1,500 miles from where he started to where he ended the adventure, but no one seemed to wonder about the 44-passenger Bronx bus so far off its regular run. Not even a sailor whom he picked up just outside of Washington and gave a lift to Charleston, S.C. He said he hoped that his employers didn't hold a grudge against him for what he did. And now, he wants to drive his bus back to the big city and return to his route. If the company sends money for fuel, he is ready to start at any time. Cinillo is more worried about what family will think. "I've got three boys and one of 'em's bigger than I am," he said. "But my wife is a fine little lady. I'm sure she'll understand." Some like it hot and some like it sizzling. To Tom Gregg, familiar to most students as "The Night Watchman" of station WREN, slow, sentimental music means listening pleasure at its best. 'The Nightwatchman'Likes Music Slow, Sentimental "Many persons prefer hot swing, but I like my music slow and sweet. guess that's why Glenn Miller's is still my favorite band," the popular unconsered said in a recent interview. college junior and psychology A college junior and psychology major, 22-year old Gregg already has four years broadcasting experience and joined the WREN staff in 1945, after announcing on the staffs of KTSW, Emporia, and KFWB, Hollywood, Calif. Jitterbug Going Out "I get a kick out of newcasts and other programs, but most of all I enjoy presenting the 'Night Watchman' show," he said. The program consists of popular recorded music dedicated to listeners by request. Gregg thinks jitterbug music is gradually on the way out, duplicating the trend following World War I, when slow sweet tunes pushed faster temps out of the limelight. "Music always becomes slow and sweet during times of economic stress" he explained. "I'm not an expert on music, but I think the trend is definitely away from hot swing. The stress is also going toward novelty tunes, such as some of the popular Phil Harris releases." Most musical requests for the program come from Lawrence and neighboring towns, Gregg said, although a few have been received from Colorado, Nebraska, and even far-away Kentucky. "I even received a request for a dedication from a soldier in Japan. He had heard of the program through friends, and had evidently decided he wanted his name read over the radio even though he couldn't hear it." Many songs have been in frequent demand since the program's start last September, but the most popular of all was "For Sentimental Reasons," which was requested "at least three times each night for a period of three months." Gregg commented. More recent tunes, "Ugly Chile," and "Open The Door, Richard," ran a close second. Popular Songs Requested Although the number of compliments received in regard to the musical program far exceeds the amount of complaints, Grego pointed out that the program is not without its trying moments. "Sometimes people request a certain song and when we don't have it in stock and have to play a substitute they write very nasty letters," he explained. "Boy, they really eat us out." Need Code. Book Another perplexing problem that of attempting to decipher some of the requests which have apparently been written with speed rather than legibility as the goal, Gregg said. "Some of the cards I receive arrive in a terrible mess," he stated, and added, "Thank heaven this is the exception rather than the rule. I would certainly appreciate it if persons who wish dedications would print rather than write their requests." One of Gregg's pet peeves is the occasional letter requesting not only music and a dedication, but a personal message to a friend or loved one also. 'Darnedest' Dedications "Listeners sometimes want me to say the darnedest things," he explained laughingly. "For instance, I was once asked to make the following dedication: 'Here's to the only girl I ever loved; may you long for me for years, darling; Signed. . .'" "Much more sentimental music is requested than swing," Gregg said. "We frequently have requests for hymns and classical music, but don't play them because it's not that type of program." Always a KU student at heart, the veteran broadcaster frequently gives his school unasked for publicity over the air waves. "I make it a point to plug student affairs as long as they are not privately sponsored," he stated. "My interest in the program lies as much in the personal angle as in the music," he commented. "I enjoy helping people celebrate birthdays, anniversaries, and special occasions. Takes Personal Interest Eastern Rifle Team Sets New Record Washington.—(UP)—A new national record was set by the University of Maryland rifle team when they scored 1408 out of a possible 1500 points in winning the national intercollegiate rifle championship. "Many persons traveling through Lawrence who have heard the program stop in to see who the night watchman is and what he's like. I always try to make them feel at home." A member of Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity, Gregg announces from 6 p.m. to midnight on weekdays and from 8 a.m. to 6 p.m. on Sunday. The musical request program may be heard from 10:30 p.m. to midnight every night. The national rifle association announced the new mark Sunday after reviewing the scores posted by more than 40 schools. The former record of 1403 points was set by the University of Iowa in 1940. Iowa, which won the title twice, was second with 1394 points. West Point was third, and the U.S. coast guard was fourth. The Washington Monument was completed Dec. 6th, 1884. Deane Tack, E. M. Brack, To Be Guest Soloists Deane A. Tack, English graduate student, and E.M. Brack. Fine Arts senior, will be guest soloists Easter Sunday with the Pratt Junior college chorus. The chorus, directed by J. T. Craig, is presenting "The Seven Last Words of Christ" (Dubois). Tack will sing the baritone solos and Brack the tenor numbers. The climate of Iraq is similar to that of the Middle West. Daily Kansan Classified Ads For Sale STEEL double-deck bunk and 2 mattresses. One deck, call 8794, 1288 Louisiana. XUEDO In excellent condition. Size 36, 1230 Eadron, phone 2988. XUEDO In excellent condition with 1424 Mercury motor, radio, heater, $850. Call 2657-M or visit at 337 Johnson avenue. 8-TWO Palm beach suits and alligator rain coat, size 40. Call 2155-M after 7 1935 FORD. Good condition. Call after 4:00. 1232 Ohio. -1- SIXAEME Kittens for sale. Reasonable. Kettle pets, at 1332 Tenn, phone 1956 ROYAL Typewriter, standard. Cheap. 1339 Tennessee. -8- Business Services TENNIES Rackets restrucing and repaired—silk nylon, or gut. Priced accordingly,$1.50 to $10. Phone 2711-W. Ed. Wellhausen, 1145 Kentucky. -1- FREE Offer. 3 copies for the price of 2. Roulette Tables. Round Corner Drug Co., 801 Mass. TYPING. Prompt service, reasonable rate, 1028 Vermont, phone 1168.-R -9 Lost WILLL person who found a Rollex wrist lift on his left hand please contact Lewis H. Noll at 900 Mo. BLUE notebook at Stadium locker room Please return to Jayhawk office or phone 1752. Lee Schlosser. -l- MAN'S Rose gold Elgin wristwatch with leather strap. Caril Harold Smith, 723-469-1800. INTRRODUCTORY Entomology book found please call 3138-M. Edward -BS BROWN Billiold in swimming locker room. Robinson gym. If found PLEASE call Billiold Bedel. 1621 Edison Drive, phone 357. Contains papered papers. Rewind. -1- ELGIN Deluxe men's watch with square gold case. Left in men's washroom, Watson library, Thursday evening. Reward. Leave at Kansas office or phone 212-792-8700. -B-S-WILL Person who picked up light gray raincoat with chemistry notes in pocket. Tuesday in Union cafeteria please call 1871-R. Inward. -S-R For Rent SINGLE Room at 1230 Oread. Phone 2988. -31- 2888 ONE Large room with private bath to to 4 students. Furnace heat, auto- matic hot water heat. Tel. 2229-R. 1801 Alabama. Wanted ROOOMMATE Wanted to share three- room apartment, 3 blocks from campus, phone 3331, Robert Grubb. -1 RIDE to Wichita after 12:00 Wednesday. Contact Mackey at 2043 Mass. after 5:30 p.m. Read the Daily Kansan daily. --- The desert date was a lemon! Long ago in the desert wilds of India (Mahabharatagandi, to be exact) there lived one Mohammed Ali Ben Mohammed, son of Mohammed Ben Ali Mohammed. One day while shopping at the village market for the most famous nationally advertised brand of white cow's milk—he fell in love and purchased Sita, curvaceous village dancer, who became his wife. Now Mohammed was tabooed by a quaint tribal custom from lifting his bride's chin veil for 5 years after marriage. On Z day (Zipper Day), the wolf in sheik's clothing was shocked to find the missus entirely "missing" in facial beauty. His dream doll was no dove of delight—the pin-up cutie turned out to be an old crow. Indian marriages were pretty much of a gamble in those days. U How much of a gambler are you? How often do you as an advertiser (in classified or display) buy space in some media without first "lifting the veil" to see what you're getting—date or lemon? When you purchase space in the KANSAN you can rest assured that you're getting the "date"—getting the most for your advertising dollar. University Daily Kansan PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 1.1947 By Bibler VACATION Little Man On Campus By Bible. VACATION KU S. Warner U.M.W. May Sue In Mine Disaster Washington. (UP) — The United Mine Workers (A.F.L.) may file claims against the government for the 111 deaths in the Centralia, Ill. nuclear disaster and other soft coal facilities since federal seizure, it was disclosed today. Wait For Krug's Report The U.M.W. will not act until Secretary of the Interior J. A. Krug makes his official report to a senate subcommittee now investigating the Centralia disaster. 'The U.M.W.'s case would be based on the recent supreme court decision which, a union official said, "field that soft coal miners are government employees." Once it establishes that the soft coal miners are federal employees, the U.M.W. would have two courses of action open to it: GNE. Individual claims for the beneficiaries of deceased miners could be tied under the U.S. Employes Compensation act. vWO. with federal permission, the U.M.W. could sue the government for death benefits charging that government negligence led directly to the miners' deaths. If the U.M.W. chooses to sue, it would have to prove negligence in the more than 750 deaths which have occurred since last May, a top government official said. Three K.U. Teachers Direct Sales Classes Prof. Elmer F. Beth, acting chairman of the department of journalism, Gerald Pearson, director of the Extension Class bureau, and Nelson Shafer, instructor in the School of Business, taught classes on salesmanship for employees and employers Thursday and Friday in Junction City. More than 120 sales personnel from 41 retail establishments participated in the class sessions. Courses offered were Counter and Specialty Selling, Window Display, Advertising, and The Power of the Voice in Selling. Dean F. T. Stockton of the School of Business awarded graduation certificates Friday night. The event was presented by the University extension division and sponsored by the Junction City Chamber of Commerce. Draft Is Dead; Just Teen-Agers Have To Worry Washington—(UP) The draft has breathed its last. At midnight Monday night it was as dead as the dodo bird. Tear up your draft cards, fellows, if you want to give 'em to the baby to chew or save them if you want some handy proof of identification. It doesn't matter now; the selective service system, which sent 10,020,637 men to battle in World War II, is no more. There will be no more presidential "greetings" that sent young men to induction centers during the six and a half years while selective service was in force. To Free Objectors Conscientious objectors—those who refused military service on religious or moral grounds—who are still in public work camps now will be freed when the draft agency dies. For teen-agers, there is still a possibility that the draft might be revived if the army and navy cannot meet their requirements voluntarily. Universal military training also hangs over their heads. But those 44 million Americans of all ages who registered for the draft probably are safe. Congress has created a new agency to succeed selective service, called the Office of Selective Service records. This office has as its purpose, to liquidate all but about 1200 of the records to pay paid employees and to store the voluminous records collected in over six and a half years of operation. Of all the men who registered, only 37 million actually received the president's "greetings" and reported for examination. Out of this group, only 10 million were put into uniform. Their group formed 67 percent of the armed forces during the war. Housing Rules Set Up For Men 37 Million Were Inducted At the last meeting of the club Miss Electa Kindlesparger, Lawrence school nurse, discussed the problems of public school nursing. The Pre-Nursing club program committee will schedule, for club meeting guest speakers, a series of industrial, psychiatric, pediatric, and institutional nursing, Guest Nurses To Speak To Pre-Nursing Meetings The next club meeting will be April 8. Rules governing the housing of men students in Lawrence are made by the University housing office. Householders who meet these rules are placed on a list which is available to students seeking rooms. Kansan Back April 8 This is the last issue of the Daily Kaiser before the Easter holidays. The next issue of the paper will be April 8. Obligations on the part of the householder are: TWO. In case of remerting the room prior to expiration of the notice period, refund shall be made to student for the balance. ONE. To list the rooms and prices per month with the housing office, whether the rooms are vacant or not. THIREE. All gas stoves shall be properly vented to the outdoors. FOUR. If additional fees are to be charged for excessive electrical appliances, this must be determined at time, room is rented. ONE. Rent shall be paid in advance. Refunds on room rent are not made for vacation recesses. Obligations on the part of the student center are: TWO. If he moves to another room, he must give 30 days notice. (If the close of the semester falls within 30 days of time of motion, he only be required to pay rent till the end of the semes- **THEKE.** If he moves to a fratern- ship, 50 down steps, he given FIVE. He shall arrange in advance with householder for overnight ity, 60 days notice shall be given FOUR. He shall not rearrange permanent fixtures without house- holder's permission. SIX. Gambling, drinking, and possession of liquor are forbidden. SEVEN. Girls are not allowed in men's rooms. EIGHT. All illnesses must be reported at once to the University health service. NINE. Pets shall not be kept without consent of the householder and other roomers. In case of conflict with the regulations on the part of the householder the Housing office and the dean of student affairs office can act in an advisory capacity only. Today: On KFKU 2:30 p.m., Art by Radio, Maud Filsworth 9:30 p.m. This Week in Kansas Legislature. Washington 2:30 p.m., Musical Matinee 2:45 p.m. Excursion in Science 9:30 p.m. This Week in Kansas Legislature Thursday 2:30 p.m. Hammond Recital, Edward Utley 2:30 p.m.. Children's Good Friday Music 2:45 p.m., Book Review 3:15 p.m., Requiem by Faure Fiddy 9:30 p.m. K. U. Sports Parade with Mike Stuart 2:45 p.m., Book Review 9:45 p.m., Passion Music Fred Burdett Union Library To Close During Easter Vacation 'The Face Is Familiar . . .' Today's character is a real funnyman. An ex-segeant, this Fine Arts saphonome has a speciality which brought him fame in the Pacific during the war. He knows all about campus life. He's the only campus character who can take pokes at University "brass" and get away with it. ☆ ☆ Monday's caricature was of Earl 'Roundman' Stanton. The Union library will be closed during Easter vacation. Robert Beiderwell, director, said today. Students may check out books for use during the holiday, but there will be no service from April, 2-9, he said. Books can be returned to the hostess' desk in the main lounge. Stewart, Frederick To Head Kansan Staff 1956-1972 MARCELLA STEWART ☆ ☆ Marcella Stewart, College senior was elected managing editor of the University Daily Kansan by the Kansas Board Monday. Miss Stewart has been an assistant managing editor. LeMoyne Frederick, College senior, will be editor-in-chief. Martha Jewett and William T. Smith, Jr., College juniors, will serve as assistant managing editors. Executives appointed to staff positions are Marian Minor, College junior, telegraph editor, Wallace Abbey, College sophomore, city editor, William Conboy, College sophomore, sports editor, Patricia James, College junior, society editor, Eloise West, College senior, art editor, and Alan Stewart, College junior, and Shirley Bales, College sophomore, assistant city editors. To Send KU Pictures To High Schools Pictures of the work of different departments at the University are included on the bulletin board, and students have also been sent to high schools. A bulletin board with pictures of University activities is being sent to Kansas high schools, Dwight Deay, chairman of the Statewide Activities committee. announced today. Home town correspondents' scrapbooks are due May 15 for judging. A first prize of $50 will be given the student who has the most clippings from his home paper of news concerning students which he has submitted. There will be a $25 second prize, $15 third prize, and three prizes of $5 each for fourth, fifth, and sixth places. News ... of the World Franco Proposes Monarchist State Madrid.—(UP)—Spanish monarchist quarters today described Generalissimo Francisco Franco's plan for eventual restoration of the monarchy as "totally unacceptable." Franco's proposal establishes a nine-man regency council under his direction. It specifies that Spain is a monarchy and that France is the head of state. If Franco dies, or decides to choose a successor, the regency council will designate as the new chief of state "a person of royal blood" most qualified. This proposed law of succession starts the movement of political evolution toward a remodeled state along constitutional lines. Topeka.—(UP)—Beaten by Maine for first, Kansas took action, today to be the nation's second state to ratify a proposed constitutional amendment to limit presidential tenure. Kansas May Be Second To Ratify Amendment Kansas might have given Maine more of a contest had not the house of representatives adjourned for the day yesterday at the time the senate voted to ratify the congressional resolution with only two negative votes. Washington. (UP)—Chairman Parnell Thomas of the House un-American activities committee today asked Attorney General Tom C. Clark to initiate prosecution of the Communist party and its officials on charges of failing to register as agents of a foreign government. Washington. (UP)—Top union and telephone company officials were called here by the government today for conferences aimed at heading off the nationwide telephone strike set for Monday. He also urged prosecution of the party and its officials under the Voorhis act, that requires registration of any organization whose aim is the seizure or overthrow of this government by force. House Committee Urges Communist Party Prosecution Prospects were dim that congress would act before the strike deadline on legislation to permit the government to prevent the strike by court injunction. Proofs of senior pictures must be picked up at the Jayhawker office before Easter vacation begins, Richard Carmean, business manager, said today. Seniors should return these proofs as soon as possible to assure their placement in the commencement issue of the Jayhawker. Meet To Avert Strike Seniors Must Pick Up Proofs Before Easter Day Isn't Over Yet, But— The traditional day of fun and folly has apparently been overlooked, a Daily Kansan survey of University administrative offices, fraternities, and sororites indicated this morning. April Fools Are A Bit Scarce On Campus Today The spirit of April Fool's day is dead this year at K.U. All campus activities and classes are functioning normally, the Chancellor's office said. No cases of violence have been reported, Uncle Jimmy Greene retains his natural color, and no professors were awakened in the two hours of the morning by April Fool-minded students. School officials are at a loss to explain the surprising lack of fun-making on the usually nerve-tracking day. One professor feared that mid-semester examinations may have destroyed forever K.U. students' humorous dispositions. XX. 10. 15 Possibly the nearness of Easter vacation had something to do with it. Or maybe it's just spring. University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Tuesday, April 8, 1947 44th Year No. 114 Lawrence, Kansas x-Minister talks Tomorrow Convocation M. BENZELA NUNGAR RUTH BRYAN ROHDE Ruth Bryan Owen Rohde will speak on "New Horizons For America—the World" at a convocation at 3.30 a.m. tomorrow in Hoch auditorium. This will be the last of the community lecture series. Mrs. Rohde, the daughter of William Jennings Bryan, is a graduate of the University of Nebraska and mother of four children. from 1929 to 1953, Mrs. Rohde is a congresswoman from Florida. From 1933 to 1936 she served as United States minister to Denmark. She has been the chairman of the institute for the Re-education of the Axis countries, honary president of the Womens Council for post-war mission to study organization of the Europe, and a member of the Composition. She assisted in planning the San Francisco conference and her outline for a United Nations organization was published in book form. Helen Wagstaff Quits Extension Position Miss Helen Wagstaff, director of the University of Kansas Library Extension service, today announced her resignation effective July 1. She is completing her 25th year on the University staff. Miss Wagstaff will become general secretary of the Missionary district of San Joaquín, Calif., a unit of the Protestant Episcopal church. Chance利 Pays Tribute "The University regrets the forthcoming loss of Miss Wagstaff's services," the Chancellor said. "In giving a quarter century's service to the University, she gave the same efficient service to the whole state." Chancellor Deane W. Malott praised the work of Miss Waastaff, and expressed his regret for the loss of her services. "Thousands of Kansans have had little formal contact with their state university except through Miss Wag-staff's work." Headed Study Libraries The Library Extension service provides package libraries for study groups, schools, and individuals, and maintains a large loan library of plays and materials on speech and drama. draitha. Wagstaff is now state president of the American Association of University Women. She has been a state chairman in the Kansas Congress of Parents and Teachers. She was an organizer and is now vicechairman of the Kansas Committee for Lastnight Peace. Classes Cut Tomorrow For Hoch Convocation Tomorrow's class schedule will be as follows: 8:00 classes----8:00 to 8:30 9:00 classes----8:40 to 9:10 Convocation----9:30 to 10:30 10:00 classes----10:40 to 11:10 11:00 classes----11:20 to 11:50 All afternoon classes will meet at the regular time. Thief Takes $500 From Phi Delts About $500 was stolen from members of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity when their house at 1621 Edgehill road was entered early April 2. Only currency was taken by the thief, who ignored several government and personal checks that were in the house. So far, city police have been unable to find any clue that would lead to a suspect. The thief was able to enter the front door, which is left unlocked all night. Officers at the scene said that since the robber had not taken any checks or jewelry he would be difficult to follow. In most of the billfolds that were ransacked the thief left at least a dollar. Several members reported that the thief had either overlooked or ignored large sums of money in their billfolds. One member of the fraternity said that all but a dollar had been taken from his billfold, and that the thief had neatly folded his trousers after removing the money. John P. Morgan was robbed of the largest amount, sixty dollars. Ralph Holiballh lost fifty-five dollars and Samuel Harris, forty-three. John W. Jenkins, the last member to come in that night, said that the house had not been robbed at 3 a.m. Police set the time of the robbery at between 4 and 5 a.m. at between W. A. Cox and L. M. Dowers, who covered the crime, believed that the robber was someone from out of town who was just passing through. WEATHER Kansas—Mostly cloudy with occasional showers east today and along east border early tonight. Becoming partly cloudy Wednesday. Low tonight near 35 northwest. No Successor Yet To Take Place Of Professor Gray [Picture of a man in a suit and tie]. PROF. ELLSWORTH GRAY No one has been chosen yet to serve as successor to Prof. Ellsworth S. Gray, head of the mechanical engineering department, who died at his home Saturday. who died on Monday Funeral services were held Monday for the professor, who was 45 at the time of his death. Burial will be in Saugus, Mass. Formerly On M. U. Faculty Professor Gray had been a member of the University faculty for two and one-half years. He was on the University of Missouri faculty fifteen years before coming here. He was born in Quincy, Mass. and received his degree of bachelor of science in mechanical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge. Received Masters At Purdue Some professors are even predicting that this will result in a complete upheaval of the grading sys- Then there's the hello-I-hate-to-bother - you this - late - but-have-you - got - tomorrow's - assignment type. His neighbor in class can go to bed early now-nobody's going to awaken him at 2 a.m. to find out how to integrate problem 154, page 680. Professor Gray received his Master's degree at Purdue University, Lafayette, Ind. He was a member of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, and was treasurer of the Kansas City section. He was vice-president of the Kansas City division of the American society of Refrigeration Engineers, and was a member of the Acacia Masonic lodge. Come Out Of That Booth! The Operator's Gone Home "Because of the strike, we're handling emergency calls only." First out the poker chips, boys, the telephone strike is on. kinned. But now he's just another guy. The twentieth century has caught up with him—his Ameche is stilled. Throw away your datebooks, gals, and take up your knitting, because the Joe Casanova's won't be calling tonight. Sociologists say it may revolutionize campus life. For some it's a blessing and for others it's destruction. Let's look at the consequences. Take the case of Big Wheel Harry. He's the guy that used to get 20 phone calls a night. Political henchmen jumped when he lifted the receiver. Meetings were called and meetings were cancelled. Skulduggery was dug and connivery was knifed. And then these telephone romances—they're going to be all shot. For that the strikers should receive a bonus. tem. If not, everybody but Johnny Brilliant will flunk. Telephone Romances Shot Take the case (and it's really a case) of Myrtle Mush and Sammy Slush. While 16 people used to wait at each end of the line Mush and Slush engaged in witty repartee about the advantages of a marsh-mallow coke over a lime freeze. After about an hour of this, writhing eavesdroppers got the general idea that Mush likes Slush and Slush likes Mush. It was such a beautiful friendship. beautiful friendship. But spring is here, and love must triumph. They say there's a fortune to be made in carrier pigeons. Long Distance Service May Be Resumed Today All NFTW Unions Must Approve Any Contract, Labor Leader Says Washington—(UP)一A federal conciliator expressed hope that one phase of the national telephone strike could be settled today. But a strike leader asserted that the settlement would have to be generally applicable before the two-day-old walkout could be ended. Government officials pinned their hope for a back-to-work agreement on negotiations here between the American union of telephone workers Hindu To Speak On Empire Views Dr. S. Chandra-Sekhar, former president of the Indian Youth congress and member of the Indian National congress, will speak at 4 p.m. Thursday in Fraser theater. The title of his talk is "An Indian View of Empire." His visit is sponsored by the department of sociology and the Y.M.C.A. He also will speak at a convocation at Haskell institute at 3 p. m., to the Plymouth Congregational church at 7:30 p. m. Thursday, and to Dr. John Ise's 11 a. m. economics class. Studied In United States studies in the United States. Dr. S. Chandra-Sekhar was graduated from the Presidency college in Madras in 1938. When the war interrupted his studies in London, he came to the United States and did research work at New York, Columbia, and Princeton universities. He has since taught in the department of oriental studies at the University of Pennsylvania, and has done research work for a government agency in Washington, D. C. Writes For Magazines He has written articles for American magazines, and is the author of "Fact and Policy," a book on India's population. He is now working on a study of India's postwar industrialization. Dr. Chandra-Sekhar is the New York correspondent for a chain of Bombay newspapers. He is making a two-week tour in Kansas. Henry Ford Dies Of Hemorrhage Detroit — (UF) — Henry Ford, 83, whose automotive genius created a new industrial era, died Monday night in a suburban home lighted only by kerosene lamps and warmed only by a wood-burning fireplace. His grandson and successor, 29-year-old Henry Ford II, announced early today that the man who brought the motor car into mass production for the millions died unexpectedly of a cerebral hemorrhage at 11:40 p.m. at "Fairlane," his unpretentious home in Dearborn. He was the world's wealthiest man. Son of a humble Irish immigrant, he left an industrial empire and an estate worth perhaps one billion dollars. His recent announcement cutting Ford prices at a time when most manufactured products were rising caught international attention and dramatized the industrial leadership role he has been steadily drawing for himself. Julia Ann Field, fine arts major, won the second purchase award of $75 for her painting "Winter Feeling" at the sixth annual exhibition of paintings, sculpture, and prints by Negro artists at the University of Atlanta. Julia Ann Field Wins Art Award In Atlanta and the American Telephone and Telegraph company. This union is the important long-distance affiliate of the National Federation of Telephone workers which is conducting the strike. *WARNING* Settlement.* Hope For Settlement Federal Conciliator Peter G. Mano told reporters today that "we are hopeful that a settlement will be effectuated in long lines today." Recognizing the problem of placing calls to the city, personnel on the campus have limited drastically their calls this morning. One operator at the University switchboard reported that she had received only as many calls in four hours as she normally handled in one. Telephone service at the University has not been affected by the strike which has tied up most of the country's phone services. Extensions from the University to Lawrence, however, are under the same emergency regulations as other commercial systems. Students returning from the Easter recess had no trouble getting taxi service at the train station. The cab companies, deprived of their phone facilities, anticipated the need and met all trains throughout the night and morning. But John J Moran, president of the long distance union and chairman of the N.F.T.W.'s policy committee, made it clear that more was involved. Before the coast-to-coast disruption of long distance and non-dial local service can be ended, Mr. Moran said, the N.F.T.W. policy committee will have to approve any proposed contract between A. T. & T. and his affiliate. All Unions Must Approve "We would not call off our strike unless the rest of the F.N.T.W, unions are satisfied that they would get a similarly satisfactory proposal." Topeka.—(UP)—The state will take no action in the telephone strike as it affects Kansas, Gov. Frank Carlson said today. Presidential press reporter Charles G. Ross said Mr. Truman had not been in conference with Secretary of Labor Lewis B. Schwellenbach on the telephone situation, "but he knows what is going on." It was understood that Mr. Schwellenbach had asked the president to refrain from personal intervention in the strike at least through tomorrow. If Mr. Truman does take a hand later, it was assumed he would make a personal plea for a truce or suggest appointment of presidential fact-finding boards to clarify the issues. Spanish Celebration To Be Held April 26 The Spanish department will sponsor its annual Cervantes day celebration on April 26, with a regional observance in which schools from Oklahoma, Missouri, and Kansas will participate. The tentative schedule includes meetings on spanish educational matters, a luncheon serving only Spanish dishes, and a program of native songs, dances, and skits. Prof. W. H. Shoemaker is in charge of the program. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 8,19 Official Bulletin April 8,1947 All students who expect to attend the summer session or return for the fall semester should sign up in the Registrar's office according to the following schedule: Wednesday, April 9, A-C; Thursday, April 10, B; Friday April 11, D-F; Monday, April 14, H; Tuesday, April 15, G-K; Wednesday, April 16, L-Q; Thursday, April 17, M; Friday, April 18, P-R; Monday, April 21, S; Tuesday, April 22, T-Z; Wednesday, April 23, all those who could not come in on scheduled days. Physical Therapy club at 7:30 tonight in projection room, Fraser Attendance required. Occupational therapists and nurses invited. *** Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship at 7:90 tonight in Barlow chapel, Myers hall. Arden Almquist in charge of panel discussion at 7:30. Women's Rifle club firing practice tonight at 7. Tau Sigma will meet at 7:30 to night at Robinson gym. * * The All-Student Council will meet at 7:15 tonight in the Pine room. ** Entomology club meeting at 4 p.m. today in 305 Snow. Dr. Downs of bacteriology department will speak on rickettsial diseases. K. U. Dames will meet at 8 pm tomorrow in the Little Theater Green hall. A play will be presented by dramatics department of Liberty Memorial H.S. * * The All-Student Council has announced the following vacancies: In District IV, a vacancy to be filled by the Pachacamac political party. For freshman representative, a vacancy to be filled by the P.S.G.L. party Petitions must be filed with the sec retary of the A.S.C. today. Deadline for ordering senior invitations and folders is April 10. Graduate Record Examination: 1-5 p.m. May 5; 8:30-12:30, May 6 Applications due at Guidance Bureau, 2A Frank Strong, April 17. Geology club meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 426 Lindley. Dr. Walter Kollmorgen will speak on "Land Reclamation in the Mississippi Valley." $\textcircled{1}$$\textcircled{2}$$\textcircled{3}$ Y. M.C.A. cabinet meeting at 4:15 p.m. today, Pine room, Union building. *** * * Y. M.C.A. advisory board meeting. 7:30 brought, East room, Union building. Camp Counselors conference committee at 5 p.m. tomorrow, Y.M.C.A office, Union building. Alabama Produces Lumber University forum, 4 p.m. Thursday, Fraser theater, sponsored by the Y.M.C.A. and department of sociology. Dr. Chandra-Sekhar of India will speak on "An Indian View of Empire." --- Campus-community meeting, 7:30 pm. Thursday, Parish house, Congregational church, 9th and Vermont, sponsored by Y.M.C.A, L.L.P.D., and department of sociology. Dr. Chandra-Sekhar will speak on "The Problem of India's Minorities." Montgomery, Ala. — (U.P.)—The State Chamber of Commerce reveals that Alabama ranks as the largest lumber producing state in the south and third in the nation. About 20 per cent of Alabama population is supported from income derived from timber resources. University Daily Kansan KAIMAN 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 periods. Entered as second class matter Sep 17, 1900, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan, under act of March 3, 1879. Aero Research Jobs Open To Graduates Scientists interested in jobs in aeronautical research work may apply to the SIC CV Service Committee. Please refer to 1 for information and application forms. Positions are open in the laboratories of the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics at Hampton, Va.; Moffett Field, Calif.; and Cleveland, Ohio. Applicants must have a bachelor's degree in a science and from one to three years of professional experience in scientific or engineering work. Graduate work may be substituted for part of the experience. Salaries range from $3,397 to $9,975 a year. No written examination will be given. Appointments will be made on the evaluation of education and experience. Application forms may be obtained at first and second class post offices, and from regional offices or the central office of the Civil Service Commission in Washington, D. C. They should be returned to the Board of U.S. Civil Service Examiners at the nearest field laboratory of the N. A. C. A. Stricklers Take First In Jitterbug Contest Arnold Strickler, education freshman and his wife, Erma, were announced recently as the winners of the jitterbug contest at the Underworld party Saturday by the student committee of the Memorial drive, sponsors of the party. Strickler received a pipe as a prize, and his wife was presented a choker. Westminster Foundation To Have Conference Here The Kansas Westminster foundation will hold its annual conference April 26 and 27 at the University. Raymond Deane Postlethwaite, College senior, is in charge of local arrangements. Students and foundation directors from the four other state schools are exposed to the curriculum. The Westminster foundation is the co-cathedral branch of the Presbyterian church. An exhibition of handcrafts made by a group of Southern Highlanders is on display in the main hallway of the museum of art until April 22. Handcraft Exhibition In Museum Of Art The exhibition which includes pottery, textiles, wood carvings, jewelry and metal work, comes from the city of Konya, near Kyrenia. It is held in Telikaholons, and northern Georgia. Also in the collection are tiny carvings done by fathers, sons, and grandsons in applewood, cherry, holly, and walnut. Birds, dogs, mules, and pigs are represented in the woods which as far as possible represent natural coloring. In pottery, examples of Jugtown ware, Pisgah Forest, Throckmorton and Carnelian ware are shown. Read the Daily Kensan daily. PERMANENT Skrip FOR ALL WRITING WHICH MUST BE PRESERVED IN THE CONVENIENT TOP-WELL BOTTLE SHEATPEEL'S Skrip PERMANENT 8d ROYAL BLUE 4 OZ. 25¢ 2 OZ. 15¢ SHEAFFER'S Skrap PREMIUM 54 ROYAL BLUE 4 OZ. 25 c 2 OZ. 15 c When you want records to be lasting, insist on Permanent SKRIP...withstands time, and even boiling water. Get SKRIP and take no chances. You'll be more than satisfied. Varsity Cleaners Student Book Store Union Building PEEVED? —No need to be! Staining a dress isn't a catastrophe when our expert cleaning is at your service. Call 400. ® Accident Victim Advised To Withdraw From School Although her condition was improved, Miss Boling had been advised to withdraw from school this semester. Betty A. Boling, College sophomore, was taken to her home at Leavenworth recently. She had been in inn Watkins Memorial hospital since March 12 with a skull fracture received when she fell from a car fender at the corner of Emery and Stratford roads. DE LUXE CAFE 28 years of service Some Location-Same Management You Are Welcome 711 Mass. WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames. Lawrence Optical Co. Spring NOTICES MAKE A NOTE to take your car in for a special motor tune-up and lubrication job. Music We use a particular kind of lubrication for your particular make of car. BRING YOUR CAR IN TODAY. Channel - Sanders Motor Company 622-24 Mass. Phone 616 WHI-SH-SH-SH-SH!! "It's Moisturized" TO STAY FRESH LONGER! TO TASTE BETTER! TO SMOKE MILDER! WHI-SH-SH-SH-SH!! It's Moisturized" TO STAY FRESH LONGER! TO TASTE BETTER! TO SMOKE MILDER! New! ALL NEW! RALEIGH "903" New Blend! New Taste! New Freshness! Made by the revolutionary new "903" moisturizing process. 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Picture SAYS: 8,19 APRIL 8,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREA 10 SOCIALLY SPEAKING BEVERLY BAUMER, Society Editor Theta's Initiate 17 Kappa Alpha Theta announces the recent initiation of the following: THE following: Judith Torrey, honor initiate; Jerry Sauder, Mary Sue Weimer; Jet Malott, Edith Malott, Joan Stevenson, Marcia Raines, Nancy Van Bebber, Phillips Doane, Juliette van Vinny, Vinitha, Daugherty, Francese Bernero, Virginia Jensen, Norma Jean Guatrie, Mercedes Muir, Mary Jane Merriman, Elizabeth McCune. Phi Kappa Pledges Two Guests at the initiation were Mrs. M. L. McClure, Mrs. F. Jensen, Mrs. O. M. Raines, Mrs. A. B. Marr, Miss Sally Eldison, Mrs. Charles Robertson, and Mrs. Lawrence Woodruff. Phi Kappa announces the pledging of Gilbert Stramel, Hays, and Richard Rowe, Goodland. Gamma Phi Dinner Guests Recent dinner guests of Gamma Phi Beta were Mr. and Mrs. George Sauer and Dean and Mrs. G. B. Smith. *** Wright Pledges Sig Ep Sigma Phi Epsilon announces the pledging of Don Wright, Lawrence Phi Chi Entertains Kappa Upsition chapter of Phi Chi, medical fraternity, entertained with its annual founder's day banquet and dance March 29 in the Kansas room of the Union. Ernie Rice's band provided music for the dance, which was held in the Military Science building. A green and white theme was carried out in decorations. Guests were Chancellor and Mrs. Deane Maltott, Dr. and Mrs. O. O. Stoland, Mr. and Mrs. H. R. Seribir, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fitzmorris, J. Jack Schdeler, and Miss Helen Casson, Blackwell, Okla. Aiunium present included Dr. and Mrs. William R. Brown, Kansas City, Kan.; Dr. and Mrs. Hugh Mathewson, Kansas City, Mo., Dr. and Mrs. L. H. Becker, Blackwell Okla, Dr. and Mrs. Robert Myers, Kansas City, Dr. and Mrs. James Batty, Wadsworth, Dr. and Mrs. R.W. Emerson, Topeka, Dr. and Mrs.D. D. Neis, Wadsworth, and Dr.James Reed. Other guests included Pauline Rankin, Klearn Bird, Jeanne McGrew, Nancy Dille, Marcella Cousins, Jeane Templeton, Sue Ann Poling, Billie Lawson, Kathleen Broers, Melba Wigate, Freda Archer, Marilyn Voth, JoAnn Adell, Anita Bedell, Dorothy Culbreath, Nita Keite, Etta Mae Cooper, Ruth Jacques, Jean Murray, Marguerita Kerchen, Carolyn Covert, Margie McCullough, Billie Dunn, Dorothy Danna, Martha Roots, Areta Hemphill, Kay Wilson, and Lucille Hollenbeck. lenbeck Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Innes, Mr. and Mrs. Merle Foland, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Munnens, Mr. and Mrs. Alexander Roth, Mr. and Mrs. John Mansfield, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bowser, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Pin- comb, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Glob- son, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Cater, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Lewis, Mr. and Mrs. Elton Schroder, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Swanson, Mr. and Mrs. John Griff- fith, Mr. and Mrs. Ben Bryant, Mr. and Mrs. Chester Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Elliott Mosley, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Evans, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Kael- m, Mr. and Mrs. James Enns, and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Montgomery, and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Batty. Chaperons were Mrs. V. A. Mallory, Dr. W. J. Baumgartner, Dr. and Mrs. A. B. Leonard, and Dr. and Mrs. R. W. Emerson. Topeka To Revive Reinisch Garden With 3,000 Plants Topeka—(UP)—New life is in store for Topeka's once-famous Reinisch rose gardens. Rated one of the finest in the nation in 1932, the garden area in Gage municipal park suffered during the war when replacement plants were impossible to obtain. Three thousand new rose plants costing $2,000 will arrive soon to revive the gardens. COED'S CORNER 'Spook' Spake, Cream Puff Lover, Prefers Occupational Therapy A cream puff lover with taffy blonde hajar, Muralyn "Spook" Spake, is a transfer to Mount Oread from Randolph Macon college. This green-cyed, 5 foot 4 inch Pi Phi, whose favorite food is cream puffs, admits that she really likes co-education better. Muralyun is a committee member of almost every campus or Junior class activity. She has helped on committees for the Junior Prom, the events committee for the Memorial Drive campaign, and debated in the Student-Faculty Solidarity conference. Minors in G. 1. With a Spanish major, Muralyn is combining occupational therapy as a minor. She likes it so well Minors in O. T "I like to help people and in O. T. I can actually get into the business of giving them aid." 89% likes water sports she may change to O. T "Spook" likes water sports Swimming is "Spook's" favorite sport. A member of Quaack club, she won third place in diving in the preliminaries of the intramural swimming contests. An advocate of all water sports, Muralyal likes canoeing and sailing almost as well as swimming. Her number one spectator sport is basketball. Muralyn has lived in Kansas City, Kan., all her life but likes to travel. "Travel always makes your views and education broader," Muralyn finished. "But there's no place like home and Kansas." 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CALL FOR PHILIP MORRIS CALL FOR ALWAYS BETTER...BETTER ALL WAYS BLACK MILK UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 8,194 PAGE FOUR SPOTLIGHT SPORTS The question of admitting Oklahoma A. and M. into the Big Six Plus One has brought into sharp focus the issue of discrimination against Negroes in intercollegiate athletics. Twenty-four different campus organizations were represented on the protest petition which was placed before Gov. Frank Carlson March 31. This petition opposed the admission of the Stillwater school on the grounds that the college does not allow Negro students to participate in sports events in Oklahoma. By BILL CONBOY There should be no discrimination against Negroes in athletics. There should be no discrimination against any people or group in any activity. But the problem is not what there should or should not be. The problem is how should such discrimination be met by those who oppose it. In addition to Governor Carlson, the petitioners are concentrating their efforts on Prof. W. W. Davis, Kansas faculty representative to the conference. In theory, all arguments are lined up in favor of those who believe the American Constitution guarantees every person civil rights and the privilege to act as his neighbors do. In practice, however, it is futile to dwell on what should be. It must be realized that certain parts of the country labor under beliefs, customs, and prejudices which seem to distort the very meaning of Americanism. All the fine arguments on ideals will never have the slightest effect on our neighbors to the south. The only real solution must be a gradual one. Denying the Aggies the right to join this conference because of their racial discrimination might be a victory for the forces of true democracy. But would it gain a single concession where it is really needed—at Oklahoma A. and M? This department is wholeheartedly in favor of the spirit of democracy and fair play reflected in the petition which went to the governor and other authorities. But we would like, most of all, to see K.U. attack the problem at its core. Make a policy of non-discrimination work here! The best way to make other schools realize we are right is to demonstrate we can make it work. After all, our purpose should not be the exclusion of the Aggie school. Our real purpose should be to bring that college around to our way of thinking. It has been stated many times that Negroes would complicate matters for the coaches were they out for varsity sports. No set starting line-ups could be decided upon since Negroes would not be eligible to play against such schools as Missouri and Oklahoma. Chancellor Malott has instructed the athletic department at the University that no eligible student shall be denied the right to try out and participate in varsity sports for K.U. Snowballs always begin small. Every majority opinion was once a minority opinion. Kansas university, by setting an example, can do much to bring about the eventual settlement of the discrimination problem. Such problems would arise and would be bothersome. But by solving those problems, by showing that Negro participation in athletics has worked at K.U., we will have developed a positive talking point. Petitions have their place. In this case, they were used to show righteous opposition to the policies of a prospective athletic bedfellow. But petitions are not an end. K. U. is now called upon to make her ideals work in practice. The burden of proof now lies on Jayhawker shoulders. Drs. Ethan P. Allen, H.B. Chubb, and W. E. Sandelius, professors in the political science department, attended the Southwestern Social Science Association meetings in Dallas Friday and Saturday. Allen, Chubb, Sandelius Speak At Social Science Meeting Dr Allen read a paper on "Teachers of Government." Dr. Sandelius read a paper on the Western Civilization course. Ray Evans Will Play For K.U. This Fall Other Big Six coaches had that worried look, but Jayhawker head coach George Sauer took time out to smile last week. Ray Evans announced he would play football at the University next fall. The two-time all-Big Six halfback and captain of the 1946 Kansas eleven will report for spring practice today. Coach Sauer said: "I am very happy to learn of Ray's decision and I know that his teammates will welcome him with open arms." With the return of his ace halfback, Sauer will have his 1946 first string lineup intact when the 1947 season opens in September. Seven Teams Win In I-M Softball Games Seven one-sided victories were scored in pre-vacation intramural softball games. SAE defeated D. U. 9-5; Die Hards took Delta Chi 20-4; Sigma Chi won from TKE's 9-3; Sigma Nu was victorious over the 128 Club 13-8; Beta defeated Triangle 20-10; and Beta defeated Triangle 17-9 and Beta defeated Wesley 37-9. With 12 strike-outs and 2 hits to his credit, Koegel, Die Hard pitcher, led his team to their victory over the Delta Chi's. A four run rally by D. U. in the last inning was not enough to overcome an early lead of the SAE team, and the Sig Alph's with Ballard pitching won 9-5. The Sigma Nu-1126 Club game was close in the early innings, but the Sigma Nu batting power proved too much for the 1126 team. WAA To Elect Officers Nominations for officers may be made from the floor at the election or mailed to the WAA office in Robinson gym. The Women's Athletic association will elect officers at 7 p.m. April 24 in Robinson gym. WRIGHTS FOR RECORDS "LANGUAGE MAJORS" Complete courses—Spanish and French—20 records with dictionary. Narrated by the Educational Director of U.S. War Department. WRIGHTS APPLIANCE STORES 846 Mass. ? How Much Milk Did You Drink Today? ADULTS REQUIRE AT LEAST ONE PINT. DRINK OUR PASTEURIZED GRADE A MILK TODAY AND EVERYDAY. LAWRENCE SANITARY Milk and Ice Cream Co. LAUNDERETTE Bendix Equipped 30 Minute Self Service—SOAP FREE Up to 10 lb. Washing (per machine)—25c 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.——Saturday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. 813 Vermont St. Phone: 2268 "FOR HEALTH" You'll really enjoy Fritzel ICE CREAM Fritzel ICE CREAM SMOOTH, CREAMY, TRY SOME TODAY 834 Vermont Chi Galloway DELICIOUS Phone 182 So Very, Very Personal "YOUR NAME" "YOUR NAME" BLOUSE BLOUSE Muriel Muriel Muriel Muriel Muriel Muriel Muriel Yours alone cause it has your name handpainted all over in two bright colors! It washes like a dream. Beautifully tailored in luxurious white rayon crepe with your 1 own name or any other name you choose, hand-painted in your choice of red and green, royal blue and fuchsia or green and brown. Sizes 10 to 18. 8.95 Place your order and allow two weeks for delivery. The Palace 843 MASS. Lost Something? Try a University Daily Kansan Want Ad . MEET 'SLOPPY SAM'' HE HASN'T DISCOVERED THAT NEATNESS is a GOOD HABIT NEATNESS IS NOT A GIFTIT'S A HABIT-A GOOD ONE TO GET FOR THE CARE OF YOUR CLOTHES. Use The INDEPENDENT Cleaning and Repairing Service Regularly A HABIT WORTH CULTIVATING. INDEPENDENT 740 Vt. Laundry and Dry Cleaners Call 432 APRIL 8, 1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Records May Fall At Kansas Relays With Big Field Of National Stars Twelve of the 14 university class champions from the Texas Relays will try for more track and field laurels here, April 19, at the 22nd running of the Kansas Relays. This will be the Midwest's second major outdoor track and field carnival this year. The title holders, one of them a record breaker from the Texas meet, will join men from the Rocky Mountain, Big Ten, Missouri Valley and Big Six conferences in what should be the biggest and best Relays in the history of the event. Potential record smashers will be the Texas two-mile relay team which turned in a 10:11.9 recently to finish just ahead of the Kansas team and wipe out a nine-year-old standard set by North Texas State. Most of the credit for the new record goes to Jerry Thompson, the Longhorn's tiny miler who chalked up a 4:13.0 in the anchor lap of the event to hang up the fastest mile ever run in the Lone Star state. Other Texas Relays victors to be seen in action here will include: Drake in the four mile relay; Baylor's Bill Martineson in the 100-yard dash; Rollin Prather, Kansas State giant, in the shot put and discuss throw; Herb Grote of Nebraska, javelin; the Texas 440 and 880-yard relay teams; Monte Kinder of Nebraska, who tied for first in the high jump; Don Cooper, also of the Cornhuskers, who won the pole vault, and Bob Crowley, Jayhawker jumping ace, who took the broad jump crown. Prather A Shot Put Threat Crowley, runner-up in the Big Six indoor meet earlier this season, leaped 23 feet $5\frac{1}{2}$ inches for his best performance, to take the Texas broad jump field by surprise. Continued improvement may move the little Jayhawker near the 24 foot mark by Kansas Relays time. Prather, who was top individual performer at the Texas event with a total of 10 points, will be one of the most impressive field event entries. He tossed the shot 50 feet $8 \frac{3}{4}$ inches and the discus 151 feet $2 \frac{1}{4}$ inches to win his double crown. Hell'll be in faster company here with Missouri's Ed. Quirk and Minnesota's Fortune Gordien both scheduled for action in the same two weight events. Drake Strong In 4-Mile With the addition of Bill Mack and Fred Feiler, Drake will be favored for an easy triumph in the four-mile event. The Bulldogs won without difficulty at Austin, with neither of these two aces in their lineup. Feiler has twice won the national cross-country crown. The Texas team will use its usual group of fast sprinters in the quarter-mile and half-mile relay events. Their foursome of Perry Samuels, Charlie Tatum, Allen Lawler and Charlie Parker tied their own meet's quarter-mile relay mark with a 4:14 in nosing out Baylor's fast team. Desmond Kidd will probably join Samuels, Lawler and Parker in the half-mile relay here. That quartet turned in a 1:27.5 in winning their event at Texas. Cooper cleared the bar at 13 feet to win his specialty, but will face an adept foe when he meets Harold Bateman of Colorado. Bateman arched over the same height to win the event here last year. K.U. Wins Dual Meet With Emporia State The Jayhawker track team won 12 of 15 events in defeating Emporia State college, 104 to 27, in a dual meet Thursday. The University swept all places in the 440-yard dash, low hurdles, and shot put. John Jackson of Kansas was high point man of the meet with 10 scores made on firsts in the 100 and 220-yard dashes. A rain-soaked track made good marks impossible. The summary: Mile run: Moore, K.U., and Karnes, K.U., tied for first; E. State, third. 4:38.3. K.U.; State 100-yard dash: Jackson, K.U. Wagstaff, K.U.; Yergler, E. State 10.6. 440-yard dash; Binter, K.U.; Hill, K.U.; Sitites, K.U. 53.6. High hurdles: Welton, K.U.; Green K.I.; Smith, E. State. 17.0. 880-yard run: Hinchee, K.U. Johnson, K.U.; Smith, E. State. 220-yard dash: Jackson, K.U. Warstaff, K.U.; Jones, E. State, 23.5. Wagstaff, K.U.; Jones, K.U.; Moore Waddell, F. State; 10:57. Low hurdles: Stannard, K.U.; Wetel- k, K.U.; Green, K.I. 27.6. Mile relay; Won by K.U.; (Wa- staff, Stiles, Binter, and Hill). 3:43.5. Pole vault: Adams, E. State; Mallon, K.U.; Payne and Dye, E. State, tied for third. 10 feet, 11 inches. Shot put: Robison, K.U.; Wygle, K.U.; Ebel, K.U. 43 feet. High jump: Scofield, K.U.; Sadowski and Stokes, E. State, tied for second. 5 feet, 11 inches. Discus: Robinson, E. State; Brawnero, K.U.; Robison, K.U. 129 feet, 7% inches. Javelin: Ebel, K.U.; Henoch, K.U.; Campbell, E. State. 188 feet, $11\frac{1}{4}$ inches. Broad jump: Yergler, E. State; Scofield, K.U.; Green, K.U. 21 feet, $ _{1/2} $ inch. . 3-day Cleaning Service 4-day Laundry Service 24-hour Shoe Repair - - Leather and Garment Dyeing a Specialty. . DE SOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH Village Cleaners SUNFLOWER, KANSAS Opposite School Western Union—8 a.m.-9 p.m. RE SOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH Budley GALLAGHER MOTORS Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL C CARLS GOOD CLOTHES FOR THIS SPRING— AIRMAN "BELT AROUND" JACKETS Shower-Repellent Wind-Resistant Spot-Resistant Long-Wearing Priced $13.95 Glad to show you. Hurry!! Hurry!! 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Phone 277 MAKE DATE NITE SHOW NITE JAYHAWKER Ends Tonite FRAND SINATRA KATHRYN GRAYSON "It Happened In Brooklyn" Tomorrow, One Week HE DOESN'T TRUST ANYONE ESPECIALLY WOMEN Humphrey BOGART Lizabeth SCOTT "DEAD RECKONING" Pus Latest World News and Cartoon GRANADA NOW, Ends Wed. HEAR Artur Rubinstein AND PLAY 2nd PIANO CONCERTO . 1 AND PRELUDE IN C SHARP MINOR And many other immortal works of the Masters as the thrilling background for one of the screen's greatest romantic stories. . . SEE SEE FRANK BORZAGE'S "I'VE ALWAYS LOVED YOU" Patee P NOW PLAYING LOVE-KILLER! INGRID ROBERT BERGMAN • MONTGOMERY "Rage in Heaven" MR-C-M MUSIC HOUSE "Rage in Heaven" 第6卷 BROADWAY FILM 819-2000 VARSITY Ends Tonite "Blondie's Holliday" "Millie's Daughter" Wednesday, 4 Days IT'S FUN AND FOOLIN' EDWARD EVERETT HORTON ANN GWYNNE 'The Ghost Goes Wild AND PRESTON FOSTER GAIL PATRICK "King of the Wild Horses" PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS . APRIL 8,1947 Kansan Comments. Industrial Safety The recent Centralia, Ill., coal mine disaster was one more illustration of the lack of effective co-operation between labor and management that exists in all too much of our industrial system. His words and actions following the mine explosion were in the typical Lewisian pattern. With vituperation and emotional dramatics he portrayed himself as the protector of miners and laid full responsibility on others. The charges and counter-charges of responsibility for the death of 111 miners are a manifestation of that lack of co-operation. The mine owners, Secretary of Interior Krug, and the governor of Illinois have all been blamed by various persons. It must be admitted that Lewis has done much to improve the living and working conditions of miners. But in this disaster he was as much to blame as anyone else. He could have prevented its occurrence, just as the state and federal agencies could have. But while John L. Lewis is calling Krug a "murderer," it should be pointed out that the record of Mr. Lewis is not clean in connection with the Centralia mine. More than a year ago, inspections revealed the unsafe condition of the mine. However, none of the parties responsible for the safety of the miners took sufficient action to correct the conditions. Under the provisions of the mine workers' contract, Lewis had the power to stop production in the mine when it was declared unsafe. He had the authority to call his miners out of the mine and insist that the conditions be corrected before another pound of coal was taken from the mine. But Lewis did not take this action to protect his miners. Of course, this does not diminish the liability of the state and federal mining agencies. But when Lewis tries to ignore his own responsibility for the death of more than one hundred of his miners, the record should be set straight. Union leaders, industrialists, and government agencies must work together toward a common goal of safe working conditions for labor. To "pass the buck" or ignore obligations will only result in more industrial injuries and deaths. The 111 miners cannot be brought back to life, but future co-operation between unions and industry can do much to prevent further such disasters. The University Daily Kansan Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assn, Nac- Asn, Assn, and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Ad- vertising Service of Madison Ave. New York City Managing Editor ... Billie M. Hamilton Editor in Chief ... Alamada Boliller Asst. Man. Editor ... Marcella Stewart Asst. Man. Editor ... Reverdy L. Mulliens City Editor ... William T. Smith Jr. Tasikish Editor (tie) ... James Jeffett Telegraph Editor ... Wendell Bryant Asst. Telegraph Editor ... Marian Minor Art Editor ... Eloise West Business Manager ... Bob Bonebrake Advertising Manager .. Alma Wuthnow Circulation Manager .. John Beach Administrator .. LaVerne Duncan Nat. Adm. Manager .. Kenneth White Promotion Manager .. Mel Adams Dear Editor--voice in the authorization of funds which were loaned to these people to start The Dove again. If I had had a voice, it certainly would have been No. No Love For Dove After reading several comments in the latest issue of The Dove, I feel that it is time someone took steps to voice an opinion in opposition to the writers of this publication and their "many silent friends" who are working to change the rights and privileges of an American. The article written by Frank Stannard against the entry of Oklahoma A. and M. into the Big Six conference clearly displays the unfounded narrow-minded and prejudice with which they assail the rights of our people. Their rabble-rousing technique is quite similar to that used by Hitler before he made all the people of Germany "free and equal." As a student, along with thousands of other K. U. students, I had no Sallislaw, Okla. — (U.P.) — Fifteen years ago a girl took a toy of cigars from the Bonham Hotel, operated by Mrs. T. E. Bonham. This week he repented and sent her a money order for $5. Thief Pays—But Late Newspapers like The Dove are exactly the thing that will force the Ku Klux Klan to live again. The American people have never been fooled by those who hide behind the cloak of democracy to spread their socialistic principles, and the students of K. U. are not fooled by The Dove. The color of this issue could not have been more fitting. Jean T. Fisher College Senior COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals - Short Orders Sandwiches Open 5:30-12:30 Lindley's Kansas Cleaners 12 E. 8th Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices MEN'S SUITS- Cleaned and Pressed ... 65c LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES— Cleaned and Pressed ... 69c Cash and Carry Only Thumb your way to Higher grades! Drop into our store today . . . * thumb through a College* Outline covering any of your courses . . . * note its neatly compactness . . . its telling paragraphs . . . its newspaper-like efficiency in highlighting essentials and putting the story over. You'll be amazed that so much can be got into so little space. College Outlines are the best high-marks insurance obtainable. Prepare with them for exams now! COLLEGE OUTLINE SERIES *To Be Published PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE ACCOUNTING, Elementary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1.00$ *LAT, AMER, Economic Development* . . . . . STUDENT BOOK STORE Union Building Delicious JUICY STEAKS Our Specialty Across from BILL'S GRILL 1109 Mass. Court House Phone 2054 Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER Serving K.U. Students For 43 Years. 809 MASS. Advertisers Prefer The Kansan To Reach Hill Students The manufacturing of women's and children's wear is a CROSS-SECTION OF AMERICAN LIFE: THE FARMER THE CHEMIST cultivates from land or livestock the raw materials of cotton and wool. synthetizes such materials as pulp wood and coal and air into fibrous yarn. THE TEXTILE WORKER spins raw commodities into yarn, weaves the yarn into fabrics. THE DESIGNER creates artistically an original model for the finished garment. THE GARMENT MAKER fashions the textiles into the clothes that make the women of this country the best dressed in the world. THE RETAILER purchases and distributes the product, keeping always in rhythm with the pulse of the public. And all these are means to a livelihood for hundreds of thousands of Americans, supplying THE CONSUMER who wears the clothes and who, of course, comprises the foundation of the entire structure of the national economy. This is the first in a series interpreting the general economic highlights of the women's and children's wear industry of possible interest in the choice of a field of endeavor, Series sponsored by Women's Wear Daily, A Fairchild Publication, 8 East 13th Street, New York 3, N.Y. APRIL 8,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS Managua, Nicaragua Should Be Easy To Reach, Othman Concludes PAGE SEVEN By FREDERICK C. GTHMAN United Press Staff Correspondent Washington — (UPS) — Managua, Nicaragua is a wonderful place and some day—I fear—there'll be a road running from there to here. I use that word, fear, advisely. For two years now I've been sitting in on the senate war investigating committee's inquiry into the Pan American highway. And I get the idea now that it is paved with mother-of-pear, except for the bridges, which must be solid gold. In 1941 our public roads administration told congress that the road could be built from Panama to the Mexican border for $30,000,000. Congress was to put up $20,000,000. The Central American countries through which the highway passed would raise the other $10,000,000. They did. Borrowed From U.S. They borrowed it from the export-import bank here in Washington. So far we, and I mean we taxpayers, have spent $60,000,000 more and best guess is that we'll have to shell out another $65,000,000 before we'll ever be able to drive down to ask the celebrated senoritas of Managua for a little embrace. Road Already There The road's still not finished. Some of it isn't even mapped. And as for what's happening in Guatemala, it is to shudder. There always has been a road of sorts meandering north from Guatemala City. "But the army went in there and built another road on another route?" asked Sen. Homer F. Ferguson of Michigan, chairman of the investigating subcommittee. Correct, but the army road didn't suit the Public Roads administration engineers and they chose still a third route for the permanent highway. Gave Equipment Away When the army finished its road in Guatemala, it gave the government of the country $1,500,000 worth of road scrapers, dump trucks, and steam shovels. Then the P.R.A. rented this same machinery from Guatemala to build its road in Guatemala. I don't care if they never get that road built to that wonderful town where you buy a hacienda for a few pesos down. Forgive and Forget The $11,000,000 spent clearing the right-of-way in Costa Rica, I'm willing to forgive; the jungle has crept back and the $11,000,000, according to the evidence, is a total loss. Investigators intend to learn more about that, but I'll be delighted if we just forget the whole business Song included. Prof. R. M. Davis To Speak To A.V.C. Meeting April 16 R. M. Davis, professor of Law, will speak on Russia to the American Veterans committee at its next meeting. April 16. The local chapter will hold its meetings on alternate Wednesday nights instead of Thursday nights, it was determined at a chapter executive committee Monday night by the board that were approved by the committee and will be presented to the chapter for a vote at the next meeting. The giraffe, the tallest of all mammals, sometimes reaches a height of 18 feet, 7 inches. Copy must be in the University Daily Kansan Business Office, Journalism blog. Send an email to p.m. of the day before publication desired. All classifications are cash in advance. Classified Advertising Classified Advertising Rates One Three Five day days five 25 words or less 35c 65c 90c additional words 1c 2c 3c For Sale STEEL, double-deck burk and 2 mattresses. One desk. Call 18794, 1288 Louisiana. TUXEDO In excellent condition. Size. 36, 1230 Oread, phone 288- TWO Palm beach beach and alligator rain coat, size 40 Call 2155-M after 9AM. ROYAL Typewriter, standard. Cheap. 1339 Tennessee. -8- Business Services FREE Offer. 3 copies for the price of 2. Discharge and valuable papers. Round Corner Drug Co. 801 Mass. -8- TYPING. Prompt service, reasoned. Bernervon Vermont 168R-9 - ENVIRONMENT Restructuring and repaired. Silk, nylon or gut. Opr. fitted accordingly. $1.50 to $10. Phone 2711-W. Ed. Well- hausen. 1145 Kentucky. -21- WILL person who found a Rollex wrist- watch with a finger pin please contact H. Holl at 900 Mo. Lost MAN'S Rose gold Elgin wristwatch with leather strap. Call Harold Smith. 722-645-1200. INTRODUCTORY Entomology book, I found please call 1318- M. Edward --84-- ELGIN Deluxe men's watch with square gold case. Left in men's washroom, Watson library, evening, evening, Maurice Drummond Kansas or phone Maurice Drummond 2240-248, 1736 La.-8-WILL Person who picked up light gray raincoat with chemistry notes in pocket. Tuesday in Union cafeteria please. 38-PARKER "51" pen, engraved "Stephen D. Hadley," near Marvin Hall. Call 3251-W. Reward. -10-New Renson lighter in Rock Chalk café Saturday night. Phone 1783, 1125 Greed. ONE Large room with private bath to rent to 4 students. Furnace heat, automatic hot water heat. Tel. 2229-R. 1801 Alabama. -10- For Rent SINGLE Room at 1230 Oread. Phone 2988. -31- Journalism Graduates Visit K.U. Campus Mr. and Mrs. David Whitney of New York, journalism graduates of 1942, visited the campus recently. Mr. Whitney, a brother of associate professor of design, Marjorie Whitney, works in the New York office of United Press. He married Jane Betty West in 1942. They have a six-months-old daughter. Other Kansas journalism graduates in the New York office of United Press are Merton Akers, a student in 1920, day news manager; William Dickinson, Jr., '29, day busieu manager; and Marion Collins, '23, on the day news desk. Earl Johnson, a student in 1921, is vice president and general news manager of United Press. For Rent: One Front Roof Louisville, Ky.—(UP) — Must be the housing shortage or a misprint. A notice in a local paper advertised "front roof; near bath; private family; gentleman; near transportation." WURLITZER PHONOGRAPHS FOR PARTY RENTALS Used Juke Box Records For Sale John H. Emick 1014 Mass. Phone 343 Attention!!! We have received many of those "hard to get" books and supplies. Tee squares 24 in.,36 in.,42 in. Drawing boards (limited number) Webster Collegiate dictionaries Lambs Essays of Elia Keenan and Keys steam tables Fiber board report covers Johnson & Scott Childrens Literature Blotter pads No.5, No.7, Sable brushes Rowlands. TWO BOOK STORES World's Record Catch MRS. DOROTHY ALLAN NEWSTEAD, NOTED DEEP-SEA FISHING EXPERT, PROVES THAT EXPERIENCE IS THE BEST TEACHER IN BIG-GAME FISHING I GIVE UP—THREE HOURS AND NOT A NIBBLE LET'S TRY FOR SOME KINGFISH IM TIRED OF KINGFISH—I WANT A GOOD FIGHT! CAPTAIN, I THINK I'll CHANGE MY BAIT THAT BALAO MAY BE ALL RIGHT FOR SAILS, BUT LET'S TRY MULLET AND THE OTHER REEL YOUNG? YES, BUT SHE'S AT A VETERAN AT THIS GAME. HARS. HARS. HALL OVER THE WORLD! ALL OVER THE WORLD I'LL JUST SMOKE A CAMEL AND WATCH HER A S-T-R-I-K-E! A MARLIN? MAYBE IT'S A SAILFISH NO— A SAILFISH WOULD BE OUT OF THE WATER! AND HE'S DIVING TOO DEEP FOR A MARLIN. WHATEVER HE IS, HE'S A FIGHTER! 35 MINUTES LATER HE'S GOT A YELLOW BELLY—IT'S A COBIA! BIGGEST IVE EVER SEEN IN THE GULF STREAM! BET IT'S A RECORD! CONGRATULATIONS, HUGO NEWTEA IRELAND CHALK TAP UP TO EXPERIENCE AFTER 69 POUNDS! I THINK THAT'S A NEW WORLD'S RECORD I SEE YOU PREFER CAMELS, MRS. NEWSTEAD CHALK THAT UP TO EXPERIENCE TOO, AFTER ALL THE DIFFERENT BRANDS I SMOKED DURING THE WAR SHORTAGE, I REALLY APPRECIATE CAMELS! R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company, Winston-Salam NEW WORLD'S RECORD FOR COBIA TO MRS. DOROTHY NEWSTEAD The International Game Fish Association today announced that Mr. Dorothy Allan Stead, recent co-chair of a nonprofit organization has been recognized as the women's high-tech record for cobin. who has 57 outwilded, who has Mr. Newbead, who has bored the trunk of big gan- gles from the back to the front. 6 YOUR "T-ZONE" WILL TELL YOU... I for sure, that's your proving ground for any cigar. see. If Camels don't suit your "Z-zone" to a "T" T for Taste... T for Throat... CAMEL TURKISH & DOMESTIC BLEND CIGARETTES CIGARETTES CUSTOMIZED EXPERIENCE IS THE BEST TEACHER... IN DEEP-SEA FISHING...IN CIGARETTES TOO. CAMELS SUIT MY 'T-ZONE' TO A'T' Dorothy A. Newstead Holder of the International Women's All-Tackle Record for Cobia MORE PEOPLE ARE SMOKING Camels THAN EVER BEFORE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE EIGHT APRIL 8.1947 Phones, Lewis Top Headlines During Vacation A nation-wide strike of telephone workers, a demand by John L. Lewis for the removal of Secretary of Interior Krug, and the postponement of proposed rent increases by the house banking committee headed the national news front during Easter vacation. An estimated 340,000 telephone workers walked on strike Monday morning. Attempts of government leaders and union chiefs to avert the strike were of no avail. In Washington, Wednesday, the house of representatives banking committee postponed all action on rent and housing legislation until April 16. Chairman Wolcott (R-ah) said the committee felt it should have a chance to thing about a proposed rent increase. John L. Lewis demanded congressional action to oust Secretary of Interior Krug from office. The demand was made by the United Mine Workers chief before a house labor subcommittee. The final barrier to a special session of the general assembly of the United Nations was removed when Russia, France, and China agreed to the session. The explosive Palestine case will be presented at this meeting. Police continued to search for the missing Langley Collyer without success. A close watch was kept at the funeral of Herman Collyer, but Langley did not appear. Members of the senate foreign relations committee approved legislation to carry out President Truman's program for aid to Greece and Turkey. The bill will now await final Senate action. An explosion and fire destroyed a fireworks manufacturing plant in Clinton, Mo., killing 11 employees and injuring four others. The cause of the blast was not immediately determined. Mav Have Fireworks Again The University stadium may be used again this year for a free Fourth of July fireworks show, Law-merchants have announced. A committee will be organized to work on the plan. Boomeranged Bunny Ain't Home For Dinner Anymore Australian bushmen and head huffers, move over! A Jayhawker moved into your select circle recently when he killed a rabbit with his boomerang. "I was out practicing, when suddenly out of a thicket rushed a rabbit, going like a bat out of wherever they come from. I let loose with a toss and the rabbit was no more surprised than me when the boomerang hit him," he said. Jim Mueller, College sophomore was down on the intramural fields with his boomerang, practicing. "You know, there's only one thing that worries me. I wonder what his wife thought when he didn't eat dinner. He was a male you knew." Jim says that his knowledge of boomerang throwing stems from his vast understanding of physics, calculus, algebra, trigonometry, and chemistry. He claims that not just any layman can become a success at it. One day he carved a boomerang out of a piece of driftwood and began practicing with it. Learned In The Navy His interest in the sport began when he was stationed on one of Uncle Sam's summer resorts in the South Pacific with the navy air corps. Whenever there was no flying to do or the gooney birds were too busy to talk, things got rather dull. "Since there were no trees to aim at, and all the gooney birds were friendly, I got most of my practice by throwing my boomerang at passing officers. This never failed to get many laughs from my fellow enlisted men," he said, with a straight face. Back in the states, Jim had to give up his pastime because there is a shortage of boomerangs in the country. Not long ago however, he passed a Lawrence sporting goods store which had a boomerang sale. Realizing that such a chance would seldom come, he bought five of them. "Practice, practice, and still more practice was necessary before I began to feel the return of the lost touch and surge of confidence in my skills," she recalled. "before I was again proficient," he said, still with a straight face. Boomerang Shortage In U. S. "Tm thinking seriously of giving lessons, and if you doubt my ability to do so, just remember the rabbit." Expect 600 To Attend Six Trials On Docket Army-Navy ROTC Ball Of Student Court More than 600 cadets and guests are expected at the combined army-navy R.O.T.C. ball to be held from 9 p.m. to midnight May 9. Faculty reserve officers and active army-navy personnel also have been invited. "We have been working hard to make this joint affair a success because we feel that mixing around in a social atmosphere will help cadets and faculty to get better acquainted," he said. Tickets are now on sale in both army and navy R.O.T.C. offices, Lt. Col. Kenneth Rosebush, associate professor of military science, said today. Kass Kassinger and his orchestra will play for the ball. The ball will not be open to ex- army personnel because facilities cannot accommodate them all. As guests of cadets, however, they are welcome, Colonel Rosebush said. Little Man On Campus By Bibler H. DAILY KRASCH Five students will be sentenced and the trial of a sixth continued at 7:30 tonight by the student court in Green hall court room. "Sure don't need a robin around, Mae, to know when spring is here." Ivan Moody and Edwin T. Mahood, business seniors, tried April 1 on charges of illegally transferring parking licenses, and Ralph Dunn and George Cozad, College freshmen who pleaded guilty to a similar charge in a previous court session will be sentenced tonight. Robert Kurtz, freshman engineer, who pleaded quilty to charges of destroying University property will also be sentenced. The case of Lawrence W. Brown, jt., College sophomore, charged with breaking library rules, will be continued tonight. Mahood and Moody were charged by the prosecuting attorney with illegally transferring parking licenses. Because of a change of zones, Moody received a new permit. The judge ordered that he destroy the old permit but gave it to Mahood who used it at least twice. Moody stated that he threw away his old permit, and did not know how Mahood obtained it. Mahood said he did not obtain it, but he did not obtain it from Moody. His counsel asked that the case be dismissed because no known rule of the University had been violated. The court overruled this, and said that the case was not a criminal case but civil as no actual statute had been violated, but that injury to students had been alleged committed. The court closed the case and announced that sentence would be announced at the next student court session. Brown pleaded not guilty to charges that he had checked out reserve books under a false name and retained them over a period of days. Dr. Forrest C. Allen was re-elected councilman from the first ward in Lawrence April 1. He had defeated Calvin Vander-Werf, assistant professor of chemistry, in the Republican primary. The Counsel then asked for a recess which was granted, and the case was continued until next court session. n the same election F. A. Russell professor of engineering drawing was re-elected third ward councilman. Henry Shenk, associate professor of physical education, was elected to the Lawrence school board. Allen, Shenk, Russell Win In City Election B 'The Face Is Familiar...' None of these positions was contested in the general election. This brown-haired, browneyed girl likes to help students with calculus and analytic geometry. Basketball is her favorite sport, and she goes to the games at 5:30 p.m. in order to get a seat on the front row, where she makes use of the extra time by knitting. Her home is in Topeka, and she formerly lived at Corbin hall. A good deal of her time is spent in an office in Frank Strong, helping the affairs of women on the Hill to run smoothly. ☆ ☆ April 1 caricature was of Richard "Little Man" Bibler. Governor Frank Carlson has told Chancellor Deane W. Malott that he is opposed to the admission of any institution into the Big Six conference "that would discriminate against any of our citizens." Carlson Opposes Aggie Application On March 31 a petition to bar Oklahoma A. & M. from the Big Six was presented to the governor. It was signed by representatives from more than 16 campus organizations. Governor Writes Petitioners The next day the governor wrote a letter to each organization represented on the petition. Here is the text of his letter: "Yesterday representatives of several organizations at K.U. called at my office and presented me the petition signed by a number of individuals representing organizations on the campus, which petition protests the application of Oklahoma A and M for membership in the Big Six conference. "Since this group presented the petition I have urged Chancellor Malott to present the views of Kansas at the Big Six conference, and have advised him that I am personally opposed to the admission of any institution that would discriminate against any of our citizens. Rader Blasts Progressives, Resigns Office In a stormy session, the Progressive party president, John Rader resigned his office April I, charging Greek leaders in the party with cooperating with Pachacamac fraternities to unify the Greek vote and split the Independents. Rader charged specifically that: TWO. "Representatives of the parties fraternities have been meeting secretly with Pachacamae inner-circle members. ONE. "The Progressive party had been set up as a paper party to confuse Independents, but had threatened to get out of Pachacamac's control. THREE. "Pachacamac men, at election time, were to go to Greek houses and tell the original purpose of the Progressive party. Pachacamac and Progressive Greeks were then to combine and vote Greeks into office. FOUR. "A fraternity man in the party had announced the emergency meeting Tuesday in the official bulletin, but had left out the time, to keep attendance low." Rader said that he inserted his own bulletin giving the correct time. He supported his fourth charge with a signed statement from Tom Yoe, director of information. Humphreys, Foster Reply John Humphreys, engineering sophomore and treasurer of the party, and Ben Foster, College junior, speaking for the fraternities in the party answered the charges. They said that their dealings with Pachacamac fraternities were to swing more fraternities into the Progressive party. They said they had nothing to gain by leaving the Progressive party and are supporting it faithfully. Barker Elected President They charged Rader with playing into the opposing party's hands by threatening to break up the Progressive's. Rader's resignation was accepted and Paul Barker, College freshman, was elected new president. Tom Alexander, College junior, replaced Barker as third vice-president. Humphreys started the fireworks by asking Rader his true feelings about the party. Amidst argument and counter charges Rader outlined his points. Rader Charged With Sabotage The Greek leaders said that Rader was sabotaging the party by his actions and statements. Rader said his information of the party's origin came from a Pachacamac inner-circle member whose name he could not reveal. Rader also said, "Tm convinced that the party started as a rotten deal. My only hope for its future is that those who originated it have changed their original purpose. I can't believe that they have." Wallace Begins Peace Tour London—(UP)—Henry A. Wallace arrived today for a tour of western Europe during which he said he would seek an international coalition of progressive forces that "believe in the unity of the world on behalf of peace." News of the World To Study 16-Year Old Charged With Killing St. Joseph, Mo.-(UP)-Defense counsel for 16-year-old Stuart B. Allen, who is charged with murder, indicated today that he would be studied by psychiatrists. They will investigate the "urgue to kill" which the youth said caused him to hammer out the life of 58-year-old John Frank, church sexton. Frank was killed in the basement of the church of which the boy's foster father, the Rev. James S. Allen, is minister. Special Cabinet Session To Hear Price Conditions Washington — (UP) — President Truman has called a special cabinet meeting for tomorrow to hear a statement on price conditions by Dr. Edwin G. Nourse, chairman of the council of economic advisers. Mr. Truman recently expressed concern over high prices, fearing that if the advance continues inflationary spirals will result and lead to new rounds of wage demands. Carlson To Washington Toppea—(UP)—Gov. Frank Carlson will leave this weekend to testify Monday in Washington at a hearing of the Interstate Commerce committee on natural gas. He will urge that more control over production, distribution, and sale of natural gas should rest with the state and less with the federal government. University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Wednesday, April 9, 1947 44th Year No. 115 Lawrence, Kansas Little Man On Campus By Bibiei HISTORY TEST BOTTOM 6' 90 or FURTHER JAMES J. 1620-N.Y. ART 1857-1930 LOUISANA PUREMASE 1905-HARDING 1614-LANDY JOHN LENWOOD 1800-1946-SMALL MODUE 1934,000,000 OF OPEN DOOR POLICY BIBER W. DAILY KANSAS Horacek To Present Cornet Recital Tonight Leo Horacek will present his senior recital in cornet at 8 tonight in Frank Strong auditorium. Horacek, a pupil of Dr. E. Thayer Gaston, is the first student to present a recital in cornet at the University. He received his Bachelor of Music Education degree in 1941, and is the first cornet major to be a candidate for the Bachelor of Music degree. President of the University chapter of Phi Mu Alpha, national music fraternity, he is also assistant director of the University band, and an assistant instructor in brass instruments in the School of Fine Arts. Horacek's program will include: "Brandenburg Concerto No. 2" (Bach) arranged by Mr. Horacek, "Willow Song" (Rossini), "Prelude on the Chorale, Adam's Fall" (Homilius), ("Two Trumpet Tunes and Air" (Purcell), "Sonata for Trumpet and Piano" (Hindemith), "Cantabile Et Scherzetto" (Gaubert), "Pallid Moonlight" (Stravinsky), "Romanze" (Reger), and "La Napolitaine (Tar- antele)" (Bohme). Melvin Zack will accompany him at the piano. 1200 to Attend Music Festival Here Approximately 1,200 Kansas high school students will be at the University Saturday for a district music festival. Prof. Russell L. Wiley, director of the University band and orchestra, is manager for the event Competitive events will be between vocal and instrumental solo and ensemble groups, band, orchestra, mixed chorus, and girl's and boy's glee clubs. There will also be a baton twirling contest in front of Hoch auditorium at 10 a.m. m. with Bill Sears as judge. Other performances will be held in Lindley hall, Myers hall, Fraser theater, Frank Strong hall, and Hoch audi-ulum. topeka, Manhattan, Lawrence, Shawnee Mission, Wyandotte, and other schools in this area will compete here. Several students from the School of Fine Arts are to help judge other festivals throughout the state. Must See Advisers From April 21-23 All College freshmen and sophomores are expected to see their advisors April 21, 22, or 23, Dean Gilbert Ulmer said today. Names of students and their advisors will be posted on the bulletin board opposite the College office soon. Dean Ulmer suggested that all students should discuss the various requirements necessary for graduation and any other aspects of the curriculum during this period, rather than at enrollment time. Parents of College freshmen and sophomores will receive mid-semester reports after the advising period, Dean Ulmer said. Married students may request that their grades not be sent home. Organized houses and other groups may obtain mid-semester grades of juniors and seniors by leaving an alphabetized list of the students at the College with sophomores will not be available through the College, but a written record may be obtained by the student from his advisor. Rev. Hughes Heads Y.M. Advisory Board He was chosen at a board meeting Tuesday in which Calvin Vanderwerf, associate professor of chemistry, was elected vice-chairman and Hilden Gibson, associate professor of politicalscience, was elected treasurer. The Rev. C. Fosberg Hughes of the Plymouth Congregational church is the new chairman of the Y.M.C.A. advisory board. H. G. Ingham, director of the extension service, will serve as treasure until Professor Gibson_ who is on leave until June, returns. The Y.M.C.A. advisory board is a 17 man organization with 13 faculty members and four students, who are Y.M.C.A. officers. Dance Program Postponed The annual Tau Sigma program will be presented in the fall instead of this spring it was decided in a meeting Tuesday. The dancers are practicing on three numbers, "Jealousy," "Waiting for the Robert E. Lee," and an Indian dance. ASC To Submit Aggie Petition To Student Vote Students will have a chance to express their opinions on Oklahoma A. and M.'s entry into the Midwest conference, at the general spring election, the All Student Council decided Tuesday night. Added to the election ballot, the question will be voted upon by the students and will be tabulated just as the votes for candidates. New Members Sworn In Calvin Cooley, College freshman, Donald Ong, senior, and James Wahl, engineering senior were sworn in as members of the Council. / Ong and Wahl represent the Pac-hacamac political party, while Cooley is a freshman class representative, elected by the P.S.G.L party. The proposed amendment to the University student constitution dealing with selection of All Student council representatives was tabled until the next meeting. New Bill Introduced Receiving its First Reading was a bill proposing that all extra-curricular representatives to the Council be elected by their respective organizations within three weeks after the general election April 24. The names of these representatives are then to be turned in to the A.S.C. by May 15. This would make it possible for all new council members to be sworn in at the same time, Betty van der Smissen, College sophomore, said. Keith Wilson, chairman of the elections committee requested that all political parties turn in their lists of candidates for the spring election to Elaine Thalman, A.S.C. secretary, as soon as possible. The location of pools has not been decided. K.U. Group To Attend Human Relations Club A delegation of University students will take part in the student institute on human relations to be held on the University of Kansas City campus April 19. Delegates representing Y.W.C.A., Y.M.C.A., A.V.C., N.S.A., and other groups interested in discrimination problems as related to campus life, will attend. Paul Sims, College senior, will gives the University campus report and Sidney Dawson, education junior, will have charge or the group singing. Senior Orders Due In Office Tomorrow Students interested in attending the institute may sign at the Y.W. C.A. office at Henley house or call Mrs. Juanita Ferguson, chairman of the campus institute committee. Seniors must order their announcements and name cards from the business office by 5 p.m. tomorrow, Lois Thompson, chairman of the senior invitations committee. said today. committee, said that the order will be placed, and money must be paid when the orders are placed. Scholarship Men Arrive For Finals Thirty-seven Kansas high school seniors arrived on the campus today for the Summerfield scholarship finals. Between 15 and 20 scholarships will be awarded this year. Conference between the finalists and the faculty committee are being held in the Military Science building this afternoon. Pictures of the group were taken earlier today. Members Of Committee Members of the faculty committee are Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College; L. L. Barrett, associate professor of romance languages; G. W. Bradshaw, professor of civil engineering; D. Gagliardo, professor of economics; J. K. Hitt, registrar; J. H. Nelson, dean of the graduate school; Henry Shenk, associate professor of physical education; L. C. Woodruff, associate professor of entomology and biology; Irving Hill, representative of the Endowment Association. To Give Dinner A dinner for the contestants will be given in the Kansas room of the Union at 6 tonight. Allen Crafton, professor of speech, will give the principal talk. The title of his speech is "How Culture Came to Kansas." Arthur Fartridge, College senior, will speak as the representative of the resident scholars. The written day-long examination will be given in the drill room of the Military Science building starting at 8 a.m. tomorrow. Sherwood, Downs To Give Research Papers Dr. N. P. Sherwood and Dr. Cora Downs of the department of bacteriology will read papers concerning their research studies to the Society of American Bacteriologists in Philadelphia May 12 and 16. On May 19 and 20, Dr. Downs will read two papers to the Association of Immunologists in Chicago. She has been asked by the association president to read "Studies on Tularemia II" and "Studies on Tularemia III." Dr. Downs did research work in biological warfare for the army at Camp Detirch, Md. and at the University during the war. Ku Ku's To Meet Tonight Removal Of Storm Doors Welcomes Spring To K.U. Ku Ku's will meet in the Pine room at 7:30 today, to make plans for the "Evening in Paris" party to be held Friday night. Spring was officially welcomed on the University campus—not by the first robin, not by the budding bushes, but by the removal of the storm doors from the buildings. The change was made during the Easter recess. Along with the removal of the storm doors came other changes. Returning students found that the front foyer floor of Watson library had a new coat of gray paint. Gravel roads on the campus had been soaked with their spring smear of oil. Racial Committee to Me C. G. Bayles, superintendent of building and grounds, commented that the only dark cloud in the recess work schedule was the one that dropped about three inches of rain on the area. The temporary committee on racial equality will meet in Green hall at 7:30 tonight. Frank Stannard, chairman of the committee, said that all persons interested in the committee may attend. Plans for further action against racial discrimination will be discussed. "We just finished putting in grass at Sumnyside, but with that rain we'll probably have the job to do over again," he said. 'UN Can't Exist In Defeatism,' Mrs. Rohde Says The United Nations organization cannot exist in an atmosphere of defeatism, Mrs. Ruth Bryan Robde, former United States minister to Denmark, told a convocation audience this morning. "The U.N.O. will accomplish only what the people believe it can accomplish," she stated. "Faith and determination must be behind the charter." Mrs. Rohde has been a congresswoman from Florida. She attended the San Francisco conference and her outline of the United Nations organization has been published. She has been attending the United Nations meetings at Lake Success, N.Y. Public Hears Disagreements "The public cannot visualize the wide areas of agreement in this organization if they only hear about disagreements." Mrs. Rohde declared. The general assembly has dealt with almost 1,200 documents,but the news centers around the disagreements and arguments of the security council, she said. "When one looks at all the bodies that have been set up and are functioning, one cannot feel pessimistic about the U.N.O.," Mrs. Rohde believes. U. N. Committees Agree "In the last meeting of the narcotics commission before Christmas, a widely divided group of nations will hand bouquets to each other." The United Nations committees and commissions deal with a wide area of problems of social and economic importance to the world, and those groups are usually in agreement, she said. If the people of the world can learn to adopt an attitude of cooperation, the United Nations organization has its main objective. Mrs. Rohde said, "We have a choice between cooperation, though difficult, and unthinkable atomic wars." Poetry Contest Closes At Noon Monday The William Herbert Carruth Memorial Poetry contest closes at noon Monday, and entries should be submitted to the Chancellor's office before that time, John E. Hankins, English professor, reminded contestants this morning. Poems may be of any length or classification, but no more than one poem may be submitted by one contest. No poem previously published will be accepted in the petition. All resident University students can enter in the contest. Three typewritten copies of each poem, signed by an assumed name, are required. A sealed envelope containing the real name of the au- tured poet, poem, or the outside with an assumed name, must be turned in with the poem. Names of prize winners will appear on the commencement program, in June. Awards of $50, first prize, for best performance; a $100 prize, and a volume of poetry to each contestant receiving honorable mention, will be made. WEATHER Kansas—Partly cloudy east, cloudy with showers west. Warmer except southwest and extreme east today. Showers or thundershowers east and central, drizzle extreme west, warmer tonight. Low tonight 45-50. Cooler Thursday. - PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 9,1947 Official Bulletin April 9,1947 Archery club practice will meet from 4 to 6 p.m. today in Robinson gym. Ruth Bryan Owen Rhode, today's convocation speaker, will be the guest of the coffees and forums committee of Union Activities at 4:30 today in the Pine room. Everybody welcome. Informal discussion. Brief meeting of Omega Psi Phi fraternity at 7:15 tonight in the Union lounge, Important business. I. S. A., council meeting at 7 tonight in Dean Werner's office. Camp counselors conference committee meeting at 5 p.m. today in YMCA office, Union building. K. U. Dames meeting at 8 tonight in Little Theater, Green hall. A play will be presented by dramatics department of the Liberty Memorial high school. *** Geology club will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in 426 Lindley. Dr. Walter Kollmorgen will speak on "Land Reclamation in the Mississippi Valley." Deadline for ordering senior invitations and folders is April 10. University forum, 4 p.m. tomorrow. Fraser theater, sponsored by the YMCA and department of sociology. Dr. Chandra-Sekhar of India will speak on "An Indian View of Empire." 米 米 米 Campus-community meeting. 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Parish house, Congregational church, 9th and Vermont sponsored by YMCA, LLPD, and department of sociology. Dr Chandra-Sekhar will speak on "The Problem of India's Minorities." YMCA movie forum originally scheduled for Thursday has been cancelled to permit attendance to Dr. Chandra-Sekhar's lecture. Kan-Do staff meeting at 5 p.m. tomorrow in Dean Werner's office. Forensic League meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Little Theater, Green hall. Pi Lambda Theta coffee at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Pine room. Sweater and skirt. *** Progressive party meeting at 7:30 tonight in room 9, Frank Strong. Election preparation. Snow Zoology club meeting Thursday in 206 Snow hall. Dr. Spaulding will speak on the subject of archeology. All wishing to attend please sign bulletin in Snow hall. Mathematics club meeting at 4 p.m. tomorrow in room 206 Frank Strong. Dale Rummer in charge of program. Kappa Phi will hold a seavenger hunt at the Methodist church at 8:15 p.m. Friday. Wesley Foundation members invited. - * * YMCA-YWCA religious seminar series at 4 p.m. Monday in the Pine room. Prof. Sandelius will speak on "Would World Government Based on Christian Ethics Give World Peace?" 枣 枣 枣 Persons desiring to apply for positions of editor and business manager of the 1948 Jayhawker must leave a letter, addressed to Karl Klooz at the Student Organization window in the Business office not later than April 15. Letters of application must include three references. Two, faculty members, and the third a past employer or friend. Graduate Record examination. 1-5 p.m. May 5; 8:30-12 a.m. May 6. Applications due at Guidance Bureau, 2A Frank Strong, April 17. All students who expect to attend the summer session or return for the fall semester should sign up in the Registrar's office according to the following schedule: Wed. Apr. 9, A–C; Thurs. Apr. 10, B; Fri. Apr. 12, F; Mon. Apr. 14, H; Sat. Apr. 15, K; Wed. Apr. 16, L—Q; Thurs. Apr. 17, M; Fri. Apr. 18, P—R; Mon. Apr. 21, S; Tues. Apr. 22, T—Z; Wed. Apr. 23, all those who could not come in on scheduled days. K. U. Amateur Radio club will meet at 5 p.m. Thursday in 205 Electrical Engineering laboratory. Take Your Car To Nevada Las Vegas, Nev.—(U.P.)—A convention of travel industry officials here brought attention to the fact that there isn't a street car in the state. Nevada still is largely frontier country and street cars have found no place in either of its two largest cities, Reno and Las Vegas. Instant Service In Our Shoe Repair Department Royal College Shop 837-38 Mass. Sommers Market HAS- These Products For Your Special Menus. OR- These Products For Your Everyday Menus. COTTAGE BUTTER 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 holidays, and exam periods are usually missed, except Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan, under act of March 3, 1879. Delicious JUICY STEAKS Our Specialty Across from 1109 Mass. Court House Phone 2054 BILL'S GRILL TRIPLE SMOKING PLEASURE DAVE "BOO" FERRISS leading pitcher of the American League—W.-25 L.-6 A ALWAYS MILDER B BETTER TASTING C COOLER SMOKING WITH THE BASEBALL PLAYERS IN THE BIG LEAGUES CHESTERFIELD IS A BIG FAVORITE That's putting it over, Boo—THEY SATISFY A ALWAYS MILDER B BETTER TASTING C COOLER SMOKING ALWAYS BUY CHESTERFIELD ALL OVER AMERICA—CHESTERFIELD IS TOPS! Copyright 1947, LIGGETT & MYRIS TOBACCO CO. APRIL 9,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Belles AND THEIR Weddings Glover-Lawler Pi Beta Phi announces the pinning of Margaret Lawler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. S. Lawler, Kansas City, Mo., to John E. Glover, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Glover, Topeka. The announcement was made during dinner by Mrs. Dean Alt, housemother, who received a corsage of wine carnations. Miss Lawler wore an orchid and was assisted by Elaine Walker and Elizabeth Priest who also wore wine carnations. Shirley Cundiff, Sue Newcomer, Jacquelyn Herriott, and Patricia Hamilton received blue cornflower corsages. Miss Lawler is a college senior; Mr. Glover is a junior in the business school and a member of Phi Kappa Psi. Guests at the occasion were Dr. and Mrs. Ethan P. Allen, Mrs. Faye Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Wray, Georgia Votaw and Mary Votaw. The engagement of Miss Permeance Stinebaugh, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jack J. Stinebaugh of Wichita, to Donnell L. Wright, son of Mrs. Faye Wright of Lawrence was announced Tuesday, April 1, at Harmon Coop. Wright-Stinebaugh Miss Stinebaugh wore a corsage of sweetheart roses. Mrs. Smith and Mrs. Faye Wright received white carnations. Carmen Wise, Wilma Hildebrand, and Patricia Waits assisted in the passing of chocolates and pinning of corsages. Mrs. Ralph A. Smith, housemother made the announcement at dinner. Miss Stinebaugh is a junior in the School of Education. Mr. Wright, freshman in the School of Education, is a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity. 象形草 The engagement of Miss Elaine Carlson, the daughter of Mr. Edward C. Carlson of Clay Center, to Robert Crowley, the son of Mrs. May Crowley of Longview, Tex., was announced recently by Mrs. Treva Brown. Corbin hall housemother. rowley-Carlson Miss Carlson received an orchid, and Mrs. Brown received a gardenia corsage. Rebecca Larson. Geraldine Hamm, and Coral Novak who assisted wore carnation corsages. Miss Carlson is a College junior. Mr. Crowley is a sophomore in the School of Engineering. * Turner-Alexander. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Willard Alexander of Bartlesville, Okla., announce the engagement of their daughter, Ann, to Mr. Josiah Shelden Turner, son of Mr. and Mrs. Josiah David Turner of 518 West Magnolia, Independence, Kan. The wedding will take place June 14th. Miss Alexander, a graduate of Bartlesville high school, attended the University where she was a member of the Chi Omega sorority, editor of the student directory, a member of the Jayhawker staff, a member of the war memorial board, and a producer of the first post-war variety show. "Yucca, Yucca." Mr. Turner is a senior in the School of Engineering. He previously served with the navy V-12 here. He is a member of the Phi Gamma Delta fraternity; Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity, and is a student associate of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers. ☆ ☆ ☆ Davis-Rothrock Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Rothrock, Wellington, announce the marriage of their daughter, Sara Kathryn, to Jack Donlon Davis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer J. Davis, also of Wellington, March 16 in Wellington. Mrs. Davis attended the University last semester and is a member of Sigma Kappa sorority. The couple is at home at 416 North Pearson, Wellington. Jennersen Sorority sisters of the bride who assisted at the reception were Margaret Wright, Kathleen Wright. Peggy Penn, Alice Hobbs, and Estelle Stewart. Mrs. 'Chris' Alford Boosts Kansas Girls, Keeps House COED'S CORNER A booster for Kansas and Kansas girls, Mrs. E. D. Alford, executive secretary of the YWCA and better known as "Chris," keeps busy dashing from meetings of committees, commissions, and the cabinet and still has time to manage a home. Although before coming to the University two years ago Mrs. Alfred lived 15 years in Sioux City, Iowa, she said that "coming back is like coming home." "Kansas must be a state of mind for all the family felt they returning home—although some of them have never lived in Kansas." Mother of Two Students Mrs. Alford is the mother of Mary Alford, College senior, and Gene Alford, engineering sophomore. "I'm sure the Kansas girls are the most attractive and the finest in the world," she declared. "My only wish for them is that they would learn to choose one or two activities and do them well—not to judge leadership ability entirely on the activities one hurries to and from. Of course, I wish one of the chosen activities might be the YWCA." Chris believes that the chief concern of an organization like the YW's to support its program and to learn "how to fit outside interests effectively into a busy life." It should teach the "proper balancing of emphasis in adult life." Gives World Interest "I feel that the YWCA offers women a better chance for this balanced interest in world affairs than almost any other organization since it is essentially for women all over the world. This broadened scope gives a girl a chance to abolish prejudices so that she will be more effective in adult life and in the outside world." Chris has enjoyed doing some type of YW work ever since she attended the Estes Park Conference in 1915. Chris has taken an active part in many civic affairs. While in Sioux City, she served on boards of the American Association of University Women. Civic Music Association, Girl Scouts, and YWCA. She also originated and promoted the Municipal Rose Garden and is proudest of this achievement. Works with Youth. She likes working with young people having been social director for children at a Sioux City Country club and a member of the staff at Cheley camps in Colorado. The engagement of Coral Wade, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W.E. Wade, Belleville, to Howard Fox, son of Mr. and Mrs. C.M. Fox, Lawrence, was announced recently at Corbin hall. Kappa Beta To Meet Tonight Chris received her bachelor of arts degree from Washburn college in Topeka where she belonged to the Senior Honor society, was editor of the yearbook and a four-year debater. Fox-Wade Kappa Beta, Christian church sorority, will meet at 7:30 tonight in Barlow chapel. The program will be a discussion on marriage. All members are asked to bring their service projects. The announcement was made by Mrs. Treva Brown, housemother, who wore a corsage of gardenias. Lois Marie Jamieson sang "Until," and Bernaldel Larsen, Joan Young, and Margaret Lowe passed the chocolates. Dean Lawson Elected Editor Of Entomological Society Paul B. Lawson, dean of the College, was elected editor of the Kansas Entomological society at a conference on the campus April 3 in connection with the Kansas Academy of Science. Other officers elected were: Fred Butler, Kansas State college, presi- dent; Leon Hepner, Hays State Teachers college, vice-president; D. A. Wilbur, Kansas State college, secretary-treasurer. Topeka—(UP)—Sugar poured into the gas tanks put three taxis out of commission Monday in the first trouble since start of a strike at the Yellow Cab and Baggage company here Saturday. Sugar Found In Gas Tanks Varsity this weekend! AND it's at the M.S.B.----9 to 12 RHYTHM by Kass Kassinger's orch. SATURDAY Night-Don't Forget! INEXPENSIVE too----$1.25 per couple TAKE your best girl-She'll love it. YOU Won't Want to Miss It TICKETS AT THE BUSINESS OFFICE THE DANCE FESTIVAL Lindley's Kansas Cleaners Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices MEN'S SUITS— 12 E. 8th Cleaned and Pressed 65c LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES— LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES Cleaned and Pressed 69c Cash and Carry Only SENIORS NOW is the time to order your senior ring. Do this when paying your class dues----- Same Window, Same Building----Business Office, Frank Strong Hall. Ten dollar deposit. DON'T DELAY L. G. BALFOUR CO. Lost Something? Try a University Daily Kansan Want Ad Misses' Shop After Easter Sale Dresses Were to $12.95 ... $ 8 Were to 16.95 ... 10 Were to 19.95 ... 12 Were to 25.00 ... 15 Spring Coats Were to $35.00 ___ $24 Were to 39.95 ___ 28 Were to 55.00 ___ 34 Spring Suits Were to $35.00 ...$24 Were to 39.95 ...28 Were to 69.95 ...38 The Palace 843 MASS PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 9,1947 SPOTLIGHT SPORTS By BILL CONBOY A true Olympic flavor has been added to the forthcoming Kansas Relays with the announcement that the decathlon will once again appear on the program. Two former decathlon champions at the Relays went on to capture the world title in the 1932 and 1936 Olympics. Big Jim Bausch of the Jayhawkers won the event here in 1932 and went on to take top international honors at Los Angeles the same year. His Olympic total set a new world's record. One story has it that a Denver schoolboy watched from the sidelines as Bausch performed in Los Angeles. The boy was Glenn Morris. He commented: "I can do all those things as well as he can, and some of them a little better." Four years later, Glenn Morris proved his claim. He won the 1936 decathlon championship at the Kansas Relays. His mark of 7,576 points under the revised Finnish rating system still stands as the K.U. record. The Olympics of that year were held in Berlin. The 1500 meter run was the last event on the decathlon card. The 24-year-old Morris led all competitors through the first nine events by a wide margin. He had an outside chance to establish himself as the greatest all-around athlete of all time. To break the listed world's decathlon record the official announced that the American iron man must cover the 1500 meter course in 4 minutes, 32 seconds. This time would give Morris the highest point total ever amassed in decathlon competition. But Morris had never run the 1500 meters in less than 4 minutes, 47 seconds. He was now called upon to clip 15 seconds off his best former mark at the end of a grueling day of physical exertion. Darkness had fallen and floodlights brightened the field as the contestants lined up for the final race. More than 110,000 spectators were in the stands, unmindful that the dinner hour had passed in their preoccupation with the effort Morris was about to make. The American sped off with the crack of the starter's gun, a step ahead of the field. Pushing his tired muscles to the limit, he held the lead till he was pounding down the home-stretch. Then Boulanger of Belgium drew abreast and threatened to pass him. Though the point record depended solely on time, the crowd booed the Belgian runner. Morris fought his way into the lead and the spectators cheered frantically as the American crossed the finish line in front. While the spectators sat anxiously, the judges checked their watches. Then came the announcement: "Time, 4 minutes, 33.2 seconds." Morris had failed by 1.2 seconds to set a new decathlon total point mark. The crowd started to the exits in disappointment. Suddenly the officials began waving their hands and running around wildly. Morris found himself swarmed under by athletes and judges wanting to shake his hand. A voice was suddenly heard over the loudspeaker with an announcement which sent over 100,000 voices into cheers and whistles. The voice said: "The judges have found an error in the computation of points: Glenn Morris of the United States wins the decathlon and sets an Olympic and all time world's record with a score of 7,900 points." If such past records mean anything, the next Olympic decathlon champion will be the man who captures the title at the Kansas Relays April 18 and 19. Some gladiatorial shows in Rome lasted 100 days. One emperor boasted that more than 10,000 men had fought in these shows during his reign. Baseball Team To Open Season Against Cornhuskers Friday The Jayhawker baseball team will open its 1947 campaign in Lincoln Friday against the Cornhuskers. Only two lettermen are slated to open the game or head coach Vic Bradford. Ray Ocamb, southpaw pitcher from Junction City, will be on the mound. Verle Anderson will hold down the right field assignment. Coach Bradford selected 15 men to make the trip from the list of over 100 candidates who reported for diamond practice this spring. Five freshmen are scheduled for starting duty on the Kansas nine. Lists Players The first year list includes: Harold May at third base, Lou DeLuna at first base, Bob Shaw in center field, G. A. Gorman in left field, and Walt Diehl in the catching spot. Charles Medlock, sophomore from Halstead, will take over shortstop duties. John Woolcoot, a junior complete the lineup at second base. Hogan, French Out The two lustiest hitters on the Kansas squad will not be available for the pair of contests in Lincoln. Red Hogan, who clouted 400 in the last year, and Bud French, sparkling cleanup slot for the Jayhawkers infielder, will still be out for spring football practice during the early season baseball, games. Hogan smashed out three hits to account for all his team's runs as his side won a 3 to 1 victory in the last intra-souad clash. the first home appearance for the Jayhawker nine will be on April 16 and 17 against Kansas State. USLTA Suspends Amateur Net Stars New York—(UP)—Suspended as amateurs because they were considering professionalism, tennis stars Pauline Betz and Sarah Palfrey Cooke were expected today to turn pro for a summer exhibition swing. The U.S. Lawn Tennis association announcing the supersions, said that the two stars could appeal to the association's executive committee, which does not meet until September. Thus Miss Betz, U.S. and Wimbledon champion, cannot defend either title, nor can she participate in any of the other big summer tournaments. Mrs. Cooke, at New York, was indignant to the USLTA action, although she pointed out it made no difference to her. She was enroute today to an unclosed destination in Switzerland. She said she expected to be in Paris within a few days. Baseball Coach This is Vic Bradford who does double duty as head baseball coach in the spring and backfield coach for Jayhawker gridders in the fall. He will lead the Kansas diamond crew in an invasion of Nebraska University this weekend. F. B. A. H. COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals - Short Orders Sandwiches Open 5:30-12:30 WRIGHTS FOR RECORDS 'LANGUAGE MAJORS' Complete courses—Spanish and French—20 records with dictionary. Narrated by the Educational Director of U.S. War Department. WRIGHTS APPLIANCE STORES 846 Mass. THE NEXT BEST THING TO A NEW CAR IS A AND YOUR OLD ENGINE . . . SIXES PRICED CORRESPONDINGLY LOW . . . INSTALLATION EXTRA. FORD Ford FORD ENGINE PRECISION REBUILT MORGAN-MACK Six IM Teams Win Tuesday's Ball Games MOTOR COMPANY Last inning scores brought one-run victories to the Phi Kappas and Die Hards in Tuesday's intramural softball play. Four other teams won by wide margins. YOUR FRIENDLY FORD DEALER Phone 277 609 Mass. Phi Kappa defeated the Delta 13-12 and the Die Hards overcame the Phi Pisis 5-4. Other game results were Sigma G, Gamma Delta 7, Gamma Delta 4, T.KE 21, Sigma Nu 11; Phi Deltar 20, PiK A.6. With the score tied in the seventh, Collins, Die Hard catcher, crossed home plate on a single by Dorge to give the Die Hards victory. Rossi- lon cracked out a single to drive the winning run for the Phi Kappas. Bowlby, Die Hard pitcher, chalked up seven strikeouts and two hits in leading his team to victory. TKE, trailed Sigma Nu two runs in the fifth but a 13 run blitz in the sixth inning was more than the Sigma Nus could overcome. Heavy hitters for the day were Dewell and Debus of the Phi Delts, who each got four base blows, and Rueschoff, A.T.O., who hammered out four hits in five trips to the plate. China Has Most Members In Cosmopolitan Club Pullman, Wash. — (U.P.) — China has the largest membership in the Cosmopolitan Club at Washington State College, which includes students from 14 foreign countries. Members from other countries include four from Turkey, two from Czechoslovakia, and one each from India, Egypt, Norway, England, Holland, Germany, Australia, Guatemala, Costa Rica, Columbia and Panama. China has 11 members in the international club. Louis 'Interested' In New Title Bout Los Angeles—(UP) Heavyweight boxing champion Joe Louis and his manager, Marshall Miles, were interested but non-committed on a proposal to meet Melio Bettina in a 10-round title bout at Salt Lake City, Utah. Aug. 12 for the title. Miles said Jim Downing, Utah sports promoter, guaranteed Louis $200,000 to meet the former world light heavyweight champion, now listed as a heavyweight contender. "This all sounds very interesting." Miles said. Team Managers We have equipment for all of the SPRING INTRAMURALS Baseball equipment Softball equipment Golf equipment Tennis equipment Horseshoes KIRKPATRICK Sport Shop 715 Mass. TOMMY Here are the Kind of Clothes You'll Like Best for Spring These clothes were made with a capital C for comfort. They're all cut or knitted to give a man room to move around with ease. See what we have for your Spring Comfort. . . Spring Slacks Spring Sweaters Spring T-Shirts Spring Jackets Sportshirts Spring Ties Made By— Dobbs MacGregor Arrow Roblee Hickok fr Wilson & Wilson Bros. Ober's HEAD-TO-FOOT OUTFITTERS APRIL 9, 1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Netmen Suffer Rough Road Trip; Win One, Lose Four Team Matches The Jayhawker tennis team suffered rough treatment in a 10-day road trip which extended through the Easter vacation. The charges of coach Gordon Sabine dropped team contests to Oklahoma, Southern Methodist, Missouri, and Washington University of St. Louis. Kansas swept its matches with Arkansas, handing the Razorbacks a 9 to 0 setback. The Jayhawkers, net champions of the Big Six last year, were marked men through which took full advantage of their familiar home courts and the psychology of being underdogs. Point Difference In Match Against Oklahoma and Washington the Kansans lost out by 3 to 4 scores. The difference of a point in one game of either series would have meant the match. Southern Methodist and Missouri won by 5 to 2 margins. The matches in Dallas were played in 85 degree weather. The Kansas racket man suffered a let-down from the Oklahoma battle of the day before and failed to play up to their usual game in the heat. In Columbia, the Tiger net men were red-hot in capturing four of five singles matches and one doubles contest. Rip Manning, the number one court artist for Missouri, trimmed Dick Richards, the talented Jayhawk first man, 6-3, 6-0. Richards-Shoof Win Richards-Shoaf Win At times, Kansas displayed a high quality of tennis. Against Missouri Richards and Roy Shoaf teamed up as the number one doubles combination to win their match, 6-2, 6-4 Erwin Busiek won his Oklahoma opponent by means of an 8-6 third set in which he made seven placements in the last two games. Coach Sabine reported that his team met a variety of playing conditions. The Kansas netters played on wood at Oklahoma, clay at Southern Methodist, cement at Arkansas, wood and asphalt at Washington, and wood again at Missouri. Nebraska Here Friday All matches were non-conference. The Jayhawkers will have another crack at Oklahoma here on May 10, Missouri here on May 16, and Washington here April 17. Nebraska Herd Friday The first home tennis match is scheduled with Nebraska here Friday. Five singles and two doubles matches will be played on the four Kansas concrete courts beginning at 2:30 p.m. This will be a non conference meet. Between the Nebraska contest and the visit by Washington university, the team will go to Topeka to play Washburn Saturday. Coach Sabine took six men with him on the trip south and east. They were: Dick Richards, Roy Shoaf, Bob Barnes, Frank Gage, Sam Mazon, and Erwin Busiek. He reported that five places are still wide open on the team at present. Following the tour, all rankings have been scrapped and the team was in search of those who made the trip received some excellent match experience, but their positions are not assured if better men appear. Dr. Cora Downs Tells Of Tularemia Disease Dr. Cora Downs, of the bacteriology department, told of tularemia and its relations to entomology in her talk before the Entomology club Tuesday. Tularemia is a widespread disease, usually called "rabbit fever" in this community. The disease lasts from a few weeks to several months. Victims often have open sores, swollen glands, and are generally pepless. Although insects often carry tularemia, it is chiefly spread by rabbits, which transmit it when they are skinned. The death rate of the disease is low, from 4 to 16 per cent. The club held a short business meeting with the president, John Bacon, presiding. It was decided that the spring picnic of the club would be April 26 at Lone Star state park. IM Schedules Posted During Phone Strike All intramural managers are requested to check the bulletin boards outside the intramural office in Robinson gymnasium for the duration of the telephone strike, Donald Powell, director of men's intramurals, said today. "It will be impossible to contact organizations individually. Managers will find all schedule revisions listed on the boards." Powell said. Oklahoma Wins Over Baylor Bears 9 to 8 Waco, Texas—(UP)—The University of Oklahoma today showed a 9 to 8 victory over the Bears of Baylor after the Sooners Tuesday pinned a last-inning Baylor rally. Eldon Davis was the winning pitcher but he was replaced by Michael Bindel in the second Paul Cook and Fred Copeland worked on the mound for Baylor The Sooner victory evened up the count for the two-game series. The Bruins won Monday night, 3-2, in 11 innings. The game Monday night was climaxed by a battle on the field by players of both teams. Another fight was averted last night. The oldest piece of glass which has been definitely dated historically is a large bead made in the 1500's B.C., according to the Encyclopedia Britannica. Lack Of Minor Sports Drop Kansas To Bottom In Final Ratings Of Big Six All-Sports Standing The University of Kansas ranks last in the Big Six All-sports standings released today. On a basis of 6 points for finishing first, 5 points for finishing second and so on the standings as present are: | | OU | NU | IS | MU | KS | KU | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Football | 5½ | 3½ | 2 | 3½ | 1 | 5½ | | Cross Country | 6 | 3 | 1 | 4 | 5 | 2 | | Indoor Track | 3 | 5 | 1 | 6 | 2 | 4 | | Basketball | 6 | 1½ | 3½ | 5 | 1½ | 3½ | | Swimming | 3 | 5 | 6 | 0 | 4 | 0 | | Wrestling | 5 | 4 | 6 | 0 | 3 | 0 | | Finals | 28¼ | 22 | 19¼ | 18¼ | 16¼ | 15 | . 28 $ \frac{1}{2} $ 22 19 $ \frac{1}{2} $ 18 $ \frac{1}{2} $ 16 $ \frac{1}{2} $ 15 No Jayhawker teams were entered in swimming or wrestling. The remaining sports to be computed are golf, tennis, outdoor track, and baseball, and the University will enter teams in all of these events. The defending champion Pla-mors of Kansas City took the lead today in the finals of the United States Hockey league playoffs with a 5 to 2 victory over Omaha. (By United Press) The Pla-mors last night skated to an easy victory over the Knights in the Ormah arena to open the course. Then they determine the league championship. Pla-mors Lead Finals Knights Bow 5 to 2 Kansas City earned a finals shot with victories over Minneapolis and Fort Worth. Omaha beat Dallas, southern division leader. The Pla-mors will remain in Omaha for two games Thursday and Saturday. The next three games will be played in Kansas City. The seventh tilt, in case there is one, will be in Omaha. Formosa has the highest shoreline cliffs in the world—rock walls rising in places to five times, the height of the Empire State Building. 3-day Cleaning Service 4-day Laundry Service 45 . 24-hour Shoe Repair - Leather and Garment Dyeing a Specialty. . Village Cleaners SUNFLOWER, KANSAS Opposite School Western Union—8 a.m.-9 p.m. SILENT TWEETMEN CARTOON SMART LIKE A FOX IN OLD SANTA FE Latest News Dr. Lowrance Attends Classics Convention Dr. Lowrance read a paper entitled, "And There Was Sertorius" at the convention, which is attended annually by high school and college teachers from 31 states. Dr. Winnie D. Lowrance, assistant professor of Latin and Greek, returned Thursday from Nashville, where she attended a convention of the Classical Association of The Middlewest and South. Plus She is vice-president of the Kansas chapter of the association, and also served on the resolutions committee. LOVE WAS THE BAIT FOR HIS MURDER PLAN! NOW — Ends SATURDAY Patee LOVE WAS THE BAIT FOR HIS MURDER PLAN! INGRID BERGMAN Hur Best Role! M-G-M MAULT-UP PICTURE DEPARTMENT ROBERT MONTGOMERY Superbl! "Rage in Heaven" with GEORGE SANDERS LUCILE WATSON OSCAR HOMOLKA Hur Best Role! M-G-M MASTERED BY MATTHEW ROBERT MONTGOMERY Superb1 "Rage in Heaven" LAUNDERETTE Bendix Equipped SOAR EFEE Up to 10 lb. Washing (per machine)—25c up to 10 p.m. Washing (per inch) 8 p.m to 10 p.m. Saturday 8 p.m to 5 p.m. 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. ---- Saturday 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. 813 Vermont St. Phone 3368 -Saturday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. I SLACKS Flannel, Belford Cord Gaberdine Dorsk $12.50 to $18.00 Corduroy Jacket Coats $10.00 to $21.95 Naturals and Browns MAKE DATE NITE SHOW NITE The Palace 843 Mass. JAYHAWKER Now, One entire week BOGART has a new Gal .and WHAT A GAL! a new WOMAN! HUMPHREY BOGART LIZABETH SCOTT in Dead Reckoning --- GRANADA Ends Tonite- "I'VE ALWAYS LOVED YOU" PHILIP DORN CATHERINE McLEOD With ARTHUR RUBINSTEIN Playing the Background Music Thurs., Fri., Sat. P THE THRILL OF YOUNG LOVE! JUNE HAVER JOHN PAYNE Wake up and Dream 20 IN TECHNICOLOR atee NOW PLAYING He Forced His Wife Into the Arms of Another Man! 1850D BERGMAN POWER MONTGOMERY 'Rage in Heaven' M-G-M MASTERPIECE REPRINT THEATRE PLUS Cartoon, Silent Tweetment Old Santa Fe—Western Variety News VARSITY Today, Ends Sat. EDWARD EVERETT HORTON ANN GWYNNE "Ghost Goes Wild" and PRESTON FOSTER BILLY SHEFFIELD King of the Wild Horse $1 TO $5 PAID FOR EACH CORRECT ANSWER ON OUR QUIZ FOR CASH--- THURSDAY PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 9,1947 Kansan Comments Atomic Control And Sen. Taft When the 80th Congress convened the American people looked hopefully to the Republican majority to supply a clear-thinking leadership based on good judgment for the difficult problem ahead. 图 图 However, as the weeks have pressed this leadership has been sporadic, to say the least. On some issues of importance these congressional leaders have demonstrated a lack of vision and judgment that is disheartening in these critical times. A recent example of this type of thinking was Senator Taft's denunciation of the Acheson-Lillienthal atomic energy report. Through this report the Ohio senator believes that Russia would get full knowledge of our secret production processes and have a direct say in the management of our installations. On that premise he tries to discredit the proposals advanced in the report. Thus we would not be revealing anything which is in our power to keep. Instead, we would divulge that knowledge under a system of control and inspection that would safeguard ourselves as well as the rest of the world. Concerning the first point, the Baruch plan for atomic energy control (based on the Acheson-Lillienthal report) does advocate the revelation of our atomic knowledge. But virtually all authorities agree that other nations could discover that knowledge by themselves in a few years. Senator Taft's second point is that Russia would have a direct say in our installations related to atomic energy. According to the plan, however, it is the U. N. that would have the power of inspection and supervision. Surely the senator cannot really believe in a system of control that is one-sided. He seems to imply that we can hold secrets that don't really exist and campaign against atomic development elsewhere in the world while denying other countries similar rights in America. A public official of Taft's position must be continually conscious of his obligation to the public to clarify issues and supply rational leadership. Negotiations for the world control of atomic energy have reached an impasse in the U. N. security council. Clouding the picture further on this tremendously important matter with such statements as that of Senator Taft is a disservice to the American people. Crime In Kansas The recent report on crime by the F. B. I. for 1946 contains some alarming figures that should be of concern to the citizens of Kansas. The crime rate in Kansas jumped 21 per cent during the past year over the totals for 1945. This figure is almost twice the rate of increase for the nation as a whole. These facts should in themselves Here are some of the figures for Kansas. Cases of murder and non-negligent manslaughter increased from 16 in 1945 to 27 in 1946; rape cases increased from 44 to 76; robberies rose from 212 to 230; aggravated assaults numbered 138 in 1946 and 115 in 1945; there were 683 more burglars during the past year than in 1945; larcenies jumped from 5,500 to 6,478; and car thefts increased from 1,320 to 1,328. call for some serious thinking and action by the people of the state. But there is another factor revealed by the F. B. I. report. The crime increase in rural areas of the country was 14.1 per cent while the urban crime rate jumped only 7.4 per cent. This is contrary to the traditional belief that crime and density of population go hand in hand. It was expected that there would be an increase in crime following the end of the war. It is not easy to see, however, why the increase in Kansas should be so out of proportion to the increase for the nation as a whole. It would be foolish to attempt to point out any particular cause for his increase. Present-day social conditions are so complex that an increase in crime is a result of many interdependent factors. Likewise, there is no one cure all for this condition. The problem must be approached from all possible angles in order to hope for a solution. All social organizations and groups from the family to our state government need to appraise their moral efforts and influence to see wherein they can reduce the causes of crime. Big Six Needs Aggies Dear Editor---intended to affect Oklahoma, but to avoid decreasing the opportunities which K. U. Negroes would have to participate in athletics. If it were necessary to sacrifice either a position in national football circles, or a principle that all men are created equal, which would be most important?) Last week's Daily Kansan carried a front-page article revealing a petition to the governor, signed by 16 K. U. organizations, which would prevent Oklahoma A. and M. from entering the Big Six conference because that school discriminates against Negroes in intercollegiate athletics. That petition is based on illogical thought. The racial discrimination at Oklahoma A. and M. has not come about in the past decade or two. It is a way of life that goes back to the years before the Civil War. Custom has never been, and cannot be, changed by any type of law or decree. And custom certainly cannot be changed by a university petition from outside the state whose custom is being challenged. What does K. U. hope to gain by withholding admittance to her conference from a great school like Oklahoma A. and M.? Certainly such action will not have the slightest influence on a long-enduring custom of racial discrimination in Oklahoma. The Big Six has all to gain and nothing to lose by admitting a strong institution like Oklahoma A. and M. to its conference. If this petition succeeds against the Aggies, then the Big Six has no choice but to dismiss Missouri and Oklahoma universities also, as they are both guilty of the same racial discrimination. K. U. students, let's reconsider what we are doing. For we may end with no conference at all. College Freshman (Name withheld by request) (Editor's note: The action was not College Freshman 225 Attend Meeting Of Science Academy About 225 members of the Kansas Academy of Science attended the annual meetings held at the University April 2 and 3. The annual presidential address was given Thursday morning by the retiring president, Dr. Claude W. Hibbard of the University of Michigan and formerly of the K. U. zoology department. Sectional meetings in botany, chemistry, geology, psychology, zoology, and physics, for junior academy members and science teachers were held Thursday. The Kansas Entomological society, and the Kansas chapter of the American Association of University Professors also held joint meetings with the academy. Open houses were held by the State Geological Survey in Lindley hall, and the Zoology department in Dvche museum Wednesday. Officers elected for the next year are Dr. John C. Peterson, Kansas State college, president; Dr. F. W. Albertson, Fort Hays State Teachers college, president-elect; Dr. Paul Murphy, Pittsburg State Teachers college, vice-president; Dr. F. C. Gates, Kansas State college, secretary; Dr. S. V. Ralin, Fort Hays State Teachers college, treasurer; and Dr. Robert Taft, Kansas University editor. Dean Paul B. Lawson was elected editor for the Kansas Entomological society. The University Daily Kansan Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editor of *The Associated Collegiate Press.* Represented by the National Advertising Service, Dickson Avenue, New York. York City. Managing Editor ... Billie M. Hamilton Editor in Chief ... Alamada Bollier Asst. Man. Editor ... Robbie Mullins City Editor ... William T. Smith Jr. Telegraph Editor ... Martha Jewett Art Editor ... Elosse Wise Advertising Manager ... Boba Wise Advertising Manager ..Alnin Wuthmow Circulation Manager ..John Beach Classified Adv. Man...Laverne Keevan Kenney Manager ... Kenney Manager Promotion Manager ... Mel Adams The Kansas Press Association 1947 Member National Editorial Association A FREE PRESS--YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW WURLITZER PHONOGRAPHS Used Juke Box Records For Sale FOR PARTY RENTALS NEW ARRIVALS IN— SPORT SHIRTS From $3 to $8 POLO SHIRTS From $1.35 to $2.50 John H. Emick 1014 Mass. Phone 343 From $3 to $8 CORDUROY "In or Out" SPORT SHIRT—$8.50 Solid colors and fancy patterns. Long and short sleeves. —Small, med., large, and X-large. — Solid colors, stripes, and patterns. — Small, med., and large Paintings By Green Shown At Spooner CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES The first local exhibition of the paintings of Robert B. Green, assistant professor of painting and drawing, is now on display at Spooner-Thaver Art Museum. Professor Green won the Prix de Rome in painting in 1935 and 1936 and was awarded a fellowship for a third year. While at the American academy in Rome, he'won the Gold Medal for his mural painting problems with architects, landscape architects, and sculptors. During his three and one-half years in the army, Professor Green won a medal for his paintings in an army at exhibition at Fort Benning, Ga. He received degrees in painting from the Carnegie Institute of Technology and Yale university. Anatomists Attend Montreal Meeting Eight members of the department of anatomy attended the annual meeting of the American Association of Anatomists in Montreal April 3 to 5. Two papers prepared by members of the group were presented. Faculty members who attended are Dr. Paul Rooge, Dr. Henry Tracy, Dr. William Young, Dr. Homer Latimer, Dr. Alfred Hinshaw, Richard Webster, Wesley Innes, and Robert Corder. Inter-Versity Fellowship To Attend Spring Meeting Plans to participate in the spring conference of the Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship to be held at Lake Shawnee, Saturday, and Monday, were discussed at the opening of the fellowship in Barlow chapel. Lars A. Almquist, student minister, led a discussion on "What it takes to be a Christian." Five Students Dismissed From Hospital At Easter Sandwiches and Chili AS YOU LIKE THEM— WHERE? five tonsillectomies were performed at Watkins Memorial hospital last week. All were dismissed Saturday. Students operated on were Corwin McIntyre, pharmacy freshman; Wilda Horton, College senior; Twyla Talbert, Fine Arts sophomore; and Howard Fox and Elizabeth A. Ward, College sophomores. "SNAPPY" LUNCH OF COURSE DE SOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH 7 a.m.-2 a.m. Week Days 12n.-12m. Sunday 1010 Mass. Buddett GALLAGHER MOTORS Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL As advertised in JUNIOR BAZAAR A woman is sewing a bedspread. And of course, I 'll wear my Cobbies, Mother _ Wear them? You'll live in them. For Cobbies are the smoothest young shoes that ever stepped onto a college-bound Pullman. Gold Cross makes them. They're Fit-Tested.* Wear them? You'll live in them. SEVENTEEN HALTER* RED CROSS SHOES FAMOUS FOR OVER FIFTY YEARS AS ROD GOLD THE BANK OF THE PHILIPPINES CORONAVIRUS WELLNESS CENTER BANK OF THE PHILIPPINES 916-784-0020 America's unchallenged shoe value $8.95 ROYAL COLLEGE SHOP 837-39 Mass. RED CALF TAN CALF *Copyrighted APRIL 9,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN American Holidays Should Include Grandmother's Day, Says Othman By FREDERICK C, OTHMAN United Press Staff Correspondent Washington—(UP) — What this country needs is 19 more holidays, including American Indian day, national heart week, Bible study month and—in particular — grandmother's day. The congressmen who wrote the bills for all the new celebrations—and let us not forget the Revere's ride, nor the day the slaves were freed—appeared with their constitutions before the house judiciary committee to urge more days of rest for Americans. I cheered 'em every one (being a little tired, myself), while Rep. John M. Robison of Kentucky, the chairman, received them all politely. He was particularly cordial to the ladies, who wore service stripes to indicate how many times they had been grandmothers. Wear Grandmother Stripes A bill would turn the second Sunday of October into grandmother's day. Mrs. Grace Gray, a one-striper identified herself as national secretary of the National Grandmother's clubs. Six thousand grandmothers pay dues. Few Hate To Admit It "Are there," asked Representative Robison in his best judicial manner, Mrs. Gray said that there were a few, unfortunately. Quickly she changed the subject. "any ladies who don't like to admit they are grandmothers?" "Now we have mother's day and father's day," she said, "but grandmother is more important. She is the mother of the father and the mother. I know it is a great day when a person becomes a father, or a mother, but I can tell you, Mr. Congressman, that the great thrill of a lifetime is when a mother becomes a grandmother." Need Grandfather's Club "Well now is there a grandfather club, too?" inquired Representative Robson, who is a grandfather. Mrs. Gray had learned that fact before-hand and she replied: "I believe you would make a very good instigator of the grandfather's club, for which I understand there already is a demand." Ohio College Opens Course In 'Dating' The congressman thanked all those who would declare more' holidays. And I thank them again, now. It is a long wait until July 4. Bowling Green, Ohio—(UP)—The learn-as-you-go technique in "dating," according to Dr. Samuel Harman Lowrie, is all wrong. He says this activity demands an intelligent approach. Dr. Lovrie, chairman of the sociology department of Bowling Green State university is doing just that. The gray-haired father of two children introduced a sociology course at Bowling Green this semester devoted entirely to "dating." The co-educational class is limited to 30 first-year students, giving college credit, which makes it the first of its kind in the country, the instructor believes. "During the 25 years I have conducted marriage and family classes," Dr. Lowrie said, "the need for fundamental education in 'dating' before young people date, rather than after, has become apparent." Help In Choosing Mates "In discussing marriage before adult groups, I have become aware of an almost unanimous desire for an intelligent approach to helping young people in dating," he said. Dr. Lowrie further believes the course will aid students in picking a husband or wife. "Social mingling permits young people to judge and choose among themselves," he explained. "They should realize that love is not the only thing involved in the selection of a life-time partner. "Marriage for most people is the most important decision of their lives, yet they know little about it. Not much effort has been made to teach young people to choose a bride or bridegroom intelligently." Dr. Lowrie is writing a textbook on dating problems which he hopes will encourage other universities to establish similar courses. Chicago—(UP) Relief rolls are lengthening throughout the nation, the current issue of Public Welfare, monthly journal of the American Public Welfare Association, reports. Magazine Reports Relief Roll Increase The article, attributes the increase to inflation, which has raised the cost of living index from 127 in 1945 to more than 150. Families with "marginal incomes" also are exhausting their savings for current living expenses, according to the magazine. Doctors Attend Course On Surgery Problems A three-day general surgery refresher course began Monday at the School of Medicine in Kansas City, The Kansas Medical society and the State board of health are co-sponsors of the program, which emphasizes problems confronting the general practitioner and the surgeon. Dr. Warren H. Cole, professor of surgery at the University of Illinois School of Medicine, and Dr. James Barrett Brown, associate professor of Washington university School of Medicine, are the visiting instructors. New Fire Truck Has Long Ladder To Rescue You Dr. Cole is a specialist in chest and abdominal surgery, and Dr. Brown specializes in plastic surgery. When fire breaks out in Fraser hall, and you're stranded in one of the fifth floor towers, you may live anyway. The Lawrence fire department has a new $20,000 truck with 40MPA driven, 100-foot telescoping ladder. Washington. (UP)—Spare stamp no. 11 became good for 10 pounds of sugar when the sugar rationing program got a new seven month lease on life from congress. New Sugar Stamp Valid The department made a test run on Fraser Saturday. Five minutes after arrival, the top of the ladder had reached the fifth floor tower windows. It is driven by a hydraulic pump that operates off the engine. No. 11 was the first regularly issued stamp since sugar rationing began to carry an allotment of 10 pounds. Heretofore sugar stamps have been good for five pounds. The extension guarantees housewives at least 20 pounds of sugar between now and Oct. 31. It also carries 1,000 feet of $ \frac{2}{3} $ inch hose and weighs 12 tons. Just to be safe, the truck carries an additional 200 feet of wooden ladder. But if all this fails to rescue any stranded victims, Lawrence firemen have one more device—the truck carries a life net. 'Hotel Mine' Is Key To Portal Pay Problem St. Clairsville, Ohio. (UP)--Miners are clamoring to go to work at the soft coal pits of the Willow Grove mine near here. Portal-to-portal has taken on a new meaning for the 600 men regularly employed. No Standing In Cold Air No Standing In Cold Air No longer must the miners stand in the cold winter air outside the entrance before going to work. No longer must they ride in uncomfortable mine coal cars through old workings to get to their jobs. The Hanna Coal Company has solved the portal-to-portal problem with a "hotel mine." Now the men ride 175 feet in a passenger elevator. The trip takes 22 seconds. Then they walk through a concrete, electric-lighted corridor, a revolving door and are within a few paces of the face of the coal. One of the unusual features of the new portal is a revolving door at the bottom of the elevator shaft through which the men must pass to get to and from their jobs. The new portal at Willow Grove, according to officials, is believed the only one of its type in the nation. The portal building has, besides the passenger elevator service, a 25-shower dressing room that will accommodate 600 men, modern toilet facilities, a lounging room, drinking fountains, and just across the way is a modern restaurant with hot meals available for each of the three shifts, night and day. The door was built to keep the ventilating blast of the mine from the elevator shaft. The door keeps the portal building and its various rooms from having a draft. Have A Revolving Door Z HANNA'S BARBARA BURTON 933 Mass. MUCH A-DO About the UP-DO Sinatra Fells Writer With One Punch Nu Vogue Beauty Shop Hollywood—(UF)—Crooner Frank Sinatra felled new York columnist Lee Mortimer with one punch in the foyer of Ciro's, plush film-colony nightclub, because, he said today, the writer insulted him. —and why not? It's comfortable and smart. It's a hair style everyone can wear. The most important thing is to have it done to suit your individual profile; and our expert operators take care of that. Just call 458 for an appointment. "He called me a Dago ___ " the singer said, "so I let him have it." The 135-pound, five-foot seven-inch New York Daily Mirror column said he was leaving the club when he ran across the crooner. "Before I knew what happened, Frank hit me on the left side of the head and knocked me down." Mortimer said in a sheriff's report. Mortimer said Sinatra's companions held him down while the singer pummed him "two or three more times." Mortimer denied that he made any remarks about Sinatra, but said that he has frequently mentioned in his newspaper column that "Sinatra can't sing." Classified Advertising Classified Advertising Rates Social Notes Take Up Most Of Air Mail New York-(UP) - Nearly two-thirds of all air mail is made up of social correspondence, United Air Lines officials reported after a spot check at 11 cities across the nation. The survey revealed that at only one time during any 24-hour period—at night—does business correspondence take the lead. Social letters constitute 76 per cent before noon, 69 per cent in the afternoon and 45 per cent at night. The overall total gave social air mail 65 per cent and business correspondence 35 per cent. Vancouver, B. C. — (UP) — The "three R's" may be riding, rotating and repartee when truck and taxi drivers get together at the University of North Carolina, driving and traffic safety. Enrollment will be limited to 50 students at $10 a head and it is hoped to make the course an annual event. Truck Drivers To Learn 3R's One three Five day days five 25 words or less 35c 65c 98c additional words 1c 2c 2c For Sale STEEL double-deck burk and 2 mattresses. One desk. Call 18794, 1288 Louisiana. Business Services Lost TYPING. Prompt service, reasonable rate, 1028 Vermont, phone 1168-R. -98 TENNIS-Rackets restrung and repaired; Silk, nylon, or gut. Priced accordingly, $1.50 to $10. Phone 2711-W. Ed. Wellhausen, 1145 Kentucky. -21- LADIES Onyx ring. Call 2905-J. Re- ward. ONYx Ring. Call 2959-J. ward. LIGHT Horseshide zipper jacket. white paint on elbow of sleeve. Reward. Please notify Kansan office. BLACK Brief case containing class notes "Meadowry" by the Boys' Reward. Return to Kansan office. BLACK Billfold on campus. Contains valuable papers. If found please contact Reger. Wearl, 100 Tennessee, phone 1770. Reger. ELGIN Wristwatch with flexible silver band. Reward. Leave at Kansan office or call 2848-J after 9. SHEAFFER Lifetime fountain pen. pen. Engraved in engraver. E.Cater. Call 1218-R. Reward. WILL MAN who found a Rollex wrist- watch in Danforth Chapel please contact Lewis H. Noll at 909 Moe. MAN'S Rose gold Elgin wristwatch with strap. Call Harold Smith, 723 Reward. PARKER "51" pen, engraved "Stephen D. Hadley," near Marvin Hall. Call D. Hadley. NEW Romans leather in Rock Chalk cake saturday night. Phone 1783, 1215 Oresd. Reward! For Rent Wanted ONE Large room with private bath to rent to 4 students. Furnace heat, auto- matic hot water heat. Tel. 2229-R. 1801 Albabma. -10- RHDE Daily from K. C to Lawrence. Lawrence 5:30; Call 2855-M after 5:45. 15 DE LUXE CAFE 26 years of service Same Location-Same Management You Are Welcome 711 Mass. 28 years of service SHE'S SURE TO WIN IN THAT DORIS DODSON! BEAUTY CONTEST Beauty contests go on all the time . . . unofficially. And the winning ways of Doris Dodson do wonderful things fo Juniors. Leave it to your own favorite judge. On campus or off, it's fun to be that girl in the Doris Doris Dodson JUNIOR ORIGINALS Dodson Junior Original. Sizes seven to fifteen. From $7.50 to $14.95 Grayce Shop 841 MASS. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE EIGHT APRIL 9,1947 Long Distance Lines May Open Late Today Washington—(UP)—Settlement of an important and possibly pattern-setting phase of the nationwide telephone strike was reported imminent today. The coast-to-coast strike of 300,000 telephone workers affiliated with the National Federation of Telephone Workers continued in its third day with service reduced to 20 per cent of normal for the Bell system's 26 million telephone subscribers. Could Set A Pattern Settlement of the long distance phase of the walkout, involving 20,000 members of the American union of telephone workers, could set a pattern for adjusting disputes between other N.F.T.W. affiliates and the A.T.T.'s subsidiaries, federal conciliators hoped. The N.F.T.W. policy committee delayed a scheduled meeting from 11 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the expectation that the proposed long distance settlement would be ready for submission at the later hour. The conciliators called representative of the A.T.&T. and the long distance workers into session at noon today to complete details of the impending settlement. But final acceptance was delayed, it was said, because the union lacked funds to pay its share of arbitration expenses and because the labor deference underwriting expense payments by financially weak N.E.T.W. affiliates. Gose To Agreement Informed sources said that the A.T&T and long distance unions were virtually agreed on a government commitment for set-tup supplies. Sunday, night Since the strike started Monday, the parties in the long distance negotiations have written an entire new contract covering 101 issues. All of the issues have been compromised, including five of the N.F.-T.W.'s national bargaining demands. Robert Kurtz Fined $10By Student Council Robert Kurtz, engineering freshman, was fined $10 Tuesday night by the student court for destroying University property. A telegram from Jean Moore, defense counsel for Ivan Moody and Edwin T. Mahood, business colors charged with illegally transferring parking licenses, asked stay of sentence. This was granted by the court. At next student court session April 15 Mahood and Moody as well as George Cozad and Ralph Dunn, College freshmen who pleaded guilty to similar charges, will be charged to therown at Brown, Jr. College sophomore, charged with breaking library rules, will also be continue next session. Jim Richey, secretary of the intramural staff, testified as witness that Kurtz in driving his jeep over the intramural baseball diamond had caused enough damage to require the service of one man for four hours to rake it out. Delmas Richards, freshman engineer, testified in defense of Kurtz 3 Delegates Attend Women's Conference Three members of the University Women's Executive council will attend the National Associated Women Students conference at the University of Minnesota Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. They leave today. Those attending are, Anne Scott Stirley Wellborn, College juniors and Joan Anderson, Education junior. In preparation for the conference, the delegates prepared several posters dealing with the various forms, styles and programs of the different universities. Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, will leave for the conference tonight. 'The Face Is Familiar...' B. He's 20 years old, measures 5 feet 8 inches from head to toe, and for the past year has been president of the Y.M.C.A. Selden is his home town, but in Lawrence he lives in Battenfeld hall. This is his first year in the medical school and some day it will be Dr. ___. ☆ ☆ Monday's caricature was of Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women. All In 5 Houses Give to Drive Five organized houses have earned the "100 Per Cent" citation during the 1947 World War II memorial fund campaign, Bruce Bathurst, student chairman, said today. All members of these houses contributed to the fund. The five houses are Pi Beta Phi, Kappa Alpha Theta, Delta Delta Delta, Sigma Phi pEslon, and Wright Place. The first four have become "Fellringers" by contributing more than one hundred dollars each. Representatives from all organized houses will meet at 5 p. m. tomorrow in 222 Frank Strong hall to report on contributions made and to discuss what aid they may need to complete solicitations. ten students have become "Bellringers" during the current campaign by contributing twenty-five dollars or more. Bathurst said They are Orville Roberts, Otis Hill George and James DePriest, Mrs. William Overton, and Mrs. Paul Warner, Donald Wind, Mary Breed, Anne Scott and Mr. Brady. Journalism Faculty To Teach In Wichita Five faculty members of the William Allen White School of Journalism will offer instruction in magazine and feature writing at the Wichita extension center beginning April 18. The first session will be conducted by Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism and chairman of the department. His subject will be finding ideas, slanting to publishers, and study of manuscript markets. Fort Worth. —(UF)—A member of the United Nations Relief and Resilience administration today filed suit for $10,000 against a Fort Worth livestock firm because a mule bit the end off his finger, while he was inspecting mules to be bought for UNRSA use overseas. On April 23, Gordon A. Sabine, assistant professor of journalism will teach the techniques of the informative article Ray B. West, associate professor of English, will discuss the narrative article May 2. Emil L. Telfel, assistant professor of journalism, will teach writing of the first person story, May 9; and John R. Malone, instructor in journalism, will discuss the interview article May 16. Mule Bites—Finger Gone Victim Files $10,000 Suit The plaintiff's petition claimed that the mules shown them by the defendants were represented to be, among other things, "gentle with no vicious habits." PSGL To Elect Its Candidates At Convention PSGL, Independent men's political party, will hold a primary convention at 7 p.m. Thursday in the Union ballroom, to elect party candidates for the general election. The primary is open to all Independent men. The following candidates have been nominated by petitions. President of All Student Council, Bruce Bathurst, Duane Postlethwaite, George Caldwell; ASC District I, Robert Campbell, Robert Casad, Calvin Cooley, Wallace Grundeman, Martin Litwin, Jack Pringle, Hardy Schuerman, Frank Stannard, Edward Stolenwerck, William Tincher, Austin Turney, Jr.; ASC District II, Richard Heiny, Jack Hollingsworth, Donald Kiper, Craig Ramsay, John Marggrave, Leigh Wellborn. James White; ASC District III, Eugene Cement, Charles Dillon, Arnold Englund, Carroll McCue; ASC District IV, Robert Andrews; Senior class officers, Allan Cromley, Clarence Francisco; Junior Class officers, Ralph Moberley, Schuyler Brookfield; Sophomore class officers, Charles Penny, Harold Cogswell, Robert Davis. Additional nominations may be made from the floor by any Independent man for the positions of class officers from among those candidates who are defeated for Student Council positions. Expect Lilienthal 'O.K.' Washington - (UP) - Senate opponents of David E. Lilienthal conceded today that he would be confirmed to head the Atomic Energy commission before nightfall. The senate was to vote today on the nominations of Mr. Lilienthal, four other commission members, and the manager of the agency. Rent Controis Relaxed Washington—(UP)—The OPA today further relaxed its rent controls over hotels and motor courts and made tourist homes eligible for decontrol. Langley's Body Uncovered Collyer Mystery Dies With Hermit Brothers News of the World New York—(UP)—The body of Langley Collyer was found at 3:30 p.m. Tuesday beneath the debris on the second floor of his old home on Fifth avenue, only a few feet from the spot where the body of his brother Homer was found on March 21. Pittsburgh — (UIP) — Hopes for peaceful settlement of the CIO United Steelworkers' demands on U.S. Steel corporation dwindled today. Union officials reportedly will consider strike action to enforce their demands next week. The union's extended contract with U.S. Steel will expire April 30. There was not even running water in the old house when police finally entered through a window to find the body of Homer hunched on the floor. There were newspapers by the hundreds. Langley Collyer had saved them for years in the belief that Homer would recover his sight and read them. Athes-(UP)—The Greek army announced that it opened a widespread offensive at dawn today against guerrilla bands in northern Greece. The air force and fleet are in action against the guerillas, the government announced. War Begins In Greece No one ever knew what drove the brothers, both well educated and of a family which was well known in New York social circles, to retire from the world. Communist Leader Cited For Contempt of Congress They did not pay their gas and electric bills, and the services were shut off. Then Langley Collyer took the engine out of the old Ford, and rigged a homemade generator which worked for a time. No Running Water Since Homer Collyer's body was found in the weird old house police had been seeking Langley Collyer. Homer Collyer, blind and paralyzed, starved to death, and police believe that Langley had died some days before his brother. Steelworkers May Strike They had no visitors. They left the house only at night, and infrequently then. They did not buy food, but accepted handouts. It was said that they lived almost entirely on oranges and peanut butter sandwiches. Washington—(UP) — The House Unamerican Activities committee today cited Eugene Dennis, General Secretary of the Communist party in the United States, for contempt of congress. He had refused to appear today before the committee which had subpoenaed him to testify as to his "real name." No Running Water They theorized that Langley Collier was trapped when he accidentally set off one of the many "booby-traps" he had constructed to stop any intruders. Police found such things as the chassis of an old Model-T Ford, 14 pianos, hstogts, guitars, medical books which had been owned by the father of the hermits, who was a famed physician. Moscow, (UP)—Secretary of State George C. Marshall today proposed to the council of foreign ministers the creation of a special boundary commission to recommend revision of the prewar German-Polish boundary and economic arrangement for the allocation of raw materials of the former eastern German area for the benefit of all Europe. The brothers, whose estate was zestimated at from $75,000 up,—re- tired about 39 years ago. Left House At Night Find Cars. Piano A detective said that the body was so badly crushed beneath the debris that it would be impossible to determine the cause of death until a medical examination was made. Marshell Asks Revision Of German-Polish Boundary Kansas Drivers License Bill Goes to Governor Today Topeka—(UP) The state printer will send the new Kansas drivers license for the first time are to be Carlson today. He may veto it. In his message to the legislature at the start of the session, the Governor asked for a statute to check the fitness of the state's motor vehicle drivers, and the condition of all cars and trucks. Under the drivers license act only the 20,000 persons who apply for a license for the first time aet to be tested. Texas Outlaws Closed Shop Austin, Texas—(UP) -Texas today became the 12th state in the nation to outlaw the closed shop, Gov. Beauford Jester announced that the measure "would not destroy union labor oor collective bargaining." Carlson Vetoes Gas Act Topека—(UP)—Gov. Frank Carlson today vetoed an act which would have permitted the Kansas Corporation commission to fix the price of natural gas at the wellhead in this state. He objected to an amendment which was unconstitutional he said. 27 Killed In Crash - Caracas, Venezuela — (UP) - At lease 27 persons were killed Tuesday when a Douglas DC-3 plane of the Venezuelan aerospace line crashed in Guatire, Miranda state. Most of those aboard were said to be Venezuelans. KU As Russia Rules Mock UN For the first time in the history of Oklahoma A. and M. University, mixed racial groups met on the campus for the student United Na- conference April 4 and 5. Two hundred delegates from Kansas, Oklahoma, Arkansas, Texas, and Missouri Universities participated. The K. U. delegation, headed by Dale Judy, represented Russia. Other members were William Tincher, Glenn Varenhorst, and Delmer Harris. Russia Walks Out Russia, in the person of Delmer William Tincher as Russian delegate to the Atomic Energy committee forcing U. S. acceptance of Russian proposals by a walkout. Varenhorst won his points by parliamentary procedure on the Economic and Finance committee, deal with UNITAR and international trade and JABO. Russia, in teh person of Delmar Harris, withdrew from the social and cultural committee, after pushing through a Russian-U. S. compromise on problems dealing with world culture. Trustee Proposals Passed The Trusteeships committee, was unprepared, and Russian proposal were easily pushed through. Dale Judy said. Proposals dealt with the implementing of trusteeships in such areas as South Africa. The group was sponsored jointly by the International Relations club and the Y.M.C.A. Ned Linegar, Y. M.C.A. secretary, accompanied the delegation as faculty advisor. Buehler To Speak At Speech Meeting F. C. Buehler, professor of speech, will appear in a panel discussion, "Communications in Industry," at a speech convention to be held at Columbia, Mo., April 18 and 19. Sponsored by the Central States Speech association, the convention will include delegates from 13 midwestern states. It will include discussions of ethics in communication, pre-requisites to the effective teach-in, speech correction, oral interpretation, and communications in industry. Professor Buehler's part of the discussion will be "Trends in Public Speaking Among Business and Professional People." The speech departments of the University of Missouri, Stephens college, and Christian college will act as hosts for the two-day meeting. Effects of folvite or folic acid were observed by student members of the American Pharmaceutical association and by Lederle Laboratories April 1. Students Observe Effects Of Acid Falvite or follic acid is a new synthetic vitamin used in the treatment of various anemias. It was first discovered in mushrooms, spinach, and other leafy vegetables. Taken in tablet form, folvite builds up the immature red blood cells and increases appetite, and usually restores a patient to good health six months. PT Club Sees Film The Physical Therapy club met in the projection room of Fraser Tuesday, to see the picture, "Accent on Use." University DAILY KANSAN Thursday, April 10, 1947 STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS 44th Year No.116 Lawrence, Kansas Party Heads Toss Penials, Charges Of Political Plot By BILL MAYER Presidents of Pachacamac and Pro-operative parties flatly deny any se- However, the president of P.S.G.L. says that his party is convinced that here is. Little Man On Campus By Bibl PERFUME PERFUME Co-ED perfume It's from Spain LA Mom Hunt! IT KILLS EM! $50.00 "What would you suggest?" The charge that a secret deal exs was made by John Rader, forml- Progressive president who resigni April 1. He said that fraternity members in the two parties are trying to split the Independent vote. "What would you suggest?" President Donald Ong of Pachacamayo said that his party will not like part in "any secret alliances with either of the other two parties. "We feel that student government only further weakens our official position." Ong told the university Daily Kansan. "So far I the accusations have been directed toward our party but we have made none in return. Paul Barker, elected Progressive resident to succeed Rader, insisted pat-Rader's charges of a Progresive-Pachacamac alliance "cannot be instantiated by him or anyone else." he added that, the Progressive par- "was started by members of six aternities that were fed up withachacamea's unorthodox methods. "It seems rather impossible thatdependent members of our party,ho have attended meeting aftereating, could not discover any hid-plot, if there were one," Barkerared. "We have at last successfully effected a Greek-Indepentunion and our opponents arevolous." President George Caldwell of P.G.L. said that his party is "thoroughly convinced that Rader's barges are true. "We of this party believe that achacamac has a secret agreement with Progressive, in order to split the Independent vote in the coming election." Caldwell told the University Daily Kansan. BULLETIN It Used To Be Sand Dunes, Now It's Gonna Be Rocks Washington. (UP)—Federal Judge T. Alan Goldsborough said today that John L. Lewis and the United Mine Workers have failed to comply in good faith with the no-strike mandate of the supreme court. Judge Goldsborough granted a government request for a two-week delay in returning $2,800,000 to the union. The supreme court had ordered this money refunded if the union compiled fully with its mandate against a coal strike. "Leave the dunes to Eastwood," is the advice given by a character in ne of Robert Nathan's novels. The reference is to the paintings of sand dunes which have become almost a trademark for Raymond Eastwood, associate professor of drawing and painting. Professor Eastwood began painting the dunes of New England in 1924 defiance of critics who for years $ \textcircled{*} $ had argued that these sand hills couldn't be transferred to canvas. "Don't be transferred to canvas." "That attitude angered me, so I vent out to be at the dams a try it have been at it ever since," he said. The small, soft-voiced, New Enlander has done a little of everything. After finishing his schooling he spent some time in New York working as a painter on stage sets. The work was fast and hard. Painted Stage Sets From New York Eastwood went o Hollywood to take a fling at the movies, and (he dropped his head in feigned shame as he admitted his) finally played a few bit-parts. Then Came The Army Just as he was getting settled at teaching along came the war, and the professor became a G. I. Having studied camouflage while in school, Eastwood managed to get enrolled in the army's course. He made a perfect score on the en-ence exam, completed the course, and made a perfect score on the final. "The army saw that I had made no progress, so they transferred me to photographic intelligence," he said. How about plans for the future? "Ive painted all the grains of sand that I want to," he replied "this summer I am planning to start in Utah and do rock formations. I spent one summer out in that country and I really like it." ☆ ☆ M. C. D'ALVINI KU Quonset Hut Work Stopped By AFL Strike Picketing started this morning on the building project back of Frank Strong. Laborers are striking against the Constant Construction company, contractors for the project, for a wage increase. PROF. RAYMOND EASTWOOD Laborers are asking for $12 \frac{1}{2}$ cents an hour raise. The present pay is 85 cents an hour. The only work there today was the unloading of trucks belonging to companies not affected by the strike. Union pickets said that as soon as this is completed they expected all work to cease. Company officials made no comment on the strike. No Kansas students will be refused enrollment next fall because of crowded conditions at the University, James K. Hitt, registrar, is telling high school seniors throughout the state this week. All Kansas Students May Enroll Next Fall He covered the southeastern area of the state last week. Mr. Hitt will be at Dodge City tonight. Wednesday he was at Pratt high school, where he spent the evening with the Pratt alumni group, headed by Boli Farmer. Mr. Hitt left Monday for a trip through the southwestern part of Kansas. He will return to Lawrence Monday. Three Car Smash-Up Near Bailey Chem Lab There were no injuries according to Robert Corwin, University patrolman, in the three way traffic accident on Jayhawk drive in front of Bailey Wednesday. Cars belonging to Harry Lees, Fine Arts sophomore, R. W. Weltman, and Clyde Channel, of Lawrence were damaged. Lees, according to the patrolman drove his car from a parking place, collided with the car driven by Weltman. The impact threw the Lees car back into Channel's machine. Twister Takes 109 Lives In Texas And Oklahoma Hundreds Injured In Area; Loss To Exceed $1,000,000 Woodward, Okla.—(UP)—The known dead in a tornado that slashed a bloody 150-mile path across the Texas and Oklahoma border Wednesday night rose to 109 today, and unconfirmed reports of fatalities ranged as high as 152. The known dead included: Woodward: 83 bodies counted by undertaker; 36 of them identified. Union To Vote On'Agreement' Washington. (UP)—Representatives of the American Telephone & Telegraph company and the American Union of Telephone workers today completed a tentative "understanding" for settlement of the long distance dispute in the four-day telephone strike. Union president John J. Moran emphasized that the agreement must be approved by the top policy committee of the national federation of telephone workers before it can be signed in contract form. Committee Votes Today He took the "understanding" before the 49-member union policy committee. A vote was expected within a few hours. Government conciliators hoped a long line agreement might set the pattern for a national settlement. The union leader said he would "make no recommendation" to the policy committee about accepting or rejecting the proposal. reflecting the position He said it represented the company's "final offer" on the union's 10 major demands. It was understood that the company proposal includes national arbitration of the long distance workers' four money demands and a settlement of the Union's six other demands. The demands involved are a $12 weekly general wage increase; elimination of area differentials; reduction of the promotion schedule from eight to five years for the top brackets; and, town classifications. Seek $12 Wage Hike The other demands include union shop and dues checkoff, job descriptions, union jurisdiction over work, leaves of absence for union officers and improved vacations and pensions G. S. Dring, assistant vice president of A. T. & T., said the "tentative agreement" applies only to the long lines dispute and does not cover the other 48 striking unions. WEATHER Kansas—partly cloudy today thunderstorms extreme east, this morning somewhat cooler. Fair and cooler tonight. Friday fair and warmer. The office of the armed forces credit committee, 121 Frank Strong hall, is open from 8 a.m. to noon Monday through Saturday. Any veteran interested in obtaining academic credit for basic training or for service schools completed in the armed forces may apply for this credit. Veterans May Apply For Academic Credit He should submit with his application a photostatic or a certified copy of one of the following forms: 100 Army; 553 Navy or Coast Guard; 78-PD Marine Corps and a transcript or any official record of training in the merchant marine. Higgins, Tex.: 17 bodies identified; Fight more missing and feared dead. Eight more missing and teared dead, Canadian, Tex.: Nine bodies identified, including five from Glazier, Tex. Oklahoma highway patrol chief H. B. Lowery, and Red Cross relief officials predicted the total in Woodward would pass the 100 mark. Unconfirmed Toll At 152 The Texas Highway patrol and Red Cross officials reported to Gov. Beauford Jester at Austin that latest estimates placed the two-state death total at 152. These reports could not be confirmed elsewhere, and there was a possibility of duplication. Hardest hit was Woodward, where the number of injured was placed at more than 500, and 2,500 to 3,500 made homeless. Property damage was expected to total considerably more than one million dollars. Unofficial estimates placed the loss at Woodward at that figure. Heavy damage was reported also at Higgins, Glazier, and Canadian, all in Texas. An emergency line was strung to the Woodward switchboard about 8:30 a.m. today, re-establishing communications contact with the rest of the world. Emergency Line Strung Although stunned citizens reported the storm struck about 9 p.m., the big clock in the Baker hotel had stopped at 8:42 p.m. The twister slashed through rural areas near Shattuck and Gage, Okla. with unconfirmed reports of fatalities. All communications lines to those towns were still out, and the destruction there had not been determined. Floeds Hammer Rescue Flood waters hampered rescue activities at Higgins where torrential rains followed the death-dealing wind. A radio announcer at Amarillo reported from the scene that there had been some looting in Higgins. Hail as large as golf balls damaged buildings and crops in the wake of the storm at White Deer, Tex. Primer To Help Voter In Elections A voter's primer is being prepared by the Y.W.C.A. and will be distributed before the next campus election. One primer will inform the voter what each of the political parties stand for and will stress the principle of voting for the individual instead of the party. It will be decided by a vote of UUPU and a student in his voting and explain the problems confronting student government. The group on campus problems of the Y.W.C.A. is in charge of the publication. Members of the group are Lois Thompson, chairman; Leah Uling, Jane Keith, Carolyn Carter, and Jean Parrott. Want To Be An Editor? Apply At Jayhawker Office "The 1948 Jayhawker magazine needs an editor and business manager. Apply now," said Richard Carman, present business manager. Applicants must address their letters to Karl Klooz, chairman of the Jayhawker advisory board, and should leave them at the Student organization window of the business office not later than April 15. Three references, including two faculty members, must be placed in these letters. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 10,1 OFFICIAL BULLETIN April 10.1947 Alpha Phi Omega meeting at 8 tonight in room 200 Frank Strong. All pledges required to attend. 宋 早 杂 --will speak on archaeology. Those who will should sign bulletin in Snow hall. *** Reorganizational meeting of Dove staff, 7:30 p.m. Monday, 210 Frank Strong. Anyone else interested in writing for the Dove also invited. Westminster cabinet supper meeting Broad. Business meeting to follow. *** Quack club at 7:30 tonight. K U. Amateur Radio club regular meeting, 5 p.m. today, 205 Electrical Engineering lab. *** Today is deadline for ordering senior invitations and folders. * * Geology club meeting, 7:30 to night, 426 Lindley, Dr. Walter Kollmorgen will speak on "Land Reclamation in the Mississippi Valley." ** University forum, 4 p.m. today. Fraser theater, sponsored by the Y.M.C.A. and department of sociology. Dr. Chandra-Kebhar of India will speak on "An Indian View of Empire." *** Campus-community meeting, 7:30 tonight. Parish house Congregational church, 9th and Vermont, sponsored by Y.M.C.A. L.LP.D. and department of sociology. Dr. Chandra-Sekhar will speak on "The Problem of India's Minorities." YMCA movie forum originally scheduled for today cancelled to permit attendance of Dr. Chandra-Sekhar's lecture. ※ ※ ※ Kan-Do staff meeting 5 p.m. today in Dean Werner's office. Others interested welcome to attend. * * Forensic League meeting at 7:30 tonight in the Little Theater, Green hall. 未 未 未 Pi Lambda Theta coffee at 8 tonight in the Pine room. Sweater and skirt. \* \* \* Mathematics club meeting at 4 p.m. today in 206 Frank Strong. Dale Rummer will present the program Snow Zoology club meeting at 7:30 tonight in 206 Snow. Dr. Spaulding * * Kappa Phi meeting at 7 p.m. at the Methodist church tomorrow. Scavanger hunt will follow meeting. Wesley Foundation members invited. \* \* \* Kappa chapter of Phi Sigma regular monthly meeting at 12 noon tomorrow in 301 Snow. Election of officers and installation. Bring lunches. ** ** College club of Trinity Episcopal church meeting at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at the church. Prof. E. H. Hollands will be the speaker. *** Unitarian Liberal group will meet at 7 p.m. Sunday in the Pine room of the Union building. Speaker will be Jim Putnam, former member of state legislature now working with bill drafting department. Y. M.C.A.-Y.W.C.A. religious seminar series will meet at 4 p.m. Monday in the Pine room of the Union. Professor Sandelius will be the speaker. ★ ★ ★ *** Applications for position of manager of the student directory may be submitted at the student organizations window of the Business office until April 16. Graduate record examination: 1-5 p.m., May 5; 8:30-12:30, May 6. Applications due at Guidance bureau, 2A Frank Strong, April 17. 赤 邪 雨 * * Persons desiring to apply for positions of editor and business manager of 1948 Jayhawker must leave letter, addressed to Karl Klooz, chairman of the Jayhawker advisory board, at the student organization window of the business office not later than April 15. Letters should include three references, two, names of faculty members, and the third a past employer or friend. All students who expect to attend the summer session or return for the fall semester should sign up in the Registrar's office according to the following schedule: Today, B; tomorrow, D-F; Monday, H; Tuesday, G-K; Wednesday, L-Q; Thursday, M; April 18, P-R; April 21, S; April 22, T-Z; April 23, all those who could not come on scheduled days. *** *** Applications for the 1948 Kansas Engineer staff are due April 15. They are to be submitted to room 201, Marvin hall. The University campus will soon include part of the Canadian Rockies. K. U. students, the first collegiate group to explore this area, will travel to their classes by plane during the summer session, Prof. L. R. Lauden, head of the geology department, said today. K.U. Campus Extends To Canadian Rockies A field trip, carrying eight hours college credit, will be conducted by the department for advanced graduate students. Unexplored portions of these mountains will serve as classrooms. Students will travel by car to Grand Prairie, Alberta. From there they will fly to the base camp in the mountains. Classes will begin June 23, and close August 13. Professor Lauden said that the trip will be especially interesting to students of petroleum geology because the Canadian Rockies have many geological characteristics of an oil producing area. The trip will cost between $225 and $325 for each student, Professor Lauden said. Students will do their own cooking. Food will be flown in and will be issued at cost. The University will furnish all camping equipment needed on the trip. Professor Lauden, a licensed pilot, owns the amphibious plane that will be used for the trip. They're Not So Pleasant Down In Pleasantville Pleasantville, Pa.—(UP) — Residents of this northernmost Venango county community are ill-pleased with things in general. They have asked for a new zoning ordinance, a systematic plan for the care of garbage, better police protection, improved fire protection and more street lights. Call K.U. 25 with your news. 1930 FIRST NATIONAL BANK INTRODUCING SEE US ABOUT BERRY TOURS OR DUDE RANCHES. AIR TRAVEL SERVICE Fly home . . . or, on your summer vacation, fly to Colorado Springs, California, Mexico even Managua, Nicaragua! THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK OF LAWRENCE TRAVEL AGENCY MISS ROSE GIESELMAN, Manager 8th and Mass. Phone 30 Jeep Leaves No Scent, Easier To Trap Foxes Charleston. W. Va.—(U.P.) —A new use for the war-time jeep has been found by a West Virginia game protector, who employs it to set traps for foxes without leaving the scent of man on the ground. Harrison Shobe says he has had much better results than when he walked around the area. COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals - Short Orders Sandwiches Open 5:30-12:30 67 3-day Cleaning Service 4-day Laundry Service . 24-hour Shoe Repair Leather and Garment Dyeing a Specialty. Village Cleaners SUNFLOWER, KANSAS Opposite School Western Union----8 a.m.-9 p.m. DE SOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH Budding GALLAGHER MOTORS Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL Adveritisers Prefer The Kansan To Reach Hill Studen IT TAKES TEAMWORK For instance, it takes planning—sometimes five years ahead by your electric company's engineers and purchasing personnel to provide material for new lines, new turbines and other equipment to meet your increased demands for low-cost electric service. And even with the best of planning it is impossible to avoid the shortages of material that hamper all types of construction in these post-war days. It takes teamwork and experience, with every man knowing his part of the job, for a line crew to set the pole and string the wires to bring you electric service. And it also takes the "behind-the-lines" cooperation of all the employees of your Electric Company, each doing his own job at which he is highly skilled, to make the stringing of the lines and the setting of the pole possible—and the bringing of more and better electric service to more users! Yes, It takes teamwork to provide you Good Electric Service 24 hours a day—the teamwork of skilled employees—your friends and neighbors—and efficient management of your home- operated Electric Company working under the free enterprise system to supply your electric needs. K The Kansas Electric Power Company THE INTERNATIONAL SERVICE RIL 10,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THRES Belles AND THEIR Weddings awford-Garling mrs. Louis J. Paetow of Ross, lif, announces the marriage of daughter, Dorothea Garling, to rd H. Crawford, son of Pro- rd H. Crawford, son of P. Du- rth Lawrence C. Craw- ford of Lawrence. The ceremony took place in the ninth chapel Monday afternoon, the Rev. C. Fosberg Hughes of Plymouth Congregational church initiating. Members of the family d Prof. and Mrs. David L. Patson attended the wedding. The de was given in marriage by Prosor Patterson, a long time friend the bride's father, the late Prosor Paetow, historian at the University of California. The bride attended the University economics Department of Radcliffe California and is a graduate of thelege, Cambridge, Mass. For the six several years, she had been an promist for the federal government Washington, D.C., and is now attached to the bureau of labor statis-. During the war, she was with Combined Chiefs of Staff Mr. Crawford is the son of Professor C. C. Crawford of the University story department. After graduation from the University, the brideeom was a graduate student andstructor at the Universities of Chicago and Minnesota. For the past years, he has been an economist Washington, D.C. Before the war, he served with the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce, the bureau of census, and the treasury department. During the war, he was with the air production board and the Combined Chiefs of Staff. He has now turned to the department of commerce. --school said today. This will be under fellowship arrangement similar to the French exchange by which Clyde Mcos, Herington, is studying at the university of Paris and Roger Leompe is a French student here. The exchange student chosen will tend the University of Uppsala,und, Goteburg, or Stockholm. Eight american schools participate in this exchange, which is arranged through the American-Scandinavian foundation. (1) SOCIALLY SPEAKING Kappa Kappa Gamma Installation Kappa Kappa Gamma recently field installation of the following officers: Mary Margaret Morris, president; Mary Slater, vice-president; Mara Goodrich, pledge captain; Betsy Peidley, scholarship chairman; Nancy Goering, house president; Elen Piller, treasurer; Elizabeth Siers, membership chairman; Patricia Slover, registrar; Barbara Olson, corresponding secretary; Nina Green, recording secretary; Martha Laffer, social chairman; and Harriet Wadell, key correspondent. A University student will attend Swedish university next fall, and Swedish student will be sent here, can J. H. Nelson of the Graduate school said today. This will be under fellowship arrangement similar to Funds for fees and living expenses will be given the students. Each must have qualified for an undergraduate degree, but there are no re-rictions as to what field he shall study in his adopted school. University Daily Kansan all subscription: $3 a semester, $450 a ar. In Lawrence add $1 a semester post- Published in Lawrence, Kan. every mondday during the school year, at daundays and Saturdays with holidays, and during period periods. Entered as a class master Sept. 17, 1919, at the stice Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of arch 3, 1879. COED'S CORNER Ex-WAC Mess Sgt. Long Loves Cock Fights, Is Home Ec Major Friends consider Anne Long "the most fabulous character that ever hit K.U." From a family whose members include professional actors, a former overseer on an Hawaiian sugar plantation, an agricultural research worker, and a forester, Anne has carried on the tradition of going places and doing things. Her career really began in November, 1942, when she enlisted in the WAC's. She was stationed successively at Fort Des Moines, Iowa; Ft. Oglethorpe, Ga., and at Ft. Jackson, S.C., where she served as mess sergeant. Served On New Guinea In August, 1944, Anne left via Camp Stoneman, Calif., for service overseas. "The first stop was Buna, New Guinea. Later, we moved into the Philippines as the final battles were being fought," Anne related. "Living conditions were, of course, terrible. For one thing the army taught me to grin at difficulty. In the army one has to laugh when the going gets tough or go berserk. As I look back, I realize it was wonderful character training. "My job overseas was statistician in quartermaster requirements. We estimated the amount of clothing and other supplies needed for the troops in our theater of action. All the South Pacific invasion forces were equipped by us." She Loved Cock Fights Anne told of the sight-seeing done by the WAC's when off-duty. "I loved the cock fights at San Fernando, New Guinea. San Fernando is famed for its cock fights." "In the Philippines, we used to visit Santo Tomas, Manila, oldest university in the Pacific and site of the Japanese concentration camp. We had informative talks with people who had been interred there during Japanese occupation." In November, 1945, Anne's company was shipped back to the states. Discharged in December, she is returned to her home in Kansas City. Mo., and the dual role of a Fred Harvey girl and a worker in the federal treasury department. Anne is a charter member of the American Legion Post 465 in Kansas City, one of the few women's posts in the country. This fall, she came to K. U. to major in home economics; she hopes to do experimental research with foods. Only Disabled Woman Vet This ex-WAC holds the unique position of being the only "disabled" woman veteran on the hill. "I'm really quite well, she contends," "Just have a touch of recurrent malaria I picked up in the Philippines. From the amount of quinine capsules I consume, I really should look like a capsule by now." Anne's most prized possession is a thorough-bred cocker spaniel, black as coal. "Her name is Colleen Faulette, which is Frenchy enough for any aristocrat. She is three months and a week old to the day. And she's the most colorful dog on the campus. She's got a rhinestone collar and a red-satin bow." The appearance of Colleen Paulette's owner? Well, fabulous Anne is quite tall, has brown hair, and Irish blue eyes which, folks say, crinkle at the corners when she laughs. The Cook's Pie-Eyed Brazil, Ind. (UP)—Mrs. Mildred Boor was charged with assault and battery in circuit court, Mrs. Boor, a cook in a Brazil restaurant, had a nice gooey pie in her hands when a fellow worker insulted her, she said. She let fly and scored a bullseye. 10 Evening in Paris FRIDAY 11th at 9 O'CLOCK, UNION BUILDING Sponsored by the Ku Ku Club Featured Entertainment The French Can-Can by Tau Sigma Apache Dance Comic Skit by Local Talent Tickets $1.00 per Couple Weaver After Easter Apparel Clearance CONTINUES Reductions Great Selections Easy SUITS Values to $49.75 - Now $28.00 Values to $59.75 - Now $38.00 Values to $69.75 - Now $48.00 COATS Values to $35.00 - Now $18.00 Values to $45.00 - Now $28.00 Values to $55.00 - Now $38.00 Values to $69.75 - Now $48.00 DRESSES Values to $ 9.95 - Now $ 5.00 Values to $13.95 - Now $ 7.00 Values to $17.95 - Now $11.00 Values to $25.00 - Now $14.00 Values to $35.00 - Now $18.00 Values to $39.00 - Now $24.00 Values to $59.00 - Now $28.00 NOT ALL INCLUSIVE All Sales Final—No Approvals, Exchanges or Refunds PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 10,19 SPOTLIGHT SPORTS By BILL CONBOY Baseball Coach Vic Bradford is not the only diamond boss in the Big Six who has been bothered with weather troubles this spring. The Iowa State squad under L. C. (Cap) Crawford was out last Friday against the Iowa Teachers with only seven days of outdoor practice. The consistent rain at Ames continued when showers fell both Friday and Saturday to force postponement of the contests. They will be replayed April 21 and 22. * * Both Kansas State and Iowa State have cage stars from the recently completed season appearing in their starting lineups for baseball play. Jack Dean, speedy Wildcat guard, is slated as a starting pitcher for the Manhattan crew. Don Paulsen, on most second team all-Big Six basketball selections, will hold down first base for the Ames nine. \* \* \* Joe Golding, 26-year-old Oklahoma halfback, gave indications in the Sooner spring football practice that he will be harder than ever to handle by the time fall rolls around. He galloped to nine touchdowns in the four spring practice games held down in Norman. The most improved player on the Oklahoma squad in the opinion of lead coach Charles "Bud" Wilkinson. Gene Heape, end right from Nowata. Ed Kreick, third string fullback for the Sooners last fall, cracked the opposing line for almost 100 yards in the final practice scrimmage. He burns "Buddy" Jones, a ground power "letter of the Oklahoma track team," worked his way up to a starting left half position in the same game. Jones will face stifler competition next fall from Dave Wallace, out of Mount Sinai and Charles Saratt, who ran wild for Sooners at the close of last season. Kansas Relay Sidelights Three of the greatest football coaches in the history of the American game have served as head referee for the Kansas Relays in past years. They were Knute Rocke, Fielding H. Yost, and Amos Alonzo Stagg. One of the biggest single events ever run in the Kansas Relays was the 1938 invitational mile. This race was broadcast to the nation over a nationwide network. The contestants were Don Lash, Archie San Romani, Gene Venske, and Glenn Cunningham. Sam Francis, newly appointed head football coach at Kansas State, participated in the Relays in 1937. He broke the shot put record that year with a heave of 51 feet, 6 inches. He then shattered two years later by Elmer Jackduck who set the present Relays record at 32 feet, $ \frac{1}{2} $ inches. Net Squad Plays Nebraska Friday The' varsity tennis team will play the first home match of the season 2:30 p.m. Friday against the University of Nebraska sued in a nonconference tilt on the stadium concrete courts. The match will consist of five singles and two doubles. Dick Richards and Roy Shoaf will start for the University team, Coach Gordon Sabine said. Other possible starters include Frank Gage, Sam Mazon, Bob Barnes, Hervey MacFerran, and Charles Carson. Shoaf, Barnes, and Carson are lettermen from last year's team. A special scoreboard on which the spectators can follow match progress has been built by the University buildings and grounds department. It is reported to be the only one of its kind. The match will be postponed or cancelled if the weather is rainy. The University team will play Washburn at Topeka Saturday. Improved Newcomers To Press Regular Backs For Football Spots New faces appear from time to time in the top eleven which head football coach George Sauer is whipping into shape on the Jayhawker practice field. Last season's starting lineup will return intact for the fall campaign, but newcomers and squadmen from 1946 who have shown improvement will be pressing the regulars for first string soots. Here is the backfield picture as it lines up at present: At quarterback, Lynn McNutt and back, Lylin McNutt and "Red" Hogan are being pressed by T. A. Scott of Kilgore, Texas. In a practice game March 29, Scott tossed two touchdown passes to end Darrell Norris to help the "Whites" defeat the "Reds" 27 to 26. Hogan's Passes Click Hogan, the fiery redhead who rolled up 229 aerial yards in only six quarters last season, tossed two scoring passes, one to end Otto Schnellbacher and the other to end Dave Schmidt in the practice game. Cecil "Tip" Mester, 1946 squadman, rounds out the top four quarterbacks. Mester has shown steady improvement this spring and will likely see more action this fall. Evans Strengths Left Half The left halfback position appears solid with the return of Ray Evans, captain of the 1946 eleven and holder all-Big Six and all-America honors, its capably backed by another 1946 veteran, speedster Bud French. Dick Gilman, a 190-pounder from Merriam, and Charley Moffett, returned all-Big tailback of the 1944 season, are pushing Evans and French for their positions. In the opening practice game of the spring season, Gilman played long touchdown sprints, ranging from 40 to 55 years in length. Behind the top four, Stricker of St. Louis and Fisher of Topeka have been the progress by playing heads up ball in crimmages. Right Half Wall Mauer Right Half Well Manned The right halfback position is manned by Dick Bertuzzi, deceptive running back of two seasons. A weak ankle which gave the player from Arma trouble in 1946 appears to have healed. Close behind Bertuzzi is Leroy Robison, converted fullback of the 1945 team. Robison made a touchdown for the "Reds" in a practice game on an 18-yard run. He has shownprom-in in the spring sessions. Dale Mahone of McDonald have been substituting for him and Robison, Foster, Brimer, and Price complete the right half picture. Baker Performs With Skill The fullback spot has seen a lot of experimenting during the spring drills. Hoyt Baker, husky veteran from last year has pieased the coaches with his performances. Forrest Griffith, converted from right half, has been flashing promise in this position. Frank Pattete from Smith Center has been going well after a late start. These three men have the edge of one year's playing experience, but the all around performances of Ralph Brown and Roger Yost have proven them strong contenders. Brown, from Newton, played in the third string bucking spot for Oklahoma A. and M. last year. Yost is from Kansas City, Missouri. He has played one season of college ball on the Kentucky varsity. Sherwood and Nacarrate, a pain of big rough bruisers, have flashed evidences of ability at the fullback spot in scrimmage sessions. New York—(UP)—The National Boxing association, deploring the lack of heavyweight title contenders, still rated Jersey Joe Walcott of Camden, N. J., today as the best of the lot, but predicted that champion Joe Louis would not be able to retain the title indefinitely. Rate Walcott Best Bet To Fight Louis In its quarterly ratings, the N.B.A. listed Walcott as an outstanding boxer but refused to list him or any boxer as a logical contender. President Abe J. Greene of the N. B. A. said that "it is inevitable that even an invincible fighting machine like Joe Louis will eventually meet his waterloo." Durocher's Fate Still A Question New York-(UP) — The baseball fate of Lippy Leo Durocher hung today on the wide-open question of who would be his successor at the helm of the Brooklyn Dodgers. Nobody knew that better than the white-faced Leo when he heard that Commissioner A. B. Chandler had suspended him from the game for one year. And it was significant that President Branch Rickey dodged all questions as to whether Durocher would be welcomed back when the suspension ends. The reason is fairly evident. Durocher, Rickey At Odds They have been at odds ever since the conventional-minded deacon inherited Durocher as manager when he took over in Brooklyn. Raucous hambanty Durocher wasn't a Rickie that had the Dodgers up there so consistently that the deacon was afraid to hand him his walking papers. Now, Rickey has a perfect out—particularly if the 1947 manager should step into Lippy's slashing lead the Dodgers to the pennant. Whether the deacon intends to throw a curve ball at Leo should be obvious when the new pilot is selected. If it is someone from within the organization, Durocher has an even chance of being reinstated as manager in 1948. But, if the nod goes to someone on the outside, then Durocher probably is through. Four May Get Call There are four men in the Dodger setup right now who might get the call. They are the three coaches, Ray Blades, Clyde Sukeforth or Jake Bitler, and second baseman Eddie Stanky. Blades is the only one with major league managerial experience, having piloted the St. Louis Cardinals in 1939 and until mid-season of 1940. Rickey fired him at that time for the manner in which he handled the pitchers. Also detracting from the possibility that Rickey might hand him the Dodger reins, Blades insisted when he signed as a Brooklyn coach this season that he never again intended to manage a club. Sukeforth formerly managed Montreal and Pitler was head man at Olean and Newport News. Of those three, big Jake is the only man who ever saw the Dodgers play until this season. Stanky is a remote possibility. He is the Rickey type, quiet and clean-living and a battler all the way through, and the deacon has a very high opinion of him. May Be Someone From Outside Yet it may be someone from the outside, too. Rickey conferred several years ago with Bill Terry, former manager of the hated Giants, when he was having contractual difficulties with Durocher. Terry is the man who embittered Brooklyn by asking whether the Dodgers still were in the league—but Rickey would dare almost anything, even to bring Terry to Brooklyn. Cards Move To St. Louis For Series With Browns Kansas City, Mo.—(UP)—The St. Louis Cardinals, homeward bound for their annual city series against the St. Louis Browns, hope to continue their heavy hitting today against the Kansas City Blues pitchers. The Cards came out of a batting slump yesterday at Dallas, Tex., and defeated the Texas league's Dallas Rebels, 10 to 2. Mele To Play For Red Sox Roanoke, Va.—(UP)—Sam Mele appeared to have climbed the right field birth with the Boston Red Sox today after rattling five straight hits against Cincinnati yesterday to pace the American League champions to a 17 to 6 victory. WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATI BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames. Lawrence Optical Co. RAVENOUS? Try One of Our T-Bone Steaks! JUST HUNGRY? Try One of Our Dinner Specials! JUST LUNCHING? Try One of Our Tempting Sandwiches! NOT HUNGRY? Then Just Try a Cup of Our Delicious Coffee! DINE WELL AT Thompson's Cafe 907. MASS. from 6:30 a.m.to 8 p.m. University Daily Kansan Advertising Brings Real Result GIBB'S 37th Anniversary BRIGHTEN UP YOUR SPRING RIGGING WITHSPORTCOATS FREDERICK A. KING New patterns of plaids, checks and tweeds in tans, blues, greys, and browns. Here Are Beauties At $22.50 TAILORED SLACKS Your favorite spring weaves are here and in colors that will harmonize with popular jackets and sweaters. $5.95 to $12.95 Men's Oxfords FOR SPRING Portage Brand YOU'LL GET A BETTER FIT IN FINER SHOES Wing Tips, Caps, Brooges of handstained heavyweight leather and sturdy soles bring you dividends in comfort and service. $5.95 to $12.95 g Gibbs Clothing "WHERE CASH BUYS MORE" 811 MASS. APRIL 10,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Texas, Minnesota May Shatter Track Records At Kansas Relays Fourteen schools have submitted lists of entries for the 22nd annual Kansas Relays to date. They are: University class—Texas and Minnesota. College class—Peru Teachers, Pittsburg Teachers, Washburn, East Texas State, Stephen F. Austin College, Abilene-Christian, Ft. Hays Teachers, and Wichita University. 65 Schools May Enter Junior college class—Coffeyville, Chanute, Dodge City, and Baca-Prowers. Close to 65 schools are expected to enter when all applications have been received. Most universities and colleges wait until the deadline before sending entries in order that the most accurate line on track material may be had before personnel is assigned. The two schools entered so far in the university class, Texas and Minnesota, will bring contestants who stand a good chance of shattering some of the Relays records. Gophers Have Discus Champ The Golden Gophers have Fortune Gordien to compete in the discus and shot put. The Minnesota strong man was 1946 N. C. A. A. discus champion. He also owns a mark of 52 feet, 11 inches in the shot. Loyd LaMois of Minnesota holds the best bump record of any man in this section of the country. He has leaped 24 feet, 1 inch. Ray Tharp, the third star of the Gopher squad, won points last year at the Relays in both the high hurdles and broad jump. Texas Strong In Relays Texas will offer one of the strongest squads of runners in the Relays history. In the Texas Relays, the Longhorns captured four relay events—the distance medley, the two-mile, the 440-yard, and 880-yard. The Texas quintet in the distance medley smashed a 9-year-old record cutting the time to 10:11.9 minutes. Jerry Thompson, anchor man, ran the mile lap in 4:13.0. This was the fastest mile ever run in the Lone Star state. The Kansas Relays record for the event is 10:12.7. The Texans would set a new standard April 19 if they should equal their best time. May Break 440 Record The 440-vard relay mark may be in danger. Perry Samuels, Allen Lawer, and Charley Parker of the Longhorn sprint staff all have run the 100-yard dash in 9.6 seconds or less. Charlie Tatum, fourth member of the quartet, is not far behind. The Relays mark is 40.5 seconds for the quarter mile event. Lawler won the 100-yard dash here last year in 9.7 seconds, but Parker returned from the Army this year to take over the number one dash spot on the Longhorn team. Bullet Bill Martineson of Baylor in He will continue his sprint duel with the 100-yard event. Parker had won 58 straight races till T martineson defeated him in an early season meet this year. A second meeting brought a victory for Parker, but Martinez again triumphed in the Texas Relays. Rifle Team Defeats Michigan U. 828-811 The N.R.O.T.C. rifle team defeated the University of Michigan in a postal gallery rifle match held last week The scores were K.U. 828; Michigan 811. The K U. team was B. B. Bryant R. I. Westmacott, J. E. Gove, L. G Mische, and T. W. Tober. Set, A. J. Allen, USMC, coach for the Navy team, announced that the team will compete with the University of Southern California this week. The local team will fire Friday night and the score cards will be mailed for comparison. Heat The Tub, Mom FOR SALE Guaranteed Not for years Not for life In Fact NOT AT ALL VIC CHESKY Ph. 2955R 1338 Ohio WURLITZER PHONOGRAPHS Used Juke Box Records For Sale FOR PARTY RENTALS John H. Emick 1014 Mass. Phone 343 RECORDS L.A. NEW!! ALBUMS DECCA Bina Crosby Fred Astaire Fred Woring Music ___Jerome Kern Songs BLUE SKIES M. G.M. Twin Pianos Guy Lombardo Mam'selle ... Art Lund Phone 375 BELL BELL MUSIC CO. 925-27 Mass. Brown's Sell Chet Laabs To Philadelphia Athletics St. Louis—(UP)—Outfielder Chet Laabs, who had been on the St. Louis Browns roster longer than any other player, has been sold to the Philadelphia Athletics for the $10,000 waiver price. More than 3,000,000 air shipments weighing 46,694,966 pounds were handled over domestic airlines last year. The Browns announced that third baseman Mark Christman had been released to the Washington Senators, also for the $10,000 waiver price. Danville, Va.—(UP)—The New York Giants and Cleveland Indians were scheduled against each other here today as they move toward New York where the two clubs will conclude their spring series early next week. next week In a game played at Hickory, N.C., yesterday, the Giants defeated the Indians, 7 to 4. Monte Kennedy, who worked six innings, was the winner. New York Giants To Play Cleveland Indians Today Read the Daily Kansan daily. AUNDERETTE Bendix Equipped 30 Minute Self Service—SOAP FREE 30 Minute Self Service—SOAP FREE Up to 10 lb. Washing (per machine)—25c 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.————Saturday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. mont St. Phone 336f 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. ----- Saturday 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. 813 Vermont St. Phone 3368 Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER Serving K.U. Students For 43 Years. 809 MASS. AUTO SERVICE Phone 4 WHEN YOU - HAVE A FLAT - BATTERY GOES DEAD - RUN OUT OF GAS The BEST service in Lawrence We wash your cars-mail your letters. CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO PHONE 4 CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE PRODUCTS 8th and New Hampshire MAKE DATE NITE SHOW NITE JAYHAWKER Now, Ends Tuesday Dynamite Entertainment NUMPHREY BOGART LIZABETH SCOTT Dead Reckoning A COLUMBIA PICTURE Wednesday, one week DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS, JR. MAUREEN O'HARA WALTER SLEZAK SINBAD THE SAILOR IN GLORIOUS TECHNICOLOR! GRANADA Now, Thru Sat. THE THRILL OF YOUNG LOVE! THE THRILL OF YOUNG LOVE JUNE HAVER JOHN PAYNE Wake up and Dream IN TECHNICOLOR Sunday, 4 Days JAMES CAGNEY ANNABELLA Frank Latimore A D D E D Latest World News, March of Time "The Teachers Crisis" "13 Rue Madeleine" P NOW ENDS SAT. atee INGRID BERGMAN ROBERT MONTGOMERY IN "Rage In Heaven" PLUS Cartoon Variety Western Short Latest News VARSITY Today, Ends Sat. EDWARD EVERETT HORTON ANN GWYNNE "Ghost Goes Wild" and PRESTON FOSTER BILLY SHEFFIELD "King of the Wild Horses" $1 TO $5 PAID FOR EACH CORRECT ANSWER ON OUR QUIZ FOR CASH TONITE 9:15 PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS APRIL 10, 1947 Hand-Washing Ceremony FEDERAL GOVERNMENT MINE OPERATORS JOHN L. LEWIS STATE POLITICIANS HERB LOCE SUPPLIED BY THE WASHINGTON DISTRICT OFFICE Kansan Comments The Price Spiral --million workers in America. Thus 80 per cent of the nation's workers and their families reap the greatest hardship caused by the inflationary battle between a minority of both industry and labor. Signs of the times: A sign in a Lawrence drug store reads, "All five cent candy bars now six cents." Edwin Nourse, chairman of President Truman's economic advisory council, said Tuesday that he was "frankly worried" over high prices. Mr. Nourse has nothing on Mr. John Q. Public who has been worried for months about the same high cost of living. The Bureau of Labor Statistics expresses the abnormal price level in this way: The overall price level for the years 1935 to 1939 is rated at 100. The level of prices today is 152. In the past year alone that index has risen 18 points. President Truman in his Jefferson Day speech called for uninterrupted production as a basic requirement to achieving economic stability. He asked industry not to go "whole hog" for profits and asked union leaders to avoid work stoppages. This combination of factors in turn tends to cause higher wage demands from organized labor. If these demands are not met, further work stoppages will cut down production and make the situation even worse. It is highly questionable whether these two requests will be complied with to any great degree. The national income is still at a record high level. The supply of goods has not yet caught up with the demand in many fields of our economy. These elements combine to force up prices and some manufacturers will take further advantage of those conditions to raise prices even more. Organized labor may be able to keep up with this inflationary spiral for a time. But what of the 40 million forgotten workers who have not been receiving these substantial wage increases? Union laborers number only about 15 million out of a total of 55 to 58 DE LUXE CAFE 28 years of service Same Location-Same Management You Are Welcome 711 Mass. Some economists believe our present condition is due to too rapid relaxation of war-time economic controls. But it is unlikely that any price controls will be reinstituted or that they will even be proposed. It seems that all we can hope for is more rational co-operation between organized labor and management. To achieve such co-operation will require greater persuasive power than President Truman has demonstrated in the past. If American schoolteachers don't get a pay raise soon, the traditional three "r's" will became the three 'p's': picketing, portal-to-portal pay, and political action committees. A woman in Kansas City recently announced that her hens were laying alphabetized eggs. Maybe that's for identity in case they're all put in the same basket. Members of the Student Union Activities committee have a good idea in the plan for a library in the Union lounge. But their method for obtaining the books for this library is at fault. Mrs. White's Tea Room Dear Editor---- The books, preferably light reading material, are to be donated. One can imagine the dog-eared and decrepit volumes that will be procured by this method. Those who do give to the drive doubtless will do so whole-heartedly, but the selection of books will be ancient and a matter of chance. This is shown in those public libraries which depend on donations for many of their books. Buv Union Libraryv Surely we should try to do better in providing for the recreation of students who would use a library for relaxation. EXCELLENT Food and prompt service can always be found at the The union organization is in good financial standing and should have some capital. So why not assure an ample and modern selection of books for this library by an allotment for their purchase from Student Union funds? There should be no objection by students to such an allocation from which they all could benefit. Sueh a library in the Union lounge would be a definite improvement. Let's do the job right. James F. Marshall College Junior SERVICE LUNCH 732 Mass. Paintings By Kansans At Spooner-Thayer Paintings by Kansas artists are on exhibition now in the south gallery of Spooner-Thayer museum. Subjects of the paintings range from surrealism to landscapes. Works by Dr. Birger Sandzen, Bethany college, Lindsborg, and Henry Varmum Poor are among the 19 paintings exhibited during April. The first exhibition of Robert Green, assistant professor of drawing and painting may be seen in the museum's north gallery until April 30. Professor Green presents studies in oil, watercolors, and egg tempera Museum hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. week days, and 2 to 5 p.m. Sundays and holidays. Cupid Hits Women Often In Ohio County Cleveland—(UP) — Women get married more often than men do in Cuyahoga county—thd Greater Cleveland area—a survey disclosed A study of 1,200 January marriage license applications made by Commissioner William Jenks revealed that the odds were three to one that persons married in that month never tried it before. For every eight people divorced here in December, there were three who married a second, third or fourth time in January. Of the 2,400 individuals involved in Jenks' study, 602 had been married at least once before. Of them, 317 were women and 285 were men. 317 were wounded and 263 were maltreated. Common Pleas Judge Samuel H. Silbert, dean of the domestic relations court, commenting on the fact that women marry more often than men, said, "grass widows can get husbands much more easily than single girls. "They know the psychology of men and are usually not so timid," he said. Flu No Bottleneck Show Still Goes On Fratt—(UP)—Woman's intuition? Or just plain luck? Mrs. Marie Brickel, a piano teacher, divided her pupils into two groups for recitals on succeeding Sundays—in the midst of the March influenza season. But- During the two-week period more than half Mrs. Brickel's pupils were ill with the "flu. Bul- The ailing ones the first Sunday were all of the group due to perform the second Sunday, and those sick the second Sunday were from the ranks of the pupils who had appeared on the first Sunday's program. He Quizzed 'Home Towners' Both recitals went off as scheduled. Boston.—(UP)—An American consul abroad once used to test persons who said they came from Boston by asking them what ornaments the top of historic Faneuil Hall. The correct answer, known to virtually every Bostonian, is a weather-vane modeled after a grasshopper. Lindley's Kansas Cleaners 12 E. 8th Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices MEN'S SUITS Cleaned and Pressed ... 65c LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES— Cleaned and Pressed ... 69c Cash and Carry Only Delicious JUICY STEAKS Our Specialty Across from Court House BILL'S GRILL 1109 Mass. Phone 2054 EALTH" You'll really enjoy Fritzel ICE CREAM "FOR HEALTH" You'll really enjoy Fritzel ICE CREAM SMOOTH, CREAMY, DELICIOUS TRY SOME TODAY 834 Vermont Chi Galloway Phone 182 Have a Coke DRINK Coca-Cola BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY KANSAS CITY COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY APRIL 10,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN A.P.O. Will Sponsor Counselor's Meeting An all-day camp counselor's conference will be held at the University April 26. The conference will be sponsored by the Y.M.C.A., Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity, and the department of physical education. All phases of camp counseling will be discussed. A certificate will be given to each man or woman who attends. The conference is planned especially for anyone who is interested in taking a position for the summer as a camp counselor. Albert Moore is chairman of the planning committee. Other committee members are Dale Judy, Keith Congdon, Robert Whitecomb, Bruce Cathurst, and Richard Collins. Classified Advertising Classified Advertising Rates Classified Advertising Rates One Three Five day days 35 days 65c 90c 25 words or less 1c 2c 3c additional words 1c 2c 3c For Sale TODAY Only! Almost new Western Electric Record player, large size. Cost $72, willing to sell for $50. $94 Mo. phone 739-W. -10. THREE New Remington portable toy truck. Under Wooded upright. Just the thing for those semester themes. Persons interested may see machine at 1031 Vermont. -10. USED Remington typewriter, $27.50; used keyboard, $61.25; rebuilt portables, $65; new Remington portable, $79.80; typewriter table, $7.50 up; 2 solenoid oak used desks, $65; new machine co., 8th street in First Nat'l Bank Bldg., phone 13. -14. Business Services BILL is now running his cab co. again and will be running 24 hours, 7 days a week. Call 69, if no answer, call 2182-J. -16- TENNIS Rackets restrung and repaired Silk, nylon, or gut. Priced accordingly. $1.50 to $10. Phone 2711-W. Ed. Well- hausen, 1145 Kentucky. -21- Lost LADIES Onyx ring. Call 2995-J. Reward. LIGHT Horseshoe zipper jacket, white on onebow of sleeve. Reward Please notify Kansan office. -11- BLACK Brief case containing class notes and Carlson's "Machinery of the Body." Reward Return to Kansan office. Contains valuable papers. If found please contact George Reader, 1100 Tennessee, phone 1770 Reward. BLACK Watch with flexible silver band. Reward. Leave at Kansan office or call 2848-J after 9. -11- SHAFFER Lifetime fountain p.e.n. Brown striped, name engraved. Please leave at Kansan office. Reward. -14- BROWN Wallet, April 8, on or near the campus. Reward. Need navy cards John Lover, 1100 Indiana. 284 if possible. BLACK Parker "51", silver cap, Wednesday afternoon in or between library Fraser. Please return to Kansan office. PARKER "51" pen, engraved "Stephen D. Hadley" near Marvin Hill. Call 3251-W. Reward. NEW Ronson lighter in Rock Chalk café New Ronson night. Phone 1783, 1215 Oread. -10- For Rent ONE Large room with private bath to rent to 4 students. Furnace heat, automatic hot water-heat. Tel. 2229-R. 1801 Alabama. -10- BURNISHED Double apartment about June 1 in exchange for 2 bedrooms furnished, unfurnished house, or apartment in Kansas City, Kansas, or suburbs as far south as Overland Park. Martin. 1529 Ky. -16- Wanted RIDE Daily from K. C. to Lawrence Lawrence S: 3:00. Call 2955-M after $4.15 Lawrence S: 3:00. Call 2955-M after $4.15 How Much Milk Did You Drink Today? ADULTS REQUIRE AT LEAST ONE PINT. DRINK OUR PASTEURIZED GRADE A MILK TODAY AND EVERYDAY. Lawrence Sanitary Milk and Ice Cream Co. Beth To Address Newsmen At Topeka Saturday Elmer F. Beth, acting chairman of the department of journalism, will address top executives of the Stauffer publications Saturday morning in Topeka. About 45 managers and editors of nine Stauffer newspapers and four radio stations will attend. Milton Eisenhower, president of Kansas State college, will speak at the dinner meeting. one newspapers to be representatives are the Arkansas City Traveler; the Grand Island, Neb., Independent; the Maryville, Mo., Forum; the Nevada Maryville, Mo., Forum; the Nevada, Mo., Mail; the Pittsburgh Headlight and Sun; the Topeka State Journal; the Shawnee, Okla, News-Star; and the York, Neb., News-Times. COOKING Get Your 'Burgers' AT Zim's SNACK SHOP CURB SERVICE starting Sunday, April 13 Across from the Postoffice. Open: 6 a.m. to 12:30 a.m. Courses in salesmanship are to be set up by the University extension division in several Kansas cities from April 21 to 25. These two day courses which will be held in Holton, Hiawatha, Sabetha and Marysville are sponsored by the cities' chambers of commerce. To Offer Sales Courses Spitizenbergen is the most northerly inhabitable land in the world. FOR THAT EXTRA PICK-UP TRY OUR creamy-rich MALTS delicious • SUNDAES refreshing ● SODAS only 15c and mode of quality products! VELVET FREEZE Ice Cream is sold only at 742 Mass. -by Bibler The Bus- (Adv). K.U. BIBER "Say boss—do we have any family rates?" WE'RE TIRED! A Personal Letter to The K. U. Student DEAR STUDENT: APRIL 10,1947 We're not mad—we're just tired. And confused. How would you feel? The other two parties have accused our party of allegiance with everyone from the Progressives to the P.S.G.L.'s to the Women's Christian Temperance Union. With all these "alliances," how can we miss at election? But nobody tells us about these alliances. We're confused. And tired. And think it's a bit childish. Pachacamac has been careful to throw no political "mud," and, in reward for its pains, has received a handsome plastering from each of the other parties. We would like to spend our time working for better student government, instead of digging our way out of political dung-heaps. So we're making a plea to the other two parties, to confine their mudslinging to each other, if sling mud they must. We're just a little tired. Aren't you tired too? Sincerely yours, PACHACAMAC PARTY UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE EIGHT APRIL 10, 1947 Summer Term? Sign Up Now Students who plan to attend summer school or enroll in the University next fall, are asked to sign up in the registrar's office according to a letter schedule. Dr. E. R. Elbel, head of the Veteran's Training bureau, urges all veterans who plan to attend the summer session to sign up now. "If the veteran does not sign up now, his subsistence allotment has automatically this summer and his cills will be delayed," he said. This preliminary sign-up will not take the place of regular registration, but will help eliminate standing in line at registration time. TWO. It will eliminate standing in line later. THEORE. It will give the university data for planning purposes. The student is asked to fill out one card if he plans to attend the summer session and another card if he plans to attend the University next fall. Indication of attendance is not binding. The schedule for signing at the registrar's office: April 9-A.C; April 10-B; April 11- B, F; F, E; April 14-H; April 15-G; I, J; K, I; April 16-L, N, O; Q; April 17-R; R, S; April 18-T; April 23- T; T, U; V, W, X, Y; Z; April 23- All those who missed their scheduled days. Signing up has three advantages according to James K. Hitt, registrar ONE. It will assure students a A woman's radio program called "Of Women and Time" will begin a series of broadcasts over station LFKU today, said Mildred Seaman, program director. Begin Radio Series On Kansas Women 200 Kansas women of national prominence, active in the field of music, poetry, journalism, literature, national and state organizations, were interviewed by the Radio Council for Kansas Women. Those interviewed will be presented on the program starting today. Mrs. Jessica Crafton, instructor in the speech department, has written the introduction to the program and will give it at the 9:30 p.m. broadcast. The first program will feature a story about Mrs. Ida Stover Eisenbower and Mrs. Raymond Clapper. It will include a duet by Joan Vickers and Mary Jane Zollinger, Fine Arts junior, and a solo by Miss Vickers. Maxine Dunkleberg, Fine Arts sophomore, is accompanist. Mrs. Alice Moncrieff, professor of voice, will be in charge of the music presentations. Mrs. Frances Feist, instructor in the speech department, will select a woman student to read poetry for the program. Allen Smith will be narrator for the entire series. It will be broadcast by various stations at a time selected by the individual stations, Miss Seaman said. The Kansas district of the Student Christian Movement will hold a conference tomorrow, Saturday, and Sunday at Friends university in Wichita. Fifteen Kansas colleges will participate. Wilbur Noble, who will be in charge of the membership committee, Alice Wismer who will head the religious seminars groun at the model meeting, Melba Whiting who will report on office hostesses and Emalouise Britton who will speak on minorities. Students from the University who will take part in the program are: To Attend Meeting Of Religion Group One feature of the conference will be a model meeting which will bring out the working techniques of the Y.M.C.A. and Y.W.C.A. A bus taking 25 University students will leave the campus for Wichita tomorrow afternoon. Seniors—Don't Put Off Taking Those Shots Seniors who will graduate in June and who will need immunizations and physical examinations for their prospective jobs. He will be available at hospital as soon as possible, Dr. Ralph Canuteson said today. Since it takes three weeks for a full set of inmunization shots, it is important that seniors do not until the last minute, he said. I.S.A. Group Attends Oklahoma U.Meeting Five delegates of the Independent Students association left today for the University of Oklahoma for the annual convention of Independent associations. The convention will end Saturday. At a meeting of the LS.A. council Wednesday, the delegates were instructed to place a bid to hold the next national convention here. *Anoint To Council* Victor Reinking was appointed to the council as senior men's representative. Jack Rardin was appointed as the junior men's representative and will also act as publicity chairman for the group. The convention will include* a faculty reception Friday afternoon, a dance Friday night, and a party Saturday night. Discussions will be held Friday and Saturday. The K.U. representatives are Jane Keith and Norman Jennings, College freshmen, Marjorie Vosel, College sophomore, and Marylee Masterson and Patricia Graham, College juniors. Norman Jennings will lead a discussion on the topic "Organizational Newspapers" and Patricia Graham will head a discussion on cooperatives. Music Students to Give Recital In Frank Strong Five fine arts students will appear in a recital in Frank Strong auditorium at 3 p.m. today. The program will include piano solos by Betty Ann Schowee, Marilyn Barr, and Blanche Pierson; cello solos by Roger Clubb and Maurice Pollom; and a solo by Lois Lee Richardson, vocalist. 3 This business senior is a firm believer of the law of physics that a driving force will continue forward until its momentum is stopped by an immovable object. He also believes that a good passer can hit a squirrel on the dead run at 40 yards with a football. He proved these statements last season by leading the K. U. gridders to a Big Six championship. Is Familiar 'The Face Lowell B. Mason, member of the Federal Trade commission, will speak to the labor economics class on relations between government and business at 10 a.m. Friday in Fraser theater. The talk is open to all students. ☆ ☆ Mr. Mason received his law degree from Northwestern university in 1914. Two years later he became assistant corporation council for the city of Chicago. He served in the Illinois senate from 1922 to 1930. Wednesday's caricature was of Dean Smith, freshman in the School of Medicine. "Of course, I want to complete the background first. That includes miniature cities, tunnels, mountains, and things like that. Most of them are just landscapes, and then painted or covered depending on what you are creating." Railroad Tycoon Millard Grasps For 8 More Trains U.S. Trade Official To Speak Friday Business students may meet Mr. Mason at a coffee hour from 3 to 5 p.m. Friday in the English room of the Union. Of all the recent train crashes, there is one that had no publicity at all. It occurred right here in Lawrence last week. In fact, it happened in Sunnyside, Apartment 3A, when a model train crashed into a divan. Sgt. Millard's future plans include placing the railroad on board sections that will fold into a case for easy shipping. "Every part of the set is created to a scale. It is determined by the scale of the trains used. The usual Plans A Folding Railroad All of the trains that Sgt. Millard now has have been purchased. However, increased costs have temporary expansion of the miniature railroad. "I tried making my own trains once and succeeded in making one. Then I gave that part of it up. It 'lakes a lot more patience than I have." "Right now I have 160 feet of track. Soon, I hope to have eight trains with at least 14 switches." Sgt. Millard first started his hobby in 1936 with his father's guidance and 14 model trains. The war ended the hobby for a time and only recently did he decide to start the hobby again. The model railroad is the hobby of Sgt. Arthur Millard, assistant in- or in Military Science. "We don't have must room for a hobby, so the train runs back of the divan, under chairs, and around various other pieces of furniture. The wreck knocked out the lights on the engine, but outside of that, there was no damage." Began Hobby In 1936 "Another realistic touch is added to the whole set by smoke capsules placed in the engine. Each capsule will last about an hour. The latest engine I got will also whistle and let off steam much like a real engine." scale is one inch for every two feet. There is quite a bit of satisfaction in making the model as much like a real railroad as possible." The set includes remote control track, an electric control station, and a magnetic electric crane. A wrecker that picks up any of the other cars must be worked by hand. Easy To Couple-Uncouple "With that control station, I can couple and uncouple cars automatically and even load and unload the freight cars automatically." "Eventually I plan to have a basement about 20 x 40 feet for my hobby. That will give me a chance to create whole districts with miniature mountain ranges, tunnels, river, and all the other background material." While in Houston, Texas, Sgt. Millard was a member of the Hobby Lobby club. "I would like to get a club started here. If there are enough fellows interested, we could mark our equipment and then put it together until we had time to make our own set-up." Wants Club Here It might be a good idea not to have any divans around, though. Order Jayhawker Now, Receive It By Mail The Commencement issue of the Jayhawk must be ordered before April 15. Leave $1.15 at the Jayhawk office and the magazine will be mailed to you. Party To.Examine Proposed Amendment A Progressive party committee will be appointed to decide the usefulness of the proposed amendment to the University student constitution which concerns the method by which representatives to the A.S.C. are to be chosen. The party will take no definite stand on the issue until the committee has investigated the amendment and given its report, it was decided at a meeting Wednesday. Progressive candidates for office in the spring election are to submit their office qualifications to the publicity committee for use in campaigning. Names of all party candidates will be turned in to the All Student council for registration by Friday. Donald Wyman, College junior was appointed chairman of the Progressive party public relations committee Wednesday night. Before the meeting, a dinner was given in the English room in honor of the party candidates for the spring election. Applications for places in men's dormitories for the summer and fall semester are now being accepted at the housing office, Mrs. Faye Netzer, director, said today. Men Can Apply Now For Summer Rooms "For the first time in many months we have more space than we have occupants. The University dorms are now available in town," he said. Although the housing problem for single men has disappeared, married students looking for apartments are still without accommodations. Mrs. Netzer reported that already she was leaving school planning to come to school this fall, but that she was unable to give any help. At present about 350 men are living in the University dormitories which have been put into operation this year. Those men will have priority on space for the summer and fall, but there will be vacancies for others, Mrs. Netzer said. Vets May Get Do-Re-Mi Soon Dividends on National Service Life insurance policies will soon be mailed out which may amount to as much as one-third of the premiums paid in whether the policy is lapsed or not, according to officials of the Veterans administration insurance branch in Chicago. Most K.U. vets will get a little surprise package in the mail one of these days, and it won't be another draft notice. "We can't say how large this check will be," Lincoln C. Cochune branch director, said. "It will be a sizable amount, perhaps one-third of the premiums paid in. That will mean more than $100 to a lot of fellows." Checks are to be written as soon as V.A. records are straight. Reason for the dividend, he said, was that war casualties were lower than the estimates used in computing insurance rates. All policyholders will be eligible for the first dividend, whether their premiums are paid up or not. Cocheu urged, however, that holders act promptly to reinstate their policies This can be done by paying one back premium and one month's current premium before August 1. No physical examination is necessary. Rohde Favors UN Police Force A power greater than either the United States or Russian is needed in the United Nations, Mrs. Ruth Bryan Rohde told coffee forum members Wednesday afternoon. "We would get along much better if we had an international police force," she said. Pereched on the edge of a desk in the Pine room, Mrs. Rohde answered questions about Russia and the UNO, Communism Too Popular "We're giving communism too much acclaim," she said. "The way to defeat communism in this country is to make our own system successful." She felt she was unable to determine Russian reaction to our proposed aid to Greece, but did say, "I would much rather see it handed to the United Nations. It would go fully, but I feel that any aid to Greece should be on approval of the entire UN." Asked the source of Truman's proposal, she said that it stems from from a previous agreement with a British statement, "or perhaps even England." Pay Tribute To Spaak Mrs. Rohde paid tribute to the presiding officer of the assembly, Paul Spak, of Belgium. "He is one of the ablest chairmen I have even observed, and far too little credit is given him." Senators Arthur Vanderburg and Tom Connally, and Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt were also singled out as being outstanding. News . . . of the World Washington—(UP)—Secretary] of the Interior J. A. Krug today charged the United Mine Workers union (A.F.L) with an "almost unbroken record of neglect" in promoting coal mine safety. Krug Charges U.M.W. Neiligent In Safety Efforts Mr. Krug, who operates the nation's soft coal mines for the government, struck back at the U.M.W.'s leader, John L. Lewis, who had accrued the imprisonment neglect in the Centralia, III., disaster where 111 miners were killed. Mr. Krug recommended to a senate public lands subcommittee a five point safety program for the coal mines. Poles Oppose Change In Polish-German Borden Moscow.—(UP)—A Polish government spokesman said today that Secretary of State George C. Marshall by supporting a change in en a death blow to the Polish opposite the Polish-German border has given rarty led by Stanislaw Mikolajezyk. Foiland would oppose any attempt to move the Poles back from the Oder-Neisse line, a foreign affairs official said. 'Super Chief' Derailed Raton, N.M.—(UP)—The wreckage of the Santa Fe's luxury streamliner "Super Chief," derailed as it rolled from Los Angeles to Chicago, was cleared from the railroad's main line today. Investigation into the cause of the derailment which injured 25 persons and hospitalized 16, began today. Carlson Vetoes License Bill Topeka—(UP)—Gov. Frank Carlson vetoed the new Kansas drivers license bill Wednesday. He said that truckers "the house" merely raises调养ments and the measure as increater revenue and promotes political patronage." Lilienthal Gets Post Washington.—(UP)—The senate confirmed the nomination of David E. Lilienthal to head the Atomic Energy commission after ignoring a last-minute move to prevent a vote. University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Friday, April 11, 1947 44th Year No. 117 Lawrence Kansas Water Famine, Mass Funeral At Woodward Woodward, Okla.—(UP)—A water famine increased the hardships of citizens and rescue workers in this tornado-stricken city today as Oklahoma and Texas counted 135 dead and more than 600 injured in Wednesday night's storm. Water is being trucked in from nearby towns. toward prepared today to bury its 79 tornado dead at mass funeral services. Partial electric service was restored during the night. Emergency filtration equipment, flown here by the Fourth army, was expected to place the municipal water system back in operation during the day. Most important at the moment was what to do for 5,000 homeless. About 1,400 were accommodated in the homes left standing. More than 3,500 others sought shelter in "New Wood-land" the Red Cross-Army tent city. Five hundred to 1,000 persons were fed at mobile field kitchens set up in Woodward the morning. The Farm and Red Cross are providing food. Damage, to both personal and real property, was expected to pass the $1,000,000 mark whenever someone needed time to make an accurate estimate. A United Press check of morgues gave the following death account: Woodward-79 known dead, 30 arrest, 425 hospitalized. Mang, 423 hospital. Moseley, One dead. Okla, Seven dead. Shattuck, Okla, Seven dead. Oklahoma City, One dead. Higgins, Tex, -34 dead. Clazier, Tex, -13 dead. Union Heads Ask For Open Meetings Washington.—(UP)—Union leaders today proposed open-to-the-public peace negotiations in the five-day old telephone strike and said they would appeal directly to President Truman if the plan were rejected by management. With present conciliation efforts completely bogged down, the National Federation of Telephone Workers proposed the new approach toward a master settlement in a memo to Secretary of Labor Lewis B. Schwellenbach. It demanded that union, government, and individual telephone company representatives be brought into immediate joint conferences "for the first time" with the doors wide open to press and radio. The union made the proposal after it rejected what AT&T had desided as its "final" offer for a settlement with the key long lines union. NFTW president Joseph A. Beirne said the proposal was "unsatisfactory" because it offered arbitration of six basic issues, including the union's national demand for a $12 weekly wage boost, on a local rather than national basis. The union is opposed to piecemeal settlement. There was no immediate comment on the union's new proposal from either government or management sources. Banker To Guide Program At KuKu Dance Tonight Dean Banker, College freshman, will act as master of ceremonies at the Ku-Ku club's "Evening in Paris" dance tonight. Tickets may be bought from any member of the Ku-Ku club or at the dance. Intermission numbers include Eileen Horner, sophomore in Fine Arts, as chanteuse, a French can-can dance, an Apache dance, and a special act by the Ku Kui's. The dance is informal, Bill Woods, president, said today. Little Man On Campus By Bibler BIG TEST TO-DAY BIBLER J ODILY KAWASAKI "It Certainly Discourages Cheating" Strike Stops Work On Campus Project All work has stopped on the building project back of Frank Strong because of the strike for higher wages against the Constant construction company. Picketing is in progress by the Buildings and Trades Construction Laborers Union, Local 1290, of Kansas City, Kansas. A jurisdictional dispute over whether Lawrence belongs in the Kansas City or Topeka districts is in progress. Wage rate for labor in the Kansas City district is $97\frac{1}{2}$ cents an hour; in the Topeka district 85 cents. Laborers are asking for a raise from the Topeka to the Kansas City wage rate. New chief engineer of the sanitation division, Kansas State Board of Health, is Ben L. Williamson, a graduate of the University School of engineering in 1933. For the past five years Williamson has been with the Iowa state health department. He previously worked for the Kansas State highway commission, and on the staff of the state sanitation division. WITH HILFIGER. J. M. Anderson, who bargains and organizes for the Kansas City union, could not be reached for comment. J. T. Constant, head of the Construction company, said that the wage scale for the contract is based on a government contract under the Federal Works Agency. He said he knew that laborers want both a wage raise and a closed shop, but he was not informed that picketing was to take place. "Any time the men set up a local union, with local officers, I will sit across the table and thresh things out with them," he said. '33 Alumnus Named Top Health Engineer Mr. Williamson also has earned a master of science degree in sanitary engineering from Harvard university and the professional Civil Engineering degree from the University in 1940. He replaces Paul Haney, who joined the University of North Carolina faculty last month. Senior Tenor Soloist To Present Recital E. M. Brack, tenor soloist with the University symphony orchestra and a cappella choir, will present his senior recital at 8 p.m. Monday in Frank strong auditorium. His program will include a recitative "My Arms," and the aria "Sound an Alarm!" from "Judas Maccabaeus" (Handel). "So Sweete is Shee" (Arne), "Si Dolce E' Tormento" (Monteverde), "Me Gustan Todas" (Monteverde folk-song); "Oft in the Stilly Night" (Irish air, words by Thomas Moore), "I Hear an Army" (Barber), "Song of the Palanquin Bearers" (Shaw), and "The Frog in the Spring" (Vermont folk-song). "Il Pleure Dans Mon Coeur" (Delius), "Apres un Reve" (Faure), "La Lune Blanche" (Delius); Kansas Opposes A. & M. Admission To Big Six Would Complicate Things, Group Feels, Says Rule Interpretation 'Foggy' The University is opposed to admitting Oklahoma A. and M. into the Big Six conference at the present time. "The ashes from the explosion go all over the countryside." Steinsson commented. "The hot lava raises the level of surrounding ground about an inch for miles around." The Icelander recently received a letter from a friend in Reykjavik, where Steinson lives. The friend said that smoke and flames were easily visible from 70 miles away, and under some circumstances could Lava Sprays Countryside Says Student from Iceland Prof. W. W. Davis, the University's Big Six representative said that the two main reasons for this policy are: Hot Lava Raises Ground ONE. The conference has just added the University of Colorado and feels that another member would complicate things at the present time. Starting Lineups For Intra-Squad Tilt When Iceland's largest volcano exploded and hurried hot lava and rocks in all directions last month, the eruption had a special significance for one University student. The planting will be completed in the fall but it will eb 4 or 5 years before the growth of the plants and trees will give the Marvin-Lindley quadranthe desired effect. Mr. Berger, architect for the site, said. Fifteen thousand bulbs of a large variety of hardy perennial flowers will be planted this fall. The mountain sputtered to silence in 1845 after seven months of constant eruption. Since then residents of the surrounding area have crossed their fingers for luck at every minor trembling of the earth. The $3,000 landscaping project between Marvin and Lindley halls, a gift from the senior class of 1947, will be more than tripled by the University donation of labor for planting and upkeep. Starting lineups for the intrasquad football game to be played at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow were announced today by head coach George Sauer. Donation Triples Gift Of Seniors The home of Ingolfur P. Steinsson, special student from Iceland, is just 70 miles from the base of Mt. Hekla, king of Icelandic volcanoes. The 5,000-foot structure sprayed the countryside with flying lava March 29. in its first eruption in 102 years. Planting begins this spring with an outside band of flowering cherries, Oriental maples, and a selection of mugho pines. These will decorate the opening to the street. There will also be heavy plantings of low trees, shrubs, and flowers throughout the quadrangle. Whites Reds Small E Schmidt B. Sperry E Schnellbacher T. Monroe or Ch'n'l T Lee Renko T Johnson Famb'gh or Hawk's G Fink Tomlinson G Crawford D. Monroe C Fischer McNutt QB Hogan French LH Gilman Mallon RH Bertuzzi Grithiff FB Baker be observed from a much greater distance. An area of semi-darkness surrounds the volcano, the friend reported, and most of the Icelanders are forced to use artificial lighting 24 hours a day. In South Central Iceland Mt. Hekla is situated in south central Iceland. Since the nearest city is 70 miles away, there has been no loss of life caused by the volcano's eruption of Mt. Hekla attracted ated towns have been built near the mountain because of the constant danger of volcanic activity. "It was nothing new for Iceland. Our country is covered with small volcanoes which explode constantly," Steinsson said. He added that the eruption of Mt. Kekla attracted world-wide attention because it is Iceland's most famous volcano. "Nobody knows how long this eruption will last," he declared, "but everyone at home is prepared for a siege of at least six months." Steinmann has seen the activity of several smaller volcanoes, and has collected an assortment of hardened lava, for souvenirs. **TWO.** The fogy interpretation *be* the best case. C.A.R. rules be cleared first. He explained that he represents the chancellor, faculty, and alumni in following this policy. Two Votes Would Be Needed. Two Votes Would Exclude Three-fourths of the universities in the conference must vote for a new member. Two negative votes would exclude an applicant. Professor Davis said that others in addition to the University of Kansas are against admitting Oklahoma A. and M. at the present time. "The whole national intercollegiate athletic situation is serious," he said, as possible. The country will be spiked to two groups. Against N.C.A.A Rules One faction, composed of the Southern conferences, is quarrelling with N.C.A.A. rules. The Southern schools grant athletic scholarships that pay board room tuition, fees, and other expenses; coaches out to recruit prospective athletes. These practices are against N.C.A.A. rules. The Big Six has not yet formally accepted the new N.C.A.A. code, as the legal, but he thinks that it will soon do so. Situation Is Critical Chancellor Malott recently blasted this N.C.A.A. rule, which has made it illegal for coaches to talk to prospective students. But with the Southern conferences the situation is critical. It is possible that they will demand modification of the N.C.A.A. rules at the New Orleans meeting April 18. If these demands are not met, they may withdraw from the N.C.A.A., Professor Davis said. The Big Six conference was invited to the meeting but declined to attend. "If such a split happened, the country would be divided into two bitter intercollegiate factions," Professor Davis said. "The Big Six, Big Nine, Ivy League, and several other Eastern conferences would be playground rules." The Southern conferences are rather rules of their own making. Such a split would be attended by a lot of bitterness. He added that if this happened the anti-N.C.A.A. faction would probably have more and stronger teams than the N.C.A.A. group. Rooms Are Needed For Relays Visitors University housing officials today requested that anyone who can house an athlete April 17, 18, or 19, list rooms with Mrs. Faye Netzer in the housing office. Athletes from high schools and colleges will be here to take part in the Kansas Relays. "Most of the fraternity and sorority houses, dormitories, and other rooming places are already crowded, the need is great." Mrs. Netzer said. "Naturally we would rather find rooms available for all three nights for two or more athletes. However, we will appreciate any place that will accommodate any athlete for even one night." WEATHER Kansas—Clear to pan cloudy today and tonight. Cooler extreme east. Warmer southwest today. Warmer west tonight. Low temperature 40-45. Saturday increasing cloudiness, light showers cast in afternoon. Little change in temperature. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 11,1947 Official Bulletin April 11. 1947 K. U. Chess club, 7:30 tonight 113 Frank Strong hall. *** Kappa Phi meeting at 7 tonight at the church. Scavenger hunt at 8:15. Wesley Foundation members invited. College club of Trinity Episcopal church will meet at 5:30 p.m. Sunday at the church. Prof. E. H. Hollands will be the speaker. Unitarian Liberal group will meet at 7 p.m. Sunday in the Pine room of the Union. Speaker will be Jim Putnam, former member of state legislature and now with the bill drafting department. Petitions for Women's Independent political party primary due tomorow noon at Templin hall. Primary will be April 15. ** ** Physical Therapy club tea for Dr. Martin, Sunday, from 3 to 5 in the Union building. R. N. club meeting 8 p.m. Monday in the classroom, Community building. Film on diabetes to be shown. * * Kansas Board meeting at 4 p.m. Monday in 107. Journalism building; Reorganizational meeting of Dove staff, 7:30 p.m. Monday, 210 Frank Strong hall. Anyone else interested in writing for the Dove also invited. Y. M. C. A.-Y.W. C. A. religious seminar series will meet at 4 p.m. Monday in the Pine room. Professor Sandelius will be the speaker. Everyone welcome. 企业培训 Applications for position of manager of student directory may be submitted at the student organizations window of the business office until April 16. Graduate Record examination: 1 to 5 p.m., May 5; 8:30-12:30, May 6. Applications due at Guidance Bureau, 2A Frank Strong hall, April 17. ※ ※ ※ Persons desiring to apply for positions of editor and business manager of the 1948 Jayhawkmer must leave a letter, addressed to Karl Klooz, chairman of the Jayhawkmer Advisory Board, at the Student Organizations window of the business office not later than April 15. Applications must include three references, two, the names of faculty members, and one, a past employer or friend. *** Now is the time to order your senior ring. Do this when paying your class dues—same window, same building—Business Office, Frank Strong Hall, Ten Dollar Deposit. All students who expect to attend the summer session or return for the fall semester should sign up in the Registrar's office according to the following schedule: Today, D-F; Monday, H; Tuesday, G-K; Wednesday, L-Q; Thursday, M; Fri., Apr. 18, P-R; Mon., Apr. 21, S; Tues., Apr. 22, T-Z; Wed., Apr. 23, all those who could not come in on scheduled days. 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 during the summer months, days, and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879 SENIORS L. G. Balfour Co. DON'T DELAY Radar May Be Used On Nation's Railroads Boston. (UP)—The nation's railroads may be equipped with radar as an accident-preventive measure. Dr. Phillips Thomas, research engineer of the Westinghouse Electric Corp., revealed at a meeting of the New England Railroad Club that experiments with radar safety devices are being conducted for the railroads. 'Cooperate or Evaporate,' Hobo King Davis Warns The chief obstacle encountered in the experiments has been the failure to adjust the light rays of the radar beam with the speed of railroad locomotives. Altoona, Pa—(UP) — Jeff Davis, king of the Hoboes of America, predicted here that "if the people of the world don't co-operate they are going to evaporate." Davis, wearing one of his favorite plaid flannel shirts, said, "it's no wonder lumber is scarce—too many people with chips on their shoulders." The graying veteran of the road, although troubled with failing eyesight, is planning a lobbying campaign for super-highways, wide and smooth enough for helicopters to take off and land. 3 Capture— THAT MOMENT SUPREME with A SUPREMELY FINE DIAMOND from Jewelry ROBERTS Gifts 833 Mass. Phone 827 MARITIME COMMANDER Looking For a Buy? Of course you are, and our stock of Navy Shoes is just what you've been Looking For ALL SIZES $5.95 shoe We are also ready to supply you with T-Shirts, Knit Briefs, and Khakis. LAWRENCE SURPLUS 911-740 Mass. Tel. 588 and 669 DE SOTA APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH DESOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH Buddy GALLAGHER MOTORS FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. University Daily Kansan Advertising Brings Real Results SUNDAY, JULY 15TH. Suits From Top Makers YORKTOWN $45 to $80 EAGLE KUPPENHEIMER SIZES: Regular, Longs, Shorts The Palace 843 MASS. APRIL 11, 1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Up and Coming A Calendar of Campus Events A Calendar of Campus Events Tonight: Kappa Phi, party, Ecke hall. Ku Ku club dance, Union ballroom. 9 p.m. to midnight. saturday: Gamma Phi Beta, dance, Kansas 3 p.m. to midnight. Sigma Nu, dance, chapter house, to 8 p.m. Varsity dance, Military Science building, 9 p.m. to midnight. --a dance in the Kansas room of the Union has been planned for May 21. The committee in charge of arrangements is Rosemary Ballinger, Mariane Carey, Jean Pflots, Lee Sears, and Jean Runnels. P SOCIALLY SPEAKING Delta Gamma Entertains A coffee in honor of their notecalumna, Mrs. Ruth Bryan Rohde was given by the Delta Gamma sorority Tuesday night. Guests included members of the faculty, representatives from the organized houses, and Delta Gamma alumnae from Kansas City, Topeka, and Lawrence. Phi Beta Pi Initiates Phi Beta Pi announces initiation of Joseph Wells, Donald Duche, Robert Cook, Marion Bills, Darwin Lankin, Glen McCray, John Buess, and Howard Pyle. K.U. Dames See Play 'Poor Man, Rich Man' "Poor Man, Rich Man," a comedy of two domineering wives and their husbands who wanted to be boss, was given at the K.U. Dames meeting Wednesday. H. C. Brockman, dramatics instructor, and four students from Liberty Memorial High school presented the play. A committee appointed to plan next week's bridge meeting includes Marjorie Reeve, Betty Hall, Jean Jammels, and Camille Gudger. Mrs. Kellogg D. McClelland, who received her master's degree, from the University in 1910, is beginning her second semester as a French instructor at the Galesburg division of the University of Illinois. Mrs. McClelland Joins Illinois Staff Mrs. McClelland did graduate work in French and Spanish at the Universities of Chicago, Grenoble and Paris. She taught at Washburn college; Hiram college; Ohio; Knox college, Galesburg, Ill.; and Montana State college before joining the University of Illinois faculty. Lois Beth Wins Scholarship Award Lois Carolyn Beth, daughter of Elmer F. Beth, journalism professor, has recently been awarded a certificate of merit as runner-up for a college scholarship offered annually by a national soft-drink company. She will receive a $50 award when she enters college next fall. Lois is a senior at University High school, and plans to attend the University after her graduation. The two four year scholarships granted in Kansas were won by Lee H. Reiff, Newton High school, and Elizabeth A. Thackrey, Manhattan High school. Joan Woodward, Keith Wilson, and Sue Webster left Wednesday for Urbana, Ill., where they will attend a meeting of University union activity committees. Miss Hermina Zipple, director of union activities, accompanied the group. They will return Saturday. 3 Go To Meeting In Urbana Fite To Speak Monday Wads Fite will speak on "Shock Waves" at the physics colloquium at 5 p.m. Monday in 203 Blake hall. Fite is a. College senior majoring in physics. COED'S CORNER 'Betty' Soukup Pounds Typewriter, Dances, Is In Honorary Groups The 5-foot 2-inch blue-eyed brunette who pounds the typewriter for L. L. Waters in the Bureau of Business Research is Betty Soukup. On the diploma she will earn in August, it will read "Elizabeth Rose Soukup" but she has been "Betty" to her friends since she was five years old. Betty, who is what is generally termed a "whiz" in the School of Business, says that she came to college to get an education, period, but she has managed to pack quite a number of activities into her college life. Holds Honorary Offices make lots of money travel Besides filling her spare hours with secretarial work for Professor Waters, Betty tz vice-president of Phi Chi Theta, business sorority, a member of Beta Gamma Sigma, honorary business fraternity, and a aide of Pi Lambda Theta, honorary education fraternity. She is secretary and scholarship chairman of Miller hall. Her name has been on the dean's honor roll one year and the School of Business honor roll two years. "I'm going to teach high school students the typewriter keyboard and how to make 'chicken tracks.'" Betty said when asked about her plans for the future. She is getting in experience on the "chicken tracks" this semester by practice teaching shorthand at University high school. Taught Country School Betty laughed when she recalled her former experience in teaching. "I taught a one-room rural school a year before coming to college. It was a lark. I think I'll like high school even better, though," she said. Betty frowned when she admitted she had no particular hobby. "Hobbies take time, and that is just what most of us don't have," she declared. "I'd rather dance than anything; I guess that's the closest thing to a hobby that I have. Riding horseback and playing cards run a close second with me. second with him "One thing I'd like to do when I make lots of money teaching, is travel. I've never done much of it, but like everyone else, I'm sure I'd enjoy it," said Betty. "About the only experience I get traveling now is riding back and forth from home in Wilson, Kansas." As for the vague, distant ambition held by every senior who chooses a practical profession, Betty said that her secret ambition has always been to go into foreign service. Read the Daily Kansan daily. Who said GOOD blades have to be high priced? Marlin HIGH SPEED BLADES Marlin HIGH SPEED BLADES 25¢ SHAVES YOU FOR 3 MONTHS! GUARANTEED BY THE MARLIN FIREARMS COMPANY Fine Guns Since 1870 Delicious JUICY STEAKS Our Specialty Across from BILL'S GRILL 1109 Mass. Court House Phone 2054 Lindley's Kansas Cleaners 12 E. 8th Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices MEN'S SUITS- Cleaned and Pressed ... 65c LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES— Cleaned and Pressed ... 69c Cash and Carry Only JBE AN EARLY BIRD On these fine spring mornings have your crowning glory shampooed, set, and dried. Make an 8 a.m. Appointment and go to your 9 a.m. class with your TRAILING TRESSES TRIM Appointments 8 a.m.-6 p.m. PHONE 430 BAND BOX Beauty Shop amou. anou. amou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. anou. An Invitation to Our Classmates and Teammates TO VISIT US GWEN HARGER and OWEN PECK SATURDAY, APRIL 12 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. X-Ray Fittings, Music—all day at the OTTO FISCHER Walk-Over Shoe Shop 813 Mass. ALEXANDER G. HANSAKY PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 11,1947 SPOTLIGHT SPORTS By BILL CONBOY Harrison Dillard, the hurdle champion from Baldwin-Wallace, will be back at the Kansas Relays this year to defend his title in the high barriers. Dillard sped over the 120 highs last year in 14.2 seconds to tie the mark which Fred Wolcott of Rice rang up in 1938. The time was not allowed as official, however, since a wind of 7.6 miles an hour prevailed. Porter trailed Dillard by less than a foot in the Purdue Indoor Relays. Blakely has turned in one 14.6 second performance in a dual meet this Tharp of Minnesota, who took second behind Dillard in 1946, will also return. Added to this hurdle field will be Bill Porter of Northwestern, Bob Blakely and Floyd Gaultney of Missouri, and Frank Stannard of Kansas. Allen Lawler of Texas will be back to defend his 100-yard dash title. A teammate, Charley Parker, has been turning in the better time, however, for the season so far. A third Texan, T.J. Hood, has sprained the century in less than the 9.7 time which won the honors here last year. Bill Martineon of Baylor came in second in 1946 behind Lawler, but the Baylor Bullet has crossed the finish line ahead of Parker twice this year to indicate that he is even faster now. The Relays record is a nity 9.4 seconds turned in by Cy Leland of Texas Christian back in 1300. Kansas Relay Sidelights The first Relays back in 1923 attracted so much attention that high schools from other states sent entries for the prep division. Schools came from Oak Park, Ill.; Cedar Rapids, Iowa; and Kansas City, Mo The three big national relay programs began in the following years: Pennsylvania Relays, 1896; Drake Relays, 1913, and the Kansas Relays, 1923. ★ ★ ★ Three world's records were broken at the 1925 Relays. Kansas set a new standard for the 440-yard relay at 42 seconds. Illinois won the 880-yard relay in 1.27. Texas captured the medley relay with a time of 7:35.6. --- - * * While on the subject of the 1925 program, it is interesting to note that the world's record for the high school 800-yard relay that year was 1.322 minutes. Last year, Southwest high school of Kansas City sped the distance in 1.31. Eleven years before that mark would have merited international fame. After the three world's marks were shattered in 1925, much paper work and a myriad technicalities were encountered before the records were officially recognized. A professor from the School of Engineering had to survey the track to legalize the results. Cleveland Wins AAU Boxing Tourney Boston—(UP)—Cleveland's clout- ing Simon U. Pures holds the National A. A. U. boxing tournament title after a three-day slugfest in which eight new champions were crowned and all-time records set for attendance and gate receipts. Though boasting only one champion, the Cleveland team had enough contenders to pile up 12 points, one more than the second-place Pacific Coast Conference Ohio Association was third with 10 points, and last year's co-winner. Individual honors in the 59th annual tournament went to a youthful Chicago truckman, Nick Ranieri, who floored his semi-final opponent in three rounds and then returned to put out Jesse Wilson, a Fort Bragg, N. C., paratrooper in two. Ranieri, and the other 15 finalists will fly to Hawaii in June to compete in a special island tourney. In addition to the trip, the eight champions were awarded gold medals. Prospective Line Strength Is Better For 1947 K.U.Football Squad The 60-minute performers of the Kansas line will have relief by the time next football season rolls around. Coach George Sauer and his assistants are busy uncovering talent in spring practice which will give the Jayhawker forward wall the reserve strength which it lacked in 1946. The March 29 practice game gave many unheralded players the chance to show their wares in the heat of actual scrimmage. By positions, the line picture shapes up this way: The center spot is held by Howard Fischer, the rugged 60-minute batter from last year. Ed Bray, who played most of his ball on the "B" team in 1946 has been showing constant improvement and will see action this season. The play of Dick Monroe, Oklas- Sauer Watching Monroe homa Aggie transfer, has been catching Coach Sauer's eye. The 205-pound, 6 foot, $1\frac{1}{2}$ inch ball-snapper has been pressing Fischer for the first string berth during the spring sessions. Left guard finds Don Fambrough back in the harness. The East-West all-star performer of last season has been living up to his all-Big Six ratings in the scrimmages this spring. Jack Fink, 195-pound former full-back, has been impressive in late workouts. Fink played for the "E" team in 1946 but will see first team play this year if his play continues to improve. Hawkins Attracts Bosses Charles Hawkins, 187-pound converted center, is another "B" team veteran whose rough and tough play has attracted the attention of the Kansas football bosses. Jim Foulk has been switched from backback to guard and will give the others a run for their money if he continues to improve. Lewis Musick rounds out the left guard cast. Right guard is in the hands of Joe Crawford from last year's team, with Kenny Sperry, Cheney Klose, and Dick Tomlinson all giving strong competition. Klose has been a standout in late scrimmages because of his aggressiveness. The 187-pound former Southwest High school star from Kansas City has been developing fast. Johnson Is Tackle Right tackle is once again in the hands of veteran Hugh Johnson. Next in line is Steve Renko, 27-year old former Wyandotte High school stalwart. Renko is strong and rough, but he faces the difficult job of getting back in condition after a long layoff from the grid game. He was a freshman at Kansas 10 years ago and last competed as an end on Gwinn Henry's 1939 eleven. Wallace Rouse and Eugene Siler round out the right tackle staff. Rouse, in the opinion of the coaches has improved as much as anyone on the squad during spring practice Siler weighs 205 pounds and that rock-em-an"-sock-em attitude which wins ball games. Left tackle is now being handled by Terry Monroe, brother of center candidate Dick Monroe and also a transfer from A. and M. The tackle half of the brother combination weighs 215 pounds and is a bear on defense. By the time he has brushed up on his offensive blocking, he will be a terror to any line. He played with the Aggies in the Sugar Bowl two years ago. Monroe Is Left Tackle Ed Lee, 202-pound former high school fullback and "B" team guard, is now stationed at tackle and has apparently found his real spot. Lee likes it rough and can dish out the punishment. Third candidate at the left tackle position is Dick Channell, 240-pound man-mountain, who has showed steady improvement all spring. Schnellbacher At End Right end is held down by Otto Schnellbacher, the all-Big Six pass catching star. He is backed by Bryan Sperry from last year's varsity. O'Neal, Mendenhall, Ellerts, and Dulaney round out the right end staff. Left end is in the hands of Dave Schmidt, also an all-Bix Six terminal in 1946, and Marv Small, the glue- fingered Alabama speedster who pulled in Ray Evans' long aerial to score against Missouri last year. Darrrell Norris, Bob Kline, and Hobart Taylor all have been seeing left action during the spring sessions. Star Negro Player Joins Major League New York-(UP)-Jackie Robinson moves into big-league competition today as a member of the Brooklyn Dodgers, and most baseball men agreed that the lithe Negro not only will stay up, but probably will become a star. The 27-year-old Robinson, who first won national athletic fame was an all-American halfback at the University of California at Los Angeles, was moved up Thursday from Dodgers' Montreal farm club to become the first Negro player in the major leagues and he was the first to admit that the pressure would be great. He was confident that he could made good in the majors, thus opening the door for others of his race to compete on equal footing as they in boxing, college and professional football, college and professional basketball, and as jockeys in horse-racing. He became the first Negro in organized baseball when Branch Rickey signed him to a Montreal contract last year, and was received with mixed emotions by his Montreal teammates. WURLITZER PHONOGRAPHS FOR PARTY RENTALS Used Juke Box Records For Sale John H. Emick 1014 Mass. Phone 343 Russell Stovers Candies Assorted Nut and Chewy Centers 1 pound,$1.20 Assorted Creams I pound, $1.20 Assorted Chocolates I pound, $1.20 STOWITS REXALL STORE 847 Mass. Adveritisers Prefer The Kansan To Reach Hill Students 10 Hold that Smile You're radiant when you smile- and that's no empty compliment. We didn't call you a raving beauty, but every woman is lovely when her eyes light and a smile breaks over her face when she sees the superb and beautiful work done on her spring clothes by the Phone 75 New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPERRANCE "He Couldn't Phone— So he came all the way across town to ask me to go to the SKYLINE CLUB for dancing tonight. IT'S ALWAYS FUN AT THE A SKYLINE CLUB Phone 3339 2301 Haskell APRIL 11, 1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FT1 140 High School Track Teams To Battle For Titles Here April 18 More than 140 high schools will compete in the 43rd annual University of Kansas Interscholastic track and field meet April 18. Champions in all classes will defend their records. Wichita East will try for its fifth consecutive crown in Class AA. Marysville, Class A, and Prairie, Class B, each will seek their third straight win. The East's Blue Aces are expected to extend their string of champion- Merrillville and Pretty. The East's Blue Aces are cap- ships, but Marysville and Pretty Prairie may find some stiff com- petition. At least a dozen crack sprinters will run, which means that the competition for the five places in each of the dashes will be close. Beck Strong In Century The sprints will have such stars as James Battle and Alfred House of Summer; Bill Wall of Hutchinson; Melvin Van Gilder and Jim Savage of Wichita North; Ted Hoffman of Pittsburgh; Lyn Smith of Shawnee Mission; Wally Bemore of Haskell and Eob Near of Lawrence. Battle, Wall, Jernigan and Van Gilder placed in the 220 at the state meet last spring. In opening meets this spring, Wally Beck, Shawnee Mission sophomore, had the best 100-yard dash time of 10.2 seconds. In the relays, he will face three place-winners at the 1946 state meet, Clarence Jernigan and Royal of Wichita East and Bob Klotz of Junction City. Van Gilder's best performances are in the quarter-mile, in which he is defending state champion. Other 440 men of note are Bill Swearer and Jerry LeCocq of East; Don White of Pittsburg; John Oswalt of Hutchinson; Glenn Gates of Ottawa and Andy Lillich of Argentine. White To Defend 880 Mark A second state champ, Tom White of Wyandotte, will defend his record in the half-mile run. He will be pressed however, by three other point winners at the state meet; Bob Williams of Fort Scott; Bob Garcia of El Dorado and Don Williams of East. The fields in the two hurdle races show few men doubling in these events this year. Roger Crawford of Shawnee Mission and Herb Clark of Junction City are expected to place in both hurdle races. Other contenders are concentrating on only one of these events. Hurdlers Plentiful Burtles Hills In the high hurdles, outstanding entries are Jack Lambert and Adrian King of Topeka; Lloyd Mairs of Argentine and Don Nichols of North. The low-hurdles stars include Merton Moore of Haskell, third place man at the state meet; East High's Jernigan; Don Young of Wichita North and Doyle Gilstrap of Arkansas City. Top contender in the field events is Dick Johnson, Lawrence, a three event athlete, who hopes to sweep the weight events. In the shot put, he will match tosses with Talton Pace of Hutchinson and Renrof, Shawnee Mission sophomore. In the discus he will meet Pace, Ostanic of Wyandotte and Gott of East. In the javelin throw his best rivals will be Bruce Rathbun of Topeka and Patterson of Leavenworth. Southern Negro Ball May Be Sanctioned Tulsa, Okla. — (UF) —Plans for a nationwide Negro sandlot baseball movement will begin at a meeting in Tulsa tomorrow and Sunday. Ray Dumont, Wichita, president of the national baseball congress, said the first step would be to plan a Dixie championship Negro tournament at Dallas, Tex., starting July 9. State champions from tournaments throughout the South would compete. The Dallas winner would be crowned Dixie Negro champion for the 12th annual national tournament at Wichita, Kan., Aug. 15 to 27. "The best talent in Negro baseball is in the South" Dumont said. "However, Southern Negroes have never had the incentive to play non-professional baseball because they have been barred from state tournaments. Under the new plan, negro baseball should show a tremendous boom." Dodger-Yank Game Scheduled Today New York—(UP)—Eyes of the baseball world were focused on Ebbets field today where the Brooklyn Dodgers, with a temporary manager and a new first baseman, prepared for the invasion of the New York Yankees. The Dodgers, who are being handled by Clyde Sukeforth, purchased Negro Jackie Robinson from Montreal Thursday and Sukeforth indicated that the 1946 International league batting champion would be in the Brooklyn line-up Thursday. The team will play on Thursday, 4 to 3, with Al Campanis and Don Lund of the Royals each hitting a home run. Manager Bucky Harris of the Yankee pared his squad by sending catcher Gus Niarhos to the Kansas City Blues of the American association; infielder Jack Phillips to Newark of the International league, and pitcher Johnny Maldovan to Portland of the Pacific Coast league. The Chicago Times was the first newspaper to use banner headlines. Undefeated I-M Champions 10 Pictured above are members of the Sigma Alpha Epsilon basketball team that won the 1947 Intramural championship. The SAE team went through the regular season and the playoffs without a defeat. Members in the picture include: Front row, left to right: C. Briney, E. Frizell, R. Rosenfield, coach, J. Biggs, and W. Sheridan. Back row, left to right: K. Thompson, O. Kaufman, F. Gage, R. Ocamb, and W. Daugherty. Intra-Squid Scrimmage To Use Game Conditions The University football team will hold an intra-squad scrimmage Saturday at 2:30 p.m. The game will be under game conditions and will be played on the regular practice field. All interested students may attend, but are requested not to interfere with the game by crowding on the field. 4-day Laundry Service 3-day Cleaning Service . - 24-hour Shoe Repair . - Leather and Garment Dyeing a Specialty. Instant Service In Our Shoe Repair Department Royal College Shop 837-38 Mass. Village Cleaners SUNFLOWER, KANSAS Opposite School Western Union—8 a.m.-9 p.m. 10 Get Your Burgers AT Zim's SNACK SHOP CURB SERVICE starting Sunday, April 13 Across from the Postoffice. Open: 6 a.m. to 12:30 a.m. LAUNDERETTE Bendix Equipment 30 Minute Self Service—SOAP FREE Up to 10 lb. Washing (per machine)—25c 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. 813 Vermont St. Phone 3368 Were to $12.95 ...$ 8 Were to 16.95 ...10 Were to 19.95 ...12 Were to 25.00 ...15 Dresses Misses' Shop After Easter Sale Spring Coats Were to $35.00 ___ $24 Were to 39.95 ___ 28 Were to 55.00 ___ 34 Spring Suits Were to $35.00 $24 Were to 39.95 28 Were to 69.95 38 The Palace 843 MASS. MAKE DATE NITE SHOW NITE JAYHAWKER Now, Ends Tuesday Dynamite Entertainment HUMPHREY BOGART ELIZABETH SCOTT Dead Reckoning A COLUMBIA PICTURE Wednesday, one week DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS, JR. MAUREEN O'HARA WALTER SLEZAK SINBAD THE SAILOR IN GLORIOUS TECHNICOLOR! GRANADA Now, Ends Saturday TWO MEN AND A WOMAN FIGHTING JUNE HAVER · JOHN PAYN Wake up and Dream Wake up and Dream. ADDED—NEWS AND "MARCH OF TIME" OWL SHOW SAT. 11:45 JAMES CAGNEY 13 RUE MADELEINE ANNABELLA·FRANK LATIMORE OWL SHOW SAT. 11:4 Sunday, 4 Days NOW, Ends Saturday INGRID ROBERT BERGMAN MONTGOMERY "RAGE IN HEAVEN" PATEE Coming Sunday MERLE MELVIN OBERON DOUGLAS IN "THAT UNCERTAIN FEELING" Cartoon Varieties News VARSITY Today, Ends Sat. GHOST GOES WILD KING OF THE WILD HORSES" Sunday, 3 Days ALAN CURTIS TERRY AUSTIN Philo Vance's Gamble AND JOHN CARROLL RUTH HUSSEY "BEDSIDE MANNER" "BEDSIDE MANNER" "BEDSIDE MANNER" PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 11, 1947 "It's All Right—I've Got Him On A Leash" MONOPOLY ANTI- TRUST LAWS HERBLOCK ANTI- TRUST LAWS HERBLOCK © BY THE WARNING POST Kansan Comments... Will We Have A Real Peace? With representatives of the world' leading powers conferring in Moscow on a peace plan, it is well to pause mementarily and consider what it takes to make a peace successful. Peace is certainly not won at peace conferences, for there nations bluff and bluster, maneuver for advantage, agree to compromise and then repeat the process. They sign what we call a treaty of peace—but it isn't. It is a truce, born of expediency, and fashioned out of mutual distrust. It is a document full of high-sounding rhetoric which camouflages conflicting nationalistic interests. For all the glibtongued oratory that goes into its making, there is not one grain of Christian humility. If there were delegates would never have to go through the formality of signing a treaty. It takes humility to make peace Christ said, "blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth." They shall inherit it because they alone have enough individual humility to get along with each other. The threat of the atomic bomb ought to make men humble enough to write a lasting peace. But the world's statesmen seem blind to reality and swap the present good for the future evil. They have reduced peace drafting to bargaining with time and death. The present peace is being written under the shadow of militarism by the dim light of national self-interest and arrogance. Permanent peace can be written only of statesmen and the people they represent learn to live as humbly as their soldiers died. When humanity has learned that lesson, the individual dignity of man will flower as the rule rather than the exception and the world will at last achieve peace. William Smith One person comments that what the United States is after is oil, not Greece. Dear Editor---- 3arring Aggies I would like to inform those who favor barring Oklahoma A. and M. of a few facts regarding the Big Six (Mid West) conference. Two schools are in states that are, by tradition and custom, anti-Negro. These are Missouri and Oklahoma; and as long as these two schools are members, there will be racial discrimination. No drastic steps will alleviate such discrimination, but it must evolve through the slow change of years. Regardless whether you consider this good or bad, these are the facts and we must face them. Since there is no conference without Missouri and Oklahoma, there is much to gain and nothing to lose by adding the Aggies. Oklahoma A. and M. is one of the best sports competitors in the Midwest, and it is certainly as clean as some of the Big Six schools as far as recruiting and subsidizing are concerned. They would add greatly to the prestige of the conference, and since it would be impossible to eliminate racial discrimination anyway, why not build our conference strength? Of the groups that are petitioning to have Oklahoma A. and M. barred from entrance, how many have taken votes from their members on the issue? I don't know about the rest of the students on the Hill, but I rather dislike for the organizations that I belong to advancing opinions for the group without the approval of the majority. This appears to be an active lobby of a minority group overriding the opinion of the majority. Clyde Shockley Engineering Senior Discuss Sun, Politics At Speech Meeting Talks ranged from Communism to Sherlock Holmes at the regular meeting of the Forensic league Thursday night in Green hall. Kenneth Beck, discussed "Is Communism a Threat to America?" He advanced the idea that the real threat lies not in the acts of communists, but in the acts taken by us to combat them. "You and the Universe" by Beth Bell, College senior, was a discussion of the scientific origin of the sun, earth, and other planets. A need for high Christian morals in business if we are to attain a peaceful world was presented by Elaine Sawyer, freshman. If American teachers could get portal-to-portal pay they'd forget agitation for salary increases. Robert Davis, with a talk entitled "Sherlock Holmes", gave a biographical sketch of the author, Conan Doyle, and his fictional character, Sherlock Holmes. Be charitable with your instructor; after all a man's "bore" is no indication of his caliber. The Y.W.C.A. and Y.M.C.A. will sponsor a May Day party May 1, for students of North Lawrence schools. Herbert Coles, business junior was chairman of the program. 'Y' Groups to Sponsor Party The two University organizations are sponsoring the party with the cooperation of the Lawrence Community group. The world's smallest post office is at Bill's Place, Pa. The University Daily Kansan Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assn. National Editorial Assn., Inland Area Press, College Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave. New York. Managing Editor Editor in Chief Assst. Man. Editor Assst. Man. Editor City Editor City Editor Assst. City Editor Assst. City Editor Telegraph Editor Art Editor ... Business Manager Associate in Circulation Manager Classified Adm. Man- ager Promotion Adm. Promotion Manager Marcella Stewart Lehmann Martha Jewett William T. Smith Jr. Wilhelm Herschel Shirley E. Bales Alan J. Stewart Marion Minor Joseph G. Extension Courses Offered Bob Bonebrake Alimaye Join Bechse LVerme Keevan Keevan Keevan Mel Adams The Kansas Press Association 1947 Member National Editorial Association A FREE PRESS--YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW Courses in salesmanship, under the direction of Quincy Attna. K. U. extension division representative, will be offered in Holton, Hawiatha, Sabetha, and Marysville from April 21 to 25. The projects are sponsored by local Chambers of Commerce. Thieves Take 'Seconds' Houston, Tex. — (U.P.) — When thieves broke into Wimpy's Hamburger stand they took nine cartons of cigarettes and Manager John Montoya's hat. A few nights later they came back and took eight more cartons of cigarettes, but returned the Wimpy. COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals - Short Orders Sandwiches Open 5:30-12:30 Team Managers We have equipment for all of the SPRING INTRAMURALS Baseball equipment Softball equipment Golf equipment Tennis equipment Horseshoes KIRKPATRICK Sport Shop 715 Mass. WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames. Lawrence Optical Co. DE LUXE CAFE 28 years of service Same Location-Same Management You Are Welcome 711 Mass. NEW SHAVER GIVES "SIMPLEST SHAVES OF YOUR LIFE!" Special Offer Introduces New Enders Speed Shaver Now at Your Campus Store Mystic, Conn. It's here at last! Today the Durham- Enders Corp., an- umpment of all mazers the new Enders—the world's most morning razor. SAFER... SMOOTHER ...SWIFTER I It's new in every way—but its big feature is its extreme simplicity. You simply click the blade in and shave. Only one piece, no moving parts, no extra "gadgets." And it's light in your hand, but keen to get an extra-shove shade, an extra-sake shade, an extra-swift shade. Already chosen as "the razor of the airlines." And here's the offer: don't risk a penny. Get the new Enders at your campus store- —introduction price only 49€ with 5 double-thick deluxe speed blades. Your money back if Enders Shaving isn't the swiftest and easiest in your life! Look for the special Enders offer next visit to your campus store. A good selection of NECKTIES READY FOR YOU NOW— SPRING LEISURE JACKETS—Plaids, Checks, Two Tones, and Solid Colors. You'll like the new Styles and Colors. Priced $5 to $22.95. Sizes 34 to 44 GLAD TO SHOW YOU— A CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES VARSITY Tomorrow Night! DANCING From 9 to12 Dont miss this all-school dance Won't have to dress up— Sweater 'n Skirts 0.K. MUSIC BY Kass Kassinger & his Orchestra APRIL 11, 1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Hardy Haworth Has Escaped Fire, Houses Geology, Mining, Anatomy Although it is still middle-aged, Haworth hall has accomplished a string of achievements that probably would make most oldsters turn green with ivy. Just now rounding-out its 38th year on the campus, Haworth can already look back upon a well-filled It was built during an early boom period in the history of the University, 1908-09. That period, not so violent as the current one but nevertheless a record breaker in its time, saw, the enrollment at Kansas University soar beyond 2,000 for the first time. Haworth was one of the four buildings erected to handle this large number of students. Houseed Geology Department Opened in the fall of 1909, the building became the home of the geology and mining departments and the state department of geology. It was named for the head of that department, Erasmus "Daddy" Haworth. It didn't take long for the department to fill Haworth's halls and library with geological specimens, and in 1920 the second floor was unofficially tagged the "Hall of Invertebrate Fossils" after the non-living specimens contained therein, of course. In 1941, the mineral display in Haworth was the largest in Kansas. Escape Fire Had the building been of a less hardy nature, a cigarette butt tossed carelessly from an upper window into an awning below might have been 'finl' for Haworth, in 1944. As it was, though, repairs amounted to only $20 and the old structure escaped with little more than a bad case of jitters. The anatomy department had been a homeless group for two years, after their own building was completely destroyed by fire. Temporarily housed in Snow hall, the department quickly moved into vacated Haworth, and once again filled it well—filled this time not with rocks and minerals but with an odor that keeps all but the sturdiest from its doors. Escaped Fire Professor Weaves Cloth To Beat Shortage The geology department pulled out of Haworth for newer and more spacious quarters in the spring of 45. But that didn't mean any vacation for the building. Anatomy Department Now Orono, Me.—(UP)—Asst. Prof Edward J. Bogan of the University of Maine chemistry department and his wife weave their own cloth from a home-made loom he built in 1942 to beat the clothing shortage. They have woven 100 yards of suiting, 22 afghans and blankets and five scarves. Classified Advertising Thirty-eight years hence, Haworth will have accrued quite a lengthy history but probably nothing will ever change its belief that the first thirty-eight are the hardest. Classified Advertising Rates One day 35c For Sale 25 words or less additional words Business Services TWO Tickets to Pla-Mor Ice Capades. box seats. For 8 p.m. Saturday, April 17, 2014. USED Rennington typewriter, $27.50; rebuilt Royal, $86.75; rebuilt Underwood, $61.25; rebuilt postmaster, $79.80; typewriter table, $75.50; up 2 solid oak used desk, $25. Roller files, at 8th street in First Bank Bidg. phone 15. -14 NAVAL Officer's uniforms. Blues and whites, size 36-38. Also used student diary, good condition. 28-A, Sumyside. 15 "36 FORD. Call 2696 or see at 1108 Ohio. 2-5 p.m. every day except Thursday. Ask for "Pete." BILL is now running his cab co. again, and will be running 24 hours, 7 days a week. Call 69, if no answer, call 2182-J. -16- TYPING. Prompt service, reasonable rate. 1028 Vermont, phone 1168-R. -17- TEENNIS Rackets restrucing and repaired. Silk, nylon or, gut. Priced accordingly, $1.50 to $10. Phone 2711-W. Ed. Well- hausen, 1145 Kentucky. -21- Lost LADIES Onyx ring. Call 2995-1. Reward. HARD. Onebrow zipper jacket, white. LIGHT HIGH on elbow of sleeve. Reward. Please notify Kansan office. BLACK Brief case containing class notes and Carlson's "Machinery of the Body." Reward. Return to Kansan office. BLACK Bilfold on campain. Contains George Reed. For please contact George Reed. 1100 Tennessee, phone 1770. Reward. ELGIN Wristwatch with flexible silver band. Watch. Leave at Kansan office or 2843-1. Suffer 9. ELGIN Bilfold on fountain p.e.n. Brown striped, name engraved, E.R Cater. If found please leave at Kansan office. Reward. BROWN Wallet. April 8, on or near campus. Reward. Need Navy hooks. John Llover. 100 Indian. Call 284 if possible. BLACK Parker "11", silver cap. Wednesday afternoon in or between library and Fraser. Please return to Kansan office. SHAFFER Pen. silvertop, black base, gold band between $5 reward. Pete SHAREHP Pen, silver top, black back reward. Delta Tau Delta. Stubbia, Delta Tau Delta. For Rent FURNISHED Double apartment about furnished, unfurnished house, or apartment in Kansas City, Kansas, or suburbs as overland Park. Park - - - - remedial classes will be conducted two hours a week for a month. Mr. Holly and Mrs. Bernice Coffee, graduate student, will be the instructors. Wanted RIDE Daily from K. C to Lawrence. Dawley S; 3:00. Call 2935-M after 5:45 15. 100 Students Take Reading-Clinic Tests Housekeeper's Dream Is Dust, Germ-Proof Rensselaer, N.Y. (UP)—A housekeeper's dream, a dust-proof, germ-proof building, has been opened here. Engineers who designed it for the Winthrop Chemical company described it as a "scientific utopia." Four stories high, with glass blocks instead of windows, the 35 isolated laboratories inside the building where medicines are prepared, have their own automatically controlled weather conditions. Each room has rounded corners, tile walls, flush lights and other means for keeping it spotlessly clean with the least possible effort. Ultraviolet rays flood all ventilating ducts to kill germs. To make the dust-proofing doubly certain, all employees and visitors on entering the building must pass through chambers with air blowers and suction fans which remove dust and lint from shoes and clothing. More than 100 persons have taken the University reading clinic's seven preliminary tests, Dr. R. A. Schwegwer, director of the clinic, said today. They are now being counselled by Joseph V. Holly, clinic counselor, and will be placed in remedial classes to improve their reading habits. The seven preliminary tests, given under the direction of Richard Kirk patrick, business junior, include reading, reading comprehension, visual, and hearing examinations. One test is a moving picture recording of images taken by cameras. This does faults in reading habits by showing the pauses and regressions the eyes make in reading a page. Conducted in three or four sessions, the tests take four hours. The personal counseling is done in a half hour period. No charge is made for the service. Interested students may still apply at the reading clinic in 18, Fraser hall. Patrolman Reads Bible At Breakfast Johnstown, Pa.—(UP)—City Patrolman Frank E. Willett has started his 29th cover-to-cover reading of the Bible. On his 28th trip through the Scriptures, Willett set himself a record in getting from Genesis to Revelations in 66 days. His best previous mark was 103 days. Willett reads the Bible instead of the morning paper while eating his breakfast. He finds the morning hours best for spiritual enlightenment. While on duty, the veteran of 33 years on Johnstown's police force scans a well-thumbed edition during lull periods at his radio broadcasting station post. Diphtheria Deaths Down London.—(UP)—Under a national immunization program begun in 1940, deaths from diptheria in Great Britain have dropped by almost two-thirds. Before the war, diptheria claimed some 3,000 victims a year, and hospital treatment of about 60,000 patients cost more than $4,000,000. Now deaths are down to 1,000 a year. PLENTY of DRAWING BOARDS $1 6^{\prime \prime} \times 2 1^{\prime \prime}$ $1 8^{\prime \prime} \times 2 4^{\prime \prime}$ $2 3^{\prime \prime} \times 3 1^{\prime \prime}$ Sandelius to Speak Monday At 'Y' Religious Seminar ALL KILN DRIED ---+--- STUDENT BOOK STORE Prof. W. E. Sandelius, department of political science, will speak Monday to members of the Y.W.C.A. and Y.M.C.A. on the subject, "Would world government based on Christian ethics give the world power." UNION BUILDING This is another in a series of religious seminars and student-faculty discussion periods. The oldest garrisoned fort in the U.S. is located in Oswego, N.Y. Sandwiches and Chili AS YOU LIKE THEM WHERE? "SNAPPY" LUNCH OF COURSE 7 a.m.-2 a.m. Week Days 12n.-12m. Sunday 1010 Mass. P GOOD SERVICE COMES FIRST And for excellent service in the conditioning of your car, for a really complete spring tune-up job, don't hesitate to see us immediately. MORGAN-MACK MOTOR COMPANY YOUR FRIENDLY FORD DEALER 609 Mass. Phone 277 WHI-SH-SH-SH-SH!! "It's Moisturized" TO STAY FRESH LONGER! TO TASTE BETTER! TO SMOKE MILDER! New! ALL New! RALEIGH "903" BETTY GRABLE star of "MOTHER WORE TIGHTS" for lifecoming 20th Century-Fox Production SAYS: Medical Science offers PROOF JCB RALEIGH 903 RALEIG 903 903 Raleigh CIGARETTES GH B" New Blend! New Taste! New Freshness! Made by the revolutionary new "903" moisturizing process. Beneficial moisture penetrates every tobacco leaf—gives you a smoother, milder, better smoke! Get new Raleigh "903" Cigarettes today. PROOF POSITIVE No other leading cigarette gives you. Less Nicotine Less Throat Irritants' Tests certified by a jury of 14 distinguished doctors --- PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 11,1947 Organized Houses May Purchase Inscribed Memorial Carillon Bells Carillon bells for the World War II Memorial may be purchased by organized houses as a memorial to their own veterans, Bruce Bathurst, said Thursday. Mr. Ken Postlethwaite, organization director of the Memorial associa- Any inscription that the house may wish will be cast on the bell they purchase, he said. The price of the bells will be 1,000 dollars. both said that two houses have an interest in making such a purchase. The price of the bells range from 2,00 dollars for the smallest to 25 thousand dollars for the large Bourdon bell. Bells which cost less than 1,000 dollars are being reserved for families who want to buy them as a memorial for individuals. A spiral stairway from the base of the bell chamber to the tower will insure that the inscriptions will be seen. An elevator will take visitors from the ground floor to the base of the chamber. "We feel that organized houses are better able to raise the 1,000 dollars then most individual families." Mr. Postlethwaite said. The millions of dollars needed to acclimate marshlands along the Mississippi river would be an unsound investment. Dr. Walter Kollmorgen, associate professor of geography, told members of the Geology club at a meeting Thursday. Reclaiming Marshland 'Would Be Unsound' Dr. Kollmorgen, who investigated conditions along the Mississippi for two years for the department of agriculture, told of his findings during this survey. He is writing several pamphlets on this subject for the federal government. "The subsidies we spend to reclaim this swamp and marsh land could be more profitably used on reforestation, elimination of slums, or a number of equally important projects." Dr. Kollmorgen said. Oyron Chronic, president of the Geology club, announced that the members will go to Topeka Saturday on a field trip. 'India Must Solve Four Problems' When the British leave, India must solve four problems before she can rise to the status of a world power, Dr. S. Chandra-Sekhar, Hindu lecturer said Thursday in Fraser auditorium. The problems are: ONE. What will happen to India's frontiers and sovereignty after the British withdraw? TWO. How will India avoid civil war? THREE. How will the princes and the feudal system which they represent be eliminated? FOUK. How can the new Indian government lift the people from their centuries of poverty? British No Protection Dr. Chandra-Sekhar said, that he had no fears for India's independence. "The British myth of invincibility has already been shattered, and they have been of no protection to us for some years." Japan as an aggressor is out of the picture he believes. Russia the Indians do not fear because of their natural boundaries to the North secure even against aircraft. The greatest problem facing India is that of composing the differences between the majority Hindus and the minority Moslems, the former president of the Indian Youth Congress said. Only a constitutional guarantee of minority rights will solve this problem, he added. Rejections Lead To 'Wings' In Magazines For Connell Had you ever thought of papering your room with rejection slips from magazines? It is inspiring, said Evan Connell, College senior, that is if you are an amateur writer, and the type who regards these frigid notes as stepping stones rather than the swan song of your pipe dream career. According to this erstwhile navy flight instructor, there are three steps the earning of "wings" in the® According to this exercise, have in the earning of "wings" in the magazine writing field. The first is the rejection slip period, corresponding to pre-flight training. When you begin receiving "sorry-keep-trying" notes from associate editors, you have moved up to primary flight. Your first check is your "wings" and you have become a "boot ensign" in the profession, Connell said. Corps Wings With Check A current bet calls for a steak dinner for the one who first gets a Farns Wings With Check He earned his wings recently when he received a check for $25 from Foreign Service, a Veterans of For-ign Wars monthly with about two million circulation, for a 1,000-word sketch, "A Cross to Bear." It was a rewrite of *a* class theme about a young officer who found himself the sole heir of an ensign whom he had accused of cowardice and who was posthumously awarded the navy "Any fool can learn to write and can sell his stories." Connell said. He said that he convinced himself of this after being released from the navy a year ago. A friend whom he sold on this idea last summer gave up a partnership in a lucrative jewelry firm and went to California to try his hand at writing, Connell said. Friend Pays Off Bet "It really burned him up when I got my first check because he had to pay off a $5 bet that he would be the first to get his wings," he said. $500 check. This much for a story will make him a "full lieutenant," Connell figures. Now an "ensign," he will promote himself to "lieutenant (j.g.)." when he gets his first $100 check. He has also tried his hand at art and for several months was art editor of Flatbatter, a publication for navy and marine aviators, published at New Orleans. Recently he began selling spot drawings to a dance magazine. A take-off on international armament races is his present brain child. It is a fantastic story about Waldo and his pal, Gismo. Waldo hadn't any arms and was happy until he became aware of his lack. Acquiring arms, he began hitting everyone and with each blow his arms became longer and longer and Waldo more and more unhappy. Finally he begged Gismo to help him get rid of them. What did Gismo do? That is what is puzzling the boot writer. Writes About Armament If you are thinking of submitting your first article to a magazine, don't send it to Esquire. Connell advised, because it can say, "Tough, bud" in "six words or less." Saturday Evening Post slips let you down the easiest of any, he said. 'The Face Is Familiar. E. ffe was born in Missouri, but has lived in Massachusetts, Illinois, California, Arizona, Louisiana, and Colorado. He has traveled in England and on the Continent. At one time, he practiced law in Portland. Ore. His mind is on international problems most of the time and he often speaks at various meetings and clubs on the campus and down town. Thursday's caricature was of Ray Eavens, business senior. ☆ ☆ Lack Of Competition Causes Bad Relations Lack of competition in government service is responsible for bad relations between business and government. Mr. Lowell B. Mason to the General Trade commission told students at a special convocation today. "Because bureaus don't have to compete for public favor, they are content to go along doing things in the same old way," he said. "This leads to stagnation. Our methods of handling fair trade problems are 33 years old. It is a hit and miss system of individual prosecutions. "Confusion in government policy leads to confusion in business practices. The government jumps first one way and then another. The anti-trust laws say it is illegal to fix prices. The government had a change of heart during the NRA and put a pants presser in jail for not entering into a conspiracy to fix prices." The only way to correct this is to get universal acceptance and understanding of the law, Mason said. Allen, Melvin Listed For History Program Dr. Melvin will read a paper entitled "Adventuring With the Time Machine" 8 p.m. Friday. Dr. Allen will give a report on research work for "Your Government," bulletin of the Bureau of Government Research which he heads. The report is scheduled for 9:30 a.m. Saturday. Dr. Ethan P. Allen, chairman of the political science department, and Dr. Frank E. Melvin, associate professor of history, will take part in the program of the Kansas Association of Teachers of History and Related Fields, in Topeka Friday and Saturday. Dr. James Malin, professor of history, is a member of the association's executive committee. Other history department members to attend are George Anderson, associate professor; Harold Dilley, instructor, and David Teener, assistant instructor. Daily Kansans Are Back To Sunflower Copies of the University Daily Kansan will now be available to residents of Sunflower village. They will be placed each day in a Daily Kansan box behind the Sunflower village drugstore. This service was discontinued a few weeks ago when most of the students moved into Lawrence, but is now being resumed. New Greek King Has Better Chance Declare Political Science Professors Since the death of King George of Greece, the world has watched eagerly for any deviation of Greek foreign policy by King Paul, who succeeded his brother to the throne. Because of the importance and timeliness of the Greek situation, the University Daily Kansan asked three questions of political science faculty members. Caldwell Heads P.S.G.L. Ticket George Caldwell, P.S.G.L. president, was elected as the party's candidate for All Student Council presidency at the party primary Thursday. Candidates for A.S.C. representative from District I are Robert Campbell, Calvin Cooley, Duane Postlethwaite, and Frank Stannard. Candidates for A.S.C. representative from District II are Richard Heiny, Jack Hollingsworth, James White, and John Margrave. Arnold England and Carroll McCue are A.S.C. representative candidates from District III, and Robert Andrews is the District IV nominee. Candidates for senior class offices are Eugene Casement, president and Clarence Francisco, vice-president. Junior class nominees are Ralph Moberly, president, and Bruce Bath-knight, president, and Dennis sophomore class offices are Harold Cogswell, president, and Charles Penny, treasurer. The Independent Women's party will supply the remaining candidates for class offices. P.S.G.L. and the Independent Women will pool election funds and carry on joint publicity drives for the general election. Seniors May Apply For Foreign Service Seniors interested in taking competitive examinations for positions in the State department as foreign service officers should see Ethan Allen, chairman of the department of political science, 412 Watson library. Applications must be in before June 30. Examinations are to be written, physical and oral. The written section will be offered from Sept. 22 to 25 in 15 cities. Those passing will take the oral and physical parts early in 1948. Applicants must be 21 to 35 years old, an American citizen for 10 years, and not married to an alien. Salary in this class ranges from $3,300 to $4,400 a year with promotion on a merit basis. The first two days of written tests will include general knowledge examinations. The third and fourth days special exams in history, government, economics, and languages are offered. More career foreign service men are wanted by the State department. Officers in this field are sent to foreign countries to carry out United States policy, keep the Government informed on events abroad, protect American citizens and interests and maintain friendly relations. Officers are sent to every country. Assignment lasts from two to five years. Sixty days of leave are granted each year. Dr. Barr Leaves Saturday Dr. Harold Barr, dean of the School of Religion, will leave Saturday for Indianapolis, where he will attend the annual meeting of Booch of Higher Education of Disciples of Christ. He will return Wednesday. Dr. Barr is chairman of the commission of religious work at state universities of this board. Lt. Gov. Frank Hagaman, president of the Kansas senate, will summarize the 1947 session of legislature in a broadcast over KFKU at 9:30 p.m. today. Hagaman To Speak On KFKU ONE. Will King Paul follow the policies of the late king? TWO. Does Paul favor any European alignments? THREE. What is Paul's attitude toward the Greek guerillas? Has Not Same Problems Has Not Same Problems H. B. Chubb, professor of political science, said that "Paul isn't confronted with the same problems that George had confronting him. Paul comes in without the opposition since George had twice before been refuted by the Greek people. "Paul naturally has to play along with the British. If the internal, political, conditions in Greece have any chance of getting better, then Paul should be able to do the job. "He will take more vigorous action against the guerillas. In fact, he already has. A new large scale offensive has been started by government forces against the guerillas." Agrees With Chubb "As far as favoring any European allignment, Paul has to favor the English as a matter of necessity. I do believe that he is more susceptible than George had been to the guerilla elements in Greece, but he is in an ambiguous position because of the pressure put on him by the Western powers." Prof. F. E. Melvin, associate professor of history, agreed with Professor Chubb except on the guerrilla question. "The guerillas, after a vigorous campaign, probably figure on getting fairly honorable terms from Paul." Professor Melvin said. Naturally Paul's interests lie with the United States, but the guerrillas offered very little opposition to the new king which makes me believe they will get concessions. James R. Yoxall, College junior and political science major, said that "King Paul will follow George's policies to a certain extent. He w have more leeway and will under take policies of his own that w have been impossible for George. Now is the time to register for vocational guidance, Prof. A. H. Turney, director of the Vocational Guidance bureau, said. "During the rush last term there was sometimes a month's delay between registration and appointments" he said. "We are caught up now and we can handle a few more persons." Students May Sign For Vocational Help The bureau, whose services are free to all students, is in the basement of Frank Strong hall. It is open from 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. All bureau counselors will attend a meeting of the Kansas Vocational Guidance association at Manhattan Saturday. These are Professor Turney, E. G. Kennedy, Thomas Christensen, and Ruth Schillinger. Dean George B. Smith, of the School of Education, also will attend. Meeting for the first time since the war, the association will elect officers and discuss guidance problems. Dr. E. L. Harden, of Michigan State college, and Marlin C. Schrader, state supervisor of occupational information and guidance will speak. K.U. Band To Play At Missouri Festival The 115-piece University concert band conducted by Prof. Russell L. Wiley will play at the annual Apple Blossom Festival at St. Joestes Mo, M4. The concert will precede the crowning of the Apple Blossom queen and the coronation ball which opens a three-day festival. It will also open National Music week when 3,000 students will be in St. Joseph for music competition. University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Monday, April 14, 1947 44th Year No.118 Lawrence, Kansas 'Eagle' Will Fly As Middle Road Opinion Journal Two birds of different feathers soon will be flocking separately on the campus. The Dove, journal of student "liberals," is to be opposed by the Eagle, a paper which its sponsors describe as a "conservative journal of campus opinion." Its motto will be "what most people think." Scheduled to appear in about 10 days, it is to be "not rankly reactionary, but middle of the read. It will not appear on pink paper." The organizers are Buell Schilts, John| Danneberg, Wallace Foster, Robert Pennington, Robert Pringle, and Donald Ong. "The Dove is being quoted in state newspapers to show how communistic these state universities are. This will be an effort to dispell the impression, created by a distinctly minority group." Its sponsors explained the reason for the publication: An organizational meeting will be held at 8 tonight in the Union hallroom. The organizers say the staff is "wide open and anyone who wants to write for it will be accepted. Anyone opposing the general tenor of the Dove will be welcome." A business manager and managing editor will be elected at the meeting and a new election will be held after each issue appears. All other staff positions will be of equal rank. The All Student council is not financing the first publication, but the organizing group is applying to the publications committee of the U.S.C. for authorization. Philosophy Lacking Putnam Tells Club The knowledge of government and the philosophy of government do not integrate in practice. James W. Putnam, '39, told the Unitarian Liberal club Sunday night. Three members of the occupational therapy staff at Wadsworth Veterans' hospital, two of them K. U. graduates, will speak to the occupational therapy club at 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Miss Belle Stewart, chief occupational therapist at the hospital, and Miss Pauline Rankin and Miss Donna Glorvick, both '46, will speak on the activities of an occupational therapy department. tire then discussed the activities of the past session of the Kansas legislature. Mr. Putnam was a member of the bill drafting committee. He explained the school reorganization bill, and taxation with respect to the "rising costs of government," to the members. By Bibler "In school a student gets a knowledge of government, but little of philosophy. We accumulate knowledge, some of which we don't respect because we know too much about it, but we do not have enough knowledge to see that knowledge," said Mr. Putnam. Discusses Legislature "The proposed test for a driver's license was vetoed by Governor Carlson because it might become the basis of an unwanted political organization." Mr. Putnam also pointed out. Harvard Dean To Speak W. B. Donham, former Dean of the Graduate School of Business administration at Harvard University, will address members of the business school at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday, in the Union ballroom. Mr. Donham will discuss "Management's Responsibilities Today." O.T. Graduates To Speak At Club Meeting Thursday Little Man On Campus 8.00 AM CLASS KING! RING! 8:00 AM CLASS WING! RING! CARTOON BONA 8:00 AM CLASS RING! RING! BONG BONG BONG BONG bony BONG BONG BONG BENG BENG A man is overloaded with books. Glee Clubs Present Recital Wednesday mediately. Jobs open are of a great variety. A commercial company wants a University woman to sell perfume and toilet waters; a girl scout camp wants a nature specialist this summer and a woman in town wants someone to do ironing. Secretarial, waitress, and salesclerk jobs are also open. "I have job openings of all kinds, some starting this summer and others beginning right now. All women who want work should apply immediately." Miss Peterson said. Both groups will sing "Pilgrim's Chorus" (Wagner), "All the Things You Are" (Kern), and "Railroad Chant" arranged by Scott. The Men's and Women's Glee clubs will present a concert at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Hoch auditorium Prof. Irene Peabody and Prof. Joseph Wilkins will direct the group. "We need girls," said Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women in charge of women's employment, said Numbers by the Women's Glee club will include "Pine-Tree by the Wood" arranged by Fitelberg, "Early One Morning" arranged by Davis, "On the Morrow" arranged by Gaines, "Breakers Off Barranquilla" (Clokey), "Night Bird in the Chaco" (Clokey); (Ciksey), "Dream Boats" (Rapper), "A Song in the Night" (Loughborough), "ItCannot Be a Strange Countree", (Rapper), and "O Sing Your Songs" (Cain). "The Men's Glee club will sing the "Drinking Song" and "Deep in My Heart, Dear" from "The Student Prince" (Romberg), "Set Down Servant" arranged by Shaw, "Shenandoah" arranged by Bartholomew, "Song of the Toreador" from "Carmen" (Bizet), and "Grand Opera a la Jayhawk" arranged by Bostford. Solists are Lois Lee Richardson Ardis Sly, Martha Weed, Merton Anderson, Melvin Borell, Jess Rose, DeLoyd Tibbs, and Clark Hargiss, Marjean Carr and Marshall Butler are accompanists. Activity books will admit students to the concert. Women May Apply For Summer Jobs Campus Strikers Still Hold Out The strike which stopped work on University emergency construction projects has moved into its fourth day with no settlement as yet. All carpenters and most laborers are out, although a few laborers reported for work according to a union picket. In wage dispute, laborers are asking a 12½ cent an hour raise and a closed shop of the Constant Construction company. Picketing of the project back of Frank Strong began Thursday morning. Leonard Axe, University service director was unsuccessful in an attempt to have the picketing stopped by state authorities. He had nothing new to report this morning. Prof. E. C. Buehler will speak at the central states speech association convention in Columbia, Mo., April 18 and 19. Professor Buehler's subject will be "Public Speaking Trends Among Business and Professional People." Buehler To Speak English Vicar's Charges Unfounded, Dr. Price Says Says Rev. Green's Criticism Of Student Morals Not Based On Factual Evidence Now It Takes 'A's' William Kanaga, John Margrave, Mendole Marsh, Robert Moore. Robert Prewitt, Orin Fringle, Harry Reed, Perry Schuerman, Savier Shartran, Richard Shea, Walter Sheridan, Harold C. Smith, Stephen Stinson, Ted Teryl, Raymond Wagner, Dean Wampler, Robert Wehe. Juniors: John Autenrieth, Andrew Bertuzzi, Henry Black, James Bollinger, Morris Borene, Carroll Bower, Albert Brown, Lowell Case, Dale Chesney, Paul Gratney, William Hall, Paul Harle, Robert Harris, Jack Hollinson, John Hunt, Harry Johnson, Max Kleiner, Carl Kron, Duane McCarter, Robert Mc Jones, Norman Miller. The highest grades in the school's history raised requirements for the first semester honor roll of the School of Engineering and Architecture, Dean J. O. Jones, said today. He attributed the improvement to the high percentage of veterans. Seniors: Robert Bessier, George Billuris, Charles T. Black, Thomas Bryant, Jack Daily, John Dornblaser, John P. Ellis, Richard Finney, Herbert Foster, Charles Green, Edward Hartronft, William Hoefer, Elliot Jacobson, Stanley Jervis, Marion Joy William Nation, Robert Partridge, Richard Patter, Walter Robinson, Harry Robson, Frank Rozich, Dale Rummer, Charles Schuler, Joseph Sciandreone, Robert Sellers, Paul Stark, Ambrose Startz, Jack Stewart, John Supic, Arthur Toch, James Waugh, Robert Wiedemann, James Williams, Francis Winterburg, George Worrell, Edwin York. 227 Engineers On Honor Roll Two hundred twenty seven students were included on the honor roll of the School of Engineering for the fall semester, which was recently released from the office of Dean J. O. Jones. The scholarship list was made up of the upper 10 per cent of the classes. Honor Requirements Raised For Engineers Sophomores: Floyd Baker, James Bowden, Billy Bowers, James Christman, Hal Davison, Alexander Dewey, Dick Dickey, John Foley, John Gerety, Charles Grimmett, Billy Hamilton, Robert Hampshire, James Hen- United Press reports from London said today that the Rev. Bryan Green told his Holy Trinity church congregation Monday night that the morals of American students are deplorable—as bad as the U.S. educational system. The vicar had recently returned from a lecture in this country which included a University convocation here Feb. 24 during Religious Emphasis week. (continued to page eight) Analysis of engineering grades for the 1946 spring semester shows that throughout all courses veterans made better marks, Dean Jones said. Two hundred twenty-seven names now appear on the honor roll. It includes the highest 10 per cent of each class with 105 freshmen who had 2.14 averages or better, 48 sophomores who excelled 2.1', 42 juniors and 32 seniors who had better than 2.2 grade point averages, Dean Jones said. "In normal years a B average (2 point), was sufficient to win a place on the honor roll but this is no longer true," Dean Jones said. Although the large number of veterans raise the level of achievement, competition of the more mature and experienced veterans was what forced the non-veterans to study harder. he said. University Debates Texas In Green Hall Tonight University debaters will match words tonight with a debate team from the University of Texas. The battle of words will take place in Green hall's Little Theater at 8 p.m., Kenneth Johnson, instructor in speech, asid today. William Conboy, College sophmore, and Edward Stolenwerck, College freshman, will take an affirmative stand on the question, "Resolved, that labor should be given a direct share in the management of industry." He declared that sexual intimacy between high school students was "very common" and that it was "suggested" that at least 90 per cent of male students and 70 per cent of women students at state universities had non-marital sexual relations. English Education Better He also said that the quality of education in America is much poorer than in England. "The average boy or girl in England is about a year ahead of his or her equal in America," he declared. These remarks were criticized today by the Rev. Edwin F. Price, director of Wesley foundation and former dean of the School of Religion. He questioned the statements by the English clergyman that the morals of American students are deplorable. Had Inadequate Data The Rev. Mr. Price said. "I think it is unfortunate that a man in his face-to-face contacts with students would express confidence in those students and then criticize them when he gets home. Without questioning his sincerity, I would question whether he had adequate data to support his statement." Dr. Price recently conducted a survey of couples he has married. Of 50 married couples questioned, 80 per cent had not pre-marital sex relations. "While this is not conclusive, I do believe it represents a fair cross-section of our students since all of those I surveyed were former University students," he said. Shouldn't Separate Sexes "I don't see where you are enhancing moral quality of the young people by separating them during their college years. Jean Moore To Sit In On 3-Day UN Session "Understand, I am not saying we are simon-pure. I think it is a challenge to our education and culture to see that provisions are made for wholesome, constructive activities to build moral integrity." Jean O. Moore, College senior, will attend a three-day session of the United Nations as an award for outstanding contribution to Mid-America College congress which was held at St. Joseph. Mo., Friday and Saturday. Twenty-eight colleges and universities were present at the conference. Betty van der Smissen, College sophomore, also represented the University at the Congress. The Congress was divided into five discussion groups: economic and social, backward and dependent peoples, human rights and civil liberties, peaceful arbitration and disarmament. A poll will be taken among University students on questions and resolutions formulated at the Congress, Miss van der Smissen related. The Congress, which was sponsored by the St. Joseph League of Women voters, was one of the first of its kind in the country. H.R. Knickerbocker, INS world correspondent, and Dr.Corwin Edwards, of Northwestern university, addressed the conference. WEATHER Kansas—partly cloudy today and tonight, with few scattered showers extreme southeast today. Tuesday showers, warmer west and central today. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 14,1947 Official Bulletin April 14, 1947 国家税务总局监制 Meeting of Sig Ep Wives, scheduled for today, has been postponed for a week. P. S.G.L. meeting at 7 tonight in Battenfeld hall * * "The Eagle", new conservative journal of campus opinion, will hold organizational meeting at 8 tonight, Union ballroom. Staff will be elected. Everyone wishing to write for this publication invited. ** International Relations club business meeting, 5 p.m. today, Kansas room of the Union building. ... Russian club at 3 p.m. tomorrow in 402 Fraser. Everyone invited. ** All-Student council, 7:15 p.m. tomorrow, Pine room. Members should bring copies of constitutional amendment. * * R. N. club at 8 tonight in the classroom in the Community building Films on diabetes will be shown. \* \* \* Kansas Board will meet at 4 today in 107 Journalism building. * * All students who expect to attend the summer session or return for the fall semester should sign up in the Registrar's office according to the following schedule: Today, H; to tomorrow, G-K; Wednesday, L-Q; Thursday, M; Friday, P-R; Monday, April 21, S; Tuesday, April 22, T-Z; Wednesday, April 23, all those who could not come in their scheduled days. Reorganization meeting of Dove staff at 7:30 tonight, 210 Frank Strong. Anyone else interested in writing for the Dove also invited. * * * * ** United Women's council meeting at 5 tomorrow in the Pine room. Dean Wallace B. Donahm will speaks to Professor Clark's classes in Psychological Sociology and Cases in Human Relations tomorrow and Wednesday at 10 a.m. in 206 Fraser. Former students in these courses invited. * * International Relations club regular dinner meeting at 6 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas room. Society for the Advancement of Management, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, west wing of the Union ballroom. W.E. Donham, dean emeritus of the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration, will speak on "Management's Responsibilities Today." *** Tau Beta Pi. 7 p.m. tomorrow. 210 Marvin. Full attendance important. * * A technical committee was appointed by the Radio club at its meeting Thursday to work with club equipment and to rig the receiver and transmitter for the club station. Members of the committee are Gabe Parks, Norman Into, Jerry Kuehle, Zane Cole, and D. S. Oppenheimer. Persons desiring to apply for positions of editor and business manager of the 1948 Jayhawker must leave a letter addressed to Karl Klooz, chairman of the Jayhawker Advisory Radio Club Appoints Technical Committee President Paul Gratny said that the club constitution has been sent to the Federal Communications commission for approval. He also said that the club soon will affiliate with the amateur radio relay league, an organization of amateur radio operators. 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 holdings include the second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. board, at the Student Organizations window of the Business Office not later than tomorrow. Letters of application must include three references, two faculty members, and one a past employer or friend. *** Applications for the position of manager of the Student Directory may be submitted at the Student Organization window of the Business Office until April 16. El Ateneo se reunira el proximo jueves, 17 de Abril, a las 7:15 p.m. en 113 F.S. David Sommerville hablara de su reciente viaje a Mexico. Se suplica a los concurrentes memorizar un refran para decirlo en la reunion. - * * Graduate record examination: 1-5 p.m., May 5; 8:30-12:30, May 6. Applications due at Guidance Bureau, 2A Frank Strong, April 17. Students Attend Chemical Conference Eight graduate students are in Atlantic City today for the annual meeting of the American Chemical society. They are accompanied by Prof. R. Q. Brewster, Prof. David Hume, Prof. Robert Taft, and Prof. Calvin VanderWerf, all of the chemistry department. Students making the trip are Raymond Stoenner, Paul Renich, William Schechter, John Cory, Herbert Bradlow, Gerald Carter, John Minor, and Robert Russell. They will return Wednesday. Read the Daily Kansan daily. 25c For LAUNDRY!! HOW?? Launderette! BRING IN YOUR LAUNDRY. Put It In a Bendix Washing Machine. DO YOUR SHOPPING. COME BACK FOR YOUR LAUNDRY IN 30 MIN. ECONOMICAL and EFFICIENT COST 25c For 10 lbs. LAUNDERETTE 813 Vt. Phone 3368 We have equipment for all of the SPRING INTRAMURALS Team Managers Baseball equipment Softball equipment Golf equipment Tennis equipment Horseshoes KIRKPATRICK Sport Shop 715 Mass. Grandchildren Add Up Pittsburgh—(UP)—Fifty-one sons, daughters, grandchildren and great-grandchildren gathered here to celebrate the 55th wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cook. The family group included 34 grandchildren and seven great-grandchildren. Philadelphia — (UP) — The Pennsylvania Aeronautics commission's annual report on aeronautical violations showed that "there were no complaints received or arrests made for intoxicated flying in Pennsylvania during 1946." COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals - Short Orders Sandwiches Open 5:30-12:30 TENNIS RACQUET RESTRINGING AN EXPERT JOB BY EXPERIENCED STRINGERS Leave Your Racquet at Student Bookstore, 24 hr. service SILK $2.50-$3.00 NYLON $4.00 GUT $5.75-$7.50 If You Want The Job Done Right, See— DICK RICHARDS HAL MILLER 128 Oread Hall 223 Oread Hall THE WALL MURAL. DESIGNED BY JOHN HOWELL GROVES AND HENRY WHITING, LONDON, 1936. THE WALL IS CIRCULAR, WITH A LINE OF BOOTHING ELECTRICITY. IT IS USED FOR AN EXTENSION OF THE ROOM. THE WALL IS MADE FROM FABRIC MATERIALS, AND IS DEFINED BY SCREEN ARTWORK. Room with a view of 11,000,000 miles! Merely by referring to this huge diagram they can tell at a glance the exact status of telephone circuits from Montreal to Mexico City and from Havana to Seattle. For, as quickly as new lines are added or extended, or as quickly as circuits In this room, telephone circuit specialists maintain accurate and instant control over some 11,400,000 miles of long distance lines. reach capacity or again become available, the change is recorded on this master chart. Simple, yet effective methods like this are important to the smooth and efficient operation of the telephone industry. Men who can produce such ideas, who can inject enthusiasm and ingenuity into their work, find telephony a fascinating and rewarding career. There's Opportunity and Adventure in Telephony BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM MERCHANDISE & TREASURES DELL SYSTEM INSTITUTE INC. ALEXANDRIA, GA INVESTIGATOR & MARKETING CENTER 15 APRIL 14, 1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z SOCIALLY SPEAKING Phi Sigma Elects Phi Sigma, honorary society in biological science, elected the following officers in a monthly meeting Friday: Thomas Porter, president; Arthur Cnapman, vice - president; Alice Tempe, secretary; Loy Morgan, trea- The next meeting will be May 9 * * * Alpha Chi's Guests of ATO's Alpha Tau Omega entertained the Alpha Chi Omega sorority with an afternoon tea dance, Saturday afternoon. --by the staff at Watkins is, 'When can I get out of here?' Students are docile as long as they're deathly ill, but as soon as they feel better they want to be out doing things." To Honor Housemother A tea was held at the Alpha Tau Omega chapter house in honor of Mrs. T. Wayne Harris, housemother, Sunday from 3 to 5 p.m. All faculty members and housemothers were invited. *** Sigma Kappa Entertains Members of Sigma Nu were guests at a buffet dinner-dance Saturday at the Sigma Kappa house. To Have Hour Dance Harman Dinner Guests Miller hall will have an hour dance at 7 p.m. Wednesday. Guests at a dinner Sunday at Harman Co-op in honor of Mrs. A. R MacAdoo, former housemother, Kansas City, Mo., were Mr. and Mrs. Robert Dreizler, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Brown, Dexter Welton, Charles Crowley, Robert Koenig, Clarence E. Erickson, Jr., Margaret Holsinger, and Jerrienne Tribble. Host and hostess were Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Smith, present house-parents. - * * Phi Psi's Elect Gene McLaughlin, business junior, was re-elected Archon, a position on the national governing body of Phi Kappa Psi, social fraternity, at a district council meeting in Austin, Texas. McLaughlin will head the fraternity's chapters in Iowa, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Missouri, Kansas Colorado, and Texas until the next district council meeting in 1949. Other members of the Kansas chapter who attended the meeting were William Ellis, business senior; Haworth White and Anthony Mura, Jr., College juniors; Byron Shutz, sophomore; Donald Sprinkle, William Haggard, and Burris Jones, freshmen. Girls State To Be On Campus In July A Girls' State for high school girls will be held at the University July 6-13. The girls, selected for their qualities of character and leadership, will set up and operate a state government of their own. The American Legion auxiliary will sponsor a nation-wide Girls' State program this year. These meetings will be followed by a Girls' Nation in Washington, D.C., attended by representatives from each Girls' State. Graduate To Make Debut In St. Louis Opera April 19 Mrs. Zendra Kass Ashianajn, '45, a former pupil of Prof. Joseph Wilkins, will make her operatic debut as Bastienine in the Mozart opera "Bastien and Bastienne" in St. Louis on April 19. She is a member of the opera workshop at St. Louis which was organized there by Stanley Chappel, conductor of the St. Louis Symphony orchestra. Membership in the workshop was awarded by competitive auditions. Five Women Elected To Pi Lambda Theta Five new members were elected to Pi Lambda Theta, women's education sorority, at a coffee Thursday night. They are Doris Anderson and Elaine Martindell, College seniors; Antonia Martinez, education senior; Caroline Campbell, education junior; and Betty Soukup, business senior. COED'S CORNER Murcile Davis, Watkins Nurse, To Do Child Guidance Work Remember that time you were in the hospital and a tall, attractive nurse with friendly blue eyes took care of you? Chances are, it was Murceil Davis. But Mururele who looks like the model nurse in white, starched uniform and winged cap as she efficiently goes about her duties at Watkins hospital, is to become a child psychologist. "In high school days, all my hopes were pinned on being a nurse," she said. "Later during nurses training at St. Lukes in Kansas City, I took a three-months course in psychiatry. I found it so fascinating that I decided to switch to child guidance work. Capped In 1944 "I got my cap from St. Lukes in the fall of '44 and the next day came to K.U. for graduate work. I am working towards a bachelor of science in nursing and a major in psychology." Murrell believes her nursing experience will furnish a good background. "Nursing is a good chance to study human nature. In a hospital, people leave off their party mood and one sees how they bear up under difficulty." Students Want Out She laughed and said, "Probably the most frequent expression heard Belles and Their Weddings Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Corlis, Sr., of Ottawa, announce the engagement of their daughter, Phyllis, to Mr. Gordon Danielson of McDonald. Corlis-Danielson Miss Corlis is a senior in the School of Education. Mr. Danielson is a first year law student at the University. Students Perform During Vacation Students in the School of Fine Arts had a "busman's holiday" during Easter vacation. E. M. Brack, tenor, who presents his senior recital today, gave a recital April 3 at Great Bend. He was assisted by Edward Utley, who presented his senior piano recital March 31. Jack Moehlenkamp, pianist, presented a program of piano numbers at the Philbrook Art center in Tulsa March 30. Instant Service In Our Shoe Repair Department Royal College Shop 837-38 Mass. JUST ARRIVED Deci-Point Slide Rules $16.50 made from a new substance called Dowmetal. No wooden parts to warp or crack. In the recreation sphere, Macul enjoys sports. She has taken courses in horseback riding, tennis, archery, and dancing. Supply is limited. Get Yours today. "Lately, I have been giving attention to the recipe book. There's a big matter of a wedding with a medical student sometime this summer. We're in the market for an apartment in Kansas City where we plan to live while he finishes training." Will Commute This Fall Murcile said that she will commute between Kansas City and K.U. during the fall semester. LAWRENCE TYPEWRITER EXCHANGE 735 Mass. Phone 548 "I have 12 hours of loose end to catch up before I graduate in February and go into child guidance work." . 3-day Cleaning Service 4-day Laundry Service 24-hour Shoe Repair - Leather and Garment Dyeing a Specialty. Village Cleaners SUNFLOWER, KANSAS Opposite School Western Union----8 a.m.-9 p.m. DESIGN SERVICE PLYMOUTH RESOTO SERVICE RYMOURS Buddy GALLAGHER MOTORS FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. Buddy GALLAGHER MOTORS They Are Just Right For You— ARROW "Button Down" White Oxford SHIRTS A fine oxford cloth with Arrows Fenway collar——$3.95 Hickok Cuff Links From $1.50 to $3.50 at CARLS GOOD CLOTHES I will write a descriptive text for the image provided. It features two women standing side by side, facing each other and engaging in conversation. The woman on the left is wearing a white top with pink floral accents and a patterned skirt. The woman on the right is dressed in a black coat with gold buttons and a plaid skirt. Both women have their hands on their hips and are smiling. There is no visible text or additional context to describe. "And Then We Went To The Tepee Danced, And Had a Delicious Barbecued Rib Dinner (75c) and Homemade Pie" (15c) Danced, FOR DANCING AND FINE FOODS AT Just 1 1/4 Miles North of Lawrence The Tepee University of Kansas GLEE CLUBS Spring Concert HOCH AUDITORIUM April 16-8 P.M. --- Activity Tickets Admit PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 14,1947 SPOTLIGHT SPORTS By BILL CONBOY The rain and cold which accompanied the Jayhawker football scrimmage Saturday afternoon reminded many spectators of last season's Oklahoma game. Practice under bad weather conditions is never any fun, but the Kansas team may profit next week by lessons it had in the mud Saturday. Experience in handling a wet ball on a slippery field will come in handy if the weather records of past seasons are a good indication. *** Four men who they counted on for heavy action next fall did not play in the practice game Saturday. They are Terry Monroe and Don Ettinger, tackles; Don Fambrough, guard; and Leroy Robison, right halfback. Monroe, Fambrough, and Robison were kept on the sidelines by injuries. Otto Schnellbacher, pass-snagging all-Big Six end, started the game for the Sixes despite an injured wrist. He sparkled in catching one pass from "Red" Hogan soon after the game opened. The heave was a short bullet over the right side of the line which "Schnelly" caught for a few seconds and then lateraled to Hoyt Baker who plunged on for additional yardage. The play was worth 15 yards. *** Head coach George Sauer had all the details of the practice worked out in thorough style. The field was marked off plainly and accurately with chalk stripes. Benches were provided for the team members, and bleacher seats had been erected for spectators. * * Despite the wet weather, the quarterbacks on all six of the elevens which saw action did not hesitate to throw the ball around. The two signal callers who opened the WHITE and "Red" Hogan for the Reds, tossed several needle-eye spirals with the soggy pigskin. McNutt hit "Bud" French with a nifty bullet toss soon after the game began which went for 15 yards. The Colby athlete looked much improved in the passing phase of the game over last year. His generalship and defensive play have always been first-rate. * * The second Red touchdown came on a beautifully executed pass play from Hogan to Schmidt. The toss was perfectly placed as Schmidt cut to the corner of the end zone. The 165-pound Schmidt took the ball over his head to score. Forrest Griffith took honors for finding the best hole during the scrimmage. He was kicking, not running, however. The stubby fullback was back for a punt, but the pass from center was high. By the time he got the ball down in position, Red linemen were bearing down on top of him. He put his foot into the ball. It disappeared for a second into the mass of tacklers, then came out beyond and carried on down the field for 40 yards. Dick Bertuzzi exhibited some rugged blocking during his time in the game. After the Arma gridder straightened out one White opponent with a bone-cracking block, Don Pierce, K. U. director of sports publicity, commented: "There's the roughest little man in the conference." Dick Gilman did some nice running from left half for the Reds. In one 15-yard sprint, four men had their hands on him at various times but couldn't bring him down. Another newcomer who showed flashes of promise was T. A. Scott, substitute quarterback for the Whites. He completed one 15-yard pass to end Roland Elliers after the niffiest bit of fakking of the offense. After a fake hand-off, he jumped into the air and tossed the serial over his shoulder right to the receiver. The deception was perfect. * * The longest play from scrimmage of the game was a pass by Ken Morrow to Pat Dulaney which gained Whites Squeeze Past Reds, 25-24 In Intra-Squad Football Game The Whites squeezed past the Reds, 25 to 24, in an intra-squad football game Saturday afternoon on the Jayhawker practice field. Despite rain and cold, about 700 spectators saw the game. The Reds scored first when right halfback Dick Bertuzzi intercepted a lateral thrown by White fullback Forrest Griffith and raced 40 yards to score. An attempted placement by Red Hogan was no good. Reds 6, Whites 0. The Whites roared back a few moments later to score a touchdown by Dale Mallon, right halfback, on a 5-yard plunge. The White drive was sparked by the running of Griffith and French and the passing of quarterback McNutt. Dick Champion exept a job was blocked by Otto Schnellbacher. Reds 6, Whites 6. Reds Score Again With Dick Gillman, Hoyt Baker, and Bertuzzi carrying the ball and Hogan tossing it, the Red eleven came back to score without losing possession of the ball. From the 7-yard line, Hogan hit Schmidt in the end zone to send the Reds into the lead once more. Instead of kicking for the extra point, Hogan tried passing again to Schmidt, but Dale Mallon knocked the ball down. Reds 12. Whites 6. The Whites took the ball after an exchange of punts and marched to the Red 35-yard line. "Bud" French took the ball on a hand-off from McNutt, found a hole at right center and scored to score standing up. The kick for point was low. Reds 12, Whites 12. New Teams Go In At this point, entire new elevers were substituted on both sides. Darrell Norris, White end, made a one-handed interception of a pass thrown by Red quarterback “Tip” Mester to start his team on a scoring drive. T. A. Scott, White quarterback, hit Roland Ellerts and Norris with bullet passes to advance the ball downfield. Charley Moffett carried the brunt of the ground attack as the White eleven marched to the 1-yard line. Scott smashed over the goal on a quarterback sneak. Darrell Norris added the extra point from placement. Whites 19. Reds 12. The Reds came back to score on the most unusual play of the afternoon. On the White 25-yard line, Tip Mester pegged a pass intended for Charles O'Neal, Red end, who raced into the end zone but lost the ball. In a sitting position, he grabbed the ball out of the air for 6 points. An attempted placement was low and wide. Whites 19. Reds 18. Third string elevenes then took the field for both teams. Mixing passes with running plays, the Reds pushed the Whites back toward their own goal scoring quarterback. The kick for point was no good. Reds 24, Whites 19. Gene Sherwood, White fullback, completed point making for the day when he crashed over from the 3- The longest running play from scrimmage was the 35-yard jaunt by "Bud" French which gave the White eleven its second touchdown. The defense was by Dick Bertuzzi when he intercepted Fortress Grettiz's lateral at the beginning of the scrimmage to run it back 40 yards for a score. 40 yards. It came near the end of contest and set up the final White touchdown. De LUXE CAFE 28 YEARS OF SERVICE Same Location-Same Management You are welcome 711 Mass. WURLITZER PHONOGRAPHS FOR PARTY RENTALS Used Juke Box Records For Sale yard line four minutes later. Ken Morrow, White quarterback, had set up the scoring thrust a moment earlier when he completed a 40-yard pass to end Pat Dulaney. The attempted placement failed. Final score: Whites 25, Reds 24. Saturday: The Whites were also victorious by one point in the practice game of March 29. The score that day was 27 to 26. The final heavy scrimmage under game conditions will be held Thursday afternoon. The starting lineups in the game John H. Emick 1014 Mass. Phone 343 Saturday: Whites Channell Hawkins D. Monroe Tomlinson Renko B. Sperry McNutt French Mallon Grithiff LE LT LG C RG RT RE OR LH RH FB Reds Schmidt Lee Fink Fischer Crawford Johnson Schnellbacher Hogan Gilman Bertuzzi Baker Nebraska Nine Beat Jayhawkers Twice The Jayhawker baseball team lost two games to Nebraska in Lincoln Saturday. Coach Vic Bradford's team was not strong enough at the plate to win either game. The summaries: The summary. First game R H E Kansas 3 4 2 Nebraska 8 12 3 Batteries— Kansas, Ocamb and Diehl. Nebraska, Jacobs and Cerv. Second game R H E Kansas 0 2 4 Nebraska 4 8 2 Batteries-Kansas, Hammer and Hurd; Nebraska, Gloystine and Schmeiding. CUT DOWN NICOTINE Frank MEDICO FILTERED SMOKING $2 EJECTS THE STUB K-State Loses Meet To Oklahoma Aggies Replaceable filter in new Frank Medica Cigarette Holders, - Cuts down nicotine. - Cuts down irritating tars. - In zephyrweight aluminum. - Special styles for men and women. - $2 with 10 filters, handy pouch and gift box. Stillwater, Okla.—(UP)—The Oklahoma A. and M. track team won a dual victory over Kansas State Friday $ 81^{\frac{2}{3}} $ to $ 43^{\frac{1}{2}} $ in a meet featuring three new meet records. S. M. FRANK & CO., INC., NEW YORK 22 Cliff Dean of Oklahoma A. and M. vaulted 13 feet, 2 inches to break the old mark of 12 feet 9 inches. A total of 152 feet were cut. A discus record of 153 feet was set by Rollin Prather, Kansas State. by Rollin Prather, Kansas State. The Oklahoma A. and M. mile team came up with the record- breakting time of 3 minutes, 222 seconds, 1/10 second better than the record set in the 1942 dual meet with Kansas State. Sommerville To Speak At Spanish Club Thursdav David Sommerville, College senior, will describe his experiences in Mexico last summer to El Ateneo, Spanish club, at its meeting at 7:15 p.m. Thursday in 113 Frank Strong hall. All members attending the meeting will answer the roll call with a Spanish proverb, Alvaro Chavaria, club president, said today. Don't Like That Music Butler, Pa.—(UP)—Joseph Fina wound up in jail on an assault battery charge after he punched another patron of a restaurant for playing a joke box that Fina didn't like. FOR QUALITY WATCH REPAIRS - One Week Service - Fully Guaranteed work. - All Watches Time Checked on the Western Electric Watchmaster SAMPLE'S WATCH SHOP Lawrence's Most Modern Watch Repair Shop 710 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. Phone 368 How about a steak dinner this evening or a delicious sandwich? How about a steak dinner this e or a delicious sandwich? fountain service and Ample parking space OPEN DAILY AT 11 A.M. 18th and Mass. The Chateau Drive-In MISSES SHOP SMART CRISP COTTONS for All Occasions in Seersuckers, Bluncloth and Chambray $15 to $1695 The Palace 843 Mass. APRIL 14,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE FIVA High School Track, Field Meet Will Be Held Here Friday Marysville, Class A, and Pretty Prairie, Class B. will be hard pressed to repeat their last year's championships in the University's annual interscholastic track and field meet for high schools here, Friday. Both teams will be trying for their third straight crown. Outstanding event in Class A will be the mile run. This event will bring together two 1946 state champions. Because of an increase in his school's enrollment, Elwin Becker off St. Peter and Paul high school, Seneca, last year's Class B mile king, will be running Class A competition. His winning time last year was 4:38.3. Cory Against Becker His fellow titleholder is Bill Cory of Concordia, who won the Class A state mile in 4:40. Pressing them will be Solomon Flores of Rosedale and Charles Exline of Marysville. Three of last year's point winners in the 100-yard dash here will return. They are Gerald Briney of Beloit; Wally Elstun of Sterling and John Trost of Concordia. Also well up in this event should be Berdell Lindsey of Paola and Atherton of Garnett. To Defend Championship In the quarter-mile, John Carmody of St. Joseph, Hays, is the defending state champion. Merle Vansholtz of Chapman, who took the number two spot in that event will also be here. More than adequate competition will be provided them by Elstun; Harold Kellar of Paola; the Margrave twins from Sabetha and Forrest Morris of Holton. Tough competition will be found in the 220. The two top quarter-milers, Carmody and Vansholtz, are expected to double in this event. They will clash with such speedsters as Briney; Elstun; Ralph Tidwell of Marysville and Jack Thomas of Neodesha. To Compete In Hurdles 10. Compete In the high hurdles, three point winners from last year will match strides. They will be Lyle Mellen of Fredonia; Ed Dill of Sterling and Charles Hall of Marsville. Some of the best among the low hurdlers are Dill, who was third at the state meet; Jack Bergen of Marysville and Dean Pryor of Frederick. Dill also ranks well up in the high jump, where he will battle Ralph Murphy of Rosedale, last year's winner, and Jack Oliver of Neodesha. A good battle in the shot put and discus throw is pending between big Jim Sacrider of Wamego and Jack Renner of St. Joseph. Pat McClellan of Turner isn't conceding anything in the shot put, however, and Ell Matthew of Concordia also may finish high. Hob Diel of Highland Park will be back to defend the broad jump title he won here last year, against such leapers as Bob Hards of Hiwatha and Chamman's Valsholtz. Defend Class B Ranks Defending Class B state champions in three events are back in action and may compete here, although definite word has not been received. This trio is composed of Charles Parrish of College high, Pittsburg, in the quarter-mile; Walter Stumps of Holyrood, in the shot put; and Calvin Wiley of Sedgwick, in the high jump. Outstanding performer in Class B is expected to be Bob Miller, sprint sensation from the Kansas School for the Deaf. Last year the blond speedster chalked up marks of 10 flat in the 100-yard dash and 22.3 for the 220. A pair of sprinters from Haven, Junior Guhl and Vernon Bogner may give Miller his best competition. Hoskins To Defend Title Back to defend his title in the broad jump will be Harold Hoskins of Bennington, whose leap of 22 feet $2\frac{1}{2}$ inches, at the state meet, was the best jump made in any class last season. Attempting to dethrone him will be Dick Haas of Overbrook; Frank Lewis of Valley Falls and Dale Davis of Norwich. Parrish's competitors in the 440 will include a pair of dash men who won their sections of that event here last year, Albert Baker of Esbon and Norwich's Davis. Winters Half-Mile Ranked high among half-mile entrants in Carl Timberlake 6f Powhattan. Timberlake took second a year ago and later won the event place in his section of the 880 here at the regional. Estes of Norwich also should finish well up in this event. Favored in the discus throw will be Del Lindblad of Courtland. He sailed the disc 131 feet to take first at the Sterling relays. Best marks to date in the javelin have been posted by Tom Bell of Arma who throws it more than 150 feet. Tennis Team Defeats Nebraska, Washburn In both contests, the Jayhawkers were able to use some second team men and rest some first stringers. Erwin Busiek, last year's tenth ranking junior player, returned to top form in the Washburn matches, pulling Jayhawkers out of their biggest trouble in the top singles and doubles matches. The University tennis team was victorious over two opponents during the weekend. Friday afternoon the Jayhawkers trounced Nebraska 6 to 1, in a non-conference match. Saturday they played Washburn at Topeka and came home with a 7 to 0 victory in a match played indoors on wood because of the rain. Hervey MacFerran and Evan Francis, Topeka freshmen, displayed smooth teamwork in their doubles match against Washburn and will be given a chance to play more this week. The two played together in high school tennis, but participated in their first collegiate match this weekend. 'Southpaw' Truman Opens Season Today Washington — (UP) — President Truman, who hasn't done any pitching since he threw Henry Wallace out of the cabinet, opens the 1947 major league baseball season today with a left-handed toss. Two minutes later, at 3 p.m. EST, professionals will take over the pitching chores as the Washington Senators and New York Yankees start playing for keeps. The other 14 major league clubs don't make their debut until Tuesday. Bobo Newsom, a man of a few thousand words and pitching gestures, drew the coveted opening day pitching assignment for the Senators. For the Yankees, it will be Floyd Bevens, like Newsom a right hander. The game marks the debut of Bucky Harris, the "boy wonder" who piloted Washington to a world championship in 1924, as manager of the Yanks. The Yankees will lack the hitting job of a robbing ground with an all-inclue ball. George B. Smith, dean of the School of Education, spoke on "The Colleges and The Exceptional Child" at the State Conference on Exceptional Children held Thursday in Topeka. Dean Smith Speaks At Child Conference First conference of its kind to be held in Kansas, the meeting was voted by members to be called "The Bert A. Nash Memorial Conference on Exceptional Children" in memory of the late professor of education, who instigated and completed plans for the meeting before his death last month. Miss Quintilla Anders, of the staff of the University of Kansas hospital, was discussion leader at the conference, and Miss Margaret Anderson, associate professor of speech, participated in the program. Copy must be in the University Daily Kansan Business Office. Journalizing blig, not later than 4 p.m. of the day before published. All classified are in advance. Daily Kansan Classified Ads Classified Advertising Rates For Sale Classified Item One Three Five day days five 25 words or less 35c 65c 90c additional words 1e 2e 3e FOUR Peanut Machines and / or 2 cigarette machines. Phone 721, Patterson. FOR SALE Naval officer's uniforms, blues and whites, size 36-38. Also electric portable phonograph. good condition. 28-A Sunnyside. 15 USED Remington typewriter, $27.50; rebuilt royal, $88.75; rebuilt Underwood, $12.50; rebuilt Buffalo, $9.50; typewriter table, $79.80; typewriter table, $7.50 up; 2 solid oak used desk, $28. Roller files, $15.50. Peterson office machine, $48. Bank Rkld. phone 13. -14- For Rent NAVAL Officer's uniforms. Blues and white trousers. Blue shirt. Navy uniform, good condition. 28-A. Sunshine 15. White shirt. FURNISHED Double apartment about 400 square feet in unfurnished, unfurnished house, or apartment in Kansas City, Kansas, or suburb as 1529 KY. - - - - own sin is to FAIL!" "36 FORD. Call 2696 at 1108 Ohio, or day every see except Thursday for "Pete." - 15- RIDE Daily from K. C. to Lawrence. Lawrence 5:30. Call 2935-M after 5:45. 15 Wanted FREE OFFER-Copies of Discharges and valuable papers, 3 copies for the price of 2. Low prices, fast service. Round Corner Drug Co., 801 Mass. 25 BILL is now running his cab co. again and will be running 24 hours, 7 days a week. Call 69, if no answer, call 2182-J. -16- Business Services TYPING. Prompt service, reasonable rate. 1028 Vermont, phone 1168.-R-17 TENNIS Rackets restrung and repaired. Silk, nylon, or gut. Priced accordingly. $1.50 to $10. Phone 2711-W. Ed. Wellhausen, 1145 Kentucky. -21- Lost KEY CHAIN with 4 keys lost on West Campus. Contact Chancellor office. 14 COIN PURSE. Only identification in purse is key ring with the initial V on it. Key ring has 3 keys. Please contact Val Parrington, Lindley hall, Geology Depth SHEAFFER Lifetime fountain p e m. BROWN striped, name engraved, Robert E Cater. If found please leave at Kansan office. Reward. -14- BROWN Wallet, April 8, on or near the campus. Reward. Need navy cards badly. John Glover, 1100 Indiana. Call 284 if possible -14- BLACK Parker "51", silver cap, Wednesday afternoon in or between library and Fraser. Please return to Kansan office. -14- RISK'S HELP YOURSELF LAUNDRY SHEAFFER Pen, silver too, black base, gold band between. $5 reward. Pete Stubbs, Delta Tau Delta. -15- Phone KU-25 with your news. Plenty of soft hot water Seven new Maytag machines Hours 9-6 Weekdays 1900 Illinois 9-4 Saturdays Call 623 for Appointments Phone 623 Adveritisers Prefer The Kansan To Reach Hill Students Our Service Department has been expanded . . . several new, expert Ford mechanics have been employed . . service facilities enlarged and improved . . to give you quicker and better service. K GOOD NEWS for FORD OWNERS Pre-War QUICK SERVICE LARGER STOCK OF GENUINE Ford PARTS Our stock of Genuine MADE RIGHT PARTS FIT RIGHT Ford Parts has been increased LAST LONGER to insure having the part you need when you need it! And, of course, you know Genuine Ford Parts are best for your car because they're made right . . . fit right . . . last longer. It will pay you to bring your Ford "back home" to us for service. We know your Ford best and give you better service for it so you will get more service from it. BRING YOUR FORD "BACK HOME" FOR SERVICE 22 MORGAN-MACK MOTOR COMPANY YOUR FRIENDLY FORD DEALER 609 Mass. Phone 277 SEE A SHOW TONITE JAYHAWKER Now, Ends Tomorrow MYSTERY THRILLER! Dead Reckoning Humphrey BOGART Lizbeth SCOTT Humphrey BOGART Lizbeth SCOTT Wednesday, one week Douglas FAIRBANKS, Jr. Moureen O'HARA Walter SLEZAK in SINBAD THE SAILOR with Anthony Quinn George Tablas Jane Grevy Mike Mazurka GRANADA Now, Thru Wed. THEIRS. . . A STRANGE CODE OF HORROR! 'LIE! CHEAT! KILL! Your JAMES CAGNEY 13 RUE MADELEINE 20 ANNABELLA • FRANK LATIMORE 20 "Treasure from Trash" Added: News Cartoon and PATEE Now, Ends Tuesday ERNEST LUBITSCHS TOP HIT MERLE MELVIN Oberon Douglas "That Uncertain Feeling" Feeling" PLUS Cartoon Goofy Gophers Variety—Ranch In White Variety—Dog In Orchard Latest News VARSITY Today, Ends Tuesday ALAN CURTIS "PHILO VANCE'S GAMBLE" AND JOHN CARROLL RUTH HUSSEY "BEDSIDE MANNER" Wednesday, 4 Days CLAIRE TREVOR ADOLPH MENJOU "BACHELOR'S DAUGHTERS" AND AND THE DURANGO KID "Law of the Canyon" UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SIX APRIL 14, 1947 Kansan Comments Proper Training For Abnormal According to Dr. John J. Lee, dean of the graduate school of Wayne University, who spoke to the group, Kansas has a long way to go to meet the needs of its handicapped children. He said that the state should have expanded facilities and a broader educational program for these abnormal children. It would be incorrect and unfair to imply that all crimes are committed by persons who are mentally or physically abnormal or that all such persons have criminal inclinations. A great many are able to successfully adjust themselves to society. A conference of 150 Kansas educators at Topeka last week deserves the attention of Kansans. The group met at the request of the Kansas department of public instruction to study the needs of exceptional children in the state. This conference has special significance in relation to the recent F. B. I. crime report (reviewed in this column April 9). The F. B. I. disclosed that there had been a 21 per cent increase in crime during the past year in Kansas. Dr. Homer B. Reed of Fort Hays State College estimates that there are approximately 68,000 school children in Kansas whose physical or mental makeup places them above or below normal. The high-tension nature of our complex present-day life is a strain on even the normal individual. Its effect on those who are physically or mentally handicapped may often be tragic. Improper adjustment of such persons to society has in some cases resulted in the development of persecution complexes and other psychic conditions that may often lead them on a path of crime. society. But is society doing its full share in assisting these persons to become normal, self-supporting and content individuals? Dr. Reed pointed out to the conference at Topeka that "From a business standpoint it is better to train children to become independent than it is to allow them to become more expensive by letting them lapse into indigence or crime." Kansans should rightly be concerned over the current crime rate. Expanded educational and adjustment facilities for the exceptional children in the state has its proper place in any campaign to reduce the causes of crime. The one great change that has come is the explosion of the possibility of setting up any rules at all for unlimited mass murder. The last sorry hopes were buried beneath the radioactive rubble of Hiroshima and Nagasaki. What the world needs, said Supreme Court Justice Robert H. Jackson, is a new set of rules for waging war; "it is perfectly obvious these rules are obsolete as they stand." Presumably he was serious. Certainly, if he was, he stood ankle-deep in Winnie the Pooh fantasy. New War Rules All that Mr. Jackson said about the changes that have occurred since last the rules of warfare were amended in 1929 is quite true. But he did not say nearly enough. Talk of "civilized war" never has made sense, anyway; the two terms contradict each other. But now there cannot be even a pretense that battle might be conducted with fine chivalric distinctions between this method or that. Any war will have to be, as the last one was, a total war, and that means entire nations are put on the front firing line, to kill or be killed. When survival is at stake, no one can ever again be bothered to consult some neat Hoyle on Battle; any means—blockade or bombardment, war by bacteria or war by A-bomb—will find its justification in the sheer need for existence. It is not war's rules that are obsolete. It is war itself—or else, as Norman Cousins long since suggested modern man is obsolete. Those are the alternatives. St. Louis Star-Times Dear Editor--- Student Employers Deserve Thanks It is time for the unselfish parttime employer of K. U.'s working students to take a bow. He is the one that makes college educations possible for veterans and non-veterans alike by supplementing that monthly check or the allowance from home with a tidy wage for work students can fit in between classes. Probably no other school in the country can boast as high a student wage scale as the University's. Fifty to 75 cents an hour will buy groceries and other necessities that many students could otherwise ill-afford. In some cases employers have had to go far out of their way to arrange work schedules for students who have irregular class hours. They have had to take special pains to train student workers who may be only on the job for a few weeks. Some of the more fortunate students have been given an opportunity to learn a trade which they may find useful in later life. In many cases there is another advantage to using this student labor—they can lighten the load on badly overworked full-time employees. These employers well deserve a vote of thanks for their service to University students. College Junior (Name withheld by request) Unrest in India—unrest in China—unrest in the Balkans—unrest in South America—no wonder this is such a tired old world. The University Daily Kansan Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn. and National Journal Association, Associated Collegiate Press, Represented by the National Advertising Services Center Ave. New York City, Verks Clyw Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Managing Editor Marcella Stewart Editor in Chief LeMoyne Frederick Asst. Man. Editor Martha Jewett Asst. Man. Editor Willard W. Abbey Asst. City Editor Wallace W. Abbey Asst. City Editor Shirley E. Bales Asst. City Editor Alan J. Stewart Telephone Eliseon West Editor Eliseon West Business Manager Bob Bonehrake Advertising Manager Alma Wuthnow Circulation Manager John Beach LeVance Keeve Nats. Admin. Manager Kenneth White Promotion Manager Mel Adams French Club To See Movies At Next Meeting The Kansas Press Association 1947 Member National Editorial Association A FREE PRESS--YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW Movie reels of French countryside scenes will be shown to the Cercle Francais at the club's next meeting at 4 p.m. Wednesday. The films will be shown in Fraser projection room. Delicious JUICY STEAKS Our Specialty Across from BILL'S GRILL 1109 Mass. Court House Phone 2054 TRIPLE SMOKING PLEASURE TRIPLE SMOKING PLEASURE A Gregory Peck STARRING IN DAVID O. SELZNICK'S "DUEL IN THE SUN" ALWAYS MILDER Chesterfield CIGARETTES B BETTER TASTING WITH THE TOP HOLLYWOOD STARS CHESTERFIELD IS THE BIG FAVORITE C COOLER SMOKING ALWAYS BUY CHESTERFIELD ALL OVER AMERICA-CHESTERFIELD IS TOPS! Copyright 1947, LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. APRIL 14,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Phi Psi House Entered Friday The Phi Kappa Psi fraternity house was entered and searched early Friday morning. Although nothing is missing, members report that three rooms were entered and dresser drawers opened and disarranged. George Brown, an employee of the fraternity, saw a man standing on the front porch when he stopped his car by the house at 5 a.m. Friday. As he came closer, three other persons lay out of the front door, and the four hastily left the premises, he said. The raid was the second in the last two weeks. During Easter vacation $500 was stolen from members of the Phi Delta Theta fraternity. Clarence Bliesner, police chief, said that there are no new clues to the identity of the thieves of the Phi Delt money, although Lawrence police are still investigating the robbery. Editor Of Daily Nebraska Visits Daily Kansas Offices Boston-(UP)—The brooks, rivers and ponds of Massachusetts have been stocked with 600.000 legal size trout in preparation for the opening of the fishing season April 15. Dake Novotny,managing editor of the Daily Nebraskan, inspected the Daily Kansan Friday. Novotny and his sister are spending a week in Lawrence at the home of their father, E. L. Novotny, superintendent of schools. Agents Shield Ducks Rehoboth Beach, Del—(UP)—U.S. Department of Interior officials, armed with cameras, have taken to the air to combat illegal duck hunting. Two federal agents have been making airplane tours of the marshlands, keeping an eagle eye out for out-of-season hunting. Lindley's Kansas Cleaners 12 E. 8th Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices MEN'S SUITS— Cleaned and Pressed ...65c LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES— Cleaned and Pressed ...69c Cash and Carry Only University Daily Kanson Advertising Brings Real Results Gambles Spring Moves In... With a New Look For Old Rooms ... plus Values for the Homemakers who have been "making things do"— A Compliment to Your Home . . $1490* Cocktail table in modern design . . . walnut veneer top, walnut finish hardwood base. Holds favorite magazines, too. --- Plate Glass Bordered Mirror $3.95 30 X 30 This lovely plate glass mirror reflects your room's beauty. Etched border in floral design. Mirror is equipped with hangers. 18° Designed for Your Pleasure Comfort awaits you in this Queen Anne style Lounge Chair. Reversible, spring-filled cushion, no-sag spring base and back (pillow effect). Walnut finish wood trim. Blue, wine, beige. *Use our Thrifty Payment Plan $1.25 Per Week, Payable Monthly $ 44^{50} $ $11950* $2.25 Per Week, Payable Monthly An Invitation... To Living Room Comfort There's a friendly welcome in the beauty and comfort of this two-piece living room group. Both Sofa and Chair have super-sagless coil spring bases and backs . . . and spring-filled reversible cushions for extra living comfort. Family and guests alike will enjoy this furniture for years and years . . . for it's sturdily built for active use. Wood trim has lustrous walnut finish . . . coverings are of rich, long-wearing velour. Colonial Charm... Jenny Lind Bed $21.95 NEW STORE HOURS: The right start to a lovely bedroom—this spool style bed of hardwood in rich walnut finish. Full or twin size. Week Days - 8 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturdays - 8 a.m. to 9 p.m. SHOP THESE NEW HOURS AT GAMBLES. Use Our Thrifty Payment Plan! Gamble's $22.50 Student Desks Maple or Mahogany 1 Drawer Side Shelves DESK CHAIR $9.95 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 1 PAGE EIGHT APRIL 14,1947 42 Candidates InIW Primary Forty-two candidates for ASC representatives and class officers will run in the primary election of the Independent Women's political party April 15. The candidates for ASC representatives from District 1 are: Patricia Bosien, Corbin; Lucie Ralston, Locksley; Shirley Wellborn, Locksley; Hilda James, Foster; Alberta Moe, Templin; Barbara Staplen, Jattife; Dorothy Scroggy, Miller; Marvlee Masterson, Miller. Candidates for ASC representatives from District 3 are Betty Barlis, Corbin; Shirley Ousley, Miller; Mary Jane Zollinger, Looksley; Georgiana Bennington, Miller; Ellen Joyce Spurney, Corbin; Mary Pritchard, Templin. Harriet Graves, Miller; Lorraine Runsey, Locksley; Geradine Bobbitt, Jolliffe; Helen Hastings, Carruth; Joyce Rohrer, Miller. Senior Class Candidates Candidates for senior class office are: Treasurer: Frances Neal, Carruth Melian Minor. Templin. secretary; Mary Savory, Templin Ruth Brown, Corsin; Ruth Hibbs, Lockley; Helen Havey, Jollifer Meertha Joo Easter, Miller. Candidates for junior class officers are: Vice-president: Joan Strowig, Wat- liss; Margaret van der Smissen, Locsley; Grace B. Strong, Miller. Secretary: Cleearn Bradford, Carrath; Mildred Garrison, Locksley; Marvin Graham, Sleepy Hollow; Judie Oehrle, Miller. Sophomore class officer candidates 60.1 Vice-president: Shirley French Watkins; Donna Rumsey, Locksley; Beverly Smith, Templin; Betty Cooper, Corbary; Mary Hercules, Milton; Janet Rummer, Watkins; Margaret Betz, Corbin; Colleen Helm- hunger, Locksley; and Rosemary Lordrey, Miller. Candidates will meet in the Stud eent Unit at 7 p. m. today. High School Students Attend Music Festival Students from 50 Kansas high schools were on the University campus Saturday for the Kansas State District Music festival. The festival, which began at 8 a.m. and continued until 6 p.m., was arranged by Prof. Russell Wiley, director of the University band and orchestra. Participants from Liberty Memorial High School, University High School, and Lawrence Junior High School placed high in the competition. The top three ratings for each position, superior, superior, and excellent. No trait, second, or third placings were used. Judges for the vocal and instrumental soloists and ensemble groups were D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts; Edwin Stuntsion, Kansas State Teachers college, Emporia; Harlin Spring, director of music at Westport High school, Kansas City, Mo.; Bob Milton, director of music at Southwest high school, Kansas City, Mo.; and John Dillington, music director at Hannibal, Mo., Bohp school. Students from the School of Fine Arts assisted with the contest. Distribution Staff Needed For Kan-Do Persons interested in working on a distribution staff for the next issue of Kan-Do should contact, Marquette van der Smissen, editor-in-chief, she said. Assignments for the next issue of the paper, which is the official newsletter of the Independent Student Journal, be presented out at the annual meeting Thursday. The eight-page issue, which will be published the first week in May, will be the last one this semester. 'The Face Is Familiar . . .' B She won second in the Student Union Activities bathing beauty contest last semester. Blonde, tanned, and the owner of a maroon convertible, she has been known as the "ooh la la" girl. A College senior, she was majoring in Spanish. Mac, the man she married, gave her a cocker spaniel, named "Mac." All three are now living in New York. ☆ ☆ Friday's caricature was of R. M. David, professor of law, identity of today's "Face" will be found somewhere on this page. Brack Will Present Voice Recital Tonight E. M. Druck, tenor, will present his senior recital at 8 tonight in Frank Strong auditorium. His program ranges from a recitative and aria from Handel's "Judas Mirabeneus" to "The Frog in the Spring." A Vermont folk-song. It includes numbers by Strauss, Mahler, Rubinstein, Delius, and the aria "Che Gelida Manina" from Puccini's opera "La Boheme." While serving in the army he was tenor soloist at the First Presbyterian church in Wilmington, N.C., and sang Verdí 'Requiem,' the "Eliiah," and "Messiah." He was the tenor soloist at the First Congregational church in Los Angeles, and in 1844 sang the tenor role in the "Messiah" with the Los Angeles Philharmonic orchestra. Brack has appeared as soloist with the University Symphony orchestra this spring, also singing a solo with them at the recent Palm Sunday vespers. He plans to go to New York City for advanced study in voice and opera following his graduation in June. Brack, a pupil of Mrs. Alice Moncrieff, enrolled first as a pre-medic at the University, but changed to a voice major in the spring of 1941. On KFKU 2:30 Hammond recital, Edward Utley Today: 2.45 News from Mt. Oread, Tony croftier of University of Pittsburgh, Philadelphia 9:30-10:00 Symphonic Favorites, Chopin Piano Concerto in E Tuesday: 2:30 Art by Radio, Maud Ellsworth 9:30 University of Kansas Concert Band, Russell L. Wiley, director. 2:30 Musical Matinee Waugh Named ASC Candidate 9:30 To Ee Announced Thursday: 2. 39 Hammond recital, Edward Utley 2:45 Excursion in Science Wednesday: James Waugh, engineering junior has been elected Pachacamac candidate for the All Student Council presidency, in the spring election, April 24. 2:43 Excursion in Science 9:30 To Ee Announced 9:30 Women of Kansas—"Beauty Goes with These" 2. 45 Book Review Pachacamac and Pachacamac N.O. W, the women's branch of the party, will share the ballot, offering candidates jointly. 9:39 K.U. Sports Farade, Mike Stuart 2:30 Children's Musical Stuart 9:45 League of Women Voters Candidates for A.S.C. representative from District I are Richard Boyd, Samuel Hoover, Chester Laniewski, Keith Wilson, Eunice Carlson, Helen Heath, and Sue Webster. Today's "The Face Is Familiar" is Mary Jane Holzman. Candidates for A.S.C. representative from District II are Charles Van Buskirk, Robert Brown, Charles T. Black, and Ralph Robertson. Candidates for A.S.C. representative from District III are Joseph Delaney, William Hogan, Harrier Harlow, and Marjorie Stark, William McElhenny is the District IV candidate. Junior class officer candidates are LuAnne Powell, president, William Braum, vice-president; Gwen Harger secretary, and Samuel McCamant, treasurer. Senior class officer candidates are Otto Schnellbacher, president, Jack Eskridge, vice-president, Joan Woodward, secretary, and John Anderson, treasurer. Sophomore class officer candidates are Stanley England, president, Joan Vermillion, vice-president, Buell Schiltz, secretary, and Charles Lindberg, treasurer. Boy Scouts To Be Guests At Relays Boy Scouts from Kansas and Missouri will be guests of the University Athletic association, Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity, and the Extension division at the Kansas relays next Saturday. "Seout visitation day" will begin with registration of all visiting scouts at 9 a.m. in Frank Strong School and will be given a ticket to the relays. In the afternoon the boys will attend the 22nd annual Kansas relays. Scouts have been invited from the following districts: "Se Kan" with headquarters at Independence; Jay-Clark; Lincoln City; City, Kan; "Pony Express", St. Joseph, Mo.; and the Kansas City area council from Kansas City, Mo. Bundles Of Pink May Bring $100 For Some Proud Papa In 1967 Here's a chance for some lucky K.U. papa to win a prize of $100 in 1967. That money is offered each year by the National Father's Day committee, to the American father of the largest living family. But, here's the catch: Last year's winner, George Davis, was the father of 20 children. There's still hope, though. Davis has been declared ineligible in order that those papas whose tribes have increased during the past year might have a chance. News . . . of the World Republicen Labor Group Defends Union Control Bill Washington. —(UP)—Republican members of the house labor committee today defended their sweeping union control bill as a weapon to free workers from "a tyranny more despotic than one could think possible in a free country." The majority report said the American working man "has been deprived of his dignity as an individual" for the past 14 years. The report blamed the New Deal labor laws which it said were "ill-copeeived and disastrously executed." G.M. Announces Wage Boost Detroit—(UP)—General Motors corporation announced today it had reached an agreement with the CIO United Electrical Workers union providing 15-cent hourly wage increases, effective today, for more than 30,000 employees. Disarmament Plan Ready Won't That $^{\$}(-!?; (£!&: Phone Ever Ring Again? Moscow.—(UP)—Gen. George C Marshall was ready today to submit to the Big Four council a 40-year plan for permanent disarmament of Germany, backed by assurance that in any case the United States was in Europe to stay. Fly Aid To Homeless San Antonio—(UP)—Eight C-47 transport planes were enlisted today in the campaign to provide housing for hundreds of homeless residents of tornado-torn Woodward, Okla. The planes were slated to carry 60,000 pounds of tarpaulins and tent stoves to the stricken Oklahoma area. Woman's morale sinks lower and lower. Seven nights and not a single buzz from an Amchel! The general cry of the female population is, "It's awful!" "You get that intellectual but isolated feeling, home all alone with the books, with not even one phone call to break into the evening," complained Joan Gregory, College freshman Maybe women and taxi owners take a dim view of the situation, but Norma McMullin, switchboard operator at an organized house, said that though calls are zero, callers are as numerous as ever. "They're just more unexpected and have to wait longer for their dates. It's kind of wearing on our magazines," she said. Norma threw in a remark about getting too much studying done herself. Taxi Drivers Play Checkers But while women eye reproachfully the silent instrument on the phone desk, the boys down at the taxi station draw up their chairs for business and ask "What business from the Hill?" asked the boss when he walked into the station. "Pretty dull around here," said a yawning driver. "Guss the fellows are walking their dates." Men Aren't Disturbed Another taxi service commented that its usual 150 to 175 calls to the University has dwindled to scattered emergency calls and a few time calls placed personally before the taxi was wanted. "None," the drivers chorused, grinning happily. "Absolutely none!" he men don't seem to be greatly disturbed by it. "The strike makes for more dates," said Kenny Davis, College sophomore. "It eliminates the date-hungry male who sits down with five phone numbers in his hand and manages a conversational evening on five nickels. Now he actually has to take a woman out and show her a good time, which everyone knows can't be done on five nickels." Pinball Crowd Is Same The eternal gang around the pinball machine at a local night spot didn't seem any larger than usual. Just to keep the records straight, one of the players turned around and said, "This strike doesn't bother us. We merely isn't got sex appeal." And then there is the fellow who leamed over the counter at the Union fountain and declared, "The fact that the phones aren't working isn't nearly as important to date averages as women think it is. Nothing will ever be able to beat personal contact. After all, you can't kiss a telephone." Figuring at the rate of one new baby a year from now on, any one of the University's proud papas could be eligible sometime in the 1960's. The contest is open to every male citizen of the United States, and sponsors of the contest are urging all interested daddies to compete for the prize. Entries should be made to the National Father's Day committee, 50 East 42nd street, New York 17. Prospective fathers are urged to clip this article for reference in 20 years or so. Traffic Violators 'To Remove Tickets' Traffic violation tickets should be removed before cars are moved, Robert Corwin. University traffic patrolman, said today. Any person caught using old tickets and changing the date on the stubs will be punished. Corwin warned. "Some city ordinance violators are still failing to appear in police court," he said. "It's for their own good if they do." The patrolman also warned drivers to watch the 20 mile-an-hour speed limit while driving on the campus. Honor Roll (Continued from page one) derson, Donald Henning, Walter Hulen. Joseph Hull, Paul Jackson, David S. Jones, Don B. Jones, James K. nehl, William Kiene, Carl Klaus, William Krall, Stewart Lambers, Verness Lamping, Donald Luffel, Victor Mathews, Richard Matzdorff, Russell Mesler, Donald Owen, Robert Pepper, James Ralls, Marion Raper, Bob Roberts, John Robinson, Eugene Sabin, Warren Shaw. Kenneth Sleigh, William Sonnenberg, Leo Spector, Robert Sterrett, William Stringer, Winton Studt, James Thornton, L. Duane Walrafen, Gerald Wilson, Wayne Wilson, Jack Winter. Freshmen; Billy Adams, Lawrence Allred, Glen Anschutz, John Ashby, Maynard Bauleke, Jack Beeman, Robert Beu, Rupert Bledsoe, Robert Bowersock, Edward Brass, Fred Brinkman, Melvin Brown Herbert Bueholt, Edward Burns, Edwin Carpenter, Edward Cause, David Carpenter, Alfred Case, Bruce Chad-wick, Lyle Chapman, Edward Cheram-y, Myron Click, Dale Clinton, Calvin Coombs, William Corman, Davis Crawford. Paul Dillon, Charles Dutton, Clint Edwards, Stanley England, William Faris, Victor Ferraro, Jack Fink, David Foley, Robert Ford, George Frazer, Thomas Fuller, Clark Grissold, Eugene Halbert, Howard Hamacher, Charles Harris; John P. Harris, Richard Heiny, Jack Herron, James Hunt, Robert Hutton, Joseph Keil, Robert Kite William Leib, Wayne Lewis, William McDonald, Guy Mabry, Clinton Maiden, Boyd Marts, John Meyer, Walter Michaelis, Bertram Miller, Rodney N. Miller, William E. Miller, Edison Mincheff, Ralph Moon, Chester Moore, George J. Moore, John Nelson, Ernest Neuer, James Oram, James R. Page, Donald Payne. Charles Penny, Allan Persson, Richard Philips, Francis Prosser, Richard Raidt, Elwyn Reynolds, John Robb, Dae Ree, Arthur Roth, Gor- dassel, Dessel Seamans, Neal Shaw, David Seaman, Mull, Jerome Smith, Lowell E. Smith, Stanley M. Smith, Richard Stewart, Jack Stines. Robert Tally, Robert Thayer, John Thimesch, George Thomas, Robert Unholtz, Donald Vesper, David Von Niederhausern, Carl Von Wanden, Charles Walker, Marvin Wanbaugh, Ronald Weddle, Herbert Weidensauh, Harry Wheeler, Harold Wilde, Clayton Williams, Charles Woodcock, William Worford, Stanley Wright. University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Tuesday, April 15, 1947 44th Year No.119 Lawrence, Kansas Education Heads To Attend Annual Spring Meeting "How Adequate Is the School of Today?" will be the theme of the annual spring education conference if school administrators, to be held in the campus Friday and Saturday. School superintendents, principals, and teachers from Kansas and western Missouri will attend. Two experts in the field of school administration, M. E. Hahn, director of center psychological services, Syracuse university, and N. E. Viles, specialist in school plant management from office station, Washington, D. C., will address a conference. Two-Day Meeting The two-day conference is sponsored annually by the School of Education, the Lawrence board of education and the University extension division. Leaders of the informal discussion groups, in addition to Dr. Viles and Dr. Hahn, will be E. L. Novotny, Lawrence superintendent of schools, and Marlin Schrader, of the vocational education staff, Topeka. Special Sessions Added Chairman of the three general sessions will be George B. Smith, dean of the School of Education; L. W. Erooks, state superintendent of public instruction, Topeka; and K. H. Taylor, principal, high school secretary-treasurer of the Kansas High School Principals association. The conference will open with the m. st general session at 10 a.m. Fri. last general session at 11 a.m. Chancellor Deane W. Maioe greet the administrators at the second general session at 8 p. m. morning, and the last general session will be at 9 a. m. Saturday. Informal discussion groups will meet at 2 p. m. Friday, and special sessions will be at 10:15 and 10:45 a. m. Saturday. Harvard Dean Speaks To Students, Faculty Wallace B. Donham, former dean of the Harvard Graduate school of Business Administration, is giving informal talks to students and to various faculty groups. Dean Donham now heads the human relations training for undergraduates in both Harvard and Radcliffe college. He also directs Harvar's graduate fellowship research program in that field. Monday he visited Professor Clark's class in "Human Relations" and spoke to Prof. F. A. Russell's "Industrial Relations" class. He met with University deans at noon and with the faculty of the social science department in the afternoon. Today he addressed Professor Clark's "Social Psychology" class and this afternoon the law students will hear him discuss the relation between business and law, and the shortcomings of legal education. He will address the College faculty at 5 p.m. Tonight in the Union he will discuss, "The responsibilities of management today," with the Society for the Advancement of Management. Wednesday morning he will speak to the "Human Relations" class. ISA Juke Box Mixer Will Be Tomorrow "Meet somebody new" is the slogan for the L.S.A. juke box mixer to be held from 7:30 to 9:00 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas room of the Union Building. All University men and woman may attend. I. S.A. members will be admitted free. Admission for non-members will be 15 cents. More than 100 persons attended the last mixer March 26. Little Man On Campus By Bibles KU COACH K.U. RELAYS DAILY KANKSOS "And we haven't lost a relay since!" "And we haven't lost a relay since?" 'Eagle' Opposes Dove' Policies Any similarity between the Eagle and the Dove will be purely coincidental. That was the opinion of the start at the organization meeting of the Fagle, a new student publication, Monday. Designed to express what its organizers call the "majority campus opinion," the Eagle will be conservative, and will undoubtedly oppose the Dove on economic and political questions. Platform of 'Eagle' Purpose He is the stand that the Eagle will take on several issues. ONE. Denounce communist activity in the United States. TWO. Uphold the American system of free enterprise. THREE. Attack Henry Wallace. FOUR. Attack Tommy Robinson. TWO. Attack bomb policy. The question of policy came up immediately. One student asked, "Are we going to be reactionary?" It was decided he would not pass on definition, but the publication would certainly be "conservative, middle-of-the-road." FIVE. Stress aid universal military training. SEVEN. Plug for admission of Oklahoma A. & M. into the Big Six. SIX. Hit at "northern agitation in the race question." Donald H. Ong, College senior, charged that members of the Dove's staff recently handed out copies of their publication to legislators in Topeka, causing concern among several legal regulators by raising concerns regarding several representatives over activities of "radicals at the University of Kansas." An executive board to handle mechanical details was chosen. Members are Donald Ong, Bruce Bathurst, and Bill Barger, College seniors; Wallace Foster and Joan Woodward, juniors; and a D Buell Schilts, and William Tincher, freshmen. A general policy was drawn up. It is to be "an opposition to any minority group that tries to present its opinion as a majority opinion." Specifically, they accuse the Dove of "presenting a distorted picture of campus opinion." One thing is sure. The Eagle will not be printed on pink paper. Gave Legislators Copies Kansas Team Debates On Labor Question The University of Kansas and University of Texas debate teams discussed "Resolved, that labor should be given a direct share in the management of industry." Monday in the Little Theater of Green hall. Representing the University on the affirmative side were Edward Stolenwerck, College freshman, and William Conboy, College sophomore, Jean Moore, College senior, acted as chairman for the debate. WEATHER Kansas—Rain and thunderstorms today and in northeast tonight except rain changing to snow northwest tonight. Followed by clearing Wednesday. Colder northwest half today. Entire state tonight and southeast half Wednesday. Reynolds On Last Laps Of Record Flight Adak, Aleutian Islands—(UP) —The Reynolds Bombshell took off from Adak army air field at 8:24 a.m. today on the next-to-last lap of its 20,000-mile record-breaking flight around the world. The twin-engined converted bomber headed for Edmonton, Alta., 2,889 miles east and the last fuel stop of the spectacular flight. Milton Reynolds said he expected to make the Adak-Edmonton lap in seven hours and 30 minutes. Kansas Rivers Are Still Flooded High water plagued residents of southeastern, southcentral, and eastern Kansas today as several streams continued flooding. Almost all streams were running bank full or higher. State and U. S. highways were closed at many places today, but the weather bureau said the overflow was not dangerous. In central and southeastern Kansas, the Neosho river spread over low-lying farm lands. The Neosho stood four feet above flood stage at Emporia, with less overflow reported farther down. The Walnut river went out of its banks near Winfield blocking railroad tracks. In east-central Kansas, the Marais des Cygnes river is still running high. From Osawatome to the Missouri line, there is a slight overflow. Additional rain is predicted for much of the area today. Dean Jones To Add To Engineering Staff J. O. Jones, dean of the school of engineering, is searching for instructors to add to the engineering staff this week. Dean Jones will visit eastern colleges and universities in an effort to add several instructors to the faculty next fall. The dean will probably return within two weeks, his secretary said. Don't Buy A New Complexion. . Here's How You Can Remodel The Old One By J. WELLINGTON ROBINSON Would you like a complexion like a peach—yellow and fuzzy? Probably not. Then pay attention to what suave, modish Lynn Weston, a cosmetic firm representative from New York, had to say about the application of cosmetics and care of the skin. In a recent demonstration before the Home Economics club, Miss Weston described every phase of applying facial make-up. She particularly emphasized that cleansing cream must be chosen with care. The skin of college girls is young and tender, and should have nothing but the lightest, most delicate creams applied to it, she said. To use the cream correctly, start at the throat and work up—but gently. Be careful when working under the eyes. There's no bone structure here and you might push your fingers right through the skin, the lovely Lynn warned the girls. Cleaning lotion must be used to dislodge the cream. Using cleansing cream without using lotion is like using a bar of soap without water, and that's quite a trick. Don't Push Through Skin Miss Weston explained that the contents of cleansing lotion is nothing but citrus fruit, and so if you're rushed in the morning and don't have time to use the lotion, just drink orange juice and drool. It has the same effect. Just Pound. Your Face. After the cleasing lotion has been applied, cleansing tissue will remove it. Pound your face with the tissues. This not only removes the lotion, but also stimulates the circulation. Let the powder base dry before applying rouge. Cream rouge is preferable to the powder type as it brings out a natural flush*. If you face fuzz will not protrude. If you still have trouble with face fuzz—shave. The climax of the entire procedure is the application of lip rouge. Use a lip brush! It can completely change the shape of your whole mouth. Your face and your canvas are the most visible tool for holding brush. Of course, if you're satisfied with the shape of your mouth then simply paint your lips. Now the job is complete. Look in a mirror. Demoralizing, isn't it? Campus Politics 'Stink,' Student Group Insists The present system of student politics "stinks" and it's time for some sort of good government league. The group will meet again at 4 p. m. today in Green hall. That is what 50 students, who met in the Kansas room Monday, believe. The meeting was called by a group of students who said that they were voting with "power politics and block voting in all three political parties." Otis Hill, the moderator, explained the purpose of the meeting. He said, "The present political set-up has shown no constructive leadership, much bickering, and inter-group name calling. "An organization should be formed; one that would endorse various candidates and urge students to vote for the man, not for the party. Questions Arise On System But when Hill had finished his talk, these questions came up immediately. "Shall we merely present facts about candidates? Shall we plug for the election of certain ones and if so, which ones? Shall we go even further and put up a new slate?" Anne Scott, College senior, said that the group should endorse certain candidates. Shirley Wellborn, College junior, asserted, "We cannot combat political parties by forming another one." Rader Wants Convocation At this point John Rader, who recently charged that the Progressive party was an instrument to split the Independent vote, cautioned that the group might become the tool of a political party. "There's no chance for the man who doesn't live in an organized house." he said. "We should have an all student convocation and let each candidate speak for himself. We should abolish political parties." Donald Ong, College senior, warned of disadvantages of a "non-partisan" political action group. Calvin Cooley, College freshman, endorsed the plan but said, "There is an amendment before the student council that would take care of everything. It would kill political parties." He referred to a proposed amendment to Article 5 of the rules governing student life. It would make student council representation by houses and housing districts instead of by schools of the University, as now exists. He said, "It would be to the advantage of the unorganized student. It might become a self-perpetuating Organization houses would pack the meetings." Ong Warns Of Disadvantages Ernest Friesen, College freshman, said. "We should form a group emphasizing 'let's vote for the man and not for the party.'" That the whole thing would have to be done by people who were sincere was emphasized several times. Bruce Hutchert, College sophomore. Werner Sums Up Problem Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, summed up the problem by telling about a convention of the National Independent Students association last week at the University of Oklahoma. "This convention attacked the problems of student government all over the country," he said. "In most universities, and ours is no exception, the electorate is not properly informed. Party alignment is the only thing left for them. A Greek-Independent split is fatal." "The convention suggested a possible solution in a large body of disinterested workers, three or four hundred strong, which would describe each candidate and get the student body out to vote." UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 15,194 PAGE TWO 1 OK Leave Bonds On Vet Insurance - Wait five years to use your terminal leave bonds? Certainly not. But there's a catch in it. The Veteran's Administration said today the bonds can be used to pay National Service Life Insurance. There are five convenient plans: Three. To reinstate lapsed policies One. To pay advance premiums Two. To buy new insurance Three. To reinstate lapsed policies NSLT policies prior to July 31, 1946 Five. To pay the difference in reserve values for back-dated conversion of policies from term to permanent insurance. Here's the catch. You cannot apply part of the bond to insurance and ask to have the rest returned. However, the VA will use part of the bond for insurance and hold the remainder for return at the date of maturity. Requests for use of the bonds should be sent to the Veterans Administration, 420 Locust St., St. Louis 2. Mo. He should give his policy number, full name, and address. The bond should also be signed. If the veteran wishes to convert his NSLI to permanent insurance, he should send in a conversion application. These forms may be obtained at any Veterans office. Two students, Clarence Francisco and Jean Francisco, and the Alpha Chi Omega house are the latest "Bellringers" in the Memorial fund campaign. 3 New Inscribers On Bellringer List Contributions made by the organized houses are; Alpha Chi Omega $12.00; Alpha Delta Pi $8.00; Alpha Tau Omega, Beta Theta, Battelton hall, $46.00; Beta Theta Pi, $16.00; Campus house, $11.00. Caruthah hall, $14.00; Chi Omega $56.50; Corbin hall, $40.00; Delta Chi $12.30; Delta Delta Delta, $115.50; Delta Gamma, $42.70; Delta Tau Delta, $42.25. Phi Kappa, $275; Pi Beta Phi $21.50; Sigma Alpha Epsilon, $76.10; Sigma Chi, $190.25; Sigma Nu, $12.50; Sigma Phi Epsilon, $300.75; Sleepy Hollow hall, $4.00; Spooner-Thayer dormitory, $8.70; Theta Tau, $48.00; Triangle, $50.25; Watkins hall, $45.55; Weight Plane, $35.00. Delta Upsilon, $31.00; Foster hall, $54.25; Gamma Phi Beta, $21.40; Hopkins hall, $8.00; Jolliffe hall, $15.75; Kappa Alpha Theta, $271.50; Kappa Kappa Gamma, $66.50; Kappa Sigma, $37.50; Locksey hall, $15.71; Miller hall, $23.25; Phi Beta Pi, $45- 11; Phi Delta Theta, $109.00. Offer $500 Prize In Wholesale Contest First prize of $500 and 23 other, cash awards totaling fifteen hundred dollars will be awarded by the National Association of Wholesalers for the best articles on wholesaling or any of its major aspects. This contest is the opening action in a drive by the wholesalers to attract college and university students for valuable careers in the wholesale field. Rules governing the articles, which should be about 5,000 words in length, may be obtained from Chester C. Kelsey, executive vice-president of the National Association of Wholesalers, 290 Fifth avenue, New York. '47 Graduate Has O.T. Job Anna Elizabeth Nivern, '47, is now employed at the Veterans' hospital in Atlanta, Ga., in the occupational therapy department. She was graded in February with a bachelor of science degree in occupational therapy. University Daily Kansan University Daily Kansan Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a postage. Page Lawrence at Lawrence a semester postage. Afternoon during the school year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as Senior - Sept 17, 1890, at the Post Office at Lawrence Kant., under set of March 3, 1879. Official Bulletin Society for Advancement of Management, 7:30 tonight, west wing of Union ballroom. W.B.Donham, retired dean of the Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration, will discuss "Management's Responsibilities Today." April 15, 1947 *** Tau Sigma at 7:15 tonight in Robinson gym. *** El Ateneo se reunira el proxim Jueves, 17 de Abril, a las 7:15 p.m. en 113 F.S. David Sommerville hablara de su reciente viaje a Mexico. Se suplica a los scconcurrente memorizar un refran para decirlo en la reunion. - * * Tau Beta Pi, 7 p.m. tonight, 210 Marvin. Full attendance important. International Relations club, p.m. today, Kansas room. Dean W. B. Donham will speak to Professor Clark's classes in Psychological Sociology and Cases in Human Relations at 10 a.m. Wednesday in 266 Fraser. Former students in these courses invited to attend. United Women's council at 5 p.m. today in the Pine room. - * * *** All-Student council at 7:15 tonight in the Pine room. Members should bring copies of constitutional amendment. \* \* \* Applications for the position of student directory manager may be submitted at the Student Organizations window of the Business Office until April 16. Progressive party meeting, 7 p.m. tonight, room 9, Frank Strong. Law Wives at 8 p.m. Wednesday in the lounge of Green hall. Spring parties will be discussed. American Institute of Electrical Engineers at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Lindley hall auditorium. Program will be student papers. Sunflower Engineering Wives at 8 p.m. Thursday, Student clubroom at Sunflower. Mrs. Margaret Sisson and Mrs. Louella Woods, hostesses *** Le cercle francais se reunira mercredi le 16 avril a quatre heures dans la salle de projection, 15 Fraser hall. Trois films sur la France seront projettes. ※ ※ ※ Mathematics colloquium, 5 p.m. Thursday, 222 Frank Strong. Howard H. Barnett will speak on "Linear Transformations." *** Graduate record examination, 1-5 p.m., May 5; 8:30-12:39, May 6. Applications due at Guidance Bureau, 2A Frank Strong, April 17. All students who expect to attend the summer session or return for the all semester should sign up in the Roger F. Rhoades, geology specialist, will speak to Sigma Xi, honorary research society, at 8 p.m. Thursday in Lindley hall. Chosen as the annual guest lecturer, he will speak on the subject, "Influence of Geological Conditions on the Engineering Development of a River." Geology Specialist To Talk At Lindley - * * Rhoades is chief geologist of the Bureau of Reclamation headquarters in Denver. Registrar's office according to the following schedule: Today, G-K; Wednesday, L-Q; Thursday, M; Friday, P-R; Monday, April 21, S; Tuesday, April 22, T-Z; Wednesday, April 23, all those who could not come in on their scheduled days. Any person desiring to apply for the position of editor and business manager of the 1948 Jayhawker must leave a latter addressed to Karl Klooz, chairman of the Jayhawker Advisory board, at the Student Organizations window of the Business Office by 5 p.m. today. Applications must include three references, two, the names of faculty members, and the third a past employer or friend. Everyone interested in bettering student politics and student government, especially those who met yesterday, are urged to attend the meeting in Little Theater, Green hall at 4 p.m. today. Ellsworth Will Visit K.U. Alumni Groups Fred Ellsworth, University alumni secretary, left Sunday for seven eastern and middle-western cities to reorganize alumni chapters discontinued during the war. Mr. Ellsworth will visit Cleveland, Washington, Philadelphia, New York, Pittsburgh, Indianapolis, and St Louis. The Philadelphia and New York chapters are active, Mr. Elsworth said. He will discuss the progress being made in the World War II Memorial drive with their committees. Universities Study Solar Home Heating New York. (UP) -Two university projects experimenting with solar heating for homes are reported by Business Week magazine to be making "encouraging progress." A University of Colorado research group has installed a heat collector on a house roof which even in subzero weather keeps the house at a temperature of 77 degrees as long as the sun is shining. The unit employs a method similar to that of greenhouses. K For Pep and Energy Drink MILK Each day. Lindley's Kansas Cleaners Adults require at least one pint a day. Lawrence Sanitary MILK & ICE CREAM CO. 12 E. 8th Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices MEN'S SUITS- Cleaned and Pressed 65c LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES— Cleaned and Pressed ... 69c Cash and Carry Only 69c Your Winter Dreams May Come True Summer Jobs At Resort Vacation Spots Have you been dreaming all winter about the handsome ranger that you would meet if you could spend the summer in Yellowstone? Or perhaps it was a young business magnate, cruising about the Great Lakes. Whatever he was, these few hints from Mademoiselle magazine might help you to realize those dreams, especially if the bank account happens to be a little depleted right now. Unfortunately, summer jobs in the resorts are a little scarce. But if you know where to go, you might very well be one of those who spends the summer at a dude ranch—all for free, too. Big City Is Best Bet If you are a home economics major, your best bet will be in a large city. There, advertising agencies, chain restaurants, and firms maintaining testing kitchens are usually able to employ a few extra dietitians during the summer. Or, if you want to be more rustic about it, most of the dude ranches hire girls as household help during the summer. The pay is small—but small—but one can always sneak in a few hours riding each day. An outdoor girl may be just the one that some summer camp is needing as a counselor. And most playgrounds will need additional supervisors during the summer. If you take one of these jobs, though, you're going to your patience stretched to the limit. The Tips Are Good. Cooks, waitresses, hostesses, and maids are always in demand, on lake steamers and in resort hotels. Not a very pleasant way to spend the summer, you may think, but if you happen not to possess any special talent, then that's about the best that you can hope for. The pay is small, but the tips are good—if you have the proper tip bait. But perhaps you are not the way- faring type. If not, then your local library, or playground, or swimming pool will surely be enlarging their staff for the summer. It never hurts to ask. Regardless of which of these positions you may land, you can expect one thing—a sadly neglected pay check. But for an expenses paid cruise from Duluth to Buffalo, who cares? OK Phone KU-25 with your news. Get Your 'Burgers' AT Zim's SNACK SHOP CURB SERVICE 6:30 to 11:30 p.m. Across from the Postoffice. Open: 6 a.m. to 12:30 a.m. MADISON'S DAILY NEWS THE NEWSPAPER ON THE SCENT OF SPRING. You want to get into comfortable clothes? . . For picnics, barbecues, coke dates or school wear . . you'll want some of this sportswear. ★ Light weight Jackets ★ Sport Shirts ★ MacGregor Shackets ★ Sport Coats ★ Slacks and Cords ★ Sweaters ★ Mansfield Jogs and Saddles Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS PRIL 15, 1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Belles AND THEIR Weddings Holt-Nelson Dr. and Mrs. W. O. Nelson announce the marriage of their daughter, Margaret, to Dr. Robert Glennolt, son of Mr. Ida B. Holt of Kingston, N.C. The ceremony was held Wednesday afternoon, April in Dunforth chapel, with the Rev. Felold G. Barr reading the service. Mrs. Holt received her A. B. and T. D. degrees from the University and was associated with her father and brother in the practice of medicine. She is a member of Delta gamma, social sorority. Dr. Holt is a graduate of the Medical College of Virginia; during the var, he served as a medical officer in the navy. Both recently completed courses in phalomology at the post-graduate school of medicine at Harvard. Jacferran-Brick The engagement of Miss Marilyn E. Macferran, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Macferran, Jr., of Toooka, to Mr. Samuel E. Brick, son of Mrs. O. F. Gross of Salinna, was announced at the luncheon by Mrs. Informal announcement was made at the Kappa Sigma house the same evening. Miss Macferran is a graduate student in the music education department, taking work toward her master's degree. She also co-owns Alpha Theta, social sorority. Mr. Brick is also a graduate student in music education. He received his masters degree last February, and is now working toward the doctor of philosophy degree. He is a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity. 业 东 南 ibbs-Rossillon The pinning of Ruth Hibbs to Ariens Rossillon was announced Saturday evening at Locksley hall. Mrs. Vivian Christian, house-mother. Members of the Phi Kappa chapter were present for coffee and traditional chocolates were passed by Leah Smith and JoAnn Rossillon, by Beaumont Miss Hibbs received a corsage of red roses. Miss Smith and Miss Rossillon wore white carnations and Mrs. Christian wore a corsage of pink gladiolus. Miss Hibbs of Carthage, Mo., is a junior in the School of Business and a member of Phi Chi Theta, business sorority. Mr. Rossillon of Gridley, is a sophomore in the School of Pharmacy and a member of Phi Kappa social fraternity and Kappa Psi, pharmacy fraternity. SOCIALLY SPEAKING Watkins To Hold Hour Dance Watkins hall will hold an open hour dance from 7 to 8 p.m. Wednesday. Sig Ens Pledge Two Sigma Phi Epsilon announces the pledging of Victor Votaw and Paul Barker, both of Lawrence. Sig Eps Entertain Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity entertained Delta DeltaDelta sorority at an informal mixer in the Union ballroom, Saturday afternoon. The Kansas chapter of Triangle fraternity held its annual Founders Day banquet Sunday at the chapter house. The guests present were Clifford Sharp, Maurice Hansell, Earl Colburn, of Kansas City Mo., Kenneth Kern and Orval Swander of Topeka. Triangle Installs Officers Officers installed were Samuel, R. McCammant, president; Thomas J. Ackerman, vice-president; James Crawford, recording secretary; Van Harrison, corresponding secretary; Alan G. Furnish, chapter editor; John Rowland, librarian; and Norman G. Royer, sergeant-at-arms. The installing officer was Joseph Densley. COED'S CORNER This Roaming Nurse Is Home But She Still Eyes The Pacific Of her 17 months service in the Army Nurse corps, she spent five in Europe with a Third army hospital unit. Nurse Janet Hamilton has been around. Janet, who received her training at Bell Memorial hospital in Kansas City, joined the Nurse corps in October, 1944, and arrived in France in April. 1945. April "What a time we had in Europe! We served in France, Germany, Austria, and ended up back in France," she related. Can't Forget Austria "I shall never forget Austria," she exclaimed. It is the most colorful country imaginable, full of mountain ranges, lakes, and resorts. The people dress in vivid Tyrolean costumes on Sunday. "We visited Hitler's hideout at Ber-chtesgaden and admired the million-dollar art collection which Goering had taken from galleries all over Europe." But Janet remembers one period of her stay in Austria which was not pleasant. The nurses' unit was stationed for two weeks in a concentration camp, just after the United States army had occupied the area. Nazis Killed 400 Daily "Before we came, the Nazis had killed an average of 400 inmates a day by various means," she said. "It was pretty ghastly there. But we accomplished some good. We treated 18,000 daily, 3,000 of whom were ill with malnutrition. The mortality rate dropped to 15 a day." "We spent a week's rest leave on the Riviera. To me, the Riviera is the most beautiful place in the world. The Mediterranean is as blue as sapphire, and, if one looks out toward the horizon, he can't see where the sea meets the sky because they are so nearly the same color." On Aug. 11, Jane's unit sailed for Manila. Heard of V-J Day "Two days after we passed Gibraltar, we were throwing a big dance. About midnight, the loudspeaker announced that it was V-J day. We were so happy that we went up on deck and shot o the rockets and big guns." "The next day, it was announced that we were going to Boston instead of Manila. Our unit broke up and I was sent to Asheville, N.C." was sent to Janet was discharged March 1, 1946, and came to K.U. in June. She will be graduated next January with a B.S. in nursing and a major in psychology. Member of Sigma Theta Janet lives at 1215 Oread. She is a member of Sigma Theta, honorary nursing sorority, and R.N., the registered nurses' club. After she leaves the University, she hopes to take a post-graduate The annual spring concert by the Men's and Women's Glee clubs will be at 8 o'clock tomorrow, at Hoch auditorium. Miss Irene Peabody and Mr. Joseph Wilkins will direct the group. Men's, Women's Glee Clubs To Give Concert Wednesday group. Numbers ranging from the "Pilgrim's Chorus" (Wagner) to "All the Things You Are" (Kern) will be presented at the concert. Activity books will admit. Janet still has wanderlust. "I still want to travel to the Pacific," she says. "I always felt a little disappointed over not seeing that part of the world." course in pediatrics and later to become supervisor of a children's department in a hospital. Wood-Carving Display Took Five Years' Work Carved by a housewife with no training and only a few simple tools, the wood-carving display on the third floor of west Frank Strong hall is the result of five years of work. Dr. Barr Williams, Clay Center, who began carving soap as a hobby but changed to wood three years ago, started with only a pocket-knife and a small chisel as tools. Now a grandmother, Mrs. Williams has had an interest in art since she was a young girl, but had no chance to take formal training. She now has various electric tools and coping saws and works with white pine, cotton wood, and linden. The carvings have been put on display by the department of design Sigma Xi To Hear Reclamation Chief The chief of the U.S. Bureau of Reclamation at Denver, Roger F. Rhoades will speak before members of Sigma Xi, honorary research society, at 8 p.m. Thursday in Lindley auditorium. Mr. Rhoades, a specialist in dam construction will talk about the influence of geological conditions on the engineering development of a river. He will discuss work on the Missouri Valley program, and a plan to bring waters of the Colorado river under the continental divide. De LUXE CAFE 28 YEARS OF SERVICE Call K.U. 25 with your news. Same Location-Same Management You are welcome 711 Mass. Join Our Rental LIBRARY The new books you have been wanting to read are here. 15c for 5 days Gustafson THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. St. THE COLLEGE JEWELER Y' Conference Elects 3 Students To Jobs Serving K.U. Students For 43 Years. 809 MASS. Margaret van der Smissen, Lorna Green, and Wilbur Noble were elected to the executive committee of the Kansas district Y.M.C.A.-Y.W.C.A. at a conference last weekend at Friends university The Kansas district is composed of colleges and universities throughout the state. Delegates to the conference were from Y.M.C.A., Y.W.C.A., and Student Christian associations of the various schools University students who attended were: Bruce Wilder, Edgar Thomas, Harry Lees, Sheila Wilder, Lucy Thomas, Dorothy Hoover, Meredith Gear, Joan, Joan Joseph, Melva Whiting, Alice Wismar, and Wilbur Noble. Mrs. Christine Alford, sponsor, accompanied the group. Alpha Phi Omega To Pledge Seven Men Thursday Seven men will be formally pledged into Lambda chapter of Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, Thursday night. This will bring the total number of members to over 100 for the first time in the history of the local chapter. Chapter meetings will be held at 7 instead of 8 p. m. for the remaining of the semester. Mrs. Wallace is employed in the occupational therapy department of the Wadsworth Veterans' hospital. Mrs. McCormick is a member of the occupational therapy department at the University hospital in Kansas City. Engineerettes Plan Meeting Mrs. La Verna Ice Wallace, '46, was elected secretary-treasurer of the Kansas Occupational Therapy association at a recent meeting in Topeka Mrs. Phyllis Riggs McCormick. '45, was elected to the association board of managers. Miss Nancie Greenman and Miss Dorothy Farmer, of the University occupational staff, and more than 20 students attended the meeting. The group heard speeches by field specialists. Read the Daily Kansan daily The Engineerettes will meet at 8 p.m. Thursday, April 17, in the auditorium of Green hall. All wives of student engineers are invited to join the group. WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames. Lawrence Optical Co. JOHN WILLIAM SMITH - See Tomorrow's Kansan O.K., TONIGHT LET'S GO TO THE TEPEE Barbecued Sandwiches (Beef, Ham, Pork, 30c) and have Remember— "Sunday Evening D.A.T. THE TEPEE Intoxication Intoxication D'ORSAY scent . . . serenading A love song In it goes to your heart! Perfume $10.00 and $18.50 Eau de toilette $5.00 (2.75 and $5.00) (plus taxes) Cosmetic Dept. Weaver PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 15,194 SPOTLIGHT on SPORTS By BILL CONBOY Kansas Relay Sidelights In 1926,49 white gold watches were presented to the first place winners of the various events. One-hundred and one schools took part in the 1926 Relays. Charley Hoff, the great Norwegian polevaulter, was one of the contestants. Fielding H. Yost was referee in 1926. That was also the year in which the Relays were insured against rain for $5,000. Nebraska broke the world's record for the 880-yard relay by running the distance in 1:26.6 In 1928, 225 trophies, medals, watches, and cups were awarded the contestants. The International Indian Marathon was held in 1928 with braves from the United States, Canada, and Mexico competing. A 26-mile distance from East Topeka to the stadium was used. The race was held in 3 hours, 53½ minutes. He ran the last five miles in his stocking feet. In 1931, the directors of the Big Six discussed dropping the Relays because of the nation-wide depression. Attendance was very poor at all athletic events. The first queen of Kansas Relays was Margaret Kilbourne from Sterling High school. She was chosen for the honor in 1931. Alfred M. Landon was honorary referee for the 1933 event. He came in second in his own big race three years later. Archie San Romani defeated Glenn Cunningham in the special mile races of both the 1937 and 1938 Relays. San Romani attended Kansas State Teachers College at Emporia during his collegiate career He ran the anchor lap on the 1936 Emporia State distance medley relay team which set the present Relays record of 10:12.7 for the university class. The Emporia State team was so strong in the event that year that the school entered an entirely different quartet in the college distance medley race and brought home a second victory. Gene Venske, chief United States mile competitor of Glenn Cunningham when the Kansas star was in his prime, picked the Relays queen in 1934. Cunningham was honorary referee for the 1942 meet. *** East Texas State will send five men to the Relays Saturday. They will make up the 880-yard and mile relay teams for the school. Two of the Texans, Carlos Salinas of Laredo and James Green of Commerce, ran on the East Texas team which established the present Drake Relays record of 1 minute, 27.5 seconds in the half-mile event. The Kansas Relays standard for the college 880-yard relay is 1 minute, 26.7 seconds. With East Texas and Texas University pressing each other, the mark may fall this Saturday. Chandler's Secretary Lashes Out At Critics Boston—(UP)—Walter W. Mulbry, the major-leagues' secretary-treasurer, lashed out today at newspaper critics of the one-year suspension of Brooklyn manager Leo Durocher and accused them of "reading into the decision so much that was not there at all." Mulbry, secretary to Baseball Commissioner A. B. Chandler since Chandler was a U. S. senator, said in Chicago that he Garens of the Boston Traveler. "A long time ago, the Commissioner told Durocher that he had already had too much unfavorable publicity and the next offense would be his last." "Yet any number of columnists have said, 'as many things as Durocher has done, why did the Commission have it?' Haiva for a year's suspension?" Relays Vaulters May Top 14 Feet; Shotmen To Toss At 52 Foot Mark Pole vault and shot put records may fall Saturday at the 22nd annual running of the Kansas Relays, but the records in the discus and javelin seem to be safe. The man apt to break the pole vault record is Nebraska's bespectacled freshman Don Cooper. He has the top ceiling among the host of entries with a mark of 13 feet 9 % inches, which he set at the Nebraska-Missouri with dual steers. high bar at 13 feet in his first outdoor start this season to take the Texas Relays crown. His chief competitors will be Sewell, Northwestern, who has vaulted 13 feet 6 inches; Harry Cooper, Minnesota, who is credited with 13 feet of vaulting; Warren Bateman, titlist, Warren Bateman, Colorado, who has reached 13 feet. With the aid of the weatherman, one of this group may clear the 14 foot 2 inches mark. Beefus Bryan of Texas set the present record in 1939. Little Chance For Shot Record Although standout weight men are entered in all three field events, not one can be considered a title threat. Topping the favored list is Missouri's big Ed Quirk. He took the NCAA championship in 1945. Returning to Big Six competition this season he won the indoor crown with a toss of 50 foot $34 inches. Quirk's best mark is 53 feet 1 inch. If he can duplicate that here Saturday, he'll walk off with one of the day's brightest records. The present 52 feet $ _{1/2} $ inch record was set by Kansas State's Elmer Hackney in 1939. K-State Has A Shot Threat Another Kansas State giant, Rollin Prather, will be one of Quirk's potent challengers. The big Wildcat won both the shot and discus at the Texas Relays. He was runner-up to Quirk at the conference indoor meet with a toss of 49 feet 9% inches. Two other weight men must be considered. Fortune Gordien, the brilliant Minnesota two-event ace, who is second ranking competitor, has a mark of 52 feet 11 inches. Another contender is Iowa's football fullback, Dick Hoerent. His best heave so far is 50 feet 10 inches. Gordon Idis Discus Favorite Gordien will be favored in the discus. He won the 1946 NCAA title on a toss of 161 feet 3 inches. Prather and Missouri's Mel Sheehan, who won the Big Six crown last May with a toss of 153 feet 2 inches, will push him to the limit. A fourth contender in this event will be Orivelle Yocum of Peru, Nebraska, Teachers, who has thrown the plate 149 feet 3 inches. Javelin competition may be a duel between two Big Six men, Herbe Grote of Nebraska and Karl Ebel, Kansas sophomore. Grote is the defending champion. He won last year's event with a toss of 197 feet $6 \frac{1}{2}$ inches. His best mark is 216 feet 2 inches. Even though the field event may be closely contested, Archie Harris record tosse of 171 feet $6 \frac{3}{4}$ inches seems to be safe. Ebel heaved the spear 193 feet 9 inches to take third place here last year. This year he made a 189 foot 3 inch toss for fourth place at the Texas Relays and a toss of 188 feet $11 \frac{1}{4}$ inches in the rain and mud at Emporia State. Mrs. Natalie Calderwood, chairman of the Union book committee, said the books will be collections of stories, current popular novels, and photo annuals. The committee selected books for short leisure reading. Jim Jones of North Texas State took third in the Texas Relays with 190 feet 3 inches. The javelin record of 229 feet $ 2 \frac{1}{4} $ inches, by set Terry of Hardin-Simmons back in 1937, will probably stand. Union Gets New Books; All Are Light Reading Distance Star CARLTON KANSAS KANSAS Here is Hal Moore, outstanding Kansas distance runner. His times for the mile are second only to Glenn Cunningham in University track annals. He finished second to Bobby Ginn of Nebraska in the mile at the Big Six indoor meet this spring. Shorten Betting Odds On St. Louis Cardinals St. Louis.—(UP)—James J. Carroll, the nation's leading betting commissioner, today shortened the odds on the St. Louis Cards and the Boston Red Sox to take the National and American league baseball pennants. Carrill quoted the Cards as 3 to 5 and the Red Sox as 3 to 4. American League—New York 3 to 1; Detroit 3 to 1; Cleveland 6 to 1; St. Louis 20 to 1; Chicago 20 to 1; Washington 25 to 1 and Philadelphia 40 to 1. Other odds: National Leggue—Brooklyn, 3 to 1; Boston 5 to 1; Chicago 5 to 1; Cincinnati 10 to 1; Pittsburgh 30 to 1; Philadelphia 30 to 1 and New York 30 to 1. (1946 won-lost records in paren-theses) Across from Court House Majors Open Season American League Detroit at St. Louis Newhouser (26-9) and Galehouse (8-12) These Relays Marks In Danger Friday Lopat (13-13) and Feller (26-15) Pibladelphia $g$ New York 120-yard high hurdles—14.9, Revell, Girard, 1388. 100-yard dosh - 69.9, Overfield, Independence, 1938. Chicago at Cleveland Mile run -4:29.9, Karnes, Overbrook, 1943. Marchildon (13-16) and Chandler (20-8) Kansas Relays High School Inter- scholastic track and field records: 440-yard run--50.8, McCaskill, Wichita North, 1933. 880-yard relay—1:31.5, Wyandotte (Shiffer, Lewis, Jenkins, and Vickers), 1932. Delicious JUICY STEAKS Our Specialty 200-yard low hurdles—22.1, Poliom, Topeka, 1938. Boston at Brooklyn 880-yard run—2:01.2, Stuart, Shawnee-Mission. 1945. Washington at Boston Wynn (8-5) and Hughson (20-11) Sain (20-14) and Hatten (14-11) 220-yard dash—22,0. Overfield Independence. 1938. Medley relay-3.31.4, Elhart (Coffield, Mills, Coleman, and Cunningham). 1930. Mile relay-3:31.2, Atchison (Wilson, Richey, Ewing, and Bratton), 1942. Washington at Boston Pole vault - 12 feet, 63% inches. Bird, Arkansas City, 1934. New York at Philadelphia Viscoil (9,15) and. Roue Voiselle (9-15) and Rowe (11-4) St. Louis (9-15) and Rowe (11-4) Pollet (21-10) and Blackwell (9-13) Pittocka, Chris Shot put- 58 feet, 10 inches, Dees, Lorraine. 1930. Discus throw -151 feet, 8½ inches, Knight. Salina, 1945. Sewell (8-12) and Borowy (12-10) BILL'S GRILL High jump- 6 feet, 5 3/8 inches, Rogers, Independence, 1939. Javelin throw-194 feet. $ 9 \frac{1}{2} $ inches. Rittel, Rock Creek. 1932. Broad jump=23 feet, 31/2 inches, Woods, Coffeyville, 1940. 1109 Mass. Phone 2054 Boston.—(UP)—The mid-western packer who uses everything in a pig but its squelag has given the Yankee fishermen an idea—he's going to utilize everything in a fish but its wiggle. Yankee Fishermen Use All But Wiggle Harold E. Crowther, director of the Atlantic Coast Fisheries company's laboratories, disclosed that research has begun to reclaim millions of dollars worth of fish liver and other waste material now tossed into the sea before trawlers reach port. Can Relay Visitors Beat These Records? Here are the present Kansas Relays records: 120-yard high hurdles—14.2, Wolcott of Rice, 1938. 100-yard dash-09.4, Leland of T. C. U., 1930. 880-yard relay (university class)-1:25.2, Iowa. 1935. 880-vard relay (college class) Two-mile relay (college class) : 748.4. Abilene Christian, 1940. 1:26.7, Riverside, Calif., J. C. Two-mile relay (university class) 7:45.7, Kansas State, 1935 Glenn Cunningham mile 4.10.7 Rideout of North Texas State Shot put—52 feet, $1\frac{1}{2}$ inches, Hackney of Kansas State, 1939. *i* High jump= 6 feet, 7 9/16 inches Crater of Colorado. 1938. Sprint medley relay (university class) 3:25.2, Indiana, 1941. Pole vault—14 feet, 2 inches, Bryar of Texas. 1939. Four-mile relay (university class) 17.37.8 Illinois, 1931. Distance medley relay (college 1323) 10-06.9, North Texas State 1323) 440-yard relay (university class) -405, Iowa, 1955. Broad jump—25 feet, 4 3/8 inches Gordon of Iowa, 1931. Distance medley relay (university class) 10:12.7, Emporia State Teachers College, 1936. Sprint medley relay (junior col lege) - 3.36. Fort Scott, 1939. Diseus-171 feet, 634 inches, Harris of Indiana. 1941. Mile relay (colleg) - 3:17.3, Pittsburg State Teachers College 1933 Sprint medley relay (college)- 3:36.7, Baker, 1940. Milt relay teachers College '18 Milt relay (university) - 3-161 Texas, 1935 Javelin- 229 feet, $2\frac{1}{4}$ inches, Terr. of Hardin-Simmons, 1937. Texas First In Roads FOR HEALTH" You'll really enjoy Fritzel ICE CREAM Luffin, Tex. — (U.P.)—Texas lead the nation in post-war road building with $75,000,000 in road contracts, according to John Red chairman of the Texas Highway Commission. SMOOTH, CREAMY, TRY SOME TODAY. 834 Vermont Chi Galloway DELICIOUS Phone 182 1 Am I Grinning? YOU BET I AM Just got my car back from an expert Wheel Balancing Job. It rides so smoothly Now. My tires will wear longer too. Had It Done At CHANNEL - SANDERS Motor Co. 622-24 Mass. Phone 616 APRIL 15, 1947 PAGE FIVE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS Phi Gams Lead In Intramurals Phi Gamma Delta retained its lead in the men's intramural sweepstakes at the end of track season leading Beta Theta Pi by only 2.63 points. Spring sports remaining to be played are softball, handball, tennis, golf, horseshoes, volleyball, and swimming. Although the Phi Gams and Betas are not threatened, the fight for third place is close. Phi Delta Theta replaced Sigma Chi in the standings. Total points of all teams at the end of season and track seasons in football is follows: Phi Gam-639.13. Phi Gam-639.13. Beta-636.5. Phi Delt-500.75. Sigma Chi-490.63. SAE-444.75. Sig Ep-435.75. Phi Psi-422.78. Delta Tau Delta-417.23. Kappa Sig-372. Phi Kappa-347.75. Sigma Nu-338.63. ATO-337.38. Delta Chi-322.63. TKE-299.63. DU-270.75. 941 Club-261.38. Battenfeld-250.9. Triangle-245. Spooner Thaver 244.38. Wiley-241.65. PI K A.-232.65. Smith Hall-217.78. Theta Tau-217.5. Blanks-201. YMCA-158.88. ISA-154.5. Independs-140.63. Kappa Alpha Psi-110.13. Alpha Phi Omega-103.13. Alpha Phi Alpha-95.08. Gamma Delta-93.75. 1126 Club-84.38. Alpha Kappa Psi-6. Sigma Chi handed Sigma Nu a 16 to 0 defeat Monday, when Williams, Sigma Chi pitching ace, turned in a three hit ball game, in the Intramural softball league. Sigma Chi Defeats Sigma Nu 16 to 0 In other games of the day, the Die Hards defeated the 1126 Club 15 to 5 and Alpha Tau Omega beat Battenfeld 10 to 2. In the volleyball loop, Y.M.C.A. had trouble defeating the Pharmacists and Sigma Phi Epsilon was hard pressed to get by Theta Tau, while Alpha Tau Omega, Phil Delta Theta, and Beta Theta Pi won their games easily. The scores, with the winner's score listed first, were: Alpha Tau Omega defeated Battenfield, 15-11, 15-5; Phi Delta Theta beat Kappa Sigma, 15-9, 15-6; Beta Theta Pi trounced Delta Upsilon, 15-2, 15-3; Y.M.C.A.dropped the pharmacists, 15-12, 13-15, 15-11; Sigma Phi Epsilon slipped by Theta Tau, 15-10, 13-15, 15-6, and the Coops forfeited to the 1126 Club. Mentally-III Children Cured Through Art State College, Pa. (UP) — Many mentally-ill children are being cured through creative art, according to Dr. Vikter Lowenfeld, professor of art education at Pennsylvania State College. The educator said "creative art provides the child with an emotional outlet that very often leads to the cause of the mental handicap." Once the cause is known, the treatment can be determined and in many cases complete recovery attained. Alpha Kappa Psi, professional commerce, fraternity, entertained faculty members and students in the School of Business with a dinner. Thursday in the Kansas room. Prof. D. Gagliardo, of the economics department, spoke at the gathering. "Unlike occupational therapy, which is merely a means of divergence for mental cases, creative therapy is a means to a cure," Dr. Lowenfield said. Alpha Kappa Psi Entertaine Quarter-mile Record Holder Here is John Jackson, star Jayhawker quarter-miler. He holds school records for both the indoor and outdoor 440-yard dash. He has run the distance in 51 seconds indoors and 49.4 seconds outside. He was victorious over a tough field at the Big Six indoor meet in Kansas City this spring. He doubles on the cinders as a member of Kansas relay teams. KANSAS French Scientists Study Atomic Energy Paris-(UP)-France has at least seven scientists who profess to know how to make an atomic bomb. But they have no intention of producing a bomb. In the words of the country's leading nuclear physicist, Frederic Joliot-Curie, "all our efforts are directed toward peaceful applications of the exploding atom." Related To Curies Mr. Joliot-Curie, who is the son-in-law of the famous Curies who discovered radium, is chairman of France's atomic energy commission. He is pushing a program designed to give France sufficient atomic energy to make dependence on coal no longer necessary. A government decree of 1945 established the atomic energy commission and appropriated four millions of three things: Three Point Program TWO. Prospect for and exploit the necessary raw materials for atomic fission found within the French union. Research is centered at the University of the Sorbonne, at the neighboring College of France and at Fort Chattillon, outside Paris. But nowhere in France is there a hugh walled city like Oak Ridge, Tenn., or a mile-on-mile barren testing ground like Los Alamos. THREE. Keep the French government informed of progress in the entire field of atomic energy development throughout the world. ONE. Discover how atomic energy could be harnessed to industry. COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals - Short Orders Sandwiches Open 5:30-12:30 In terms of the American concept of atomic production the French effort seems almost unreal. Baksi Is Favored Over Woodcock The American slugger was made a 5-to-4 choice in last minute fight odds, chiefly because of a 28 pound weight advantage and because of impressive workouts during the past week. In his final training session Saturday, Baksi knocked out four sparring partners. ___ London—(UP)—Joe Baksi, heavyweight from Kumpmont, Pa., was rated a bare favorite today against Bruce Woodcock, British Empire champion, in their 10-round "battle of the reluctant challengers" tonight before 10,500 fans at Harringay arena. Pittsburg—(UF)—Dr. John Von Neumann, a mathematical research expert, believes the adding machine of the future is being constructed at the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton, N. J. He said the new electronic computer will work about 100,000 times faster than a man's mind and ultimately will replace all existing types. Adding Machine Of Future Is At Princeton, N. J. First Lippy, Now Diz Ain't Talkin' St. Louis—(UP)“All right, go ahead and kick around Lippy Durocher, Red Mcphail and even the king man, Happy Chandler. "Me. I ain't talkin' " .. All that from Jerome Herman (Dizzy) Dean, who will match you lip for lip and give you a lower lip head start when he's in good voice. Diz said he was not trying to outslence the now silent Durocher. "I jest don't want to take no part in this mess. I can get in enough trouble without blattin' off my face. Course, I got my hates and dis-haters, but I'm learnin' it costs me money to cut loose with em," he said. He Picks The Winners But now, how about the coming baseball season—how about that? Well, that's an elk of another burrow and this is the open season for picks. In Dizzy's own words: "In the national league I pick the Cardinals jest like I done in the world series—and most other guys didn't. But pull up the mules, son. Could be Brooklyn, the Braves (most improved team in the league) or Charley Grimm's Cubs. I can't hot on the Cards as I was, but you can't sell them boys short. After the top four, give me the Giants, the Phils, the Pirates and the Cincinnati Reds. But I'd say the Braves is the guys to watch, and I predict the National league race will be a dizzle-razze. "Well, in the American league I'll have to play dogtail and do like the rest, I reckon—pick the Boston Red Sox. For second place I'd say the Detroit Tigers, with all their fine pitchin' plus hittin' by Dick Wakefield and Hoot Evers. St Louis Browns Improved "And now, hang onto your sum glasses. I think the St. Louis Browns win a game in team I in EITHER league and ouch to finish third. After that, come to Cleveland." "Them Yankees, which ain't had much lately ain't got no more than the" he last year and no doubtly will skud to fifth place. And I think Washington, in spite of the administration, will be sixth. The White Sox next and poor o' Connie Mack and his athletics pullin' up a limpin' hind end. "I shore wish I could spout off about this Durocher business. I got my feelings." But the last time I done somethin' like that I learned me a lesson. "The man came up to the door with a summons." WURLITZER PHONOGRAPHS FOR PARTY RENTALS Used Juke Box Records For Sale AUTO MOTOR LASER CUTTING John H. Emick 1014 Mass. Phone 343 WE ARE LUBRICATION SPECIALISTS Featuring the Premium Plus Oils Quaker State and Permalube. The Handy Service Station-Just off the Hill Hartman Standard Service 1300 Mass. SEE A SHOW TONITE JAYHAWKER Now, Ends Tonite NEW, ENDS TOMMY HUMPHREY BOGART LIZABETH SCOTT "DEAD RECKONING" Wednesday, 1 week Douglas FAIRBANKS Jr. Maureen O'HIARA Walter SLEZAK in SINBAD THE SAILOR with Anthony Quinn, George Tabias, Jane Bruner, Mike Anastasio GRANADA Now, Thru Wed. When These Doors Open you're facing DANGER! JAMES CAGNEY 13 RUE MADELEINE 20 ANNABELLA • FRANK LATIMORE Added: News and Cartoon CALENDAR GIRL JANE WILLIAM FRAZEE-MARSHALL Thurs., Fri., Sat. PATEE Ends Tonite Merle Melvyn DBERON DOUGLA In a Laugh Hit "THAT UNCERTAIN FEELING" FEELING" PLUS Goofy Gophers, Cartoon, Variety, Ranch In White, Latest World News. Short, Dog in Orchard. VARSITY Ends Tonight BEDSIDE MANNER "PHILO VANCE'S GAMBLE Wed., 4 Days ADOLPHE MENJOU GAIL RUSSELL CLAIRE TREVOR "BACHELOR'S DAUGHTERS* AND The Durango Kid "LAW OF THE CANYON" --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS APRIL 15, 1947 PAGE SIX Kansan Comments Insurance For Tragedy Victims What if you had been in Woodward, Okla., instead of Lawrence Wednesday night? You probably wouldn't be worrying much about physical comfort, if you were a tornado victim. Doctors, nurses, Red Cross workers, and peace officers went into the stricken area from hundreds of miles in all directions. A special train took in medical supplies and took out injured persons. Ambulances and automobiles carried casualties to hospitals in surrounding town. Property damage in Woodward alone is estimated at a million dollars. At least 3,000 were homeless. This does not consider hospital expenses which many will have to pay in addition to the volunteer services they receive. Their investments and savings; their food, clothing and shelter; their businesses and places of employment, were at least partly blown away. As far as their own efforts are concerned, many of them will have to start again from scratch. According to the statistics, tornadoes kill an average of 237 persons in the United States every year. In 1884, one storm killed 800 persons. Property damage from this cause has averaged $11,631,350 each year from 1916 to 1945. Floods and drought frequently bring suffering to thousands. --become attached to particular theories and philosophies and render tenacious allegiance long after logical basis for their continuance has disappeared. This seems to be true of the author of the aforementioned letter. In times of tragedy, the whole nation volunteers aid. We would not have it otherwise. But what of the unfortunates a year later? Why doesn't the federal government provide for aid in rehabilitation of such victims? It provides the Old Age and Survivors Insurance system known as Social Security, which includes eight types of benefit to which mishaps beyond man's control might entitle him. Since it has been proved by workmen's compensation experience that a man will not fall on a buzz saw just to get a little money without working, it seems no more likely that he would build his home low on a dangerous river bank to collect money for flood damages. Alamada Bollier. On the theory that society should never make a loss to an individual as profitable as production, insurance against catastrophe probably should not attempt to return a loser to his exact former status. But it might help save a lot of self-respect which would pay back its cost by contributing to a stronger community later. We wonder how much longer the American taxpayers are going to have to pay Senator Bilbo to sit at home in Mississippi. But on second thought, perhaps it is worth the price to keep him off the floor of the senate. Federal all-risk crop insurance is an example of this theory in practice. Although it lost the government a million dollars during the bad years when it was instituted, and was even voted out of existence by Congress for a time, it was soon reinstated, and gained back part of its indemnity in productive times. If costs of social insurance to cover "acts of God" were properly computed and a corresponding system of premiums adopted, why couldn't it work? Is not the function of organized society to protect its members from injustices they are helpless to prevent? Dear Editor---become attached to particular theories and philosophies and render tenacious allegiance long after logical basis for their continuance has disappeared. This seems to be true of the author of the aforementioned letter. The Dove Replies In reply to a recent letter written by Jean T. Fisher, I have only to advise that he strike up an acquaintance with members of the Dove staff and derive a little insight into the factors which motivate their opinions. Really, we are quite innocuously sincere. Our aims are altruistic, and I believe Mr. Fisher is laboring under a good many burdening mis-apprehensions about us. Frank Stannard, who opposes the entry of Oklahoma A. and M. to the conference, is accused of "unfounded narrow-minded and prejudice," yet I believe this characterization could better be applied to the author of the criticism, if he has no feeling for the rights of all men to equality, irrespective of race or color. The Dove staff is accused of trying to "change the rights and privileges" of Americans. What we really have in mind is the removal of what we consider to be injustices in our society. We are also dubbed as imitation Hitlerites, while our editors exclude pacifism and racial tolerance. We have always considered ourselves possessed of theories which are in direct antithesis to Hitleristic doctrines. We are to be an instigating factor in a revival of the Klan, says our critic, and we are "hiding behind a cloak of democracy to spread socialistic principles." We are hiding behind nothing or we would not be publishing such a straight-forward statement of our stand as the Dove. As for Mr. Fisher's attempt to strike a great contrast between democracy and socialism, perhaps he should study the full intimacy of true democracy and our idealistic brand of socialism. We do not have to "hide behind democracy," for we believe in it. Most of us are individualists who believe that maximum individual freedom may be attained by ordering society to secure greater economic and social equality. We do not mind criticism of our theories based on rational arguments against them; that is good, but name-calling is old stuff and very unconvincing. Beth H. Bell College Senior Defends The Dove The letter in the Kansan of April 8 which so bitterly attacked the liberal and independent publication, The Dove, is one of the most unwarranted and hypocritical examples of indignation it has been my misfortune to read. The Dove is one of the few publications in Lawrence campaigning against bigotry and intolerance bred of ignorance. Many people have a tendency t Head Hunters Played Baseball "I taught head hunters to play baseball and grow corn," Dr. E. H. Taylor, zoology professor, told the Sunflower K.U. Dames club recently. Dr. Taylor spent two years on the island of Mindanao in the Philippines as a government representative. His job was to help civilize the savage tribes. He had to break down native religion and superstitions such as not chopping trees because they were the homes of the native gods. Later Dr. Taylor was made head of the fisheries in the Philippines. This gave him an opportunity to collect many rare specimens for his large reptile collection. New Formula Would Prevent Tooth Decay Dr. Barnhardt Gottlieb of Dallas, instructor in dental pathology and dental research at Baylor, explained methods in impregnating teeth with a silver nitrate formula to prevent decay. "Dental cares are gone." Dr. Gottlieb explained. "There is nothing secret about my formula. It isn't patented and anyone can use it by impregnating a tooth with this common chemical. Tooth decay can be eliminated or halted." Galveston. (UP)—The nation's tooth wories may be alleviated, according to a Baylor University dental instructor, who told a group of Gulf Coast dentists about his new formula designed to end tooth decay. Is it a crime to use our free and independent press to voice opposition to intolerance, injustice, and restriction of civil liberties? And is it an honor to forever remain in a seemingly inescapable state of ignorance and prejudice? Robert Anderson Jr. College Sophomore The University Daily Kansan Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press, and Southern Newspaper Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service. 420 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10016. York City. Managing Editor Editor in Chief Asst. Man. Editor Asst. Man. Editor City Editor Ast. Editor Ast. Editor City Editor Telegraph Editor Art Editor Business Manager ... Circulation Manager Classified Adm. Man. Promotion Manager Promotion Manager Your Car Can Get Spring Fever, Too Get A 10 Star Spring Tune-up and Clean-up Marcella Stewart LeMcOrr Martha Jewett William T. Smith Jr. Shirley E. Bales Shirley E. Bales Alan J. Stewart Stewart Elaine West Eloise West at Bob Bonebrake Almire John Beach LaVerno Keevan Keevan Mel Adams Mel Adams Darl's Standard Service A 23rd and La. "What Are You Doing After The Trial, Baby?" MOLOTOW GERMAN HERGLOCK Britain's 'Cat Man' Discusses Planes Hawthorne, Calif.—(UP)The British hold world speed records and are pacing jet engine development, but they are trailing the United States in research on flying wing airplanes, England's "cat man" pilot said here. Former RAF pilot John Cunningham, who earned the "cat man" nickname because of his apparent ability to see at night, told pilots and engineers at Northrop Aircraft Co. that the British still are in the planning stage on a 90,000-pound flying wing. Cunningham examined the enormous flying wing B-35 bombers built here for overload gross weights of more than 105 tons. His visit was for a conference with engineers on such designs. He now is chief test pilot for DeHaviland Aircraft in England. It's All In The Family Albany, N. Y.-(UP)—Nineteenyear-old Betty Holt and her mother are students in the same evening shorthand class at Albany business college. They have the same ambition—to become an author's secretary. To Elect Officers For Religious Council Student Religious council will elect officers at its next meeting at 4 p.m. Thursday in the Mission room of Myers hall. Those elected will take office immediately, President Mary Holtzclaw said today. Recommendations for Religious Emphasis week next year will be made next week by the Religious Emphasis committee of the council ( ) 5 4 3-day Cleaning Service . 24-hour Shoe Repair 4-day Laundry Service - Leather and Garment Dyeing a Specialty. Village Cleaners SUNFLOWER, KANSAS Opposite School Western Union----8 a.m.-9 p.m. 4 4 Nice Things To Have 1. An umbrella when it's raining. 2. A doctor when you are sick. . . 3. A spare tire when you have a flat. . . 4. A GOOD PLACE TO EAT WHEN YOU'RE HUNGRY! . . . DINE WELL at Thompson's Cafe 709 MASS. APRIL 15, 1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Shoemaker Receives Associate Editorship Dr. W. H. Shoemaker, chairman of the romance languages department, is an associate editor of Spanish literature for the magazine, Symposium, published by Syracuse university. Symposium is a magazine devoted to comparative literature. It contains articles in French, Spanish, and German, and deals with every literature except English. The only articles in English are those pertaining to the literature of other countries. Symposium follows in the tradition of "Revue de Litterature Comparee," a magazine, published in Paris, which died during the war. Lemon Adds A 'Tana' Mercedes. Tex.-(UP)-If you don't like orange-grapefruit juice, just add a few drops of lemon, advises C. P. Melton, Texas-"lemon king." "One per cent lemon juice gives orange-grapefruit juice a personality," Melton said. "It brings out the tang." Phone KU-25 with your news. Tests For Graduates Offered May 5-6 Graduates and prospective graduates may take tests to measure their general education in eight fields and specialize in the major fields Mav 5 to 6. Students may register for the tests from 8 to 12 a.m. and 1 to 5 p.m. daily. A strong Hall with T. E. Christensen, examiner, before noon Thursday. Many graduate schools require that the results of this examination be submitted for admission. Elmer F. Beth, chairman of the School of Journalism, will attend a radio news clinic tomorrow in Kansas City, Mo. The clinic is a feature of a three-day meeting of the National Association of Broadcasters. Prof. Beth To Attend Radio News Clinic Radio executives from Iowa, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, and Kansas will attend. William B. Quarton, general manager of radic station WMT, Cedar Rapids, Iowa, chairman of the news clinic. DE SOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH Buckley GALLAGHER MOTORS Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL Daily Kansan Classified Advertising Copy must be in the University Daly Kansas Business Office, Journalism bldg., 3 p.m. of the day before publication is desired. All classicals 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 For Sale 22 FT. Shutz House trailer, 2 new tires. 15 FT. Priced to sell at 6. Shore Island, 2823R 17 FT. REMINGTON "Throneess" Electric shaving razor, good condition. Price, $11.50. Contact Tom Ecclefield, 1537 Rhode Island. 15 FOUR Peanut Machines and / or 2 cigarette machines. Phone 721, Patterson. FOR SALE Naval officer's uniforms, blues and whites, size 36-38. Also electric portable phonograph. good condition. 28-A Sunnside. II NAVAL Officer's uniforms. Blues and gray insignia. Blue cap. Sunny day. van, good condition. 28-A, Sunshine 15. DE SOTO APPROVAL SERVICE PLYMOUTH "36 FORD. Call 2696 or see at 1108 Ohio, or for "Pete." day except thursday 15-15 PUBLIC SALE. Having sold my property in Birmingham on 1 o'clock to 700 Alabama St. mencing at 1 o'clock Furniture, 8 rooms — 1 leather — 5-piece bedroom suite; 3-piece bed- room suite; 3-piece bed- droplet table; 2-legged, with center droplet leaf, folds up small; 1 gas range, table top, white porcelain; electric refrigerator; 5-foot Kelvinator; 1 electric range, Estate. guest room; 1 guest room, above new room; 2 Axminster rugs, 9x12 and 6x9; sewing machine, White; 2 gas heaters, one bathroom heater; 3 linoleum rug, good as new; 1 living room suite, 3-room suite; 2 kitchen stairs, stands; 2 breakfast sets; porch swing; 2 full-size Jenny Lind beds; 1 studio couch; some odd chairs; bedding; dishes; cooking utensils of all kinds. 1 4-wheel trailer, rubber tires, car hatch or horse hitch; 2 innerspring mattresses; blankets; pillows; 1 wall clock; antique; 15-pound ice box; ice facades; rocking chairs; a large toolbox of all kinds; a lot of potted flowers; a lirtight heater, good; fruit jars; wire stretcher; lawn mower; ironing board; ladders (2) 5 stand tables mirrors (3); pine table number 9x12.Exmatee Daisy chair and a lot of things too numerous to mention. In the event of rain, will hold sale at a later date. R.J.HENLEY, owner. George Criss, auctioneer. E.J.Coy, clerk. For Rent FURNISHED Double apartment about 300 feet from the water. Finished, unfurnished house, or apartment in Kansas City, Kansas, or suburbs as as overland Park. Min-16 1529 Ky. Found BILLFOLD in 206 Snow. Loser may have by paying for this ad and identifying. Contact George Thomas, 1300 Kentucky St. 17 LINOTYPE OPERATOR needed by University Daily Kansan. 2 hours daily, late afternoon or evening. See Mr. Ryther, Journalism building. Wanted RIDE Daily from K. C. to Lawrence. Daily from K. C. to Lawrence. 5:30. Call 2933-M after 5:45. 15 RIDE to Leavenworth or Leavenworth function. Monday, 6 p.m. Monday, Wed., and Fri. Call 89. FLY-By-Nights Independent softball team attended Diamond 5, 14 Tuesday, April 15 15 Business Services FREE OFFER -Copies of Discharges and valuable papers, 3 copies for the price of 2. Low prices, fast service. Round Corner Drug Co., 801 Mass. 25 BILL is now running his cab co. again and will be running 24 hours, 7 days a week. Call 69, if no answer, 2182-18. -TYPING. Prompt service, reasonable rate. 1028 Vermon, phone 1168-R. -17 TENNIS Rackets restrucing and repaired. Silk, nylon, or gut. Priced accordingly, these are $14.95 in-W. Ed. -W. hausen, 145 Kentucky. Lost BLACK brief case bearing name Harold Hawell. Ph 24979 or return to Kansas Office. REWARD to finder of ladies Bulova wrist watch. Lost either in Bailey or the Union or somewhere between. Return to chemistry office, Bailey. 17 PLASTIC-rimmed eye glasses in leather case. Finder please contact J. E. Buckner at 825 Indiana or turn in to Kansan office. Reward. 17 NAVY blue billiard, Friday, on Ohio nea- jayhawk Cafe. Contents important to me. Please return to Mary Briganan, 1420 Ohio. Phone 85%. Reward. 17 COIN PURSE. Only identification in purse is key ring with the initial V on it. Key ring has 3 keys. Please contact Val Parkington, Lindley hall, Geology Depth. SHEAFFER Pen, silver top, black back. Stubba, Delta Tau Delta. Stubba, Delta Tau Delta. Regular passenger service abroad will be inaugurated on the 16 fast C-Y type vessels recently sold by the U.S. Maritime Commission to Lyke Bros. Steamship Co. Each ship of the fleet is 406 feet long, built with shelter decks, 8,500 tons dead weight and a cruising speed of $15\frac{1}{2}$ knots. No Blue-sky claims... just down-to-earth satisfaction from Old Golds! Let other cigarettes offer you the sun, moon and movie stars. We're content with what Old Golds actually deliver just a fragrant deliciousness that leaves you happily anticipating your next smoke. Frankly, that's all we put into Old Golds. No monkeyshines . . . just nearly 200 years of fine tobacco experience . . . luxurious tobaccos . . . loving care . . . and quality safeguards all down the line. And what do you get? Pleasure. Mellow gentleness, grand flavor, goodness in every drag. Like the idea? Then go for Old Golds. You're pretty sure to be happy with 'em. Old Gold CIGARETTES Made by Ligustrum a florida tree in tennessee for more than 200 years. Old Gold Old Gold CIGARETTES Made by the International a financial mark on tobacco for twenty, 100 years. Old Gold For a TREAT instead of a TREATMENT ...try an Old Gold Made by Lovillard, a famous name in tobacco for nearly 200 years √ UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 15,1947 PAGE EIGHT Press President Talks Tomorrow On Journalism George W. Marble, publisher of the Ft. Scott Tribune-Monitor, will give three talks on journalism here tomorrow. He will be an all-day guest of the department of journalism, and at 6:30 p.m. will speak at a Press club dinner in his honor in the English room of the Memorial Union building. Journalists who have spoken to previous Press club banquets include Frank Hall, Hill City Times and then Kansas Press association president; H. A. Meyer, publisher of the Independence Reporter and now a representative in congress; Rechnie publieh a magazine; the Kowa Country Shell; and C. W. Wheeler, business manager of the Abitane Reflector-Chronicle. Journalism students, faculty members, and their wives are invited to attend the Press club dinner, said Elmer F. Beth, acting chairman of the journalism department. The news and editorial problems of a small-city daily will be Mr. Marble's topic at 10 a.m. He will explain the activities of the Kansas Press association, of which he is president, at 3 p.m. Both talks will be given in room 102, Journalism building. Mr. Marble is a graduate of Dartmouth college, and has the master of arts degree from the Tuck School of Business Administration, Hanover. N.H. Kansan Board Names New Members, Staff Eleven students were named to fit vacancies on the Kansan board and the Kansan business staff at a meeting of the Kansan board Monday. New members on the board are Allan Cromley and John Beach, College seniors; Alan Stewart, Bilobie Whiting, and Joan Schindling, College juniors. Business staff members appointed were John D. McCormick, College junior; business manager; Calvin Arnold, College senior; advertising manager; Thomas Cadden, College senior; circulation manager; Joan Schindling, College junior; classified manager; Frank Schultheis, College senior; national advertising manager; William Brooks, College junior; promotion manager. New members will hold office for the second half of the spring semester. Law Students Hear Talks On Abstracts A series of lectures by V. P. Wilson, of Iwrence, on some phases of abstracting are being presented to students of the School of Law every Tuesday and Thursday at 4 p.m. in Green hall. Mr. Wilson, a graduate of the University of Oklahoma, gathered the material for his lectures when he inspected systems of mid-western states concerning processing of land tilers. Mr. Wilson came to Lawrence in February of 1946. He formerly was manager of the Tula division of the National Association of Credit Men. The purpose of the lectures, which will be completed by April 24, is to give students a knowledge of how to examine and to formulate abstracts. Dr. Merrell D. Clubb, professor of English, will read selections from Miller's "Paradise Lost" in room 140 Fraser hall at 7:30 p.m. tonight. Clubb To Road Selections *In 'Paradise Lost' Tonight* This is the third in a series of informal readings of English poetry presented by the English department. 'The Face Is Familiar...' BENNETT This law school student has played tennis, among other sports, has served on the All Student council, and hails from Arkansas City where they knew him as "Rone". It could be said that he was once an all-American, that he has blond, curly hair, but that would be telling. P.S.G.L. Vote Canvass To Begin Tonight Members of the P.S.G.L. party today begin canvassing Lawrence in preparation for the spring election They will concentrate on areas housing Independent men. The city has been divided into 158 districts with 24 to 34 Independent men students in each district. Convassers are to work in teams of experienced and inexperienced men. They will work every night except Friday and Saturday until the general election April 24. Teams are to be chosen and districts assigned at a meeting at 7 p.m. today, in Battenfeld hall. Journalism Graduate Visits Prof. L. N. 'Daddy' Flint William C. Sproull, journalism in 1918, visited Prof. L. N. Flint of the journalism department Monday. Mr. Sproull is now advertising director of the Burroughs Adding Machine company Detroit. He was a member of the Kansan board and the track team at the University. He has two children enrolled here, Carolle E., special student in business, and William C., Jr., engineering freshman. Students Will Soon Get Official University Ring The official University ring will soon be on sale. On the other side is the seal of the University, showing Moses at the burning bush. Above the seal are two sunflowers and below it a chevron on which the drgree is superimposed. Cast in 14-carat gold, it will have "University of Kansas" in raised letters framing an oval ruby stone. On one side is the fighting Jayhawker in relief, with two sunflowers above and chevron with graduation year below. Moscow—(UP)—Secretary of State George Marshall will reject the Russian substitute text for a German disarmament treaty, even as a basis of discussion, authoritative sources reported today. Members of the ring committee are Earl Robbins, Alberta Moe, Martha Metcalf, Virginia Williams, Glen Sewell, chairman. They co-operated with the design department to plan News of the World Marshall Rejects Plan Applications may now be made for the Stephen Vincent Benet Memorial Poetry and the Theodore Dreiser Memorial Prose Awards for Young Writers. No recipient nation under the 50 billion dollar aid program was expected to pay off in full because the goods were used in the "common cause" against the Axis, the officials said. Negotiations on the settlement will begin probably within a few weeks. Students May Apply For Writing Awards Logan Act May Cover Wallace Speech In Britain Washington—(UP)—Russia's final lend-lease settlement with the U.S. will provide cash payment for only a small part of her 11,100 million dollar bill, state department officials said today. 2. Only original work submitted in English will be accepted. 1. Applicants must be under the age of thirty.. The entry rules are Among the six judges of the Stephen Vincent Benet Memorial Poetry award will be Mrs. Stephen Vincent Benet; Norman Rosten, author of "Big Road" and winner of Yale and Hopwood awards; and William Rose Benet, poetry editor of the Saturday Review of Literature. Among judges for the Theodore Dreiser Memorial Prose Award will be Edwin Seaver, editor of "Cross-Section" and Arthur Miller, author of "Focus" and "All My Sons." Washington — (UP) — The White House said today that Henry Wallace was speaking "as a private citizen" in his British speeches attacking U. S. foreign policy. Prizes of $25 cash will be awarded for the best poems and prose. The winning poems and prose are guaranteed publication and will be read by leading publishers. A special awards edition of the New Writing Quarterly by William Bliss will be given for winning verse and prose. The edition will be sent to the World Youth festival which will be held in Prague this summer. a ring that would fit the traditions of the University. They rejected several drawings from each before they reached the desired design. Miss Lowrance Returns Miss Winnie Lowrance, assistant professor of Latin, returned Monday morning from Denver, where she was called Friday by the death of her father, David M. Lowrance. 3. No work which has been published commercially will be accepted. The rings can be ordered now at the business office and will be on sale there until commencement. Prices are $27.50 for men and $21.50 for women, plus federal and state tax. This was the first comment from the White House since Mr. Wallace began blasting Mr. Truman's proposed Greek-Turkish aid program. There have been suggestions of prosecution under the Logan Act, which says private citizens cannot advise or assist a foreign government in opposing U.S. foreign policy. Neaotiations To Begin Queen Elizabeth Aground Off Southampton Harbor Southampton — (UP) — Chugging harbor boats hauled to shore today some of the 2,246 passengers of the Queen Elizabeth, largest ship in the world, whose Atlantic crossing from New York ended abruptly on a mud bank outside Southampton harbor. The mighty Queen ran aground last night only two miles from shore and 12 miles from her home dock. St. Louis—(UP)—For the second day St. Louis was without daily newspapers today as members of the A.F.L pressman's union continued their walkout over wage difficulties with publishers. The union rejected an approximate four dollar a week wage increase offered by the publishers of the St. Louis Globe-Democrat; Post-Dispatch, and Star-Times. No News In St. Louis Bratislava, Czechoslovakia (UP)—Father Josef Tosef, former president of the nazi-inspired "Republic of Slovakia," was sentenced today to be hanged by the Slovak national court. Toroka-(UP)-Four southeastern Kansas coal mines closed because of "hazardous conditions" have taken necessary precautions to meet safety requirements and will be re-opened, State Labor Commission P. G. Baird said today. State Mines To Close Tiso To Be Hanged Officers To Confer With Veterans Today Two training officers, Robert L. Pease and William L. Lockridge, from Kansas City Veterans administration regional office, will advise veterans on training and subsistence allowance problems, today in the University Veterans bureau, Prof. E. R. Elbel, bureau director, said today. The officers will be available from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Veterans desiring conferences may sign the appointment schedule in the Veterans bureau. Clarify Points Following are points that have been clarified by recent bulletins from the Veterans bureau, Professor Elbel said: One. Student veterans working full-time may be eligible for subsistence allowances. Two. Veterans drawing retirement pay are eligible for full subsistence allowances. Three. Any veteran discharged under conditions other than dishonorable, is eligible for benefits under the G.I. Bill. Veterans taking two hours of college work and earning less than $175, if single, or $200, if married, are entitled to part-time subsistence, he said. Retirement pay is not considered "earned" so it does not affect subsistence. 'Double Door' Opens April 21 In Fraser A melodramatic thriller will close the regular season of plays by the department of speech and drama. Prof Allen Crafton said today. The play, "Double Door," will open April 21 for a three-night run in Fraser theater. Tickets will go on sale Thursday at the ticket office in the basement of Green hall. All seats will be reserved, Professor Crafton said. Elizabeth McFadden's melodrama will be the last in a series of plays that has brought a season of variety to University theater-goers. Previous productions included a satire, a modern tragedy, and a Shakespearean comedy. "Many mystery melodramas come and go without much public interest but 'Double Door' is an exception," Professor Crafton declared. Conflict, insanity, and murder lend thrills to a plot that centers about an aristocratic family whose pride develops to a point of mania. Donald Dixon, assistant professor of speech, will direct the production. He has also designed and constructed the play's scenery. Davis To Speak To AVC R. M. Davis, professor of law, will discuss the United States foreign policy at an American Veterans committee meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Frank Strong auditorium. Bureau To Be Closed Friday The bureau of vocational guidance will be closed all day Friday because of the Education conference being held have Friday and Saturday. Prof. A. H. Turney, bureau director, has announced. Today's face is Howard Engleman. Reply To Phone Proposal May End Walkout Developments in the nation-wide telephone strike tdoay indicated that the nine-day old stalemate may be drawing to a close. Spokesmen for both sides agreed to reply by 6 p.m. today to a government proposal that the walkout be ended at 5 p.m. Thursday. The government today asked in effect that the public bring persever on both parties to end the strike Thursday. Meanwhile in the Lawrence area maintenance at the phone company is reported to be operating smoothly. Richard Ayers, manager, said Monday that no Lawrence phones are out of order. Ayers complimented Lawrence citizens on their cooperation during the strike, and asked that the lines be kept free from non-emergency calls so that real emergencies would not be held up. Journal-World Has Agreement The Lawrence Journal-World has a special agreement with the telephone company enabling it to use the lines for "special contacts" other than emergencies, J. W. Murray, managing editor, told a Daily Kansan reporter this morning. "The agreement is to simplify calls when we need to make important news contacts," Mr. Murray explained. "We have a dozen or so calls a day about accidents, police, or fires which might not be completed because of the emergency ruling." Secretary of Labor Lewis B. Schwellenbach proposed today that the 325,000 strikers return to work at 5 p.m. Thursday and submit six of their 10 national demands to arbitration. The other four demands also would be arbitrated if two days of "intense" negotiations fail. Asks Return On Thursday Terming the proposal "an extremely fair" peace formula, labor leader Schwellenbach handed the government paper to top union and company officials Monday night with the warning that the walkout must end before public health and welfare are endangered. More than 300 students from 69 colleges and universities attended the 11th biennial conference of the Intercollegiate Association of Women Students April 10 to 12. The conference was held at the University of Minnesota. 300 Women Attend Student Conference Three officers from the Women's Executive council accompanied Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, to the conference. They were: Shirley Wellborn, College junior; president; Joan Anderson, education junior, vice-president; Anne Scott, College junior, publicity chairman. The conference was divided into discussion groups for large and small executive and service groups. Topics of discussion concerned the purpose and work of women's campus organizations. The next national conference will be held at the University of New Mexico in 1949. The western regional conference, in which representatives from the University will take part, will meet next year at Seattle, Washington. Son Born To Walter Lucas' Mr. and Mrs. Wailer H. Lucas, Jr are parents of a son, George Latime; Lucas, II, born Friday at Lawrence Memorial hospital. Mr. Lucas is a sophomore in engineering and his wife is president of the Sunflower Engineerettes. University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Wednesday, April 16, 1947 44th Year No.120 Lawrence. Kansas French Freighter Blast Wrecks At Texas City Bulletin Washington—(UP)—American Red Cross headquarters said today it has received reports that "200 to 300 and possibly 700" persons have been killed and many injured in the Texas City, Texas, explosion. There were no immediate official statements or estimates from anyone in the blast area on the number of casualties. The population of Texas City is more than 18,000 persons A Houston police report said that Texas City authorities had ordered the immediate evacuation of the entire explosion-damaged town "because of spreading gas fires believed to be poisonous." A Texas City telephone operator flashed Houston to "send the Red Cross; thousands are injured." Texas City, Tex.—(UP)—A French lines freighter exploded in Galveston bay today and first reports from the area said that the concussion set off a series of blasts in the Monsanto Chemical company plant which were felt in a 130-mile area along the Texas Gulf coast. By Bibler The explosion was felt as far up the gulf coast as Beaumont and Port Arthur, 70 airline miles away. Freeport, 45 miles from the coast, was taken. Residents in the Houston area, 38 miles to the north, thought earthquake had hit. The U.S. coast guard said fire broke out on the 3,000 ton French lines ship Grand Camp. The boat was loaded with Ammonium Nitrate fertilizer, the coast guard said, and it exploded 15 minutes after the fire broke out. Huge fires were raging in oil storage areas along the busy waterfront. The 19 million dollar Monsanto Chemical company plant, ripped by blasts which followed the explosion, covered the city, where the explosions piled debris and injured perhaps hundreds. Five students were fined a total of $151 Tuesday night by the student court. Fire equipment from the entire gulf coast area was on the scene. Telephone lines were down and power was off, a Houston newsman said. Fires in the refinery area covered a mile and a half front. Black smoke over the disaster scene was visible for 10 miles. Lawrence W. Brown, Jr., College sophomore, was fined $51 for breaking library rules. Ivan Moody and Edwin T. Mahood, business seniors, and Ralph Dunn and George Cozad, College freshmen, were fined $25 each for illegally transferring parking licenses. Brown pleaded guilty to civil action brought against him on charges that he had injured the student body by checking out reserve books under a false name and keeping them for a two week period. Five Fined $151 By Student Court Defense counsel presented a statement signed by members of Brown's American people class, which affirmed that none of them had been damaged in any way by Brown's keeping reserve books for that man. He also supported on the grounds that the action was morally bad, and that Brown already had pleaded guilty to charges stating "damage to students." In the cases of the four students found guilty of illegal transfer of parking licenses, a stay of execution of $15 was allowed to each man. Little Man On Campus U.S. PARKAUTHOR CO. Women Nominate 11 For Spring Election The Independent Women's political party nominated 11 candidates for the general spring election April 23. Ballots were counted yesterday. Five candidates were nominated for All Student Council representatives from District I and III, and six nominated for class officers. Prof. Russell Wiley, director of the University band and orchestra, and Bill Sears, fine arts senior, left this morning for Enid, Okla., to attend the Tri-State Music festival. A. S. C., candidates from District I are Shirley Wellborn, Locksey, Marylee Masterson, Miller, and Dorothy Scroggy, Miller. Candidates from Districts I and III, and six linger, Locksley and Ellen Spurney, Corbin. Nominated for senior class officers are, Marian Minor, Templin; treasurer, Helen Havey, Jollife, secretary. For junior class officers, Margaret van der Smissen, Locksley, treasurer; Marian Graham, Sleepy Hollow, secretary. For sophomore class officers, Betty Cooper, Corbin, treasurer; Janet Rummer, Watkins, secretary. The festival was started 16 years ago, with Professor Wiley as one of the organizers. It first included musicians from Kansas, Oklahoma, and Arkansas but now includes several other states. Professor Wiley organized a band at Phillips university in 1929 and the first musical festival was built around it. Professor Wiley, besides being one of the honored guests, will conduct some bands and judge music competition at the festival. Sears will present a baton twirling exhibition. Both men will return to Lawrence Sunday. The I. J. A. Mixer planned for tonight has been postgened. The mixer is now scheduled for April 30. ISA Postpones Mixer Wiley, Sears Attend Tri-State Festival Women's Council Makes Plans For Spring Picnic The United Women's council is planning an all University women's picnic this spring. ne council is also working on a program of counseling for new students next fall. Muralyn Spake, College junior and former Randolph-Macin student, presented counseling ideas from that school for the council's consideration. New K.U. Group Decides Only To Get Out Vote Will Maintain Non-Partisan Attitude; Won't Publicize Or Endorse Candidates By ALLAN W. CROMLEV After wrangling for two hours Tuesday in the Little theater of Green hall, the new League of Student Voters decided to confine its activities to getting out the student vote on election day. April 23. Lindley hall will soon look like a pile of rock set in an arboretum. "Arboretum" is derived from Latin and means where a lot of trees and shrubs grow. 'Arboretum' Is 47's Gift To Lindley's Spring Plans The meeting had been originally scheduled for 7 tonight, however, the official bulletin Tuesday announced the meeting for that night, so it was held. Party Endorses Political Action President Paul Barker of the Progressive party said Tuesday night that his party endorses the theory behind the new political organization "because its aims and purposes are identical to ours." "We, as they, are chiefly interested in getting rid of all this Greek-Independent friction and in developing more responsible and efficient student government," he said. There will be another meeting at 7 tonight in 9 Frank Strong hall. It's motto is "Vote for the student—not for the party." Bill Adams, College freshman, succeeded Charles Roter, engineering freshman, as head of the publicity committee. Roter resigned saying that he did not have the time required to do the job thoroughly. The entire planting on the north will be interspersed with 15.000 flowering bulbs. "The business expediency, plat form, and nominations committees have been dissolved since their usefulness to the party is of no further value." Barker said. A committee to investigate veterans fees will be appointed later. Plans are being drawn by Arthur Burger, landscape architect in Fort Worth, Tex., to use the $3,000 given by the class of '47 to give the grounds around Lindley the "nicest planting the campus has ever had," James Reiter, head gardener, said. "Somedav we hope to have the whole south bank covered with iris, too," said Mr. Reiter. "Of course, we can't hope to get all the planting done this spring, especially with the weather so tricky. In fact it will be three or four years before the planting will Tentative plans call for a border of pear trees along the curving sidewalk leading past Lindley. Inside this will be low Mugha pines. A 10-foot band of iris, peonies, and chrysanthemums will border these to the south. Extending along the north side, the shrubbery will change to a new variety of forsythia called "spring glory", forming a background for some Japanese yews, low spreading evergreen shrubs. 15. 000 Bulbs Close to the northeast corner of the building will be euonymus shrubs. They are low evergreens with leaves which turn a brilliant red in the fall. By the flagpole, will be tree wisteria, which has large clumped lavender blooms. Wisteria by Flagpole show up as the beautiful thing it is; he said. To Plant Flower Beds Plantings in the four flower beds on the campus have been definitely decided on, and they'll be blooming as soon as it is possible to set them out. The balcony of Hoch auditorium will look out over a bed of white vicaora, a large plant with slender stalks of delicate white blooms. The bed will be interplanted with chrysanthemums for fall blooming. Hardy pink petunias will blossom in the circular bed at the end of the west drive. Triangle' Planted The "triangle" in front of the law building has narcissus in it now and later it will have chrysanthemums. The bed in front of the hospital will have dark red geraniums as usual Forsythia on the campus was badly nipped by the hard freeze early in the spring. Most of it on the campus,pus setting it blooming only at the bottom. Nothing else was affected by the freeze, said Mr. Reiter. The 1000 crab apple trees, gift of the class of '46, are budding and will soon be 'beauty spots' on the campus. The group which in the words of its organizers, "had been formed in about 18 hours," had a hard time deciding whether to publicize qualifications of candidates, actually endorse them, or be entirely non-partisan. The body reached its decision only after prolonged debate marked by the sincerity of the majority and distrust by a few. The league meets again at 4 p.m today in the same place. Asks Reason For Party After the election of Bruce Bathurst as chairman of the meeting, Jean Moore asked why the group had been formed. He seemed to think that disappointed office holders from several political parties had started the league. Bathurst asked the group if it wanted to put up candidates of its own in the coming election. He was assured by the majority of the group that there was no skullduggery involved. Lois Thompson, College senior, said. "If we put up candidates we would be a pressure group. We should be completely objective. We should not endorse anyone, but rather publicize the qualifications of such candidate." Proposes Representation Plan This plan was disapproved. As John entered into too formal an organization." Otis Hill proposed a plan of representation in the league, in which each organized house would have two representatives and unorganized students would be represented by apportionment geographically. Paul Barker, president of Progressive party, objected to what he said were slams against his party. He was also afraid that someone was using the group to push PSGL legislation, which had, in fact, been defeated April 7. Hill arose and said, "If you can find any ulterior motives in this organization I'll leave school." *Hammered By Distrust* Wallace Foster said, "This group is having the same difficulty that the Progressive party had. We were hampered by a feeling of distrust. But I think that there are no ulterior motives on the part of any of the leaders here." Barker subsided, and Hill is still in school. Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, advised the league to be a "continuing group, a gadfly, without party representation. "Forget about your political parties," he said. "They don't amount to a hill of beans." Watson, Richard Nostet. Moore said he thought the group must swing voters to be effective. Someone thought the league should be merely a watchdog. Barker complained about ulterior motives. Someone thought they were only forming another inner circle. 'Must Swing Voters' This had gone on from 4 p.m. almost 6 p.m. before the group cided to confine its activities to getting out the vote. WEATHER Kansas—Generally fair, warmer west. Diminishing wind and colder east today. Clear and continued cold tonight. Little local light frost. Thursday fair and considerably warmer. Low tonight near 25 north-west to 30-35 southeast. - PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 16, 1947 Official Bulletin April 16,1947 Faculty and staff: 45-min. color-sound film, "The God of Creation". Fraser projection room, 5 p.m. today. Film deals with astronomy, natural science, microscopic world. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship is sponsor. *** Archery club practice from 4 to 6 p.m. today in Robinson gym. P. S. G, L. meeting at 7 tonight in Battenfeld hall for canvassing All Independent men-urged to attend. ☆ 很不平 Officers and committee chairmen of Alpha Phi Omega will meet at 7 tonight, Union lounge. "The Eagle" staff will meet at 5 p.m. today in 110 Frank Strong. Provisional "clean government" group meets again, 4 p.m. today, 104 Green. Steering committee will report. --- Progressive party meeting tonight at 7 in 9, Frank Strong. All committees to be present. Applications for the position of manager of the student directory may be submitted at the Student Organizations window of the Business Office no later than 5 p.m. today. General Semantics club at 8 tonight in III, Frank Strong. Meeting is important. - * * \* \* \* American Institute of Electrical Engineers at 7:30 tonight in Lindley hall auditorium. Program will consist of student papers. Law Wives at 8 tonight in the Lounge, Green hall, Spring parties will be discussed. 私.承.承 Le cercle français se reunira met- credi le 16 avril a quatre heures dans la salle de projection, 15 Fraser hall. Trois films sur la France seront projetées. AVC meeting at 7:30 tonight in Frank Strong auditorium. Prof. R.M. Davis of the Law School will speak on U.S. foreign policy. Important business meeting to follow. Camp Counsellors conference committee meeting at 5 p.m. today in the YMCA office. 亦 宋 串 Sunflower Engineering Wives at 8 p.m. Thursday, K. U. Students' clubroom at Sunflower. Mrs. Margaret Sisson and Mrs. Louella Woods, hostesses. --- "Basic Christianity"-continuation of course started by Rev. Bryan Green, at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Mission room, Myers hall. Rev. H. G. Barr will lead discussion. Student Religious council meeting Mission room, Myers hall, 4 p.m Thursday. ** Sign up for YMCA softball team at "Y" office. El Ateneo se reunira el proximo Jueves, 17 de Abril, a las 7:15 p.m. en 113 F. S. David Sommerville hablará de su reciente lae a México. Se suplica a los concurrentes memorizar un refran para decirlo en la reunion. Graduate record examination: 1-5 p.m.; May 5, 8:30-12:30, May 6. Applications due at Guidance Bureau, 2A Frank Strong, April 17. - * * Mathematics colloquium. 5 p.m. Thursday, 222 Frank Strong. Howard H. Barnett, speaker, "Linear Transformations." - * * Christian Science organization regular meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Danforth chapel. IS.A. council meeting, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 228, Frank Strong. University Daily Kansan Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1 a semester post- age only) for the first afternoon during the school year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Enterse- second class matter Sept. 17, aud. at the Postal Office, Lawrence K., under act of March 3, 1879. Occupational Therapy club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 312 Frank Strong. Belle Stewart, Wadsworth Veterans Hospital, will speak. Forensic League, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Pine room, Union building. *** Business School Association announces election of officers for the 1947-48 school year to be held on the Business School Day, May 9. Petitions for nominations may be secured from the Business School office and must be filed with that office by April 28. All students who expect to attend the summer session or return for the fall semester should sign up in the registrar's office according to the following schedule: Today, L-Q; Thursday, M; Friday, P-R; Monday, S; Tuesday, T-Z; Wednesday, April 23, all those who could not come in on their scheduled days. International club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, English room, Union building. ★ ★ ★ YMCA needs men for concessions at K.U. Relays, Report to "Y" office. Sigma Tau will meet at 4:30 p.m. Thursday, 210, Marvin hall. 'Dumb Phase Over For College Women' Memphis. Tenn.—(UP)—The 1947 college girl should be a hep chick as well as a slick chick. That is the view of Helen Manley, president of the American Association for Health, Physical Education and Recreation. According to Miss Manley, the beautiful but dumb phase is over. From now on, the college sweet-heart should; One, Speak and write English well. Two, Know how to organize ma- terials. Three. Have a speaking knowledge of a foreign language. Four. Understand the scientific method. (Whatever that is.) Five. Know the history of the past and its relation to the future. Six. Have a knowledge of our social economy, Seven. Know how to maintain healthful living. After that, Miss College Jane of 1947 can make herself beautiful for her light of love. Of course, Miss Hanley admits, if the girls use many of the above tiquettes on current male under- graduate students do their research in aloof solitude. World War II veterans who do not have the maximum of $10,000 of G. I. insurance and who save active service between Oct. 8, 1940, and Sept 2, 1945, are eligible for National Service life insurance. Jobs Or Husbands? College Brings Both But it's all for progress. 25c For LAUNDRY!! HOW?? Launderette! Boston.—(UP)—Of 467 girls interviewed for admission to one Boston vocational school, all but eight said they would like to marry as soon as possible after graduation. BRING IN YOUR LAUNDRY. Why a vocational school, they were asked, if their primary goal was marriage? ECONOMICAL and EFFICIENT Topeka—(UP)—Topeka has its first case of leprosy in more than a quarter of a century. BRING IN YOUR LAUNDRY. Put It In a Bendix Washing Machine. DO YOUR SHOPPING. COME BACK FOR YOUR LAUNDRY IN 30 MIN. Leprosy Case Diagnosed By Topeka Health Officer Dr. D. D. Carr, city-county health officer, said that a diagnosis of leprosy has been confirmed unofficially through smears sent to the U.S. public health service. Most answers were that the girls wanted to spend the time before marriage in "some well-paid job in a glamorous field." LAUNDERETTE 813 Vt. Phone 3368 COST 25c For 10 lbs. He said a specialist from the Army leprosarium in Louisiana would arrive this week to confirm the diagnosis officially. Dr. Carr said the disease is not considered contagious in temperate climates. 3-day Cleaning Service 4-day Laundry Service - 24-hour Shoe Repair - Leather and Garment Dyeing a Specialty. Village Cleaners SUNFLOWER, KANSAS Opposite School Western Union----8 a.m.-9 p.m. Delicious JUICY STEAKS Our Specialty Across from BILL'S GRILL 1109 Mass. Court House Phone 2054 "New Spring Suit for Milady?" A No, you missed on that question, but any one would have guessed the same. You see she just had it cleaned and pressed at the NEW YORK CLEANERS. And this smart young lady knows, as well as her husband, that the work they do conditions all of her clothes to look like they had just been tailored. Phone 75 New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPEARANCE Advertisers Prefer The Kansan To Reach Hill Students Department Of Speech And Drama Presents The University Players In DOUBLE DOOR A Melodrama by Elizabeth McFadden FRASER THEATER Mon., Tues., and Wed. APRIL 21, 22, 23 Curtain 8:15 Ticket Office Opens Tomorrow Exchange Activity Tickets for Reserved Seats Ticket Office Basement Green Hall. Phone K.U. 64 Ring 2, 9-12, 1-4 APRIL 16,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Dreaming of a boy with an open mouth and tongue. He is surrounded by trees and a river. The sky is blue and cloudy. SOCIALLY SPEAKING Gamma Phi Gives Formal The annual "Spring Formal" of Gamma Phi Beta was held Saturday night, April 12, in the Kansas room of the Union. Larry Bowman, Herbert Foster, Robert Weeks, Douglas Wall, Dexter Welton, William Sproull, Robert Gene Ashley, Anthony Mura, DonNear, John Higdon, Richard Ashley, ald Miller, William Sharp, William Stacey, Jerry Ward, Stephen Ellsworth, Robert Stroud, James Brieley, Dean Miller, Norma Whitacre, Robert Shirley, Joellen Shirley, Robert Murphy, Letty Gibbs, Stanley Over. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Patee, Mr. and Mrs. Duane Spalsbury, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Castor, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fairchild, Mr. and Mrs. Terry Relhain, Mr. and Mrs. Dean Ostrum, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Melker, Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Perkins, and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bellamy. Chaperones were: Mrs. Ralph Baldwin, Miss Margaret Habein, and housemothers, Mrs. Arthur Little, Mrs B. A. Webber, Mrs. Edith Martin, and Mrs C. R. Calvert. The guests were: John Duffy, Edgar Williams, Richard Bradley, Richard Dodson, Pat Maloney, Lynn Seigh, William Cowling, Robert Jumpk, Donald Meescham, James Walker, Harold Moore, James Hastings, Clifford Wade, Duward Dasow, William Clubb, Mel Kauffman, Robert Learned, Stanley Nelson, Gene Jennings, Doc Buell, Charles Bevan, Eugene Conklin, James Coffman, Charles Peterson, John Higgins, Everrett Land, Norman Huelsing, Donald Brown, Richard Piper, Francis Pierport, Robert Glover. Watkins Gives Hour Dance Watkins hall will hold an open hour dance from 7 to 8 p.m. today. Foster Gives Hour Dance Foster hall announces an hour dance from 7 to 8 p.m. today. Ott Pledges Sigma Kappa Sigma Kappa announces the pledging of Geraldine Ott, college freshman, Madison, Kan. Gamma Phi Pledges Gamma Phi Beta announces the pledging of Elizabeth LeSuer of Lawrence. Gamma Phi Guests Sunday dinner guests of Gamma Phi Beta were Mr. and Mrs. Homer F. Neville, Nancy Neville, Mr. and Mrs. Earl W. Glover, and Richard Ashley. Tri Delt Holds Meeting Tri Derby Hills Delta Delta Delta will hold a Missouri-Kansas state day meeting Saturday at the Hotel Continental in Kansas City, Mo. The one-day convention will mark a resuming to the state day gatherings discontinued during the war. Participating from Kansas will be active Tri Delta members from Baker university, Kansas State college, and the University here. Participants from Missouri will be Tri Deltas from Drury college, Washington university, and the University of Missouri. Alumnae groups represented will be from St. Louis, Springfield, and Kansas City, Mo., and from Baldwin, Lawrence, Manhattan, Topeka, and Wichita, Kan. Mrs. Frances Priddy McDonald, national president of the sorority will be the keynote speaker at the state day luncheon. Mrs. Frank C. Carlson, wife of the governor of Kansas, will be guest of honor at the luncheon. Phi Theta Alpha Installs Phi Theta Alpha, social sorority held formal installation of officers Sunday evening, April 13, in the English room of the Union building. New officers installed were: Marie Creegan, Kansas City Mo., president; Connie Herrera, Wichita, president; Margaret Womnichil, Lucas, president; Rozanne Frores, Fresno, Calif. recording secretary; Bette Krenzer, Kansas City Mo., corresponding secretary; and Ladeen Steinkirchner, Newton, historian. Long Activity List To Follow 'Lolly' O'Leary's Senior Picture COED'S CORNER There will be a long list of activities after Kathryn "Lolly" O'Leary's senior picture in the Jayhawker this June. Lolly has been pretty busy since she arrived on the K. U. campus four years ago. She's been a member of Tau Sigma, Quack club, A Cappella choir, has been vice-president and pledge trainer of Kappa Alpha Theta, and is now on the United Women's council. Lolly is especially known as an all-round athlete, and has been an asset to the Theta's in intramural competition. She's a menace at swimming and tennis, likes sailing, and is learning to ski. Interesting Nickname Folks say that her nickname is one of the most interesting things about her. To those who wonder about it, she smiles and explains, "When I was a baby, my crying used to sound as though I were saying 'La, la.' And that is what my brother called me. I still have the name, but it's been changed by the years to Lolly." A Spanish major, Lolly hopes to come back to the Hill to work in the Spanish department next year. If she doesn't do that, she'll try to get a job "somewhere south of the border, maybe with an airline company." Gets Caribbean Cruise She's excited about her graduation present-a Caribbean cruise that she and Marilyn Carlson, a sorority sister, are going to take this summer. "We're going to drive to Florida and see some of the South," she explained. "Then we'll go on a twelve-day tour of the West Indies." ☆ ☆ You've seen Lolly around the cam. A. K. Belles and Their Weddings KATHRYN O'LEARY A reception was held at Harmon Co-op after the ceremony. Assisting at the reception were Marguerite Watson, Carolyn Covert, and Doris Meinecke. pus: she's five feet, two inches tall, has brown hair, hazel eyes, and an especially nice smile. ☆ ☆ The bride wore a royal blue suit with a sweetheart rosebud corsage. Doris Dennis, maid of honor, and Perenea Stinebaugh and Georgia Votaw, bridesmaids, wore corsages of red carnations. Morris Knott was best man, Marvin Wray and Donnell Wright were ushers. Votaw-Wise Mr. and Mrs. Seth Wise, Conway Springs, announce the marriage of their daughter, Carmen Jill, to Victor Votaw, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Votaw, Eudora, on April 12, at the First Methodist church in Lawrence. Dr. Oscar E. Allison officiated. Instant Service In Our Shoe Repair Department Royal College Shop 837-38 Mass. Read the Daily Kansan daily... WURLITZER PHONOGRAPHS FOR PARTY RENTALS Used Juke Box Records For Sale John H. Emick 1014 Mass. Phone 343 Graduate, '27, To Head Curtiss-Wright Laboratory Raymond A. Rugge, 27, has been announced as chief of the Curtiss-Wright electrical and development laboratory at Columbus, Ohio. He has been employed with that company since 1932. The laboratory which he heads is experimenting with guided missiles, and is now designing the basic electrical system for a new cargo transport. Call K.U. 25 with your news. SANDWICHES AND CHILI As You Like Them-of course Where "SNAPPY" LUNCH 1010 Mass. 7 a.m.-2 a.m. WEEK DAYS 12 n.-12 m. SUNDAY Looking to warm weather Now it's time to select your warm weather attire. . . WEAVER'S is the Place. . . and our little prices in smooth, smart junior wear is Action plus! Sketched — Americana Sportswear's prescription in cotton. . . so cleverly designed in stripes. Blue with navy, white or lime with black. Sizes 9 to 15 $8.95 AMERICANA SPORTSWEAR Ready-to-Wear AMERICANA SPORTSWEAR Weaver Lost Something? Try a University Daily Kansan Want Ad Expect DRY CLEANING Call 432 DEPEND ON INDEPENDENT "Perfect Dry Cleaning" Service! Whether Formals, Wraps, Evening Apparel or Every-Day Wear Expert Repair and Alteration Service Available INDEPENDENT Laundry & Dry Cleaners Phone 432 740 Vermont St. PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 16,1947 SPOTLIGHT SPORTS By BILL CONBOY A comparison of the times and records made in three big relay meets held each year in the nation shows that the Kansas Relays often produce the best performances. Lawler of Texas won the 100-yard dash here last year in 9.7 seconds. The winning time at the Pennsylvania Relays was 9.8, turned in by Carter of Tuskegee A.A.F. The victor at the Drake Relays was Martinezon of Baylor who ran the distance in 9.9. Both Martineson and Lawler will run the century in Memorial stadium Saturday, as will Charley Parker of the Longhorns who holds victories over both. Tom Scoffold led the high jump field at the local relays last year with a leap of 6 feet, 5/7/8 inches. This mark exceeded the winning standard of both other national meets by 1 7/8 inches. Eddleman of Illinois and Shefield of Utah both turned in jumps of 6 feet, 4 inches in capturing firsts at Philadelphia and Des Moines respectively. Scofield will be back to defend his championship this year. A leg injury suffered while playing intramural tennis kept him out of indoor competition, but he is rounding into shape once again. After an intrasquad meet Saturday in which he cleared 6 feet, 3 inches, Scofield said. "I'm hitting my old jumping stride once again. My only concern now is building up condition for long meets." The Jayhawk high bar artist is one of the nation's best when he is right. In the National Collegiate track championships held last year at the University of Minnesota, Scotfield jumped to a 6 feet, 7 3/8 inches mark which gave him a tie with Sheffield of Utah for second in the country. Herb Grote of Nebraska tossed the javelin 197 feet, $6\frac{1}{2}$ inches at the Relays last year. Chyneweth of Army hit 189 feet, $9\frac{3}{4}$ inches at the Pennsylvania meet. Lowther of Louisiana State won the Drake Relays event with a 183 feet, $11\frac{1}{2}$ marks. Grote will be back to defend his title this year. He was the javelin winner at the Texas Relays this spring. The Nebraska strong man holds the Big Six outdoor record for throwing the spear. Missouri university came through with a championship in the 880-yard relay last year in the Relays. The Tiger quartet of Whitacre, Ault Guth, and Crowson edged out Texas in the fast time of 1:27.3. Navy won the same event at the Pennsylvania meet in 1:25.7. Texas captured the crown at the Drake meet in 1:28.1. The 440-yard relay was won here last year by a quartet of Baylor sprinters, Isaacs, McGillberry, Cotten, and Martineson ran the distance in 41 seconds flat. Illinois, anchored by Herb McKenly, won the 440-yard relay at Philadelphia in 41.5 seconds. The Baylor team turned in another victory at the Des Moines meet, but the time was a slower 41.9 seconds. Baylor will be back this year to try for their second consecutive title, but a swift foursome of Longhorns from Austin, Texas, will be here to offer strong opposition. Try For Second Title The Texas squad which is coming for Saturday's competition includes Allen Lawler, Perry Samuels, Charley Parker, and Charley Tatum. The last mentioned is a 209-pound tackle off the Texas football squad. His weight, plus feet which call for number 12 shoes, marks him as an oddity among sprint men. Halpin To Attend Meeting Of Kansas County Officials John Halpin, research assistant for the Bureau of Government Research, will attend the Southwest Kansas County Officials Association meeting in Meade, Thursday. Nineteen counties in the southwest part of the state are to be represented by 100 officers. Mr. Halpin is to meet and become acquainted with the members as preparation for future work in the bureau. Black To Compete In Decathlon; Nine Entered In Two-Day Event Charley Black Jayhawker basketball and track star, will compete in the Missouri Valley A.A.U. decathlon at the Kansas Relays Friday and Saturday. The basketball "Hawk" and 1946 outdoor shot-put champion of the Big Six will enter for the Kansas K-club. The decathlon consists of four running and six field events. Point ratings are assigned to the performances in each of the ten phases of competition. The athlete compiling the greatest total is declared the winner. To conform with Olympic regulations, the 100-meter run, broad jump, shot put, high jump, and 400-meter run will be decided on the first day. Saturday the track stars will complete the gruelling schedule with the 110-meter high hurdles, discuss throw, pole vault, javelin throw, and 1500 meters run. Strongest in Field Events Black will be strongest in field events, having turned in previous top performances in the shot put, discus, and pole vault. His biggest handicap will come from the lack of time which he has had to prepare for the two day grind. His play with the West All-Star basketball team in New York and at Bartlesville, Okla., kept him from reporting for track practice till last week. "My biggest fear is that I may tighten up in the middle of a race." Black said Tuesday. "I am in poor condition to undertake the workout I'll get this weekend." Nine Men Entered Nine men are entered in the two-day classic. Ray Ramsey of Bradley university will be strongest in the hurdles. He has turned in a 14.2 seconds time for the high barriers. He is a three-sport collegiate star, having participated in football and basketball as well as track. Ross Nichols is entered unattached from Stillwater, Okla. He is a former Oklahoma Aggie wrestling star. He also holds a National A.A.U. championship in the high hurdles. Reserve In Record Jump Favorite In Broad Jump Jack McEwen of Colorado university will be strongest in the broad jump. He has a leap of 23 feet, 8 inches to his credit. Other entries are: Everet Draper of Missouri Valley college; Bill Weaver, distance runner from Oklahoma university; Jack Hague of Ft. Hays; Kroencke, unattached from Lee's Summit, Mo. and a contestant from Arkansas university whose name has not yet been received by the Relays committee. Oil Field Tactics Explained To Group The mining and oil industries are two of the few remaining fields that offer opportunities for the rugged individual, Dr. Eugene Stephenson, of the petroleum engineering department, said Tuesday. Speaking to the student section of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers, Dr. Stephenson explained the unitization plan that has been adopted in several oil fields. Under this plan, the several operators in a field determine the proportionate value of their holdings. They inject compressed gas into the oil pocket. This forces the oil to collect in one large pool which makes more economic for the drillers to recover. Dr. Stephenson said. London.—(UP)—Joe Baki, eligible but apparently not very interested in meeting Heavyweight Champion Joe Louis, held out today for a September title bout, but New York Matchmaker Nat Rogers said his orders were to arrange it in June. By economizing in the drilling process the operators are able to recover much oil that previously would have gone to waste. Baksi Holds Out For September Match Baksi, the Kulpmont, Pa., fighter, who eliminated Bruce Woodcock of England from the heavyweight title picture with a seventh round technique to meet Rogers today to decide when the bout with Louis will be held. New York—(UP)—Except for Hal Newhouser, baseball's big-shot pitchers would have been just as happy today if the season could have started without an opening day. Top Star Pitchers Bow In First Games Newhouser, the Detroit ace, shut out the Browns at St. Louis, 7 to 0, on four hits. Feller Loses to Lopat At Cleveland, an all-time record major league opening day crowd of 55,014 turned out, hoping to see Bobby Feller duplicate his 1940 no hit no run victory. Instead they saw Little Eddie Lopat, a lefthander, pitch Chicago to a 2 to 0 victory. Feller did not finish the game. Lopat allowed six hits while Feller yielded nine. At Boston, the American league champion Red Sox topped Washington, 7 to 6. However it wasn't 20-game winner Tex Hugheson who won. Hugheson held Washington hitless for five whirlwind innings but had to be replaced by rookie Harry Dorish who got credit for the victory. The Yankees' Spud Chandler, who won 20 games last season, was defeated 6 to 1 by the Philadelphia A's at New York. Phil Marchidon allowed only six hits for the A's during the game. Young Ewell Blackwell of the Reds mastered last year's top national league winner, Howie Pollet, a 21-game victor, at Cincinnati when he beat the world champion St. Louis Cardinals, 3 to 1. The Brooklyn Dodgers defeated the National's other 20-game winner, Johnnv Sain, at Ebbets field when they came from behind to score a 5 to 3 victory on Pete Reiser's two-run seventh inning double that sparked a three-rally run. Dodgers defeat Nationals Hank Greenberg, late of Detroit, celebrated his entry into the National league by driving in the winning run for the Pittsburgh Pirates in a 1 to 0 pitching battle at Chicago. He doubled Hank Borowy's pitch. The Phils, capitalizing on Sid Gordon's wild throw, came from behind to score three runs in the eighth and beat the New York Giants, 4 to 3 at Philadelphia. Team Managers We have equipment for all of the SPRING INTRAMURALS Phog' Allen To Return To Duties April 23 Baseball equipment Softball equipment Golf equipment Tennis equipment Horseshoes KIRKPATRICK Sport Shop 715 Mass. Head basketball coach, Dr. Forrest C. Allen, will return to the University April 23, Howard Engleman, acting Jayhawker basketball coach, said today. "Doctor Allen wrote in a letter to me that he will start spring basketball practice on April 28," said Engleman. Baseball Cemented Yanks, Southerners Ames, Iowa. —(ACF) - Baseball helped to cement the "Rebels" and the "Yankees" into a nation following the Civil War! In that era, touring baseball teams visited the South and history reveals that is the reason baseball is called the "national sport." But this was all before Abner Doubleday, a lad from Cooper-town, N. Y., worked out baseball's predecessor, "One Old Cat," with a base, a ball, and a bat. It was the centuries' outgrowth of people playing with spheres. The first organized baseball was played in early 1845. Interest in the game increased until the Civil War, when all the players donned uniforms. Naturally baseball began to be played on the field by the roving teams developed sports-manship ties between the Yanks and the Southerners. Today's Pitchers Today's Probable Pitchers Last Year's Won and Lost Records In Parenthese. American League Philadelphia (Fowler 9-16) at New York. (Brauns, 16-13) Detroit (Trucks 14-9) at St. Louis (Municecr. 3-12) Washington (Haefner 14-11) at Boston (Pearlw 0-0) Chicago (Rigney 5-5) at Cleveland (Embree 8-12) National League New York (Ayers 0-0) at Phila- debia, Kocher 0-8) Violators Must Notify Gugler Boston (C Barrett 3-2) at Brook- lyn (Jhg. 17-8) St. Louis (Munger 2-2) at Cincinnati (Eraust 0-0) Pittsburgh (Roe 3-8) at Chicago (Wise, 14-12) Students wanting to appeal parking tickets must notify Wayne Gugler, College sophomore, in the business office, Frank Strong hall, within a week after receiving the ticket. WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames. How peppy is your car? Lawrence Optical Co. A motor that is slow starting and sluggish takes all the kick out of driving. RODEO Our scientific motor analysis equipment is the answer to your problem. For peak efficiency and low operating cost, come in for a free estimate. 617 Mass. Darnell Electric Phone 360 Keep out of the ROUGH by keeping your car in perfect running condition. For any repairs, for all makes of cars, we give immediate and thorough service. MORGAN-MACK MOTOR COMPANY YOUR FRIENDLY FORD DEALER 609 Mass. Phone 277 APRIL 16, 1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Seven High School Track Records May Be Beaten At Meet Friday This year's group of high school track men will have a good chance to snap three records and endanger four others when they meet here Friday for the 43rd running of the Kansas Relays Interscholastic track and field meet. Nine of the records on the 16 event card appear to be safe for another year, but exceptional ability and keen competition plus help from the Johnson May Break Record weather man is quite likely to rewrite a part of the remaining seven standards. Best bet to surpass a current record is Lawrence's track star, Dick Johnson. He has already thrown the discus past the record mark of 151 feet $8 \frac{1}{2}$ inches. This big all-state football end sailed the platter 153 feet 10 inches at the Ottawa Relays, and is expected to improve that performance before the season closes. Two other records likely to fall are the 880-yard relay and the 880-yard dash. The baton mark, set by Wyandotte in 1932, was 1:31.5. Summer's fine in 1946 quartet cut this time by one tenth of a second in the state meet and three of the same team, Jim Battle, Jim Fisher and Walter Parker, are back this year. Al House, regional 220-yard dash champion, is the new fourth man. Wichita East won the 880-yard relay at the recent Ottawa Relays, nosing out Sumner by inches. Topeka hit a slow heat and finished fifth. Topeka, which ran second to Summer last year, has a returning trio off last year's team and is certain to be a dangerous contender. The three vets are Bruce Rathbun, Jack Lambert, and George Davis. Aces Won At Ottawa Wyandotte's Tom White is an even-bet as a record breaker in the 880-yard dash. White is defending state and Kansas Relays champion. He turned in a 2,03.5 to win here last April, only -02.3 over the current record. Under pressure he should easily set a new record. Other records on the danger list are the quarter-mile, 220-yard dash, 100-yard dash and the broad jump. Three defending Champs Return The Relays 440-yard standard of .50.8 hasn't been touched since 1933, but with three defending state champions slated to compete, it could be equalled or broken. The returning titlists are Melvin Van Gilder; Wichita North, class AA; John Carmody, St. Joe of Hays, class A, and Charles Parrish of Pittsburg College high class B. Parish's best time of :51.5 and Van Gilder's of :51.6 are both within a second of the record. Carmody ran a .51.9 to win his crown last spring. Independence's great sprinter of the late '70s, Dick Overfield, blazed two fine sprint marks into the book here in 1938, a 99.9 hundred and a 22-flat 220. Neither, however, is out of reach of this year's field. Big Ted Hoffman of pittsburgh already has turned in a .221 for the 220 in his first meet of the season. Olathe Star Will Run Again Bob Miller, Olathe School for the Deaf's chunky sprinter, clocked a :22.3 here last year to take the 220 and was nosed out for first place in a 10-flat hundred by less than a foot. He is capable of equalling both existing dash marks this year. Also worthy of mention is Wally Beck of Shawnee-Mission. He clipped off a :10.2 hundred in his school's first meet of the season. Harold Hoskins of Bennington is the top threat in the broad jump. Winner of the class B state title for the past two years, Hoskins should be set for his best year. Oldest records in the relays book are the medley relay held by Elkhar and the shot put held by Elwyn Dees of Lorraine. Both were set in 1930. Glenn Cunningham, the famous Kansas iron horse, anchored Elkhorn's 3:14. effort while Dees, also a former Jayhawk athlete, was heaving the shot 58 feet 10 inches. Managers To Check Bulletin Boards Don Powell, director of men's intramurals, requests all managers of intramural teams to check the bulletin board in Robinson gymnasium for schedule revisions. The rifle schedule for the remainder of the season includes: Division I Postponed Rifle Competition Date Time Teams Postponed Rifle Competition Date Time Teams Apr.21 6:15 YMCA Spooner-Thayer 21 6:15 Pi KA Westminster 21 7:45 941 Club Battenfeld 21 8:30 Smithsonian Triangle 21 9:15 ISA Army Apr.30 6:15 Pi KA Army 30 7:00 Triangle ISA 30 7:00 Battenfield Smithsonian 30 8:30 Sp-Thayer 941 Club 30 9:15 Westminster YMCA May 6 6:15 941 Club ISA 6 7:00 Army YMCA 6 7:45 Pi KA Smithsonian 6 8:30 Triangle Westminster 6 9:15 Battenfeld Sp.-Thayer Division II Apr.23 6:15 Phi Psi DU 23 7:00 Phi Kappa Phi Delti 23 7:45 Sig Ep Beta 23 8:30 Sigma Nu Sigma Chi 23 9:15 Delta Chi Kappa Siq May 2 6:15 Kappa Siq Sigma Nu 2 7:00 Sigma Chi Sig Ep 2 7:45 Beta Phi Psi 2 8:30 DU Phi Delti 2 9:15 Phi Kappa Delta Chi Division III Apr.16 6:15 Hot Shots TKE 16 7:00 Delta SAE 16 7:45 Oread Hall Phi Chi 16 8:30 Phi GAM Atio 16 Lambda Bye Apr.18 6:15 Delta Tau Lambda Chi 18 7:00 Hot Shots SAE 18 7:45 TKE Phi Chi 18 8:30 Oread Hall Phi Gam 18 ATO Bye Apr.25 6:15 SAE Oread Hall 25 7:00 Phi Chi Phi Gam 25 7:45 Hot Shots ATO 25 8:30 TKE Lambda Chi 25 Delta Tau Bye Apr.28 6:15 Lambda Chi TKE 28 7:00 ATO Oread Hall 28 7:45 Phi Chi Delta Tau 28 8:30 SAE TKE 28 Hot Shots BYe Apr.4 6:15 Oread Hall TKE 4 7:00 Lambda Chi 4 7:45 ATO Phi Chi 4 8:30 Hot Shots Delta Tau 4 Phi GAM Bye The University tennis team plays its second home match of the season at 2:30 p. m. Thursday against Washington university of St. Louis. Netters To Play Washington U. Dick Richards and Erwin Busiek will lead the Jayhawkers into the tussle to revenge a previous win the visitors hold over the Jayhawkers. Washington, Missouri Valley, champions the K. U. netters, 4-3, in a match in St. Louis 12 days ago. Other Kansas men who'll play will be chosen from Roy Shoaf, Sam Mazon, Harold Miller, Bob Barnes, Frank Gage, and Hervey Macferran. Unreasonable Women Wet Grounds Postpone K-State Baseball Game Louisville, Ky.—(UP) — Circuit Judge Lawrence Speckman didn't hesitate in granting a divorce on the plea of a woman whose name was withheld. She told the court, "When ever he went out with other women he'd dress fit to kill. But never when he went out with me." The baseball game scheduled for today with Kansas State has been postponed until tomorrow because of wet grounds, Vic Bradford, head baseball coach, said today. The postponed contest will be played as part of a doubleheader tomorrow. The first game, a 7-inning affair, will begin at 2 p.m. Five Teams Win Volleyball Matches Results of volleyball games played Tuesday found TKE defeating Sigma Nu, Phi Psi winning from Spooner Thayer, Phi Gam over Battenfeld, Sigma Chi over Delta Chi, and ATO winning by a forfeit from Phi Kappa. The Phi Gam's leaders in the total point sweepstakes, had a hard time defeating a determined Battenfield team. The losers won the first game 16-14, but Phi Gam took the next two 15-12 and 15-5 to prevent an upset. TKE was not pressed to win from Sigma Nu 15-9 and 15-4. Phi Psi took Spooner 15-4, and 15-7, while Sigma Chi defeated Delta Chi 15-9 and 15-12. No III Wind, This One Butler, Pa.—(UP)—The yellowed pages of the Butler Eagle, carrying an account of the Terrible Snow of 88, illustrated the intensity of the blizzard by reprinting this comment from a Camden, N. J., paper: "The wind has blown nearly all the water out of the Delaware River." COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals - Short Orders Sandwiches Open 5:30-12:30 Plamors Hold Edge In Ttitle Play Off Kansas City.—(UP)—The Kansas City Planners of the United States hockey league held a three to one edge today in the final seven-game plavoff series for the league title. The Kansas City team yielded a 2 to 1 victory to the Omaha Knights last night—the first playoff victory for the Nebraska team—when high-scoring Ben Morrison flashed the puck into the net at 12 minutes of an overtime period. The fifth game in the series is scheduled for Kansas City Thursday night. Blackwell Was Star Yesterday's star of major league was Pitcher Ewell Blackwell of the Reds who beat the world champion Cardinals on three hits, 3 to 1, holding them to one hit until the ninth and striking out six. Are You Writing Your Letters On Just Any Paper? Be correct. Write your correspondence on beautiful, soft finish ART STATIONERY. Each letterhead is etched with a delightful K an s as a scene drawn by Birger Sandsen, the renown Kansas artist. Compact and neatly Packaged. See this fine stationery today Cordell Drug Store 14th and Massachusetts NOW SHOWING HICKOK BELTS A good selection in pigskins, cowhides, or moulded saddle leathers. Dress, slack, or western styles— From $1 to $3.50 See Them Today At— CARLS GOOD CLOTHES The Bus-(Adv) -by Bibler RIDE THE BUS! VOTE FOR MU DOG-C RTC BIBLER "The boss got the idea on a plane trip." SEE A SHOW TONITE JAYHAWKER Now, One Week Lover . . rascal and adventurer! Douglas FAIRBANKS Jr. Maureen O'HARA Walter SLEZAK in SINBAD THE SAILOR with Anthony Quinn George Tobias Jennie Gwynne Mike Maguish GRANADA Ends Tonite JAMES CAGNEY 13 RUE MADELEINE ANNABELLA + FRANK LATIMORE Thurs., Fri., Sat. Everybody's Sweetheart Queen of them A She's the Girl in your Hall. . . the On the Barber Shop wall. . . the World's Favorite Pin-up Delectable CALENDAR GIRL JANE FRAZEE WILLIAM MARSHALL Delectable Girls! --- PATEE Now Playing Scotnick International presents RONALD COLMAN IN THE PRISONER OF ZENDA WITH MADELEINE CARROLL DOUGLAS FAIRBRANS, Jr. as Nupers of Henton Produced by DAVID O. SELZNICK Released thus Cassnave-Artue Pictures, Inc. PLUS Cartoon, Gay Anties, Latest World News, Enric Modri- guera and orchestra VARSITY Today, Ends Sat. GAIL PATRICK ADOLPHE MENJOU CLAIRE TREVOR "BACHELOR'S DAUGHTERS* AND The Durango Kid "LAW OF THE CANYON" QUIZ for CASH THURS., 9 p.m. 1 PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 16, 1947 "Come In! Come In!" VETO VETO PORTAL PAY BILL TAX CUT HERBLOCK Kansan Comments. Our Vital Need For Teachers During the past six months the shameful plight of American public schools and school teachers has been brought out in the open and has made American citizens sit up and take notice. Newspapers, magazines, the radio, and the film industry have all combined to bring home to the people a disgraceful picture of our public school system. In fact, the campaign has been brought to the attention of the public so often and so forcefully that some people are beginning to weary of the story. One is beginning to hear such remarks as "Yes, I know all about that. I've heard it a dozen times. It's all too bad and someone should do something about it, but I'm getting a little tired of hearing about it so often." But this is no time to rest. There is still too much to do before we can say that we are doing our full share to provide suitable education for the children of the state. It is this type of tired inertia that we must continue to fight. Many states have finally been awakened to the conditions that exist and are taking action to improve them. In Kansas, the legislature has passed school aid bills, that will provide additional state financial aid and will also make it possible for school districts to get more money from local taxation. A major problem still to be solved is how to entice more persons into the teaching profession. In 1920, about 22 per cent of all college students prepared themselves for the teaching profession. Today it is estimated that only 7 per cent of the students in our colleges intend to become teachers. While the number of teachers is declining, our school population is steadily increasing. There will be five million more elementary school children in 1950 than there were in 1940. At the present rate, it will take 10 years to turn out the estimated 500,000 teachers who will be needed in the next three years. It is true that with many states taking action to increase the pay of teachers we may see more persons preparing themselves for this profession. But such a process is entirely too slow for today's needs. Some further vigorous action needs to be taken to supply the number and kind of teachers we need today In Georgia, a system of subsidies has been instituted to provide the state with more doctors. Why could not a similar plan be set up to secure more qualified teachers? Americans traditionally dislike subsidy systems. They look upon them as an encroachment of the government upon segments of our society that should be essentially free. Nevertheless, in an emergency it is better to take a disagreeable medicine for a temporary period than allow a sickened condition to persist until decay results or conditions are rectified by a long and painful process. The plight of America's teachers is not the only factor involved. A democracy depends for its very existence on the intelligence of its citizens. We can help to insure the continued greatness and freedom of America by vigorous action now to improve our system of public education. The New York bus driver who drove his bus to Florida for a change of scenery is probably a fan of John Steinbeck. Steinbeck's latest book is entitled "The Wayward Bus." South America is at it again. Scientists have tried to explain these recurring outbursts of disorder in relation to the tropical climate. We disagree. It's not the humidity—it's the humanity. The rising tide of American divorces suggest that the hand that once rocked the cradle is now rocking the boat. If Congress goes after the "Reds" in government, how about curbing some governmental red tape too? A happy medium is a fortune teller who guesses right. Dear Editor--- Explains Operation Of Union Library The letter published April 10 concerning purchase of the Student Union library requires some clarification. The remark of the writer about the flush state of the Union Activities budget caused a flurry of laughter among the members of the Student Union executive board. While all bills are being paid, we are wondering if by June we will be able to buy stamps for the June correspondence. This is not anyone's fault but is due mainly to increased costs since the budget was drawn up. However, the Union Operating Board has allotted a special fund of $346 to buy a book case, a fifty dollar beginning supply of books, a two dollar weekly allowance for new books, and a fund to cover evening and week-end wages for operating the library. Thirty-three members of the Union Public Relations committee donate one hour a week to keep the library functioning during school hours, beginning at 11 each morning. The results of the recent book drive (which is, incidentally, still on) conflict with Mr. Marshall's prediction that only "ancient, dog-eared, and decrepit" books would be given. More than 65 up-to-date volumes in excellent condition and of superior quality have been donated through the good-hearted generosity of students, teachers, and townspeople. Last week a board composed of four student leaders and a faculty chairman chose $52 worth of books which will be added to the library in two weeks. Mr. Woolley of the Student Book store says that we should receive the book case in a few weeks. Everyone has co-operated admirably toward the library. Many successful and permanent things have meager beginnings. We hope the library will continue to be a real convenience for the students for many years. Mistakes may be made at first, but everyone is attempting to do the job right. The success of the library will depend upon continued interest of the students. The Executive Board appreciates the interest of Mr. Marshall, and we welcome any and all suggestions in effecting an efficient Union library. Otis Hill Public Relations Chairman Union Activities The University Daily Kansan Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assm, Na- Assm, and the Associated Collegeg Press. Represented by the National Ad- vertising Service at Jackson Ave, New Wark City Managing Editor...Marcella Stewart Editor in Chief...LeMoyne Frederick Asst. Man. Editor...Martha Jewett Asst. Man. Editor...William S. Abbey City Editor...Wallace W. Abby Telegraph Editor...Marlon Minor Art Editor...Elise West Art Manager...John D. Emmett Advertising Manager...Calvum Arnold Circulation Manager. Thomas S. Caden Administrator...Calvum Arnold National Adv. Mgr. Frank R. Schultheiss Promotion Manager. William K. Brooks The Kansas Press Association 1947 Member National Editorial Association A FREE PRESS-YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW SEE DARL FOR- ATLAS GRIP—Safe Silent Tread Tires (These tires have a nation-wide warranty providing for adjustment at any time, any place in the country) And ATLAS BUTYL TUBES Darl's Standard Service 23rd and La. REMEMBER "Sunday Evening D.A.T." *See Tomorrow's Daily Kansan* THE TEPEE ost Something? Try a University Daily Kansan Want Ad Misses Shop LADIES SLAXS for those LEISURE HOURS in Greys, Browns, Tans 5.50 to 12.95 The Palace 843 MASS. REMEMBER "Sunday Evening D.A.T." *See* Tomorrow's Daily Kansan THE TEPEE Misses Shop APRIL 16,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Now It's Used for Languages Fraser Former Law School Chemistry Lab, Cafeteria The college atmosphere at the University back in the 1870's meant much more than scurrying students and book-laden professors. The odors from the chemistry lab and cafeteria, the clatter of strange tongues from the foreign language department, the long-winded orations on the law school; all mingled to form what was then the true collegiate "voice." Dedicated In 1872 In those days, K.U. meant only Fraser hall and within the walls of that old structure one could find all the marks of higher learning, and several other marks, too. Dedicated In 1972 Dedicated in December, 1872, Fraser hall has since played host to thousands. Presidents, Hayes and Grant, have climbed its now creaky stairs to view the surrounding country from the north tower. In 1920, a young vice-presidential candidate, Franklin D. Roosevelt, told the people of Kansas that "Kansas voters have an independence of thought peculiar to the state alone," from the stage of Fraser theater. Like any normal structure, the old building has had its bad moments. More than once its very life has been threatened Threatened By Fire Threatened By Fire A careless cook in the basement cafeteria almost caused it to go up in smoke, and the freezing winds that whipped across Mt. Oread in the winter of 1874 forced the faculty to close many of its rooms because it was impossible to heat them. Once when a legislative committee visited the one-building campus, they found the halls of Fraser, then known simply as University hall, so filled with odors from the chemistry lab that upon their return to the capital they appropriated funds to construct a chemistry building. The chemistry building that they built was the Journalism building. eeeches Were Required For a few years it was require that every student deliver at least one speech during the semester at the daily chapel exercises in Fraser. These were cancelled, though, when students adopted the practice of throwing bouquets to the speaker and then "lost" their aims to such an extent that more than one faculty member left the exercises covered with flowers and battle scarred. When the campus became a cluster of three buildings, the name "University hall" no longer seemed appropriate, so in 1897 it was renamed Fraser hall after the first actual chancellor of the university. Building Is 'Text Book' After Fraser hall was dedicated, a Kansas editor wrote, "The whole building is itself a text book." New, 75 years later, the only change that could be made in such a description is, "The whole building is itself an education." They Didn't Study For Poli Sci Exam Syracuse, N.Y.—(ACP)—A couple of Colgate men have gone back to Hamilton with a slightly distorted idea of how Syracuse university operates. Coming here for the Bolte speech, they went to Maxwell auditorium where the address was scheduled. Upon entering the hall, they were handed copies of typical poli sci exam papers. Protests were to no avail. In their efforts to explain the situation, their only answer from the professor in charge was, "We've gone over this several times in class." Bewildered, they fled from the auditorium with something about double cuts hurled after them. It is rumored they are filing a petition for a half hour of credit in poll sci 165. Curb Service For Fines Duncan, Okla.—(UP)—Folice are operating a curb service for overtime parkers. 14 Desk sergeant Dick Wright said that persons with parking tickets could double park in front of the police station and blow their horns. Then he will go out and collect the 50-cent fine. Social And Forum Planned By Nurses Plans for a forum discussion or the structure study of nursing, and a social for pre-nursing students were made Monday at the bi-monthly meeting of the Registered Nurses club. Margaret Collins, fine arts freshman, and Marcella Taeves, were named to head the committees for the functions. Helen McLean, president of the organization, conducted a roundtable discussion on complicated diabetes. Refreshments were served after the meeting. Classified Advertising Copy must be in the University Daily Kansan Business Office, Journalism bldg., 101 East 5th Street, 4 pm. of the day before publication is desired. All classicals are cash in advance. Classified Advertising Rates One Three Five day days five 25 words or less 35c 65c 90c additional 1c 2c 3c For Sale RECEIVED limited shipment of new portable typewriters. First come first served. Also have one used upright interested party. Art Uppenhulst, 1031-188 FOR Sale. 1937 Harley-Davidson motor- interested. contact Jim Horee. 1252 Temp. 22 FT. Shutz House trailer, 2 new tires, those made in France. Priced to sell: 1 hode Island. 2982R. OUR Peanut Machines and / or 2 cigarette machines. Phone 721, Patterson For Rent FURNISHED Double apartment about June 2016. Exterior, unfurnished house, or apartment in Kansas City, Kansas, or suburbas as in 1529 KY. as Overland Park. Ma- 16- Found BILLFOLD in 206 Snow. Loser may have by paying for this ad and identifying. Contact George Thomas, 1300 Kentucky St. 17 Wanted ENOTYPE OPERATOR needed by University Daily Kansan, 2 hours daily, late afternoon or evening. See Mr. Ryther, Journalism building. RIDE to Leavenworth or Leavenworth 6 p.m. Mon., Wed., and Fri. Call 89. RADIO Service. Home and car radios. All work guaranteed. Fast efficient car radios. Drive on Road (New Village) Sunflower Kans. 23 FREE OFFER—Copies of Discharges and valuable papers, 3 copies for the price of one. Round Drum Co., 801 Mass. 25 TYPING. Prompt service, reasonable rate. 1028 Vermont, phone 1168-R. -17 TENNIS Rackets restruing and repaired. Silk, nylon or, gut. Priced accordingly. $1.50 to $10. Phone 2711-W. Ed. Wellhausen. 1145 Kentucky. -21 BILL is now running his cab co. again and will be running 24 hours, 7 days a week. Call 69, if no answer, call 2182-J. -16- Business Services Lost PLASTIC-rimmed eye glasses in leather case. Finder please contact J. E. Buckner at 825 Indiana or turn in to Kansan office. Reward. 17 STAINLESS steel watch with spring band. "Exim" brand. With Univer- tary Glassware Reward Koech, 1121 Tenn. Pho. 196-J. -18 REWARD to finder of ladies Bulova wrist watch. Lost either in Bailley or the chemistry bottle between. Return to chemistry office. Bailey. NAVY blue bilbill, Friday, on Ohio nex Jayhawk Cafe. Contents important to me. Please return to Mary Branigan, 1420 Ohio. Phone 853. Reward. 17 COIN PURSE. Only identification in purse is key ring with the initial V on it. Key ring has 3 keys. Please contact Val Parrington, Lindley hall, Geology Dept. 'Tiger Claws' Are Absent-minded, Too Miscellaneous Columbia, Mo.—(ACP)—The "Tiger Claws" the University of Missouri pep squad, was all set to present Prof. Jesse Wrench a sweater in appreciation of his efforts in founding the organization. WILL the person who picked up my light tan raincoat in the second floor Union cafeteria Tuesday morning please notify T. J Tefel, 601 Fraser. •••••••••• Between halves of a basketball game the squad turned out in full; the loud speaker announced the impending ceremony and the fans sat back. There it ended. One point had been overlooked. Someone had forgotten to get a ticket for the professor, so he could enter the over-crowded field house. Cigarette And Atom Bomb Cited As Equal Menace Lincoln, Neb.—(UP)—A letter to State Sen. William Hern, read before the legislature, claimed the proposed cigarette tax should be 5 cents instead of 2, that "the things should be outlawed entirely," and that they are as "great an element of destruction as an atomic bomb." "I smoke a pipe, drink whiskey, and play poker," the writer of the letter said, "but I never get low enough to smoke a cigarette." It was signed, "taxpayer." Decatur, Ind.—(UP)—Edwin H. Kaufman, city audit, thinks that of all terminal leave pay checks he probably has the smallest. He received a check for 2 cents-plus a $400 terminal leave bond. De LUXE CAFE 28 YEARS OF SERVICE Same Location-Same Management You are welcome 711 Mass. DE SOTO PROVEN SERVICE PLYMOUTH Budditt GALLAGHER MOTORS Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL Lindley's Kansas Cleaners 12 E. 8th Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices MEN'S SUITS- LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES— Cleaned and Pressed ... 65c Cleaned and Pressed ... 69c Cash and Carry Only Win a 10 Spot for a Crazy Shot LIKE THIS PEPSI COLA PEPSI COLA PEPSI COLA PEPSI COLA PEPSI COLA PEPSI COLA HERE'S WHAT YOU DO—Send us a crazy shot featuring Pepsi-Cola. We'll select what we think are the three or four best "shots" every month. If yours is one of these, you get ten bucks. If it isn't, you get a super-deluxe rejection slip for your files. AND—if you just sort of happen to send in a Pepsi-bottlecap with your "shot," you get twenty bucks instead of ten, if we think your "shot" is one of the best. Address: College Dept., Pepsi-Cola Company, Long Island City, N.Y. Franchised Pepsi-Cola Bottlers from coast to coast. PEPSI-COLA NO. 5 & BAY ON UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 16, 1947 PAGE EIGHT ASC Argues Submission Of Aggie Petition The A.S.C. meeting Tuesday really gol hot. A heated debate among political party leaders took place around the question of submitting the Oklahoma bill to the students in the next election. After voices were raised on both sides, the council voted to submit the question: "Resolved, that Oklahoma A. and M. should be excluded from the Big Six conference solely because of racial discrimination in the state of Oklahoma." Question On Ballot it will be on the ballot in the election April 23. George Caldwell, president of P S.G.L and Donald Ong, president of Pachacamac, lead the debate Caldwell opposed submission on the grounds that the vote will not be representative of student opinion. Ong favored submission of the question. He said that he felt that real student opinion was not represented in the petition that was presented to the commission and the governor recently. Postlathleth Opposed Duane Postlethwaite, College sen- sor who had bitterly opposed Ong on the matter. When the council voted in favor of submission Postlethwaite jumped up with a motion that since he was the president of the college, the feeling of students about the World War II memorial be polled also. Postliftwrote said he felt that "the ASC had not represented the students accurately in its overwhalmelding of the memorial several weeks ago." Student Control Cox pointed out that the matter had been cleared up 6:25, and the motion was dropped. The council decided that in the coming elections students with joint faculty such as College and Law or College and Medicine, will vote in district IV. A peace conference between the University and Kansas State college will be held Tuesday when the councils from the two schools meet at a dinner in the Kansas room of the Union. Medley To Close Clee Club Concert A smaller composition of the "Alba Tales" and "Onward Kansas" will be the first number at the seventh conciling concert, given tonight in the Men's and Women's Glee clubs. Activity books will admit students to the concert at 8 in Hoch colleltium. The special number was arranged by J. Jack Leffer, 78, who wrote the notes for "Onward Kansas." Mr. Leffer, who is now an insurance spokesman in Wichita, was president of the Men's Glee club at the University and wrote many of the special skits and songs still used by the group. Both glee clubs will sing the number. A comedy act by 10 members of the Man's Glee club will also be featured. They will sing "Grand Opera in Jayhawk" which is a parody on the quartet from "Briololette". The painter is Frank Alderson, Lewis Holmes, Robert Faber, Charles Howard, Scott Harvey Haworth White, Walter Abbrey, Clarence Hooper, Dell Woolworth, and Marshall Butler. Elizabeth Esterle Picked As Relays Queen By Colo. Elizabeth Esterle, College junior, and a member of the Delta Gamma social sorority, has been chosen queen of the Kansas Rebays by the Colorado university track team. For attendants are Mary Llv, College sorghene from Cork in Lull, and Mary Lou Martin, fine freshman and a member of the Chi Omega social sorority. KPA President WILLIAM B. ROGER GEORGE W. MARBLE Press Head Talks On News Problems The greatest problems of running a newspaper come from people either trying to get in the news or trying to stay out, George W. Marble, publisher of the Ft. Scott Tribune-Monitor told journalism students today. Mr. Marble, who is president of the Kansas Press association, related several instances in which he has been forced to solve these problems. Of those trying to stay out of the news, he said, probably those arrested on drinking charges are the most frequent. He added that it was the policy of his paper to withhold stories of his offenders and of those who request that a story be withheld. Others withheld are stories of juveniles who have committed minor offenses and traffic violation stories The other types of people that are trying to get into news are local advertisers and government agencies, he said. He said that he was swamped with publicity releases from persons or agencies trying to break into the news. Ninety-nine per cent of these releases end up in the waste-basket, he said. Mr. Marble will speak to the Press at dinner at 6:30 in the English room. "Any member of the organization is eligible for office." he said. Petition blanks with the candidate's name and the required number of signatures must be turned into the business office. Blank forms may be obtained at the office. Business Club Seeks Candidate's Petitions The deadline for filing petitions for officers of the Associated Business Students club will be April 28, Williamson Hough, business junior, announced today. The first election of the club since 1941 will be May 9, date chosen for Business School day. The club was reorganized last fall after being inactive during the war years. Six Students Give Recital Thursday Twila Wagner will give a piano solo. "Rondo, Op. 129 in G major" (Beethoven), and Charles Smith will play "Three Intermezzi, Op. 117" (Brahms). The voice soloists and their numbers will be: The following students in the School of Fine Arts will present $n$ recital at 3 p.m. Thursday in Frank Strong auditorium. Violet Orloff. "Voce di donna" (Ponchieli); Jacqueline'Baum, "A Spirit Flower" (Campbell-Tipton) and "Life" (Curran); Harriet arlow, "Apres im rev" (Faure) and "Silent Noon" (Williams); and Ruth Reisler, "In der Frueh" (Wolfe) and "Nimmersatte Liebe" (Wolf). Music Festival Will Feature 'Elijah', Recitals The annual Music Week festival for the University and the city of Lawrence, will be held from May 4 to May 10. D.M.Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts, announced today. Mendelssohn's great oratorio, "The Elijah," will be sung by the University A Cappella choir on May 4. to open the festival. Solo parts will be sung by Mrs. Marie Wilkins, soprano; Prof. Irene Peabody, contralto; Prof. Joseph Wilkins, tenor; and Reinhold Schmidt, baritone. The 90-piece University Symphony orchestra will accompany the group. Miss Helen Traubel, famous Wagnerian soprano of the Metropolitan Opera company, will give a recital May 5 in Hoch auditorium. On May 7, the 15-year-old pianist, Sylvia Zarema, will give a recital. She recently appeared as soloist with both the New York and Kansas City Philharmonic orchestra. Pussell Goudey, New York, will lecture May 8 in Frank Strong auditorium. His subject will be "Rhythm and Native Percussion Instruments of Latin America." Musical groups from Lawrence Senior and Junior High schools and from grade school, will present concerts May 9. Special music programs will be given in the various churches and before the Rotary, Kiwanis, Lions and Co-op clubs in Lawrence. Special exhibits in painting, water colors, sculpture, ceramics, and crafts will be on display during the week in Frank Strong hall and in Spooner-Thayer Art museum. 'Combo' Will Play For Houses That Pay Four University students, John Elliott, James Scott, Robert Harding, and Wilmer-Nichols, have organized a small 'jam' combination to play for hour and tea dances, Kenneth Postlethwaite, director of the World War II Memorial fund, said today. The group is available to any house that makes what Postlethwaite termed a respectable' condominium fund in return for their services. Contributions that have already been reported cannot be used as payment for the band, he said. Fite Explains Shock Waves To Physics Group Monday "Shock waves have created tremendous problems in aviation because we must deal with them when the speed of the airplane approaches the speed of sound." Wade Fite, College senior, told the physics colleoum Monday. Fite, who is majoring in physics, explained mathematically the concept of a shock wave. He said that scientific knowledge of this matter is as yet inadequate. Phone Union To Air Answer To Schwellenbach Washington—(UP)—The National Federation of Telephone Workers will present to the public tonight its reasons for refusing to end the 10-day-old telephone strike until it receives a specific wage increase offer. The N.F.T.W. announced that its president, Joseph Beirne, will broadcast an answer at 9:15 p.m. (ABC) to Secretary of Labor Lewis B. Schwellenbach's radio talk last night. Both the N.F.T.W. and the American Telephone and Telegraph company rejected a strikeending abrutition proposal by Mr. Schwellenhack. The secretary last night called on the public to "demand of each side" that it change its mind. Charges Based On Beliefs Not Proof, Students Say Recent accusations by the Rev. Bryan Green, rector of Holy Trinity church, in London, that a high degree of immorality exists on United States college campuses drew rapid fire from students interviewed by the University Daily Kansan Tuesday. Comments ranged from the sarcastic to the unprintable as students tossed verbal brickbats at the Englishman who addressed an all-University convocation Feb. 24 and returned $ ^{ \textcircled{6}} $ some to disclose his findings Eight of the ten students interviewed objected to the clergyman's charges, which most believed were based upon preconceived beliefs rather than factual observations. Two students thought the visiting Englishman's findings were basically true. Too Much English Imagination George Holland, College sophomore, endorsed the clergyman's stand. "I personally think that a person would learn more in a man's school. The accusations are probably true; women don't belong in college anyway. Ninety-nine per cent of them come only to catch a man." Mary Stark. College senior, remarked, "He talked to everybody very closely and got them to give opinions which he interpreted and exaggerated to fit his previously formed ideas." Typical of the comments was that of Robert Cauble, business junior, who said, "I wonder where the Rev. Hickey is." Possibly he strolled by Potter lake and his English imagination got the best of him." Hel Friesen, College sophomore, doubts that such a situation exists. "I have not been fortunate enough to find one whose morals are low." He Can't Find One R. C. Kelley, engineering sophomore, said, "I don't think there is a great let of immorality, due more to the lack of time and money than to moral scruples. Veterans aid the school in that respect; they act as a steadying influence upon the campus." Speech Show Hypocrisy Helen Mathert, College senior, commented, "The Rev. Mr. Green talked intimately to any small group around the campus and evidently enlarged upon the information they gave him. His speech showed his hypocrisy." One coed said she belied the accusations are true, but added that the Englishman had exfoliated information learned in private conferences which had been discussed supposedly "in strict confidence." "Most of the girls whom I have talked with agree that his percentages of immorality are about right but think he took a lot for granted in publicizing what was told him in confidential interviews," she declared. "Looked For Delinquency" Myers, College, sophomore, "Probably the situation could stand improvement, but the Rev. Mr. Green has greatly overemphasized (its seriousness. I think he came here for delinquency." Elwanda Brewer, education junior, blamed the press for allotting undue prestige to the clergyman's speech. "He probably said only in generalities what the papers stated specifically. His remarks were probabilistically realized to make a good news story." An unidentified male student said, "Ninety per cent of the men are probably immorally inclined, but that's about as far as it goes. There's a sharp dividing line between aspiration and achievement." News . . . of the World Trumon Requests Authority To Holt Munitions Shipping Washington. (UP)—Congress took a cautious look today at President Truman's request for authority to halt munitions shipments to nations considered potential enemies of the United States. "If war should ever again become imminent." Mr. Truman said, "It would be intolerable to find ourselves in our present position of being bound by our own legislation to give aid and support to any power which might later attack us." Irate Telephone Operators Resign From Union Miss Justine Ruble, chairman of the Woodward local, said each of the operators was sending her resignation to the National Federation of Telephone Workers as a protest against the union's instructions to ticket the Woodward exchange during the emergency following last Wednesday's tornado. Woodward, Okla. —(UP)—Thirty irate telephone operators, who disregarded orders to remain on strike when this tornado-striken city needed their help, mailed official resignations today to their union's parent body. National Service life insurance carries no restrictions as to the residence, travel or occupation of insured veterans, the Veterans administration says. S Springtime FOOD BUYS Springtime FOOD BUYS PORK CHOPS Center Cuts 57c lb GROUND BEEF Lb. 39c OLEO Lb. 45c Parkay or Nucod Fresh GRAPE FRUIT 10 for 32c Orange and Grapefruit BLENDED JUICE 46 oz. can 25c Red, Ripe TOMATOES Ready to slice Tube 29¢ Extra Standard TOMATOES No. 2 can 17c IGA fancy tomato CATSUP 14 oz. bottle 25c CLO X Quart Bottle 16c ★ It's convenient—It's near the Hill ★ JAYHAWK GROCERY 1342 Ohio University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Thursday, April 17, 1947 44th Year No. 121 Lawrence. Kansas Texas Blast Toll May Hit 800 1700 Athletes To Compete In Kansas Relays More than 1,000 high school students will be here Friday to open the 43rd running of the state interscholastic track and field meet. The first events in the revived decathlon, a part of the Kansas Relays, will also be run. An estimated 700 athletes from 56 universities, colleges, and junior colleges are entered for the relays which begin Saturday. Elizabeth Esterle, College junior, will reign as Relays Queen. Mary Lilly, College sophomore, and Mary Lou Martin, fine arts freshman, are her attendants. Activity Book Admits Admission for University students to the Kansas Relays Interscholastic high school track meet tomorrow will be by activity book. The price of admission for non-student adults is 75 cents and for high school students, 50 cents. Band Will Take Part In Relays Ceremonies The University band will take part in the flag raising ceremony and during the running of the Kansas Relays Saturday at Memorial stadium. Leo Horacek, fine arts senior, is conducting the band this week in the absence of Professor Wiley, who is attending a music festival in Enid, Okla. Admission for University students to the college meet Saturday will be by the No. 4 "Extra" slip in the activity book. The price of admission for non-student adults is $1.50, for high school students, 75 cents. There will be no reserved seats either day. The first event Friday begins at 9:30 a.m. The Friday finals begin at 1:30 p.m. Preliminaries Begin Saturday The preliminaries in the college meet Saturday will begin at 10:15 a.m. The first events will be the 120-yard high hurdles, 100-yard dash, the shot put and javelin. The finals and relay events will start at 1:45 p. m. The decathlon will start Friday at 1:15 p. m. The first decathlon event Saturday will begin at 9 a.m. The ten-event schedule will be completed by 11:30 on Saturday. ASC Calls Meeting To Discuss Memorial A special meeting of the All Student council has been called for 5 p.m. tomorrow in the Pine room of the Union. Five council members, Duane Posttlewhaite, John May, John Waugh, Ondg, Ong, and George Robb, requested that the special meeting be called to discuss putting the War Memorial question on the ballot in spring election. In the meeting Tuesday, A.S.C. members voted to submit the Oklahoma A. and M. controversy to the students on the general election ballot. Postlethwaite suggested that the students also be allowed to vote on the desirability of the War Memorial. Relays Queen SHELBY TERRY ELIZABETH ESTERLE 'Papers Must Lead,' Editor Tells Press Club One of the best opportunities for journalism graduates is in newspaper promotion work, George W. Marble, president of Kansas Press association, said at a Press club dinner Wednesday night. "A small-town newspaper's responsibility is to take the leadership in civic projects," he said. "It is good business to encourage community improvements." Competition from radio, magazines and metropolitan newspapers will force small-town editors to improve their papers. Most editors, he felt, were too occupied in the mechanical details of publishing, to write a good paper. "I look to the graduates, from journalism schools to bring a big improvement," he said. Mr. Marble expressed his interest in journalism courses and said that he was "impressed by the K.U. journalism department." He declared that, "I would be putting out a better paper if I had gone to K.U. Progressives To Ask Reduced Language Hours A request to eliminate the 10-hour foreign language requirement in the School of Education unless the student plans to teach a language, was added to the Progressive party platform Wednesday night. . Glen Kappelman, College junior, was appointed chairman of a standing investigations committee, and Rodney Almond, engineering sophomore, will head the social committee. Members of the investigations committee are John Reese, College junior; Harold Persing, College sophomore; Robert Cox, and Gone Bollings, College freshmen; John Humphreys, engineering sophomore; and Mary Shatzell, Fine Arts freshman. The first job for this committee is an investigation of veteran's fees. It will be a permanent committee which will handle all of the party questions concerning Universities activities. Any person who brings up a point for investigation will become a member of the investigations committee until the point in question has been either clarified or dropped. "In this way the men most interested, and most often the man who is best informed on the subject, will have some say about how it is handled." Almond, who introduced the motion, sald. Members of the social committee are Wendolynne Jones, College junior; Patricia Creech, Mary Sue Kanehl, College freshmen; Bill Adams, Engineering freshman; and Roy Rogers, education junior. To Investigate Fees Voting Group To Meet Today The new campus non-partisan electoral group, the League of Student Voters, will hold a meeting at 5 p.m. today in Green hall. President Truman today assured Mayor J. C. Trahan of Texas City, that every government agency would cooperate fully in helping the stricken city recover from yesterday's disaster. A report of the steering committee will be the chief business of the meeting. At least one airplane was blasted from the sky by the explosion aboard the Grand Camp, and its two occupants killed. Today it was reported that another private plane, also with two aboard, might have gone down in Galveston bay after the blast. 'It'S Worse Than War,' Gen. Wainwright Says For one thing, he said, many of the dead were blown to pieces. Among them were many migratory workers, registered for work by name only, and it is doubtful whether their own relatives even knew where they were. Gen. Jonathan Wainwright, hero of Bataan, said today the devastation was "more horrible than anything I've ever seen in war." As commander of the Fourth army at San Antonio, he came here to direct army disaster relief, including the distribution of 10,000 army blankets, 5,000 gas masks, and large quantities of blood plasma. A spokesman for the Red Cross, said today that the exact death toll in the Texas City disaster may never be known. Death and injury came in strange ways. A naval lieutenant who had worked through yesterday and into the night told his men: As he turned to leave the waterfront, the High Flyer went up, and a piece of steel sheared off his right leg. "I had better call my wife and tell her I am okay." Father William A. Roach of St. Mary's Catholic church in Texas City, ignored warnings of workmen and went to the dockside to administer to the dying. An exoskeleton caught him. He died in a Galveston hospital. Funeral services for the dead priest were the first to crystallize from the chaos of the blast-torn area. A Braniff DC-4, from Dallas winged southward today carrying 3,266 pounds of embalming fluid, chemicals and medical supplies, and 19 morticians to Texas City. 430 Bodies Found; 3,000 Are Injured Bulletin Austin, Tex.—(UP)—Gov. Beaufort Jester today issued a summary of Texas City casualties supplied by the Red Cross which showed an estimated 600 to 650 persons dead and 3,000 injured. Texas City—(UP)—Three new explosions rocked the devastated waterfront of this stricken Texas gulf coast industrial town today. Two of today's blasts occurred aboard the freighter High Flyer, loaded with thousands of tons of nitrates and sulphur. The second blast disintegrated the ship, throwing chunks of metal for miles, and killing and injuring many who had escaped earlier explosions. The third explosion occurred as another oil tank blew up. Authoritative estimates placed the death toll anywhere from 500 to 800. The Red Cross assistant director of disaster in the midwest, placed the dead at 700 to 800. (By United Press) The Texas City explosion was the second major disaster in Texas in a week and the third in the United States within 23 days. Texas City Blast Worst Since'65 Texas has suffered more disasters than any other state. Worst Was In '65 States within the Texas On April 9 a tornado in the Texas Oklahoma panhandle killed 132 persons and on March 25 111 miners were killed in the Centralia, ll., explosion. The worst explosion in the United States, occurred Aug. 24, 1865, when a steamboat carrying union war prisoners, blew up in the Mississippi river near Memphis, killing 1,405 persons. But 430 bodies had been counted and authorities believed 100 to 250 bodies still lay in the debris of the shattered dock area. Coach guard and Red Cross estimates placed the injured at 3,000 or more. The next worst explosion was the New London, Tex., school disaster of March 18, 1937, when 293 children were killed. The greatest natural disaster in U.S. history occurred at Galveston, Sept. 8, 1900, when a tidal wave engulfed the city, drowning 6,000 persons and second was the Johnstown flood May 31, 1889, which took 2,209 lives. 1944-Port of Chicago, Cal., ammunition ship explosion, 321 dead 1944-Hartford circus fire, 168 dead. 1842 - Boston Coconut Grove night- club, fire. 622 dead. Other Disasters: club fire, 492 dead. 1926 - Florida hurricane, 327 dead. 1917 - Ammunition ship explosion Ullmer harbor, 1,226 dead. in hailfall harbor, Lazy oad. 1915- U.S.S. Eastland captured in 1006 - San Francisco earthquake. 452 dead 1904 - Steamer Slocum burned in New York's East river, 1,012 dead 1903 - Iroquois Theater fire, Chicago, 575 dead 1871 - Forest fire engulfs Peshtigo, Wilis, area, 1,152 dead. WEATHER Kansas—Generally fair today, to right and Friday. Warmer today and tonight. Low tonight middle 40's. The Deputy Mayor of the town of 18,000 reported that 99 per cent of homes in Texas City had been damaged, and that half the town's population had fled from the holocaust. Damage was estimated at 125 million dollars or more as ships, a vast chemical plant, oil refineries, oil tanks and other industrial plants were destroyed. Inquiries Should Go To Galveston Red Cross Texas City,. Tex—(UP)—Galveston, not Texas City, is the correct place to seek information concerning relatives or friends in the stricken area, Red Cross public relations chairman Dan Romine said today. Romine said that all inquiries should be sent to the Red Cross central inquiry service at Galveston chapter house. He revealed that 6,000 messages were handled during the night. Two Freighters Destroyed As thousands of rescue workers toiled into the second day of the tragedy, the major damage included: The freighters Grand Camp—on which originated the little fire which lead to the disaster—and High Flyer destroyed. Two smaller ships and several barges destroyed. The 19 million dollar Monsanto Chemical company plant blasted to a "hollow shell." Fifty or more oil storage tanks burned out. Two oil refineries heavily damaged. Two oil refineries heavily damaged. Most of the docks, warehouses, and office buildings along the waterfront destroyed. Buildings wrecked as far as two miles away, houses shaken and windows broken over an area of 140 square miles. Five hundred automobiles parked in the area reduced to twisted wreckage. Fires Still Rage At least eight major oil tank fires still raged more than 24 hours after the first blast, Deputy Mayor J. H. Hill told a press conference. He explained that a north wind was sweeping smoke and noxious fires out into Galveston Bay and restricting possible spread of the fires. a tank of chlorine gas blew up and (continued to page eight) PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 17,1947 After 40 Years, Crawford Still Enjoys Teaching Forty years is a long time to teach English history. Prof. C. C. Crawford of the history department admits that it is but he says that he still enjoys it. Born In Illinois It was in September, 1908, that Professor Crawford, equipped with one new unfurnished PiD6, one year's teaching experience at M. U., and a bride of one year, descended on K.U. And he's been here ever since. ___ Born in Pike County, Ill., he received his early education in Racine, Kas, and was graduated from K. U. with the class of 1899. He received his A. M. here, in history, naturally, and then went to the University of Wisconsin for the coveted degree of Doctor of Philosophy. It was there that he met and married Elizabeth. Forty years may have brought a lot of change to K. U. but students are about the same, Professor Crawford thinks. Asked if he ever got bored teaching English history year after year, he retorted. "In fact," he says with a reminiscent grin, "I had the marriage license in my pocket when I went in to take my final exam for the doctor's degree." "No, but I've learned to tell which students in the class are bored. I can tell those who are interested, too. And you know, sometimes if they even pretend to look interested, I appreciate it." Changes in K. U. Professor Crawford heads a Phi Beta Kappa family. Mrs. Crawford wears a key as do the two sons, both K. U. graduates. Richard is now senior statistician for the Commerce Department in Washington, College of an insurance firm in Kansas City. Notebook: Hola, K. J. Veterans Help K. U. Professor Crawford feels that the University has profited by this year's invasion of veterans. He believes they are far superior to the veterans who attended college after the last war. He relates that he mentioned the seriousness of the veterans about education to one of the boys in his class. The vet, whose wife took advantage of the years she was separated from him to complete her education, retorted. "If you think I'm serious, you should hear the little woman." Professor Crawford says he has found new experiences in instructing each new class of students. But the one he most recently enjoyed was the class of Navy veterans he taught last spring. "Most of them had been around the world several times," he grims, "And by the time the course was over, they had taught me a few things." Four University students and Miss Hermina Zipple, Memorial Union director, returned Saturday from a national conference of College unions at Champaign, Ill. KU Union Delegation Returns From Illinois Joan Woodward, president of the Memorial Umo executive board, reported progress in discussions on student union operations, use, and construction. The group took part in panel discussions on the changing functions of College unions, changes brought on by postwar needs, individualized services versus social activities, and the union as a University division of social education. Speakers at the conference included Prof. Gobel Gobels, former chairman of the Illini board, a formative member of the faculty of men at the University of Illinois. The Kansas delegation included Miss Woodward, Miss Hermina Zipple, Union director; Sue Webster, secretary-treasurer; LuAnne Powell, chairman; and Thornton Cooke. University Daily Kansan My name is Miyah Kalish. Mail subscription: $3.99, $4.50 a year, (in law) add $1 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan, every afternoon during the school year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holloway periodicals. Entered as second class matter March 7, 1900 at Post Office at Lawrence, Kan, act of March 3, 1879. Washington. —(UP)— The house Unamerican activities committee recently put the Communist brand on the American Youth for Democracy and offered to help expose A.Y.D. leaders on campuses where the organization is active. A.Y.D. Branded 'Red' By House Committee The committee said the A.Y.D. claims 16,194 members in 60 colleges in California, Colorado, Connecticut, Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, Minnesota, Missouri, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Washington, Wisconsin—and the District of Columbia Committee chairman J. Parnell Thomas, Republican, New Jersey, said copies of the report will be sent to every college and university in the nation and to each of the 48 governors and state legislatures. What should be done with A.Y.D. was left up to them. But the report did say that colleges and universities where A.Y.D is active should thoroughly expose 'the Communist' connection with the Communist party. The report charged that many officers of the A.Y.D. formerly held key posts with the Young Communist league. These same officers, it said, now are making policy for the A. Y. D. which has "aperd" the program and constitution of the Communist league. Meter Blows Top At Sunnyside The lights were on again at Sun side Wednesday. All apartments in the project were plunged into darkness about 8:30 Tuesday night when the master meter burned out. Four maintenance men worked three hours in the rain and snow to repair the damage. We are headquarters for Khaki Trousers. Biggest stock of Genuine Suntans in this Area. A. G. B. R. C. D. E. F. G. H. I. J. K. L. M. N. O. P. Q. R. S. T. U. V. W. X. Y. Z. DON'T FORGET! $1.49 to $2.98 Sizes 28 to 44 LAWRENCE SURPLUS 740 and 911 Mass. Tel. 669 and 558 Geologists To Hear Former TVA Head Roger Rhoades, chief geologist for the United States Bureau of Reclamation, Denver, will visit the University today. A graduate of the University of California, Mr. Rhoades, was former chief geologist of the Tennessee Valley Authority. Spring NOTES This will be Mr. Rhoades first visit to the University. He will speak to geology majors and graduate students at 4 p.m., today, in room 402, Lindley hall, and to Sigma Xi, honorary science fraternity, at 8 p.m., in Lindley auditorium, R. M. Dreyer, associate professor of geology said. The talks are open to the public. Three-fourths of Colorado's farming land is irrigated. Maybe we should join an optimists' club, But when Spring DOES arrive, Be prepared for that impromptu cone-date or spur of the moment movie With a soft, lustrous PERMANENT Styled for a Langorous lassie or a Casual coed PHONE 480 BAND BOX Beauty Shop 1144 IND. Lost Something? Try a University Daily Kansan Want Ad Refugees from a Rodeo? NEVER! We serve steaks from choice beef a good man-sized meal that includes omato Salad, Rolls and Coffee. 90c French Fries, Tomato Salad, Rolls and Coffee, 90c Charlie Long's BLUE MILL 1009 Mass. Department Of Speech And Drama Presents The University Players In A Melodrama by Elizabeth McFadden DOUBLE DOOR FRASER THEATER Mon., Tues., and Wed. APRIL 21, 22, 23 Curtain 8:15 Ticket Office OPEN NOW Exchange Activity Tickets for Reserved Seats Ticket Office Basement Green Hall. Phone K.U. 64 Ring 2, 9-12, 1-4 APRIL 17,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE I SOCIALLY SPEAKING Sigma Nu Will Entertain The members of Sigma Nu fraternity will entertain the members of Pi Beta Phi sorority with a dessert dance at the chapter house from 6 to 8 p.m. Thursday. *** Sigma Nu to Have Skating Party Kappa Alpha Theta held a Brother-Son banquet Sunday. The banquet was given for University men who have either a Theta mother or sister. Guests were Wallace McKee, Edward Swain, Jim Swain, William Schwinn, Charles McGill, Edward Surface, John May, Henry LaRue, Dunham Walker, Howard Joseph, Donald Kreamer, Hugh Kreamer, Robert Malott, Russell Stites, John Sites, Robert Shaw, Clarence Francisco, Arthur Myers, Roy Shoaf, Rodney Armstrong, James Thompson, Moulton Green, Dormon O'Leary, Wood Runyan. *** Sigma Nu fraternity will entertain the members of Gamma Phi Beta sorority with a skating party at the Lawrence roller rink Saturday morning. D. W. Whitlow, Gordon McCue, William Meier, Chester Frazer, Jerry Harkins] Seank Gage, Hawzee Macenfon, Jennel MacFerran, James Salee, Eugene Salee, Milton Fadler, Phillip Carlson, Wendel Gulgler, William Neff, William Sproull, Everett Land, George Holden, Calvin Markwell, Richard Wagtail, Charles Wagtail, Ned Tanner, Gene Alford, Richard Porter, Clyde Burnside, Ralph Kline, and Donald McIlrath. Sigma Nu fraternity elected officers, for the next vest. Kappa Alpha Theta Has Brother-Son Banquet cers for the next year. They are Omer Muchmore, commander; Robert Combs, lieutenant commander; Robert Jones, leserorderer; Johnrey; Dean Banker, treasurer Buddy J. Hinkle, assistant treasurer; Arthur Myers, reporter; Richard Williams, marshall; Russell O'Hara, sentinel; Andrew Berry, historian; Stanley Englund, chapliain; Robert Seaman, social chairman. Sigma Nu Elects Officers Robert Williamson, scholastic chairman; Richard Dalrymple, pledge trainer; Howard Perry, intramural manager; Dale Riemig, song leader; Thomas Messplay, alumni contact officer; and Thomas Miller, activities chairman. Ricker Hall To Hold Costume Party A costume party will be held at Ricker hall from 9 to 12 p.m. Friday. Newman Club Elects Officers for 1947-48 were elected at the regular Newman club meeting Sunday. They are William Conroy, president; Eileen O'Brien, vice-president; Rosemary Alderman, secretary; Kerrel Butler, treasurer; and Dick Roe, historian. Officers Elected by Alpha Chi The newly elected officers of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority are Mila Williams, president; Patricia Link, first vice-president; Edith Carey, second vice-president; Margaret Logan, recording secretary; Bette Lemert, corresponding secretary; Barbara Parent, treasurer; Joan Vermillon, warden; William Rusch, norma; Norma Jones, social chairman; Normae Lee Loske, house manager; Carolyn Keith, scholarship chairman. Virginia Lee Daniels, reporter and lyre editor; Retta Jo Landis, activities chairman; Helen Ward, song leader; Jacqueline Bogan, program chairman; Eleanor Howell, scrapbook chairman; Ann Hogue, assistant warden; Martha Weed, assistant treasurer; Lila Hyten, file keeper; and Billie Mae Powell, assistant social chairman. Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, will be co-sponsor with the M.Y.C.M.A. in a camp councilor's training program April 26. A.P.O.-Y. M. To Sponsor Camp Training Program The meeting will offer practical information to persons interested in councelling problems. Speakers will include Henry Shenk, professor of physical education, professional campers, and Boy Scout executives. Before: She Painted Portraits After: Wrote Men's Pants Ads COED'S CORNER Joanne List began building her reputation as an artist by drawing portraits of classmates in a Kansas City high school. City mail scribbles. "I did cartoons, caricatures, and serious portraits, and I always ended up giving them away. Students would ask how much I'd charge for their pictures and I'd say $5. Then I'd get soft-hearted and give away my work." In, "After all, I couldn't fill up closets with faces!" Went On With Portraits In Kansas City Junior college, Joanne continued drawing portraits. "The teacher looked like Greer Garson, and had a passion for trees. As a result, her students spent most of their time drawing oaks and evergreens. I was given a break and allowed to do faces. I had begun to paint in water colors by then." Joanne, who has made a study of expressing personality in portraits, says that some people look best done in water colors, others in pastels. tells. "Persons with vivid personality and striking coloring look at home in water colors. The quiet and reserved type, especially girls of delicate femininity, are best suited to pastels," she related. Did Ad Work In K.C. Portrait painter that she is, Joanne looks to a future in commercial advertising. Her interest in that field began during the summer preceding her junior year, when she worked as an advertising artist for a department store in Kansas City. "At first, I did basement ads of men's trousers, grandma's shoes, and table cloths. "But gradually, I climbed to upstairs ads of fashions." When Joanne came to the University, in the fall, her mind was made up to become a fashion advertiser. She enrolled in fine arts the first semester. Gave Her Artist's Idea "It gave me the artist's side of advertising. The next semester I entered the college because I wanted to see the copy side of advertising," she explained. Now completing her advertising major in the college, she believes she has gotten what she wants. Jo graduates in June, but promises: "Like MacArthur, I will return. I have five hours to finish in summer school—you know how it is when you transfer." Vital statistics about Joanne include hazel eyes and curly brown hair. She is a member of Alpha Omicron Pi. Boston Gets 'Factory' To Supply Blood Parts Boston, (UF)—Massachusetts now has a state-operated "blood factory." It was established as the first step in a long-range program under which free plasma and blood products eventually will be supplied to all who need them. Early farmers disinfected grain seed by soaking in sea water. Call K.U. 25 with your news. De LUXE CAFE 28 YEARS OF SERVICE Same Location-Same Management You are welcome 711 Mass. 3-day Cleaning Service 4-day Laundry Service 24-hour Shoe Repair Leather and Garment Dyeing a Specialty. Village Cleaners SUNFLOWER, KANSAS Opposite School Western Union—8 a.m.-9 p.m. Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER Serving K.U. Students For 43 Years. 809 MASS. Art By Vet's Wife To Cincinnati Display Advertisers Prefer The Kansan To Reach Hill Students Fifteen drawings of thoroughbred horses by Mrs. Shirley Irwin Keller, wife of a University veteran, will be on display for the remainder of this month at the Closson Art gallery in Cincinnati. GRANADA The sketches are of Kentucky Derby winners, and include such racing greats as Whirlaway, Lawrin, Pensiye, and Count Fleet. Mrs. Keiller will exhibit her work at the Louisville, Ky. are gallery during the two weeks before the Kentucky Derby. She will go to Louisville for the Derby May 3. TO-NIGHT Everywhere You Look Plenty Good Looking. And All Yours! A CHEERFUL LITTLE YEAR-FULL OF MUSICAL MERRIMENT AND HAPPY SHEMANIGANS! Calendar Girl A REPUBLIC PICTURE. Starting A CHEERFUL LITTLE YEAR-FULL OF MUSICAL MERRIMENT AND HAPPY SHEMANIGANS! JANE FRAZEE WILLIAM MARSHALL GAL PATRICK KRISTIN BANKER - Victor McGee JAMES Ellison - RICH FRANKLEEN FANAGHN - MELANNE O'Donnell - Du Siling Brian Filmer by Mary Long, Leo Safe, Lee Lauth - Original Story by Lee Earre BOOK BY JAMIE RUSSELL AND BARRY ARMSTRONICA Accidental Booker and Earth Wear Calendar Girl REMEMBER—"SUNDAY EVENING, D. A. T."* Remember-"Sunday Evening Dinner At The Tepee y That's Right - Beginning Sunday, April 20 The Tepee Will Be Open Every Sunday From 11:30 a.m. To 11:00 p.m. Featuring Tempting BARBECUED RIB DINNERS ...75c BARBECUED BEEF, PORK OR HAM DINNERS ...70c HAMBURGER STEAK DINNERS ...65c BARBECUED RIB SANDWICHES ...50c BARBECUED BEEF, PORK, OR HAM SANDWICHES ...30c HAMBURGERS ...20c CHEESEBURGERS ...25c ENJOY THIS SUNDAY EVENING and EVERY SUNDAY EVENING AT THE TEPEE PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 17,1947 SPOTLIGHT SPORTS By BILL CONBOY Looking over the lists of past Olympic champions, it is pleasing to an American to note the dominance of the various track and field events by athletes from this country. The compulsory physical culture of some foreign nations has not served to eclipse the natural abilities of American runners and weight men. Spectators will have special interest in the Kansas Relays Friday and Saturday because 1948 is an Olympic year. Several contestants who will appear in Memorial Hall this year will undoubtedly make the squad which will represent the United States in the international games in London next year. The 100-meter run has been won by an American 8 out of 11 times. Jesse Owens triumphed for the United States field by an American, Eddie Tolan, who ran the distance in 10.3 seconds in 1932. The 200-meter run has been won by an American seven out of nine times. Canada furnished the victor twice. Jesse Owens ran first for this country in 1936 to complete his double victory. His time of 20.7 seconds was a new Olympic record. The 400-meter run has been won by an American 8 out of 11 times Archie Williams of the United States was victorious in 1936. The record is held by William Carr who turned in a time of 46.2 seconds in 1932. The 800-meter run has been won by an American 5 out of 11 times. Great Britain holds the edge in this event, having captured the title six times. John Woodruff of this country was the victor in 1936. The Olympic record is held by Thomas Hampson of Great Britain who ran the distance in 1 minute, 49.8 seconds in 1932. The 1,500-meter run, the Olympic equivalent of the mile, has been won by an American 3 out of 11 times. Great Britain has furnished the winner four times. Jack Lovevich won for the first time of 3 minutes, 47.2 seconds in 1936 to win the race and establish a new record. Athletes from the United States have been less successful in the distance events. Finland has won the 5,000 meter run all five times since 1972. In the 10,000 meters event, Finland has triumphmed five out of six times. The Olympic Marathon has been won by 8 different countries in the 11 times the international meet has been held. The United States had the champion in 1904 and 1908. Kiel from Germany in 1932 running the gruelling race in 2 hours, 29 minutes, 19.2 seconds to set a new record. The 400-meter hurdles have been won by an American six out of eight times. Glenn Hardin of the United States won in 1936. Hardin holds the Olympic record of 52 seconds flat, but he set this standard in the 1932 games at Los Angeles when he came in second to Robert Tisdall of Ireland. Tisdall won the race, but his time of 51.8 seconds was not allowed as a new record because he knocked down one hurdle. Hardin finished second in 52 seconds. This mark was faster than the old mark, so Hardin was credited with the new official record. American superiority once more becomes evident in the hurdle events. The 110-meter high hurdles have been won by an American 9 out of 11 times. Forrest Towns of the States sped over the barriers in 14.1 seconds in 1936 to chalk up a new Olympic standard. The Jayhawker tennis team will be out for revenge today when it tangles with the net squad from Washington university of St. Louis. Washington, last year's Missouri Valley champion, turned back 'the Kansans 4 to 3 two weeks ago. The matches will begin at 2:30 p.m. on the cement courts by Memorial stadium. Tennis Team To Play Washington U. Today Kansas To Offer Strongest Bids In Distance Medley, 2-Mile Relay "The Kansas track team will make it's strongest bids in the distance medley and the two-mile relay in the Relays Saturday," Ray Kanehl head coach said today. "The Texas distance medley team is planning to set a new Relays record, but we intend to beat them. That will even the score for our def it the Texas Relays," he added. The Texas team beat the Jayhawkers the texas carnival when little Jerry Thompson ran a 4.13 anchor mile. This may be one of the best races of the day. The medley team will be John Jackson, Pieratt Johnson, Hal Moore and Bob Karnes. Relay Team Defends Title In the two-mile relay, Kansas is the defending champion. Coach Keble will use Jackson, Moore, Kames and Harold Hinchee for the event. Tom Scofield, who missed the early season meets because of an injured knee, is back in jumping form to defend his high jump title. He has cleared 6 feet, 3 inches in practice this week and should be ready for the Relays. Other entrants for the high jump will be Delvin Norris, who tied for third in the Big Six indoor meet earlier this season, and Norbert Zimmer. Bob Crowley, who leaped 23 feet $5\frac{1}{2}$ inches to take the Texas Relays board jump crown, will be one of the top contenders in that event. Crowley doubles as a spinner and will run the 100-yard. dash with Lee Schloesser and Herbert Hess. Crowley Top Jump Contender Chesney Green, Charles O'Neal, Dexter Welton, Dale Mallon and Forrest Griffith will also enter the broad jump. The University will enter four other relay teams: William Binter, Richard Shea, Robert Hill and Welson will make up the sprint medley team; Schleesser, Hess, Crowley and Thompson will be the 440-relay team; Schleesser, Hess and Richin Wagstaff with the 840-relay team and Binter, Wagstaff, Welton and Hill the mile relay team. Ehel Will Toss Discus Karl Ebel is expected to finish high in the discus event. Leroy Robison, William Wygle, Clifford King, Bob Kline and Don Brawnero also will compete in this event. Robinson and Wygle will make up the shot put entries, and Robinson, Ebel, King, Mallon, Bob Kline and Bruce Henech will throw the javelin. I-M Swimming Meet To Be Held May 6-8 The men's intramural swimming meet will be held the afternoon of May 6 and 7 and the night of May 8th. All organizations planning to enter must turn in a list of contestants by Wednesday, April 30. Team managers will meet May 1 in room 202 Robinson gymnasium to discuss rules for the meet. Order of events for the meet include: 4-lap relay (4 best times go to Tuesday, May 6, 4 p.m. 10-yard breast stroke. 100-yard free style. 100-yard back stroke. 50-yard dash. 50-yard medley. 50-yard medley relay (4 best time to finals). Wed., May 7, 4 p.m., Semi-finals 50-yard breast stroke. 100-yard free style. 100-yard back stroke. 50-yard free style. 50-yard medley. Diving Championships, require dives are a plain front, plain back and one optional dive. Thurs, May 8, 7 p.m., Championship 14-pel relay. Last Football Game To Be At 4:15 Today hurts, May 8, 7 p.m., Cham] 4-lap relay. 50-yard breast stroke. 100-yard free style. 100-yard back stroke. 100-dash dash. 50-yard medley swim. 50-yard medley relay. HEDY LAMARR star of "DISHONORED LADY" A Hunt Stromberg Production Released thru United Artists The final practice football game of the spring sessions will be at 4:15 today, head coach George Sauer said this morning. Several squad members were released after Saturday's scrimmage so they could join the track and baseball squads. The remainder of the men will be divided into two teams for the game today. Bears Win AL Title Hershey, Pa.—(UP)—The Hershey Bears out fought the aggressive Pittsburgh Hornets in a bruising, seven-game playoff and today boasted the Calder Cup, emblematic of American Hockey league supremacy, and a $30,550 player pool. Pittsburg's underdog team took a 3 to 1 lead in the series but the Bears rallied. Wednesday's Baseball National League St. Louis 4, Cincinnati 1 American Association: National League: American Association Kansas City 8. St. Paul 4 Kansas City 8, St. Paul 4 Columbus 5, Indianapolis 1 New Arrivals In INTERWOVEN and COOPER SOCKS New York—(UP)—President Branch Rickey of the Brooklyn Dodgers today asked well wishers to let Jackie Robinson alone and give him a chance to make the grade. Aw, Quit Houndin' The Guy! 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SURPRISE your FAVORITE GAL with a CORSAGE "SHE'LL LOVE IT" Ward's FLOWERS 910 Mass. Phone 820 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE APRIL 17, 1947 Newcomers Will Aid Baseball Nine In K-State Doubleheader Today The Kansas baseball squad, dependent upon a handful of two-sport performers like most Jayhawker athletic teams, will go into a double-header against Kansas State today strengthened by five new hands from spring football practice. spring football practice. Two of them, outfitler "Red" Hogan and shortstop "Bud" French, are certain to be in there from the first cry of "play ball." The three others. outfielder Dick Bertuzzi, pitcher Dick Gilman, and catcher, Jack Fink, won't be far behind. Bogan, the squat grid quarterback, will take over in centerfield where he hit. 400 last year, while French, the fleet-footed halfback from Kansas City, Mo., is moving into the short field spot where he showed much promise last year. "I wasn't a bit discouraged at our showing against Nebraska," Bradford commented on the eve of the first home series. "The boys hustled all the way and with a little more batting punch our club could develop into a pretty tough nine in another week or two. Hammer looked particularly good knocking down two line drives at the mound to turn them into putouts." Coach Vic Bradford's main headache is uncovering a batting punch and this pair, along with Fink and Bertuzzi, is being counted on to provide it. The Jayhawkers scratched only six hits in dropping a doubleheader to Nebraska last Saturday in their Big Six inaugural. Only two of the bingles were delivered in the second game to cancel a well-pitched game by "Lefty" Lou Hammer who scattered nine Husker blows while losing a 4 to 0 decision. Kansas State will field one of the best rines in the Big Six. The Wildcats will invade Lawrence fresh from three southern victories over the Oklahoma Aggies, Oklahoma City university, and the Oklahoma Sooner The first game today, a 7-inning contest, will begin at 2:00 p.m. Kansas Anderson, rf May, 5b DeLuna, 1b Hogan, fc French, ss Wolcott, 2b Diehl, c Gorman, lf Ocaub, p Kansas State Bartley, bf Ivens, lf Atkins, bb Chew, b3 Bremner, m Sherrif, rf Grimes, ss Gryskiewk c, d, Cean COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals - Short Orders Sandwiches Open 5:30-12:30 Jayhawker Golfers Itch For Competition The University golf team boasts the sharpest swinging personnel this year it has had in many seasons. The Jayhawk linksmen, coached by Robert Coyan, are eager to tee off against Big Six competitors. The golf squad, sparked by Bill Jones, a crack fairway stylist, is composed of eight members. Coach Covan has outlined pre-match qualifying events which will decide the top playing four. The golf season opened Saturday against Washburn college. The four-man team match was played in Topeka. The Kansas shotmakers clowed through the rain to come home with a soggy 9 to 9 tie. A return match will be played on April 26 in Kansas City. Low qualifiers for the match played Saturday were: Bill Jones, who matched par in showing skill from tee to green; Bob Meeker, who posted a 78 despite bad breaks; Jack Bines, the 1946 lead man who carded a 79; and newcomer Kirk Scott who fired well to hit an 81. The other four squad members are: Harold Delongy, Frank Isaacs, James Marshall, and Bill Winey. This year initiates a two-year round robin schedule, with no late season 36-hole medal play Big Six tournament. This change is looked on as weakening the past dominance of the Oklahoma Sooners in conference play. WURLITZER PHONOGRAPHS FOR PARTY RENTALS Used Juke Box Records For Sale John H. Emick 1014 Mass. Phone 343 MAMA PIN A ROSE ON ME Phone 4 You'll Be Pinning a Rose on Yourself when you try the auto service at CITIES SERVICE Cities Service Products FRITZ CO. CITIES SERVICE (Last year's records in parentheses) Today's Pitchers Detroit, Trucks (14-9) at St. Louis, Munierre (3-12) Philadelphia, Fowler (3-16) at New York, Bevens (16-13) Washington, Haefner (14-11) at Boston, Parmell (0-0) National League Leafs Nip Montreal To Take Cup Lead Pittsburgh, Roe (3-8) at Chicago, Wyse (14-12) Boston, Cooper (13-11) at Brooklyn Highe (17-8) New York, Ayers (0-0) at Philadelphia, Koecher (0-0) St. Louis, Dickson (15-6) or Brazle (11-10) at Cincinnati, Lively (0-0) Toronto—(UP)—The Toronto Maple Leafs figured they had the National league Stanley Cup all but wrapped up and ready for delivery today. They took a strangle hold last night on their championship playoff series with Montreal by winning a bitterly fought, 2 to 1 overtime battle which gave them a lead of three games to one. The Leafs need only one more victory to clinch the cup. Lindley's Kansas Cleaners 12 E. 8th Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices MEN'S SUITS— Cleaned and Pressed 65c LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES— Cleaned and Pressed ... 69c Cash and Carry Only Prettify your ankles with Paradise Shoes Paradise To keep you lovely, to keep him loving you, wear Paradise shoes from this day on. See them here today, as shown in many of your favorite magazines. S Special! --- Brown and White 10.95 . Royal College Shop SEE A SHOW TONITE 837-39 Mass. JAYHAWKER NOW Ends Tuesday NOW, Ends Tuesday Out of the Arabian Nights! Reckless Loves. . . . Daring Exploits. A Man Who'd Risk His Life For a Kingdom. .OR A KISS! Douglas FAIRBANKS, Jr. Moureen O'HARA Walter SLEZAK to SINBAD THE SAILOR with Anthony Quinn George Tablier Jon G. Stevens Mike Mozzak GRANADA NOW—Thru Saturday Delectable Girl! CALENDAR GIRL JANE FRAZEE WILLIAM MARSHALL 11 OWL SHOW—SAT. SUN., 4 days WALLACE BEERY The Mighty McGurk PATEE MOST THRILLING Sward Fight Ever Filmed RONALD COLMAN At His Best NOW, Ends Saturday With Madeline Carroll David Niven Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. IN "THE PRISONER OF ZENDA" PLUS Cartoon Musical VARSITY Today, Ends Sat. GAIL PATRICK ADOLPHE MENJOU "BACHELOR'S DAUGHTERS AND The Durango Kid "LAW OF THE CANYON* $1 to $5 Paid for Each Correct Answer QUIZ FOR CASH TONITE 9 p.m. PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 17,1947 Kansan Comments Sunnyside Irked By Barking Dogs The students and faculty members living at Sunnyside have a legitimate gripe. The dogs confined nearby in a pen behind the University power plant are creating a definite disturbance that can and should be corrected. The physiology department says that the dogs are adequately fed and cared for. But dogs will be dogs and because of their confinement any disturbance in the vicinity of the pen brings a noisy response. The dogs are the property of the physiology department and are used for various experimental purposes. Some of the dogs have been given to the department by their owners for that purpose and others have been picked up by the police department as stray nuisances and have never been claimed. Under present conditions the residents of Sunnyside are plagued by a din of howling and barking at all hours of the day and night. This especially bothers those who have small children. For some time the physiology department has been trying to secure different housing for the animals, for the welfare of those who live nearby and also to afford dogs better care. It is time the administration took some action to correct this condition. As we see it, there are two alternative solutions: One. Different housing could be provided for the dogs at a place where they would receive proper care and where there are no nearby residents whom they would disturb. Two. If different housing cannot be provided at this time, the physiology department should be instructed to "debark" the dogs. A relatively simple operation can be performed to render a dog barkless. It does not effect the dog in any other physical way. The physiology department is not doing this at the present time because staff members lack the time necessary to perform the operations. If members of the staff actually do not have the time, someone from off the campus should be engaged to do the job. The residents of Sunny-side need a rest. Who's A Witch? The currently popular witch hunt for Communists in this country is a direct outgrowth of the war-propagandized public mind. The French revolution was followed by a bloody purge, out of the Civil War rose the brutish Ku Klux Klan, and World War I was followed by its witch hunts. When a nation is surrounded by the threat of war, its people suddenly become aware that they are patriotic. With war comes overdoses of glory halluujah propaganda, and patriotism becomes intense nationalism. As peace returns, nationalism becomes chauvinism for a time and the victor gets blind drunk on the stuff. He's ready for a witch hunt. But he ought to be careful. He ought to know a witch when he sees one, instead of deciding that everyone who doesn't agree with the majority is a Red and a radical. He ought to remember that laws which place a bar on free speech, no matter whom they are calculated to muzzle, are a positive step toward destroying what he seeks so nively to protect. Certainly the Communist is no white-livered panty-waist. Many of us cannot countenance his revolutionary methods, his passion for the ordered state, and his share-thewealth philosophy. But legislation won't get rid of him. It will only drive him underground where he can work clandestinely, out of the public eye. There he is a real threat. A witch hunt usually pets itself out. But history testifies that someone usually gets hurt, and reading between the lines of history will show that both the hunter and the hunted suffer in the end. William T. Smith Jr. Dear Editor---is now K. U. Should Participate In Swimming Competition I was pleased to see the letter in the April 1 issue of the Kansan regarding a plea for a swimming team at K.U. Last fall I watched patiently for announcements concerning swimming activities but learned that intercollegiate swimming was not scheduled. In 1936 as a member of a team from a university in the Southwest Conference, I participated here in a swimming meet against the K.U. team. I recall that the Kansas team gave us some keen competition and that we exhibited before an overflow crowd, although an important basketball game was scheduled for the same evening. It seems to me that if a swimming meet was received with enthusiasm at that time, the same would occur today. Rollin H. Baker, Graduate Student. Texas Professor Discounts I.Q.'s Austin, Texas.—(ACP)—As long as the trend toward creating a hypothetical "average" man instead of studying the far-reaching differences between individuals continues, we shall continue to deal ineffectively with society, says Dr. Roger J. Willems, present chair of the University of Texas. Society is composed of real, not hypothetical individuals. In the field of personality, Dr. Williams said little emphasis should be placed on intelligence quotient tests. Intelligence is not a unitary quality, but a mosaic of separate abilities. "Science can, if it will, make tremendous contributions to a better understanding of human beings," he said. Satisfactory human relationships must rest upon human understanding. This understanding cannot be fully attained without the utilization of all the tools of science to study real individuals. The University Daily Kansan Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Association, as Associate Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave, New York, N.Y. Managing Editor Editor in Chief Astt. Man. Editor Astt. Man. Editor City Editor City Editor City Editor City Editor Telegraph Editor Art Editor Business Manager Cycle Management Circulation Manager Classified Advisor - Mgr Formalist Manager Formalist Manager Marcella Stewart LeMoyne Frederick Martha Jewell William Wallace Wallace W. Abbey Shirley E. Bales Alan J. Stewart Minor Minor Eaton W. John John D. McCormick Calvin Arnold Thomas S. Cadden Joan Schindling Frederick Williams Wilhelm K. Brooks The Kansas Press Association 1947 Member National Editorial Association A FREE PRESS—YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames. Lawrence Optical Co. Our Terrace EAT WHERE SMART EATERS EAT OPEN With the warm days of spring approaching you'll enjoy dining in the open Cottage CAFE at the end of Oread Time Bomb Found In London London.—(UP)—A powerful time bomb was found recently in Dover house, colonial office adjunct in the heart of the Whitehall government area, thwarting a sabotage attempt described by Scotland Yard as a "terror reprisal" for the hanging of Dov Gruner, Jewish underground member in Palestine. Moscow. —(UP)—An authoritative source said today that Freierior Joseph Stalin and Secretary of State George C. Marshall "accomplished nothing" in their face to face effort at the Kremlin recently to break the Big Four deadlock. Read the Daily Kansan daily. DESOTO APRILIA SERVICE PLYMOUTH DESOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH Bradley GALLAGHER MOTORS FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. We wish to express our appreciation of the splendid cooperation of our patrons during the inconvenience of the strike. 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Phone 827 APRIL 17,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Official Bulletin April 17, 1947 German club at 4:30 p.m. today in 402 Fraser. ** Everyone wanting better campus politics and government should attend League of Student Voters meeting at 5 p.m. today in 104 Green hall. ** ** - * * Alpha Phi Omega at 7 tonight, 206 Frank Strong. Formal pledging. All wear ties. Sigma Xi, 8 tonight, 426 Lindley hall. Roger Rhoades, U. S. Bureau of Reclamation, will speak. Public invited. *** Student Religious council meeting at 4 p.m. today, Mission room, Myers hall. International club will not meet tonight. Next meeting, April 26. *** 单 单 单 Sign up for YMCA softball team at Y office. YMCA men need for concessions at K.U. Relays, Report to Y office. Forensic league at 7:30 tonight in the Pine room of the Union. Occupational Therapy club at 7:30 tonight, 312 Frank Strong, Belle Stewart, Wadsworth veterans hospital, will speak. + + I. S.A. council meeting at 7:30 to tonight in 228 Frank Strong. Christian Science organization regular meeting at 7:30 tonight in Danforth chapel. - * * *** Mathematics colloquium at 5 p.m. today in 222 Frank Strong, Howard H. Barnett will speak on Linear Transformations. El Ateneo se reunira hoy a los 15 p.m. in 113 Frank Strong, David convencir hablara de su reciente viaje a Mexico. Su explica la los concurrentes memorizar un refran para decirlo en la reunion. *** "Basic Christianity"—continuation of the course started by Rev. Bryan Green at 7:30 tonight, Mission room. Myers hall. Discussion will be led by Rev. H. G. Barr. (3) Sunflower engineering wives at 8 p.m. today in clubroom at Sunflower. Mrs. Margaret Sisson and Mrs. Louella Woods, hostesses. Graduate record examination: 1-5 p.m., May 5: 8:30-12:30, May 6. Applications due at guidance bureau, 2A Frank Strong, today. Kappa Phi regular meeting at 7 p.m. Friday at First Methodist church. ** ** Petitions for nomination of candidates for the all student election must be filed with the secretary of the ASC no later than Friday. A filing fee of $1 must accompany each petition. Elaine Thalman, secretary. - * * All-Student council meeting at 5 p.m. Friday in the Pine room. Purpose of meeting will be to discuss student opinion of war memorial. The Student court will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Gfeen hall. The following students are requested to appear: George Waugh, Leonard Sparks, Jr., Norman Eberhart, Frederick Kiewit, George Wootten, Charles W. Hall, Harold T. Herriott, Lawrence Syerson, Oliver Samuel. The Business School association announced the election of officers for the 1947-48 school year on Business School Day, May 9. Petitions for nominations may be secured from the Business School office and must be filed with that office by April 28. - - - All students who expect to attend the summer session or return for the fall semester should sign up in the registrar's office according to the following schedule: today, M; Friday, P-R; Monday, S; Tuesday, T-Z; Wednesday, all those who could not come on scheduled days. Dr. Laudon Will Fly To Canada This Summer In Search Of Oil Each week end Lowell Laudon, geology professor, travels to Kansas City to practice take-offs and landings in his new Seabee amphibious plane Next summer he will fly in it to the regions of Northwest Canada to look for oil. This method of travel will add a modern touch to Professor Laudon's fourth trip into the near-Arctic, three of which were petroleum expeditions. With the party will be the $ ^{\textcircled{8}} $ geologist's wife and three children together with 12 graduate geology students of the University who will work with him under the GI bill. Stay Four Months The Canadian Rockies northwest of Dawson Creek and to the west of the Alcan highway will be the scene of the four months search. Into this country Professor Laudon will pilot his plane and three members of the party. The others will precede him by car since the Seabee carries only four passengers. Professor Laudon explained that the group will not look for actual oil deposits. The purpose of the trip will be to study the oil-producing rocks in the lower strata of the earth. Exposed By Eruption These rocks were forced to the surface many years ago by volcanic action. In this manner members of the expedition actually will be seeing underground. If the expedition is successful, drilling will follow years later. Answering rumors arising from an atomic-conscious public, the geologist made one point clear. "We are not going in search of new uranium fields or any other metallic minerals. We are going in quest of oil deposits and nothing else." The Seabee, chosen for its adaptability to water and land will be tested thoroughly on the many Canadian mountain lakes. Adventure takes to the airlanes as Dr. Laudon prepares for a vacation that most persons find only in the pages of a book. Youngberg Will Visit Dormitories On Trip Irvin Youngberg, director of dormitories, will leave Sunday on a combined business and vacation trip to Arkansas. He will be gone about one week. Mr. Youngberg will visit the University of Oklahoma, Oklahoma A. and M. college, Drury college, and the University of Arkansas. Two new dormitories will be built by the University during the next two years. The state legislature has appropriated $250,000 each year for the buildings. The style, size, and location of the buildings are being discussed, but nothing definite has been decided. Pool Geology Data For Missouri Basin John Frye, director of the state geological survey has returned from Lincoln, Neb., from a four-day conference of state and federal agencies associated with the Missouri Basin project. Accompany Dr. Frye were Oscar Fent, V. C. Fishel, and A. R. Leonard of the state geological survey. The project, which will take 20 years to complete, will affect all states along the Missouri river including the northeastern third of Kansas. State engineers and survey representatives met with national officials to pool geological data and formulate plans for coordinating work on the reclamation program. The Very Best -in Service, in Quality of Product, And Friendliness 1021 MASS. Sommers Market Lawn Chairs Adjustable Chairs, $3.95 All Steel Lawn Chairs, $5.95 Purchase Yours Now Colors, Red, Green, Blue and Yellow ALL ARE DISPLAYED C FRANK'S 834 Mass. FURNITURE COMPANY FREE DELIVERY Copy must be in the University Daly Kansan Business Office, Journalism bldg., 107 W. 6th St. p.m. of the day before publication desired. All classifieds are cash in advance. Daily Kansan Classified Ads Phone 834 Classified Advertising Rates day days 25 words or less 35c 65c 95c additional words 1c 2c 3c 4c For Sale STUDIO COUCH for sale, very reasonable. Shop at apartment 19-A. Sunny days after 7:30 a.m. ONE PERFEX camera. Equipped with range finder, a zoom lens and 3 anastigmat lenses, focal plane shutter with speeds of 1/25 to 1/80, and a film. See at 182 Wass, St. Phong 2091. RECEIVED limited shipment of new portable typewriters. First come first served. Also have one used upright and party. Art Ruppenhielt, Vermont. -138 FOR Sale 1937 Harley-Davidson motor interested contact Jim Horea 1252 Tenn. 23 FT. Shutz House trailer, 2 new tires, Priced to Price: Friored to sell 61, Rhode Island RB2928R FURNISHED double apartment a b o u t nished or unfurnished house or apartment in Kansas City, Kans., or suburbs as far south as Overland Park. Marital. 1352. Found BILLFOLD in 206 Snow. Loser may have by paying for this ad and identifying. Contact George Thomas, 1300 Kentucky St. 17 FOUND: Organized house pin. Greek letters Ommega PSi Phi. Owner may have by identifying and paying for this ad at the Kansan office. 21 Lost LOST: Book entitled "Only Yesterday" by Allen. Please return to Kansan office LOST: Bulova watch without the crystal Easter vacation. Reward. Contact the easter vacation. Reward. Contact the Kansan office. Lost: Glasses without case. Plastic rims. In or near union. If found please return to manufacturer. STAINLESS steel watch with spring clasp. **BULLET** swimming pool. **Reward** Wilbur Koehn, 1121 Tenn. Pho. 196-J. - 18-REWARD to finder of ladies Buloa julius **Union** in Bailey or **Union** on somewhere between. Return chemistry office. Bailey. PLASMA finger. contact J. E. Buckner at 825 Indiana or turn in to Kansan Gap NAVY blue bilbill foil, Friday, on Ohio near Jayhawk café. Contents important to me. Please return to Mary Branigan, 1420 Ohio. Phone 853. Reward. 17 Miscellaneous Wanted WILL the person who picked up my light rain coat in the second floor Union cafeteria Tuesday morning please notify T. J. Teflai, 601 Fraser. -18- RIDE to Leavenworth or Leavenworth and have 6 pm. 47 Morn, Wed, and Fri, Call 89. LINOTYPE OPERATOR needed by University Daily Kansan, 2 hours daily, late afternoon or evening. See Mr. Ryther, polymor. building. Business Services RADIO Service. Home and car radios. All work guaranteed. Fast efficient service. Tubes tested free. 604 Hercules Road (New Haven) 23 FREESHOP. Tables of Discharges and double papers, 3 copies for the price of 2. Low prices, fast service. Round Corner Drug Co. 801 Mass. 25 TYPING. Prompt service, reasonable rate. 1028 Vermont, phone 1168-R. -17- TENNIS Rackets restring and repaired. Rockville, phone 1168-R. $1.50 to $10. Phone 2711-W. Ed. Willehausen, 1145 Kentucky. At the end of March, 898 veterans in Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma had been certified as eligible for new automobiles under the Veterans administration's "autos for amputees" program. 1. For Spring College Row Sports Coats You'll like the smart styling of these coats You'll also like the patterns and plain colors in all wool fabrics. $22.50 Casual Coats Fresh looking, two-tones or plain colors in these practical coats. $11.50 to $19.50 Slacks Plenty of gaberdines, coverts, flannels, and tweeds made of all wool, styled in the new continuous waist band model with pleats and zippers. $5.95 to $12.95 Gibbs Clothing Co. 811 Mass. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE EIGHT APRIL 17.1947 Bowers To Take Utopia College Position In July Walter A. Bowers, associate in the University business research bureau will leave the University in July to take over duties as president of the new Utonia college now being founded at Eureka by Roger Babson. The first term to be held at Eureka will begin October 1. However, the first term of the college will open in first term of the college will open in Wellesley, Mass., July 1. Mr. Bower did graduate work in the University School of Business. He holds a bachelor of philosophy degree from the University of Chicago and a bachelor of laws degree from George Washington university Did Graduate Work Here He was an instructor at Southeastern university, Washington, D.C., as well as in the University School of Business. 6. Business: Mr. Bowers is a member of the bar of Kansas, District of Columbia, U. S. court of appeals, Interstate Commerce commission, and the U.S. supreme court. He spent nine year in commercial and investment banking; then worked for the U.S. government for 16 years serving as senior chief fiscal officer of the War department and a senior bureaucracy department. He conducted surveys for the Departments of Commerce and Agriculture. "I first became acquainted with Roger Balson in 1925 while I was in the banking business." Mr. Bowers said. "Utopia college is in a site selected in the center of the greatest area of diversified mineral and agricultural wealth in the central area of the United States." Give Intensive Courses Its purpose is to give a short intensive course to adults on the basis principles of production, distribution, finance, and investing which under- estate planning and motivate business and investment activities. "Mr. Babsen, after intensive research for five years, selected Eureka. He chose an area north of Eureka and discovered that it was near a community named Utopia. Lone he adopted the name, Utopia College." Mr. Bowers explained. Utopia college is the third school Mr. Babson has founded. The others are Babson institute. Wellesley. Kloss, and Webber College for Women. Babson Park, Fla. Moscow—(UP) Yugoslavia formally demanded the Austrian province of Carinthia and 150 million dollars in reparations from Austria in a hearing before the Big Four Czechs who supported evidence said that if Russia supports either the territorial or reparations demands, there will be no treaty. Soviet Reaction To Demand Is Key To Austrian Treaty News... of the World The Americans firmly oppose caging any Austrian territory. The 98 governors agreed at Potsdam that, in return, would be executed from Austria. Bevin To Leave Moscow London—(UP)—Foreign secretary Ernest Bevin is expected to leave Moscow for London by train next Tuesday. Bevin is expected to have another private talk with Russia's V. M. Molotov to discuss proposed changes in the Anglo-Soviet treaty. Phone Strike Stalemated Washington.—(UP)—The nationwide telephone strike developed into a "war of nerves" today. Each sale was blaming the other for the collapse of peace negotiations in the 10-day-old walkout. Government efforts to find a settlement formula continued to get nowhere. By Bibler Little Man On Campus "I don't care if you are a medical student—you can leave your stethoscope at home!" B. B.fer Rooms Needed For Relays Men University housing officials are seeking more rooms today to house athletes taking part in the Kansas Relays. "We need all the rooms we can get and we need them right away," said Mrs. Faye Netzer of the housing office. Despite the telephone strike, rooms have been found for about 125 men. Those who have rooms available have been calling at the housing office in person or sending post cards to the office. Most of the rooms are needed for today and Friday night. Many of the athletes are arriving today. However, a large number of the college and university men will stay in Kansas City and Topeka. Beds are being brought in from Sunflower village. They will be put up in Robinson gymnasium to house those without other places to stay. Approximately 500 men will be able to stay in the gymnasium. Blast Toll May Hit 800 Fires were visible all night from a distance of 70 miles. A man in an airport control tower 38 miles away flashed as the High Flyer exploded. The deputy mayor told newsmen that the main problem now in the stricken city is fire fighting and policing the devastated area. threatened for a time to spread deadly times, over the town. Mr. Hill said the biggest worry was new oil fires. A shipment of 80,000 pounds of toamite—miracle enemy of oil fire—was en route from Baytown He said latest reports from the water front were that one tank at the Republic Refinery, two at Atlantic and two at the Sid Richardson Refining company were on fire. He said no more major explosions were expected although the residents were littery and frequent rude behavior, it may that "another blast is imminent". Black smoke from numerous small fires stretched from one end of the two-mile-low dock area to the other. Fear New Oil Fires Over the city hall, the United States flag flew at half mast. In the building beneath it death lists were compiled. Mr. Hill said any wind shift would increase fire hazard and spread a pall of smoke and gas over the city. Sheepskins To Be A Thing Of The Past This Year There will be no sheepskin in University diplomas. Starting spring all diplomas will be on per cent linen rag content paper. Even though paper diplomas don't have the sentimental value of sheepskin, they make a much better looking award. Linen is replacing the old sheepskins at many colleges. Small Audience Sees Fine Show By KU Glee Club By FRANK STALZER A smaller-than-average audience attended the combined Men and Women Glee club concert in Hod auditorium Wednesday night, Directed by Irene Peabody and Joseph Wilkins, these groups turned in an attractive and almost flawless performance. The selections ranged from light opera to Negro spirituals, and to contemporary and musical comedy numbers. They were well performed and sung with warmth and richness. Especially notable were the solos by Martha Weed, DeLloyd Tibbs and Jess Rose. The treatment of Jerome Kern's "All the Things Your Are" enclosed professional performances. it was unfortunate that the place changing on the stage could not have been effected more smoothly. It was, however, a necessary evil. At times the men were just a shade flat. The girls did not possess as much dynamic contrast and expression as the men, but they sang their attacks and releases much cleaner. The hit of the evening, so far as the audience's reception indicated, was the "Grand Opera a la Jay-hawk," an amusing burlesque on grand opera ably handled by 10 of the men. "Onward, Spirit of Kansas" was admirably done by the mixed group. The pop song was written by Jack Norman former Men's Glee club president. The two accompaniists did a wonderful job and added much to an already fine performance. Girl Born To The Matthies' A daughter, Carol Jo-Nez, weighing 6 pounds, 3 ounces, was born Tuesday to Mr. and Mrs. Orville F. Matthies. The father is a sophomore in the School of Engineering and Architecture. Delicious JUICY STEAKS Our Specialty Across from Court House BILL'S GRILL 1109 Mass. Phone 2054 "IT'S SPRING" The Little Man Says. And it's time for a 10 STAR SPRING TUNE-UP Complete Lubrication Oil change and Auto check-up For Your Car. AUTO SERVICE Darl's Standard Service Darl K. Smith 23rd and La. Special! Special! We Are Selling Out Our Entire Stock Of PENS AND PENCILS EVERSHARP 25% off 925-27 Mass. Phone 375 Still Have '46 Tags? You're Breaking Law If you still have 1946 license tags on your car you'd better be careful, according to Col. Lathrop B. Read, superintendent of the Kansas highway patrol. It's a violation of Kansas motor vehicle laws and violators are subject to arrest. This also applies to the 16 counties for which new tags have been issued. These tags are to be placed on the back of the car, but the front 1946 plates must be removed. Students May Register For Institute On Human Relations Students who want to attend the "Student Institute on Human Relations" to be held at the University of Kansas City may register at the Saturday in the Liberal Arts buildings at the University of Kansas City. VETERANS CAB Phone 994 Juanita Ferguson, chairman of the K. U. contact committee, has announced that 25 students have already signed up to attend the conference. ★A★ Don't Miss Attraction AT THE Patee Theater NOW, Ends Saturday GREAT An Old One—But a Great One CAST OF STARS. MOVIE MOST THRILLING SWORD FIGHT EVER FILMED Their Love Laughed at Danger! Selznick International presents RONALD COLMAN IN The PRISONER of ZENDA PRISONER ZENDA WITH BYDID MADELEINE CARROLL MARY ASTOR - DAVID NIWEN RAYMOND MASSEY - C AUBREY SMITH AND DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS JR. PLUS Cartoon Gay Anties, Enric Madriguera Latest World News University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Friday, April 18, 1947 44th Year No. 122 Lawrence. Kansas Student League Points Out Need For Secret Vote The need for a secret ballot in fact was emphasized Thursday afternoon at a meeting of the League of Student Voters. Ways by which political parties have defrauded and could fraud student elections were discussed openly by members of the three campus political parties. John May, law student, told of ways in which illegal voting can be done. One way, he said, is by letting some students vote twice which would be the fault of the person who checked activity books and another by the person who cuts the number from the ballot after it has been voted. Poll Workers Can Defraud The poll worker who cuts the number off the ballot often looks at the ballot, and if the voting party is not voting the way he wants, he can often put that ballot in his pocket and not put it in the ballot box. he charged. "The only way to have a secret ballot is to publicize the fact that it is up to the voter to insure a secret ballot and not let the one who clips the number look at the ballot," Anne Scott, College junior, said. One member of the League charged that in the 1946 spring election pages of the student directory on which voters were checked off had them turn out. Fonts Three Resolutions The following resolutions, drawn up by the League's steering committee were adopted: ONE The group be entirely nonpartisan, and that the group will endorse no candidates. The function of the group will be to publicize the election and urge all students to vote on the basis of individual candidate's qualifications. TWO The group adopt the name of the League of Student Voters. THREE The group elect the following committees of coordinating, qualifications, publicity, and speakers Noble Is Chairman Wilbur Noble, College sophomore, was unanimously elected chairman of the coordinating committee. Qualification committee members elected are: Barbara Ford, chairman; Dolores Custer, Education junior; Elizabeth Evans, College junior; Otis Hill and Grace Gwinner, freshmen; Wilbur Noble and Bruce Bathurst. sophomores. publicity committee members are: Shirley Wellborn, chairman; Margaret van der Smissen and Sue Webster, College sophomores, and Marylee Masterson, junior. Scientific Movie In Fraser Today "The God of Creation," a fullcolor, 45 minute movie on astronomy and natural science, will be shown at 4:15 p.m. today in Fraser theater. It is being sponsored by the Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship. In the opening scenes of the film, the audience is taken on a trip through the stars. This is done by means of solar photographs that were taken through the giant hundred-inch telescope on Mt. Wilson observatory in California. Kansas — Generally fair today, partly cloudy and somewhat cooler tonight and Saturday. Low tonight 9-45. No admission will be charged, but a free will offering will be taken. WEATHER Group To Discuss Race Relations Racial discrimination on the campus will be discussed by delegates from Missouri, Kansas, and Nebraska schools attending the Student Institute of Human Relations conference to be held tomorrow at the University of Kansas City. Forum meetings will discuss the racial question in light of a Negro student wishing to enter a college, a Negro student already on a mixed campus, a white student's viewpoint, and the viewpoint of a church-supported school. 'Double Door' Opens Monday Weeks of hard work will be rewarded Monday night when the curtain goes up on the speech and drama department's production of the melodrama. "Double Door." Backstage in Fraser theater, the play's director, Donald Dixon, told a Daily Kansan reporter that audiences will not get the usual murder mystery. "Double Door" isn't a 'whodunit.' You might call it a "who-might-have-dunit." Thrills and melodrama are based upon the cast's interpretation of suspense and feeling grising from hatred and jealousy." Dixon said. The cast of 12 students will meet tonight in Fraser theater for dress rehearsal, Mr. Dixon said. Several costumes haven't arrived yet from Kansas City. Otherwise, the production is nearly ready for Monday's opening night. "Few persons realize how much work goes into a play," the speech instructor said. "Memorizing lines, rehearsals, quick backstage costume changes, and hours at a littered make-up table aren't half the story." "I have a class in stagecraft which meets right here on the stage three times a week. Right now they are doing everything from painting scenery to scrubbing floors. These students put in lots of extra hours doing things that few persons would connect with the theater work." Workers' Union Repeats Demand For More Money Demands for a $12\frac{1}{2}$ cent an hour wage raise and a closed shop were repeated Thursday by the laborers' union out on strike against the Constant Construction company. The strike has tied up work on the emergency construction projects back of Frank Strong ball for eight days. J. M. Anderson, business agent for the Building Trades Laborers, Kansas City, Kan., Local 1290 emplosiazs with The Topeka and the Toppea local. "I don't know where the story got started," he said. "Douglas county comes under the Kansas City local as assigned by the International headquarters." Records Show Higher Wages Anderson presented records of contracts for previous construction in Lawrence showing that 971/2 cents and a closed shop had been granted laborers before. These are minimums assigned to this area he said. "I hate to see pickets on University grounds," he said. "However, I will hate more to see, after our laborers get the raise, union men working for 97½ cents an hour, and men right across the road employed by the University as laborers working for 50 cents an hour," he added. Can Be No Local Union In a conference with a Constant representative after the meeting, Anderson said that the local, as assigned for this area by the International, is in Kansas City, and there can be no local laborers union set up in Lawrence. J. T. Constant, head of the construction company, had said earlier that he would bargain with a local union under local officers. "There will never be a Lawrence local," said Anderson. "However, as soon as office space is available we will have an office here." Law Wives To Hold Benefit Little Man On Campus The Law Wives will hold a bridge benefit in the Law lounge at 7:30 pm. tonight. Prizes will be awarded for high scores. By Bibler Run On Campus By B. B. Bicker "Finnegan is hard of hearing." Activity Books Admit To Relays Activity books are all that is needed for student admission to the Interscholastic high school track meet today in Memorial stadium. The price of admission for non-student adults is 75 cents; for high school students, 50 cents. Admission for University students to the college meet tomorrow will be by the No. 4 "Extra" activity book slip. The price of admission for non-student adults is $1.50; for high school students, 75 cents. There are no reserved seats either day. Saturday preliminaries will begin at 10:15 a.m. Finals in all events and the relay races will be held in the afternoon, starting at 2 p. m. Oil Fires Menace Torn Texas City Texas City, Tex.—(UP)—Firemen and disaster crews moved back into the blasted Texas City waterfront area today, where oil fires still threatened two high - pressure onion-shaped tanks of highly explosive propane gas. The statistics at noon today on the disaster were known dead—278, injured —3,000, hospitalized —600, estimated damage $125,000,000. Area damaged—the fire blackened water front, eight blocks long, 10 blocks deep; the adjacent 30-acre Monsanto plant; a residential section 22 blocks long and 15 blocks wide. 100 Workers Still Missing William M. Rand of St. Louis president of the Monsanto Chemical company, said 100 workers were still missing. While the waterfront was still burning, Mr. Rand announced that the $19,000,000 Monsanto plant would be completely rebuilt. The destroyed plant produced 25 per cent of the nation's supply of styrene—vital ingredient in the production of synthetic rubber. Second Greatest Insurance Loss Marvin Hall, Texas fire insurance commissioner, today said the Texas City disaster probably will prove the second greatest insured loss in the history of underwriting. Mr. Hall could not put a dollar estimate on the Texas City loss at this time but said it likely will be the greatest since the $250,000,000 loss in the San Francisco earthquake and fire of 1906. Dr. Clarence Quinn, medical coordinator, said that of the 3,000 injured, 500 to 600 remained in hospitals today. Three burn specialists from the navy's medical research institute at Bethesda. Md., arrived today. Electrical power and gas were turned back on. City employees began decontaminating the water supply. Memorial Fountain To Be Dedicated Formal dedication of a memorial countain will be made Sunday afternoon at the University of Kansas hospital in Kansas City. The countrain is a memorial to Dr. Logan Clendening, former Kansas City physician. Henry J. Haskell, editor of the Kansas City Star, will give the dedication talk. He will be introduced by Chancellor Malott. A committee of physicians, with Dr. Ralph H. Major as chairman, collected the memorial fund and supervised construction. Landscaping the grounds around the fountain will complete the project. A tea will be held in the medical museum of the laboratory in connection with the dedication. High School Entries Open 22nd Relays The 43rd Annual Interscholastic track and field meet began this morning in Memorial Stadium to open the two-day program of the 22nd Annual Kansas Relays. More than 1,000 high school athletes are in the weight and running events. Esterle To Reign An estimated 700 track specialists from 56 universities, colleges, and junior colleges will take over the stadium tomorrow. The referee for the relays will be John Jacobs, track coach of Oklahoma university. The queen of this year's Relays, Elizabeth Esterle, a member of Delta Gamma social sorority and a junior in the College, will be presented with her attendants at the stadium tomorrow afternoon. Attendants are Mary Lilly, Corbin hall, and Mary Lou Martin, Chi Omega sorority. Miss Esterle was chosen by the Colorado track team from the pictures of 22 candidates. Entry List Here is the Kansas Relays entry list: University class: Baylor, Bradley, Colorado, Iowa, Iowa State, Kansas, Kansas State, Missouri, Minnesota, Nebraska, Notre Dame, Oklahoma, Oklahoma A. & M., Texas, Wichita, Texas A. & M., Drake, Arkansas, College class: Abilene-Christian, Baker, Bethany, Colorado State, College of Emporia, East Texas State, Fort Hays State, Friends, Howard-Payne, Emporia State, Pittsburg State, Kansas Wesleyan, Kearney State, Midland, Missouri Valley, North Texas State, Ottawa, Peru State, South Dakota State, Southwestern of Memphis, Westminster, Idaho State, Drury, Cornell. Junior college: Arkansas City, Baca-Prowers, Chanute, Coffeyville, Dodge City, ELDorado, Hutchinson, Kansas City, Fort Scott, Wentworth Military academy. Preliminaries In Morning Preliminaries in four events at the relays Saturday will be held in the morning. The schedule; 120-yard high hurdles 10:15 100-yard dash 10:20 Shot put 10:30 Javelin 10:30 Finals in all events will be held in the afternoon. The first event will be the 120-yard high hurdles, starting at 2 p.m. The pole vault and the shot put, will also begin at 2 p.m. Decathlon Schedule Decathlon Schedule Here is the time schedule for the decathlon, in which Charley Black, Kansas basketball and track star, will compete. Friday Afternoon: **Friday Afternoon** Event 1 100 meter run ...1:15 Event 2 Broad jump ...1:45 Event 3 16-lb shot-put ...2:40 Event 4 High jump ...3:10 Event 5 400-meter run ...4:00 **Saturday morning:** Event 6 110-meter h. hurd.. 9:00 Event 7 Discus throw ...9:30 Event 8 Pole vault ...9:50 Event 9 Javelin throw ...10:20 Event 10 1,500-meter run ...11:25 Court Will Hear 3 Traffic Appeals Student court will hear three appeals of traffic violators and try six students with more than five violations at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Green hall court room. Students appealing their cases are Norman E. Eberhart, Frederick P. Klewit, and George Woonten. Those being tried for more than five traffic violations are: Leonard Sparks, Jr, George Waugh, Charles W. Hall, Harold T. Herriott, Oliver J. Samuel, and Lawrence Syverson. 1 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRL 18, 1947 PAGE TWO Social Ends Important Donham Tells Bosses "The responsibility of business management is to see that social ends are obtained," Wallace B. Donham, former dean of the Harvard Graduate School of Business, told the Society for the Advancement of Management. He said business would make less money, but inflation would be avoided. Labor strife and the growing legislation against business would be unnecessary, he explained. "The main thing we have to learn is how to get along with others." Mr Donham said. "Labor and management do not understand each other they always come to the conference table with the idea that the other is wrong. "Education should make students realize their social responsibilities. At present students are given too many inert facts and ideas. There is no attempt to apply education to daily living." "Perhaps the worst sign in our democracy is the unwillingness of people to support themselves," he said. "If this is not remedied our form of government will disappear." Official Bulletin April 18. 1947 A.S.C. elections committee, 5 p.m. today, Pine room of the Union. *** Qualifications committee, League of Student Voters, 5 p.m. today, Union Activities office. * * Omega Psi Phi meeting at 7 tonight in the Pine room of the Union. * * Petitions for nomination of candidates for the All-Student election must be filed with the secretary of the A.S.C. by tonight. A filing fee of $1 must accompany each petition.-Eliae Thalman, Sec'y. 永年 Sign up for YMCA softball team at "Y" office. YMCA needs men for concessions at KU, Relays, Report to "Y" office. Entomology club picnic, Lone Star lake, April 26. Transportation from Snow hall furnished. Tickets may be purchased at Entomology office, 323 Snow. Food furnished. * * Progressive party precinct, social and investigating committees meeting 4 p.m. Monday,116 Frank Strong. League of Student Voters, 4.p.m. Monday, 104 Green hall. Public Relations committee of Union Activities, 7 p.m. Tuesday, East room of the Union. Attendance required. Refreshments. The student court will meet at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in Green hall. The following students are requested to appear: George Waugh, Leonard Sparks, Jr., Norman Eberhart, Frederick Kiewit, George Wootten, Charles W. Hall, Harold T. Herriot, Lawrence Syverson, Oliver Samuel. The Business School Association announces the election of officers for 1947-48 to be held on Business School day, May 9. Petitions for nominations may be obtained from Business School office and must be filed with that office by April 28. All students who expect to attend the summer session or return for the fall semester should sign up in the Registrats office according to the following schedule: today, P-R; Monday, S; Tuesday, T-Z; Wednesday, all those who could not come in their scheduled days. 30 percent of all homes have no running water. University Daily Kansan University Daily Kansan Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year. (In Lawrence add $1 a semester post- day.) Mail subscription for afternoon during the school year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as second cover matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Lawrence, Kan, under act of March 3, 1879. ISA Will Sponsor Mixer And Picnic Jack Rardin, College sophomore, was sworn in as men's representative of the junior class, replacing Ira D. Jordon, College junior, who recently resigned. The council voted to have a pamphlet summer to all new students describing the activities of the organization. The ISA council decided at its weekly meeting Thursday night to sponsor a mixer April 30 and a box supper May 7. Both events will be held at Potter lake. The next meeting will be held April 23. COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals - Short Orders Sandwiches Open 5:30-12:30 Speed regulations on the campus will be enforced more strictly in the future, Robert Corwin, campus policeman, said today. Five speeders have been arrested since Sunday, he said. Corwin To Crack Down On Speeders Instant Service In Our Shoe Repair Department Regulations governing parking after school hours will be more rigidly enforced. Zoning regulations are not effective after 4:30 p.m., but the orange spaces must be clear and cars must be parked on the correct side of the street at all times, Corwin said. Royal College Shop 837-38 Mass. DE SOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH Buddett GALLAGHER MOTORS Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. 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Of all the leading cigarettes, PHILIP MORRIS is the only cigarette with an exclusive difference in manufacture recognized by eminent medical authorities as being to the advantage of those who smoked O. B. L. D. I. C. NEW YORK CALL FOR CALL FOR PHILIP MORRIS ALWAYS BETTER...BETTER ALL WAYS APRL 18,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Up and Coming A Calendar of Campus Events Tonight: Bacteriology Club, dinner-dance, to midnight. Lutheran Student association skating party at the rink, 8 to 10:30 p. m. Delta Tau Delta, picnic, Holcomb's cave, 5 to midnight. Sleepv Hollow, open house, 9 tc midnight. Kappa Alpha, picnic, Green park. 6 to 8:30 p. m. Ricker Hall, costume party, Ricker 9 to midnight. Delta Gamma Pledge class, hay- rack ride and picnic, 6 to midnight. Lambda Chi Alpha, piemic, Lake Shawnee, 545 to midnight. Tau Kappa Epsilon, dance, chapter house, 9 to midnight. Alpha Omicron Pi, dance, chapter house, 9 to midnight. Saturday: Sigma Nu, picnic, 6:30 to midnight. Phi Gamma Delta, dance, chapter house, 9 to midnight. Delta Upson, buffet, chapter house, 6 to 8 p. m. Sigma Kappa, dance, chapter house 9 to midnight. sunday Harmon Co-op, picnic, Lone Star lake, 4 to 10 p. m. Belles AND THEIR Weddings Kalbfleisch-Cawood Mr. and Mrs. Harry Prince Cawood, of Wetmore, announce the marriage of their daughter, Ruth Josephine, to Mr John Burnham Kalbleisch of Newton. The wedding took place at 2:30 m. Saturday in McClintock chapel, Grace Cathedral, Topeka, with the tev. E. O. Minturn of St. Andrews epispocal church, Fort Smith, officiating. The bride wore a pink wool suit with a flower hat and a corsage of tinted gardenias. The bride's attendants were her sister, Mrs. Warren M. Snodgrass, who wore and grey ensemble, and another who was dressed in yellow. Their corsage bouquets werd of roses. Mr. Robert Wells of Kansas City was the best man. Usheres were Mr. Paul Briley, Chanute, and Mr. Bailey, Bailey, Iola, both University students. Mr Harry Henney, Grace Cathedral organist, played the wedding music and the accompaniments for Ina Katherine Roderick, Lawrence fine arts student who, sang. Mrs. Kalbfleisch will be graduated in June from the University, where she is majoring in child development in the home economics department. She is a member of the Jay Janes and is president of Iota chapter of Omicron Nu sorority. A reception at the home of Mr. and Mrs. I. Barnum, 1803 Pembroke Lane, was held after the ceremony. The table, covered with a Madeira cloth, held a centerpiece of roses, white tapers, and a centerpiece of ivory flowers assisting were Mrs. E. C. Dysart, Beverly Ruth, Rudd Dutley, Dorean Linguist, Virginia Foreman, Betty Park, Virginia Shimer, and Ann Andrews. After a short wedding trip, the couple will be at home at 824 Orleans in Toneka. SANDWICHES AND CHILI As You Like Them Where "SNAPPY" LUNCH Mr Kalblefisch attended K. U and served three years in the U. S navy. He is at present employed by the W. A. A. Thompson Hardware Company in Topeka. of course 1010 Mass. 7 a.m.-2 a.m. WEEK DAYS 12 n.-12 m. SUNDAY While Billie Rotermund Sleeps, Her Dreams Become Reality COED'S CORNER "I can't imagine getting paid for work that's so much fun!" said Billie Rotermund, talking enthusiastically about her major in commercial art. Billie is looking forward eagerly to her work after graduation. "It seems like a long time," she said. It isn't so long, however, She'll graduate next February, after attending the summer session. Some form of advertising work is Billie's goal. Once she did a notebook into a fashion designer going into a large Kansas City firm, and enjoyed it so much that she wanted to do it professionally. Doing layouts and lettering are favorite phases of her work. "Billie Jone's sleeps." Billie "Just Sleeps" Billie hasn't been idle during her years in the campus, even though she says, "I don't do all the things I'm supposed to, let alone the things I'd like to. When I have spare time, I'm uncontrollable. I just sleep!" It seems she has failed intently in honorary art fraternity, Inter-Dorm council, and the presidency of Miller hall. Billies drawings have probably been seen by more students on the Hill than any other artist's. Yes, she has even had some bona fide designs exhibited in the show cases of the design department. Her real claim to fame is her illustrations in the biology lab manual. Last summer she peered into microscopes as still life and then drew what she saw so Billie's talent brings her lots of jobs, some wanted and some otherwise. She has made jillions of posters in her life, for everything from Kiddies' shows to the Jay Jane dance. that the suffering students in biology lab can label their diagrams. Talent Brings Jobs Her first year on the Hill, she worked for the bureau of visual arts and "told that job" said Billie. "Sometimes I even ran the projector in classes." Ask any girl who has lived with her, and she'll tell you that Billie is sweet-tempered. There is one thing that will draw fire, however; Billie is convinced that she is a blond, and even if the sun is shining lights in her hair, she doesn't care to have them mentioned. If you want to stay in her good graces, it's not advisable to shout, "Hey, Red!" She has also arranged displays and displays on the extension library service Ping-Pong, Bridge Sponsored By Union The deadline for entries into the Union table tennis tournament has been extended until tomorrow. Thirty-five teams have entered. A duplicate board system will be used, and a medal will be awarded the winning team by Carl Henrich- man of the intramurals committee. All women's organized houses are invited to enter one or more teams in the annual bridge tournament sponsored by the Union intramurals committee later this month. Playoff will be tomorrow in the men's lounge of the Union anytime during the day. Medals will be given to the winners. Preliminaries will be played at 7:15 p.m. tomorrow in the Union ballroom. Counselors To Aid Freshman Women The women will attend a counselor school to learn their summer and fall duties. Dues will be charged on the basis of $1 for each seat in the organization, the council decided. Women counselors will acquaint freshman women with University activities and traditions, the United Women council has decided. Four counselors will be chosen by each organized house on the council for the fall semester. Be correct. Write your correspondence on beautiful, soft finish ART STATIONERY. Are You Writing Your Letters On Just Any Paper? Each letterhead is etched with a delightful Kansas scene drawn by Birger Sandxen, the renown Kansas artist. Compact and neatly Packaged. See this fine stationery today Cordell Drug Store 14th and Massachusetts Ricker Hall To Have Party Ricker Hall To Have Party Ricker hall has announced a costume party tonight from 9 to 12 p.m. Lambda Chi Alpha Pledges Lambda Chi Alpha announces the pledging of William Brown, Peabody; John Jackson, Great Bend; Billy Meek; Stafford; and Jack Eiffel; Larned. Delicious JUICY STEAKS Our Specialty Across from BILL'S GRILL 1109 Mass. Court House Phone 2054 Let Us Give Your Car A "Sunny" Disposition If winter has made your car "cranky" and hard to get along with, it probably needs a Spring tonic now. Drive it in tomorrow for our complete Spring change-over service. . life-giving Spring lubricants. . a tune-up for extra pep. . water system flush out. It will have a "sunny" disposition when we're through. ONE STOP does it! MORGAN-MACK MOTOR COMPANY YOUR FRIENDLY FORD DEALER 609 Mass. Phone 277 Advertisers Prefer The Kansan To Reach Hill Students 1234567890 A A President Truman has proclaimed May 11th as Mother's Day Choose a gift for your mother from our complete selection of • Dresses • Blouses • Purses • Lingerie • Gloves Adelane's 823 MASS. PH. 554 Adelane's DIL. 554 PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRL 18,1947 SPOTLIGHT SPORTS By BILL CONBOY A look at the Olympic field event records shows that American track men have dominated the weights and endurance event in the international competition. The pole vault has been won by the United States 10 out of 11 times, Gouder of France was the victor in 1906. Earl Meadows gave America the title in 1936 by leaping 14 feet, $3^{1/4}$ inches. This set a new Olympic record. The broad jump has been almost a unanimous American event. The United States has furnished the champion 10 out of 11 times. William Pettersson of Sweden won in 1920 for the only foreign triumph. Jesse Owens captured the event in 1936 to complete his triple crown of victories (100-meter run, 200-meter run, and broad jump). He leaped 26 feet, 5/16 inches to break the previous Olympic mark. The 400-meters relay has been won by the United States five out of six times. Great Britain was victorious in 1912, the first year the race was held, but Americans have won each subsequent year. The 1936 team of Jesse Owens, Ralph Metcalf, Moya Draper, and Frank Wycoff traveled the course in 39.8 seconds for a new record. The high jump has been won by an American nine out of 11 times. Cornelius Johnson triumphed for the United States in 1936, leaping 6 feet, 7/15 inches to set a new record. The 1,600 meters relay has been won by the United States five out of seven times. Great Britain edged out this country in 1936. British runners also were victorious in 1920. We were surprised to learn in examining the records that the United States has won the 16-pound hammer throw six out of nine times. This event has never attained much prominence in America. Karl Hein Thomas, tossing the implement 185 feet, 4/3/16 inches for a new Olympic standard, The discus throw has been won by an American eight out of 11 times. Finland has produced the victor twice and Hungary once. Kenneth Carpenter won for the United States in 1936, establishing a new record at 165 feet. 7 3/8 inches The running hop, step, and jump has been won by the United States only 3 out of 11 times. Japan has captured the championship in the last three Olympics. Naoto Tajima gave the Nipponese their 1936 victory, reaching a new record distance of 52 feet, 9/78 inches. The shot put has been won by this country 9 out of 11 times. The place of 53 feet, 1 1/16 inches was set by Wahoo Hueke of Germany in 1936. Nine members of the mathematics department will attend a mathematical convention at Wichita University today and Saturday. G. W. Smith will present a paper on "Pythagorean Numbers" and Sam Kneale a paper on "Non-Euclidean Planes." 9 Mathematicians Attend Conference Others attending the convention are Gilbert Ulmer, D. H. Erkianlet, Olein Ossen森, Lorin Akers, Kenneth Nicker, Lois Harkleroad, and E. H. Jordan. Thursday's Baseball National League Cincinnati 9, St. Louis 4 Brooklyn 12, Boston 6 Pittsburgh 7, Chicago 1 Philadelphia 11, New York 5 American League: National League: Philadelphia 11, New York 5 American League: Boston 4, Washington 1 New York 2, Philadelphia 1 St. Louis 4, Detroit 3 (10 innings) American Association; American Association: Kansas City 10, St. Paul 3 Minneapolis 11, Milwaukee 8 Toledo 7, Louisville 2 Indianapolis 3, Columbus 2 On March 31 there were 147,070 veterans on Veterans administration disability compensation rolls in Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma. The Kansas baseball squad swept a doubleheader from heavily favored Kansas State by scores of 9-8 and 3-2, before 700 persons at the University diamond Thursday. Jayhawkers Win 9-8,3-2 Games From Aggie Nine The Jayhawkers unleashed their batting power, contributed largely by converted football players, to come from five runs behind and eke out a victory in the first game on Dick Bertuzzi's timely smash in the seventh. Bill "Red" Hogan scored on the single. French Dominates Hitting "Bud" French, another gridder playing his first game with the squad, dominated the batting in the first contest with a triple and a home run in three trips. Kansas State pulled ahead with a five-run splurge in the top of the third, driving Lefty Hammer from the hill. Guy Mabry, a right-hander, relieved and finished with credit for the victory. He started the Kansas 14th with a single, later scoring, and rang up another score in the sixth. Jack Dean went the route for Kansas State and was charged with the loss. Pitchers' Duel In Second The nightcap provided a contrast to the opening slugfest as Dick Gillman of Kansas and Jack Bell hooked up in a tight pitchers' duel. The Jayhawkers garnered only four hits but capitalized on six Wildcat errors, three in the last inning, to pull out a victory. Gilman limited the visitors to six hits. Kansas opened the scoring in the fourth when Lou DeLuna reached first on an error by third baseman Don Chew, advanced on a passed ball, and scored on another misplay by Chew. Thomas Drives Out Homer Keith Thomas singled to lead off the fifth, the ball striking third baseman May in the face on a bad hop. He advanced on a passed ball, and tied it up when French bobbled a difficult catch in short center. Thomas powered a tremendous homer in the seventh to put the Wildcats back in front, but the Jay-hawkers again pulled from behind to chalk up another victory, with two runs on a hit and three errors. Score by innings R. H. E. Kansas State 005 201 0-8 9 4 Kansas 020 042 1-9 10 Dean and Gryskiewkz; Hammer, Mabry (3), and Diehl. R H E. Kansas State ..000 010 2-3...6 6 Kansas State ..000 100 2-3...4 4 Kansas State ..000 100 2-3...4 Bell and Thomas; Gilman and Fink. World War II started with the 1918 Congress when it enacted the bill which raised tariffs and directed us toward economic nationalism, R. M. Davis, law professor, told the American Veterans committee recently "Economic nationalism is the sure road to war," he said. "Every human being is dependent upon every other human being in the world. Even with political control of the British Empire we would not be able to maintain our present standard of living." Commenting on the United Nations, he said the with the 75 million sovereignties in the world we must militarize to just ust as we need economic unity. "If a world constitution is not made, the human race will be blown up with only a remanent remaining hold. We need a back to its preset level." Professionals At the business meeting, Dale Fields and Edward Kelly were nominated to represent the committee on the All Student Council next year. Nominations will be open at the next meeting, and one will be elected. A constitution was also adopted by the group. Attends T-B Meeting Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the University health service, attended an executive committee meeting of the Kansas Tuberculosis and Health association in Kansas City Thursday. RISK'S HELP YOURSELF LAUNDRY Plenty of soft hot water Seven new Maytag machines Hours 9-6 Weekdays 9-4 Saturdays Call 623 for Appointments 1900 Illinois Phone 623 FUN! FUN!! FUN!! that's you--that's you! Tonight and Every Night when you go DINING AND DANCING at the SKYLINE CLUB Phone 3339 2301 Haskell Charles of the Ritz COMPLEXION VEIL Charles A Beauty because of the Base You'll find the secret in the colorful cream. So easy to apply. Tints your complexion to a lovely tone and prepares it for the make-up that follows. Also disguises minor flaws. All skintone shades. New compact jar, at $1 and $2. Plus tax. Cosmetic Dept. Charles of the Ritz COMPLEXION VEIL Charles Weavers UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE FIVE APRL 18,1947 Kansas Loses Tennis Match To Washington The Jayhawker netmen pushed Washington of St. Louis to the limit before dropping a 4-3, non-conference match at the University courts Thursday. The match was not decided until the last match of the day in which Bob Ziervogel and Bob Light edged Ewin Busiek and Dick Richards of Kansas in three sets only a few seconds after Bill Ziervogel and George Hendry had finished a straight set conquest of Roy Shoaf and Harold Miller, the other Kansas doubles team. Roy Shoaf, Kansas number one player, and Bill Ziervogel staged a three-set marathon before the Washington man emerged on the long court of 44 count. Both players lost set point advantages in the second stanza. Erwin "Bitsy" Busiek was the outstanding Kansas player, turning in a 6-1, 6-1 trouncing of his number two ranking opponent and finishing with a last-ditch stand which pulled the Jayhawker doubles duo from behind twice. Washington defeated Kansas 4-3 in an earlier match at St. Louis. The Bakers will travel to Ottawa Mondays with a record of 3 wins, 5 losses. Individual results: Bill Ziervogel (W) over Roy Shaof, 5-7, 11-9, 6-4. Erwin Busiek (K) over Bob Ziervogel, 6-1, 6-1. Dich Richards (K) over Bob Light, 6-3. 9-7. Sam Mazon (K) over Bill Muenz, 6-1, 6-4. George Hendry (W) over Harold Miller, 6-2, 6-2. Bob Ziervogel-Light (W) over Richards-Busick, 6-3, 2-6, 7-5. Bob Ziervogel-Hendry (W) over Shofa-Miller, 9-7, 6-1. The 'Hawk' Rated By California Group Charley Black, Jayhawker basketball star, was named Thursday to the second all-American team of the Helms Athletic foundation of Los Angeles. The Kansas "Hawk" ranked second in Big Six scoring this season, gained all-conference rating on every selection, and was a member of the West all-star team which trimmed the East all-stars last month at Madison Square Garden. With Black on the second team are: Gabor of Syracuse, Shugart of Navy, Hoffman of Purdue, Rocha of Oregon State, Groza of Kentucky, O'Shea of Notre Dame, Wilkinson of Iowa, Humerickhouse of Bradley, and Kraus of Georgetown. Gerald Tucker of Oklahoma, 1947 Big Six scoring champion, was named Player of the Year by the Helms group, and placed on the all-America first team. He is the first conference player to receive this honor. Today's Pitchers (By United Press) (Last year's won and lost records in parenthesis). New York: (Reynolds 11-15) at Washington (Newsom 14-13). American League Boston: (Ferris 25-6) at Philadelphia (Christopher (5-7) Cleveland: (Embrez 8-12) at Detroit Trucks 14-9). St. Louis: (Potter 8-9) at Chicago (Rigney 5-5). Philadelphia; (Judd 11-12) at Boston, (C. Barrett 3-2) Brooklyn: (Lombardi 13-10) at New York (Koslo 14-19). Chicago: (Schmitz 11-11) at St. Louis (Brecheen 15-15). Cincinnati: (Beggs 12-10) at Pittsburg (Bonham 5-18) The United States mint in Philadelphia was established in 1793. Stannard Entered In Hurdles Event The story on Jayhawker entries in the Kansas Relays which appeared in Thursday's Daily Kansan failed to mention that Frank Stannard, star University timber-topper, will compete in the 120-vard high hurdles. Stannard placed third in the 60- yard high hurdles in the Big Six indoor meet at Kansas City this spring. Since the opening of the outdoor season, the blond speedster Jake Hensley gave him both the low and high hurdle title in the 1944 Big Six outdoor meet at Lincoln. Chesney Green and Dexter Welton are other Kansas entries in the 120-yard high barrier event. Coins On Display In Chicago Chicago—(UP)—Coins issued by noted monarchs or commemorating them have been placed on display at Chicago's Museum of Science and Industry. Among the ruler represented in the exhibit are Queen Victoria, Queen Wilhelmia of Holland, Louis Napoleon, Maria Theresa of Austria, Catherine the Great and Emperor Franz Joseph of Austria. 25c For LAUNDRY!! HOW?? Launderette! BRING IN YOUR LAUNDRY. ING IN YOUR LAUNDRY. Put It In a Bendix Washing Machine. DO YOUR SHOPPING. COME BACK FOR YOUR LAUNDRY IN 30 MIN. ECONOMICAL AND EFFICIENT ECONOMICAL and EFFICIENT COST 25c For 10 lbs. SOAP FREE LAUNDERETTE 813 Vt. Phone 3368 AMAZING NEW INK ENDS PEN TROUBLE! 10 tective *solv-x* to every drop of Quink, Parker scientist develops a new type ink that actually stops pen troubles before they start! By adding pro- 1. Ends gumming. clogging. Gives quick starting. even flow. Parker Quink with *solv-x* protects all makes of pens these 4 ways: 4. Prevents metal corrosion, rubber rot caused by high acid inks. 2. Actually cleans a pen as it writes — keeps it out of the repair shop. 3 Dissolves and Nushes away sediment left by ordinary narks. Quink PARKER Quink Furniture glue Premium Bake Block GET PARKER QUINK TODAY STUDENT BOOK STORE Union Building 25¢ To Speak At French Club PARKER QUINK Gerald Davis, architecture instructor, will speak in French to the Cercle Francais at its meeting at 4 p.m. Wednesday in room 113, Frank Strong hall. He will tell his experiences in France as a painter. Oklahoma was purchased by the U.S. from Seminole Indians in 1889. De LUXE CAFE 28 YEARS OF SERVICE Read the Daily Kensan daily. Same Location-Same Management You are welcome 711 Mass. Olympic The only Radio with Tru-Base Olympic The only Radio with Tru-Base 55 60 70 80 90 Introductory Sale THE FACTORY has authorized us to allow $25.00 for your old radio on this wonderful combination. 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WALLACE BEERY The Mighty McJurk Edward Arnold Dean Stockwell Also: Latest World News and "March of Time" PATEE NOW—ENDS SATURDAY An OLD "GREAT ONE" You Will Enjoy Great Cast... Great Story... RONALD COLMAN Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. MADELINE CARROLL "The Prisoner of Zenda" COMING SUNDAY "Kings Row" "Wild Bill Hickock Rides" VARSITY Today, Ends Sat. "BACHELOR'S DAUGHTERS $ ^ { \cdot } $ "LAW OF THE CANYON" SUNDAY—3 DAYS TODAY—ENDS SATURDAY "MICHAEL SHAYNE" At His Best "3 On A Ticket" AND BILL BOYD HOPALONG CASSIDY "Fool's Gold" 0 PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRL 18, 1947 The Wayward Bus OMNIBUS LABOR BILL WHITE HOUSE HERBELSON THE WASHINGTON Kansan Comments . Stopping Strikes By Legislation Last year there were more than 5,000 strikes in America. Today many congressmen seem to think they can legislate away future strikes. Labor legislation now being debated in congress is largely negative and lacking in positive elements that go to the roots of our labor-management troubles. Here are some of the most important parts of the house of representatives' Labor-Management Bill of 1947: The closed shop is outlawed. The President is given the power to issue injunctions to prevent or halt strikes involving the public health and safety. Industry-wide bargaining is outlawed. Jurisdictional strikes are outlawed. Sympathy strikes are outlawed. Mass picketing is outlawed. Contributions of employers to union health and welfare funds are outlawed. Foremen are barred from unionizing. Representative Hartley (R-N. J.), chairman of the house labor committee, has described the bill as "Labor's bill of rights." The A. F. of L. has replied that it is "the first step toward fascism." The C. I. O. has said that the bill, if passed in its present form, will "set the cause of labor back 50 years." Even by considering personal prejudices, there is something wrong with a bill that calls forth such widely divergent opinions. A member of the house labor committee has been quoted as saying the bill was purposely made overrestrictive to provide bargaining points for compromising with the senate. The senate bill, though restrictive, seems less so. This implies a lack of endeavor to write a really sound bill but instead an effort to throw in every possible restriction solely for bargaining purposes. It is apparent to everyone that some new labor-management legislation is needed. But the trend now seems to be from one extreme to the other—from a lack of proper legislation to legislation that is excessively restrictive. Such laws would accomplish little and only provide a breeding ground for further labor strife. One reason for our recurring waves of strikes is that labor and economic policies have too often been considered separately. The two are unalterably bound together. They must be so considered or we will never find a working solution to the dilemma of labor-management relations that has faced the country for so long. Our major domestic problem today is to arrive at industrial peace and develop a sound economy that will benefit our entire society. Ill-considered labor legislation may well cause the opposite result. Buehler Tells How To Stop Stage Fright A recent news item states that military officials learned through a survey that there are too many sergeants in the U.S. army. Any buck private could have told them that. The University Daily Kansan Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Association, Associated Collegiate Press, Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service Dickson Ave. New York, NY 10024 "I pick out the sourest, meensest looking man in the audience and imagine that he is sitting there with only his red flannel underwear on." Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS That is the method used by E. C Buehler, professor of speech to overcome stage fright, he told the Forensic league Thursday. Managing Editor Editor in Chief Assst. Man Editor City Editor Telegraph Editor Art Editor Manager Advertising Manage Circulation Manage Classified Ads Manage Promotion Manager eense league he Marietta Rettig, College junior, led a discussion on "Butterflies in the Stomach." Marcella Stewart LeMoyne Frederick William T. Smiljr William T. Smiljr Wallace W. Abbey Marion Minor Eloise John D. Cornish Calvin Arnold Thomas S. Cadden Joan Fraser R. Schultheis William K. Brook Guest speakers of the evening were Mrs. Claes G. M. Rende of Sweden, and Aldo Aliotti of Italy. Admires American Confidence Mrs. Rende, who has been in the United States only a few months, told the league that speech training is not a part of Swedish education, and that she admired the self-confidence of American speakers. Mr. Aliotti, a former Italian soldier who was captured by the German army, said that the pictures he had seen of the Texas City disaster reminded him of bombing raids he had experienced. The Kansas Press Association 1947 Member National Editorial Association A FREE PRESS—YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW Other speakers were William Tincher, Engel Ninger, Ernest Friesen and Hal Friesen. Blames Power Politics Tincher told the group that the United Nations was a weak and inefficient organization because of the power politics practiced by the United States, Russia, and Great Britain. Friessen discussed the nationalization of industry in Great Britain and said that political competition had replaced individual competition. He blamed Britain's present chaotic condition on the lack of employer-employee relations Nininger reviewed the life and idealisms of the late Thomas Wolfe, American author. KFKU Lauds Kansas Women "Beauty Goes With These," spotlighting contributions women have made in the nature life of Kansas, was presented over KFKU Thursday night. This was the second in a series of 12 weekly programs on Kansas women. Allen D. Smith, College junior, narrated the program, and Betty A. Hills, College junior, read the poetry. Mrs. Zula Bennington Greene, "Peggy of the Flint Hills," Topeka Capital columnist, and Mrs. Fred West, Kansas City Star feature writer, helped write the script for the program. Local script writers for the series include Mrs. Jessica Crafton, Helen Rhoda Hoopes, Mrs. J. W. Murray, and Mildred Seaman, program director of KFKU. Chinese Educator To Address Group The Rev. Freeman C. Havighurst, who received his master of arts here in 1916 recommended Dr. Ding, Reverend Havighurst preceded Dr. Ding as president of Angio-Chinese college. Dr. James Ding, president of Anglo-Chinese college, Foochow, China, will speak to the Wesley Foundation at the First Methodist church at 6:30 p.m. Sunday. His subject will be "China, the Open Door." "This speech will give us a view of China today from the Chinese standpoint," Dr. Edwin Price, Methodist pastor for students, said. 3-day Cleaning Service - . 4-day Laundry Service C 24-hour Shoe Repair C - Leather and Garment Dyeing a Specialty. Village Cleaners SUNFLOWER, KANSAS SUNFLOWER, KANSAS Opposite School Western Union—8 a.m.-9 p.m. Shoemaker's Lecture Printed In Magazine A lecture by Dr. W. H. Shoemaker, chairman of the romance languages department, has been published in a recent issue of the Southwestern Social Science quarterly. The lectures, entitled "Our Relations with Latin America," was given here as one in a series of lectures on "America at Peace." "This article is the only contribution published during the year by someone other than a social scientist," said Dr. E. P. Allen, director of the University government research bureau, and associate editor of the quarterly. Dr. Shoemaker's lecture outlined the history of our relations with our hemispheric neighbors. 25 25¢ Shaves YOU for 3 months! Marlin HIGH SPEED BLADES GUARANTEED BY THE MARLIN FIREARMS CO. Fine Gun. Since 1870 Light intensity affects vitamin C content in tomatoes. Lindley's Kansas Cleaners Quality Cleaning at Reasonable-Prices MEN'S SUITS— 12 E. 8th LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES— Cleaned and Pressed ... 65c Cleaned and Pressed ... 69c Cash and Carry Only ARE YOU LOOKING FOR GOOD... SERVICE? Darl Features- For All Automotive Service Stop At Expert Lubrication Tire and Battery Service Your car vacuum-cleaned Darl's Standard Service Dinner At THE TEPEE 23rd and La. Remember—Sunday Evening TALKING ON THE HORSEBACK You will enjoy the appetizing Barbecued Dinners and Barbecued Sandwiches OPEN SUNDAYS 11:30 a.m.-11:00 p.m. Remember Sunday Eve.-The Tepee For A Delicious DINNER Or Just A COKE DATE THIS IS THE SPOT! OPEN DAILY 11 A.M. Plenty of Parking Space CURB SERVICE SUNDAY From 2 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. WEEKDAYS From 4 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. Steak Dinners 5-7:30 Sunday 11-2:30 CHATEAU Drive-In Mass. at 18th St. APRL 18, 1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Classified Advertising For Sale ONE PERFEX camera. Equipped with a GPS, digital camera and one foot- carrying case. 3-3 anastigmatic plane plane shutter with speeds of 1/25 to 1/80 fps on film. See at 18 Mass. St. Phone 2001. RECEIVED limited shipment of new typewriter writers. First come first service also have one used upright for interested party. Art Ruppelt, Vermont. -18- For Rent FOR Sale. 1937 Harley-Davidson motor- er. interested contact Jim Huron 1252 Tenn. BNISHED double apartment a b o u l unfinished or unfurnished house or apartment in Kansas City. Kans., or suburbs as far as Overland Park. Martin, 1528 Found FOUND: Organized house pin. Greek letters Omega Psl Phi. Owner may have by identifying and paying for this at the Kansan office. 21 Lost LOST: Field jacket in 201 Bailey. Has loose pants. If found please含 2835W. Bear. LOST: Book entitled "Only Yesterday," by Allen. Please return to Kansan office. LOST: Bulova watch without the crystal and strap, near Haworth hall, just before Easter vacation. Reward. Contact the Kansan office. 21 STAINLESS steel watch with spring band. "Exim" brand. Lost in University swimming pool. Reward! Wilbur Koehn, 1121 Teen. Pho. 1996-J-18 Miscellaneous WILL the person who picked up my light tan raincoat in the second floor Union cafeteria Tuesday morning please notify T.J.Tef勒. 601 Fraser. -18- Wanted THE VITA CRAFT company has openings for men who are interested in making a career as a cook. The future. The product is quality aluminum cookware. Qualified men interested in sales personnel work can begin on a part time basis now and earn from $100 to $350 per week, in the course of study. Upon graduation these men will be considered for key positions as chefs or kitchen staff. Deregrades can qualify for lucrative summer work in their home areas. Write Ha Craft, Company, 4125 Penn, Kansas City, KS. Fill in your name at Dz Kansan Business Office. NOTYPE OPERATOR needed by University Daily Kansan, 2 hours daily, late afternoon or evening. See Mr. Ryther Journalism building. Business Services RADIO Service. Home and car radios. 23 Radios and GPS service. Tubes tested free. 604 Hercules Road (New Village) Sunflower Kans. 23 FREE OFFER-Copies of Discharges and fees for the price of 2.5 Low prices, fast service. Round Conner Drug Co. 801 Mass. TENNIS Rockets restrung and repaired. Silk, nylon, or gut. Priced accordingly. $1.50 to $10. Phone 2711-W. Ed. Wellhausen, 1454 Kentucky. -21- Transportation RIDE to and from Kansas City, Mo. Arrive in Lawrence 9:00 a.m. Leave some afternoons any time after 4:00 p.m. Other days 5:30 p.m. Call Westport 5118. 18 College Men Welcome SIMPLER SHAVING! World's Most Modern Razor Wins New Friends Every Day Mystic, Comm. On every campus in America where it's been tried, the new simpler method of shaving is winning men over. The new Enders Razor gives the world's simplest shave. 1 Safer, swifter, smoother shaves are assured by the Enders with its amazingly simple construction. It's all one piece—no mechanics, no gadgets! All you do is click the blade in and shave. Furthermore it doesn't clog, it's easy to clean and stays clean. Blades are sharp and long enough to cut through your right into your hand. Just try it. Your campus store has the new Enders at a special introductory price. You'll like enders simpler shaving. SPECIAL OFFER... RAZOR AND 5 BLADES...49¢ MISSES' SHOP COTTON DRESSES in Sizes for Juniors, Misses and Women Sizes 9 to 20 A. No. 217 Washable rayon shantung. Melon, A. No. 217 Washable rayon shantung. Melon, gold, lime, grey, aqua. 38 to 44 ... $17.95 B. No. 223. Washable rayon seersuckle; blue, red, green or brown checked pattern. 36 to 40 $10.95 C. No. 230. Two-tone chambray, Grey and pink, yellow and blue, aqua and yellow. 10 to 18 $10.95 D. No. 2308 Men's shirting fabric coat dress in black, grey or blue. Sizes 12 to 18. $15.00 E. No. 3805. Two-piece striped chambray in junior sizes 9 to 15. Blue, gray or pink. $14.95 F. No.2952. Two-piece chambray in solid tones of brown, green, grey, yellow, and blue. 12 to 20. $16.95 G. No. 3808, Checkered gingham; white eyelet pockets and yoke. Black or brown checks. 9-15. $15.00 H. No. 210. Striped cotton seer- sucker; drop pearl buttons. Black, brown, aqua, gold. 10-18 $12.95 J. No. 208. Seersucker golf dress; pique yoke. Black, brown, yellow, aqua, grey. 12 to 20. $14.95 I. No. 406. Two-piece cotton seer-sucker. Piquel collar and cuffs. Brown, blue, pink, green, aqua. 9-15 $15.00 K. No. 417. Two-piece raynon plaid severser, grosgrain trim. Brown, green, red, blue. 9 to 15...$10.95 L. No. 3802. Solid color chambray in aqua, pink, blue or gold. 9 to 15 $14.95 See these—and dozens See these—and dozens of other styles tomorrow The Palace 343 MASS. . UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRL 18,1947 PAGE EIGHT Clapper Receives Merit Award From Alumni Raymond Clapper, late great United Press correspondent and a University journalism graduate, has been given the first posthumous award of merit presented by the alumni association. autumn. Edward was presented Tuesday to his widow, Mrs. Olive Ewing Clapper, in Washington, D.C., by the alumni chapter there. The citation accompanying the award began "For the strength of mind and character he exercised in想着 to a position as one of the world's most trustworthy reporters and interpreters of contemporary events. . ." and described the highlights of his career. rights of his high mission was to give his millions of readers and hearers a fair and thorough view of the democracy and the dangers its faced within and without. He gave his life in the performance of duty at the battlefront," the citation read. The award of merit of the University, similar to an honorary degree, was started in 1941. Since then more than 50 alumni of the University have received the honor. city have received. Clapton was graduated from the University in 1917. He was killed while serving as a foreign correspondent in the South Pacific. Before Queen he was chief of the Washington bureau of the United Press. 55 Poems Entered For Carruth Prize Fifty-five manuscripts, more than twice the number entered last year, have been submitted for the 1947 William Herbert Carruth Memorial poetry contest. Between 15 and 20 of the manuscripts will be selected for final judging, said John E. Hankins, professor of English and chairman of the committee. Preliminary judges are Ray West, associate professor of English, and Hannah Amini, John Tye, instructors. Final judging to determine the contest winners will be done by Professor Hankins, Erewster Ghiseleen, poet and professor of English at the University of Utah, and Madeleine Aaaron. University alumna from Wichita. Prizes of $50, $25, and $15 will be awarded the first three winners, while those rating honorable mention will get a volume of poems. Professor Harkins said that the winners will be announced late in May. Clee Club Leaves For Kansas Tour Members of the women's glee club will leave Monday morning on a two-day tour of eastern Kansas. Earl Irene Peabody is director of the 65-voice group. They will present concerts at high schools in Leavenworth, Turner, and Bonner Sorings on Monday, and in Ottawa, Paola, and Osawatonie on Tuesday. New numbers have been added to the concert program which was presented here Wednesday night, including soloist Mary Lou Mathews and a quartet composed of Mildred A. Houve, Sylvia Stephens, Betty Folls, and Peggy Moyer. A selection of popular numbers to presented has been arranged by Mrs. Thelma Lehman Bass. Marjean Carr is the glee club accompanist. Wallace To Open Campaign For World Solidarity Tonight Stackholm—(UP)—Henry A. Wallace will open his continental campion for world solidarity tonight at a rally sponsored by Socialist-Cooperative leaders and the Swedish United Nations association. 1946 Jayhawkers Available Monday Copies of the 1946 Jayhawker magazine will be on sale Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday in Frank Strong hall. Students who wish copies of last year's magazine may obtain them at 25 cents an issue. Minister To Speak In Union Monday The Rev. Winburn Thomas, who has worked with student and social organizations in Asia and Europe for more than seven years, will speak at 4 p. m. Monday in the English room of the Union. Sponsored by the YM and WYCA he will describe youth work in China and Japan. He worked in Japan for seven years before the outbreak of war on student problems. He also traveled in China and Korea. Since the war's end, the Rev. Mr. Thomas, as chairman of the International Student Service Commission, visited 19 universities in the four zones of Germany. Due to the report of this commission, the World Student Relief association is giving material aid to German students. In the summer and autumn of 1946, he met the Russians in Poland, Czechoslovakia, and Germany. The Rev. Mr. Thomas is chairman of the executive committee of the United Student Christian council, which is the American section of the World Student Christian Federation. This association coordinates student work of the YMCA, YWCA, and 13 Protestant church organizations. Four To Teach Sales Courses Next Week Four members of the University teaching staff will give instruction in salesmanship for employees and employers on a tour of several small Kansas towns next week. Sponsored by the University exe- sion division, the group will speak at Marysville, Sabetha, Hiawatha, and Holton during the week beginning April 21 and ending April 25. Nelson C. Shafer, Jr., instructor in retail marketing, will instruct in counter and specialty selling, and Gerald Pearson, director of the bureau of extension classes, will discuss the power of the voice in selling. Elmer Beth, professor of journalism, and John R. Malone, instructor in advertising, will teach advertising. The program is designed to stimulate interest in selling and to instruct salesmen in sales tactics and promotion. A refresher course in obstetrics and gynecology will be held at the University Monday through Thursday for all Kansas doctors. To Offer Doctors Refresher Course The course will be the second refresher study for Kansas doctors presented this month. Last week a similar course in general surgery was presented by the University. Intended primarily for those doctors who have recently returned from military service and those who have remained in active practice during the war, the course will be presented by the University in cooperation with the Kansas Medical society and the state board of health. Eleven faculty members of the University School of Medicine and four guest instructors will teach the courses. Alien To Discuss City Manager Plan The city manager form of government will be discussed in a 15-minute radio-broadcast over KFKU by Dr. Ethan P. Allen, chairman of the political science department, at 9:45 pm. Friday. Big Crowd Sees Whites Win In Last Scrimmage The Whites defeated the Reds 13-12 in the final spring football workout Thursday. The Whites scored the first touchdown soon after the game started. Frank Patee covered 25 yards taking the ball from the 50 to the Red 25. He alternated with Moffit in carrying the ball to the Red 8. From this point Scott. White quarterback, threw a short pass to McDonald who stepped over the goal Scott's try for the extra point was blocked. Foster Runs 50 Yards Foster provided the fans with the longest run of the game when he carried the ball from the Red 35 to the White 15, a total of 50 yards. Evans carried around his own left end to the 6, but the White line stiffened and Marvin Small threw Mester back to the White 35 on the next play. The Reds lost the ball on downs. Scott let Bray's center get past him and the ball rolled into the end zone. Johnson recovered the ball after it had squeezed out of a pile-up. Evans attempted the extra point, but his kick was no good. Once again Scott passed the White team into the lead. The former Kilgore (Texas) Junior college star threw to Moffit for 15 to put the ball on the Red 30. Two running plays went for nothing, but Scott outfaked two tacklers and hit McDonald with a pass to the flat. The shifty McDonald reversed his field and scored without being touched. Scott converted for the Whites and they led 13-6. Evans Scores For Reds Foster, Baker, and Evans made some good gains for the Reds and Mester hit Baker with a pass good for 15 yards to place the ball on the White 19. Evans went around his teammate and took touchdown. Evans failed to convert and both starting teams were replaced, the Whites leading 13-12. For the next half hour the game was one of strong defenses. Neither team was able to dent the opponent's line for any scoring threats, but Arnold Strickler peeled off a 25 yard jaint for the White team just before Coach Sauer halted proceedings for the spring. WURLITZER PHONOGRAPHS FOR PARTY RENTALS Used Juke Box Records For Sale John H. Emick 1014 Mass. Phone 343 THE NEW YORKER We have equipment for all of the SPRING INTRAMURALS Team Managers Baseball equipment Softball equipment Golf equipment Tennis equipment Horseshoes KIRKPATRICK Sport Shop 715 Mass. IT'S A HIT! With OBER'S Athletic Goods Golf- Golf Bags Golf Clubs Golf Balls Tennis— Softball Gloves, $5.00 up Balls Bats Racquets $7.00 up Completely strung Nylon and Gut Racquet Restringing Baseball--- Gloves, $5.00 up Balls Bats Wilson & Spaulding Ober's in the Forest Air Park Lost Something? Try a University Daily Kansan Wont Ad K.U. Jayhawk Novelties Pennants Pillows Tie Clasps Decals Stickers Pins Lockets Post Cards Watch Bands T Shirts Jackets Stationery Charms Compacts Lighters Ash Trays Bracelets Key Chains K. U. Songbooks STORE NO 1 Rowlands Book Store 1401 Ohio St. "Where Students Go" Rowlands STORE NO. 2. Rowlands Annex 1237 Oread Ave. Two Book Stores Lawrence, Kansas University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Monday, April 21, 1947 44th Year No.123 Admiral Finlay Pushes Probe Of Texas Blast Galveston—(UP)—Read Admiral Gordon T. Finlay, conducting the hearing into the Texas City disaster, promised that "one of the most important witnesses" of the entire investigation would appear before the federal board today. The admiral was displeased with the present pace of the proceeding. He indicated this following the argument Saturday between John R. Brown of Houston, attorney for Lykes Bros., and Edwin Longscope of New York, representing the French government. The flare-up occurred after Brown questioned L. D. Boswell, a long-shoeeman goreman who was aboard the Grand Camp before the explosion which rined the Texas City waterfront. The questioning concerned smoking regulations aboard the ship. The investigation thus far has revealed: One. Smoking regulations aboard the Grand Camp were lax and at least some personnel were not aware that the ship was carrying ammonium nitrate. Two. Some doubt has arisen as to the manner in which the ship's officers conducted firefighting. The fire was discovered one hour before the explosion. Three. The ammonium nitrate was consigned by three midwestern ordinance plants to the French supply council, an agency of the French government. Army Capt. John D. Lutz, an official representative of the secretary of war and the army-navy munitions board, said he planned to state that "pure carelessness" was the primary cause of the disaster. Forty-five freshmen in the University R. O. T. C. will embark on an 8 week practice cruise aboard the battleship U. S. S. Iowa this summer. The midshipmen will arrive at San Francisco from K. U. on June 22 and will embark aboard the U. S. S. Iowa on June 28 returning to San Francisco on August 22. ROTC Freshmen To Take Cruise Travel expenses will be allowed the men while they are traveling to and from San Francisco. Upon return you receive a one month leave with pay. Aboard ship the men will hold the status of midshipmen, U. S. N. R., and will receive full pay. Continuing with scholastic work in navigation, seamanship, and other naval subjects, the midshipmen will also take part in all ship-board drills. The midshinmen will be given liberty time in Canadian, Hawaii Islan, and West Coast ports. Geltch To Give Recital Prof. Walde玛 Gelfith, of the School of Fine Arts, left Friday for John B. Stetson university at DeLand, Fla. Tuesday evening he will present a violin recital for faculty and students of the school. To Keep Dorm Room, Contract By Wednesday All women who wish to retain rooms in University dormitories must have their contacts in the dean of women's office by noon Wednesday, Dean Margaret Habein announced today. Any room not contracted for by this time will be reserved for new students entering K.U. next fall. Little Man On Campus By Bibier BUS STOP Carlson Attacks Democrat Spending Kansas City, Mo. — (UP) — Gov. Frank Carlson of Kansas today described the Democratic party's policy as "trying to bully our way through domestic and international troubles with dollars." Speaking at a meeting here of the Republican National committee, Carlson asserted. "Inside our nation, this Democrat policy has caused great masses of people to look to government and politics for their welfare. Outside our country, this Democrat policy has made whole nations dependent upon the credit of the United States." The Kansas governor declared the U. S. treasury is not the "world's honeypot, although the political entrepreneurs of other nations and of our own city machines may think so." A workshop for rural and city elementary school teachers, to be hold June 12-25, is being sponsored by the University School of Education. A part of the summer session, the two-week course will offer two hours of optional senior or graduate credit. Carlson predicted national ruin if this country does not "deny ourselves the momentary gains of subsidies and handouts." He said, "Lenin, godfather of communism, predicted that the United States would spend itself to destruction. The Democratic policy of spending American dollars to meet the threat of the communist words appears to be a losing battle, since words are so easily coined." Fred Ellsworth, executive secretary of the University alumni association, attended the meeting. He is on a tour of eastern cities, reorganizing alumni clubs. Thornton McClanahan, '44, was elected chairman of the University of Kansas alumni association in Washington D.C., at a recent meeting of the group. Mrs. Milton Dye, a student in 1920, and Miss Helen Kinney, '33, were elected to other offices. Kansas Teachers To Learn Latest Teaching Methods Alumni Association Elects McClanahan Chairman Marshall Invited To NIUN Conference George C. Marshall, secretary of state, has been invited to attend the National Intercollegiate United Nations association conference at the University on November 17 by the central executive committee of tme Universities of Kansas and Missouri. James F. Byrnes, former secretary, has already accepted an invitation to address the 2,000 delegates who are expedite from universities and colleges in the country. Invitations to the conference. one of the largest ever held, have been refused to students in colleges in foreign countries because of housing difficulties, Gene Moore, national chairman, said. ASC Debate Kills Move To Vote On Memorial Drive, Campanile Would Be Built Regardless of Decision, Werner Says A move to allow the students to vote in the spring election on the current plans for a war memorial was smothered at a special meeting of the All Student council Friday. Short tempers and caustic remarks flared up at the meeting. Rare editions, paintings, statues, samples of information, and craft-work will be displayed by the Spanish department during the Cervantes day celebration Saturday. The display to be held in 117, 119, and 113 Frank Strong hall, is in charge of Miss Agnes Brady, associate professor of romance languages. Cervantes Day To Be Observed Books, pamphlets, and maps of Latin America published and distributed by the Office of Co-ordinator of Inter-American Affairs and the U. S. Office of Education will be shown. Most of the exhibits were secured by Miss Brady, who worked with the Office of Co-ordinator of Inter-American Affairs during the war. Rare editions of "Don Quijote" the rare by Cervantes, and reproductions of paintings and etchings of Don Quijote will be shown. Several statues of the Don, including one carved of wood from Mexico, will be on display. Lengthy debate was held on the Memorial vote question, with some edge going to the opponents, when some candid comment and advice were offered by Henry Warner don Miss Brady Got Them A collection of children's beeks from Latin America will share display space with newspapers and magazines from Spain and various countries of Latin America. 200-Year Old Dolls Shackrats Will Fete Zilch, Sage Of Lower Burpovia A set of dolls in Spanish conquistador costume which were made by hand 200 years ago in Bolivia will be shown with other antique dolls and samples of handicraft. J. M. Osma, professor of romance languages, will demonstrate the Spanish recordings which are used in University Spanish laboratory system. His most important discovery solved a problem that had baffled leading scientists for years. Zilch came through. He discovered what makes the light go off in the refrigerator. And It Works. Too As an inventor he had perfec ted a cigarette lighter that has withstood By ELMER A. ZILCH The eminent journalist, Elmer A. Zilch, will arrive on the campus Wednesday. Shackrats (journalism students) will gather in the Kansas room at 6 p.m. Wednesday to honor this great type louse. Zilch is coming! Mr. Zilch comes straight from his Mr. Zilch comes straight from his prohibitionless haven of Lower Burpovia. Having been graduated from the class of '42 (1842, that is), Mr. Zilch visits his alma mater this time each spring. But not only is Mr. Zilch an author He's a discoverer, inventor, and connoisseur, mostly a connoisseur. He has put the University on the map with his superb journalistic accomplishments. He's the man whose best seller, "The Life and Loves of the Type Louse," has the country laughing and scratching. It's A Lousy Book nearly a million tests without failing once. It weighs only two tons. As a connoisseur, Mr. Zilch's taste runs to Scotch. For ten consecutive years he has been named by the W. C.T.U. as the "Man We'd Most Like to See Die of Thirst." His imbibing tendencies date back to his childhood, when he was able to say "beer" before he learned "mama." With the advent of the 18th amendment, Mr. Zilch decided to found a new country in protest. He took a bevy of blondes, 60 carloads of beer, and a distillery to a place he named "Lower Burpovia." In a wire received Friday by the department of journalism, Mr. Zilch said, "I'm coming. I'm coming. For my head is bending low. And may I survive another drought in the citadel of prohibition." Roll Out The Barrel - was offered by Henry Werner, dean * of student affairs. Memorial Will Be Built "The War Memorial, as I understand it, is going to be constructed. It is going to be built and carried through regardless of what is said by this body or by the student body," he said. Speaking of potential effects of a vote, he said, "Whether it goes positive or negative is bringing up questions which are of no import and are no longer moot. You would be subjecting yourself to ridicule." What students vote on the question of admitting Oklahoma A. and M. into the Big Six may have a decided effect on the final decision of the administration, he said. **Agiee Question Is Live** "The issue is a live one. No student will say that this is voting on a dead issue," he explained. The Council decided to put on the student ballot any party polling 5 per cent of the voters, or showing paid membership of 5 per cent of the students, by the submission of dues stubs, was reached. Opponents preferred that party status be determined by petition. The question was raised in reference to the status of the new campus political party, the League of Student Voters. Observers did not be adversely affected by the would be adversely affected by the ruling. Request Election Roll: A request for a non-partisan rally the day of the elections was passed and referred to the administration, and a committee investigating student wages was granted authority to continue its inquiry. Request Election Rally The sponsors of the move for a student vote on the Memorial driveway campanile said that students have to express themselves on the matter. They were told that student-elected council members, representing student opinion, had approved the plan, and that an entire year had been devoted to canvassing student opinion and veteran opinion before the plan had been adopted. Students Contribute Small Part Opponents answered that student voters had not elected candidates who had made the question an issue. Howard Engleman, A.S.C. president, said that students are giving them the fund total, and that the other 19-20hs have the right to say what is done. "Why not submit the Rev. Mr. Green's opinions to a student vote?" asked Bruce Bathurst, College sophomore. Stephenson To Speak To Chemical Engineers The student section of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers will meet in the Pine room at 7:30 p.m. Jessica Rosso Blair McGrew, president, said today. Dr. Eugene Stephenson, of the petroleum engineering department, will speak on "The Duties and Responsibilities of a Technical Witness." Dr. Stephenson has appeared as such a witness at numerous hearings over the country, McGrew said. WEATHER Kansas—Partly cloudy today and tonight, with scattered showers west today and in east tonight. Tuesday fair, cooler extreme northwest and warmer extreme northeast. Tenight cooler west half. Low temperatures 35 to 45 tonight. Tuesday cooler east. - UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 21,1947 PAGE TWO Official Bulletin April 21.1947 Independent Women's Senate, 7 tonight in Memorial Union. A. S. C. candidates must attend. All A. S. C. candidates from all parties are to meet at 4 p.m. today in the Little Theater, Green hall. Meeting will also be held at 5 for those unable to come at 4. The Sig Ep Wives will meet at 7 tonight with Mrs. Dean Gibson, 1045 Kentucky, apartment 5. Physical Therapy club meeting at 7:30 tonight in the hospital classroom Miss Margaret Anderson of speech department will talk on speech therapy. League of Student Voters, 4 p.m today, 104 Green hall. Progressive party precinct, socia and investigating committees will meet at 4 p.m. today in 116 Frank Strong. Tau Beta Pi, 7 p.m. tomorrow, 210 Marvin. Full attendance needed. United Women's council, 5 p.m. tomorrow, Fine room. All-Student Council members peace pact dinner at 6 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas room, Union building. Jewish Student Union, 5 p.m. to- morrow, Myers hall. Pre-Nursing club at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Fraser dining room. Guest speaker. Public Relations committee of Union Activities will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the East room of the Union. Attendance required. Reshments. The student court will meet at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Green hall. The following students are requested to appear: George Waugh, Leonard Sparks, Jr., Norman Eberhart, Fredrick Kiewtit, George Wootten, Charlene W. Hall and T. Herriot, Lawrence Syvansen Oliver Samuel. Home economics majors, required meeting. 4 p.m., Wednesday, 110 Fraser. Interested non-majors invited Student - Faculty Council in tone economics will be organized. * * * Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship at 7 p.m. tomorrow in Barlow tapel of Myers hall. Bob Koenig will lead the Bible study. Mr. William Sommerville of Lawrence will speak. The Business School Association announces the election of officers or the 1947-48 school year on Business School Day, May 9. Petitions or nominations may be obtained from the Business School office and must be filed with that office by April 26. - * * All students who expect to attend the summer session or return for the fall semester should sign up in the Registrar's office according to the following schedule: Today, S; Tuesday, T-Z; Wednesday, all those who could not come in their scheduled days. University To Give Teachers Two Week Summer Course Two-Week Summer Course An intensive two-week course for teachers unable to attend summer school will be held June 12-25 at liberty Memorial high school. The course is part of the Kansas association for Childhood education program. It is designed to inform teachers of the latest teaching methods. Subject to be covered include arts and crafts, arithmetic social studies, language, arts, music, reading, speech, guidance and special work in aviation materials. The University will furnish housing for the teachers in dormitories. University Daily Kansan University Daily Kansan fall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a month (excludes booklets). Publishers in Lawrence Kan, every afternoon during the school year except atdays and Sundays. University holidays, and examination periods. Entered as the Office on September 17, 1930, at the hot office at Lawrence Kan, under the of March 3, 1879. Why Relax? Summer School Can Offer Concerts, Sports, Dances Why relax and bask in the sun this summer? Go to summer school! You didn't want to go on that trip anyway. Why not trade it in on a summer session? Even if this doesn't look so good right now to the student catching his breath as finals loom ahead, the prospect may seem better by June 23, opening date of the 1947 summer session at the University. 3.000 Expected There were 2,964 students enrolled in the 1946 summer session. At least that number is expected this year. Living accommodations for the session are plentiful. All University houses and dormitories will be open. A full social program of informal dances, sports, concerts and lectures has been planned. ML Session. James K. Hitt, registrar, has announced that the summer session has been designed to meet the needs of: ONE. The veteran who wants to get through college quickly. TWO. Teachers and superintendents of schools who want professional improvement. THREE. Teachers who want emergency certificates. FOUR. College students who wish to accelerate their educational programs. FIVE. Graduates doing advanced study. Maximum credit which can be earned during the eight-week term is eight semester hours. If you think eight hours would look well when placed in the right divisions, or rounding out some extra hours, better apply at once. All qualified students who apply will be accepted. Dr. Clark Speaks On Druggist Needs Dr. Ralph Clark, professor in the School of Pharmacy, discussed the role of the pharmacist in the small town at a Rotary club meeting in Burlingame recently. Dr. Clark was asked to speak by J. G. Thews, a graduate of the School of Pharmacy in 1910 and now a druggist in Burlingame. The part a pharmacist plays in the health service of a community was emphasized by Dr. Clark. He also said that the druggist must have a good foundation of knowledge to meet the many community needs and problem, and for flexibility. New Library Books Non-fiction highlight: "Behind Soviet Power" by Jerome Davis is one of the newer studies of the why's and how's of Soviet diplomacy. The work has been recommended by Joseph E. Davies, former ambassador to Moscow, as being an accurate report. Fiction highlight: "B. F.'s Daughter" by J. P. Marquand is another novel of the "Late George Apley" and "H. M. Pulham, Esq." type, but this one has a woman as the main character. Other new books: Louis Adamic, "Dinner at the White House"; C. A. Bread, "American Foreign Policy in the Making"; John Dewey, "Problems of Men"; P.F. Drucker, "Concept of the Corporation"; W. S. Haas, "Iran"; A. L. Huxley, "Science, Liberty and Peace"; Prince Hubertus Loewenstein, "The Germans in History"; C. S. Macafaland, "Pioneers for Peace through Religion"; Fremont Rider, "The Great Dilemma of World Organization"; Elliott Roosevelt, "As He Saw It"; Ellery Sedgwick, "The Happy Profession". 4-day Laundry Service 3-day Cleaning Service 24-hour Shoe Repair Leather and Garment Dyeing a Specialty. 40 24-hour Shoe Repair 20 . Village Cleaners SUNFLOWER, KANSAS Students May Work In Army Hospitals Opposite School Western Union—8 a.m.-9 p.m. Free PickUp and Delivery Phone 9009 Legislation has passed the senate establishing a permanent army nurse corps to include dietitians, physical therapists, and occupational therapists as well as registered nurses. "This bill is important to the profession in that it gives us recognition." Miss Nancie Greenman, assistant professor of design and chairman of the University occupational therapy department, said. A proposal to allow occupational therapy students to practice in army hospitals has been authorized. Students will spend between four and eight months at the hospital duffing their final year of training. They will not be classed as government emplores. At present University occupational therapy students spend their last 12 months of training in a civilian hospital. During the last 10 weeks 19,156 veterans in Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma have reinstated lapsed National Service life insurance policies. De LUXE CAFE 28 YEARS OF SERVICE Same Location-Same Management You are welcome 711 Mass. Be Thinking About It---- In not too many weeks we'll be finishing up the semester and going home for the summer. During the year you've no doubt accumulated numerous articles which you would like to sell rather than cart home—Pieces of furniture. . clothing. . household accessories. . The classified columns of the University Daily Kansan offer you a handy and effective way to dispose of these articles. When you have something for sale—SELL IT—Use the classified section of the Daily Kansan. University Daily Kansan Advertisers Prefer The Kansan To Reach Hill Students Department Of Speech And Drama Presents The University Players In DOUBLE DOOR A Melodrama by Elizabeth McFadden OPEN STONIGHT FRASER THEATER Mon., Tues., and Wed. APRIL 21, 22, 23 Curtain 8:15 Ticket Office OPEN NOW Exchange Activity Tickets for Reserved Seats Ticket Office Basement Green Hall. Phone K.U. 64 Ring 2, 9-12, 1-4 APRIL 21. 1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE BREWER'S WAREHOUSE SOCIALLY SPEAKING Delta Delta Delta Installs Delta Delta Delta held formal installation of officers April 14. New officers are: Shirley Grigsby, presy; Eunice Carlson, vicepresident; Helen Dietzel, recording secretary; Patricia Dye, correspondence president; Mary Kinsuater, treasurer; Dorothy Stephenson, marshal. Barbara Meyer, chaplain; Eva Humphrey, scholarship chairman; Doreen Wallace, social rush captain; Bonnie Cunningham, business rush captain; Marilyn Oborg, social chairman; Mary Ann Sawyer, librarian; and Mary Lynn Trousdale, historian. D.G. Pledges Entertain The Delta Gamma pledge class entertained with a picnic Friday. The guests were Carson Rockhill, Ralph Moore, Jerry Bales, Gordon Church, John Ferguson, Max Coats, Melvin Ketter, Donald Simonson, Clark Duncan, Charles Replogle, Richard Collins, Dale Romig, Stephen Ellsworth, Charles Duncan, Betty Hammam, William Binter, Richard Dalrymple, William Pattison, James Scott, William Bradford, Herbert Gronemeyer, and William Roehl. Mr. and Mrs. Umbach and Mr. and Mrs. Meyers were chaperones. Belles AND THEIR Weddings Johnson-Hull Foster hall announces the engagement of Miss Erma Belle Johnson, daughter of Mrs. Ernest Johnson of Baldwin City, to Mr. Howard D Hull Jr., son of H. D. Hull of Lake Quivira, Kansas City, Kan., and Mrs. D. M. Hull of Albuquerque, N. M. The announcement was made recently at a coffee by Mrs. Mildred B. Scott, housemother, who wore a corsage of light carnations. Miss Johnson wore an orchid and was assisted by Elizabeth Posnowr and Mary Booth with flowers received by Rose Persoon, Marilyn Woods, a cousin of Miss Johnson, sang "Ah Sweet Mystery of Life" accompanied by Janet Hamilton. Miss Johnson is a senior in the School of Business. Mr. Hull was graduated from the University in February. He is a member of Alpha Tau Omega. ☆ ☆ Brown-Seymour Pi Beta Phi announces the pinning of Carolyn Brown, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. J. B. Brown, Kansas City, Mo., to Paul Al Seymour, Leavenworth. The announcement was made during dinner by Mrs. Dean Alt, housemother, who received a corsage of gardenias. Miss Brown wore an orchid and was assisted by Sara Jane Scott, Joan Armacost, Shirley Garst, Ann Stanton, Mary Longenecker, and Nancy Love who received gardenia corsages. Miss Brown is a college junior. Mr. Seymour, also a college junior, is a member of Sigma Chi. Harvey- Miner Harvey - Miller Mr. and Mrs. Thomas MacGregor Mirrer announce the marriage of their daughter, Nora Jane, to Mr. John Cole Harvey, Jr., to take place Saturday, May 3, at the Country Club Methodist church, Kansas City, Mo. Miss Miner, 4917 Wyoming, Kansas City, Mo., received her degree from the University in 1943. She was a war-time minor in journalism. Until April, 1946, Miss Miner was editor of Lifetime, a house magazine of the Kansas City Life Insurance company. She is now employed in an advertising agency. Mr. Harvey, 4131 Virginia, Kansas City, Mo., was graduated from the University in 1942 as a major in journalism. He was then employed on the Daily News, Springfield, Mo. In October, 1942, he entered the marines and served with the sixth division on Guadalcanal, Guam and China. Mr. Harvey is now employed with an advertising agency in Kansas City. COED'S CORNER 'Marty' Laffer Rides 'Satan,' Likes Horses And Dogs If you can't locate Martha "Marty" Laffer at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house, she's probably out riding the spirited horse, "Satan." Marty, who comes from Wichita, developed her equestrienne interests during her freshman year. Since then she's been helping with the K.U. riding classes, and has been president of the Spur club since it was organized in 1945. Besides horses, Marty likes dogs; music, dramatics, and "big, thick, jule steaks." Kappa Social Chairman She sings in the Women's Glee club and is a member of the University players. Her friendly personality makes it easy to see why the Kappas chose her as social chairman. The Hill is a tradition in the Laffer family. Marty's father, brother, and sister are all University graduates. Marty, a junior, is majoring in personnel management. "I chose that because I like being around people," she explained. "Td like to work in the personnel department of some store after I graduate." This summer she's going to do that kind of work as a requirement for one of her major courses, and then she's going to San Francisco to visit her sister. To Work In Personnel Marty, who is five feet five inches tall, has neat dark hair parted in the middle. She says, "I have a secret ambition. I want to live out in some open place and own a lot of dogs and horses." For anyone who looks as natural on a horse as Marty does, that's not a strange wish. Scarab Initiates 12 New Members Scarab, architectural fraternity initiated the following members in a formal ceremony in-Marvin hall recently. Jack Bradley, Overland Park; Oliver J. Bryan, Junction City; Herb B foster, Topeka; Rufus Graves, Baltimore, Md.; Edward Hartront, Lyons; Glenn Horst, Pomona; John Horner, Wayne R. Johnson, and Merle Masterson, all of Lawrence; Joine LoPinho, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Louis Shepard, Erie; and William Yost, St. Joseph, Mo. Alpha Phi Omega Will Elect Officers Lambda chapter of Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity will hold election of officers May 1. Members who have missed three meetings in a row will not be eligible to vote unless they attend the two meetings before election time. The officers elected will take office for the fall term. Nine men were formally pledged last week. The next meeting will be Thursday night. L. L. Barrett, associate president of romance languages, was elected president of the Kansas chapter of the American Association of Teachers of Spanish and Portuguese at the yearly meeting of the Kansas Modern Languages association held recently in Wichita. Barrett Elected Group President Prof. Barrett was also elected vice-president of the Kansas Modern Languauses association. Twelve faculty members from the departments of German and romance languages attended the meeting. Botany Club Sponsors Plant Record Contest A contest to obtain the earliest records of the blooming of plants in Lawrence and vicinity, is being sponsored by the Linnean club. the club, a botanical society, includes in its members botany majors and interested townpeople. Contestants record their observations of the first plant-blooming of the season on a bulletin board in the botany department. They must give the scientific and the common name of the plant, the date it was seen, its location and their name. ONE. Everyone is eligible to enter the contest, whether a member of the Linnean club or not. Rules of the contest are: TWO. The earliest record of each plant, counts THEREE. Both wild and cultivated plants, count FOUR. All blanks on the chart must be filled in by the observer. FIVE. Scientific names must be correct. SIX. The prize will not be awarded to the same observer two successive years. To the observer the blooming of the largest number of plants will go, as first prize, a copy of Professor Stevens' forth-coming book, "Kansas Wild Flowers." Professor Stevens is a retired chairman of the botany department. The contest, formerly an annual affair, was discontinued during the war. The botany department uses the information gained to study the variance of plant-blooming with the season. Dillon Elected By Religious Council Charles Dillon, business junior, was elected president of the Student Religious council at its meeting Thursday, Robert M. Stewart, business junior, and Frances Hadley, junior in education, were elected vice-president and secretary-treasurer. A coffee hour at 4 p.m. Tuesday at Westminster hall, with the Rev. Winburn T. Thomas, general secretary for the student volunteer movement, was planned. Robert M. Stewart was appointed Religious Emphasis week committee chairman. Roberta Jacobus, College junior, David B. Thomson, freshman engineer, Jack B. Pringle, and Clifford Malone, College freshmer were appointed to the committee. Frances Hadley was appointed chairman of the ways and means committee with Malba J. Winters, Jr., Winfried Wilson, College freshman, was appointed on the activities committee. Doa's Barking Right Uphold Omaha—(UP)—A dog had its day in police court here. John Rodgers, 25, was sentenced to one day in jail and fined $10. The dog's owner testified Mr. Rodgers slashed the dog with a knife because it barked at him. A-T-A Calvin VanderWert, associate professor of chemistry, and his wife will be leaders at the 23rd annual Intercollege Student Faculty conference to be held at Estes Park, Colo. June 11 to 20, said Keith Wolfenbarger, YMCA conference chairman. VanderWerfs To Lead Summer Conference The purpose of the seminar is to train newly elected officers and cabinet members for effective lead- in campus Christian associations. A program will include counseling opportunities, fireside fellowship sessions, and discussions over national and international problems. Museum To Show Russian Culture Russian culture will be exhibited in Spooner-Thayer's main gallery for one month beginning April 29. Mrs. Warner, museum curator, said today. The exhibit, "Russia, Old and New," is the work of Mrs. Rachael Soloveitchik, instructor of German and Russian, who has collected most of the culture objects from individual owners. Texiles, enamelware, toys, books, money, and stamps are among the articles representing both Czarist and Soviet periods in Russian history. Council Postpones Meeting Student Religious council will not sponsor a combined youth group meeting this summer, Charles Dillon president, said today. "This decision was made because it is believed each denominational youth group will be large enough this summer to sponsor its own meeting," he said. Instant Service In Our Shoe Repair Department Royal College Shop 837-38 Mass. COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals - Short Orders Sandwiches Open 5:30-12:30 LUCINA D'AGOSTINI PAPA PACCHETTI "If my new glove was like a Pre-Smoked Dr. Grabow it pipe would need no breaking in!" Pre-Smoked DR.GRABOW PIPES No Breaking In No Bite No Bitter Taste SEE ... It's Pre-Smoked $150 $200 $350 $500 Fashioned by Linkman DR. GRABOW PIPE CO. INC. CHICAGO 14, ILL. No Breaking In No Bite No Bitter Taste SEE ... It's Pre-Smoked $150 $200 $350 $500 Fashioned by Linkman Dr. GRADOW PIPE CO. INC. CHICAGO 14, IL PreSmoked DR.GRABOW PIPES SEE . . . It's Pre-Smoked $150 $200 $350 $500 Read the Daily Kansan daily Clearance Of Coats & Suits Misses' Shop Savings Of The Year S25. The Palace 843 Mass. - UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FOUR APRIL 21,1947 Kansas Relays' Records Don't Fall Because Cold, Damp Rain Did Track records did not fall because the rain did at the 22nd Annual Kansas Relays Saturday. The fourman entry of Rain, Wind, Cold, and Mud got a jump on other teams with a special practice late Friday night and went on to swamp all events Saturday. Approximately 700 athletes competed with the weather at Memorial stadium in individual and team contests which would have threatened numerous Relay standards had conditions been more favorable. Nearly 3.000 spectators were on hand at 2 p.m. for the opening event, the finals of the 120-yard high hurdles. Only a handful remained, however, by the time the last race, the university mile relay, began. Few Stay For Finish Texas university won the quarter-mile, the half-mile, and the distance medley relays. Allen Lawler of the Longhorns repeated his 1946 victory in the 100-yard跑, outdistancing his teammate, Charley Parker. The duel between Parker and Clementine tineson of Boston moved to materiality with the Baylor Bullet was disqualified for two false starts. Quick Fails to Quality Quirk Fails to Qualify Another surprise was the failure of Ed Quirk, giant Missouri shot-put champion, to qualify for the finals in his event. His mark of 47 feet, $2 \frac{1}{2}$ inches was far short of the 51 feet, $5 \frac{1}{2}$ inches mark which gave Fortune Gordian of Minnesota the title. Another favorite fell when John Smith of Notre Dame defeated Bob Blakely of Missouri in the finals of the high hurdles. In most other events, the favorites came through to win by comfortable margins. Tom Scofield of the Jayhawkers gave Kansas its only victory of the day when he leaped 6 feet $ _{1/4} $ inches to tie Monte Kinder of Nebraska for first in the high jump. Ebel Henoch Place Ebel. Henoch Place Karl Ebel and Bruce Henoch of Kansas ranked in second and third place for the javelin throw. The event was won by Grote of Nebraska with a toss of 189 feet, $ 10 \% $ inches. Ebel threw the spear 189 feet. $ 3 \% $ inches. Kansas relay teams placed fourth in both the two-mile and distance medley relays. Jayhawker runners in these two races were Jackson. Johnson, Hinchee, Moore, and Karnes. Johnson, Moore, and Karnes ran in both events. Bob Crowley gave the Javhawkers a third in the broad jump with a leap of 22 feet, 4 inches. The winning jump by McGinnis of Nebraska was 22 feet. $6\frac{1}{2}$ inches. Jayhawkers Make Finals Lee Schloesser and Frank Stannard of the Kansas squad both made the finals in their specialities. Schloesser came in second to Allen Lawyer in his heat of the 100-yard dash. Stannard led the field in his heat of the 120-yard hurdles. Two of the best marks of the day were turned in by Jerry Thompson of Texas and Bill Mack of Drake as each ran the mile lap of a win:4.31.5 mile in the anchor position ning relay team. Thompson ran on a the Texas medley relay. Mack sped the distance in 4:34 as the last man on the Drake four-mile队. Five Teams Win IM Baseball Games Results of intramural softball games played April 17 found Beta Theta Phi defeating Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 9-3, Kappa Sigma winning from Lambda Chi 27-13, the Sig Ep's trouncing the Fly-by-Nights, 25-2, Triangle outlasting Wesley, 23-12, and the 941 Club taking Kappa Eta 19-7. Don Powell, director of intranrurals, advised team managers to check the bulletin board outside the intramural office to see when postponed games would be played. Powell said that the phone strike made it impossible for the intramural office to contact the managers individually. City Table Tennis Tournament Postponed The Lawrence city table tennis tournament which was to have begun April 7 has been postponed until after the settlement of the telephone strike, Larry Heeb, city recreational director, said today. All students in the university division will be notified when play will start. Application blanks for the tournament are still available at the sports desk in the Daily Kansan news room. Wichita East Wins High School Meet Here are the point totals for the Interscholastic track and field meet held Friday: Class AA high schools—Wichita East, 46; Wyandotte, 30%; Topeka, 41%; Haskell, 22; Lawrence, 19; ElDorado, 15; Junction City, 14; Summer, 131%; Shawnee Mission, 13; Wichita North, 13; Hutchinson, 16; Akron, 9; Akron City, 12; Ft. Scott, 6; Arkansas City, 6; Dittawa, 6; Independence, 5; Coffeeville, 5; Leavenworth, 4; Atchison, 3; Manhattan, 1. Class A high schools—Hugoton, 29; Marysville, 20; Chapman, 17; Anthony, 16%; Highland Park, 16; Sterling, 15%; Fredonia, 15; Beloit, 14%; Hiawatha, 12; Andale, 11%; Concordia, 11; Sabetha, 11; Harper, 10; Rosedale, 10; Olathe, 8; St. Joseph of Hays, 8; Washington Rural, 3; Fringham, 7; St. Peter and Paul of Secaea, 7; Kuegla, 7; Wamapo, 7; Bubler, 4; Caney, 4; Atchison C. C. S., 4; Bonner Springs, 3%; Garnett, 3; Fortlant, 2%; Paola, 2; Immaculata of Leavenworth, Class B high schools—Esbon Rural, 26%, Leon, 21%; Kansas School of the Deaf, 19; Pittsburg College High, 17; Haven, 13%; Wathena, 13; Axtell, 12; Macksville, 12; Peabody, 11%; Troy, 11%; Clyde, 9%; Bennington, 9%; Burr Oak, 9%; Derby, 9%; Overbrook, 9%; Claflin, 9%; Pretty Prairie, 8; Arma, 8; Wellsville, 6%; Caseton, 6; Sedgwick, 5%; Blue Rapids, 5%; Potwin, 9%; Pow, 5%; Powlan, 5%; Nickerson, 5; Mulberry, 5; Meridan, 5; Courtland, 5; Burton, 5; Valley Falls, 4; Norwich, 4; Hamilton, 4; Fairview, 4; Cedar Point, 4; Emmett, 3; Washington, 3; Cherokee, 3; Edgerton, 2; Lyndon, 2; Miltonvale, 2; Wilson, 2; Waterville, 1½; DeSoto, 1; Milford, 1; Parker, 1; Baldwin, 1½; Burlington. %. Black Wins Four Decathlon Events Black capture the pole vault, discus, shot put, and javelin. He was not pressed in any of these events. Following his victory in the javelin, the ninth event on the card, the basketball "Hawk" was in the lead with only the 1,500-meter run left. The fact that he had only ten days of practice and conditioning for the weekend grind showed up in the distance run as Black came home last. McEwen placed third and his time for the event gave him enough points to overtake the K.U. K-club entry and annex the title. Charley Black, the Kansas basketball and track star, won four of the ten events in the Missouri Valley A.A.U. Decathlon Friday and Saturday, but he placed second to Jack McEwen of Colorado in the finals points totals. South Bend, Ind.—(UP)—No treason Dame will open graduate courses next fall in the fields of probation, parole and prison administration. The courses will emphasize that the criminal justice profession is responsible and can learn to control his conduct despite the evil influences that led him to turn to crime. To Teach Criminology Scofield Ties Kinder In Relay High Jump Here are the results of the Kansas Relays held Saturday: High jump: Scofield of Kansas and Kinder of Nebraska, tied for first at 6 feet, $1\frac{1}{4}$ inches; Morgan of Baker, Howard of Missouri, and Heintzman of Bradley, tied for third at 5 feet $11\%$ inches. University Division: Javelin: Grote of Nebraska, 189 feet, 10% inches; Ebel of Kansas, 189 feet, 33% inches; Henoch of Kansas, 177 feet, 8½ inches; Dierker of Ottumwa, Iowa, Navy, 175 feet, 83% inches. Smith 20-yard high hurdles; Smith of Notre Dame; Blakely of Missouri; Gaultney of Missouri; and Gartiser of Missouri; 0:15. Smith Wins High Hurdles Two-mile relay: Missouri (Bogsworth, Lancaster, Killough, Schmidt); Colorado; Drake; and Kansas. 8:09.7. Shot put: Gordien of Minnesota, 51 feet, 7¾ inches; Prather of Kansas State, 50 feet, 5½ inches; Crumley of Colorado State college of education, 49 feet, 5³¼ inches; Hoerner of Iowa, 49 feet, 4¾ inches. McClay Takes Pole Vault Pole vault: McClay of Kansas State, Blackwell of Missouri, Knapp of Missouri, Dean of Oklahoma A. and M., McKee of Colorado, and Moore of Ottawa, tied for first, 11 feet, 6 inches. Distance medley relay: Texas (Northcutt, Hafernich, Sparks, and Thompson); Oklahoma A. and M. Nebraska; and Kansas. 10:46. 100-yard dash: Lawler of Texas; Parker of Texas; Cotten of Baylor; Guth of Missouri. 09.7. Sprint medley relay: Oklahoma (Shelby, McConnell, Gillstrap, Westbrook); Notre Dame; Oklahoma A. and M.; Kansas State. 3:38.8 Quarter-mile relay: Texas (Samuels, Tatom, Lawer, Parker); Baylor; Oklahoma A. and M.; Missouri 42. Discus: Gordian of Minnesota, 154 feet, 4 inches; Yocum of Peru Teachers, Neb. 142 feet, 5% inches; Prather of Kansas State, 138 feet, 5% inches; Simerotof Oklahoma A. and Titusville 3 inches. Texas Takes Half-Mile Half-mile relay: Texas (Samuels, Tatom, Lawler, and Parker); Nebraska and Oklahoma A. and M., tied for second. 1:30.4. Broad jump: McGinnis of Nebraska, 22 feet; $6\frac{1}{2}$ inches; Barnhouse of Kansas, 5 feet; 5 inches; Crowley of Kansas, 22 feet; Lemois of Minnesota, 22 feet, $\frac{1}{4}$ inch. Four-mile relay: Drake (Feiler, Jerchalks, Prohaska, Mack); Notre Dame, Missouri. 18:54.4. Shot put: Gordien of Minnesota, 51 feet, $7 \frac{3}{4} $ inches; Prather of Kansas State, 50 feet, $5 \frac{1}{2} $ inches; Crumley of Colorado State college of education, 49 feet, $5 \frac{1}{4} $ inches; Hoerner of Iowa, 49 feet, $4 \frac{1}{4} $ inches Mile relay; Texas A. and M. Napier, Baldback, Halbrook, Harden; Minnesota; Notre Dame; Oklahoma A. and M. 3:27. Half-mile relay: North Texas State (Marvel, Womack, Ladish, and Adams); Stephen F. Austin college; East Texas State; Abilene-Christian. 1:31.7. invitational sprint medley relay. Ottawa university (Morgan, Ellison, Harbour, Browning); Baker, Midland, Missouri Valley. 3:54.4. College Division: Distance medley relay; South Dakota State (Lynn, Mills, Burtrun, and Keller); Howard Payne; Ottawa university; Washburn 11:25. Two-mile relay: South Dakota State (Lynn, Bertrun, Mills, Keller); Howard Payne; Pittsburg; Fort Hays State. 8-22.8 Sprint medley: Abilene-Christian (Mason, Carter, Smith, Saunders); North Texas State; Southwestern of Memphis; Washburn. 3:47.2. Mile relay: North Texas State (Marvel, Womack, Gilbert, Adams); East Texas State; Southwestern of Memphis; Abilene-Christian. 3:30.8. Special Events: Kansas City, Mo., high school half-mile relay: Southwest (Burt, Tapp Thomas, and Schutzel); Manual; Central; Northeast. 1:37. Junior college sprint medley: Arkansas City (Work, Grinnell, Ward, Smith); Hutchinson; Ft. Scott; Coffeyville. 3:53.3. Gamma Phi's Defeat Alpha Chi, 28-12 Alpha Chi Omega bowed in defeat to Gamma Phi Beta Thursday with a 28 to 12 score as the women's intramural baseball season got under way. Sleepy Hollow won from Templin 10 to 5. Miller forfeited to I. W. W. Outstanding players for Alpha Chi were Link, Rosenau, Powell; for Gamma Phi, Heil, Brown, Simmons. WURLITZER PHONOGRAPHS Rear admirals range in age from 42 to 75. FOR PARTY RENTALS Used Juke Box Records For Sale John H. Emick 1014 Mass. Phone 343 How To Reduce Your Car's "Waste" Line Do you want to reduce driving costs this Spring. . get more miles per gallon. . assure smoother, more pleasant traveling? Then drive in tomorrow for our complete Spring changeover and tune-up services. We'll put your car in top flight condition to withstand warm weather hazards, and to assure thriftiest possible performance. ONE STOP does it! Ask About Our Complete Spring Changeover Service Special MORGAN-MACK MOTOR COMPANY YOUR FRIENDLY FORD DEALER 609 Mass. Phone 277 AFTER GIVING A SLIGHTLY SCREWBALL PITCHER CAREFUL ADVICE ON JUST HOW TO PITCH TO A CERTAIN SLUGGER, CASEY STENGEL DEMANDED AN EXPLANATION WHEN THE BALL WENT OVER THE FENCE... AND HE RECEIVED AN OBVIOUS ANSWER! WHAT KIND OF A BALL DID YOU THROW HIM? WHY, IT WUZ A SPALDING BALL, MISTER CASEY OFFicial National League For C. Frick THE CONSIGNED CORE CENTER WITH THE TEAM'S NAME SPALDING OFFICIAL Vanuai Ball Official National League Ford C. Trick THE OBSTIED BOOK CENTER PATRIOT ISLAND WASHINGTON SPALDING OFFICIAL American League Ball William Harridge Press THE CUSTOMIZED CORNER CENTER MAY 28, 1905 MARCHA BUSTERTON REACH IN BASEBALL-The Twins of the Majors have been the official base balls of the big leagues since they were organized. Both made by Spalding. FIRST IN EVERY MAJOR SPORT IN GOLF--More top tournaments are won with Spalding golf balls than any other make. IN TENNES-Only Spalding-made tennis balls are used in National Championships and in every Davis Cup match played in the U. S. IN FOOTBALL AND BASKETBALL Spalding made the first foot ball and the first basket ball and is today the choice of America's leading coaches and teams. M D C SPALDING SETS THE PACE IN SPORTS New I M. hol of soo St reco Ne Ca oo APRIL 21,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE I McEwen Takes Decathlon Over Charley Black n-meter dash: Here is the summary of the Missouri Valley A.A.U. Decathlon held friday and Saturday: Entry Mark Points McEwen (Colorado) 11.1 814 Nichols (Uunattached) 11.4 735 Weaver (Oklahoma) 11.4 735 Black (K.U. K-club) 11.5 710 Danielson (Kansas St.) 11.5 710 Payne (Kansas St.) 11.5 686 Hague (Ft. Hays St.) 11.8 640 Kroencke (Unattached) 11.8 619 Broad jump: McEwen 24 ft, 3 in. 894 Danielson 22 ft, 7½ in. 775 Payne 22 ft, 4 in. 751 Black 21 ft, 1½ in. 703 Weaver 21 ft, ½ in. 654 Hague 20 ft, 5 in. 608 Nichols 19 ft, 5½ in. 541 Kroencke 19 ft, 3 in. 459 pictured Black 44 ft., 10 in. 781 Hague 39 ft., 11 in. 696 McCaven 39 ft., 7½ in. 627 Payne 36 ft., 11 in. 553 Weaver 36 ft., 1 in. 530 Kroencke 35 ft., 5 in. 513 Nichols 35 ft., 4½ in. 512 Danielson 33 ft., 5 in. 462 High jump: high jump. Nichols 6 ft., 5 in. 980 Weaver 6 ft, 2½ in. 890 Payne 5 ft., 10¼ in. 762 Danielson 5 ft., 9½ in. 745 Hague 5 ft., 7 in. 671 Black 5 ft., 5 in. 616 McEwen 5 ft., 5 in. 616 Note—Kroencke withdrew after completing three events.) 100-meter run; 110-meter high hurdles: Wichols 51.0 sec. 818 Yeaver 51.3 sec. 801 BeeEwen 51.9 sec. 770 Payne 53.2 sec. 706 Black 54.9 sec. 630 Hague 55.5 sec. 605 Danielson 56.1 sec. 581 Nichols 17.5 sec. 597 Weaver 18.3 sec. 520 Mcbwen 18.5 sec. 502 Black 18.6 sec. 493 Payne 18.6 sec. 493 (Notes: Danielson fell and tailed deaf. Hague withdrew after a tour with the police.) Discus: Discus: Black 135 ft. 745 Milwaukee 122 ft. 3 in. 763 Weaver 106 ft. 3 in. 500 Nichols 101 ft. 459 Payne 95 ft. 413 Danielson 65 ft. 6 in. 209 Pole vault: Black 11 ft., 9 in. 725 McEwen 11 ft. 632 Payne 9 ft., 7 in. 473 Danielson 9 ft., 7 in. 473 Weaver 9 ft., 1 in. 418 Nichols 8 ft., 7 in. 368 Javein: Black 157 ft., 10 in. 553 McEwen 137 ft., 3½ in. 445 Weaver 128 ft., 9½ in. 402 Payne 127 ft, 10 in. 397 Nichols 112 ft., 12 in. 322 (Note—Danielson withdrew after completing eight events.) 1.500-meter run: 1,000-meter run: Weaver 4:32.8 599 Nichols 5:00.4 412 McEwen 5:05.5 383 Payne 5:15.3 332 Black 5:27.7 275 Final totals: McEwen 6,333 Black 6,240 Weaver 6,120 Nichols 5,995 Payne 5,566 Next Time He'll Go Faster London—(UP)—Group Captain E. M. Donaldson, the R. A. F. ace who holds the world's air speed record of 616 m.p.h., is going to try again soon — this time over the United States. He wants to make a non-stop record flight from San Francisco to New York in a jet-propelled Meteor. Captain Donaldson believes he could boost his plane to 700 m.p.h. this time. Kansas Winner COLLEGE OF SPORTS TOM SCOFIELD Baseball Results Sunday's results: National League Cincinnati 13, Pittsburgh 5 Pittsburgh 7, Cincinnati 3 Philadelphia 10, New York 1 Chicago 7, St. Louis 4 American League New York 6, Philadelphia 2 New York 3, Philadelphia 2 Washington 3, Boston 1 Columbus 6, Louisville 1. (Game called in 7th, rain). Milwaukee 4, St. Paul 0 Milwaukee 6, St. Paul 7 Standing of Teams National League W L Pct. Pittsburgh 5 1 .833 Philadelphia 4 2 .667 Brooklyn 2 2 .500 Cincinnati 3 4 .429 Chicago 2 3 .400 Boston 2 3 .400 New York 2 3 .400 St. Louis 2 4 .333 American League W L Pct. Chicago 2 0 1.000 Boston 4 1 .800 New York 4 2 .667 Detroit 2 2 .500 Washington 2 3 .400 St. Louis 1 2 .333 Cleveland 1 2 .333 Philadelphia 1 5 .167 American Association | | W | L | Pct. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kansas City | 3 | 0 | 1.000 | | Minneapolis | 1 | 0 | 1.000 | | Columbus | 3 | 2 | .600 | | Louisville | 2 | 2 | .500 | | Toledo | 1 | 1 | .500 | | Indianapolis | 1 | 2 | .333 | | St. Paul | 2 | 4 | .333 | | Milwaukee | 1 | 3 | .250 | 1068 Gets 'Hoppers' Moscow, Idaho, (UP) — The grass- bagger number is up—and it's "11." H. C. Manis, head entomologist at the University of Idaho, says "1068" is by far the most powerful weapon against grasshoppers that has been found. Dusted over fields, it kills from 95 to 98 per cent in a few days. Manis says the insects can be killed in eight days in heavy crops such as alfalfa and clover, where they have always been hardest to reach. 25c For LAUNDRY!! HOW?? Launderette! Entomologists says "1068" is no more toxic than DDT. BRING IN YOUR LAUNDRY. Put It In a Bendix Washing Machine. DO YOUR SHOPPING. COME BACK FOR YOUR LAUNDRY IN 30 MIN. COST 25c For 10 lbs. SOAP FREE ECONOMICAL and EFFICIENT LAUNDERETTE 813 Vt. Phone 3368 Add Fedde, Eckert To War Honor Roll Two names were recently added to the honor list of former University students who lost their lives in World War II They are Keith Hilton Fedde, class of '41, and Charles A. Eckert, of the class of '42. Fedde was killed in a plane crash in the United States in 1942 while flying in the line of duty. He was a lieutenant in the army air corps. Eckert, also a lieutenant, was killed in action over Germany in 1944, while piloting a B-17. The first motorcycles were used in France and Germany about 1885, according to the Encyclopedia Britannica. The Pershing Rifle company was reactivated at a dinner Thursday night. An election of officers was held. Pershing Rifles Reactivate At Dinner They are; Donald Vaughn, captain; Ira Jordon, first lieutenant; John Campbell, second lieutenant, Thornton Cooke, first sergeant. I Other members initiated into the company are, Gordon Offenbacker, Robert Franklin, Richard Lamb, Lester Early, Daniel Schungel, Robert York, Theron Brewer, Addison, Carr, Richard Jones, William Vaughn, Harold Willey, Ralph Moberly, and Bobby Collison. Studies depend upon it. If you have been having headaches due to your eyes, come in and let us check them carefully. CLEAR EYESIGHT is a "Must." Go By Air Lawrence Optical Co. Go By Air anywhere " Our Air Travel Service can arrange your vacation trip BY AIR: .. to most any spot in the world. Let us help you get there-Quicker! The Air Travel Service Of The Lawrence National Bank SUPER CHEVROLET SERVICE IMMEDIATE SERVICE NOW! on any make of car or truck Winter Chevrolet YOU DON'T HAVE TO WAIT AT 730 New Hampshire Phone 77 JAYHAWKER SEE A SHOW TONITE NOW—Ends Tuesday Blazing ADVENTURE . . . Flaming ROMANCE! IN GLORIOUS TECHNICOLOR! BOUGLEY FAIRBANKS JR. MAUREEN O'HARA WALTER SLEZAK SINBAD THE SAILOR WEDNESDAY—One Week ANN SHERIDAN KENT SMITH Nora Prentiss ANN SHERIDAN KENT SMITH LOVING HER ONCE is once too often! Nora Prentiss GRANADA ENDS WEDNESDAY A ROWDY LOVABLE RASCAL! WALLACE BEERY The Mighty McGurk Edward Arnold Dan Stockwell Also: Latest World News and "March of Time" PATEE Now Playing -2 features 2-- NOTHING HIDDEN NOTHING LEFT OUT: AMN ROBERT SHERIDAN-GUMMINGS BETWEEN REAGAN-FIELD KINGS ROW CHARLES COBURL RAINS WARNER JUSTIN MCCOY - MANLY COLLINS - GAETAN VINE - MAURA DUFFYMANKY JUSTIN MCCOY - MANLY COLLINS - GAETAN VINE - MAURA DUFFYMANKY MARIE CROOKPIT SAR WOOO-- ALSO! "WILD BILL HICKOK RIDES" CONSTANTINE DENNUTT BROUCE CAROY HARDY MILLIAM BETTY DEEPTIN MAYER COLLISIT HARRY BENGAM A WARNER BROS. PICTURE VARSITY Today, Ends Tues. HUGH BEAUMONT As MICHAEL SHAYNE With 'CHERYL WALKER' "3 On a Ticket" AND BILL BOYD As Hopalong Cassidy "Fool's Gold" Wednesday, 4 days "Magnificent Rogue" "Come On Cowboys" 1 . UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SIX APRIL 21, Kansan Comments How Your Votes Will Be Counted How are you going to vote Thursday? When you have decided whom you would like to see elected, it is important that you mark your ballot correctly to indicate your decision. In this case $X$'s don't count. The voting system for KU student elections is known as the Hare system of proportional representation. Theoretically, it operates to carry representation in the same ratio of minorities to majorities which exists in the total voting population. This system does not apply in filling a single office such as the A. S. C. presidency. Here is how it works: You will be instructed on the ballot to put the number one after your first choice, two after the second and so on for as many candidates as you wish, regardless of the number to be elected. Be sure to follow instructions or your ballot will be void. A quota is calculated to find the least number of votes which will elect each of the required number of officers without electing more. This quota is determined by dividing the total number of valid ballots cast for that position by one more than the total number of positions to be filled. For instance, if four men are to be elected A. S. C. representatives from District I (the College), and 2,000 valid votes are cast for them, 401 votes would be necessary to elect each representative. If any candidates have more first choice votes than the quota they are declared elected and each extra vote over the quota is transferred to the second choice listed on that ballot. Since the ballots are piled in the chance order in which they are first counted, taking the required number of excess ballots from the top of the stacks provides the random selection necessary to give each candidate a fair opportunity. If the second choice on the ballot has already met the quota, the vote is transferred to the third choice instead. When these transfers give other candidates enough votes to meet the quota, they are declared elected. If all the offices are not filled by this transferred vote, the candidate with the fewest votes is declared out of the race and his second choice votes are transferred in the same manner as the extra ballots. If necessary this process is repeated until enough persons have received quotas to fill all of the offices. But when is proportional representation not proportional representation? Answer: when a "boss" plans the voting for his machine. Obviously, a number of ballots showing the same order of choice will elect more persons than the same number of ballots with several candidates chosen in various orders. One way to beat machine politics is for all democratic-minded citizens to go to the polls. Your vote can help. Be sure you make it count. Alamada Bollier It was like a joke joint in the state capitol when House members considered a state song. They just put Representative Nickell in the slot and out came "Home On The Range." Peace—it's "blunderful." "United we stand, divided we fall, is certainly true of prices these days. One student has advanced the theory that the biggest thing wrong with K. U. is that too many women are working for their MRS. degree. The purchaser of a post-war home can find little comfort in reflecting that his is "the house that jack built." Note on Lippy Durocher—Happy Chandler estrangement: "There's many a gap 'twixt the 'Lip' and the 'Hap.'" August 1, 1947, is the last day on which World War II veterans may reinstate lapsed National Service life insurance term policies without physical examination, upon payment of two months' premiums. 'Tut Tut-Drive On' PRICES PURCHASING COVER HERBLOCK DID NOT THE LANDMARK ON POPE 'Tut Tut-Drive On' Dear Editor--will An A.V.C. Critic In a time of great national emergency our government called on all able-bodied men to prove their right to be called American citizens by protecting the rich heritage handed down to them from courageous forefathers. We, the veterans on the Hill, answered that call. We fought for our nation, our government, our families, and perhaps mostly for ourselves. When we returned, we were honored and praised by our fellow-Americans. In addition to these pleasing rewards we kept all the privileges which we as Americans so dearly cherish—the right to choose our form of government, the four freedoms, and many other privileges enjoyed only in America. This reward should have been enough. But our government and neighbors wanted to show their appreciation in a more concrete way. They established the V. A., gave us on-the-job training, unemployment compensation, and the best and cheapest life insurance. They provided hospitalization, gave us loans for building homes and businesses, and first priority on war surplus property. They also attempted to help veterans secure an education. Our government had already spent more on us than it could afford. Yet, it threw common sense to the winds and established the great dole. They offered each veteran a subsidy of $65 per month to help pay living expenses while he continued his education. In addition, the government offered to pay tuition, books, and fees up to the amount of $500 per year. At the end of each school term we get a paid vacation—sounds like manna from heaven. As you may have guessed by this time, this letter is directed at the A. V. C. I was interested in the A. V. C. when it was organized and had planned to become a member. But this organization is a discredit to its members, to the University, and to every American veteran. This group should have chosen the Gimme-Gipme Bird as their mascot. Their symbol should have been the outstretched palm. When the A. V. C. can use the American eagle and all it stands for in place of the Gimme-Gimme bird; when the outstretched palm becomes the clenched fist, drawn back to protect peace and America; then and then only will the A. V. C. become an organization to which our University can point with pride, an organization which I and every veteran on the Hill will gladly join and whole-heartedly endorse. Ted Joyce College Sophomore The University Daily Kansan Member of the Kannas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily News Press, National Advertising Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service 420 Madison Ave, New York Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS York City. Managing Editor... Marcelia Stewart Asst. Man. Editor... Martha Jewett Asst. Man. Editor... William T. Smith Jr. Editor in Chief... LeMoyne Frederick City Editor... Wallace W. Abby Citic Editor... Peter B. Perry Acity City Editor... Alin J. Stewart Telegraph Editor... Marion Minon Art Editor... Eloise West Thieves 'Step In' North Platte, Neb.—(UP)—Thieves at North Platte believed in a sign, especially one above a doorway reading "Step Inn." They removed the front door lock, stepped in, and stepped out again with $50 in cash and several boxes of cigars. Business Manager John D. McCormick Circulation Manager Thomas S. Caden Classified Adv. Mar. Fryer Jann Schindling Promotion Manager William K. Brooks Promotion Manager, William K. Brooks Chicago.—(UP)—More and more public schools are teaching our mobile driving courses, according to the American Public Works society. In the past 10 years schools offering such a course have increased 700 per cent. Complete Line of Schools Teach Driving Arrow Products at CARLS GOOD CLOTHES Delicious JUICY STEAKS Our Specialtv Across from BILL'S GRILL 1109 Mass. Court House Phone 2054 Lindley's Kansas Cleaners 12 E. 8th Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices MEN'S SUITS Cleaned and Pressed 65c LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES— Cleaned and Pressed ... 69c Cash and Carry Only THE NEXT BEST THING TO A NEW CAR IS A NEXT BEST THING A NEW CAR IS A PRECISION REBUILT FORD ENGINE ✈️ PRECISION AND YOUR OLD ENGINE . . . SIXES PRICED CORRESPOND- INGLY LOW . . . INSTALLATION EXTRA. FORD FORD ENGINE Tord MORGAN-MACK MOTOR COMPANY Your Friendly Ford Dealer Your Friendly Ford Dealer 609 Mass. Phone 21 Popularity IN A PACKAGE Here's a natural for fun Harley Here's a natural for fun. It plays anywhere... at the beach, on trains, boats... and with rich, "big-set" electronic tone, always! 2 motors: Electric (plug it in) or wind up (tubes operate on battery). There's no other phonograph with the unique features of Capitol's "Luxury" Portable. Remember; it's produced by a record manufacler, to give you recorded music at its best, when and where you want it. Ask your record dealer for Capitol's Reme- facturer, to when and where dealer for Capitol's Luxury Portable now! Capitol LUXURY PORTABLE PETER CARNES eci r C rling lary e Un of cad a ectu h h turp CHAPTER 10 21, IL 21,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN albity Mass. 2054 alty Mass. 2054 5c 9c ON WE N 277 here... h rich, motors: operate Specialists Scheduled Counselor Course me specialists in camp counsel will speak at the first post war w art p counseler's training course day. The meetings will be in Union from 9:30 a.m. to 4:30 p. The Y. M. C. A. and Alpha Phi ga, service fraternity, have orzed the course. makers are Mrs. Christine Al- secretary, Y. W. C. A.; Miss Stapleton, assistant professor physical education; Henry Shenk, mate professor of physical edu- nion; Allen Crafton, professor in- ch; Ned Linearge, secretary of Y. M. C. A.; H. S. Preson, of the irty Memorial high school fac- courne Lawrence Heebe, director of crafton, scout commissioner for grance, and Adrian Snodgrass, of the Shawnee-Mission High Kansas City Kan ey will discuss the duties of a selor, the program of the sum-camp, and such specialties as ing, hiking, recreation, athle-waterfront activities, music and natics, field and camp safety, arts and crafts. agent committee members in age of the course are Alfred Cole, college freshman, chairman; Art Judy, junior; Bruce Bath-sophomore; Richard Collins, man; Keith Congdon, business manager; Robert Whitcomb, junior; and Wrehe, engineering senior. special committees are to present of camping for girls. Could Happen Here Springton, Vt. — (UP) — Striken laryngitis, Prof Robert S. Long e University of Vermont thought of canceling his classes. Then ad a better idea. He whispered picture into a recording machine h he carried to the classroom turned on full blast. Allen Reports Committee Findings Dr. Ethan Allen, head of the Bureau of Government Research, reported on findings of the committee on governmental research, of which he is chairman, to the fourth Kansas conference on government information and instruction services. The conference meetings opened in Topeka Saturday. Manx cats are native to the Isle of Man. Nominate McCoy, Carper To Head Alumni Association Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary, has announced the following candidates in the 1947 election of officers for the Alumni association: For president, J. Wayne McCoy, Topeka, and Clay-C. Carper, Eureka; for vice-president, Paul J. Neff, St. Louis, and Blake L. Williamson, Kansas City. for directors, Carl I. Winsor, and Mragaret Purves, Wichita, Ralph E. Ferry, Kansas City, and Lloyd H. Ruppenthal, McPherson. Daily Kansan Classified Ads 1923 DODGE. Late Plymouth undercarriage. New wheels. Good tires. Perfect condition. 50,000 Mile SPORTY. lan '41 Chevrolet club coupe. Radio, heater floggies, spot lights, low mileage, new tires, late general overhaul. Priced for quick sale. James Firebraught. ONE PERFEX camera. Equipped with range finder, yaw sensor and 3.5-mastigam lens, focal plane shutter with speeds of 1/25 to 1/80, film. See at 183 Magg, St. Phone 2091. FOR Sale. 1957 Harley-Davidson motor 1225 Tenn. , contact Jim Horn- 1225 Tenn. For Rent ROOM to men only. Share bath and floe classroom. Phone 2187 X 616 Kentucky For Sale FURNISHED double apartment a b o u t June 1 in exchange for 2 bedroom furnished or unfurnished house or apartment in Kansas City, Kans., or suburbs as far south as Overland Park. Martin, 1529 Ky. 23 Found FOUND: Organized house pin. Greek letters Omega Psi Phi. Owner may have by identifying and paying for this ad at the Kansan office. 21 Wanted time basis now and earn from $100 to $200 per month while carrying a regular course of study. Upon graduation these students can apply for our in our National Sales Organization. Undergraduates can qualify for lucrative summer work in their home areas. Write Wits Craft Company, 4125 Kansas, Kansas to prove your name at Dall Kapsan Business Office. LINOTYPE OPERATOR needed by University Daily Kansan, 2 hours daily, late afternoon or evening. See Mr. Ryther, Journalism building. LOST: Field jacket in 201 Bailey. Has potholes on his right hand and please return 1719 Alabama. Reward Lost LOST: Field jacket in 201 Balley. Has 26353 W. Reward. If found please c22 26353 W. Reward. LOST: Book entitled "Only Yesterday", by Allen. Please return to Kansan office. JOST: Bulova watch without the crystal and strap, near Haworth hall, just before Easter vacation. Reward. Contact the Kansan office. 21 Business Services RADIO Service. Home and car radios. All work guaranteed. Fast efficient carry-on service. Road (New Village) Sunflower Kans. $23 FREE OFFER-Copies of Discharges and valuable papers, 3 copies for the price of one service. Round Corner Drum Co. 801 Maui Ave. TENNI Baskets restrung and repaired, ink, nylon, or gut. Priced accordingly, 11.50 to $10. Phone 2711-W. Ed. Well- ausen, 1145 Kentucky. -21- DE SOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH Buddy GALLAGHER MOTORS Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL FOR QUALITY WATCH REPAIRS - One Week Service - Fully Guaranteed work - All Watches Time Checked on the Western Electric Watchmaster SAMPLE'S WATCH SHOP Lawrence's Most Modern Watch Repair Shop 710½ Mass. Phone 368 Lost Something? Try a University Daily Kansan Want Ad WE ARE NOW FEATURING FORD RACING Atlas Tires and Tubes These Longer-Wearing Tires Are Available in All Sizes STOP TODAY AT The Handy Station—Just Off the Hill Hartman's Standard Service 1300 Mass. WATCH POLO'S FAMOUS Cecil Smith IN ACTION! ONE OF AMERICAS'S POLY 'GREATS'—THIS MIGHT TEXAN IS VETERAN OF MAN A FAMOUS INTERNATIONAL MATCH, HATRED AT 9 GOALS, SMITH IS KNOWN FOR, HIGHER HORSEMANSHIP AND LONG HINTING. IT'S LATE IN THE LAST CHUKKER IN A TITLE MATCH. SMITH'S TEAM AND HIS OPPONENTS ARE TIED... HE'S GOING TO SCORE! EVEN CECIL SMITH CAN'T CATCH HIM! DON't BE TOO SURE! AFTER TWENTY YEARS OF BIG-TIME POLO THAT MAN SMITH KNOWS EVERY TRICK IN THE BOOK! WATCH HIM! EVERY TICK IN THE BOOK. WATCH HIM! PERFECTLY LEGAL — IF YOU CAN DO IT! SMITH'S TRYING TO HOOK HIS OPPONENT'S MALLET TO KEEP HIM FROM HITTING THE BALL. IS THAT LEGAL? HE'S DONE IT! HIS OPPONENT CAN'T MAKE THE SHOT NOW! YOU HAVEN'T SEEN ANYTHING YET! KEEP YOUR EYE ON SMITH! HE STOPPED HIS PONY ON A DIME RIGHT BY THE BALL! JUST IAKES EXPERIENCE TO HANDLE PONIES LIKE THAT, BUT CECIL SMITH HAS TRAINED PONIES FOR YEARS! NOW... IF HE CAN JUST MAKE THIS SHOT... WHAT A SHOT! A SIXTY- YARD BACKHAND FOR THE WINNING GOAL! IT'S A GOAL! SMITH'S TEAM WINS! C 'C' ATERRIFIO BACKHAND SHOT... TURNS THE TABLES ON HIS OPPONENTS! CECIL, IT SURE MUST TAKE A LOT OF EXPERIENCE TO MAKE A GREAT PLAY LIKE THAT! I NOTICE YOU PREFER CAMELS, MR. SMITH CHALK THAT UP TO EXPERIENCE TOO. DURING THE WAR SHORTAGE, I WANT TO COULD GET CHALK THAT UP TO EXPERIENCE DOO. DURING THE WAR SHORTAGE, I SMOKED ANY BRAND I Could GET. NOTHINGS SUIT ME LIKE A CAMEL! EXPERIENCE IS THE BEST TEACHER IN POLO...IN CIGARETTES TOO! I'VE TRIED THEM ALL 'CAMELS SUIT MY T-ZONE' TO MORE PEOPLE ARE SMOKING CAMELS A"T" Cialis Smith Enzyme International Polarist THAN EVER BEFORE CAMEL TURNISH & DOMESTIC BLEND CIGARETTES CHOICE GRAVELY T for Taste... T for Throat... YOUR "T-ZONE" WILL TELL YOU... that's your proving ground for any eigencite. See if Camels are going to work at "Zone" to a "T". - UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 21.194 PAGE EIGHT 'Door' Tickets Go Begging; Surprise Ending "Ticket sales for tonight's opening of "Double Door" indicate that the melodramatic thriller will not play to a full house. Activity books will admit students only if the dramatics slips are exchanged for tickets, the plays director, Donald Dixon, said. He added that some tickets will be available for exchange at the Fraser theater box office each night of the play's three-night run. The speech and drama department's final production of the season has a cast of 12 veteran student-actors. Many of them appeared in "Juno and the Paycook" and the Shakespearean comedy, "A Midsummer Night's Dream." A unique feature of the play is a surprise ending dreamed up by Director Dixon. The regular ending was too much like the usual and they-lived-hap- ply-ever-after stuff. I rewrote the closing scene," Dixon said. Asked how he thought audiences would react to the unusual ending, Dickson said: "Frankly, even I am curious. We will just have to wait and see." Howe To Present Senior Piano Recital Helen Howe will present her senior piano recital at 8 p.m. Wednesday in Frank Strong auditorium. Miss Howe, a daughter of the Rev. and Mrs. J. L. Howe, Lawrence, is a student of Prof. Carl Preyer. While in high school she won best division ratings in both piano and oboe at the National Regional Music contest at Omaha in 1942. She attended the College of Ento pora for one year and, after teaching a year, enrolled at the University major. Miss Howe was a student of Prof. Ruth Orcutt until the latter left for the Hawaiian Islands. She is secretary-treasurer of Mu Phi Epsilon, national music sorority, a member of Mortar Board, and was formerly a member of the All Student Council. In 1946 she was granted the Pi Kappa Lambda award for scholarship as highest ranking member of the Junior class. New Directory Out Unless ASC Acts Unless the All Student council takes action immediately, there will be no printed supplement to the student directory this semester. The printing of the student directory and a supplement is, at present, under the supervision of the ASC, Dean J. H. Nelson said. The council has not discussed the possibility of printing a supplement. The registrar's office has made a 12-page mimeographer supplement for its own use which has been distributed to campus offices for their convenience. James K. Hitt, registrar, said that he had received no instructions to have the supplement pointed. Disabled Veterans May Get Automobile Many disabled Kansas veterans entitled to an automobile at government expense have not applied for it. William Monypeny, director of the Kansas office of veterans affairs, said today. World War II veterans are entitled to such compensation for the loss of the use of one or both legs above the ankle. Applications must be in by June 30. Fligible veterans may contact district veterans affairs offices or the central office at 801 Harrison, Topeka, for information and forms. 'The Face Is Familiar... K A Big Wheel on the campus, this guy is a former employee of the Liberal Arts and Science office. It is reported that now he's not a "good deal" working in Frank Strong. He was born in Abilene and is a graduate of K.U. He did additional work at Harvard, did some writing, was was involved with Hawaiian pineapples for a few years. At present he lives in Lawrence, and plans to continue his work at the University. First'Eagle' To Fly Tuesday a four-page Eagle will soar Tuesday. For 5 cents a copy students can find out what the opponents of the Dove think about local, national, and international issues. The day after the Eagle's appearance is the day of the campus election, in which voters will find on their ballots the question of admitting Oklahoma A. and M. into the Big Six conference. The Eagle will plug for admittance. That's the reason it's being put on sale Tuesday, the day before election, says Don Ong, of the Eagle's executive committee. "A very definite middle-of-the-road policy will be followed in bte Eagle." Ong said. "It will probably seem right to the leftists, but should strike most people as a fair presentation of campus views." Also included in the first issue will be articles on the Lawrence theater policy in regard to Negroes, the United States foreign policy, and the loan to Greece, a criticism of the closed American-United States atom bomb policy. The Eagle's ideas of left, right, and center will be outlined, with a criticism of the scope of "radical activity on the campus." Ong said. The paper will be distributed from Frank Strong hall, Marvin hall, and Watson library. Only political parties which poll 5 per cent of the student enrollment at the past general election or those who can show 5 per cent of the student body as paid members are eligible to appear on the ballot of school elections. The All Student Council voted Friday afternoon A.S.C. Sets Limit For Parties On Ballot The A.S.C. voted down the motion to present the War World II memorial to the student body for a vote at the election Thursday. Ann Scott, College junior, brought before the meeting a plan to have a rally on election day to remind students to vote. At the rally the three candidates for A.S.C. president are to appear. The plan was approved by the Council and will be presented to Chancellor Deane W. Malott for his approval. Learn To Usher At Church In Class At Omaha Omaha- (UP)—A church ushering course, designed to teach the technique of handling people, is being given for the fourth consecutive year at the University of Omaha. Committee Asks Interior Budget Be Cut In Half Washington—(UP)—Swinging its sharpest economy ax to date, the house approvals committee today chopped 43 per cent off the funds asked by President Truman for the interior department. It voted to give the department $183,649,313 for fiscal 1948 instead of the recommended $322,531,220. The total included $27,110,800 which congress is required by law to give the department each year. Omitting these funds over which the committee had no discretion, the slash was nearly 50 per cent. For its vast projects, the department's reclamation bureau was allotted only $62,17,600 of the $145,-952,200 recommended—a 58 per cent cut. Reclamation Budget Cut From a percentage standpoint the cut in interior department funds was the biggest voted by the committee in any of the three major appropriations bills it has acted on thus far. It trimmed the treasury-post-office bill from $13,285,302,721 to $12, 388,029,971. But the reduction—thought the biggest in dollars—represented only a 6½ per cent saving. Increases For Mine Inspections Remembering the Centralia, Ill. mine disaster, the committee granted $1,625,000 for coal mine inspection and investigation and $1,148,000 for investigating mine accidents and operating mine rescue cars. The bill is due for house action late this week. The bill will go to the senate, which usually is more liberal in voting money for the interior department. Even before the committee did its trimming job, the budget bureau already had cut the interior department's original request by $56,500,-000. Senior Scouts See Relays, Tour Campus Two hundred and fifty senior scouts were guests of Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity Saturday, for the Relays, tour of the ampus, and a luncheon at the Union. Don C. Baldwin, chief scout executive of the Kaw council, spoke to the group during the moon lunchoon. He emphasized the importance of carrying scouting into everyday relations and into later life. Complimentary tickets for the Relays were provided by the athletic department. The scouts came from Kansas City, Topeka and Independence. Air ROTC Students To Attend Camp Twenty-five advanced air R. O. T. C. students from the University will attend summer camp at Lowry Field, Denver, from June 22 to Aug 2. These students, who will have completed one year of advanced air R. O. T. C. work, are John Gurtner; Donald McDaniel, Hubert Strecker; James Street, Billy Vaughn; and Leland York, engineering freshman David Poley, Charles Howard Penny, and Michael engineering sophomores, and Bobby Collison, Raymond Wagner, and Edwin York, engineering juniors. Jack Campbell, Wallace Good, Rahul Moberly, and Robert Stroud, College sophomores; Berkley Harper, College special; and Ia Jordan Robert Mertel, and James Windblad Robert Shannon, and John Higdon, Glenn Hahn, and Morse E. Murray, business juniors; and John Higdon, business senior. Shack' Has Come Long Way Since Days of Chemists Many visitors to the campus probably never notice the "Shack," siting there half-hidden by shrubbery and overshadowed by larger buildings. Others probably see it only as a misshapen appendage of Watson But regardless of its present anonymity, the "Shack," Journalist building if you like, was at one time the University's second largest building. That was back when there were two buildings on the campus. News . . . of the World G.O.P. National Committee To Pick Convention Site Kansas City—(UP)—Republicans should know tonight whether their 1948 national convention will be held at Chicago or Philadelphia. The G. O. P.'s national committee meets here today to pick the convention site and study party finances. B. Carroll Reece, the Republican national chairman, has said that in all probability the convention will be awarded to Chicago. Speakers for today's session are Barak T. Mattingly, G. O. P. national committeeman for Missouri, Gov. Frank Carlson of Kansas, and Rep. Charles A. Halleck of Indiana, house floor leader. Steel Strike Averted By Wage Hike Agreement Pittsburgh.—(UP)—The threat of a major steel strike this spring, was eliminated today with the negotiation of a 15-cent hourly wage increase for the employees of the "big steel" industry. The two-year agreement, which is retrospective to April 1 and runs until May 1, 1949, was reached yesterday between Philip Murray, president of the C.I.O. and the United Steel Workers, and officials of the U. S. Steel corporation. Mcscow. —(UP)— Soviet Foreign Minister V M. Molotov told the foreign ministers council today that the United States promise or probable financial assistance to the free territory of Trieste "might become external interference" in Trieste affairs. The agreement provides for a wage increase of 12 1-2 cents an hour, or $1 a day. The remainder of the raise will cover elimination of inequities by hiking hourly wage rates and improvement in vacations. Terms U.S. Aid To Triester As External Interference "The Soviet government believes that any external interference in the affairs of Trieste is undesirable," Molotov said. CIO Invited To Conference Washington.—(UP)—The AFL today invited the CIO to a "peace" conference here Thursday. The invitation was the first action taken by the AFL executive council as it opened its quarterly session here. Hope For Quick Settlement Washington. — (UP)—Government officials today counted on a wave of weekend wage settlements to lay the basis for ending the 15-day nationwide telephone strike. Film Stars To Texas City Hollywood—(UP)—The film colony and many southern California organizations rallied to the relief of Texas City disaster victims today. Orchestra leader Phil Harris announced that he and radio comedian Jack Benny would take their troupes to Texas for a benefit performance. Telephone Strikers Arrested Detroit..,(UP)—Sixteen strikers—including two top union officials—were arrested today after an outbreak of telephone picket line violence during which one man was injured seriously. *Opened In 1884 It was opened in January, to alleviate the crowded condition in Fraser, and the chemists were chosen to move into the new building. After all, it had been the mul ti-flavored odors from their lab that had prompted the legislature to erect the new building. So it wa named simply the Chemistry building. The building started its career in the usual manner; classes, lecture lab mishaps, and all the other trait of a chemistry building. But non malyce was shortlived because in 188 the new School of Pharmacy was opened and professors became hard pressed to find places for the man students in the undersized room New Building Built This condition lasted for 14 year and then the legislature cam through with another 55 thousand and a new chemistry building Bailey, was built. But no soone iad the chemists left with their est tubes than in moved the medic with their cadavers. With the move came a new nam—the Medical building. The medies were never very happy there however. It seems that there was enough space for them on the first floor, and a number of professor who tried to use the damo basement were stricken with malaria. The had completely abandoned the basement by 1911, because that year the Daily Kansan left its own drquarters in Fraser to take over the condemned portion of the Medicer building. Until 1923, the Medical buildin was home for the future doctors and editors alike. Then, the doctors for Kansas City and the builn was left with only type lice as occupants and its new name was u Journalism building. Word has it that in the near future the newspapermen are going to be leaving the cubby-hole offices and numerous frame additions for larger home. But to the "Shack it will be just another milestone along a busy road. It has seen then come and go before. 1947 Commencement Schedule Announced The commencement schedule for the 1947 graduating class, largest in the history of the University, has been announced by the commencement committee. Gilbert Ulmer, asistant dean of the College, is chair man. Commencement will begin June 12 and end June 16, when over 1,000 will receive diplomas. Reunion dinners and celebrations are planned for June 15, with all headquarters in the Union. The class of 1907 will have a 40-year reunion, and the class of 1927 a 20 year reunion. The main events follow: 8 p.m. School of Fine Arts commence ment recital. 8:30 p.m. Alumni-senior reception Sunday, June 15: 7:30 p.m. Baccalaureate services. Monday, June 16: 7.30 a.m. Breakfast for the class of 4' 10.15 a.m. Annual alumni association J 12:30 p.m. Commencement lunches 7:30 p.m. Commencement exercises Black Kittens Added To Navy Roster Two new "boots" came into the department of naval science last week. They are coal off-loading boats that has been hanging around. Despite the midnight color of the kittens, they are not looked upon as bearers of bad luck. Condir. R. J. Eaum said the kittens were born in the garage and have been cared for by the Navy. They will probably grow up to be catboat commanders or maybe members of the "black gang". 21, 194 University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Tuesday, April 22, 1947 44th Year No. 124 Lawrence, Kansas ack," sit buildings nationalism larges campus. ly, the conditioni wers w build the mul la thab that mature t it it wa y build careerist i lectured er trait but not nor in 1884 acway he une hard the man rooms 14 year we cam thousand building soome the ther medic w nam we med y there we wasn the firs professor assem师 a. The the base ye year th wn dr over the Medica buildin ctors tors build e as was th u furfurs to g b pieces and for "Shack" billestone then ment ced lulu dole highest i ha emence hia emence am, as is chair celebrate 15, with on. The year re 17 a 20 commencement exception successes. class of '4' association monochrome reprises June 13 er 1,00 into science off been ercises oler of looked luck e kik garage y the grow ers or black Democracy May Be On Way Out Minister Asserts THE REV. WINBURN THOMAS ☆ ☆ That Communism has won out over our conception of democracy was the opinion expressed by the Rev. Winburn Thomas at Religious Seminar, Monday. The Rev. Mr. Thomas has just returned from Europe where he spent two months visiting universities. Before the war he did social work in Japan, and traveled through China and Korea. "I fear the time has already run out on our conception of democracy in the world. The only way we can stop either Communism or Russia is an offensive which is as dynamic in the field as Russia's. And we don't have it." Russia Willing To Fight Now He said that the Russians feel theirs is the only true democracy, and that they differ from us in that they are willing to fight and die for their kind of democracy now, not just when war is declared. "Russia merely has to wait for events to take their normal course, and as conditions get worse, the soil for the growth of Communism gets better." Communism will be felt in the United States, in increasing controls of life the Rev. Mr. Thomas declared. Students Feel Sense Of Unity He also told the groun what he found in his studies of 19 European universities. "The students in Europe feel a sense of unity, and a oneness of spirit and purpose with other students simply because they are students. "European students have developed two powerful organizations the International Student Service to raise money for student's education, and unions of students. These unions of students have gained more power than the presidents of the French universities and for that reason are not being reorganized." He said there was a possibility of American students organizing an international union of students in this country, stated that two conferences are being planned, one this summer, and one next Christmas to do just that. The Rev. Mr. Thomas pointed out that there are two trends in the United States today that may eventually wipe out the YMCA and the YWCA, or at least reduce their area of activity to personal relation. These are unions of students which will take over the social aspect, and the Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, which is composed of "those students on the campus who are prios, whose soul activity on campus is going to prayer meetings." Double Door' May Be Ham But Folks Still Like It By ALLEN D. SMITH The "Double Door" swung open Monday night and released a torrent of melodrama upon the first night audience. The play a psychological character study written in the early 30's, is beginning to show its age. The plot involves the attempts of Victoria Van Bret, a family-conscious old maid to maintain her tyrannical domination over a sister, Caroline, and a half-brother, Rip, at the beginning of the 20th century. Her efforts to retain a grasp on these people almost wreck Rip's brand new marriage. The climax of the scheme is Victoria's attempt to murder Ann, Rip's bride. Everyone is saved, but the tyrant is still unbroken when the curtain falls. Darlene Van Biber and Alice McDonnell, portraying Victoria and Carolina Van Brett, turned in outstanding performances. Miss Van Biber did an excellent job as the domineering and stinder Victoria. Tom Rea did a credible job as Rip Van Bret, the male lead. Herk Harvey although he didn't do much in character creation, helped considerably to speed up the show. Jack Elliott's portrayal of the old K-State Here For Peace Treaty Ten members of the Kansas State College student council will meet Tuesday night with the A.S.C. to discuss means of stopping vandalism on the two campuses. The principal purpose of the joint meeting, to be held at the Union, is to decide upon a method of stopping acts of vandalism and pre-game painting, although year-around destruction will also come into the spotlight, council members said. Discussion is expected upon the draft of a new treaty, prepared by the K. U. council, which would provide for campus protection the entire year. The present treaty covers only athletic events. family lawyer seemed forced, and his contortions with his arms detracted from the performance. The pact now in existence was successful until this year when intense rivalry again broke out on both campuses producing minor destruction and increased antagonism between the two schools. Both football and basketball games brought raids on the K. U. campus last winter and Uncle Jimmy Green awoke on numerous occasions to find himself in a state of much-needed repair. Council leaders here said that little could be done beyond setting up an honor system for the two student bodies and providing for the punishment of raiders. This proved ineffective last winter since offenders were caught only once. The program will include explanations of the election system and proportional representation. A public address system will be set up and each candidate for the A.S.C. presidency will be given two minutes to present his views on student government. Anne played by Abigail Bixby, was weak in characterization. In the supporting cast, Mary K. Booth, Vivian Rogers, and Thomas Shay added a vigorous touch that enlivened the show. A student government rally sponsored by the newly organized League of Student Voters, will be held in Fowler grove at 9:45 a.m. tomorrow. The slogan of the rally will be "Vote for the person and not for the party." The audience tossed the largest bouquet to Miss Van Biber by showing its hatred for Victoria with a cheer when Rip finally broke away, Kansas—Mostly cloudy showers and thunderstorms occasional light drizzle west today. Cooler tonight. Low tonight 35 northwest to 50 southeast. Partly cloudy Wednesday except showers extreme east in morning. Warner west. "That kind of stuff is pure ham, but it's still good theater," commented Don Dixon, producer and director. WEATHER A.S.C. Candidates Will Speak At Rally 42 Indicted For Vote Fraud Kansas City—(UP)—A county grand jury, indicting 42 persons late yesterday, confirmed allegations that vote fraud returned to Kansas City in last summer's primary election. Fnos A. Axtell, backed by President Truman, defaced then-Rep Roger S. Slaughter for the Democratic nomination to congress from the fifth district. Whether the Axtell-Slaughter contest was involved directly in the alleged fraud was not revealed. Mr. Kimbrell said that 42 true bills returned yesterday—naming both Democratic and Republican election workers—represented only a start of the grand jury's work and indicated other indictments might be expected. 'Eagle' On Sale Today: Wants A & M In Big Six The Eagle, campus "middle-road" publication, is going on sale today in Marvin hall, Frank Strong hall, and the Union building at five cents a copy. Stating in its policy the belief that "the left is as bad as the right, and the right as bad as the left," the Eagle features articles backing the United States foreign policy and favoring the admission of Oklahoma A. and M. into the Big Six conference. Editors of the magazine invite everyone with ideas on current affairs to write them up and send them in. Short features are also desired. $740,000 Granted By Legislature For 3 Buildings An appropriation of $740,000 has been made by the Kansas legislature for three main building projects on the campus. Thev are: ONE. An addition to Watson library, costing $300,000. **TWO.** An engineering shop building totaling $290,000, to replace Fowler shops. The new shop will be built south of the mechanics laboratory on the promontory overlooking the Military Science building. THREE. Fowler shops will be remodelled into a journalism building. An appropriation of $150,000 has been set aside for this project, which Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, says will not be enough. The University may have to wait for the 1949 Kansas legislature to add more money before starting construction. Little Man On Campus Mr. Nichols said the University has not yet decided what will be done with the present journalism building. The legislature also appropriated $500,000 for two new dormitories, one for men and one for women. By Bibler K.J. J. RIDING INSTRU U.O.K. "If you had read the horse manual Miss Slurp you would know what is meant by 'bare-back'" Dr. Woodruff To Succeed Dean Werner C. H. B. LAURENCE C. WOODRUFF A new dean of student affairs, Dr. Laurence C. Woodruff, has been named by the board of regents, Chancellor Deane W. Malott announced today. Dr. Woodruff will succeed Dean Henry Werner, who is resigning upon orders from his physician. Dr. Woodruff, whose new appointment becomes effective July 1, served as acting registrar for four years until Registrar James K. Hitt returned from the army. Since then he has directed the new survey course in general biology. He will continue to teach that course after assuming his new duties, the chancellor said. Joined Faculty In 1934 Dean Werner has been ordered by his physician to take a complete rest during the summer. A long-time resident of Lawrence, Dr. Woodruff received his bachelor's degree here in 1924 and his masters in 1930. He was granted his doctor's degree from Cornell university in 1934. Later that year he joined the University faculty. Dean Werner, a native of England, came to this country in 1914. He came to the University in 1920 as assistant professor of chemistry and state food analyst. He became men's student advisor in 1929. The position was changed to dean of student affairs in 1944. "The doctor says I can't even take a vacation by going fishing," he said sadly. Dean Werner Must Rest Chancellor Malott said that after a summer of rest Dean Werner will resume his work as associate professor of chemistry and Kansas state food analyst. Early Serenades Get Probation For Five Five men students have been placed on probation for the rest of this semester. Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, said today. The names of the five students were not released. "Several groups of men have been attempting to serenade the women in organized houses at early hours in the morning. The singing has been decidedly unharmonious," said Dean Werner, "One of these groups attempted to serenade an organized house at 3 am. April 14. There was no response from the house, so the men kicked the door, rang the doorbell, and made plenty of noise. "The neighbors awoke, recognized some of the group, and turned in a complaint. Since this is getting to be a common occurrence, it is necessary - UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE TWO APRIL 22,1947 'Paw' Kloepper Overshadows Pilot And 'Ham' Progenies Dean Kloepper, a high school senior from Lancaster, is probably the first contestant to fly his own plane to Lawrence to compete in the preliminary Summerfield scholarship tests. Dean, 18, owns a Piper Cub and has had a student pilot's license since he was 17. He lives on a farm near Lancaster and has a landing strip and hangar on a nearby clover field. Flies Father To Meetings His father is on the board of trustees at Midland college in Nebraska, and Dean hauls him to and from board meetings regularly. These trips and business trips to Oklahoma and over Kansas keep Dean in the air most of the time. The "ham" is Robert Kloepper, an assistant instructor in the physics department, an amateur radio fan. Robert with his ham set contacted his father at Lancaster who also has a radio set, about weather conditions there. Conditions were bad and Dean waited until Tuesday to go home. Kloepger Intervenes Dean flew to Lawrence March 17, took the tests the next day and was ready to fly back that evening until the "team" intervened. Robert built the radio set at the farm home before he went into the army. Then, when he was discharged last fall, he couldn't talk his father out of the set, so he built another when he came to Lawrence. Both sets have been assigned call letters by the Federal Communications commission. Technician In Army Robert was in the army two and one-half years as a radio technician. In his spare time, while stationed in Manila, he built a radio set and had it licensed with the Philippine Commonwealth government under the call letters KA1AP. His father/with help of amateur relay radio stations in Hawaii, Guam, and Okinawa, sent messages which Robert was able to pick up with his set in Manila. "Fear." Not Outdone set it down "Paw" Not Outdone In fact "Paw" Kloepper, not to be outdone by either of his sons in the hobby field, has talked to amateurs in Hawaii, England, New Zealand, Australia, Japan, Guam, South Africa, Canada, and several South and Central American countries. All of which leaves us wondering what Mrs. Kleoeper does in her spare time. Maybe she collects atom bombs or something. 'Are You Haptical, Visual Or Between?' State College, Pa.—(UP)—Dr. Viktor Lowenfeld, professor of art education at Pennsylvania State college, believes every person is either hapital, visual or in-between. A baptical person works primarily through the sense of touch. A visual, according to Dr. Lowenfeld, uses his eyes for observation and possesses unusual ability to visualize details. While riding in a train, a haptical sees merely pieces of landscape through the moving train window. The visual is able to integrate these pieces in his mind into one landscape," he explained. The professor believes that the haptical would be the better person for mechanical jobs, where skillful fingers are needed. Miss Anderson Speaks To P-T Club Miss Margaret Anderson, associate professor of speech, spoke on speech therapy at the Physical Therapy club last night in the hospital classroom. Miss Anderson is a member of the speech correction department of the student health program. Inter-Dorm Council To Discuss Powers The Women's Inter-dorm council will vote at their next meeting on the question of executive power over all organized houses. According to the present constitution, the council may only recommend and has no actual jurisdiction over houses. "The executive power will be of special use in setting up new dormitories," said Bonnie Chestnut, president of the council. "We will have specific rules for the new house and they will not have to rely on their own judgment." To obtain executive powers, the council must amend the constitution and must have the approval of the dean of women, Miss Chestnut said. More than 18,000 veterans in Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma applied to the Veterans administration during March for education and training benefits under the G. I. Bill. DRINK MILK FOR MILK BOTTLE PEP, ENERGY, HEALTH. Drink our Grade "A" Pasteurized Milk today and Every Day Lawrence Sanitary Milk & Ice Cream Lindley's Kansas Cleaners 12 E. 8th Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices MEN'S SUITS Cleaned and Pressed ... 65c LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES— Cleaned and Pressed ... 69c Cash and Carry Only The image shows a woman with long hair, wearing a white top and holding her hands up to her face. She is smiling broadly at the camera. The background is plain black. Hey There! ALONG WITH YOUR SPRING CLEANING- GET A MOTOR TUNE-UP Job done on your car. You'll be wanting to take lots of drives now that its spring, so put your car in tip-top shape. CHANNEL - SANDERS Motor Co. 622-24 Mass. Phone 616 (Ha!) Lost Something? Try a University Daily Kansan Want Ad A-T-A ADMIT THE AGGIES 1. Don't Discriminate Against Oklahoma A & M 2. K.U. Students Can't Change Okla. Racial Laws 3. We Already Have 5 Year Contracts With Okla.A&M 4. Racial Non-Discrimination Is Steadily Improving In Okla. N. O.W. - Pachacamac Independent-Greek Cooperation For 35 Years The ONLY Party Endorsing The Admittance Of Oklahoma Aggies APRIL 22,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE A SOCIALLY SPEAKING Triangle Pledges Four Triangle fraternity announces the pledging of the following: Tri Delts Give Awards Robert M. Kunert, Raytown, Mo.; James E. Faris, Hutchinson; Chester Neal Holliman. St. Francis; and Winton L. Studd, Kansas City. Two scholarship awards of $75 each were presented to Barbara Meyer, Kansas City, Mo., freshman in fine arts, and Miss Phyllis Farrell, Marysville, Kan., senior in home economics, at the Missouri-Kansas state meeting of the Delta Delta Delta, Saturday, at the Hotel Continental. The competition is open to all girls on the campus. Scholarship awards are given on the basis of scholarship character, and outside activities. Mrs. Frank Carlson, wife of the governor of Kansas, who was guest of honor, presented the award to Miss Meyer. The second award will be sent to Miss Farrell, who was not present. The entire membership of the K.U. chapter, 45 members, was present for the all-day meeting, the first Kansas-Missouri state day since 1937. Ricker Hall Has Party Ricker Hall had a "Suppressed Desire" party, Friday night. Guests were Roger Adams, Robert Thayer, Warren Brick, Vern Birney, Richard Harris, Benjamin Raymond, Robert Fleming, Pete Jensen, Ben McKinley, Lowell Elliott, and John Reber. Chaperones were Mr. and Mrs Irvin Youngberg, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mize. The following were guests at the annual Delta Tau Delta Steak fry held at Holcomb's grove Friday night: Delt's Have Steak Fry Shirley Griggsy, Eunice Carlson, Marjorie Seidmore, Sibyl Duff, Susan Thompson, Pat Hinshaw, Cara King, Marilyn Barnum, Beverly Fox, Jo Compton, Arleen Fieldkamp, Norma Jones, Corinne Temple, Joano Carr, Ollie Swaim, Bonnie Holden, Mary Sawyer, Nancy Welker, Marnie Brown, Harriet Harlow, Corine Carter, Marion Sheldon, Bonnie Cunningham. Bernadine Read, Bobbie Smith B. Cook, Patricia Noreross, Lou Minich, Harriet Waddell, Norma Mendenhall, A. Wehe, Mary Hagerty, Dolores Teachenor, Edna Mae Cates, Mary Helen Keller, Helen Dietzel, Kathleen, McClannan, Dorothy O'Connor, Darlee Althaus, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Goss, Mr. and Mrs Ernest Rice, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lee. Cunningham, Donna Kapp, Eleanor Howell, Jo Ellen Hall, Janet Maloney, Marilyn Steinert, Marjorie Funk, Nancy Nevins, Barbara Howard, Jane Elb- le, Leatha Sanford, Mary Ann Mc- clure, Dottie Mooney, Joan Manuel, Charlotte Moxey, Martha Legler, Lola Branit, Eileen Maloney, Ethel Pearson, Jane Belt, Doraen Lian- quist, Margaret Lynn, Kathryn O'Leary, Phyllis Fretwell. Chaperones were Mrs. Nelle Hopkins, and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Biery Carey Will Explain Volcanic Ash Glaze J. Sheldon Carey, assistant professor of ceramics, will explain his process of utilizing ansas volcanic ash as a pottery glaze, at the annual meetings of the American Ceramic society beginning today in Atlantic City. Professor Carey has developed a low-cost base glaze suitable for commercial production, and is now conducting experiments for using volcanic ash in color glazes. This volcanic ash, found in great quantities in western Kansas, costs about five per cent less than other glazes. 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, holidays and Sundays. Entitled "Holidays and Sundays Periods. Entered as a class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. Jean McGavran Went To Coed's Boarding School In Himalayas COED'S CORNER She knows as much about exotic India as most of us know about our own hometowns. Jean McGavran, Watkins hall, is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs. D. A. McGavran' missionaries to India from the Christian church. Jean, was born in Naini Tal, a village in the United Province, in India, and in India she remained until 1944 but for two brief furloughs in the U.S. Schooled in Himalayas "I went to school at Woodstock, an American coeducational boarding school in the northern Himalayas. All roads from there led either up or down, so when people talk of the Hill here, it's just a slope to me! "The semester system is different in India. We went up to Woodstock in March and came down in December to spend the vacation months with our parents who were stationed about a thousand miles away in the United Province." Jean and her sister Helen began kindergarten at the same time and continued there through grade and high school. "We've always been in the same grade together; it's more companionable that way. We're almost like twins." The McGavran "twins" came to the states in 1944 during the war. "We sailed on a troop ship via Australia and the Panama to Boston. It was a circuitous route, but I guess it was safer that way. We didn't have any chance for sightseeing, though. "As civilians, we were not permitted to leave the ship, whereas the The girls started as freshmen at Washington university in St. Louis, Mo., in the fall of 1944. Helen is still there, but Jean came to K.U. as a junior pre-med this fall. She is eager to begin medical school next semester. officers got off at every port and came back with perfumes, jewelry and other souvenirs." "Two uncles and my father are all doctors. It is common for missionaries in India to be doctors, because of the vital need for medical care there." Jean says the McGavran family is running over with doctors. Plenty Of Doctors Belles And Their Weddings Right now, Jean is "holding her breath for six weeks" when she expects to see her parents for the first time in three years. "They left a few days ago, on a ship bound for the United States. It will be grand to see them again. And, naturally, I'm eager to see how my little sisters Winnie and Pat have changed. They were eight and six when I last saw them, and they change in a hurry at that age." Walker-Walker Students are given check-up tests after using the devices to determine if they gained vocabulary comprehension while reading correctly. . . Walter Baker Pi Bertie Phi announces the pinning of Elaine Walker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Walker of Wichita, to William Walker, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. S. Walker of Hutchinson. not regress. The reading clinic owns three of the devices. Two are small and are used individually, while the third is large enough to be used with a class of 20 persons. The clinic has enough rolls that no student ever reads the same one twice. April 20 to 26 has been named as "National Service Life Insurance Week" by a proclamation from Mayor C. B. Russell of Lawrence. "Unfortunately, our large machine is now in the factory being repaired, but it will be back in a few days in clinic," Joseph Holly, clinic counselor said. Metronoscope Used To Help Slow Readers The metronoscope, an electrical device used by the reading clinic, is devised to stop regression, common fault of slow readers. Leaders of the community will emphasize the advantages of National Service Life insurance to all veterans of World War II, and especially to those who have permitted their insurance to lapse. Barbara Varner, Margaret Lawler, and Margaret Foster wearing white carnations and staphanotis corsages, assisted in the ceremony which took place during dinner. Mrs. Dean Alt, housemother, wore a gardenia corsage. Traditional chocolates were passed. April 20 To 26 Is Insurance Week Miss Walker is a senior in the School of Education. Mr. Walker is a senior in the School of Engineering and a member of Phi Delta Theta. trait of slow readers. The device consists of a roll which can be regulated at any rate between 15 to 50 lines a minute. This roll exposes each line of approximately eight words for a small time in such a way that the student's eyes cannot regress, or jump back. Students Present Engineering Topics Four student papers discussing practical applications of electrical engineering principles were read at an American Institute of Electrical Engineers meeting recently. Dale Runner, engineering junior, read a paper on electrical machines for the solution of simultaneous linear equations. Such a machine can solve linear equations up to 12 unknowns from four to seven times faster than an expert using ordinary arithmetic methods, Runner said. Charles Irwin, engineering senior, discussed the apparatus used in the radar blind landing system. This system enables planes to land safely when visibility is extremely limited, and should be an important factor in reducing air line accidents, Irwin declared. John Marggrave, engineering junior, read a paper on the advantages and properties of the coaxial cable, which is capable of carrying high frequencies, and greatly improves the effectiveness of television and high velocity telephone systems. Marggrave said. Same Location-State Management You are welcome 711 Mass. Henry Black, engineering senior, explained the steps in Armstrong's frequency modulation. Read the Daily Kansan daily. De LUXE CAFE 28 YEARS OF SERVICE 3-day Cleaning Service 4-day Laundry Service . . . 24-hol Leather and Garment Dyeing a Specialty. --- Village Cleaners SUNFLOWER, KANSAS Opposite School Western Union----8 a.m.-9 p.m. Free PickUp and Delivery Phone 9009 Dehydrates Specimens Gainesville, Fla. — (UP) — The University of Florida's experiment station has found a way to dehydrate botanical specimens and preserve them indefinitely in transparent plastic. Phone KU-25 with your news. FLYING? see the FIRST NATIONAL BANK Ad in today's Kansan! DE SOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH Bradley GALLAGHER MOTORS Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL Change To SPRING WEIGHT OIL See Darl for The premium plus oils Quaker State and Permalube Darl's Standard So Darl's Standard Service 23rd and La. PACIFIC CENTER FOR VEHICLE REPAIR JJUST ARRIVED—— TERRY CLOTH SHIRTS PULLOVER, LONG SLEEVEES, $2.25 BUTTO NCOAT STYLE, $2.50 Tan and blue stripe—Small, Medium, and Large. Kansas T-Shirts, $1.25 Kansas Sweat Shirts, $2, $2.25 CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Hold It... ] HIXON'S 721 Mass. WE SPECIALIZE IN BETTER KODAK FINISHING Drop in and examine our complete stock of Amateur Supplies Today. BARRY MCGREGOR R.C.A. Radios Battery-Electric Portable $65.20 R.C.A. Personel Battery, Camera Size $32.50 Table Model Record Players $99.50 Table Model Radios $24.50 to $49. BELL MUSIC CO. 925-27 Mass. Phone 375 . UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 22,1947 PAGE FOUR SPOTLIGHT SPORTS Bv RILL CONBOY Despite stiff competition from Southwest conference and Big Nine schools, the Big Six held its own in the Kansas Relays Saturday. Nebraska furnished the javelin victor and earned a runner-up award winner in McGimnis. Monte Kinder of the Cornhusker squad tied for first in the high jump. Drake won the four-mile relay for the second straight year. Texas A. and M. repeated its 1946 victory in the mile relay. Southwest High school came through with another win for Kansas City, Mo., high schools. Lawler of Texas again won the 100-vard dash. Six defending champions were successful in their bids for top honors. Scofield came through in the high jump to add to his victory in the Relays here last year. Grote was again the javelin champion, although Karl Ebel of Kansas/ was only $7\frac{1}{4}$ inches behind him. Allen Lawler won the 100-yard dash final in .997. This time was he the same number last year's record, but the clock was unset on Saturday than it was in 1946. Missouri won the two-mile relay and had two of the six men who tied for first in the pole vault. Oklahoma won the sprint mendley relay. Kansas State had one man in the first place pole vault deadlock. Kansas had Tom Scofield who tied Kinder for the high jump title. The wet track did not prevent some remarkably fast times in the 100-yard dash preliminaries and finals. The times for the three preliminary heats were :69.7, :69.8, and :69.9. North Texas State won the half-mile relay in 1317. In 1946, the winning time (by Howard Payne) was 145.2 seconds and is amazing how fast some of the times were Saturday despite poor running conditions. The college distance medley race was also won by South Dakota State. The time was 11:25. Peru, Nebr. Teachers won the event in 1946 in 11:28. The two-mile college relay was won by South Dakota State in 8:22.8 Emporia State captured the event last year in 8:36.8. The South Dakota State quartet which won the above two races is composed of four freshmen. They had a meet up in South Dakota on Friday. After the meet, the coach told them he didn't see how they could make Lawrence in time for them they begged to give them a chance in their big meet, so he drove all night to bring them here in time to compete. And they really proved their stuff on the cinder track Saturday. Fortune Gordien of Minnesota won the shot put with a heave of 51 feet, $7\frac{3}{4}$ inches. In 1946, Creese of Colorado took the title with a toss of 47 feet, $4\frac{3}{4}$ inches. Big Ed Quirk of Missouri hit 47 feet, $2\frac{1}{2}$ inches this year but didn't even qualify. This surprised many of the experts since Quirk has a previous distance of 53 feet, 1 inch to his credit and was the N. C. A. A. shot put champion two years ago. Gordien also annexed the discus title. The Minnesota strong man sailed the platter 154 feet, 4 inches in the rain. Thompson of Camp Grant won the event last year with a toss of 142 feet. 9 inches. North Texas State won the college mile relay in 3.30.8 this year. Emporia State had the victorious quartet in 1946, but the winning over a dry track was 3.31.7, again not as good as this year's mark. From the above examples it appears that Old Man Weather was alone responsible for this year's Relays escaping a case of acute record-breakitis. Oil Jobs Open In Venezuela Engineers interested in jobs with a national petroleum company will be interviewed by R. L. Hale, company representative, on Wednesday. The company's looking for unmarried to women Venezuela on field exploration activities. Students interested should inquire at the engineering office. 'Spring Chicken' Connie Calls Spud An Old Man (By United Press) You may have heard this, yet it bears repeating. Connie Mack was being complimented on the beating his team handed Yankee Spud Chandler, a 20-game winner last season. "So what if he did win 20 games," Mack exploded. "That fellow's getting old and in this mess you can't go on forever." Note: Connie is a young 84 + and in his 63rd year of baseball. Chandler is a rickety 37 and in his 15th year of baseball. Net Squad To Play William Jewell Today The Jayhawker tennis team will cross rackets with the William Jewell college squad at 2:30 p.m. today on the two upper concrete courts by Memorial stadium. Coach Gordon Sabine said that several new faces will appear in the Kansas lineup. Likely participants are: Singles—Harold Miller, Frank Gage, Hervey Macferran, Lynn Greeley, Mever Mazon. Doubles--Dick Richards and Roy Shoaf, Sam Mazon and Bob Barnes. The next home match will be with Washburn university Saturday. Two Chicago Teams Win Major Games The Chicago Cubs' Hank Wyse blanked Cincinnati's bunch of surprising sluggers 3-0 Monday on three hits, and had a one-hitter until the ninth. Lennie Merulo, usually the weakest hitter in the Cub lineup, led the attack with four of the 10 Bruin hits off the Reds' Ken Peterelman. Liamano got two of the Cincinnati hits. Hodgin Is Beamed Hal Newhouser of the Detroit Tigers had one of his rare wild streaks in the first inning of the Chicago-Detroit game, walking three batters and serving on a bean ball. Yvette Sox outfielder Ralph Hodgin. Hodgin was taken to a Detroit hospital suffering from a brain concussion, and will be out of the line-up. He is back at Chipotle St. Union. Chipotle St. Union Chicaco tallied three times in the first and went on to whip the Tigers 6-4 and keep their record of the only unbeaten team in the majors to date. Frank Papish got eredit for the victory. Luke Appling, with a double and two singles, and Cass Michaels, who drove in three runs with a double and single, led the White Sox at the plate. All other major league games were postponed. Spokane, Wash.—UF—An increasing rate of insanity among adult residents. Spokane is believed by door cloors to be an aftermath of the war. The police identification bureau reports that 10 times as many persons are be taken in charge for insanity than in pre-war years. When the identification bureau reorganized its file system 19 months ago, a card index was set up leaving space for the listing of insane suspects for the next 10 years. Almost half the space is now filled. Insanity Increases After World War Chief Michael J. Shea retired last May after 44 years' service. Then Thomas E. Rude was chief when he retired because of age in July. The ratio of insane persons in Spokane County is one woman to every three men. Fitchburg, Mass.—(UP) This city has had a real parade of fire chiefs the Four Fire Chiefs In Year John Nikula took over but his temporary appointment expired in December. Now Ernest C. Caouette is chief. Funeral Services For Charlton On Wednesday Glenn W. Charlton, one-time student at the University, died suddenly at 4:30 p.m. Sunday following a probable heart attack. Charlton, a Lawrence resident, was 57. A former president of the K.U.Relays club, he helped officiate the Kansas relays, Saturday. Funeral services will be at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Plymouth Congregational church, with the Rev. C. Fosser Hughes, pastor, officiating. Burial will be in Oak Hill cemetery. Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Paula Arbenz Charlton; his mother, Mrs. Carrie B. Charlton; a son, Robert S. Charlton, 424 Indiana; and a brother, Theodore S. Charlton. Charlton attended Wentworth Military academy. Boonville, Mo., where he wont letter awards in football, basketball, baseball, track, and tennis. He.was a student at K.U. from 1906 to 1907. Then he coached football at Bradley college, Peoria, Ill. Charlton was owner of the Charlton Insurance agency, East Seventh street. He was a member of the Congregational church. Active in civic affairs, he was a 32nd degree Mason, a member of Jesters, Rotary, and an organizer of Lawrence Kiwanis club. He was former president of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce and the Lawrence Country club. More than 5,200 veterans in Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri and Oklahoma applied to the Veterans administration for hospital or domiciliary care during March. WE FIT GLASSES and DUPICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames. Lawrence Optical Co. I wish for a Cardinal Cardinal BONDED DIAMOND RINGS Hitch your wishes to the stary brilliance of a Cardinal Bonded Diamond Ring. Each diamond afire with captured starlight. Bonded for lifelong assurance. $500 to $500 $50 to $500. HAPPY 10TH ANNIVERSARY Gustafson COLLEGE JEWELER 809 Mass. PLASTICS ENGINEERING Prepare for your career in America's fastest-growing industry with practical plastics instruction directed by nationally known plastic engineer and production expert. Summer course beginning June 23 includes mold design, fabrication, plastics engineering and sales. Previous plastics experience not necessary. Approved for Veterans Training. SUMMER COURSES WRITE FOR FREE CATALOG AND FULL DETAILS KANSAS CITY SCHOOL OF PLASTICS 3827 Main St. Kansas City, Missouri ARE YOU AFRAID to take your heap out on the open road. . . afraid to get more than a bolt's throw from a mechanic or a parts department? If your car isn't a good performer, come in and get an estimate for anything from a tune-up to a tear-down. Darnell Electric 619 Mass. Phone 360 Elizabeth Arden Elizabeth Arden Sleek CHIC... QUICK... Sleek Elizabeth Arden's wonderful depilatory that goes on in long fragrant ribbons, comes off leaving a smooth, satiny clean surface, discourages the return of unwanted hair or fuzz. Essential before applying Velva Leg Film, or on the underarm. Sleek, 1.00 plus taxes Cosmetic Dept. Weavers SDIr 71 1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE APRIL 22,1947 Sigma Nu Beats Delta Chi, 6-5 In Upset Monday Excellent pitching and last inning balls were featured in intramural softball games played Monday. Sigma Nu squeezed by Delta Chi 6-5; Sig Ep blanked Oread hall 5-0; D.U. swamped Kappa Eta Kappa 24-3; and Kappa Sigma defeated the Fly-by-Nights 11-4. Trailing 5-1 going into the last inning, the Sigma Nu nine suddenly came to life and scored 5 runs to win their game from the Delta Chi's. The winners scored their ve runs on a walk, two errors, and two hits. McNeive Sets Pace McNeive, Sig Ep pitcher, set the pace for his team by tossing a one-hit game against Oread hall. Wriglesworth and Garich powered homers for the winners. Hermann, Delta Upsilon pitcher, turned in a three hit job for his team. The DU's had little trouble in defeating the Kappa Efa's 24-3. Heisler allowed the Fly-by-Nights four hits for another tight pitch performance while the Kappa Sig's were gathering 11 runs to win without trouble 11-4. Volleyball games played Monday also provided their share of close scores. ATO topped Phi Gamma Delta in a three game affair and the Kappa Sigs defeated the 1128 Club in another contest that went the full three games. Battlefield won from Barnum Bacon by a forfeit. ATO's Win 2 of 3. Alpha Tau Omega won the first and hardest fought game from the Phi Gam's 15-12, but found themselves on the short end of a 15-7 count at the end of the second battle. In the final game the ATO's were not to be denied and they won 15-10. After dropping the first of the three games played 15-9, the Kappa Sigs came back strong to cop the second 15-11 and the third 15-3. 75 B-29's Pass K.U. In Bombing Practice Seventy-five B-29's flew near Lawrence shortly before 1 p.m. today in a practice bombing mission on Kansas City. After making their first run over the city the bombers will fly north to St. Joseph. Squadrons from New Mexico and Texas rendezvous over Wichita Falls, Texas, at 10:54 this morning and flew northwestat a 3,000 feet. The flight is at low altitude to give watchers a glimpse of the task force. In an actual raid the bombers would fly between 40,000 and 50,000 feet. Probable Pitchers American League Boston (Dobson 1-9) at New York (Beyens 1-0) Washington (Wynn 0-1) at Philadelphia (Fowler 0-1). Chicago (Lopat 1-0) at Detroit (Trout 0-1). St. Louis (Galehouse 0-1) at Cleveland (Fallon 0-1) National League New York (Jansen 0-1) at Boston (Sabnk 0-0). Philadelphia (Leonard 1-0) at Brooklyn (Gregg 1-0). Cincinnati (Beggs 0-1) at Chicago (Cade, 0-0). Pittsburgh (Roe 1-0) at St. Louis Munger (1-0). Table Tennis Tournament Opens In Union Today Preliminaries in the men's doubles of the table tennis tournament will begin at 7:15 today in the men's lounge of the Union. Donald Ong, a member of the intramurals committee, said that a limited number of additional entries will be accepted this afternoon. The deadline for entries in the women's bridge tournament has been extended to Saturday, Ong said. All teams should register at the hostess' desk in the Union. The play-offs will be at 7:15 Tuesday, April 29, in the Union. Winners of both tournaments will be awarded medals. Six Million Ex-GI's Apply For Education Benefits So you think it's crowded at the University now? The Veterans administration in Washington has just announced that more than 6 million ex GL's have applied for education or training benefits, and that most of these have not yet started their courses. At present there are about 5,500 veterans attending the University. Babe Ruth Is Home; Feels Much Improved New York—(UP)—Babe Ruth was back home today ready to tackle his new job as head of sandlot baseball activities for the Ford Motor company, following a two-week vacation at Miami Beach, Fla. It was the first time he had been permitted to take any exercise since he underwent a serious neck operation here early last February. He arrived at Newark, N.J., airport last night with his wife, Mrs. Claire Ruth, and his nurse. After being driven home to his apartment on riverside drive, he fell asleep almost immediately. Ruth will make a command performance next Sunday at Yankee Stadium as honor guest of "Babe Ruth Day," an occasion being observed in all major league parks. Baseball Results The scores of Mondays games: Chicago 6 Detroit 4 Boston at Washington, postponed, rain Only games scheduled. National League: Chicago 3, Cincinnati 0. Philadelphia at New York, postponed. rain. Brooklyn at Boston, postponed, rain. Only games scheduled. Standings of Teams American Ass'n: Kansas City 3 0 1.000 Minneapolis 1 0 1.000 Columbus 3 2 6.000 Louisville 2 2 5.000 Toledo 1 1 5.000 Indianapolis 1 2 3.333 St. Paul 2 4 3.333 Milwaukee 1 3 2.500 American League W. L. Pct. Chicago 3 0 1.000 Boston 4 1 8.000 New York 4 2 6.677 Detroit 2 3 4.000 Washington 2 3 4.000 St. Louis 1 2 3.333 Cleveland 1 2 3.333 Philadelphia 1 5 1.677 National League W. L. Pct. Pittsburg 5 1 8.833 Philadelphia 4 2 6.677 Brooklyn 2 2 5.000 Chicago 3 3 5.000 New York 2 3 4.000 Boston 2 3 4.000 Cincinnati 3 5 3.750 St. Louis 2 4 3.333 COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals - Short Orders Sandwiches Open 5:30-12:30 Books For Gifts Come in and see them whenever you are down town. Birthdays Weddings and convalescents for THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Cincinnati—(UP)—The one year suspension of Brooklyn Dodger manager Leo Durocher was a closed incident today as far as Baseball Commissioner A. B. (Happy) Chandler was concerned. Durocher Case Closed Says A. B. Chandler Chandler turned down personal appeals for leniency yesterday which were made by Branch Rickey, president of the Dodgers; Ford Frick president of the National league; and Judge Henry L. Ughetta and Walter O'Malley, stockholders in the Brooklyn club. The four men made a special trip here from New York to ask Chandler for reconsideration of the one year suspension he imposed on Durocher April 9 for "conduct detrimental to baseball." "The Commissioner declined the request, stating that the Durocher case was closed." Democratic Labor Unions Imperative For Democracies Los Angeles, Calif.—(ACP)—That the preservation of democratic labor unions is necessary for the preservation of democracy was declared recently by Herbert K. Sorrell, president of the Conference of Studio Unions, in an address at the University of Southern California. Eston—(UP)—If you're a man and feel it beneath your dignity to climb ladders to hang pictures on clean walls, here's an excuse: Women are better adapted for the job safety experts say. Ladder Climbing Dangerous For Men As the family breadwinner, you can tell your wife it would be risky business for you to clamber up a steep stairway to that picture of your mother-in-law. You can quote authorities at the 26th annual Massachusetts Safety Conference as saying every fifth man who mounts a ladder in his home suffers injury. Women have far fewer injuries, the experts say, because they're more careful and more agile. WE SPECIALIZE IN WE SPECIALIZE IN JUICY STEAKS and OTHER FINE FOODS. Thick Malts Sandwiches Short Orders BILLS GRILL QUICK COURTEOUS SERVICE Across From 1109 Mass. Court House Phone 2054 --- Lovely Hair Heads The Spring Parade Those undesirable little ends of hair can be turned into soft lustrous curls by our experts. Call 493 for appointments. Marinello Beauty Shop 1119 Mass. Phone 493 NOW, Ends Saturday HER HEART'S Desire HER HEART'S Disgrace HER HEART'S Desire A WARN RE-RELEASE ANN SHERIDAN ROBERT CUMMINGS RONALD REAGAN BETTY FIELD "KINGS ROW" WITH CHARLES COBURN CLAUDE RAINS • JUDITH ANDERSON • NANCY COLEMAN KAAREN VERNE • MARIA OUSPENSKAYA • HARRY DAVENPORT Screen Play by CASCE ROBINSON • From the Neuford Directed by SAM WOOD HENRY BELLMAN • Music by ENCH WOG KJANG DOINGOLD 2nd Feature WILD BILL HICKOK RIDES" 2nd Feature "WILD BILL HICKOK RIDES" CONSTANCE BENNETT · BRUCE CABOT · WARREN WILLIAM WARNER RE-RELEASE BETTY BRENNER - WALTER CALETT - Directed by RAY ENRIGHT PRESENTED BY CHARLES PAMELA, PAUL GRAND, GEORG A. SMITH, SAWMON KENNEDY Two Features SHOWING AT THE . Well Worth Seeing PATEE Complete Evening Shows Come Early Matinee Daily at 2 p.m. At 7 and 8:25 JAYHAWKER SEE A SHOW TONITE Ends Tomorrow DOUGLAS FAIRBANKS, JR. MAUREEN O'HARA "Sinbad the Sailor" Wed., One Week ANN SHERIDAN KENT SMITH LOVING HER ONCE. is once too often! ANN SHERIDAN KENT SMITH Nora Prentiss GRANADA Now, Ends Wed. WALLACE BEERY The Mighty McGurk Edward Arnold Bass Stockwell Thurs., Fri., Sat. That Terrific Star of "Anna and The King Of Siam" Notorious Gentleman with LILLI PALMER REX HARRISON in Notorious Gentleman with LILLI PALMER The Sensation of "Cloak and Dagger" PATEE Now, All Week NOTHING HIDDEN NOTHING LEFT OUT AWM SHERIDAN-CUMMINGS AND REAGAN - FIELD - KINGS ROW CHARLES LINCOLN CORBURNS RAINS A WARNER JOURNAL AMERICA - MARVEL COLUMBIA - AARON VERNE - NINA QUIPPENBERG * BARRY CHEWPORT SAN WACO "ALSO! "WILD BILL HICKOK RIDES" CONSTANCE, DENNEST BRIDE CAROT - WINDER WILLOW 19TH DECEMBER 1945 AT 7:30 P.M. WARNER-BROADWAY 19TH DECEMBER 1945 AT 7:30 P.M. VARSITY Ends Tonite "Fool's Gold" "3 on a Ticket" Wed., 4 Days The Magnificent Rogue LYNNE ROBERTS WARREN DOUGLAS AND THE THREE MESQUITEERS "Come On Cowboys" --- --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 22,194 PAGE SIX Kansan Comments Cancer Drive Merits Support When you attend your next class count its members. Divide that number by eight. The resulting figure is the number of your classmates who may suffer the agonies of cancer. Unless concerted action is taken, it is estimated that one in eight Americans will die of cancer. The campaign against this killer merits the support of every one. Sueh support is actually a matter of enlightened self-interest. Cancer is no respecter of persons, age, or sex. It is sound personal insurance to co-operate in the fight against it. The Kansas Division of the American Cancer Society is aiming at a minimum goal of $120,912 in this month's campaign. Sixty per cent of this fund will stay in the state. It will be put to work financing medical research, improving hospital facilities, and in an expanded program of public education about this disease. The remaining 40 per cent of the fund will go to the national cancer fund to aid in the national research and education campaign. Cancer deaths have risen from 133,000 in 1930 to an expected toll of 185,000 during this year. Medical authorities expect this yearly increase to continue unless concerted action is taken. Scientific research is costly. But the dividends we can reap from such research will repay many times over any contributions we make now. The campus office for this campaign is 107. Robinson Gymnasium. If you find it inconvenient to go to the campaign office, place your contribution in an envelope, mark it "Cancer Drive, 107 Robinson Gymnasium," and drop it in any of the boxes provided for campus mail. Nine days remain in the current campaign. Join the fight now to conquer cancer! Lesson In Texas On Thursday of last week Hal Boyle flew over Texas City, Texas. When he landed he wrote these words, "In four years of war coverage I have seen no concentrated devastation so utter, except in Nagasaki, Japan, victim of the second atomic bomb." Mr. Boyle's words are worth not ing. They offer food for sober thought. In spite of the terrible destruction of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, the fact that they were enemy cities, thousands of miles away, served to lessen somewhat the impression those bombs should have had on the American mind. The tremendous tragedy in Texas, however, took hundreds of American lives. It struck without warning. The entire nation was appalled at the results. Aid and sympathy from all parts of the country poured to the stricken area. The comparison of this event with what happened in Nagasaki is worth thinking about. But should an atomic attack ever hit America, there would be one of the above elements lacking. Stricken areas could hope for little aid from the rest of the country. An atomic attack would strike simultaneously at many points. Communications and transportation would be drastically crippled. During the recent war, our nation was fortunate in one important respect. Americans were spared the experience of unheralded mass destruction of our civilian population. We now have had a taste of the effects of large scale explosions. The Texas City disaster should provide added inspiration for the tenacious effort we must exert to secure effective control of atomic energy and to erase the problems that may breed World War III. Dear Editor--in strikingly smart combination of 10-Karat Gold-filled top and satin-finish stainless steel barrel. Barring A. and M. The Daily Kansan of April 8 and 9 published letters concerning the admission of Oklahoma A. and M. that contained not only a bias but also outright and deliberate distortion of facts. From time immemorial, the backward and evil forces of reaction have tried to suppress the growth of a democratic way of life. Today those who are attempting to make a democracy a reality here at the University are being subjected to the same old smear tactics. Let us set the record straight on this matter. Oklahoma A. and M. will not allow non-white students from Kansas to participate in athletic contests held in Oklahoma. As a result of discrimination in Oklahoma and Missouri, Negro athletes at KU have been discouraged from trying out for athletics. This means that Oklahoma and Missouri are forcing the state of Kansas to adopt some of the same discrimination for which they are so well known. The problem is not merely the question of whether or not a particular school should be admitted to the conference; it is much larger than this. It is once again the age-old conflict between human rights and property rights, democracy and fascism, good and evil. William Scheinman College Sophomore Russia's resolved to disagree In all peace negotiations, As if it were trying hard to be The John L. Lewis among nations The time is now at hand when another of America's inalienable rights can be exercised, that of cussing the umpire. The University Daily Kansan Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editor's Association, the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, View City TV, New Ave. Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Managing Editor Asst. Man. Editor Editor in Chief City Editor City Editor City Editor Asst. City Editor Editor in Chief Art Editor Marcella Stewart William W. Smith William T. Smuller LeMoyne Frederick Marion M. Bales Shirley E. Balez Alan J. Stewart Marion Monroe Woods Business Manager John D. McCormick advertising Manager Michael T. Cullen Classified Adv. Mgr Joan Schindling Promotion Manager William K. Brooks Promotion Manager William K. Brooks The Kansas Press Association 1947 Member National Editorial Association A FREE PRESS--YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW Palestine, Texas—(UP) — A pet Boston bull terrier claims the honor of being the nation's No.1 baby sitter. Dog Is Tops As Baby Sitter Nuisance, three-year-old terrier owned by Mr. and Mrs. Charles O. Miller, keeps a watchful eye over 300 baby chicks all at once. And lets no one harm a single pin feather in their fluffy down. The dog has been a baby chick sitter since he was a pup and he not only goes to bed with them but spends his waking hours in the brooder as well. Nuisance—wno is really misnamed for all the mother-her care he lavishes on his charges-takes over from the moment a batch of day-old chicks are dumped into the brooder house. He doesn't object if the little chicks snuggle up to him for warmth or play on his back. He also patrols the hen yard and protects the flock of chickens against hawks and prowling cats. His owners find only one fault with their aithful dog. He must be tied securely before anyone tries to catch a fat hen for Sunday dinner. Medical Supplies Flown to Injured Texas City, Tex.—(UP)—Urgently needed medical supplies are being flown to hospitals in Texas City to treat an estimated 480 patients who were seriously injured in the explosions and fires Wednesday. Flying debris caused multiple perforating wounds. Concussion and falling objects inside buildings caused crushing injuries. The terrific blast also caused compound injuries from flying missiles to persons in the open. WURLITZER PHONOGRAPHS FOR PARTY RENTALS Used Juke Box Records For Sale John H. Emick 1014 Mass. Phone 343 NO OTHER PEN CAN COMPARE! -by Bible QUICK QUICK ONLY $1250 New EVERSHARP CA REPEATER PEN NO CAP! Point "Clicks" in and out with your thumb! No other pen can compare! It rolls the CA* ink on dry! Writes up to 3 years without refilling. You refill it yourself with a cartridge! ON SALE TOMORROW AT/ Stowits Rexall Drug Store The Bus- (Adv) Smoke Ride the BUS! DO NOT TALK TO DRIVER "That's His Wife!" 1950 FIRST NATIONAL BANK AIR TRAVEL! A NEW SERVICE FOR PATRONS OF THE First National Bank 1. We offer AIR TRAVEL SERVICE in connection with CONTINENTAL AIRLINES. We can make your reservations to all major points in the U.S. and to many foreign countries. 2. For your summer vacation plans we have a complete listing of Colorado ranches and resorts for your consideration. 3. Our service is free of charge and we will be glad to have you come in so that we may serve you. The First National Bank OF LAWRENCE Travel Agency 0 MISS ROSE GIESEMAN, Manager 8th and Mass. Phone 30 Mem ork trong sorro till c PRIL 22,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWKENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN April 22,1947 Official Bulletin Men students desiring summerork should report to 228 Frank trong between 2 and 4 p.m. toorrow. A company representativeill conduct interviews. - * * Archery club practice today from to 6 p.m. in Robinson gym. Target ill be set up on hockey field if eather permits. - * * At club meeting at 7:30 tonight 321 Frank Strong. Prof. Raymond estwood will speak on "Landscape intering." Tau Sigma at 7:30 tonight in Robson gym. Important Progressive party meeting at 7 tonight in room 9, Frank pong. All members be present. United Women's council will meet 5 p.m. today in the Pine room. Tau Beta Pi, 7 tonight in 210 Mar- h. Full attendance needed. All - Student council members; ace pact dinner at 6 tonight in the insas room, Union building. ☆ ☆ ☆ Pre-Nursing club at 4 p.m. today Fraser dining room. Guest seaker. - * * Jewish Student Union, 5 p.m. lay, Myers hall. Public Relations committee of Activity Activities at 7 tonight in the st room of the Union. Attendance quired. Refreshments. The student court will meet at 10 tonight in Green hall. Thelowing students are requested toear: George Waugh, Leonardarks, Jr.; Norman Eberhart, FredckKiewit, George Wootten,arles W. Hall, Harold T. Tarriet,wrence V-syerson, Oliver Samuel. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship 7 tonight in Barlow chapel of vars hall. Bob Koenig will lead the study. Mr. William Sommerle of Lawrence will speak. Home economies majors, required writing at 4 p.m. Wednesday in 110 aser. Interested non-majors ined. Student-faculty council in me economics will be organized. * * / * Le cercle français se reunira aatre heures, mercredi le 23 avrilnsa la salle FS 113. M. Gerald Davisla Section des Beaux-Arts et ofenseu de dessin dans le SectionArchitecture, qui est revenu renment de la France, fera une tite causerie. Tous ceux qui s'yeressent sont cordialement ines ay assister. Student chapter of A.I.Ch.E. Eoker at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Pine room of the Union. Dr. sphenson will speak on "Duties I Responsibilities of a Technicalness." Also nominations of three candidates for representative to engineering council. All chemical琴 invited. *** sociology club at 4 p.m. Thursday Little Theater, Green hall. Elec of officers. Geology club at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, in 402 Lindley. Dr. Byron Leoed will speak on "Application ofology to Geology." Mathematics club at 4 p.m. Thursday in 206 Frank Strong, Dr. Smith 1 speak on "Pythagorean Numbers" ※ ※ ※ snow Zoology club at 7:30 p.m. sunday in 206 Snow. Dr. D. S. erner will speak on "Limnology of later Lake, Oregon." All planning attend please sign bulletin 'in ow ball. \* \* \* The Business School association bounces election of officers on business School day, May 9. Petitions for nominations may be obfed from Business School office 1 filed with that office by April All students who have not registered, and who expect to attend the inn session or return for the semester should sign up in the strar's office today and tomor- ★ ★ ☆ Daily Kansan Classified Advertising For Sale 1947 CROSLEY Sedan with heater and spare, excellent condition. $800. Contact Bernie Wanner or inquire at Comic Works Service Station, Sixth and Vernon 249. 1939 BLACK 2-door Plymouth; good condition. See G.W. Frank, 1540 La. Ph. 4428. SILVERTONE One Conn Tumpet, excellent condition. See Bib Summer 1985. 241 INDIAN Motorcycle, completely over-hauled last month. $75.00 out of extras. 1923 DODGE. Late Plymouth undercarriage. New wheels. Good tires. Perfect condition. Inquire Rock Chakle Cafe. 700-840-7730. Radio, heater, foglets, spot lights, low mileage, new tires, late general overhaul. Priced for quick sale. James Firebaugh FOR Sale 1937 Harley-Davidson motor interested, contact JIM Hoy 1252 Tenn. 1 r Rent FURNISHED double apartment a b o u l June 1 in exchange for 2 bedroom fur nished or unfurnished house or apartment in Kansas City, Kans., or suburbs as far south as Overland Park. Martin, 1529 Kv. 23 ROOM to men only. Share bath and floors on their upper classroom. Phone 21875 616 Kentucky URGENT—Ride to Leavenworth Junction on Kansas City highway Mon, Wed, and Fri. at 5:50 p.m. Contact KU. Intu- neral office. 24 Wanted LINOTYPE OPERATOR needed by University Daily Kansan 2 hours daily,午夜 THE VITA CRAFT company has openings for men who are interested in making a connection for a sales position with a kitchen or culinary cookware. Qualified men interested in sales personnel work can begin on a part that pays now and will continue to pay $200 per week while carrying a regular course of study. Upon graduation these men will be considerer for key positions at the company, as do their degreates can qualify for lucrative summer work in their home areas. Write The Vita Company, 4125 Penn, Kansas City 21106, www.vita.com, email name at Dall Kansas Business Office. afterterm or evening. See Mr. Ryther. Journalism building. Lost A BOOK of Drawing I plates belonging large reward offered for the return or information leading to its return. 208W 15th or Wendell Rob in drawing depa DAN WESTERMAN from bilbillid; black; valuable papers, etc. Will findier please return to Kansan office? Pants at cleaners, pants check in bilbillid—no bilbillid— AN ELGN wrist watch near power plant Finder leave at Kansan office Reward. 02 FOLDER containing book of bartone songs; sheet music, among which are "King Lear," and "Rose to Mandalay." Please bring them to Arts office. Charles oward. WILL the person who has my "Types of kpl" turn it in to room 201 Fraser. Kpl pleas turn it in to room 201 Fraser. MY TAN sport jacket picked up by mishandle and in pocket. Contact me to exchange it. for your own. Jack Ernst 923 Maine. 3024J. 24. GREEN sheafer's fountain pen with name phone 212-900-3564 on it. Find **212** please phone 21290-3564. LOST: Field jacket in 201 Bailey. Has been traded and please return 1719 Alabama. Reward. LOST: Field jacket in 201 Bailey. Has 6235EW. If found please en 6235EW. Reward. Business Services RADIO Service. Home-and car radios. All work guaranteed. Fast efficient service. Tubes tested free. 604 Hercules Road (New Village) Sunflower Kans. 23 FREE OFFER—Copies of Discharges and valuable papers, 3 copies for the price of 2. Low prices, fast service. Round Corner Drug Co., 801 Mass. 25 TENNIES RACKETS restruing and repaired. Silk, nylon, or gut. Priced accordingly. $1.50 to $10. Plain 2711-W. Ed. Wellhaus, en. 1145 Ky. M-5 The world's finest Art Museum is at Philadelphia. The Flavor's All Yours... when you smoke PHILIP MORRIS! CLEAN, FRESH, PURE America's FINEST Cigarette! There's an important difference in PHILIP MORRIS manufacture that makes PHILIP MORRIS taste better-smoke better—because it lets the FULL FLAVOR of the world's finest tobaccos come through for your complete enjoyment clean, fresh, pure! First smoke in the morning or last one at night—the flavor's ALL yours, when you smoke PHILIP MORRIS! And here's why... Try PHILIP MORRIS—you, too, will agree that PHILIP / MORRIS is America's FINEST Cigarette! NO OTHER CIGARETTE CAN MAKE THIS STATEMENT! Of all the leading cigarettes, PHILIP MORRIS is the only cigarette with an exclusive difference in manufacture recognized by eminent medical authorities as being to the advantage of those who smoke! CALL FOR PHILIP MORRIS ALWAYS BETTER...BETTER ALL WAYS - PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 22,1947 The Machine Does It A person working at a desk. Shown above is Mrs. Mildred H. Bock, College senior. She is operating a test grading machine in the Guidance bureau. Machines such as this electrically operated one make the work of scoring the bureau's many tests easier. The K.U. vocational guidance bureau doesn't like to tell persons what to do with their lives, but it has helped one thousand students make that choice this year. 'Guidance Bureau Will Aid More,' Says Dr. Turney And that isn't all. The bureau expects to handle 200 more cases this year. And when it gets its new building behind Frank Strong hall, next year, the load probably will go up to 1,700 cases. Dr. Austin Turney, who has bee with the bureau since its beginning in 1944, is developing a new department, that of advice on personal problems. "We haven't been advertising that angle, but calls for personal guidance have steadily increased," he said. tro Good Job "For the vocational part of the bureau, I don't think anybody does a better job than we do," he commented. "We think that about eight times out of ten we get data that help the student make a definite choice. Some guidance bureaus say they never have any failures—that's a lot of ansesauce!" Dr. Turney said that none of the beau's counselors has ever told anyone what to do. He maintains that choices don't amount to much unless the individual makes them himself. As Dr. Turney says, older people around and binding pressure on them a sort of cardinal sin." Cities Administration Credit He gives credit to the administration for supporting the work to a greater extent than in many other places. "This show belongs to the students on the campus; we are under no stresses of any kind, nor are we involved in any form of discipline. Everyone is professionally protected if he were going to take a doctor. If he was going to talk about my cases to my wife. We are just interested in human behavior." Dr. Turney said that one of the reasons the thing has gone so well. Dr. Turney explained that "It's perfectly normal for a college student to be uncertain about his vocation, because interest patterns mature between 18 and 25 years of age. A person may have interests in both job markets but be better qualified for one of them. That's where the Bureau helps." 4. Perfectly Normal' The bureau has four counselors, three psychometrists, and three full-time clerks, as well as student help. Bureau counselors are Dr. E. G. Kennedy, an authority on occupational guidance; Dr. Thomas Christensen, a specialist in measurement and evaluation; Miss Ruth Schillinger; and Dr. Turnney. No Politics Now, I.S.A. Declares The I. S. A. declared itself a non-political organization Monday in a resolution passed by its council and aimed toward ending confusion concerning the function and political status of the association. The statement of non-political affiliation was made in order to distinguish between the I. S. A. and the Independent Women's political party, President Shirley Wellborn said. "Certain conflicts have arisen because both organizations are referred to as the Independents," she said. "The purpose of the I. S. A resolution is to end this confusion by making our status clear." The resolution contains a statement of policy from the I. S. A. committee and lists five functions to the organization, also from the constitution. Functions of the I. S. A. as outlined in the resolution, are: TWO. To interest independent students in campus activities and to aid them in participation in such activities. ONE. To promote social activities for independent students. THREE. To present the independent student's viewpoint .. on campus government, campus publications, and other activities. Architects Honor First Professor FOUR. To promote the general welfare of independent students with regard to housing, wages, and general living conditions. FIVE. To organize independent students into a group which creates a feeling of fellowship and of loyalty to the University. Dorothy Feldcamp, fine arts junior, won a national scholarship at the Art Students league in New York. Prof. Karl Mattern has announced. Student Wins Scholarship Goldwin Goldsmith, founder of the K. U. department of architecture, will be the honor guest at the architect's 35th anniversary banquet Thursday in the Kansas room of the Union. The scholarship will entitle her to a year of instruction with her choice of any two professors at the league. Miss Feldcamp is among the ten winners in the United States. The two department heads who succeeded Professor Goldsmith, Edward Tanner, '16, the first graduate of the department, and about 45 alumni from cities over the Mid-West will attend. Chairman At Texas University Professor Goldsmith, who headed the architectural department from 1913 until 1928, is now the chairman of the department of architecture at the University of Texas. He served as president of the Association of College Schools of Architecture from 1927 to 1964. He also authored a book on architecture in which his specifications, a subject in architect's qualifications, a subject in Professor Goldsmith studied at Columbia university and in France. George M. Beal, present head of the department of architecture, will be toastmaster at the banquet. Joseph Kellogg, who succeeded Professor Goldsmith in 1928, will present special awards to students in architecture. Professor Goldsmith will speak at 4 p. m. Thursdav in Frank Strong auditorium. His topic will be "Architecture and People." Ecal To Be Toastmaster The Scarab award for sophomore design this year will also be presented. The contest is held annually, and is judged by advanced architectural students. Marvin hall will be open to the public all day Thursday. Scale models and sketches will be displayed. Officers Will Inspect R.O.T.C. Unit Here The first annual inspection of the umy R.O.T.C. program since World War II will be conducted at the University Wednesday and Thursday. The inspections will be a part of the program of the fifth U.S. army. Five teams of three officers each will conduct inspections of R.O.T.C. activities at 45 high schools, academies, colleges and universities in the Fifth army sector, said Col. John Alfrey, professor of military science. Nine midwest and northwest states are included in this sector. Inspecting officers are Col. Wray B. Overa; Lt. Col. Francis R. Bowlin, field artillery, and Maj. Kenneth R. Sturman, infantry. Inspections are made to determine how well the R.O.T.C. program is conducted from an administrative point of view, Colonel Alfrey said. The last pre-war inspection here was rated excellent. The deadline for applications for the positions of editor and business manager of the 1948 Jayhawker has been extended to Wednesday, Richard Carmean, business manager, said today. Applicants should include three references. Two must be faculty members and the third a past employer or friend. The applications are to be addressed to Karl Klooz, chairman of the Jayhawker Advisory board, and left at the Jayhawker office in the Union. Names of the students selected will be announced Saturday. Carmean Extends Jayhawker Deadline Applications for editorship have been received from Keith Wilson, William Conboy, and James Moryd, Robert Williams, Judith Tihen, and Larry Simmons have applied for the position of business manager. Mr. and Mrs. Roger Williams of Kukaiu, Hawaii, who have been guests of Chancellor and Mrs. Deane W. Malott, left for the west coast Monday. Hawaiian Guests Leave 'The Face Is Familiar . . . G FOR Small and energetic, she is president of Student Union activities and chairman of its executive board. A speech and drama major, her chief interests are dabbling in the fields of law and bacteriology. Her excess energy has been spent these past two years in leading University cheers. Monday's Face was of Chancellor Deanne W. Malott. ☆ ☆ Ding Tells Students Of Chinese Problem Until there is peace in China there can be no peace in the world. Dr James Ding, president of Anglo-Chinese college, Fuchow, China, told Wesley foundation recently at the First Methodist church. "The ills of my people are part and parcel of the world situation." Dr. Ding said. A militant China would be a major world problem, while a peaceful China would be a most stabilizing factor in world affairs. The turmoil in China is the outward expression of inward conflict, the speaker explained. The conflicts are between faith in God and faith in man, between personal freedom and totalitarian control, and between democracy and communism, he added. China's great opportunity has come with the end of the war, Dr. Ding said. "Although we find ourselves physically and spiritually exhausted we must bring our people from the Middle Ages into the atomic age." Maloff, Moreau Testify In Suit The case which was contested by Mrs. Ellis in Douglas county probate court, is in district court on appeal. The contention of Mrs. Ellis is that Mr. Ellis was not competent at the time of signing the library over to the University. The late Ralph Ellis, compiler of a 65,000-volume library on bird lore, had ample opportunity for outside legal advice when he willed the library to the University, Chancellor Deane W. Malott told the district court this morning. "We plan to make at least one field trip each week during the spring," he said. "Bad weather prevented several trips recently." The students will leave at 9 a.m. for the LeCompton quarry a few miles west of Lawrence on highway 40. The quarry is rich in fossil and mineral specimens. The trip Saturday is to acquaint students with the topography of this area, and to give them practice in recognizing rocks. The search will last until noon. F. J. Moreau, dean of the School of Law, testified concerning the contention of Mrs. Ellis that the language of the will was such that her late husband was deceived. Dean Moreau, who drew up the document, said the language was such that any reasonable man would understand it. "Ralph Ellis fully understood the agreement," the chancellor testified. "He said that this was exactly what he wanted." He described Mr. Ellis as "an amazingly brilliant person in the field of natural history." Geology classes will take their first spring field trip Saturday Byron Chronic, assistant geology instructo., said today. Mr. Ellis died of pneumonia in Cal- ifornia in 1945. Prior to his death, he worked for several months at the University in cataloguing the library. The library has an estimated value of from $200,000 to $400,000. News of the World Tax Cut Opposition Voiced By Snyder Washington.—(UP) —Secretary of the Treasury John W. Snyder warned congress today that income tax cuts now would disrupt President Truman's campaign to halt the price spiral. Even if the administration favored, tax cuts now, he said, it still would oppose the house bill because it considers the measure unfair to low and middle income group wage earners. U.A.W. Meets Today To Negotiate Wage Demand Geology Field Trip To Be Saturday Detroit.—(UP)—The negotiating committee of the United Automobile Workers (C.I.O.) meets with General Motors negotiators today andifications that the union had mobilised its demands for a boost of $23\frac{1}{2}$ cents. The U.A.W. was the only major C.I.O. union holding out against the 15-cent formula set by the United Steel Workers contract with U. S. steel. Train Wreck Touches Off New Wave Of Violence Jerusalem. (UP) - At least 10 persons were killed and 29 injured today when a tarin carrying British troops and civilians from Cairo to Tebu were down in the Jewish underground in the Citrus gardens of Rehovot. The wreck was the first major blow by the underground in reprisal for British execution of underground members. P Li F Hundreds Flee New Fires In Blast-Torn Texas City 3 sia bef opi Texas City, Tex.—(UP)—Hundreds of reclamation workers hurriedly evacuated the blast - torn waterfront area of Texas City today. Clouds of smoke from burning ammonium nitrate billowed up from wrecked warehouses near the Monsanto Chemical company plant. aut sin Stu No attempt was made to fight the flames. Texas City lost its volunteer fire department in the attempt last week, but blighted the fire aboard the Grand Camp. th in An official of the striking National Federation of Telephone Workers said the picket violence and demonstrations Monday in Detroit, Seattle and Louisville were "to be expected." Washington.—(UP)—The government is studying plans for reviving key negotiations in the 16-day-old national telephone strike as union leaders warned that the strikers "are growing bitter." Study Plans To Revive Phone Strike Negotiations G.O.P. To Philadelphia Kansas City.—UP)—Boosters of all but one of the major candidates for the G.O.P. presidential nomination were satified today with the selection of Philadelphia for the party's 1948 national convention. The G.O.P. national committeemen supporting Sen. Robert A. Taft, Ohio, for the presidential nomination wanted the convention held in Chicago. 1947 University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Wednesday, April 23, 1947 44th Year No.125 Lawrence, Kansas ern- nivin- ing v-old union ikers tion-arkers mon-. eattle spect- Pachacamac Lists Platform For Students In the first belief that student government can be strengthened and made effective, and that student opinion at Kansas university can be heard and followed, the Pachacamac—N.O. W. party stands on this platform. 1. Vote the person, not the party, for better student government. 2. Admit Oklahoma A. and M. to the Mid-West conference, and take the necessary steps to assure students that the matter is never again nationally misquoted. 3. Submit all other such controversial questions to the students for vote before presuming to give student opinion on the matter. 4. Lower the parking fines from an automatic maximum $5 to $2 for a single offense. This is up to the All Student Council. 5. Guarantee A.S.C. cooperation in the establishment of a dental clinic in Watkins Memorial hospital. 6. Reestablish the Missouri university-Kansas university drum tradition at the Thanksgiving day football game. 7. Establish of special A. S. C. committees to investigate and report back to the students the disposition of veterans' fees and Union cafeteria funds. 8. Take steps to abolish or restrict political parties and their influence on student government. Candidates James Waugh engineering junior is the Pachacamac candidate for All Student Council presidency. Candidates for A. S. C. representative from District I are Richard Boyd, Samuel Hoover, Eunice Lankford, Elizabeth Esther Nelson, Healen Heflin, and Sue Webster. Candidates for A. S. C. representative from District II are Charles Van Bushirk, Robert Brown, Charles T. Black, and Ralph Robertson. Candidates for A. S. C.,representative from District III are Joseph Delaney, William Hogan, Harriet Harlow, and Marjorie Stark. William McEhenny is the District IV candidate. Senior class officer candidates are Otto Schnellbacher, president; Jack Eskridge, vice-president; Joan Woodward, secretary; and Joan Anderson, treasurer. Junior class officer candidates are LuAnne Powell, president; William Braun, vice-president; Joan Joseph secretary; and Samuel McCamant treasurer. Sophomore class officer candidates are Stanley England, president; Joan Vermillion, vice-president; Charles Lindbergh, secretary; and Paul Dillon, treasurer. Campus Parties Urge All Students To Vote Two candidates for the presidency of the All Student council today urged students vote "to help insure an honest election," at a political rally Wednesday morning. James Vaugh, the third candidate, could not attend the rally because of an examination. John Gunther, College senior and Progressive party candidate, said, "I believe that there should be a better and more mature student government and I believe the Progressive party can give this to the students." George Caldwell, College junior, and Progressive Student Government League candidate, declared, "I do believe the Council can amount to something. This year they pushed the student bookstore and investigated faculty salaries." He promised to push a student commissary, a study of the curriculum, and an investigation of University housing if elected. Voting Places For Election Here is where you'll vote in tomorrow's election; District I—(College) Four polls will be set up in the basement of Frank Strong hall. Two will be open on the first floor of Fraser hall. District II—(Engineers) Two polls will be open in Marvin hall. District III—(Fine Arts, Business) Three polls will be set up in the rotunda of Frank Strong hall. District IV—(Law, Medicine) One poll will be set up in the basement of Fraser hall. All women who don't vote in District I or District IV will be allowed to vote in District III, Keith Wilson, chairman of the elections committee, said. P.S.G.L. Party Lists Platform For Government We of the P.S.G.L. party in order to promote constructive student government and to make the All Student Council more than just a political debating society stand on this platform; 1. Representatives to A.S.C. from housing districts and not schools in the University. 2. Reduction of campus party politics. 3. Sale of sundries in the student book store in the Union. 4. Cooperative laundry and commissary for the students. 5. A theater on the campus for students only. 6. Improved recreational facilities such as handball and tennis courts and a University farm. 7. A planned long-range University building program. 8. Increased student and faculty salaries. 9. Rating system for placement of students in dormitories. 10. Negro participation in Mid-West conference athletics. 11. Sidewalk from the Oread hall- Memorial stadium area to the Union building. 12. Student representation on the University senate. George Caldwell, College senior is the P.S.G.L. candidate for the A.S.C. presidency. 13. Publication of the A.S.C. activities Candidates for A.S.C. representative from District II are Richard Heiny, Jack Hollingsworth, John Margrave, and James White. Candidates for A.S.C. representative from District I are Robert Campbell, Calvin Cooley, Duane Postlethwaite, Frank Stannard, Marylee Masterson, Dorothy Scroggy and Shirley Wellborn. Candidates Candidates for A.S.C. representative from District III are Arnold England, Carroll McCue. Ellen Spurney, and Mary Jane Zollinger. Robert Andrews is the District IV candidate Junior class officer candidates are Ralph Moberley, president; Betty van der Smissen, vice-president; Marian Graham, secretary; and Bruce Bathurst, treasurer. Senior class officer candidates are Eugene Casement president, Clarence Francisco, vice-president; Helen Hana- secretary and Marian Minor treasurer. Sophomore class officer candidates are Harold Cogswell, president; Betty Cooper, vice-president; Janet Rummer, secretary; and Charles Penny, treasurer. Progressives List Platform, 27 Candidates We of the Progressive party, in order to bring about a more efficient student government, believe in Independent-Greek cooperation, and stand on this platform. 1. Consolidation of Independent-Greek forces for a more efficient and mature student government. 3. Investigation of veterans' fees concerning income and disposition of money received by the University from that source. 2. Elimination of the foreign language requirement in the School of Education. 4. A more responsible student government, by allowing a student court jurisdiction in disciplinary action now held by the administration. 5. An amendment to the all-student constitution which does away with the faculty advisory committee of the student body. 6. Student priority for all seats at all athletic events. 7. Lower admission charges for students at all athletic events. 8. Encouragement of school spirit, by more mixers, rallies, and other activities to include one movable holder; for example, set the at the discretion of the A₁ S₂ C₃ 10. Equal opportunity, regardless of race, sex, or creed, for student leadership. 9. 4 An all-student convolution at which campus political parties explain their platforms. 11. Negro participation in Mid-West conference athletics. 12. Higher wage rates for students employed by the University, with a minimum wage rate of 65 cents an hour, regardless of sex. John Gunther, College senior, is the Progressive candidate for the All Student Council presidency. Candidates for A. S. C. representative from District I are Thomas Alexander, Paul Barker, Ben Foster, George Robb, Gwendolyn Jones, Barbara Lamoreaux, and Beulah Ward. Candidates for A. S. C. representative from District II are Lynn Leigh, Charles Roter, and Arthur Ruppenthal. Candidates for A. S. C. representative from District III are George McCarthy, Harry Rice, Helen Miller, and Mary Shatzell. Jean Moore is the District IV candidate. Senior class officer candidates are Gilbert Stramel, president; John Rees, vice-president; Geraldine Ott. secretary; and Bob Barnes, treasurer. Sophomore class officer candidates are Ernest Friesen, president; Carol Crow, vice-president; Patricia Creech, secretary; and Barbara Hamilton, treasurer. Ask For Identity, Reporters Have It Junior class officer candidates are Richard Brown, president; Robert Shearer, vice-president; Bertha Lowry, secretary; and Meade Almond, treasurer. Have you been fooled lately, too? Reports have reached the Daily Kansan office that several persons have been going around the campus and the campus area representing themesses in this paper, when actually they have no connection with the Daily Kansan. If someone approaches you, and claims to be a reporter for your official student newspaper, test him very easily. just say: "May I see our press card?" ALL official representatives of the Daily Kansan have a press card—a distinctive red-and-white affair that carries the reporter's or executive's name, and is signed and dated by a faculty advisor to the paper. If you have any doubt, ask for credentials. Our people—just like the Fuller Brush man—have 'em. Ellis Document Ruled 'Not Will' By Judge Means The document signed by Ralph Ellis is not a will, Judge Hugh Means, of the Douglas County District court ruled today. Mrs. Ellis'attorneys asked the court for the ruling because Kansas law requires that a will be signed at the very end. "This document is not a will. There is a paragraph of the instrument coming after the signature of Ralph Ellis." Judge Means said. The case will now proceed on the assumption that the document was a contract to make a will. If the judge rules that it is, then it will be the same as proving it was a will. Mrs. Ellis will try to prove that her husband was not competent to make a contract. Mike Getto Testifies M. J. Getto, manager of the Eldridge hotel, was called to testify for Mrs. Ellis. He said the Ellis' had lived at the hotel for about two months in the spring of 1945. "Ellis' behavior was very erratic." M. Getto said. "He was a hard guest to get along with. On a couple of occasions he broke windows in his room. The help in the hotel hated to see him come in." 'Ellis 'Spun His Wheels' Asked whether he thought Ellis was insane, Getto said, "I wouldn't say he was insane. But he had something loose. He kept spinning his wheels." Mrs. Mary Ellen Simmons, clerk of the district court, testified that she rented the Ellis' an apartment in her home. She said that on several occasions Ellis broke windows, and frequently caused a lot of disturbance. I'm Thinking This Is A Queer Deal Indeed By ALLEN D. SMITH So there I am walking down the main drag minding my own business, as every good reporter should when I see this shnook up ahead sticking these posters up on trees. Well I am not thinking much about it but it really gives me quite a charge. These campus politicians sure take the stuff serious. I am just wonderng how many straight "A" transcripts there would be if all of that energy is put in cracking books when suddenly see the other guy. Now that looks like a real waste of energy. Here is one character nailing the stuff up and not 30 feet behind him comes another one tearing it down. WEATHER Kansas—Cloudy and cooler, rain or drizzle west, showers and thunderstorms east today and tonight with moderate to locally heavy rainfall east. Considerable cloudiness tomorrow, Rain and cooler southeast and extreme east. Warmer northwest. Group Supports Negro Admission To Campus Cafes Bv JOHN H. STAUFFER A chapter of the Congress of Racial Equality, national group which "seeks to abolish racial segregation and discrimination" has been organized at the University, Chairman Frank Stannard said Tuesday. The immediate objective is to abolish discrimination against Negroes in the four restaurants near the campus, he added. The purpose of the local chapter is to break down the system of segregation of Negroes on the campus." Stannard said. Other officers of the C.O.R.E. are Beth Bell, College senior, vice-chairman, and Wesley Elliot, graduate recording secretary and treasurer. "A number of people don't even know Negroes can't eat in cafes," Stannard said. "Now we are presenting the problem to organized houses and groups to acquaint them with it. "Six groups, the American Veterans committee, the Y.M.C.A., the Y.W.C.A., the Unitarian Liberal group, the Negro Student association, and Dove have given us at least their moral support," Stannard added. Five persons were fined a total of $48 Tuesday in Student court. All fines were assessed for parking violations. Circulate Petition "Later we might attack other racial problems downtown, such as the theaters segregation," Stannard explained. A petition reading, "We, the undersigned, are in favor of equal service, without segregation in respect to race, creed or color, for any student wishing to patronize any Hill cafe," is being circulated on the campus by the group. Ned Linegar, Y.M.C.A. executive secretary, will speak to a meeting of the C.O.R.E. at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in Frank Strong hall. He will discuss the attitude and techniques of non-violent direct action in doing away with racial discrimination. A discussion will follow. Five Fined $48 In Student Court Charles Hall, College sophomore had received 10 tickets for parking in the wrong zone. He argued that since he is an employee of a contractor doing work for the University, he should be treated as such and not as a student parking in restricted zones. Hall said that his car is necessary to his work and that he had been parking in the same zone as other employees who never receive tickets. The court found him guilty and fined him $11 for five tickets and a stay of execution on a $15 fine for five remaining tickets. Hall said that he would appeal his case to a higher court. George Waugh, College freshman, was found guilty on five counts for parking in restricted zones with- holdment. He was fired $11 by the court. Wallace V. Nicholson was fined $1 and Frederick Kiewit was found not guilty in the remaining cases on the docket. Lawrence Syerson and Oliver Samuel were fined in absentia. Glee Club To Kansas City Sixty members selected from the Men's Glee club will present two concerts in Kansas City, Kan., Monday. In the morning they will sing before students at Wyandotte High school and will sing at Rosedale High school that afternoon. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 23,1947 For Better Student Government 1950 James Waugh THE QUALIFIED CANDIDATE FOR A. S. C. PRESIDENT President, Engineering Council; 34 months overseas as Captain in Armored Corps; 3.0 grade average since 1945; President, Theta Tau, Professional Engiineering; Sachem, honorary senior men's society, and other wide experience in student government. And The Entire Pachacamac- NOW Slate Stand For THESE Improvements In Student Government ★ Vote the PERSON, not the party. ★ Admit Oklahoma A. & M. to the Big Six. ★ Submit this and other controversial questions for a student vote. ★ Lower Parking Fines to a maximum of $2.00, instead of the present automatic $5.00 ★ Guarantee Council Cooperation in the Establishment of a Dental Clinic in Watkins Hospital. Re-establish the M.U.-K.U. Drum Tradition at the Thanksgiving Day football game. Take steps to abolish or to restrict political parties and their influence on student government. $ \star $ Appoint special committees to investigate Veteran's Fees and Union Cafeteria Funds. Pachacamac-N.O.W. 35 Years Of Independent - Greek Cooperation APRIL 23,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE SOCIALLY SPEAKING Sigma Kappa Has Spring Formal The Sigma Kappa sorority held the annual spring formal Saturday night. April 19. Guests were: Clarke Hargiss, William Stanton, Chester Dillon, Grant Morrell, William Tinscher, Lloyd Grant, Perry Wilcox Frank Tyler, Dean Bradley, Frank Palmer, Billie Passmore, Lewis Mitchell, Donald Culhane, Achilles Wheat, Richard Harris, John Daniel, Frank Komarek, James Hosman Norman Moody, Morgan Wrtght, Fred Firner, Dale Firner. Jeanette Perkins, Bill Olin, Marilyn Boucher, Carl Bangs, Helen Todd, Kenneth Lewis, Maurine Breitenbach, Robert Davison, Jacqueline Pryor, Dean Stockwell, Nancy Ruth, and Robert Smith. Elden Kiddoo, Donald Stockdale, Samuel Duran, Lewis Musick, A. D. Moore, Donald Williams, Jack Fink, John Wuest, John Wilcox, Clarke Thomas, Gene Rudd, Delmas Richards, Leo Hines, Gordon Walters, Jack Rordin, Duane Olson, Thoman Mahan, Carl Faler, Donald Hyten, Dick Greiner, Allan Dougherty. Chaplegnes were Miss Martha Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. W.D. Thompson, Jr., Mrs. R.G. Roche, and Mrs. Mary Younkman. Lambda Chi's pledge Lambda Chi Alpha has announced the pledging of James Roller, Karnak, Ill., and Lloyd McBride of Wichita. Both In One Day, Too Fort Wayne, Ind - (UP) -George Jordan received a safety award for careful driving in the morning and in the afternoon answered a traffic citation in court. COED'S CORNER Alice Wismer Has Green Eyes, Lilting Voice, Four Sisters Alice Wismer, 20-year-old junior in psychology, says she's just another dizzy green-eyed blonde. "There's nothing unusual about me," she declares. (The listener is immediately intrigued by the lifting quality of her voice; one notices the melody pattern and the way her voice rises at the ends of sentences.) "Take my family, for example, it's just a typical American family, she continues. "My father raises spotted riding horses, and my mother is the brains of the family. She is interested in philosophy and religion and is active in church activities. One of Five Girls "We Wismers live on a farm just outside Pomona, about 40 miles south of Lawrence. The sign outside the town reads, 'Welcome to Pomona, population 501—they forgot to change it when I left.' One of Five Girls "There are five of us girls. My older sister is married and teaches; I would study a student here and scared to death of my dad's horses; third is my 16-year-old sis a red-head who breaks Dad's horses; and last are the 11-year old twins who are the cutest of the family." One summer, she worked as a doctor's receptionist in Denver. got to change that you that she is a graduate of Coffeyville Junior college where she was president of YW. One has to dig for the information that she graduated with the highest honors in her class. Was Receptionist do this. "I liked the job, mainly because of its psychological possibilities. I have always been interested in people and I enjoyed studying the various personalities as they explained their aliments to me." She goes on to explain that she still finds people the most interesting subjects in the world. subjects in the workplace. "I like to listen to people talk, so that I can tell'what they're like. But unlike some psychologists, I never analyze the people I know, as I value their friendship too much." As to activities, Alice has a list "as long as your arm." She says the only thing she hasn't found time to do at K. U. is to study But, despite this, her transcript reveals a line of straight "Bs." a line of salute. She belongs to Kappa Phi, Methodist College is a member of Wesley foundation and Y. W. C. A. She is on the Wesley cabinet, in addition to being a personnel chairman in the foundation. In Y. W. Alice is a leader of seminars; she was organizer of a new commission last year, and will hold the office of "Office Hostess" this year. Long Activity List UNIVERSITY Mail station: $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. For other days, enter the appropriate periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. University Daily Kansan Daily Kansan Classified Ads ALMOST new Kodak 35 mm. F. 3.5 lens, couple range finder, excellent case, sun- shade and lens adapter, $75. Moore, 1140 Louisiana. 29 For Sale 1947 CROSLEY Sedan with heater and spare. excellent condition. $800. Contact Bernie Wanner or inquire at Connie's Cities Service Station, Sixth and V24 1939 BLACK 2-door Plymouth, good condition. See G. W. Frank, 1540 La. Ph. 448. SILVERTONE County, Trumpet, excellent See Bill Summerour at 1111 W. 11th St. or contact Daily Kansan. 24 14 INDIAN Motorcycle, completely overhauled last month $75.00 worth of extra use at 6th and 12th floors. 1923 EATON Late Plymouth undercarriage. New wheels. Good tires. Perfect condition. Inquire Rock Chalk Cafe. 23 SPORTY, ton '41 Chevrolet club coupe. Radio, heater, foglights, spot lights, low mileage, new tires, late general power贵or quick sale. James Firebaugh. 25 FOR Sale. 1837 Harley-Davidson motorcycle. If interested, contact Jim Hore. LARGE room with private bath, continuous hot water. Close to University. Also garage for rent. 1801 Alabama. Phone 29 1122 Ohio. FOR Sale. 1837 Harley-Davidson motor cycle. If interested, contact Jim Hore, 1225 Tenn. -23- For Rent FURNISHED double apartment a b c o u t June 1 in exchange house or apartment in Kansas City, Kans., or suburbs as far as overland Park. Marit, 1858 ROGM to men only. Share bath and floor room. Classroom phone. Classroom 2187 616 Kentucky BOOKS entitled "Economics and Principles" and "Types of Speech." Finder please contact Kansan office. Generous reward. 29 Lost Burger, A. OK of Drawing I plates belonging H. E. Shigley has been misplaced. A large reward offered for the return or information leading to its return. 208W ONE loose-leaf notebook between 4 and 5 p.m. Thurs., April 17 at Military Science building. Container case, accounting set and desk. Please return to Arnold Burgett, 28 West 138th, 25 15th or Wendell Robb in drawing department 24 DAN WESTERMAN from bifildo; black; valuable papers, etc. Will finder please; return to Kansan office? Pants at cleaners; pants check in bifildo—no blazers! 41 WILL the person who has my "Types of English Poetry" by Kirk and Kirk please turn it in to room 201 Fraser. 24 FOLDER containing book of baritone songs; sheet music, among which are "Consider the Lilies," and another daly' 'tles' *the Lilies* Kansan or Fine Charles *warden* Charles *warden* 24 30249. GREEN Sheaffer's fountain pen with name W. C. Earnest engraved on it. Finder please phone 2120-M. 28 MY TAN sport jacket picked up by mishaze Friday night in "Hawk." W.F. V. pin and tie in pocket. Contact me to enquire for your own. Jack Ernie 623 Mar 24 Wanted VETERANS: We will buy, trade or sell you any Army or Navy gear in good condition that you may wish to dispose of. Lawrence Surplus, 911 Mass. 1f URGENT - Ride to Leavenworth Junction on Kansas City highway Mon., Wed. and Fri. at 5:50 p.m. Contact K.U. Intra- mural office. 24 Business Services RADIO Service. Home and car radios. All work guaranteed. Fast efficient service. Tubes tested free. 604 cassette Road (New Village) Kameo. 23 FREE OFFER. Free of Discharges and 2.5 low prices. fast service. Round Corner Drug Co. 801 Mass. TENNIS RACKETS resturing and repaired. Silk nylon, or gut. Price accordingly, $1.50 to $1.90 Phone 2711-W. Ed. Wellhaus, M-5 Found PARKER Fountain pen on bridge table in main building Friday before K.U. Relays. Can pick up at Daily Kansam office after paying for this ad. 25 Miscellaneous SOCIENCE-FICTION FANS! The few few in town that are organized are starting a discussion club, and will welcome anyone interested. For further information call Norm Storer at 26313 or send me a card at 1724 Mississippi ST. 23 AT LAST! A Chance To Vote For The Man Not The Machine Four Real Campus Leaders Placed On The Ballot By Non-Partisan Petition Of Your Fellow Students District I Dave Schmidt (All Big-Six End) Bill Tincher (Freshman President) District II Bob Wehe (See Kansas Engineer) District III Don Fambrough (All Big-Six Guard) QUALIFICATIONS Good Grades Cognizant Of Hill Problems Leaders In Their Schools All Veterans NOT PARTY CONTROLLED These INDEPENDENT VETERANS Will Represent YOU, Not A Party Machine Vote For The Man! Vote Independent! VOTE! - UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS APRIL 23,1947 PAGE FOUR SPOTLIGHT SPORTS By BILL CONBOY Three events in the Missouri Valley A.U.A. Decathlon which was run off Friday and Saturday produced better winning marks than were made in the regular competition of the Relays. Jack McEwen of Colorado won the Decathlon broad jump Friday with a leap of 24 feet, 3 inches. McGinnis of Nebraska took the same event Saturday with a jump of 22 feet, $6_{1/2}$ inches. Ross Nichols of the Oklahoma Aggies captured the Decatom high jump Friday by topping the bar at 6 feet, 5 inches. Tom Scofield of Kansas and Monte Kinder of Nebraska tied for first Saturday by leaping 6 feet $1 \frac{3}{4}$ inches. The comparison is not accurate here, however, since Scofield and Kinder were forced to jump indoors. Take-off is more difficult beneath the stadium and always yields poorer marks. Charley Black turned in a winning height of 11 feet, 9 inches for the Decathlon pole vault Saturday. McClay of Kansas State, Blackwell and Knapp of Missouri, Dean of Oklahoma A. A. and M., McKee of Colorado, and Moore of Ottawa all tied for the pole vault title on the regular card with leaps of 11 feet, 6 inches. Here are firsts for the Jayhawker home baseball season gleaned from the opening game of Thursday's double-header with the Kansas State Wildcats: First walk—Sheriff of the Wildcats was walked by Hammer of Kansas. First hit-Atkins of Kansas State in the first inning. He batted four for four in the contest. First strikeout—Hammer of Kansas whiffed Bartley of the Wildcats. Bartley led off the batting order for the Manhattan nine. First extra-base hit—"Bud" French of the Jayhawkers pounded out a truble. First stolen base—Gorman of Kansas pilfered second. First error—Dean of the Wildcats committed the initial bobble. First double play-Kansas State pulled the twin killing to cut off a Jayhawker threat. First sacrifice—Wolcott of Kansas laid down a bunt. First home run-"Bud" French of the Jayhawkers powered one of Jack Dean's pitches for four bases. The sprint men from Baylor university were in very low spirits Friday night before the Relays, "Bullet Bill" Martineson, the pint-sized speed merchant who runs anchor on the Baylor relay teams and who holds two victories over Charley Parker of Texas in the 100-yard dash this year, was suffering from a sprained ankle and it appeared he might not be ready for Saturday's races. Martineason soaked his ankle and placed it under a sun lamp Friday night. After taping it up well Saturday morning, he declared himself ready to go. The personable little dash man was unhappy over the wet weather. While warming up before the races he said: "Im afraid this is Parker's day. He's bigger and has more power to buck this mud than I have." Texas university nosed out the Baylor runners in both the quarter-mile and half-mile relays, but Martineson did not yield ground to Parker in the anchor lap of either race. In the quarter-mile relay, Parker and Martineson finished only a foot apart. It was the fourth time this year that Texas has triumphed by the same small margin over the Baylor quartet. Strike Leaders To Confer Washington—(UP) —The labor department today called in leaders of the striking National Federation of Telephone Workers to find out how much of a wage offer is needed to revive negotiations in the 17-day-old telephone strike. 'Phog' Of Negro Basketball Is 'Little Coach' McLendon A record of 151 games won against 30 lost is basketball playing in any league. That is the record which has been established by coach John Norm, of North Carolina college for dives during the last eight seasons. McLendon received his bachelor's degree in physical education from the University and his master's from Iowa university. He went to North Carolina college in New York after coach Jesse Williams of the Northern High school in Lawrence from 1934 to 1936 and at the Kansas Vocational school in Topeka in 1937. "Little Coach," as he is known by his associates, was appointed head basketball coach at North Carolina college in 1940. Since that year his teams have a winning per cent in the NCAA in either first or second place in the C.I.A.A. conference during the last seven years. Also Athletic Director McLendon, also director of athletics at North Carolina college, is making a study on the "Status of health and physical education in Negro high schools in North Carolina." As a coach, the diminutive athlete who played his first basketball at Hornsby High School in Kansas City, Kauai, for his sportship and, his expertise trained teams. He is nationally known as an authority on the fast break. Rival coaches who have met the teams coached by McLendon have come to recognize him as the "Phog" Allen Phi Psi Beats ATO For Softball Lead Phi Kappa Psi defeated Alpha Tau Omega 8-4, Tuesday to take the league lead of Division III in intramural softball. The winners banged out 14 hits as Hoffman held the A.T.O.'s to 6. Sigma Chi won from Phi Kappa Psi, 8-3. Williams held the Phi Fai's twice hits. Mercer drove in all three Phi Psi runs on a first inning homer. In other Tuesday games Delta Tau Delta beat Pi Kappa Alpha 11-1; the Beta's murdered the 941 club 24-3; and the Phi Delt's walloped Battenfeld 12-2. In Intramural volleyball games Phi Gamma Delta won two successive games 15-5 and 15-13, to defeat Y.M.C.A. Tuesday. Delta Tau Delta defeated Battenfeld 15-8 and 15-11. Philadelphia Wins BAA Playoff Philadelphia — (UP) — The Philadelphia warriors, who won the Basketball Association of America plays off Tuesday night with an 83 to 80 victory over the Chicago Stags, picked up $14,000 in prize money today after one of the longest net seasons in history. Joe Fulks, who set a new professional record for scoring during the season and held every BAA mark, tallied 34 points last night in six interiors to their fourth victory in five games of seven series. He totalled 1.611 points for 70 games during the regular season and playoffs. VETERANS $ WE $ BUY-SELL-TRADE of Negro basketball. In 1943, Rudolph Roberson, one of "Little Coach's" pupils, scored 58 points in a game against Shaw university. Honored In Booklet Recently the athletic department of North Carolina college published a special booklet in honor of McLendon. It is titled "A Decade of Greatness." In it the president of the college, opposing coaches, former players, and numerous admirers join in praising the fine example which the Negro cage authority has set during his ten years at the school. The introduction to the booklet closes with these words: 'Whether winning or losing, McLendon has always been called a great coach and a perfect gentleman.' Army and Navy Gear in good condition that you may wish to dispose of. Joe's Little Brother May Show Them All New York—(UP)—Dom Dimaggio, the "little professor" who patrols center field for the Boston Red Sox, may give them all a lesson this year and wind up as the most valuable player in the American league, manager Joe Cronin insisted today. Well, then, is the more famed Joe able to do more things and do them better? Standing behind the batting cage, the taciturn little fellow with the ever-present spectacles didn't look at the ball player's ball player. But he is. "Just let him get his basehits and he'll be there." Cronin said through a tip full of snuff as he watched the oongest of the famed Dimagroes. "He can field, he can run the bases and he can hit the balls added." "They don't come any better." "I don't know anybody who could do any more or do it any better." Cronin barked. "There's a real ball player." Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. Whether it's a bat, steaming around the bases or playing out in the garden, little Dom backs up those words with a fluid grace. One look is enough to mark him as a Dimaggio, cut from a smaller pattern than the lanky Joe of the New York Yankees. "No." Dom said, "Joe never volunteered any tips to me about my hitting and I never asked him. It's not true, and we both know it, because Joe is the best wrestler and I'm stumpy. Anyway, we don't talk much about baseball." Not that Joe ever helped Dom reach his present status of stardom with the Red Sox. Baseball Results The scores of Tuesday's games: American Association Louisville 4, Columbus 2. National League Brooklyn 1, Philadelphia 0 American League National League Cincinnati 7. Chicago 6 New York 5, Boston 4 Cleveland 5. St. Louis 0 Standings of the Teams National League W L Pittsburgh 5 1 Brooklyn 3 2 Philadelphia 4 3 Cincinnati 4 5 Chicago 3 4 New York 2 3 Boston 2 3 St. Louis 2 4 American League | | W | L | Pct. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Chicago | 3 | 0 | 1.000 | | New York | 5 | 2 | .714 | | Boston | 4 | 2 | .667 | | Cleveland | 2 | 2 | .500 | | Detroit | 2 | 2 | .400 | | Washington | 2 | 3 | .400 | | St. Louis | 1 | 3 | .250 | | Philadelphia | 1 | 5 | .167 | Probable Pitchers American League Boston (Ferris 1-0) at New York (Reynolds 1-0). Chicago (Lopat 1-0) at Detroit (Trout 0-1). St. Louis (Galehouse 0-1) a Cleveland (Embrez 0-1). Washington (Wynn 0-1) at Philadelhia (Fowler 1-0). National League New York (Koslo 1-0) at Boston (Spahn 0-0). Pittsburgh (Roe 1-0) at St. Louis (Munger 1-0). Philadelphia (JuJdd 0-1) at Brook- lv (Higbe 1-0). Cincinnati (Erautt 0-2) at Chicago (Schmitz 0-1) De LUXE CAFE 28 YEARS OF SERVICE 28 YEARS OF SERVICE Same Location- same Management You are welcome 711 Mass. VOTE! VOTE! VOTE! VOT PERSON NOT PARTY League of Student Voters COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals - Short Orders Sandwiches Open 5:30-12:30 --vote! person not party WE SPECIALIZE IN WE SPECIALIZE IN JUICY STEAKS and OTHER FINE FOODS. Thick Malts Sandwiches Short Orders BILLS GRILL QUICK COURTEOUS SERVICE Across From 1109 Mass. Court House Phone 2054 League of Student Voters Call K.U. 25 with your news. 25c For LAUNDRY!! HOW?? Launderette! BRING IN YOUR LAUNDRY. BRING IN YOUR LAUNDRY. Put It In a Bendix Washing Machine. DO YOUR SHOPPING. COME BACK FOR YOUR LAUNDRY IN 30 MIN. ECONOMICAL and EFFICIENT COST 25c For 10 lbs. SOAP FREE LAUNDERETTE 813 Vt. Phone 3368 Sure! And If Your Fancy's Turned You Can Show It With AP R C Flowers hea the be bee SPRING'S Here, 100 WARD'S FLOWERS 910 Mass. Phone 820 APRIL 23,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Relay Weather Is Usually Good Check Of Records Reveals After the bad weather at the Kansas Relays Saturday, some people were heard expressing the opinion that maybe the Relays were held too early in the spring to be favored by good weather and that the Relays date should be moved to some later time in the season. A check with those who have been associated with the Relays and the records of past events prove this to be untrue. Usually Good Weather Prof. E. R. Elbel, who has directed the running of the Relays for many years, says that he thinks the Relays have been favored with unusually good weather over the span of years he has served as an official. "I have been connected with the Relays since about 1930, with the exception of the war years, and I can remember only about three years that we had weather as bad as that Saturday. By and large, I think we have had good weather for the Relays most of the time," he said. A check of Relays recorded for the weather angle proves Professor Elbel to be right. Although past records as to what the weather was on Relays day are incomplete, they indicate that the weather has been good more than 60 per cent of the time. Many accounts of past Relays showed that the weather was perfect. Wind in 1942 At the 1942 running, there was a stiff wind blowing, but no mention of rain was made. 1938 seems to be the year that comes closest to duplicating the conditions which existed Saturday. The account of the Relays for that year says that a cold drizzling rain fell throughout the day. The years of 1934 and 1928 are recorded as having been cold but with no rain. The only other year that was listed under the heading of rain was 1924. Most of the other years are described by such phrases "perfect track weather," and "balmy spring day." On only one year were the Relays insured against bad weather. That was in 1925 on the third year of their running when they were just beginning to become nationally important in the track and field world. That year people were speculating as to whether or not one man would have to pay $4,000 for his seat at the carnival. He was the insurance agent. 1925, however, was one of the years that came under the perfect weather headline and both the Relays officials and the insurance agent were happy. Arguments Against Changing the Relays date has only the possibility of better weather in its favor, while there are stronger points to be made against it. Probably the serongest opposing argument being the running of two other nationally important relays in the weeks following. They are the Drake and the Penn Relays. If the time was moved back, it would clash with the dates of these events and the quality of all three would probably suffer. The Kansas and the Drake Relays would probably feel the effect more since they are located closer together, both geographically and in the span of time between their running. Attend Several Relays Tennis Team Beats William Jewell, 7-0 Nine different men played for Kansas as the Jayhawker tennis team defeated William Jewell college, 7 to 0, in matches here Tuesday. Coach Gordon Sabine used only one first string combination, Richard Richards and Roy Shoah take the victory. The touries consist of Kansas defender Harold Miller of Kansas defeated Walter Binns, 6-2, 6-1. Brinning Frank Gaucher of Kansas defeated Tom Brandon, 6-2, 7-5. Hervey Macferran of Kansas defeated Jim Bercaw, 6-0, 6-1. Lynn Greeley of Kansas defended Gray Wilcox, 9-9, f-1. Gray-Wilcox, 6-5 92'. Mexico-Blazor, 6-1 90'. Mexico-Blazor defeated Blazor, 6-1, 84'. Brazor, 6-0. Chick Benedict, 6-1, 0-0. Richards Richards and Roy Shaof of Kansas defeated Binns and Berwau. 6-0, 6-0. Bercerw, 0-8, 0-4 Sam Mazon and Bob Barnes of Kansas defeated Brandon and William. 6-1, 6-1 Saturday Kansas will play Washburn university on the concrete courts by Memorial stadium. The matches will begin at 2 p.m. As the dates now stand, many teams from this section of the country attend both the Drake and the Kansas events. If the date of the Relays here was changed, hat might be impossible. Many teams, especially those from the South, travel some distance to attend these contests. Some of them, as Abilene Christian did this year, remain in Lawrence for a few days and then move on up to the Drake event before returning home. If the dates of these two carnivals were farther apart, the budgets of some schools might not permit two trips and they would be eliminated from attending one of the events. United States' Olympic hopes have been receiving damaging bumps and bruises of late with at least three potential point winners—two of them virtually first place cinches—going over to professional ranks. Olympic Hopes Are Hurt As Top Stars Turn Pro Cornelius Warmerdam, the only 15-foot pole vaulter in track history, is an assistant track coach on the coast; Elmore Harris, National quarter-mile king, has turned to pro football, and Dewitt "Tex" Coulter, whose 54 foot, 7-1/4 inch shot put was the best performance of 1946, is with the pro football Giants. Turns Fireman At Age Of 101 Turns Firemen At Age Of 101 Braintree, Mass — (UP)—When a grass fire threatened his home 101-year-old Abey Thayer grabbed a broom and joined firemen in putting it out. - 3-day Cleaning Service - 4-day Laundry Service - 24-hour Shoe Repair - Leather and Garment Dyeing a Specialty. . Village Cleaners SUNFLOWER, KANSAS Opposite School Western Union----8 a.m.-9 p.m. Free PickUp and Delivery Phone 9009 LOOK at yourself Then come see Cecil, Shorty and Jack at the Oread Barber Shop 1237 Oread St. Just North of Brick's OK Get Your 'Burgers' AT Zim's SNACK SHOP CURB SERVICE 6:30 to 11:30 p.m. Across from the Postoffice. Open: 6 a.m. to 12:30 a.m. Read the Daily Kansan daily. SUNFLOWER DRIVERS !!! On Your Way to Class— On Your Way Home For Better Service and Standard Oil Products Stop At Darl's Standard Service 23rd and La. Vote The All-Independent Ticket Presented By The PSGL - INDEPENDENTS It takes a large and unified vote to assure the Independent majority its fair representation on Council. Don't be misled by Greek-Independent slates or by petition candidates from Greek houses designated as "Independent" on the ballot. Vote For PSGL - INDEPENDENT Candidates Student Council Can Do Something The Student Union Bookstore was steered through Council by the PSGL-Independents. Give us your support. Help us to work for: 1. An improved election system. 2. A student commissary. 3. A student theater. Vote PSGL - INDEPENDENT PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 23,1947 Kansan Comments An Obligation Or A Privilege? On the eve of the spring student election it might be well to call attention to a 146-year-old statement of Thomas Jefferson: "The will of the people is the only legitimate foundation for any government." The events of the past few weeks have made it more apparent than ever that Hill politics need cleaning up. Our student government has been hamstrung for too long by bickering, self-seeking party groups. Few will question the need for student government. There is a real job in a university community of nearly 9,000 students for a representative group to handle student affairs and promote the common welfare of the student body. But, to paraphrase Jefferson, a government that does not rest on the will of the governed is on a shaky foundation indeed. Too often that has been the case at K U. But the immediate goal is a truly representative election. K. U. students should make tomorrow's election the opening gun in a campaign to improve Hill politics. To vote is an obligation, not merely a privilege. If the students at K U wake up and demand an end to such shenanigans, student government can achieve the position it should occupy on this campus. The recently formed Student Voter's League can be a constructive force in such a movement, providing it remains independent and receives sincere support from those who believe in the benefits of democratic student government. If we continue on our politically apathetic way, we will only reap the truth in the old axiom that "A people's government is only as good as they deserve." A Summary Of The A. & M.Issues The following is an effort to crystallize impartially the issues involved in this question. Tomorrow K. U. students will have the opportunity to express their opinion on the question of whether Oklahoma A. and M. should be denied admission to the Big Six conference because of its policy of race discrimination. Conference Policy: At its meeting May 18, 1946, the Big Six athletic committee decided that the conference as a whole would impose no discriminatory rules to keep Negroes from competing in athletics. At the present time the Universities of Missouri and Oklahoma are the only two conference members imposing specific discrimination in accordance with their state laws and established customs. However, it gave to each member school the power to decide this matter in conformity with respective state laws. Each school now has the right to bar colored athletes from participating in games on its campus if it so desires. University Policy: Chancellor Malott has on several occasions reaffirmed the policy that any regularly-enrolled student at K. U. may try out for intercollegiate athletics, subject only to the specific eligibility rules of the conference. On Nov. 20, 1946, Ernest C. Quigley, director of athletics, made the following statement to the Kansam: "Any regularly-enrolled student may try out for any University athletic team." (It should be pointed out that the recent University administration decision in favor of barring A. and M. was made for reasons other than this racial issue.) Oklahoma A. and M. Policy: The policy on this matter at A. and M. is of necessity in conformity with the state laws of Oklahoma. An excerpt of its segregation laws states: "It shall be unlawful for any person, corporation, or association of persons to maintain or operate any college, school, or institution in this state where persons of both white and colored races are received as pupils for instruction." As a result of the conference ruling, granting to host schools the power to decide whether colored athletes shall be allowed to compete on their campuses, and in view of the segregation laws and customs of Oklahoma, it is reasonably certain that A. and M would invoke the same restriction as M. U. and O. U., that is, Negro athletes from other schools could not participate in games held on their campus. Those in favor of admitting A. and M. maintain generally that the school would be a worthy asset to the conference. They point out that the present policies of M. U. and O. U. already impose indirect discriminatory pressure on other member schools and barring A. and M. would accomplish no improvement in the present situation. Those opposing A. and M.'s admission maintain that if that school is admitted, the present condition will only be worsened. The ratio of schools in the conference practicing race segregation will be increased. This will make efforts more difficult to allow colored students in the other member schools to participate in athletics. They further point out that we have carried on athletic relations with the school in question for many years and will no doubt continue to do so whether it is a member of the conference or not. They say further that coaches in the non-discriminating schools are thus placed under an even greater pressure not to use Negro athletes because of the need to build teams they can use throughout the season. These opponents also point to the more liberal trend in many other conferences regarding this question and put forth the argument that our conference would be taking a backward step in strengthening the discrimination faction in the Big Six. Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Education Delegation, College Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave, New York, NY 10026. The University Daily Kansan Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Managing Editor ... Marcela Stewart Asst. Man. Editor ... Martha Jewett Editor in Chief ... William Crawley Editor in Chief ... LeMoyne Frederick City Editor ... Wallace W. Abbey Telegraph Editor ... Marion Minor Art Editor Manager ... John D. Mormick Advertising Manager ... Calvin Arnold Circulation Manager Thomas S. Cadden Editor in Chief ... William Crawley National Adv. Mg.. Frank R. Schultheis Promotion Manager ... William K. Brooks York City. The Kansas Press Association 1947 Member National Editorial Association A FREE PRESS--YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW Dear Editor--toward government by and for all of the people. First, let me say that I am not a member of any staff. I belong to no clique. I am just a bystander, interested in the long term view of the past and the future. Liberal Changes Past And Present The Dove has made its mistakes, one of which was that pink paper. Such a stupid blunder was certainly asking for it. But the Dove has never made the mistake of claiming to represent all of campus opinion, for it is common knowledge that much of the opinion at K. U. is anything but liberal. Now about that long term view, the barons of 1215 began the fight on centralized power. They were the radicals of their day. Parliamentary government was born in England after 50 years of travail but it has survived and grown there for more than 250 years. The Revolution of 1668 served to broaden the base of sovereignty with the creed that the King derives his authority from parliament; that the law itself is the source of that authority. Liberalism appeared again in England in the Reform Bill of 1832. But no progress is ever achieved without a struggle. Every Gladstone has had his Disraeli. In spite of those who dug in their heels in an effort to defy inexorable change, England has witnessed the suffrage reforms of 1832, 1867, 1884, 1918, and the "Flapper Bill" of 1928. She achieved the court reforms of the 1870's, and the Parliamentary Act of 1911, which subordinated the House of Lords to the House of Commons. Always the unmistakable trend has been away from power vested in the few toward participation by the many. Today, in spite of the considerable reaction of much of the press, we find socialist governments in most of the capitals of Europe. The Hitlers, Frances, Perons, and Pauls are passing phases, remnants of autocracy, surviving for a brief span only to be trampled finally by the irresistible march of history Freshmen, Sophomores Must See Advisors Married students will get a break when they go to see their freshmen and sophomore advisors this week. They can request that their failure grades not be sent home. However, the parents of single students will be informed of the grades after student-advisor conferences. Freshmen and sophomores must see their faculty advisers between Monday and Wednesday. Conference hours are listed on a bulletin board in the east hall of Frank Strong. A very wise man on this campus said to me the other day, "If you undertake change, you will have to combat two forces: inertia and momentum." At first I thought it was a paradox; but it is true. We must realize that we are living in the twentieth century. We cannot turn time back; we cannot preserve the status quo, for change is fundamental and even reaction must eventually tag along. G. Mendenhall College senior Permanent Loveliness . . is yours when we give you a natural-looking permanent. Call for appointment. DE SOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH NU VOGUE BEAUTY SHOP BULLY GALLAGHER Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. MOTORS FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL Lindley's Kansas Cleaners 12 E. 8th Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices MEN'S SUITS- Cleaned and Pressed ... 65c LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES— Cleaned and Pressed ... 69c APF Cash and Carry Only Rugby and Brentwood SWEATERS Fancy stripes, patterns, two tones, and solid colors. 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LOVE THAT'S FUN The Magnificent Rogue LYNNE ROBERTS WARREN DOUGLAS AND THE 3 MESQUITEERS "Come On Cowboys" "Quiz For Cash" Thursday Nite APRIL 23,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Honesty Maturity John Gunther For President Of The Student Council The Progressive Party Submits The Following Record For Your Inspection And Approval : 1. THE ONLY PARTY OPENLY AND HONESTLY TO EFFECTUATE INDEPENDENT AND GREEK CO-OPERATION. 2. THE ONLY PARTY TO WORK CONSISTENTLY FOR A MORE POWERFUL AND MATURE STUDENT GOVERNMENT. 3. THE ONLY PARTY ADVOCATING A CONCRETE CHANGE OF THE ALL STUDENT COUNCIL CONSTITUTION FOR GREATER INDEPENDENCE OF THE STUDENT COURT. 4. THE ONLY PARTY NOT REPRESENTED ON THE STUDENT COUNCIL EVER TO FORCE THAT ORGANIZATION TO A COMPROMISE. 5. THE ONLY PARTY TO SURVIVE A SERIOUS ATTEMPT AT ITS DISORGANIZATION DURING ITS INCEPTION. The Progressive Party Platform 1. Consolidation of Independent and Greek forces for a more efficient and mature student government. 2. Equal opportunity, regardless of sex, race or creed, for student activity leadership. 3. Negro participation in Big Six athletics. 4. A more responsible student government by allowing a student court jurisdiction over student affairs in disciplinary action now held by the administration. 5. An amendment to the Constitution of the All Students association of the University of Kansas abrogating the Faculty Advisory Committee to the Student Court. 6. An all student convocation at which campus political parties will explain their platforms. 7. Encouragement of school spirit by more mixers, rallies, and other activities which stimulate school spirit; to include one movable holiday per semester, to be set at the discretion of the student council. 8. Investigation of veteran's fees, in regard to the income and disposal of money received by the University from that source. 9. Student priority for all seats at all university athletic activities. 10. Lower admission charges for students at all university athletic events. 11. Higher wage rates for student employees of the university, with a minimum wage of sixty-five cents an hour for all students, 12. Lowering of language requirement for entrance into the School of Education regardless of race and sex. BECAUSE OF ITS RECORD OF ACTION FOR THE IMPROVEMENT OF STUDENT GOVERNMENT, BECAUSE OF ITS PROPOSED PLAN OF ACTION, THE PROGRESSIVE PARTY SINCERELY URGES THE STUDENT BODY TO REPOSE ITS CONFIDENCE IN THE PARTY FOR A MATURE, RESPONSIBLE, AND EFFICIENT ADMINISTRATION OF STUDENT AFFAIRS. VOTE FOR THE PARTY OF ACTION VOTE PROGRESSIVE!!! VOTE FOR THE PARTY OF RECORD Efficiency Progressive Party Responsibility - UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 23,1947 PAGE EIGHT K.U., K. State Agree On Pact A five-point peace pact was agreed to by members of the Kansas State and the University of Kansas student councils at a joint meeting Tuesday. One. A joint meeting of the entire student councils to be held 10 days before athletic competition between the two schools. The friendship meeting will be held alternately at each school. The meeting resulted from inter- colegiate vandalism which occurred on both campuses this year. The context of the pact is: Three. The 1947 council recommended to the next convention that they set up an inter-council of three students and one administrative official from each school, to enforce punishment for violation of the pact. Two. The peace pact will be reconsidered each year at the meetings of the councils. It will be published in the official newspapers of each school. Recommend Inter-Council Four. The student council of the offended school shall decide whether an offense of the peace pact has been committed. Punishment shall be decided by the inter-council. The minimum punishment will be restoration of damages; the maximum, one semester suspension for the offender. Five. The joint student councils shall make special efforts to see that the least amount of publicity concerning the offence of the offenders be given out. Official publicity shall not be released without consideration by both councils. The revised pact will be signed by both council presidents each year and published. Kansas State will be host to the next meeting of the councils in the fall. Will Play Down Publicity The council agreed that publicity helped to prevent destructive activities. A. L. Pughey, dean of men at Kansas State, apologized for the vandalism which occurred on the L. U. campus this fall. Candidates To Sign Progressive Pledge Progressive party candidates will pledge to strive for more efficient, unbiased student government through cooperation with the University administration if elected, according to a resolution accepted by the party Tuesday night. The resolution is to be signed by all candidates representing the group in the general election tomorrow. The investigations committee will meet Monday with Karl Klooz, University bursar, to discuss veteran's fees and how they are spent by the University. Each member of the committee will make a list of questions which he will present to Mr. Klooz. Hope, Skelton Join Allen In NBC Fight New York—(UP)—The sparring between the National Broadcasting company and its defiant comedians continued today with Bob Hope and Ed Skelton as the latest participants. Both Hope and Skelton were cut off the air briefly last night when they attempted wise-cracks about the network. They had been told to delete the jokes from their studio and cracks, but only the studio audience heard them. Fred Allen was reported yesterday to be considering seeking a spot on another network next season. He started the affair Sunday night by saying that an NBC vice president charge of overtime got his vacations by taking 10 seconds here and 10 seconds there from the end of over-long programs. Before he completed the gag, engineers cut him off the air for 25 seconds. There will be an emergency meeting of the ballot counters of all political parties at 5 p.m. today, in the English room of the Union. Ballot Counters To Meet Confident Truman's Aid Bill Will Pass Washington. —(UP)— Chairman Charles A. Eaton of the house foreign affairs committee voiced confidence today that the house would join the senate in giving resounding approval to President Truman's Greek-Turkish aid program. Describing the senate's overwhelming okay as a "blow for freedom," the New Jehrsey Republican said he would push for house action next week on the $400,000,000 stop-Communism measure. The measure would authorize about $300,000,000 in economic and military aid for Greece and $100,- 000,000 for Turkey. Prospects appeared good for sending the bill to the White House by the end of next week. It was expected that only a little time would be needed to adjust differences between the house and senate versions. The victory for the bill in the senate was considered a crushing rebuke to former vice-president Henry A. Wallace, who has been stumping Europe with violent attacks on Mr. Truman's stop-Communism program. Byrnes Expresses Interest In SUN Fulton, Mo., got Winston Churchill, and K. U. may get former Secretary of State James Byrnes, his health permitting. In a letter to the Student United Nations, Mr. Byrnes expressed his interest in the Nov. 17 conference, but didn't promise to be able to attend. Invitations have been sent to 21 colleges and universities, and if the Intercollegiate Political conference joins, it will bring 16 eastern schools with it. The three day Student United Nations conference is a proposal of the International Relations clubs of the universities of Missouri and Kansas to bring together students from over the United States to discuss world problems. Instead of having organized houses take the parts of U. N. members as was done in February, delegates from visiting schools will represent the nations. Two foreign schools, the University of Mexico and the University of Denares, India, have expressed interest in the conference, but because of housing difficulties, only United States delegates will attend. Donald Blaisdell, of the State department, and a member of the U. S. delegation to the United Nations, suggested asking Secretary of State George C. Marshall to attend. Official Bulletin April 23, 1947 - * * Archery club will practice from 1-6 today in Robinson gym. I. S. A, meeting at 7 tonight in 228 Frank Strong. Jay Jones at 5 p.m. today in the Pine room of the Union. - * * ** * * * Poll workers, judges and clerks of the Progressive Party meet in 103 Frank Strong at 7:30 tonight. Briefing on places and times to work. General Semantics club at 8:15 tonight in 111 Frank Strong. Final arrangements for Semantics seminar will be made. By Bibler Today is the last date that students can purchase copies of last year's Jayhawker in the center hall of Frank Strong. Those who did not get subscriptions can buy back numbers at this time. All students who have not registered for the summer and fall sessions should sign up today in the Registrar's office. - * * Le cercle français se reuimita a quatre heures aujourd'hui dans laalle FS 113. M. Gerald Davis de la Cession des Beaux-Arts et proseurde dessin dans le Section d'Architecture, qui est revenu recémement de la France, fere une repetite causerie. Tous ceux qui s'y interessent sont cordialement invites a y assister. 幸 幸 幸 Student chapter of A. I. Ch. E. smoker at 7:30 tonight in the Fine room. Dr. Stephenson will speak on "Duties and Responsibilities of a Technical Witness." Also nominations of three candidates for representative to Engineering council. All chemical engineers invited. Home economics majors, required meeting at 4 p.m. today in 110 Fraser. Interested non-majors invited. Student-faculty council in home economics will be organized. - * * Der Deutsche verein wird Donnerstag um 4:30 in 1402 Fraser treffen. Fraulien Joan Rodgers wird ein paar Deutsche lieder singen. Alle studenten, die sich für das Deutsch interessieren, sind eingeladen. Sociology club at 4 p.m. Thursday, Little Theater, Green hall. Election of officers. Mathematics club regular meeting at 4 p.m. Thursday in 206 Frank - * * Snow Zoology club regular meeting, 7:30 Thursday, 206 Snow. Dr. D. S. Farner will speak on "Limnology of Crater Lake, Oregon." All planning to attend please sign bulletin in Snow hall. Strong. Dr. Smith will speak on "Pythagorean Numbers." Geology club at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 402 Lindley. Dr. Byron Leonard will speak on "Application of Zoology to Geology." Christian Science organization regular meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Danforth chapel. CIVIL ENGINEERS: Meeting of American Society of Civil Engineers at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 101 Snow Mr. Wilson, guest speaker. All civils urged to attend. Refreshments. Quill club at 7:30 p.m. Thursday Watkins hall. Important meeting. 象 形 态 Community service committee of YWCA will meet at 4 p.m. Thursday at Henley house. Sigma Xi business meeting at 4:30 p.m. Thursday in Bailey C. L. Members urged to attend. Forensic League at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 105 Green hall. Basic Christianity seminar at 7:30 pm. Thursday, Mission room, Myers hall. Rev. H. G. Barr will lead discussion. Entomology club annual picnic and initiation of new members on April 26. Contact David W. Craik, Soil Science make arrangements for transportation - * * Preliminary examinations in Western Civilization will be held Saturday at 1:30 at the following places examination over the first five units of reading, 305 Bailey; examination over units 6 through 10: students whose names begin A-K, Snow hall, L-Z, 426 Lindley. ** ** The Business School Association announces election of officers for 1947-48 school year on Business School Day, May 9. Petitions for nominations may be obtained from the business School office and must be filed with that office by April 28. ** ** K. U. Dames will meet tonight at 8 in 426 Lindley. Flower arrangements will be discussed. Little Man On Campus KU BIPPER H. DINGY KALSAN "Worthal is writin' a term paper on the 'Evils of Drink,' and he has to have factual information." Government Bulletin Raps State Spending Kansas has no central control over state spending and little efficiency in managing of the state budget according to the latest "Your Government" bulletin, published by the Bureau of Government Research. It discusses four problems in the existing financial system in Kansas. First of these problems is that there is no central organization coordinating state expenditures. The bulletin terms the system "patchwork" in character, with nine officers taking part in administration. "Too Diversified Spending." Many are in charge of spending, instead of having one responsible executive, thus causing the legislature to restrict the administrative branch in spending as much as possible. The second problem is that 80 percent of state money goes into "special funds" controlled neither by the legislature nor governor. Agencies to whom these funds go get automatic appropriations each session. Started as a device to avoid budgeting, this plan has grown into an expensive system. Most special funds could be abolished or revised. An allotment system is the third reorganization move needed according to the bulletin. Under this system a given amount previously calculated is given each agency for each period. Spending for the period is restricted to that amount. "Need Auditing System" Poll workers of all the political parties will meet at 5 p.m. today in 200 of Frank Strong hall. An auditing system independent of the administrative official is the fourth need. This would tend to insure having a responsible administrator. Solutions to most of these needs were suggested in a bill before the state legislature in 1941. The bill, which did not pass, would have given the state a modern financial system. Poll Workers To Meet Howe Will Present Recital Tonight Helen Howe, pianist, will present her senior recital at 8 tonight in Frank Strong auditorium. She is a student of Prof. Ruth Orcutt and Prof. Carl Preyer. Her program will include a choral prelude "Wachet auf, ruft uns die Stimme" (Bach-Busoni), "Prelude and Fugue in D Major" (Bach,"Sherzo a Capriccio in F sharp minor" (Mendelssohn), "Sonata in D minor. Op. 31 No. 2" (Beethoven) "Nocturne in D flat, Op. 27 No. 2" (Chopin), "Scherzo No. 4 in E major" (Chopin), and a suite, "Pour le Piano" (Debussy). Lawrence Optical Co. WE FIT GLASSES AND DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames. Instant Service In Our Shoe Repair Department Royal College Shop 837-38 Mass. WURLITZER PHONOGRAPHS FOR PARTY RENTALS Used Juke Box Records For Sale John H. Emick 1014 Mass. Phone 343 As You Like Them- SANDWICHES AND CHILI "SNAPPY" LUNCH Where of course Ra St W 1010 Mass. 7 a.m.-2 a.m. WEEK DAYS Ho skirr Broa comi lians dav Bu turne the 12 n.-12 m. SUNDAY want The nigh Aller wise vice- time. gets secon broad Sea. Al and tracl air T cheek conds Li Al presi regu 'pre tiviti Lrd signa "I repli "B said. "I liste De his shur frier room Bu who thro spite tota othe Ks mos show sout and and ued ZH Iism, room mid I little exp laye Hen his 1947 ler University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Thursday, April 24, 1847 44th Year No.126 Lawrence, Kansas sent in is and die include chi D, 2" superior Pi- TE D. By Bibler Radio Comics Stop Feuding With Network Hollywood—(UP)—The four-day skirmish between the National Broadcasting company and its radio comics was over today. The comedians are planning an unopposed field day of ibes at the network. But the fun was over. NBC turned its other cheek and invited the comics to say anything they wanted to about the network. The controversy started Sunday night when NBC cut comedian Fred Allen off the air briefly during a wiscrack about a mythical network vice-president in charge of overtime. Allen said the vice-president gets his vacation by accumulating seconds from the ends of overtime broadcasts. Comics Are Honored It ended when NBC last night lifted its order to "fade" any jokes directed at the network. In turn the network appointed Allen and comedians Bob Hope and Red Skelton, who also were cut off during NBC jokes, as honorary vice-presidents. Allen turned down his vicepresidency, pleading "pressure of regular work" and poor health that precluded strenuous outside activities." Allen was cut off for 25 seconds, and Hope and Skelton finished wise-tracks about the network into dead Air Tuesday night when the network checked the switch for about 15 seconds on each program. Lifting of the NBC ban was recorded by the airplanes comics as a signal for open season on radio jokes. Demis Dawn Starts Fun Dennis Day was the first to have his fun last night without being shunted off the air. His radio girl friend, Mildred. coming into the room, asked: Little Man On Campus DOWN WITH ANYTHING! SOAP “...And our party will publish 'The Buzzard,' a Bottleneck paper." "I'm listening to the radio," Day replied. "But I don't hear anything." she said. "I know it." Day answered. "I'm listening to the Fred Allen program." Others Ready With Jokes "What are you doing?" Kansas—Partly cloudy northeast, mostly cloudy west and south with showers and thunderstorms extreme south today. Mostly cloudy tonight and Friday with rain south tonight and most of state Friday. Continued cool. Burns and Allen and Jack Benny, who like Day had threatened to go through with anti-network gags despite the ban, trot out their jokes today and Sunday. Half a dozen others got their cracks last night. WEATHER Don Ettinger Fined After Tussle With Cops Zilch And His Middle Name Has 'Em Rolling in the Aisles Don (Red) Ettinger, a regular starter on the University football team last fall, was fine $78.50 Wednesday in the Independence, Mo., police court. Ettinger, who is working on a construction project south of Independence this semester, was fined for six different offenses. He left the scene of an accident after scraping fenders with another car, and was charged with careless driving, interference with an officer, resisting arrest, destroying public property and being drunk in a public building. He was permitted to post a $25 cash bond Tuesday night after the run-in, and paid the damage in court today. Elmer A. Zilch, bon vivant and patron saint of the School of Journalism, rode high last night at a banquet held in his honor in the Kansas room of the Union. He opened his comments by remarking that the middle initial A stood for Amorous. little red kiddy-car. This year he explained that he had been delayed in England "while helping Henry Wallace pull his foot out of his mouth." Arvid Jacobson's Have Son Only on special occasions does Elmer ever enter the state of Kansas. He pointed out that its "airl climate" didn't agree with his health, immediately after the banquet, he dashed off for Kansas City, Mo., and the wetter atmosphere. Every year at this time Eimer comes zooming into Lawrence on his little red kiddy-car. This year he $ ^{*} $ Prof. and Mrs. Arvid Jacobson are parents of a 9 pound, 7 ounce son. Arvid Victor, born Monday at Lawrence Memorial hospital. Mr. Jacobson is an assistant professor of design. During the time that Professor Zilch wasn't speaking, students and faculty took turns at lampooning each other. Highlight of the evening's entertainment was J. Wellington Robinson's impersonation of Emil L. Telelf, associate professor of journalism. Robinson conducted his "class" in a "business-like manner." (The quotes are Robinson's.) One hundred and twenty-five members of the faculty, students, and alumni attended the Zilch-fest, and many rolled on the floor as they read copies of the "Pee-Wee Kansan," the burlesque cousin of the Daily University Kansas. Students Have Chance To Meet With Minister Appointments can be made with Charles W. Thomas, 1124 Mississippi street, by students who are preparing for the Christmas or New Year's Prof. John W. Thomas, of Crozer Theological seminary. Professor Thomas will be in Lawrence April 26 and 27 and wants to meet all theological students. Charles Thomas said. Dean Werner Resigns As Advisor To ISA Dean Henry Werner submitted his resignation as faculty advisor to the ISA, at the regular weekly meeting of the ISA council Wednesday night. The date for the annual ISA Sweetheart dance was set for May 7. Final arrangements were completed for a mixer, to be held Wednesday at Potter lake, and a box cupper May 7, also to be held at the lake. The council heard a report given by delegates to the National ISA convention, held at Oklahoma University last week. Victor Reinking, College junior, and Helen Hastings, the arts junior, were sworn in as council members. Reinking was appointed intramurals chairman and Miss Hastings was designated council secretary. Hitt Attends Convention Of Registrars In Denver James K. Hitt, University registrar, is attending the national convention of the American Association at Collegiate Registrars this week in Denver, Colo. Robert Nash Breaks Arm While Pole Vaulting Tuesday The convention is studying problems created by this period of greatly increased enrollment. Robert Nash, son of the late Dr. Bert Nash, fractured his arm while pole vaulting Tuesday afternoon. He was taken to Watkins hospital for treatment and was released Wednesday. He is a student at University high school. Political Parties Throw Charges In Hot Election Campaigning With Loudspeakers Almost Starts Candidates Fighting By COOPER ROLLOW A bitter battle of accusations raged between political parties this morning as flying words nearly became flying fists in a climax to pre-election skirmishes. The ruckus resulted when the use of a P.S.G.L. loudspeaker was condemned by Pachacamac and Progressive parties because of what 'Elijah' To Start Music Festival May4-10 A performance of Mendelssohn's oratorio, "The Elijah," will be the first event of five special programs highlighting the annual music week festival of the University and the city of Lawrence May 4 to 10. The acappella choir accompanied by the symphony orchestra will present "The Elijah," in Hoch auditorium at 4:00 p.m., May 4, D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts, said today. Helen Traubel, Metropolitan Opera soprano, will give a recital in Hoch, May 5. Miss Traubel is filling the date originally scheduled for Gladys Swarthout, who cancelled her tour because of an injury. Sylvia Zaremba, 15-year-old pianist, will appear in Fraser theater May 7, and Russell Goudey of New York will give a lecture May 8. Instrumental and vocal organizations from Lawrence Senior and Junior High and Grade schools will present a concert May 9. Other special events will include music programs in the churches, and at the Rotary, Kiwanis, Lions and Co-op clubs of Lawrence. Banquet To Wind Up Cervantes Day Festival A banquet and tertulia (program) will climax the Spanish department's Cervantes day Saturday. It will be held at 5:30 p.m. in the Kansas room of the Memorial Union building. The program will include musical and dramatic pieces, dances, and novelty numbers. Miss May Gardner, professor of Spanish, will make the welcoming speech at the banquet. J. M. Osma, professor of romance languages, will be program master of ceremonies. The program will include numbers by pupils of graduates of the University department of Spanish. Students of Mrs. Jeanette Robbins, '26, now teaching at Park College, and of Miss Violette Garrett, '06, now at Kansas City Junior college, will be on the program. Tickets for the banquet are available in room 119, Strong Strong hall. Lawrence League To Meet The Rev. Ornel Miller of the Topeka First Methodist church will talk on "Lawrence, a Single Community of Many Peoples." The Lawrence League for the Practice of Democracy will meet at the Friends church, 16th and New Hampshire streets, at 7.30 p.m. today. Pachacamac lead Donald Ong terme[ " complete disregard for University regulations." Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, had forbidden the use of loudspeakers in the campaign, Ong said, and declared that all parties should work on an equal basis. George Caldwell, running for A.S.C. president on the P.S.G.L. ticket said that the misunderstanding was the result of two different interpretations of the regulations. Forbids Loudspeakers Forbids Loudspeakers Mr. Nichols was unavailable, but Leonard Axe, director of University services, forbade the use of University outlets to power the speakers. At noon today, Caldwell said that he had not decided whether or not to discontinue using the portable speaker between classes. Posters of one of the parties were found on University Daily Kansan boxes, and in between the newspapers, which is against University regulations. Voting Heavier Than Expected About 1500 students had voted in the All Student council election up to noon, an unofficial University Daily Kansan check showed today. Poll workers told a reporter that they had orders not to release any information, but estimated that from 1,500 to 2,000 votes had been cast this morning. No election returns, official or unofficial, had been released at the time the Daily Kansan went to press this afternoon. Poll workers said that voting had been heavier than was expected, but remained tight-lipped about election trends or results. The campaign ballyhoo which recently swept the campus had subsided somewhat this morning, until politics again raised its ugly head and the loudspeaker episode took place. The P.S.G.L. speaker was posted outside Bailey Chemical laboratories this morning, mixing campaign slogans with dance music. The battle started as a quiet argument and ended with the frenzied shrieks of the angered politicians almost leading to blows. Student Stand In Line Long lines of students waited patiently this morning in Frank Strong hall, where voting was much heavier than at other polls located in Fraser and Marvin halls. Polls will close at 6:30 p.m., but workers estimated that they would not finish counting ballots before midnight. None of the counters are sworn to secrecy, but the first public announcement of the results will be released in early May. Page, instructor in political science, will survive the ballot counting. The controversial question of Oklahoma Aggie participation in the Big Six conference crowded into the spotlight alongside student politics this morning, as students voted on the athletic issue along with student elections. interest 'Tremendous' In A. & M. Student interest in the sports issue was reported as "tremendous" today. Attention increased when University officials said last week that the results of today's voting on the question will be considered when the final decision is made. College, fine arts, and business students voted in Frank Strong hall and Fraser. Engineers cast their ballots in Marvin hall, and medical and law students in Fraser. . UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE TWO APRIL 24,19 Official Bulletin April 24.1947 Alpha Phi Omega at 7 tonight in 206 Frank Strong. Der deutsche Verein wird Donnerstag um 4:30 in 4Fraser Trier erleben. Frualein Joan Rodgers wird ein paar deutsche Lieder singen. All Studenten, die sich für das Deutsch interessieren, sind eingeladen. Christian Science organization at 7:39 tonight in Danforth chapel. Sociology club, 4 p.m. today, Little Theater, Green hall. Election of officers. * * *** Mathematics club regular meeting at 4 p.m. today in 206 Frank Strong, Dr. South will speak on "Pythagorean Numbers." Snow Zoology club regular meeting at 7:30 tonight in 206 Snow. Dr D. S. Farner will speak on "Limnology of Crater Lake, Ore." Those planning to attend sign the bulletin board. 车 厚 厚 Geology club at 7:30 tonight in 402 Lindley, Dr. Byron Leonard will speak on the application of zoology to geology. *** Civil Engineers: Meeting of American Society of Civil Engineers at 7:30 tonight in 101 Snow. Mr Wilson, guest speaker. All civil engineers urged to attend. Refreshments. * ✨ Quiff club at 7:30 tonight, Watkins hall. Important meeting. Community service committee of YWCA at 4 p.m. today, Henley House. *** 车 车 车 Basic Christianity seminar at 7:30 tonight, Mission room, Myers hall. Rev. H. G. Barr will lead discussion. *** Sigma Xi business meeting at 4:30 p.m. today in 205 B.C.L. Members urged to attend. Preliminary examinations in Western Civilization will be held at 1:30 p.m. Saturday at the following places: Examination over the first five units of reading-305 Bailey. Examination over units 6 through 10 students whose names begin A-K. Snow ball; L-Z, 426 Lindley. *** The Business School association announces election of officers for 1947-48 on Business School day, May 9. Petitions for nominations may be obtained at the Business School office and must be filed with that office by April 28. Entomology club annual picnic and initiation of new members on April 26. Contact David W. Craik 316 Snow, to make arrangements for transportation. Society for Advancement of Managemenl regular semi-monthly meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, April 29, in Kansas room of Union building. Delta Phi Delta will meet in the projection room of the design department at 4:00 p.m., today. Attendance is required. Two Engineers Will Read Papers At Area Convancie Waldo Hobbs, engineering senior, and Stephen Hadley, junior, will read scientific papers at a conven- tion of Oklahoma Monday and Tuesday. The subject of Hobbs' paper is given to the authors and Hadley's, engineering education. The meeting will be sponsored by the American Society of Mechani- cists. Cash prizes with a $50 first prize will be awarded to the four best papers. University Daily Kansar Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year. (In Lawrence add $1 a semester post- age for the first half of each summer, afternoon during the school year event) Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays, and examination periods. Emersed as separate office on September 17, 1960, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., ended on March 3, 1879. Summer Tour For Five Law Will Take Em Over Main To Europe Summer Tour For Five A two-month tour of Europe will be made by five University students this summer. They will be accompanied by Marc Law, '20, who has served as guide for such groups for more than 15 years. Students who will make the tour are Patricia Ferguson, College junior; Mary Jean Hoffman, College senior; Sarah Smart, fine arts junior; Neil Ball, graduate student; and Reed Hoffman, freshman law student. "We feel very fortunate in being able to make the trip so soon after the war's end," Miss Ferguson said. She explained that members of the group have submitted 15 pictures to officials who must issue their passports. This trip will be Mr. Law's first since 1939. In addition to the five KU students we will students from University of Virginia and Colgate and Harvard universities. Scheduled to sail from New York City on the SS Vendam, of the Holly American lines, June 24, the group will first tour England and Scotland. After spending a week in the British Isles, the students will cross to Europe to tour France, Holland, Belgium, and Switzerland, largely travelling by train and automobile, acclimatising to the new environment, leaving Rotterdam, on the SS Veendam for New York City when their tour is completed, she added. Veterans in the Arkansas-Kansas-Missouri-Oklahoma area have reinstated $114,696,000 worth of lapsed National Service life insurance since Feb. 3. EXCELENT Food and prompt service can always be found at the Phone KU-25 with your news. 3-day Cleaning Service SERVICE LUNCH 732 Mass. 4-day Laundry Service 24-hour Shoe Repair - Leather and Garment Dyeing a Specialty. Opposite School Western Union--8 a.m.-9 p.m. Free PickUp and Delivery Phone 9009 Village Cleaners SUNFLOWER, KANSAS Blithe Companion For You For any event that crops up on your calendarSummer Cottons. You'll want several, they are so becoming and inexpensive. 740 Vermont Come in. WE HAVE THEM. . Grayce Shop 841 Mass. Lost Something? Try a University Daily Kansan Want Ad FLOWERS OF DISTINCTION Gift Box Roses Orchids Gardenias Spring Flowers Phone 363 FOR THE LARGEST SELECTION ALLISON 4T THOMAS Flower Shop "Flowers By Wire" 927 Mass. --- TOM When The Phones Ring Again CALL 432 For perfect dry cleaning service. In the meantime bring your clothes in to us. We'll clean them-press them and they'll come back to you fresh and new-looking. Whether you're dressing up or dressing down always dress neatly with that clean well-pressed look from the Laundry And Dry Cleaners The INDEPENDENT H B I grade on crime and burden nigl that ings T Bec tion can thro the T be say pre hea (2) April 24,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE --- COED'S CORNER Has 'Squirrels In Her Closet' But Still She's Phi Beta Kappa It's unconstitutional, but Kansas does it. For information on how Kansas breaks its own laws, see Frances James, graduate student in political science, who is writing her master's thesis on special legislation. "I got my background material when I worked for the bureau of government research which put out pamphlets on departmental organization and acts as a kind of information $ ^{a} $ and acts as a kind of information bureau for towns," she said. And when she told about it, it sounded interesting. She propped her feet against the radiator in her room and discussed legislatures, and bills, and constitutions with eager animation until the squirrels interrupted her. Squirrels In Her Closet The squirrels are in her closest! Because of the peculiar construction of Westminster hall, squirrel can chew holes in the roof and run through a net-work of closets under the eaves. "They aren't especially spooky at night," she says, "but they see to it that I wake up early in the mornings." Frances claims that she is hard to get acquainted with. If so, she must have some persistent friends, for she is a member of Mortar-board and a former vice-president of Y.-W.C.A. Modest About Honors That she is a Phi Beta Kappa must be mentioned tactfully, for Frances says it gives people the "false impression that I go around with my head in a book." She has a dislike for conceit, and says it's all too common for students to boast about grades. "Of course some people are smarter than others, but everyone can excel in a particular field. Political science has given me an opportunity to cover up what I don't know about other fields." Has Five Hours To Go Frances has five more hours and her thesis to complete before she receives her master's degree. She is vague about her plans after she gets her degree-adult education and Y.W.C.A. group work are possibilities. --also, Phipps. He is a junior in the College M. He is a member of Beta Theta Fl. 30 SOCIALLY SPEAKING Tekes Entertain A party and dance was held Saturday night at the Tau Kappa Epsilon fraternity house. Kass Kassinger's orchestra played for the dance. The guests were Jane Archibald, Mary Bernnitter, Geraldine Bobbitt, Elizabeth Bradney, Bernice Brady, Frances Deane Carter, Mary Helen Clark, Barbara Coats, Marcela Cousins, Covey, Nancy Dille, Mary Douglass, Betty Fulkerson, Nancy German, Jeanne Gorbutt, Doris Greenback, Harriet Harlow, Dorothy Hartner, Betty Hatcher, Kathryn Haver, Carol Hastings. Nancy Jackson, Melba Lemon, Jerre Lyons, Melba Mather, Kathleen McKinney, Norma McMullen, Joyce Randolph, Irma Lee Rick, Margaret Robinson, Barbara Schweheimer, Katryn Showalter, Sylvia Stephens, Dorothy Stephenson, Laura Katherine Steibler, Bonnie Veatch, Martha Weed, and Melba Whiting. ** ** Lambda Chi Alpha entertains Guests at the Lambda Chi Alpha picnic at Lake Shawnee Friday night were: Martha Webb, Delores Travalent, Estelle Stewart, Meribah Barrett, Margaret Hessick, Joyce Mamigon- ian, Helen Lawrence, Dorothy Stephenson, Mary Yost, Margo Pierce, Helen Hastings, Patricia Graham, Marybelle Sheppard, Janet Belt, Mary Corsaut, Marie Franklin. Ruth Ann Hawman, Shirley Sparling, Marie Jackson, Sydney Letson, Billie Burtcher, Jerry Osmer, Sue Webster, Virginia Taylor, Charlyne Oliver, Juanite Keener, Mary Moore, Betty Black, Evelyn Kerschen, Betty Sargent, Barbara Hamilton, Geraldine Ott, Cleta Van Marter, Nola J. Hosey, Patricia Nordeen, Ardyle Wilson, Margaret Hoopes. Alpha Kappa Psi Elects Donald Baumunk will be president; Curvin Greene, vice-president; Charles Dillon, secretary; Morse Murray, treasurer; and Charles Mosley, master of ceremonies. Alpha Kappa Psi, business fraternity, held an election of officers for the coming year. Kappa Alpha Theta announces the piming of Sarah Frances Phipps, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry K. Phipps, Wichita, to Francis E. Carr, Wellington. Belles And Their Weddings Phipps-Carr The announcement was made during dinner, Friday, by the housemother, Mrs. Karl Perkins, who wore a corsage of carnations and sweet-beas. Miss Phipps wore an orchid. Her attendants were her sister, Mrs. H. C. Altman, Jr., Lawrence, and Mrs. J. S. Welfelt, Winfield, who received gardenia corsages. Miss Phipps is a college senior. Life expectancy has increased from 19 to 65 years in the last 40 years. For Those Casual Moments Light summer weight flight coveralls made of fine mercerized cotton twill. 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Enjoy the quality that results when a maker earnestly strives to build the world's finest shoes for men. Brown and White $14.95 Others $10.50 to $15.50 Royal College Shop 837-39 Mass. - UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 24,1942 PAGE FOUR SPOTLIGHT SPORTS By BILL CONBOY Kansas Relays Notes: Glenn Cunningham, the famous Kansas miler, expressed the opinion that America's leading threat for the Olympic 1,500-meter title will be one of the current crop of young college distance men. The "Iron Horse" said that the older runners will fade in the next year but that the younger college athletes will continue to improve more and more as they get back into condition after experience in the service. The Baylor relay team was hoping to go to the Pennsylvania Relays next week-end, but the school authorities decided to keep them closer to home by sending them to the Drake Relays in Des Moines instead. The Baylor dash men, led by Bill Martineson and Stoney Cotten, are probably the second fast crew of sprinters in the nation, but they have faced the undefeated Texas university team in every meet this year and have always come in second best. Two of the best mile bets for the future in this country performed for Cunningham to see Saturday. Jerry Thompson of Texas ran the anchor lap of the distance medley relay team in the unofficial time of 4:31. Bill Biddle, a member of his relay quartet to victory with a 4:34 mile. These times were exceptional considering the condition of the track after the early rains. Stoney Catten, Baylor speed merchant who placed third in the open 100-yard dash, has shown remarkable improvement this season. J. D. Stovall, his track coach, said that Cotton's best time for the century last year was 10.4 seconds. This season he has already run one 9.8 race. \* \* \* Head football coach George Sauer deserves an assist for helping the Jayhawker baseball team conquer the Kansas State Wildcats in two games here last Thursday. Sauer turned several of his gridders loose in time for them to play in the opening home baseball games of the season. Vic Bradford, head baseball coach, said after the double-header that the batting punch of Red Hogan, Bud French, and Dick Bertuzzi made the difference between winning and losing. The former Alabama football and baseball star said: "If Hogan, Bertuzzi, and French had been around to bat and Dick Gilman had been available to pitch we would not have lost our two opening games with Nebraska up in Lincoln." *** The University R.O.T.C. rife team recently defeated the rifle team of the University of Alaska in a telegraph firing match. The Kansas marksmans hit a total of 1,738 against a score of 1,586 for the Alaskans. High man for the Jayhawkers was Jim May with a final score of 365. Leader for the University of Alaska was Sturgulewski with a final total of 341. Members of the Kansas team are: Leslie Cox, Wayne Miller, Duane Harvey, Charles Howard, and May. The team is coached by Tech. Sgt. Mitchell P. Wojcik. Probable Pitchers Cleveland (Black 1-0) at Chicago (Rigney 1-0) American League Boston Johnson 0-0) at New York (Shenan 0) St. Louis (Kramer 1-0) at Detroit (Trucks 1-0). (Only games scheduled) National League New York (Kennedy 0-0) at Boston (Sain 0-1) ton (Sain 0-1) Philadelphia Hughes 0-1) at (Brancue 0-1) Chicago (Borowy 1-1) at Pitts- burgh (Roe 1-0) Cincinnati (Blackwell 2-0) at St Louis (Dickson 0-1) Phog's Back In Harness; Practice To Start Soon The Jayhawker master was interviewed over the radio Wednesday night by Max Falkenstien. In referring again to the coaching work of Engleman, he said, "I don't believe I could have done any better myself." Pleased With Engleman Dr. Forrest C. "Phog" Allen, perennial producer of basketball champions at the University, returned to Lawrence Wednesday after spending three months in California. He had been forced to take the vacation in the middle of the recent basketball season because of poor health. Dr. Allen said: "I am feeling fine once again and am anxious to get back into the harness. I think Howard Engleman did a fine job of coaching the Kansas team in my absence. I congratulate him." Dr. Allen wrote: Dr. Allen also clarified the case of Bob O'Brien, the 6-foot, 4-inch basketball star who enrolled at the University after spending time on the Kansas State campus. He said that the former Kansas City, Mo., Westport High school player had never enrolled at the Wildcat school. Therefore, since he has now enrolled at the University, he is fully within eligibility requirements. Plano, NC. Blasts NCAA Code The NCAA purity code came in for a brief blasting during the broadcast. Regarding the NCAA attitude toward subsidization of athletes, he said, "In this respect, the NCAA is following a stupid course. They are talking amateurism and practicing professionalism. "Why don't they legalize paying athletes' board and room? I would suggest setting up a program, similar to the G.I. Bill of Rights for athletes, with a C average and other requirements made." "Athletes Deserve It" The Kansas cage boss closed his remarks by agreeing with the suggestion of "Frosty" Cox, Colorado basketball coach, that athletes deserve some financial aid in their schooling. He said that many fine athletes will never get to college unless some system is devised to help them meet expenses. "These boys are not going to school to make money, but they will need help in order to go to school," he said. ing crop of holdovers and some outstanding newcomers give the Jay-sawker coach title hopes for next year. Dr. Allen has called a two weeks spring basketball practice beginning Monday. He has a tough job ahead in replacing such stars as Charley Black and Ray Evans, but a promis- Baseball Results Wednesday's Games American League: American League New York 2, Boston 0 Detroit 7, Chicago 4 Washington 4, Philadelphia 3 Cleveland 10, St. Louis 4 National League: National League: Pittsburgh N. St. Louis 5 Boston N. New York 1 Chicago 7, Cincinnati 1 Brooklyn 5, Philadelphia 2 American Association: American Association: Louisville 3, Columbus 1 Kansas City at Minneapolis, rain Milwaukee at St. Paul, rain International League; International League. Montreal 7, Jersey City 3 Syracuse 10, Rochester 1 Newark 6, Toronto 1 American League: Standings | | W. | L. | Pct. | G.B. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | New York | 6 | 2 | .750 | -- | | Chicago | 3 | 1 | .750 | 1 | | Cleveland | 3 | 2 | .600 | $1\frac{1}{4}$ | | Boston | 4 | 3 | .571 | $1\frac{1}{2}$ | | Detroit | 3 | 3 | .500 | 2 | | Washington | 3 | 3 | .500 | 2 | | St. Louis | 1 | 4 | .200 | $4\frac{1}{2}$ | | St. Louis | 1 | 4 | .200 | $4\frac{1}{2}$ | | Philadelphia | 1 | 4 | .143 | $4\frac{1}{2}$ | National League; National League W. L. Pct. G.B. Pittsburgh 6 1 .857 — Brooklyn 4 2 .667 1½ Philadelphia 4 4 .500 2½ Boston 3 3 .500 2½ Chicago 4 4 .500 2½ Cincinnati 4 6 .400 2½ New York 2 4 .333 3½ St. Louis 2 5 .286 4 Physics Group To Hear Ott Paul W. Ott, graduate student in physics, will lecture on "Mesirit Mass Determination" at a physics colloquium at 5 p.m. Monday. The meeting will be in 203 Blake hall. Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER Serving K.U. Students For 43 Years. 809 MASS. PARKER HERBEX or OGILVIE SISTERS Don't expose your hair to ol' sol's rays without a series of It's Sun-Tan Time Treatment for the prevention of TRICHOPTILOSIS (split hair-ends) FROM 450 BUND BOX Beauty Shop 1144 IND. Lindley's Kansas Cleaners 12 E. 8th Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices MEN'S SUITS— Cleaned and Pressed 65c LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES— Cleaned and Pressed 69c Cash and Carry Only Protect The Trade-In Value Of Your Car OF course you want to get the best "trade-in" price possible on your old car when you buy your new one. Now is the time for Spring conditioning and tune up services to put it in top shape for warm weather driving. Bring your winter-weary car to us. We will service it to run its best and look its best. Drive in tomorrow. . ONE STOP does it! ASK ABOUT OUR COMPLETE SPRING CHANGEOVER SERVICE SPECIAL MORGAN-MACK MOTOR COMPANY YOUR FRIENDLY FORD DEALER 609 Mass. Phone 277 Adveritisers Prefer The Kansan To Reach Hill Student Sew Thiny A COOL COTTON chambray. Two piece peplum with pleats in front—Luxable. $7.95. Adelane's 24,194 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS April 24,1947 PAGE FIVE 5c 9c K.U. To Send 15 Track Men To Drake Relays Fifteen members of the University track team will leave tonight to participate in the Drake Relays at Des Moines Saturday. "We will be meeting some of the cream of the countries track and field crop up there, but the boys are determined to get something out of this meet." Ray Kanehl, head track coach, said today. "The competition is going to be plenty stiff and only time will tell how well we will do." Scifield Is High Jump Entry Tom Scofield, ace Kansas high jump man, is favored to place high in the event. He tied Monte Kinder of Nebraska for the Kansas Relays crown here last week. The high jump entry field for the Drake event is one of the best in many years and Kinder and Scofield will have plenty of competition. Scofield has been clearing over 6 feet 3 inches in practice this week and if the weather is nice his chances are good. Aim At Texas Coach Kanehl will enter a distance medley relay team and a two-mile relay team in an attempt to knock Texas from the vaunted position they hold by virtue of their victories at the Texas Relays and here last week. The competition in these two races, heightened by many entries, will probably be the best of the day. Other Kansas entries will be: The distance medley team will consist of John Jackson, Harold Hinchee, Hal Moore, and Bob Karnes. Hinchee, Moore, Karnes, and Pieratt Johnson will make up the two-mile relay team. 100-yard dash—Jackson; high hurdles and 440-yard hurdles—Frank Stamard; sprint medley relay—Johnson, William Bintner, Bob Crowley and Richard Waggstaff; mile relay-Binter, Jackson, Robert Hill and Richard Shee; discuss-Karl Ebel; javelin-Ebel, Bruce Henock and Clifford King; broad jump-Crowley and Scofield. Fight Close Games In Volleyball, Softball An upset win by the Fly-by-Nights over the Phi Gams highlighted intramural softball play Wednesday. The Sig Sips continued undefeated whipping Lambda Chi 20.1. Kappa Sigs kept their record clean defeating Mom's Boys 10-1. Disregarding their underdog role, the Fly-by-Nights turned on the batting power to defeat Phi Gamma Delta 18-12. It was the first defeat for Phi Gam and the initial win for the Fly-by-Nights. In volleyball, Sigma Alpha Epsilon won two intramural games, both by a 15-11 score, from Pi Kappa Alpha. Phi Delta Theta was not extended winning two games from the 1126 Club by the same score, 15-2. While the Phi Gams defeated Phi Kappa 15-0, 15-4, Alpha Tau Omega was involved in a three game tussle with the Delta Tau Delta team. The ATO's win 15-10, 9-15, 15-9. Volleyball playoffs begin tonight in Robinson gymnasium. The sched-ule finds Phi Delta Theta vs. Delta Chi and Beta Theta Pi vs. Delta Tau Delta at 7 p.m. Alpha Tau Omega will play Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Sigma Chi tangles with Sigma Alpha Epsilon at 8 p.m. The winners will meet April 28 in the semi-finals and the finals will be played April 29th. The standings of men's intramural softball league including Tuesday's games are: **Division I** W. L. Sigma Chi 5 0 Die Harris 3 1 TKE 2 1 Phi Psi 2 2 Sigma Nu 2 2 1128 Club 0 5 Delta Chi 0 5 **Division II** W. L. Beta 4 0 SAE 3 1 Triangle 2 2 Phi Kappa, Not Phi Psi, Beat ATO Nine Tuesday The Phi Kappa intramural softball team, not Phi Kappa Psi, defeated Alpha Tau Omega, 8 to 4, Tuesday. The Phi Psi's were wrongly credited with the victory in Wednesday's Daily Kansan. The Phi Kappa's moved into the lead of Division III by means of the triumph. They have won three games as against no losses. NROTC Riflers Lose To Harvard, 833-766 The University N. R. O. T. C. riff队 lost a firing match to Harvard university the past week end. Results were compared in a telegraphic exchange of scores. The Kansas navy team made a score of 765 in the match. Harvard marksmen hit the targets for 833 points. Davis Speaks To French Club Prof. Gerald Davis, who has just returned to the United States after spending 30 years in France, spoke to the French club at its regular weekly meeting Wednesday afternoon in Frank Strong hall. D. U. 1 2 Kappa Eta 1 2 941 Club 1 2 Wesley 0 3 **Division III** **W.** **L** Phi Kappa 3 0 Phi Delt 3 1 Delta Tau 3 1 ATO 2 1 Pi K. A. 1 3 Battenfeld 0 3 Gamma Delta 0 3 **Division IV** **W.** **L** Sig Ep 2 0 Kappa Sigma 2 0 Phi Gam 1 0 Lambda Chi 1 1 Mom's Boys 0 1 Fly-by-Night 0 2 Oread Hall 0 2 Call K.U. 25 with your news. WURLITZER PHONOGRAPHS FOR PARTY RENTALS Used Juke Box Records For Sale John H. Emick 1014 Mass. Phone 343 --- VE SPECIALIZE IN JUICY STEAKS AND OTHER FINE FOODS. Thick Malts Sandwiches Short Orders WE SPECIALIZE IN BILLS GRILL QUICK COURTEOUS SERVICE Across From 1109 Mass. Court House Phone 2054 --- Let us repair them for you at once. We do an expert job. DE SOTO APPROVAL SERVICE PLYMOUTH Glasses Broken? Lawrence Optical Co. Bullley GALLAGHER MOTORS Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL ? (THIS SPACE RESERVED) Yes, this space was reserved for THOMPSON'S CAFE—but we got so hungry hearing everyone talk about the good meals at THOMPSON'S that we didn't even take time to write the ad—we're going down right now Come on! We'll DINE WELL AT THOMPSON'S CAFE! 709 Mass. Gabardines, worsteds, twills and flannels. Plenty of sizes. . . Lots of Color SPRING'S WINNING TEAM SLACKS $7.95 up I Black is back in the saddle—plenty of Browns too. . . SADDLE SHOES $8.95 SPORT SHIRTS All Colors, All Fabrics All Styles-------- $3.50 up DANCE FOOTwear Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS JAYHAWKER SEE A SHOW TONITE Now, Ends Tuesday The Whole Country's Talking A About this woman who wouldn't talk But Whose Kisses Were FREE and EASY! Ann SHERIDAN as "NORA PRENTISS" Loving Her Once Was Once Too Often! Watch for... BOB HOPE DOTTY LAMOUR "MY FAVORITE BRUNETTE" GRANADA Starts Today By their willing lips he lived. . . and left them only their foolish hearts! Men Scorned him. . . Yet Envied! Men Scorned him. Shows: 2:30, 7:00, 9:00 Women Loved him... Then Hated! V He brings out the "WOMAN"...in women! Notorious Gentleman with Lilli PALMER REX HARRISON Coming ANGEL AND THE BADMAN PATEE Now, Ends Saturday COME EARLY 2 OUTSTANDING FEATURES "KINGS ROW" With All Star Cast Shawn at 8:25 only in Evening. Wild Bill Hickok Rides With An All Star Cast VARSITY "Magnificant Rogue" WARREN DOUGLAS AND 3 MESQUITEERS "Come On Cowboys" You May Answer Questions From Your Seat $1 to $5 Paid for Correct Answers "QUIZ for CASH" TONITE 9 O'CLOCK PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 24,1947 Big Four Peace Layout Big Four Peace Layout REPARATIONS AGREEMENT RUNA SETTLEMENT AUSTRIAN TREATY ZONE UNIFICATION BERGLER Kansan Comments Can We Avoid An Economic Bust? President Truman has made a plea to business to reduce prices which he considers abnormally high. Response thus far is small and scattered. On the surface there appears to be ample basis for the request for price reductions. U. S. corporation profits after taxes for 1947 are rolling in at a rate of 15 billion dollars a year. That figure has never been approached before. It is three billion dollars more than last year's profits. Such a business recession—or perhaps a bust—seems to be in the offing. This is no doubt one reason why many corporations are trying to increase reserves. Business savings for 1947, if they continue at the present rate, will total near 10 billion dollars, another record amount. Although profits are almost double the 1929 level, dividends are running 700 million dollars below the amount for that year. In a capitalist economy profits cannot be rationally judged on a short-term basis. Sound large-scale businesses must make adequate provision for the future. Allowances must be made for replacement of inventories and equipment. Reserves must be accumulated to offset the effects of possible business recessions. But these figures can be misleading. Though profits are twice what they were in 1929, the national income has also doubled. Individual industry profit reports for 1946 indicate that high earnings were largely caused by record consumer spending rather than excessive profit margins. But by doing this they are really hastening that slump. Present high prices are siphoning off purchasing power and in turn these profits are going largely into savings rather than being poured back into the economy in the form of expanded industrial facilities. Whether our economy will straighten out without a serious bust is anybody's guess. Our economic future is far from clear. And as long as that condition exists big business will lean toward large reserves and away from the risks of new investments. The answer to our dilemma will be greatly influenced by what policies business adopts in the next few months. A healthy economy for the entire nation will not be achieved as long as capital is excessively hoarded by the highly important big business minority. That segment of our economy must decide whether its policies will be formed for personal short-term benefits or for the long-term good to our entire society. K-State Is Still Minus Kansas State college is still without a student union. The most recent effort to obtain a building was stymied by the United States office of education in Kansas City. A. L. Pugley, dean of administration at Kansas State, said their plans for obtaining the recreation center at the Herington army air base had to be dropped when a prior claim to the building was filed by the Kansas City office of education. The army will declare the building surplus next week. The University Daily Kansan Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Associate Publisher, College Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service at Madison Ave. New York City. Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Managing Editor Asst. Man. Editor Asst. Man. Editor Editor in Chief City Editor Art Editor Asst. City Editor Asst. City Editor Telegraph Editor Art Editor Marcelia Stewart Marcela Stewart William T. Smith Jr. LeMoyne Frederick Shirley E. Bales Shirley E. Bales Alan J. Stewart Alan J. Stewart Eloise West Dear Editor---- Frailties of the Press Business Manager. John D. McCormick Circulation Manager. Thomas S. Cadden Classified Adv. Mgr. John Schindling Promotion Manager. William K. Brooks Promotion Manager. William K. Brooks Our campus is provided with the services of the Dove, which is altruistic in aim, liberal in policy, and indicative of honest, sincere journalistic reporting. The Kansas Press Association 1947 Member National Editorial Association A FREE PRESS--YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW Now another publication, the Eagle, is making its appearance with what it claims is "the majority campus opinion." Its organizers have publicly stated that it will take a specific stand on seven issues all of which, as they put it, personify "the majority campus opinion." News publications are common carriers. When those who control them arrogate to themselves the right to determine by their own consciences what shall be reported and for what purpose, democracy is unworkable. Public opinion is blockaded. For when a people can no longer confidently repair "to the best fountains for their information," then anyone's guess and anyone's rumor, each man's hope and each man's whim becomes the basis of government. The most fundamental problem of all for honest and intelligent journalism is the fact that nobody, broadly speaking, really wants the truth—though we all insist that is our sole desire. The radical wants statements which support a radical point of view; the liberal wants liberalism, and the conservative wants reaction. It is a universal human failing to close our minds against information which does not fit in with our preconceptions. Our favorite newspapers are our favorites quite as much because of the things they leave out as those they print. In short, the chief frailty of the newspapers is the frailty of human kind. Robert Anderson, Jr. College sophomore Not Just a Fine Pen An Outstanding Value EVERSHARP CA*PEN For Only $875 Rolls CA* Ink on dryl Won't leak in any position. Writes 3 months to 3 years without re- filling. Reloads cleanly with a cartridge. CA* means Capillary Action Cartridge. No Luxury Tax $875 No luxury Tax STOWITS REXALL DRUG STORE TRY OUR COTTAGE CHEESE On Luncheon Plates and Salads— "FOR HEALTH" Fritzel DAIRY PRODUCTS 834 Vt. Chi Galloway Phone 182 Smooth! A. F. WILSON My Car,That Is, Since I GOT IT BACK FROM FROM AN EXPERT WHEEL-BALANCING JOB. RIDES AS EVENLY AS A CLOUD. MY TIRES WILL WEAR LONGER TOO HAD IT DONE AT CHANNEL - SANDERS Motor Co. 622-24 Mass. Phone 616 (Ha!) Lost Something? Try a University Daily Kansan Want Ad EVEN THE STORK'S GOING HIGH-HAT 200 THE OLD BOY HAS GIVEN UP OLD-FASHIONED FLYING ABOUT UNDER HIS OWN STEAM. HE'S GOT HIMSELF A CAR NOW AND GETS THE JOB DONE QUICKER AND BETTER 'CAUSE HE HAS HIS CAR SERVICED AT CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. CITIES SERVICE Phone 4 CITIES SERVICE Cities Service Products April 24,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Ad Teachers To Talk On Cervantes Day Three faculty members of the Spanish department and J. R. Ashton, associate professor of Spanish at the University of Wichita, will speak at the Cervantes day professional meeting at 2 p.m. Saturday in 103 Frank Strong hall. Miss May Gardner, professor of Spanish, will preside. University speakers will be William H. Shoemaker, romance languages department chairman; J. Chalmers Herman, Spanish instructor, and Miss Agnes Brady, assistant Spanish professor. LOVE OWES Dr. Shoemaker will speak Alaindo Casona. Casona, a Spanish refugee now living in Buenos Aires, has become a leading director and producer of Argentine motion pictures. Dr. Shoemaker's translation of Casona's play, "Nuestra Natacha" is scheduled for publication May 3. Beth Begins Classes In Feature Writing Herman will talk on "Word Borrowing on the Isthmus of Panama." Miss Brady will discuss the English Language institutes for foreign students. She has taught in such institutions, sponsored by the state department, at Michigan, Bucknell, the University of Kansas City. Professor Ashton will speak on "The Oral Approach Four-hour Course." Five members of the department of journalism will teach classes in magazine and feature writing in Wichita on Fridays. Elmer F. Beth, acting chairman of the department recently opened the course. On Friday Prof. Gordon Sabine will teach the class; on May 2, Dr. Ray B. West; on May 9, Prof. Emil L Telfel; on May 16, John R. Malone. Wagstaff Presides At AAUW Meeting Miss Helen Wagstaff, director of the University library extension bureau, will preside at the state board meeting of the American Association of University Women in Wichita today. Miss Wagstaff, who is state president for the Kansas division of the organization, will be in charge of the state convention in Wichita tomorrow and Saturday. CUT DOWN NICOTINE Frank MEDICO FILTERED SMOKING $2 EJECTS THE STUB Replaceable filter in new Frank Medica Cigarette Holders, filters the smoke. - Cuts down pirotine. - Cuts down nicotine. - Cuts down irritating tars. - In zephyrweight aluminum. - Special styles for men and women. - $2 with 10 filters, handy pouch and gift box. S. M. FRANK & CO., INC., NEW YORK 22 Daily Kansan Classified Ads NEW 6 x 30 German Binocular. Price $75.00. Ralph L. Miller, 212 Lone "U" Sunflower, Kans., or contact me in Pharmacy office. For Sale RADIOS—used. Kent, Milgut, $9.75-2 Zenith 3 way portables, $21.50. Radios, new. Olympic 5 tube piastics with lucite diag, $26.95—Olympic combination radio, phonographs and tube performance, 9 in. speaker, $135.50, less $25.00 for any trade combinations, $87.50. Terms if desired, 212 Lane "OO" (Old Village Sunflower. 16mm. MOVIE CAMERA, B. and H. Antisigmatic f.3.5 lens, converted Army gun to new viewfinder, and battery. Advertised over $100. Asking $40. Phone K U. 185. MEN'S spring formal, white and tuxedo paint. Cost size 36. 413 Miss. Phone 850-792-9800. ALMOST new Kodak 35 mm. F. 3.5 lens couple range finder, excellent case, sunshade and lens adapter, $75. McLean, 1140 Louisiana. 29 1947 CROSLEY Sedan with heater and spare, excellent condition. $800. Contact Bernie Wanner or inquire at Connie's Service Station, Sixth and Vern mont. 1939 BLACK 2-door Plymouth; good condition. See G. W. Frank, 1540 Ls. Ph. 444. SILVERTONE Conn. Trumpet, excellent condition. See Bill Summerour at 1111 W. 11th St. or contact Daily Kansan. 24 **14 INDIAN Motorcycle, completely overhauled last month. $75.00 worth of extras. see at 6th and Kentucky.** 24 SPORTY, tam '14 Chevrolet club coupe, Radio, heater, foglights, spot lights, low mileage, new tires, late general overhaul, quick sale, quick sale. James Firebaugh 1122 Ohio. 25 For Rent Lost MAN'S watch with stainless steel spring band. Leave name, address and watch at Daily Kansan office or see Exley 941 Indiana. Reward. 24 LARGE room with private bath, continuous hot water. Close to University. Also garage for rent, 1801 Alabama. Phone 2292R. BLACK and red lady's billfold. Important papers and activity book inside, and the name Bermice Alexander printed on inside page will please return to Dale Kansan office. TWO-TONE brown sport coat. Dark front, light brown herringbone weave back. Vicinity Marvin hair. Tuesday. Earl Windisch, 1057 Tern. Reward. 28 GNE PAIR rmless glasses last Friday gives you return to School of Pharm macy office. **PRINCIPLES of Economics" by Ise. Need** **Under contact Louise Rouse, 10,** *Indiana.* BOOKS entitled "Economies and Principles" and "Types of Speech." Finder please contact Kansan office. Generous reward. 29 One lose-leaf notebook between 4 and 5 p.m. Thurs., April 17 at Military Science and co accounting set and all my notes. Please return to Alfred Burgert, 128 Wenth 13th, 25 A BOOK of Drawing I plates belonging to the artist, displaced. A large reward offered for the work of information leading to its return. 208W by Wendell Robb in drawing department. DAN WESTERMAN from billiard; black; valuable papers, etc. Will finder please return to Kansan office? Pants at clean- up check in billiard—no billiards; no pants! WILL the person who has my "Types of Kirk please turn it in to room 201 Friens." FOLDER containing book of baritone songs, music, among which are under the title *Head to Head to Dalay*. Please bring to Kansai or Fine Arts office. Charles Howard. MY TAN sport jacket picked up by mistake Friday night in "Hawk." W.F. V.pin is in pocket Contact me to exchange for your own. Jack Erick 923 Maine, 3024J GREEN Sheaffer's fountain pen with name of Charles, mounted on it. Find 286 please phone 2129-5000. Wanted VETERANS: We will buy, trade or sell for you any Army or Navy gear in good condition that you may wish to dispose of. Lawrence Surplus, 911 Mass. tt Business Services URGENT—Ride to Leavenworth Junction on Kansas City highway Mon., Wed, and Fri, at 5:50 p.m. Contact K.U. Intrumral office. 24 LADIES tailoring and alteration. Orta Floyd, 923 Ala. Phone 767. 30 FREE OFFER—Copies of Discharges and valuable papers, 3 copies for the price of 2. Low prices, fast service. Round Corner Drug Co., 801 Mass. 25 Found PARKER Fountain pen on bridge table in Union building Friday before K.U. Relays. Can pick up at Daily Kansan office after paying for this ad. 25 De LUXE CAFE 28 YEARS OF SERVICE Same Location-Same Management You are welcome 711 Mass. JLKERS OUTLINE SERIES AN OUTLINE OF FIRST YEAR COLLEGE CHEMISTRY PRESENTED BARNES C. HOBLIFF - NEW YORK EXAMS We have 'em... The essentials of your courses highlighted and packed into a nutshell, for quick thorough review! Ask to see the famous ACCOUNTING, Elementary $1.00 AUGERBA, College .75 ANCIENT HISTORY .105 ANCIENT MED. and MOD. HISTORY .105 BACTERIOLOGY Pin. and Proc. of. .125 BIOLOGY General .75 BOTANY General .75 BUSINESS LAW .125 CHEMISTRY First Year College .125 CHEMISTRY Mathematics for Goin. CHEMISTRY Organic .125 CORPORATION FINANCE .100 DOCUMENTATED PAPERS, Writing .75 ECONOMICS Principles of ECONOMIC .75 ENGINEering DRAWING .125 ENLAND History of .75 ENGLISH 8198-8488 History of .75 EUROPE 8198-8488 History of .75 EXAMinations How to Write Better GRAMMAR .102 GEOLOGY Principles of .102 GERMAN GRAMMAR .100 GOVERNMENT American .75 GRAMMAR Graph. Prin. and Proc. of. .100 HYDRAULICS For. of .100 JOURNALism Survey of .125 JOURNALism Survey of .125 LATIN AMERICA in Maps .125 LATIM AMERIC Civilization Readings in .125 COLLEGE OUTLINE SERIES *To Be Published PRICES SUBJECT TO CHANGE LAT. AMER. Economic Development . . . 1.25 AMERICAN . . . . . Student Book Store Union Building The "KING" Still Reigns Yes, Old King Hamburger still remains all high in the Taste Treats of our customers. When you order one of our Delicious "Burgers" we treat it as a full course dinner, which in our case includes— TASTE, SATISFACTION, and QUALITY COURT HOUSE LUNCH (Across from the Court House) ARROW Products at CARLS GOOD CLOTHES ?? If you ARE YOU A CHOOSY BUYER? If you are... 1 you need never hesitate when you see 'Arrow sports shirts. Here's why . . . Arrow sports shirts have the same expert styling that goes into famous Arrow shirts—the best, that is. 2 Arrow sports shirts (except for a few models) are all washable. Foolproof fabrics throughout save you dry-cleaning worries. They can take it! 3 Arrow sports shirts are reasonably priced. None of them are so high priced you'll feel guilty buying them and then be afraid to wear 'em! apd FOR THE BEST IN SPORTS SHIRTS—TRY ARROW! ARROW SHIRTS and TIES UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS First With What Men Want the Most Oet's UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 24,1947 PAGE EIGHT Speech Contest To Begin Tuesday An all-University extemporaneous speaking contest will be held in the Little Theater of Green hall at 8 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday, Kenneth Johnson, instructor in speech, said today. Preliminaries will be held Tuesday with finalists going into Wednesday's contest. Thirty minutes will be allowed for preparation, books and reference materials being allowed, after which a 4-minute speech will be given on the topic selected. The winners of Tuesday's preliminary procedure Wednesday night, except the speeches will last six minutes. The verbal competition will be sponsored by the department of speech and drama in conjunction with the Forensic league. Mr. Johnson stressed that all students interested in public speaking should enter the contest. "Prepared speeches are not used in extemporaneous speaking tournaments," he said. "Our general subject will be American Politics. Each contest will draw three topics the night of the event and will choose one upon which to talk." Prizes will be awarded to the winner and runners-up of the contest. Entries should be turned in at Room 5 Green hall. The Women's Athletic association will elect officers at 7:30 p.m. tonight in Robinson gymnasium. The nominating committee has listed two candidates for each position except president and vice-president. Other nominations may be made by members who attend the meeting. Candidates nominated by the committee and the offices they have been nominated for are: Maxine Gunsell and Frances Clubb, president and vice-president; Betty van der Smisson and Donna Mielier, secretary; Georgette Westmoreland and Joan Anderson, treasurer; Julia Fox and Mary Varner, business manager; Earnela Larsen and Jeanne Cooper, point system manager; WAA To Elect Officers Tonight Karlieben McClanahan and Josephine Stucker, volleyball manager; Annette Stout and Mariorie Kaff, basketball manager; Mary Helen Saperd and Marie Horseman, base-ball manager; Geraldine McGee and Frances Pence, hockey manager; Harriet Connor and Joan Libpelmann, swimming manager; Pearl Leigh and Alberta Schmidtler, minor sports managers. Reports of the national athletic convention held at the Women's College of the University of North Carolina will be given by Maxine Gunzotty and Frances Chubb. University To Hold Home Ec Workshop The value of home economics for personal and home living will be the central theme of a two-week workshop for Home Economics teachers to be held by the University from June 30 to July 11. Forty K.U. journalism students are in Topela today, on a field trip to inspect the state printing plant and the Capper Engraving company. Proof. Lee Cole is in charge of the group. Dr. Ivol Spaaford, educational leader, will be the principal instructor. He is the author of several texts on the teaching of home economics and has worked on educational problems in the field since 1940. Two general courses, Fundamentals in Homemaking I and II, offered for the first time by the University this year, will be used for observation and demonstration, and special groups will discuss specific problems of high school and college teachers. Forty See Printing Plant Today's Face is Billie Marie Hamikton. 'The Face Is Familiar . . . 蒙 The first love of this college senior is journalism. Besides being former managing editor of the Daily Kansan, she is a member of the Kansan board. Theta Sigma Phi, former associate editor of the Jayhawker, and past president of the Press club. She is also president of Mortar Board and member of Jay James. ☆ ☆ Tuesday's Face was of Joan Woodward. Today's Face is identified on this page. KFKU To Dramatize 5 Lindsborg Women Five women of Lindsboro, home of the ancestry annual "Messiah" concert, will have their life stories presented on the "Women of Kansas" program over KFKU tonight. They are Miss Alma Louise Olson, a correspondent for the New York Times for 12 years; Mrs. Alma Swensson, wife of the founder of Bethany college, and director of the "Messiah"; Mrs. Anna Carlson, a newspaper woman; Mrs. Zandzen Greenough, artist; Mrs. Lofgren Craft, and Mrs. Arthur Rumbeck, who has worked in ceramics for 15 years and has devised a formula of her own for the making of Swedish pottery. Script readers will be Delores Teachenor, Fine Arts sophomore; Betty Ann Hills, Allen D. Smith, College juniors; Gloria Gray, senior; Dan Berry is the announcer. Mrs. Alice Monctiac, professor of voice, is in charge of music. Training of counselors for YMCA summer camps will begin Saturday, Ned Linegar, MYCA secretary, said today. The training course by the YMCA and Alpha Phi Omega, national service fraternity, will begin at 9:30 a.m. in the Pine and East rooms of the Union building. Alfred Moore, chairman of the training committee, will open the study with an explanation of objectives and Mr. Linegar will lead a panel discussion on the duties and functions of the counselor and the camp leader. Reginald Strait, assistant professor of physical education, will speak on the principles of recreation Movies will be shown at 11 am. YMCA To Train Counselors No fee will be charged for the training, and certificates of qualification as camp counselor will be given all students attending the course. Trainees must register in the YMCA office before noon Friday. After lunch in the cafeteria, Mr Lawrence Heeb, city director of recreation, will speak on "Athletics and Waterfront Activities." Other discussions will include cooking and hiking, organization of camps, music and dramatics, field and stream English Department To Read 'Manfred' An informal group reading of Byron's poetic drama "Manfred" will be presented by faculty members of the English department in 110 Fraser at 7:30 p.m. today The cast will include Mrs. Doris Branch, Mrs. Helene Farrell, Miss Paula Ikard, Miss Ellen Spurney, Miss Joan Joseph, Mr. James Scholes, Mr. Tom Leflar, Mr. Merrell Clubb, Jr., Mr. William Bracke, and Mr. George Z. Wilson. Cervantes Day Reservations Due Tomorrow Morning Reservations for the Cervantes day banquet must be made by Friday morning, Prof. L. L. Barrett banquet committee chairman, said today. Requests for reservations should be sent to Professor Barrett in 119 Frank Strong hall. RISK'S HELP YOURSELF LAUNDRY Plenty of soft hot water Hours 9-6 Weekdays Seven new Maytag machines Call 623 for Appointments 9-4 Saturdays 1900 Illinois Phone 623 Mail-A-Voice Records On Paper Discs May be re-used hundreds of times, filed permanently, or mailed as a letter. instu Era Just turn it on, talk your speech or letter into the "mike." Play it back instantly for editing or correcting. ✩ SIMPLE TO OPERATE UNIT COMPLETE $59.50 Pkg. of 20 disc - - 1.45 Erasing bar - - 1.00 Come in and make a FREE Recording Peterson OFFICE MACHINE CO. E, 8th. First Nat'l Bank Bldg Students Work 576 Hours For Eight Academic Credits Two or three hours a day spent in a lab course is not unusual for University students, but two days a week spent "on the job" is something different. This plan of learning while working at a job and receiving college credit, too, has been incorporated in the graduate professional school of social work which began this year. Five graduate students have enrolled in the field supervision courses and are getting experience in actual social case work on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Agencies where they receive their training include the Shawnee county welfare office, Topeka; the Kansas City office of Vocational Rehabilitation; the Family Service association, Kansas City, Kan.; and the social service department of the University hospitals in Kansas City, Kan. Students are given a choice between the four agencies and are placed according to their experience and special interests. A minimum of eight semester hours of this supervised field work is required for the certificate of social work being offered this year. Sommers Market THE QUALITY GROCERY STORE WHERE QUALITY MEANS: FINE FOODS GOOD SERVICE COURTEOUS CLERKS Stop In At 1021 Mass. And See WHI-SH-SH-SH-SH!! "It's Moisturized" TO STAY FRESH LONGER! TO TASTE BETTER! TO SMOKE MILDER! New! ALL New! WHI-SH-SH-SH-SH!! "It's Moisturized" TO STAY FRESH LONGER! 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PROOF POSITIVE No other leading cigarette gives you Less Nicotine Less Throat Irritants Tests certified by a jury of 14 distinguished doctors den and pres Sam Go Se 2014.12.27 STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Friday, April 25, 1947 44th Year No. 127 Lawrence, Kansas Waugh Steamrollers Election All Class Offices Swept By Pachacamac-NOW Pachacamac made a clean sweep of all class offices in Thursday's election. Other class officers elected are: Otto Schnellbacher, education junior, was elected senior class president; LuAnn Powell, fine arts sophomore, won the junior class presidency, and Stanley England, engineering freshman, is sophomore class presi- Other class of Senior class: Jack Eskridge, vice- president; Joan Woodward, secre- tary; Joan Anderson, treasurer. Junior class: William Braum, vicepresident; Joan Joseph, secretary; Samuel McCamant, treasurer. Schnellbacher polled 401 votes out of the 735 cast for senior class president. His runner-up was Eugene Casement, business junior, with 194. Sophomore class: Joan Vermillion vice-president; Charles Lindbergh secretary; Paul Dillon, treasurer. *Casement Is Runner-Up* In the junior class race, Miss Powell received 299 votes out of 643, with Ralph Moberly, P.S.G.L. polling 234. Englund led the sophomore pres- idential candidates with 541 votes out of 1,206. Harold Cogswell, P.S.G.L., polled 427. PSG.L Gets Seconds P.S.G.L. Gets Seconds Clarence Francisco, P.S.G.L.'s candidate for senior class vice-president, received 221 votes. Margaret van der Smissen, running on the same ticket, polled 229 votes for the junior class vice-presidency. Betty Cooper, also a P.S.G.L.-In-dependent candidate, received 546 in the sonhomore race. Helen Havey, Marian Graham, and Janet Rummer, all P.S.G.L.-Independent candidates, were runners-up for class secretaries. Marian Minor, Bruce Bathurst, and Charles Penney received second place in the election for class treasurers. Gettys Will Present Senior Recital Sunday James Gettys, baritone, will present his senior recital at 4 p.m. Sunday in Frank Strong auditorium He is a student of Prof. Joseph Wilkins. Gettys entered the University in 1842 and in that year played a leading role in a presentation of the opera, "Hansel and Gretel." He is a member of the A Cappella choir and Phi Mu Alpha, national music fraternity. Last year he was soloist at a performance of the Faure "Requiem" at the Trinity Episcopal church in Lawrence. $228 Contributed In $3000 Goal Exactly $228 in contributions have been turned in by K. U. students for the $3000 cancer drive goal of Douglas county which will end this month, said Reginald Strait, in charge of K. U. contributions. Of the total amount contributed for the drive, 60 per cent will remain in Kansas and 40 per cent will go the national research. Douglas county maintains a "cancer detention" clinic which carries on research work in this area, John Andrews, chairman of the drive said. All contributions for the drive should be in this week, Mr. Andrews said. Dr. Chubb To Speak On American Policy Dr. Herman B. Chubb, professor of political science, will speak on "Implications in American Policy in the Near East" at a University club meeting at 8 tonight at $107\frac{1}{2}$ Massachusetts street, headquarters the club. Vote May Be Evenly Split The new All Student Council presents interesting possibilities for political maneuvering. By ALLAN W. CROMLEY Few students politicians will envy Jim Waugh in his task of uniting a council which is divided almost equally among three political parties. Combining N.O.W. with Pachacamac and merging Independent Women with P.S.G.L., the membership stacks up as follows: P.S.G.L. 5. Pachacamac (including president) 5. Progressive 4. Unaffiliated 3. 3. Progressive 1 Grammar Throws Everything Open This doesn't mean that P.S.G.L will control the council. It throws everything open to a wild scramble by all three parties. This poses a strange problem. Three parties are about evenly represented, but to each issue there can be only two sides, yea and nay. Therefore the parties must either join or split on any issue. If the voting follows precedent, Pachacamac and Progressive will join on most issues. This would appear to leave P.S.G.L. out in the cold. Hold Balance Of Power But three unaffiliated members, Dave Schmidt, Robert Wehe, and Bill Cole constitute a joker that could tip any hand in favor of P. S.G.L., even against the combined strength of Pachacamac and Progressive. Two of the unaffiliated members are Independents. The third, Bill Cole, is a member of Beta Theta Pi, which used to favor P.S.G.L. but split away from the party for this election. He apparently has made no promises to anyone. Now, add them up. If Pachacamac and Progressive vote solidly together they must eight votes, assuming the president abstains. Could Balance Combination P. S.G.L. could mass six votes in opposition. If the three unaffiliated members were to vote with P. S. G.L., it could balance the Pachacamac-Progressive combination. But on top of this, party strategists must consider the votes of organizational representatives on the council. They will affect most of the voting. Blake clock is being cleaned and repainted, and a white transparent glass front being installed by buildings and grounds workmen. P. S.G.L. elected six Independent students to the council. Pachacamac placed no Independents, and Progressive elected one. Blake Clock Gets Its Face Cleaned The plain glass painted white has proved unsatisfactory in the past as the paint kept cracking off. The glass now being installed is the same type as that used on movie theater marquees. "The clock is in as good condition as ever." C. G. Bayles, buildings and grounds superintendent, said today. Heads Council DICK S. HANCOCK JAMES WAUGH ASC Head Is Honor Man "I shall try to represent the students as much as possible, and strive for better student government. My interest lies in their interests." The winner in the tri-party race has been elected to both Owl and Sachem, junior and senior honorary societies. This is the election statement of James Waugh, new president of the All Student Council. The 25-year-old veteran is also president of the engineering council, the engineering school, and Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity. He serves as a new student counseur', and writes for the Kansas Engineer and has been an A.S.C. representative. Hubbub, Bottles, Cigarets But Still Somebody Won PSGL Wins 6 Seats, Pach 5, Progressives 4 The smoking ban was off on the second floor, east wing of Frank Strong hall Thursday night. The place looked like Hiroshima. The whole thing wasn't too clear to some of the counters, in fact, about 99 percent of them. Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, has said that results of the student poll may affect the administration's decision. Student voters echoed the Pachacamac party cry, "Admit the Aggies," when they voted overwhelmingly not to bar Oklahoma A. and M. from the Big Six because of racial segregation. The vote in Thursday's election was 2,559 to 744 against the resolution: "Resolved, that Oklahoma A. and M. should be denied admittance to the Big Six conference solely because of racial segregation in Oklahoma." The administration previously had said that the University is against admitting Oklahoma A. and M. to the Big Six, on the grounds that Colorado had just been admitted and another school would complicate things. The second reason is that interpretation of N.C.A.A rules should be cleared first. By COOPER ROLLOW The reporter kept running too until about 1:30 a.m. The little man in the white coat finally took him away. The Pachacamac powerhouse steamrollerled James Waugh, engineering junior, into the All Student Council presidency Thursday by rolling up 1,712 votes for him. The place was lousy with big wheels, little wheels, minor spokes, and loyal cogs. Not all were happy either. Not everybody can win. Vote Against Aggie Ban Wheels Weren't Happy Room 203 could have been a Texas City in minature. The activity looked like a cross between musical chairs and the Notre Dame shift. As election boards finished counting ballots for one office, they relaxed by lighting up, coke in hand, feet on chairs—the perfect political, smoke-filled-room atmosphere. But the faint-hearted began to leave. One tired soul wrote on a board. "To hell with this, I'm going home." For seven hours they toiled. As the smoke grew thicker and the litter grew deeper the fun began to wear off. This was where the hemen of politics began to be separated from the boys. The thing that took all the time was a little thing called "proportional representation." In this you make choices when you vote, and if your first choice is elected, he gives his extra votes to somebody else. Very roughly, that is the principle of it. The old-timers stuck it out. They studied the results, looking for trends. They knew the ropes. 'Representation' Takes Time Waugh's total is 623 more than the count for George Caldwell, P.S.G.L. candidate, who polled 1,089 votes. John Gunther, Progressive, received 450. WEATHER KANSAS--Cloudy with light rain east today, warmer central and west this afternoon. Partly cloudy tonight with little change in temperature. Low tonight near 32 extreme west to 35-40 east. Fair and warmer Saturday. The 3,251 votes represent 36 per cent of the entire student body. Pachacamacs and Progressives broke even with P.S.G.L.-Independents and independent nominees in a bitter fight for student council seats. Pachacamac and Progressive each placed four candidates, while P.S.G.L. won five seats and Independents three. Only 3,398 Votes Cast A total of 3,398 students, or 38 per cent of the University enrollment and 1000 more than voted last year, voted for council members. Two names, Donald Kramer and John Weaver, were written into the presidential ballot, and 129 potential presidential votes were invalid. Caldwell, presidential runner-up, will be student representative at large, giving the P.S.G.L.-Independents a total of six seats on the Council. Waugh's election as president gives the Pachacamac party 5 new representatives on the council. Leigh. Ruppenthal, Wehe Win in District I (College) George Robb, Progressive; Duane Postlethwaite, P.S.G.L.; Dave Schmidt, Independent, and Keith Wilson, Pachacamac, were elected to the council by 1,147 voters. Helen Heath and Sue Webster, Pachacamac, and Shirley Wellborn, P.S.G.L., received 686 votes to win seats. Legal, Supporters A total of 711 voters in District II (Engineering) elected Lynn Leigh and Arthur Ruppenthal, Progressive; Robert Whee, Independent, and John Margrave, P.S.G.L. In District III (Business, Fine Arts) Arnold England, P.S.G.L., and George McCarthy, Progressive, polled 372 votes to win. Harriett Harlow, Pachacamac, and Mary Jane Zollinger, P.S.G.L., received 245 votes for council seats. Bill Cole, an independent candidate, was elected by 86 voters from District IV (Law and Medicine). Of the 3,398 votes cast in the general election, 150 were invalid. An additional 617 were exhausted, or marked incompletely by voters who did not vote for all candidates listed. Water Safety Awards Given Thirty-six men and women will be awarded their water safety instructor's certificate tonight. Ritz Bills, of the St. Louis district office, is in charge of the night class. Duane Hopes Case Is Closed Duane Postlethwaite, College sophomore and P.S.G.L. worker, discovered yesterday that the road to political success is sometimes blocked by cops, policemen to you. At 11:53 $ _{1/2} $ a. m. Thursday he was told by two Lawrence gendarmes to stop disturbing the peace with his portable loud speaker, which Postlethwaite claimed, "is actually merely a glorified megaphone." Postlethwaite explained to the po- $ ^{\textcircled{4}} $ Postlethwaite explained to the policeman about political parties, campaign scruples, and elections in general, and the officers left, apparently mollified. "Two hours later, however, the campus cop asked me to accompany him to the station." Postlethwaite told a University Daily Kansan reporter. "There I was accused of violating a city ordinance and told I was going to be released on a $25 bond, and that my trial was to be at 8 this morning. "Uncertain about just what ordinance I had violated, the police chief sent for the city ordinance book, but it couldn't be found and I was released. They neglected to collect my $25 bond and failed to give me a written directive to appear today for my trial." "I hope they consider the episode closed, because I do." . UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 25,1947 PAGE TWO 'Law Will Give Students Stability,' Says Moreau Ten years changed everything but ideals. This month marks Frederick J. Moreau's 10th anniversary as dean of the School of Law. The campus and students have changed during this time but the goals Dean Moreau set up are the same. The dean was single when he came to the campus in 1929. Today he has a wife and two boys. To his bachelor of arts and bachelor of laws degrees he later added the master of laws. A graduate of the University of Wisconsin, he began his career in 1924 with a law firm in Madison. From 1927 to 1929 he was associate professor of law at the University of Idaho. Then he came to Kansas. In April, 1937 after eight years on this campus, he succeeded Dr. William L. Burdick as dean of the School of Law. Dean Moreau believes that his school should be a service to the University as well as an institution that leverages its resources. Students Should Enroll "Any senior or graduate student should be allowed to enroll in law courses," he said. Law graduates the many needed education in the art of being a good citizen. "I have worked toward this goal for 10 years. Unfortunately, no action has been taken on this recommendation." Dean Moreau said that he believes Official Bulletin April 25.1947 Joist YWCA-YMCA cabinet meeting at 4 p.m. today for old and new cabinets. Miss Fern Babcock, national officer, will be guest speaker. Omega Psi Phi at 7 tonight in the Pine room of the Union. Entomology Club picnic scheduled for tomorrow will take place if the sun is shining Saturday morning, even if it rains tonight. If raining or overcast Saturday morning, don't come—picnic will be postponed until May 17. In case of doubt, check entomology bulletin board Saturday morning after 9. Contact David W. Craik, 316 Snow, to make arrangements for transportation. Westminster Supper club at 5:30 p.m. today at 1221 Oread followed by Fellowship party at 8 p.m. ISA midweek will be held next week. *** Preliminary examinations in Western Civilization tomorrow at 1:30 at the following places: Examination over the first five units of reading, room 305 Balley. Examination over units 6 through 10: students whose names begin A-K, Snow hall; L-Z, 426 Lindley. ** The Jayhawk Advisory Board will interview applicants for the positions of editor and business manager of the 1948 Jayhawker at 10 tomorrow in the Jayhawker office in the Union building. Registered Nurses club at 8 p.m. Monday in the Pine room of the Union. *** Business School association announces election of officers for 1947- 48 school year on Business School Day, Mary 9. Petitions for nominations may be obtained at Business school office and must be filed with that office by April 28. Formal pledging exercises of Alpha Kappa Psi business fraternity at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Union building. Sigma Gamma Epsilon meeting at 7:30 Tuesday. Dean J. O. Jones, speaker. - * * --there would be less communistic thinking on the campus if such a policy were put in practice. Society for Advancement of Managemeneg regular semi - monthly meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas room of the Union building. --there would be less communistic thinking on the campus if such a policy were put in practice. Students who left activity books at the polls may pick them up at the Business Office. He has seen 275 lawyers graduated since he became head of the school and he believes that "on the ground we are turning out better lawyers today." "This is true because of the increased requirements for entrance into the School of Law," he explained. He added that in 1929 a minimum of 60 hours of C was enough for graduation. Today law requires 50 hours and no grades lower than C. Contact Students "The most important thing I do is contact students in high schools and colleges to prepare them for law schools," the dean said smilingly. He insisted that lawyers should be thoroughly informed. They must know how to think and express themselves with accuracy both orally and in writing, he declared. "Like a building contractor, it is my job to see that the foundation is well-constructed before the house is begun," he said. De LUXE CAFE 28 YEARS OF SERVICE Same Location-Same Management You are welcome 711 Mass. Who said GOOD blades have to be high priced? Marlin HIGH SPEED BLADES 25¢ SHAVES YOU FOR 3 MONTHS! GUARANTEED BY THE MARLIN FIREARS COMPANY Fine Guns Since 1870 University Daily Kansan --- Charming C People will compliment you on your hair when you let us style and condition it. Call us today for an appointment. 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 is on Friday, and second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. NU VOGUE Beauty Shop Belfast is the most important industrial center in Ireland. DE SOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH Baldwin GALLAGHER MOTORS Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL Adveritisers Prefer The Kansan To Reach Hill Students Mr. James has been called to the office. It's The time of year now for SPORTSWEAR (and our stock is really tops) SPORT SHIRTS—lightweight gabardine; $8.95 Washable, Crown tested LEISURE COATS—Two-tone $24.00 Gabardine CORDUROY JACKETS—casual coat $10.00 Tans and browns POPLIN JACKETS—by Block $10.50 Weather Repelent WOOL SWEATERS—long sleeves or sleeveless. Some imported $5 to $12.50 KNITTED T-SHIRTS—McGregor, Van Heusen, Manhartan makes $1 to $2.50 SLAX—Gabardines, Coverts $12.50 to $18.50 Bedford Cords The Palace I 843 Massachusetts 25,1947 APRIL 25,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE dents Up and Coming A Calendar of Campus Events Tonight: Alpha Omicron Pi, dance, Crystal room, Hotel Eldridge, 8:30 to 11:30 p. m. Pi Kappa Alpha, dance, Hotel Eldridge, 9 p. m. to midnight. Delta Delta Delta, picnic, Holcom's grove, 6 to 11 p. m. Alpha Tau Omega, tea dance sever house. 3 to 5 p. m. Sigma Alpha Epsilon, picnic, Lone Star, 3 p. m. to midnight. Templin hall, hayrack ride, 6:30 n m, to midnight. Triangle fraternity, dance, chapter house, 9 p. m. to midnight. Kappa Sigma, party, chapter house. 8:30 to 11:30 p., m. bell Watkins hall, dance, Watkins hall, 9 p. m. to midnight. Kappa Kappa Gamma, dinner dance, Country club, 6 p. m. to midnight. SOCIALLY SPEAKING Watkins to Entertain Watkins hall will give their annual semi-formal spring party from 9 to 12 p. m. Saturday at the ball. Chi Omega Alumnae Entertain The Chi Omega alumnae and Lawrence Mothers' club entertained with a tea at the Chi Omega house Sunday. The guests were: The goddess, Mrs. Edith Martin, Coffeyville; Mrs. James Perry, Mrs. Donald Phelps, Mrs. Henry Asher, Jr., Mrs. J. Cholmer Herman, Mrs. D. Dowers, Mrs. Harold G. Barr, Mrs. Thomas Parker, Mrs. Gerald Hesse Mrs. Paul Harmer, Mrs Raymond Pendleton, Mrs. Donald K. Allan, Mrs John F. Andrews, Mrs. W. G. Beougher, Mrs. J. J. Biery, Mrs. Donald C. Brodie, Mrs George Baxter Smith, Mrs. R. I. Canuteson, Mrs. Donald Haines, Mrs. Andrew Hess, Mrs. Frank Hoecher, Mrs. Frank Gray, Mrs. Allen Asher, Mrs. Benjamin Manninga, Mrs. David McCreath, Miss Ruth Kenny, and Miss Martha Peterson, all of Lawrence. fhi Gamma Delta Has Spring Dance Phi Gamma Delta entertained with its annual Spring dance Saturday night at the chapter house after the K. U. relays. Spring flowers, white trellis-work, Chinese lanterns, a fountain, and yellow and green rabbits carried the theme. Chaperones were; Chaperones were: Mrs. A. G. McKay, Mrs. Nelle Hopkins, Mrs. P. H. Klinkenberg, Mrs. Onita S. Miller, Mrs. J. W. Whipple, Mrs. C. A. Thomas and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Heinz. The following Gloria Gray, Barbara Varner, Georgia Lee Westmoreland, Nina Green, Lish Leming, Mary Lou Martin, Elaine Wells, Rosemary Robinson, Cissy Faulders, Eileen Horner, Susie Bayle, Ellie Faye, Eleanor Thompson, Joan Armacost, Edith Casey, Alberta Schnitzer, Shannon McKimm, Eileen Maloney, Barbara O'Neal, Jody Veatch, Mary Louise Lambert. Marriet Waddell, Norma Jean Gutherie, Frances Shutz, Constance Dean, Janice Concron, Elizabeth Shears, Ruth Granger, Mary Varner, Deane Strisker, Iva Belle Flora, Isabel Faurot, Constance Claughly, Barbara Nash, Martha Duncan, Mary Jane Merriman, Dorothy Woodward, Shirley Leitch, Carolyn Coleman, Joan Gardner, Betty Osborne. bore Evan Spaulding, Jeanne McGrew, Joan Schindling, Marjorie Stook, Jane Ferrell F. Pouitt, Carolyn Anna Noe, Ann Alexander, Celeste Busley, Crabb, Judy Hibbs, Mary Bovaird, Heaven Heth, Ruth Walters, Peggy Clayd, Caroln Carmean, Marjorie Crone, Sarah Hell, Virginia Joseph, Virginia Talle, Ann Ashley, Joiller, Jody Stuckey, Sally Krovehil, Pegg- Baker, Patricia Williams. Mr. and Mrs. S. K. Alexander, Jr. and Mrs. and Joseph Stryker, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Shields, Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Hinshaw, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stucker, and Mr and Mrs. James Richey. Katherine Of Drs. Wilson Lives Alone And Likes It COED'S CORNER There must have been a medicine-man in the Wilson ancestry. Anyway, the whole family is medically minded now. In fact, in 1953 there may be a shingle hanging from a cluster of three doctor's offices, announcing "Wilson, Wilson, and Wilson, Inc." Katherine Wilson, freshman medical student, is afraid the family corporation won't work out, but says that it is a standing joke in her home. Parents Are Doctors Katherine's parents have a joint office in Kansas City, Mo. Her father, F. I. Wilson, is a surgeon and her mother is a physician. Invitably, Katherine decided when she was very young that she wanted to be a doctor. She's here following in the footsteps of her parents, who were graduated from the K. U. medical school. Katherine took three years premed work at Vassar before coming here this fall. She thinks transferring from Vassar to the University School of Medicine is nearly the same as transferring from a girls' school to a boy's school. "There is really only one thing I don't like about the University and about co-educational life in general," she said. "A girl can't wear blue jeans to class all the time." Lives Alone And Likes It Lives Alone And Likes Her Katherine lives alone and likes it. She says it is a change from her dormitory life at Vassar. The room which Katherine has at 1301 Louisiana street was once the living room of the house there. Katherine explained that the house, built on the side of the hill, was once a one-story bungalow. When the owner decided he wanted a two-story house, it was easier to burrow into the hill and put the additional floor under the existing one than to build the house up in the usual manner. Has Brown Eyes, Bangs Katherine has big brown eyes and wears her hair in short bangs. She likes tailored clothes. Disclaiming any interest in hobbies, she likes many sports in general and enjoys playing golf. She doesn't sing a note but once got into a singing group because "I afforded them comedy relief." One has to keep pretty strictly to the books up here and that's what I intend to do," declares Katherine. "And the sooner I get behind a door marked 'K Wilson, M.D.', the happier I'll be." To Teach At North Carolina L. L. Barrett, associate professor of romance languages, will teach at the University of North Carolina summer session as a visiting professor of Spanish literature. He received his degree of doctor of romance languages there in 1938. College Men Welcome SIMPLER SHAVING! World's MostModern Razor Wins NewFriends EveryDay Mystic, Conn. On every campus in America where it's been tried, the new simpler method of shaving is winning men over. The new Enders Razor gives the world's simplest shave. Safer, swifter, smoother shaves I are assured by the Enders with its amazingly simple construction. It's all one piece—no mechanics, no gadgets! All you do is click the blade in and shave. Furthermore it doesn't clog, it's easy to clean and stays clean. Blades are sharp and long lasting—the razor is shaped to snuggle right into your hand. Just try it. Your campus store has the new Enders at a special introductory price. You'll like Enders simpler shaving. SPECIAL OFFER... RAZOR AND 5 BLADES...49¢ NOTICE SPRING FLEVER NERVY CHEN YU DUAL SETS -Featuring Nail Lacquer and Twincote Are Being Discontinued Now on Sale All Colors At a Special Price Regularly 75c Special 60c plus taxes Cosmetic Dept. Weaver Versatile Calf 7.95 Velvet Step Shoes with the waistline to match clock flatterers Round the clock flatterers for every daytime and night time occasion. The Walk-Over Shop 813 Mass. Loafer Shoes for RELAXATION AND PLAY Bondshire SHOES 8.00 So free and easy on your reet you'll want them as traveling companions wherever you go in your leisure hours. Rich soft textured leather PLUS unusually fine craftsmanship make them the greatest values we are offering in a loafer type shoe. Comfortably Yours The Walk-Over Shop 813 Mass. Street . UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 25,1947 SPOTLIGHT SPORTS By BILL CONBOY Today's column is being written in response to opinions expressed by a large number of students following the campus elections Thursday. In addition to voting for candidates for the various offices in student government, the men and women of the University were asked to vote on a resolution concerning admission of the Oklahoma Aggies to the Big Six Plus One conference. The resolution was stated in this manner: Students were asked to vote either "For the resolution" or "Against the resolution." Too bad there wasn't a third alternative of "I'm too mixed up to know." The majority of the X's would have gone there. Eleven students have already reported to this column that they voted the opposite of their actual intentions because the verbal gymnastics of the resolution had their heads swimming. The results obtained are virtually worthless as indications of student viewpoint. "Be it resolved: That Oklahoma A. and M. should be denied admission to the Big Six conference solely because of racial segregation in Oklahoma." Why was the resolution stated "should be denied" admission solely because of racial segregation in Oklahoma? The University administration has already committed itself to opposing the entrance of the Aggies, but the racial question was not given as even one of the reasons for this decision. Many students, voting hurriedly between classes, thought a vote "For the resolution" was a vote for admission of the Aggies and that a vote against the resolution" was a vote against admission of the Aggies. The resolution could have been worded in this manner: "Be it resolved: That Oklahoma A. and M. should NOT be denied admittance Six conference solely because of racial segregation in Oklahoma." The important point to remember is that the above wording would have given students a chance to vote on policy consistent with what has been done so far. Chancellor Malott and Prof. W. W. Davis, Big Six faculty representative, have both declared that their opposition to non-racial considerations. What they said in a statement that A. and M. SHOULD be denied admittance SOLELY because of racial segregation when we are already denying them admittance for other reasons? By using SHOULD NOT in place of SHOULD, students would have more clearly realized the purpose of SHOULD. University sentiment on the racial issue has been just as clearly defined, but the results would have meant more. To other Big Six schools and in the daily newspapers of this region the campus vote on the A. and M. question will be cited as showing Kansas' attitude toward the Stillwater school. This will not be accurate, since the vote concerns only the racial side of our attitude toward the Aggies. This ambiguity could have been avoided had the resolution been stated in such was as to leave the other considerations of admittance still open for discussion. A negative vote for the question used would seem to imply that student opinion favors admission, whereas many who voted against the resolution might actually favor rejection of A. and M. for other reasons. This column is not concerned with which side won nor (for the moment) with whether the Aggies should be admitted, but we are disappointed that the question was stated in such a way as to confuse student voters and to accomplish nothing in the end. Golf Team Will Meet Washburn Saturday The Jayhawker golf team, coached by Robert Coyan, will play Washburn university in a match at Kansas City Saturday. In a previous match in Topeka on April 12, the two teams wound up in a 9 to 9 tie. Baseball Team To Play Oklahoma, Seek Third Win Bolstered by their double victory over Kansas State last week and by additional practice for their late football player additions, the Jayhawk baseball team left Thursday night for a two-game series with Oklahoma. The games will be split,weather permitting,with one being played today and the other Saturday. Seek Victory The team, with its new power, will try to improve on its present record of two games lost and two won. The lost games were the first two of the season, a double-header with Nebraska. Oklahoma, usually one of the top baseball teams in the conference, has suffered two defeats against one victory this season, the victory coming in a double-header with Nebraska and the other defeat in a 20 to 6 trucing by Kansas State. Sonners On Sick List. Four Sooner pitchers, considered the best of their staff, have been nursing sore arms, and on this is layed the blame for the poor early season showing the team has made. They have played superbly in the field, turning in an average of only 1.4 errors per game. Coach Vic Bradford is not counting on a pushover, however, and will send two young righthanders, Dick Gilman and Guy Mabry into the pitchers box for Kansas. Both of these freshmen were instrumental in defeating the Kansas Aggies. Mabry took over in the third inning of the first game and allowed the Wildcats only three hits to pull out a 9-8 victory for the Jayhawks. Gilman in turn held them to six shots to win the second game 3-2. Same Lineup Expected The Kansas lineup is expected to be the same as that which opened the Kansas State series here with the exception of left field. Dick Bertuzzi probably will move in ahead of Bob Shaw for this position. Bertuzzi came into the first Aggie game as a pinch hit and tapped a sharp single over the short stop's head to drive in the winning run. He collected another hit in the second game of the day. With Bertuzzi in the outfield will be Bill "Red" Hogan in center and Verle Anderson in right. The infield will be Lou Del Luna at first, Ed Wolcott at second, French at shortstop and Harold May at third base. Walt Diehl and Jack Fink will split the catching. League Standings Standings of baseball teams are as follows: America Association W. L. Pct. Kansas City 4 0 1.000 Minneapolis 2 0 1.000 Louisville 4 2 0.667 Toledo 2 2 .500 Columbus 3 4 .428 Indianapolis 2 3 .400 St. Paul 2 5 .286 Milwaukee 1 4 .200 W. L. Pct. New York 6 3 .667 Cleveland 4 2 .667 Boston 5 3 .625 Chicago 3 2 .600 Washington 3 3 .500 Detroit 3 4 .429 St. Louis 2 4 .333 Philadelphia 1 6 .143 National League W. L. Pct. Pittsburgh 6 2 .750 Brooklyn 5 2 .714 Boston 4 3 .571 Chicago 5 4 .556 Philadelphia 4 4 .444 Cincinnati 4 6 .400 New York 2 5 .286 St. Louis 2 5 .286 Baseball Results American Association Kansas City 11. St. Paul 3 Minneapolis 11. Milwaukee 0 Columbus Louisville 12. Columbus at Indianapolis rain Thursday's results: American Association Sigma Chi, Phi Delt, Beta, ATO Win American League Boston 1, New York 0 Cleveland 1, Chicago 0 St. Louis 6, Detroit 1 Only games scheduled Sigma Chi was pressed to beat the Sig Alph's in the opening round of intramural volleyball playoffs Thursday night. Beta, Phi Delt, and A. T. O. had little trouble in winning matches. After Sigma Chi won a deuce game the Sig Alph's retaliated with a 15-10 victory. In the final game, Sigma Chi's strengthened to win 15-8. Beta took the Delt's 15-11, 15-6; Phi Delt downed Delta Chi 15-3, 15-8 and A. T. O. eliminated Sig Ep 15-3, 15-4. National League Lanky Jack Eskridge, fed shots by Millikan, scored consistently for the A. T. O.'s. In the Sigma Chisig Alph deuce game, Peck socked the ball across the net for the winning point. Brooklyn 2, Philadelphia 0 Chicago 6, Pittsburgh 5 Cincinnati at St. Louis, wet grounds Thursday's winners will meet in the semi-finals Monday. The finals will be played April 29. Will Speak To Paola YWCA Mrs. Rachael Soloveitchik, instructor in Russian, will speak to the Chatham in Paola at 2 p.m. Sunday. She will discuss current Russian affairs. VELVET FREEZE famous 'n delicious Double Dip Cones are only 5c TRY ONE IN Red Raspberry Revel Eat the best for less! We use quality products at VELVET FREEZE ice cream sold only at 742 Mass. DANIELLE KENNEDY New BEAUTY For You With Personal Beauty Advice Personal Beauty Advice by a Hudnut Salon consultant ALL NEXT WEEK, from April 28 thru May 3, in our Cosmetic Department. . Miss Carole Almgren, a representative from the famous Richard Hudnut Salon in New York, will be here to give you individual, personalized advice on skin care and the subtle art of make-up—to enhance your own charms! Arrange with us today for a FREE lesson in make-up advice from one who knows! Simply drop in our store and make a special appointment. * ROUND CORNER DRUG 801 Mass. It's ADare! To all car owners with really common sense we'll make a wager that if once you walk into our front doors you'll have a tough time tearing yourself away from the genuine- SQUEGEE TIRE a General Tire Co. exclusive. Never before have we been able to give you a tire with more durability or ruggedness never before have we been able to give you a tire which will give any more long lasting satisfaction to all car owners SEE IT TODAY. MORGAN-MACK MOTOR COMPANY Your Friendly Ford Dealer Your Friendly Ford Dealer 609 Mass. Phone 277 Relax... have a Coke DRINK Coca-Cola © 1947 The C.C. Co. BOTTLED UNDER AUTHORITY OF THE COCA-COLA COMPANY BY KANSAS CITY COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY DRINK Coca-Cola REG U.S. PAT. OFF 5¢ UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE APRIL 25,1947 Return Match With Washburn Here Saturday The Jayhawker tennis team will play a return match with Washburn university on the cement courts by Memorial stadium at 2 p.m. tomorrow. In the previous net contest at Topeka, Kansas came out on top, 7-0. Diek Richards, Erwin Busiek, Harold Miller, and Bob Barnes are certain to be on the firing line for the University in four of the singles matches. Busiek and Miller will handle the chores in one of the doubles contests. Others who may play in the fifth singles match and the remaining doubles match may be chosen by Coach Gordon Sabine from these four men: Frank Gage, Charles Carson, Hervey Macferran, and Lynn Greeley. Two regular members of the squad will be unavailable for competition. Sam Mazon is ill and Roy Shoaf has to catch up on some studies. Monday the team will journey to Manhattan to play a non-conference match against the Wildcats. Richards, Busiek, Miller, and Barnes will make the trip along with another member not yet chosen. Vets Must Sign Now For Summer School The veteran must make up his mind soon about coming back to summer school. If he decides to attend, he must sign up in the basement of Frank Strong hall May 12, 13, 14, or 15, or his subsistence check will stop, the Veterans bureau said today. Any veteran will be entitled this spring to $2\frac{1}{2}$ days of G.I. bill of rights pay for every month he has spent in school since September, if he has not cut too many classes. Thus single veterans who have spent nine months in the University under the G.I. bill will get about $48, married veterans about $68. But three class cuts knock off a day's pay. If the veteran takes this money, it will be deducted from his credit with the Veteran's administration. His G.I. bill will end that much sooner. Chemical Society Hears K.U. Papers Three graduate students, Warren K. Lowen, Donald D. DeFord, and Herbert L. Bradlow, were authors of papers read at the annual conference of the American Chemical society in Atlantic City, Prof. R. Q. Brewster of the chemistry department said recently. David Hume, assistant professor of chemistry, assisted in writing the papers by Lowen and DeFord. Calvin VanderWerf, associate professor of chemistry, was co-author of the paper with Bradlow. 215 Children Will See Y-Sponsored May Day Fete 10.24 Two-hundred fifteen school children from North Lawrence will be entertained at a May day dye sponsored by a joint community service commission of the YWCA and YM CA. The entertainment will take the form of a play day with sack races, relays, singing games, and a May pole. It will be held from 4 to 5 p.m. May 1, under the co-chairmanship of Dorothy James and Elizabeth Webster, College sophomores. Bridge Team To Compete In All Big Six Tournament Dean Gibson, College freshman and Stanley Nelson, sophomore, will represent the University at the all-Big Six bridge tournament today. at Lincoln, Nebraska. at Lincoln, Nebraska. These men won the recent All-University tournament sponsored by the Union intramurals committee. Net Star Here is Erwin Busick, leading racket wielder of the Jayhawker tennis squad. He was ranked 10th among the nation's juniors last year. A total of 9,095 veterans in the Arkansas- Kansas- Missouri- Oklahoma area obtained G. I. loans during the first three months of 1947, the Veterans administration reports. COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals - Short Orders Sandwiches Open 5:30-12:30 3-day Cleaning Service 4-day Laundry Service 24-hour Shoe Repair - Leather and Garment Dyeing a Specialty. Village Cleaners SUNFLOWER, KANSAS Opposite School Western Union----8 a.m.-9 p.m. Free PickUp and Delivery Phone 9009 Two of the scheduled women's softball games were played Wednesday despite the muddy diamond. Delta Gamma upset Alpha Omicron Pi 9 to 2 and I.W.W. defeated Alpha Delta Pi 7 to 5. Delta Gamma, IWW Win Softball Games Tennis doubles have been rescheduled because of the weather and telephone strike, Miss Ruth Hoover said. "The first round must be played by Saturday or the games will be scratched," she said. WE FIT GLASSES AND DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES MOTOR CARS Distinctive Frames Of All Kinds Lawrense Optical Co See DARL for a SPECIALIZED LUBRICATION and QUAKER STATE or PERMALUBE OIL CHANGE DANCE Darl's Standard Service 23rd and La. Need We Say More? It almost goes without saying that for years our cleaning has been high among the most well established cleaners in this city. Our customers on the "Hill" have long regarded us for our quality service and thorough work. Why not become a "regular" and "join the rest." Phone 75 NewYork Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPEARANCE Advertisers Prefer The Kansan To Reach Hill Students What A Band! What A Floor Show! Yes, every Saturday night the SKYLINE CLUB offers for your dining 'n dancing pleasure—— - Music by JOE LANGWORTHY'S Band wonderful for dancing - Floor show with happy JERRY CORREA, emcee featuring K.C. entertainment and, of course, the same good food the SKYLINE always has. For DINING and DANCING, it's always FUN 2301 Haskell-on Highway 10 SKYLINE CLUB at the Phone 3339 JAYHAWKER SEE A SHOW TONITE Now, Ends Tuesday TO LOVE HER ONCE WAS ONCE TOO OFTEN ANN SHERIDAN in Nora Prentiss KENT SMITH BRUCE BENNETT ROBERT ALDA Wed., One Week BOB HOPE DOROTHY LAMOUR My Favorite BRUNETTE GRANADA Ends Saturday REX HARRISON in Motuvious Gentleman with LILLI PALMER Owl Show Sat. 11:45 Sunday, 4 days Gunfire rules his life... Beautiful Women Rule His Heart! ROMANCEL ADVENTURE! ROMANCE ADVENTURE! JOHN WAYNE * GAIL RUSSELL A REPUBLIC PICTURE Angel AND THE BADMAN Angel AND THE BADMAN PATEE Now, Ends Sat. "KINGS ROW" 2 OUTSTANDING FEATURES Shows at 2:00, 7:00, 10:32 Hit No.2 "Wild Bill Hickok Rides" Shown Only at 4:20, 9:20 Shown Only at 4:20, 9:20 Coming Sunday "JACK" CARSON 'Make Your Own Bed' VARSITY Today, Ends Sat. Magnicent Rogue" "Come On Cowboys" SUNDAY, 3 DAYS SUNDAY, 3 DAYS Roy Rogers DALE EVANS In their first all truco picture "APACHE ROSE" AND 60 minute 'Karnival of Comedy* . - UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS APRIL 25,1947 PAGE SIX Kansan Comments Future Of A.S.C. Up To Students A new student council has been elected. The question now is whether we will have an improvement in student government. We do not wish to detract from the constructive achievements of past student councils. But the general feeling—shared by some outgoing council members—is that much more could and should have been accomplished. One reason why more was not done has been some of the unsavvy activities of our political parties. Correction of that condition is largely up to the student body. Conscientious students should demand an end to such activities. If parties try again to hamper our new student council we must make it known to party leaders that we are fed up with such tacies. As soon as our campus parties realize that K. U. students have a definite interest in student government and are sick of immature political stunts, they may begin acting in the best interests of the student body and not for group or party benefits. The discussions at the recent national meeting of the I.S.A. revealed that student governments are in a sad state in many colleges and universities. This is interesting and worth knowing. But we don't want consolation such as this information may give. What we want is results. We firmly believe that student government can be a strong constructive element on this campus. If others are having trouble, we can be different and show that it can be done. By co-operation, effort, interest, and devotion to those things which will advance the welfare of all and make K. U. a better university, student government can achieve its rightful place on the campus. Give the new council your interest and support and in turn demand of it the service for which it was conceived. Unauthorized Use Of The Kansan When the Daily Kansan hit the campus Wednesday something happened that, to put it bluntly, "burned us up." Shortly after distribution was made, a mimeographed political party pamphlet was inserted in copies of the Daily Kansan. The party material was that of the Progressives. We assume it was distributed by Progressive party members since it hardly seems logical that another party would distribute Progressive party material. The Daily Kansan is dedicated to neutrality in campus politics. Members of the staff sincerely strive to treat all parties fairly and impartially. We object to having the Daily Kansan used to secure distribution of party literature. Students picking up copies of Wednesday's Daily Kansan and finding party leaflets inside may well have concluded that the Daily Kansan was endorsing that party. When the Progressive party was formed, it stated it was fed up with various activities of existing parties. What happened Wednesday was hardly an improvement over past party shenanigans. To the student body, the Daily Kansas wishes to say that it is sorry that some persons chose to use your newspaper in an unauthorized manner for party ends. We say again that we endorse no party. To those responsible for what occurred, we voice our stern objection. You took an unfair advantage of your student newspaper and the student body. K.C. Concert Praised By George Bowles Recently I was fortunate in being one of the audience at the two-part concert of the University of Kansas symphony orchestra and the concert band. This concert was staged primarily for the music-minded students of the high schools of Kansas City but luckily was attended by many old grads and former students. Dear Editor--- Despite a day and night of terrific rain, the Music Hall (seating approximately 2,400) was about two-thirds filled and I'm positive everyone attending felt more than repaid for coming out in the rain. The purpose of this letter is not to tell you that I and other loyal Jayhawks thoroughly enjoyed this evening of orchestra and band music but to impress upon both the students and the faculty of the University the high standard of musical achievement gained by more than one hundred Kansas students under able direction. And furthermore to point out the great value in publicity and public relations resulting from this musical achievement and staging of the Kansas City concert. I am not exaggerating in saying amazed at the musical ability of both the orchestra and band. As for myself, I did not believe it possible for a midwestern university the size of Kansas to have and develop so many fine musicians and especially for that same university to boast of such a capable director as Russell Wiley. It is almost incredible that, with the annual and even semester changes in orchestra and band personnel, two such polished musical organizations could be developed. I trudged through a heavy rainstorm expecting to hear a somewhat amateurish concert and was rewarded by a finished, professional performance which truly delighted many hundreds of both youthful and adult music lovers of Greater Kansas City. Indeed such musical activity and accomplishment proves great tribute to, and excellent publicity for, the University of Kansas. George H. Bowles Kansas City, Mo. Class of 1912 (Editor's Note: Mr. Bowles, better known as "Dumpy" Bowles to his friends and classmates, wrote both the music and lyrics of "I'm A Jayhawk" in 1920. A former staff member of the Kansas City Star, he is now head of an advertising and publicity firm in Kansas City. His son, George Bowles Jr., is a junior in the College.) Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS The University Daily Kansan Member of the Kansas Press Assn., Nac- ton, Asn., and Assn. Inland Dairy Press Assn., and Assn. Mills Press. Represented by the National Ad- vertising Service, 420 Madison Ave. New York, NY 10022. Managing Editor ... Marcella Stewart Editor in Chief ... LeMoyne Frederick York City. Three More On Honor Roll Names of three students were omitted from the engineering honor roll according to Prof. J. O. Jones, dean of the School of Engineering. They are Clyde L. Coe and Leonard M. Richards, freshmen, and Paul Whitford, sophomore. RISK'S HELP YOURSELF LAUNDRY Plenty of soft hot water Hours 9-6 Weekdays Seven new Maytag machines 9-4 Saturday 1900 Illinois Call 623 for Appointments Phone 623 TRIPLE SMOKING PLEASURE ADOLPH KIEFER WORLD'S RECORD HOLDER AND OLYMPIC SWIMMING CHAMPION ALWAYS MILDER BETTER TASTING CHESTERFIELD GARETTES VOTED TOPS CHESTERFIELD THE LARGEST SELLING CIGARETTE IN AMERICA'S COLLEagues BY NATION WIDE SURVEY COOLER SMOKING Right on all three, Adolph — THEY SATISFY Always Buy Chesterfield ALWAYS BUY CHESTERFIELD ALL OVER AMERICA-CHESTERFIELD IS TOPS! Copyright 1947, LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. 1947 APRIL 25,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Reading Clinic Analyzes That Squint You don't have to squint at a chart on the wall 20 feet away anymore to find out what's wrong with your eyes. The Reading clinic has an instrument called the tele-binocular which does all the testing while you sit in a comfortable chair. You don't even have to keep one eye closed. The tele-binocular is one of the seven preliminary tests given to the student before beginning remedial work. It consists of 12 checks, each one made at a distance equivalent to 20 feet for far vision and 14 inches for reading. The checks are for astigmatism, color blindness, 3-dimensional vision, ability to see at a distance, and convergence of the eyes. In taking the test the student must wear glasses if he uses them in reading. In case of doubt on the first test, a second test will be made at a later date, when the eyes have had a chance to rest. All information received is strictly confidential, and will be used only in advising the student as to steps to remedy any defects in eyesight or reading. Entomology Club Will Initiate Members The Entomology club made final plans Tuesday for the annual picnic and initiation of new members at Lone Star lake Saturday. New members to be initiated are: Ruth A. Belt, College freshman; Betty A. Boling, College sophomore; Elinor L. Frye, College sophomore; Juliett V. Williams, College freshman; Margaret A. Gruenthal, Education junior; Nellie M. Nordeen, College freshman; Patricia L. Fleming, Education junior; Wilmer W. Tanner, Graduate student; George H. Lowery, Graduate student; Ronald L. McGregar, Graduate student. Talks were given by David W Cralk, Graduate student, on a problem in taxonomy; and by Wayne Porter, assistant instructor in biology on a problem in biology. Mrs. Dorothy Dean Viets Schnell. she received her masters degree in 1941 in entomology at the University also attended the meeting. Occupational therapy students who plan to take hospital training for the first time this summer must see Miss Nancy Greeman, department chairman, at 7:30 p.m. May 6 or May 7. She will be in 328 Frank Strong hall those nights to answer questions. Ask O. T. Students To Attend Sessions "It is imperative that students attend either of these sessions on the nights designated," Miss Greenman said. "Otherwise they may not be able to go into hospital training this summer." Students should sign a sheet on the occupational therapy bulletin board immediately and indicate the night they will attend. Judge Gray Speaks To Law Fraternity More care should be taken by lawyers in the preparation and presentation of wills to courts, Judge Frank R. Gray, 34, Douglas county probate judge, said at a dinner meeting of the Phi Alpha Delta Law fraternity recently. Judge Gray then discussed the formation of wills, their probation, and the administration of estates. "This care is necessary since one wrong statement or clause in a will, or failure to include outside incidents, may prolong the case being finally administered for months or years." 'Gratifying Number' Apply For Summer, Fall Terms A "gratifying number" of students have signed up for summer school and fall semester at the University, Miss Mae Rublee, assistant registrar said today. Former students who wish to attend either of these sessions and those who will be new students should apply at the registrar's office this week. Group Discusses Intermarriage Bans Despite the obstacle of public opinion, intermarriage between Jews and non-Jews should be encouraged if couples settle problems in advance. This was the majority agreement of those taking part in an informal discussion of racial intermarriage at the Jewish student union meeting recently. Students backing their opinions with recent publications, agreed that decisions should be made before marriage. This referred mainly to the rearing of children and observance of rites. Intermarriage is part of the racial assimilation process and public opinion causes the most failures the group decided. Couples should consider intermarriage with their eyes open, they agreed. Choose Patricia Pearson For College Fashion Board Patricia Pearson, College sophomore, has been selected by a Kansas City, Mo. department store as counselor to select the store's "Back to College" clothes for the 1947 fall season. Miss Pearson will be given a trip to New York sometime in May, accompanied by the fashion co-ordinator of the store. New Map Now Available A new topographic map of the Parsons quadrangle is now available from the state geological survey of the University. This map covers an area 14 by 17 miles in northern Labette and southern Neosho counties and was surveyed cooperatively by the federal and the state geological surveys. Daily Kansan Classified Advertising Copy must be in the University Daily Kansan Business Office, Journalism bldg., 20 p.m. of the day before publication is desired. 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 For Sale FOR SALE! 1833 Chevrolet couple. Motor just overhauled. 18-inch wheels, new tires. See at 1646 Tenn., or phone K.U. 160. 29 BANTAM model airplane engine with accessories. Not even broken in. Also, Chavys eight-piece drawing set. Tom Knoetler 1300 Tenn. 29 NEW 6 x 30 German Binocular. Price $75.00. Ralph L. Miller, 212 Lane "O." Sunflower, Kans., or contact me in Pharmacy office. 30 RADIOS—used, Kint, Midget, $9.75–2 Zenith 3 why portables, $21.50, Radios, new, Olympic 5 tube plastics with lucid cell, $25.35—Olympic combination radio, phonographs and tube performance, 9 in. speaker, $135.50, less $25.00 for any, R-AA combinations, $75.50 if used in R-AA "Lane" "OO" (Term Village) Sunflower, 16mm. MOVIE CAMERA, B. and H. Antisigmatic f. 3.5 lens, converted Army gun camera—complete with new viewfinders over $100! Amargi $49, Phone KU, U85. MEN'S S/pen formal, white coat and tux pants. Cont size 36. 413 Miss. Phone: (212) 555-8070. ALMOST new Kodak 35 mm. F. 3.5 lens, coupled range finder, excellent case, sunshade and lens adapter, $75. McLean, 1140 Louisiana. 29 SPORTKY, tan '41 Chevrolet club coupe. Radio, heat器, foglights, spot lights, low mileage, new tires, late general overhaul. Quick sale. James Firebush. 1212 Ohi. 825 For Rent LARGE room with private bath, continuous hot water. Close to University. Also garage for rent. 1801 Alabama. Phone 22298. 29 LADIES white wool head scarf in Frank Return to office or Missouri office 213 Mississippi BLACK and red lady's billfold. Important papers and activity book inside, and the name Bernice Alexander printed on inside cover. Please please return to Dailies 28 TWO- TONE brown sport coat. Dark front, light brown herringbone weave back. Vicinity Marvin hair. Tuesday. Contact Earl Windil. 1037 Tenn. Re- 28 >NE PAIR rimless glasses. last Friday. I found, please return to School of Ph. 264 BOOKS entitled "Economies" and "Principles and Types of Speech". Finder please contact Kansan office. Generous reward. 30 ONE loose-leaf notebook between 4 and 5 p.m. Thursday, April 17 at Military Science Center. Please cost accounting set and all my books. Please return to Alfred Burgert, 128 West 13th, 25 GREEN Sheaffer's fountain pen with name sheaffer, is graved on R. Find, 288 number p 2120. Wanted TYPISTS WANTED: 3 experienced typists for part-time work. No dictation time. Sessions hour to suit your convenience. Please contact Hassel L. Wiley, 3 Room 1, Auditorium. THE VITA CRAFT company offers a real future to men qualified for a sales position. A college education can earn $100 to $200 and ability to quality for supervisor and exe- culative work upon graduation. Summer work also available. The product is quality aluminum cookware. Write Advertisement Company, 4125 Perm. Wake City City 2, MQ. VETERANS: We will buy, trade or sell for you any Army or Navy gear in good condition that you may wish to dispose of. Lawrence Surplus, 911 Mass. Business Services LADIES tailoring and alteration. Ora Floyd, 923 Aa. Phone 767. 30 FREE OFFER—Copies of Discharges and valuable papers, 3 copies for the price of 2. Low prices, fast service. Round Corner Drug Co., 801 Mass. 25 Found TENNIAS RACKETS restruing and repaired. Silk, nylon, or gut. Priced accordingly, $1.50 to $10. Phone 2711-W. Ed. Wellhaus, en, 1145 Ky. M-5 PARKER Fountain pen on bridge table in Union building Friday before K.U. Relays. Can pick up at Daily Kansan office after paying for this ad. 25 For Rainy Days Get A—— RAINFAIR RAINCOAT Smart appearing—Long wearing "Shorty's" or Full Lengths. Sizes 34 to 46—Priced $13.75 to $15.00 Other raincoats from $7.50 to 24.50 CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Lindley's Kansas Cleaners 12 E. 8th Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices MEN'S SUITS— Cleaned and Pressed ... 65c LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES— Cleaned and Pressed ... 69c Cash and Carry Only Montgomery Ward Phone 195 825 Mass. 1930s WOMEN'S 8-OUNCE DENIM BLUE JEAN SUPERVALUE $2.44 Yes, they're hard to find. Yes, they're great values at this unusually low, money-saving price! Sturdy Sanforized (shrinks less than 1%) denim, with new yoke back for better fit, bright stitching, copper rivets. 2 side, 2 back pockets. Sizes $22\frac{1}{4}$ to 34. 6 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 25,1947 PAGE EIGHT CORE Officers Want Improved Race Relations Officers of the Congress of Racial equality told the University Daily Kansas Thursday that their organization had not planned any violence or had in any manner forced its speakers into organized houses at the University. "House officials approve the plan and designate the time for the speech in all cases. Never have we sent a speaker into a house where he wasn't invited," he said. Frank Stannard, chairman, and Wesley Elliott, secretary-treasurer, declared that C.O.R.E. had never used violent means in its campaign for better racial relations. Elliott branded the rumors of CORE.E's plans for a demonstration as entirely unfounded. "We have tried to track down those rumors, but have not had much luck," he added. Elliott said that at present C.O.R.E. is sending its representatives to explain to members of organized houses the principles and aims of C.O.R.E. The Congress is working to improve racial relations. Elliott explained, and does not accept violence of any kind as a solution to the problem. He emphasized that the only way to settle the issue is through education. "That is what we're trying to do," he added. Elliott, who is also executive secretary of the Negro Student association, said that he knew of no movement among Negro students to use violence or force to gain their ends. Novelist Will Speak In Fraser Next Week Robert Penn Warren, novelist editor, and critic, will speak in Fraser theater at 8 p.m. Thursday scanned by the English department Mr. Warren's novel, "All the King's Men," is a recent book club selection. A dramatic version of this novel, which gives a fictional disease to the Huey Long regime in Louisiana, is being given a tryout this week at the University of Minnesota. If it is successful, the play will be produced on Broadway next season. Mr. Warren has been editor of the Southern Review, and has served as poet-in-residence at the Congressional library. He is a Rhodes scholar. Mr. William Bracke, instructor in English, said Mr. Warren is also noted for several volumes of poems. He recently published a book of criticism on Coleridge's "Ancient Euripus." Members To Print Quill Club Booklet The publication of a booklet of poems and short stories by members of the Quill club was announced by Raymond D. Posthite, College senior, chancellor of the club, at a special meeting Thursday night. Grace Witt, College senior, Janice Cebble, sophomore, and Alverta Kennedy junior were appointed to the editing staff. Jean Moore, Colleen senior and first law year law student was appointed to arrange for printing. Five professors in the School of Business are attending a midwest Economic association meeting at Conaha, Neb. Five Professors Go To Omaha Meeting Dr. John Ise, professor of economics will participate in a forum. Others attending are Frank T. Stockton, dean of the School of Business, Leslie Waters, associate professor of economics, and F. B. Jensen, assistant professor of economics. Seniors Must Pay Dues By May 20 Seniors must pay their $4.20 dues at the business office by May 20, Harold Swartz, auditor of student organizations, said today. The $42.00 dues are split up as follows: 50 cents, for cap and gown; 45 cents for breakfast; and $3.25 for the class gift. An optional sum of $2 may be paid for the Graduate magazine. The diploma fee of $7.50 may be paid at any time before graduation. The veterans administration will pay the diploma fee for all veterans and will also pay for the can and gown. Class rings may be ordered at the business office. Friesen, Conboy Talk To Forensic League The UNESCO program to cement relations between nations and increase knowledge of democratic ideals will fail because of "conflicting principles," Hal Friesen, college freshman, told members of the Forensic league Thursday night. "Regardless of the fine intentions of the UNESCO, the program willail because many nations do not desire the education of the commonman." Friesen said. "The peoples of war-torn Europe, in their presentstate of starvation and economicdespair, are more interested in the necessities of life than in freedomand equality." William Conboy, College sophomore, declared that "trivialities" will be the downfall of the world, in a humorous talk on "Man's Infatuation With The Insignificant Things Of Life." "The mastery of the human race has been the mastery of the trivialities of life," Conboy said. He criticized footnotes in books and statistical fill-ins in newspapers because of the amount of the doughnut instead of the doughnut, the frosting instead of the cake." Kansas Engineers Must Be Licensed The new Kansas law requiring compulsory registration and licensing of practicing engineers will go into effect when the Kansas registration board for professional engineers considers 50 applicants. Prof. G. W. Bradshaw, secretary, announced today. Registration of engineers was optional before the passage of the law by the last legislature. Now all practicing engineers, with the exceptions of architects and a few others, must be licensed. Engineers registered at the time the law becomes effective will automatically be licensed by obtaining a new seal, Professor Bradshaw said. Miss Fern Babcock. New York, national program chairman of the Y.W.C.A., is conducting a two day leadership training course Thursday and today for the new Y.W.-Y.M.C.A. cabinets. 'Y' Cabinets Attend Leadership Course She will meet at 4 p.m. today at Henley house with the joint cabinets to discuss "Faith for Living in Troubled Times." She will be entertained tonight by the Y.W.-C.A. advisory board at the home of Mrs. Wilma Collins. Miss Babcock, a graduate of Kansas State Teachers college, held personal interviews with members of the cabinets. Counseling Program Will Be Part Of Orientation A counseling program sponsored by the United Women's council will be a part of orientation week next week for old girls,ames,secretary,said Tuesday. The program is to acquaint new University women with campus life. A training program for girls from each house interested in being counselors will start in May. More than 150 persons have made reservations to attend Cervantes day activities here tomorrow. Formerly an annual affair begun by the Spanish department in 1922, the celebration is being resumed this year after a lapse during the war years. 150 Will Attend Cervantes Day Here Tomorrow The day's activities will begin with a professional meeting in 103, Frank Strong hall at 2 p.m. Research and critical papers will be read. Displays of rare editions of Cervantes' classic, "Don Quixote," and paintings and statues of the Don will be exhibited in 113, 117, and 119 Frank Strong hall. A demonstration of Spanish recordings used in the University Spanish laboratory system will be made. A banquet and tertulia (program) at 5:30 p.m. in the Kansas room in the Union will close the celebration. Dances, musical and dramatic pieces, and novelty numbers will be given by pupil of University or the Spanish department and by members of the department. Tomorrow was chosen because it is the nearest Saturday to the anniversary of the date of Cervantes' death on April 23, 1616. Visiting Army Team Inspects ROTC Unit A Fifth army inspection team visited the campus Thursday and made a complete inspection of the ROTC unit. They made a personal inspection of the cadets and checked administration facilities. "K U has a fine plant, but it is crowded as at all other universities. The interest seems to be high here and I'm well satisfied with the inspection." Col. W. B. Avera, officinal charge of the inspection "said. The colonel also announced that the army will give an examination to all cadets in the nation, testing whether cadets at one school are learning as much as those at another. The inspection team is covering a 12-state area. Other officers who made the inspection were Col. F. R. Crowley, and Maj. K. R. Sturman Jayhawker Staff To Be Selected Applicants for editor and business manager of the 1948 Jayhawker will be interviewed by the Jayhawker Advisory board at 10 a.m. tomorrow at the Jayhawker office, Editor Dean Ostrum said today. The student chosen for each position will be announced after the meeting. Little Man On Campus Applicants for editor are William Conboy, James Mordy, and Keith Wilson. The four candidates for business manager are Larry Simmons, Arthur Myers, Judith Tihen, and Robert Williams. Church Delegates Meet Here Saturday A state-wide Westminster Foundation conference will convene here tomorrow with delegates from the University, Kansas State College, Manhattan, and Kansas State Teachers' College, Hays, attending. Conference meetings will be held at 1221 Oread. Deane Postlethwaite, College senior, will be general chairman at all session. The Rev. Dr. Harold Barr, dean of the School of Religion, will discuss "The Religious Need of University Students." The Rev. Dr. A. Walton Roth, Topeka, will discuss "The University Student and His Church." A welcoming address by Chancellor Deane W. Malott, a tour of the campus, and a closing communion service conducted by the Rev. Dr. Mary M. Westminster of the University. Westminster, Foundation, complete the program. Delegates from the University include James Luther, College sophomore; Mary Lois Rice, College junior; Mary Lynn Lucas, College freshman; Seldon Knudson, graduate student; Joseph K. Thompson, graduate student, and David Thomson, Engineering freshman. YM-APO To Sponsor Counseling Program All persons interested in camping may attend a camp counselors training course tomorrow in the Union building. The program is being sponsored by the Y.M.C.A. and Alpha Phi Omega. The program will begin at 9:30 a.m. and continue until 4 a.m. Camping authorities and Boy Scout officials will speak. A certificate will be presented to all persons who complete the course. By Bibler 2 B. PETER "Eay, did you fellows see anything of a baseball that came over this way?" Widow Tells Of Mate's Moods In Ellis Trial Thursday was the fourth day in the court-battle between the University and Mrs. Ellis for the possession of her late husband's $200,000 natural history library. Wednesday Judge Means ruled that the document signed by Ralph Ellis was not a will. Mrs. Ellis hopes to show her husband was incompetent to make a contract. Mrs. Irene Ellis broke down and wept in court Thursday, while testifying about her husband's strange behavior. She was relating an event about Mr. Ellis throwing shotgun shells in the street. Mrs. Ellis had asked him to put them away so people would not stumble over them. She said he became enraged. At this point she cried. Judge Hugh Means granted a short recess. Later they went to New York, where Mr. Ellis tried to make arrangements to give his library to some educational institution, she related. At one time he considered selling his books. Mrs. Ellis said his behavior in Lawrence was irrational. He threw anything he could get his hands on when he became excited. In the fall of 1944, he went raging through the house about 3 a.m., she said. The police came and took him to the station. The next day the authorities sent him back to Livermore sanitarium. Mr. Ellis escaped from there, and Mrs. Ellis drove him to Reno, she said. During the morning, testimony concerning Mr. Ellis' behavior was read into the record. Mrs. Joanna Merrill, of Berkeley, Calif., Ellis' secretary, said he threatened to take his life, and broke a window in her apartment. Sgt. Orville W. Rouse of the Berkeley police force, told about the night Mr. Ellis was arrested and how he was later sent to the sanitarium. Miss Anne Murray, a former K. U. student and employee at Dyche museum, said Mr. Ellis wanted her to work for him. She said she was never sure what Ellis wanted her to do. He proposed to hire her at $300 a month, but would only pay her $30. The rest he said he would save and give her in a lump sum when she had finished the job, she testified. Mrs. Ellis told of numerous occasions on which her husband had thrown bottles, telephones, keys, and even a fire axe through windows. In these moods "he was just sort of mad," she said, "not angry at anyone, just mad." U.A.W. Accepts G.M. 15-Cent Wage Raise Detroit—(UP)—Officials of the United Automobile Workers (CLO) were confident today that the 15-hour hourly wage increase agreed to by General Motors corporation behind the 1947 wage pattern in the entire automotive industry and would insure a year of full compensation unhampered by major strikes. Savs He Threw Things The agreement provides a liberalized vacation plan, an $11 \frac{1}{2}$-cent hourly increase if the contract is ratified by May 5, and wages for the paid holidays will account for the other $3 \frac{1}{2}$ cents increase. Moscow—(UP)—Both Secretary of State George C. Marshall and British Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin predicted today that the Moscow conference will prove a greater contribution to peace than anyone now believes. Marshall Comes Home Rent Controls Extended Washington—(UP)—The house, banking committee has approved a bill to extend federal rent control until at least Dec. 31 without a general rent increase. The committee previously had given tentative approval to a 10 per cent general rent increase. En Fo Sp Secretary Testifies 15 1947 University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Monday, April 28, 1947 44th Year No. 128 Lawrence, Kansas. the (O.) 15- to ton in and ac- ces. bent is for for of it- rin ow n- new se/ sed but 1-1 1-1 1-1 se ed 1- ut 1- 1- 1- Entries Due For Campus Speech Contest Entries for the all-University extemporaneous speaking contest must be turned in at 5 Green hall, the speech and drama office, before 4 o.m. tomorrow, Kenneth Johnson, instructor in speech, said today. A preliminary contest will be held at 8 tomorrow night in the Little Theater of Green hall. Finalists in the preliminary contest will compete for prizes at 8 p. m. Wednesday n Fraser theater. In the preliminary contest, speakers will draw three topics on the general subject of American politics. One topic will be selected by the contestant and 30 minutes will be allowed for preparation. At the end of this time, a four minute speech will be given by each participant on the subject chosen. Finalists Wednesday will follow the same procedure except that one hour will be given for preparation and that speeches will be six minutes in length. "All interested students at the University are invited to enter the contest," Johnson said. "There will be three judges: one from the speech department, one from the political science department, and a business man from Lawrence." 150 Attend Latin Fete By Bibler Cervantes day was celebrated Saturday by the Spanish department and guests from over the state with a banquet, tertulia (program), professional meeting, and displays. More than 150 persons participated in the activities of Cervantes day, a tradition here since 1922. With J. M. Osma, professor of romance languages, as master of ceremonies, the banquet program included dances, playlets, and musical numbers. Miss Irene Cebula and Bolivar Marquez danced an original Spanish number. Miss Nancy Cook and Samuel Duran performed a tango, and Miss Cebula and Alvaro Chavarría gave a Spanish dance based on the incidents of a bullfight. Two playlets written or adapted by Prof. Daniel Samuels were acted by University students. James O'Hara and Jane Tippin acted "At the Wedding" and Mary Bovaird and Patricia Brown performed "A Telephone Call." Dr. William H. Shoemaker gave a biography of Alejandro Casona, the Spanish refugee who is teacher, playwright, and producer in Argenting. J. C. Herman, Spanish instructor, explained how English words are worked into the Spanish language in the Panama Canal Zone, where he had charge of the Cristobal postal censorship station during the war. Miss Agnes M. Brady, spoke on the difficulties of teaching English to Latin American technical and professional men, as was done in English language institutes sponsored by the State department during the war. Prof. Ashton reviewed his new book on the oral approach to teaching Spanish through conversation. The largest delegation attending was 30 students and teachers from Park College. The delegations traveling the farthest were from Joplin, Mo., and Wichita. Among the guests was Captain Jose Guzman Baldivios, Brazilian consul to Kansas, now at Salina. Writing Contest Sponsored For Konsas Residents A writing contest will be sponsored by the Kansas Author's club from June 1 until August 1. The contest is an annual event for residents of Kansas. Little Man On Campus KU J.BLER 16 DAILY CALAN "Yeah, the house is pretty strict about 'table reaching'." Even At 6 To I, The Ladies Still Had Percentage Troubles Back in '17 building contractors evidently didn't use hair in the plaster. L. E. Penfold, an employee of the building and grounds department, recently discovered a World War I issue of the Summer Session Kansan which had been sealed up in a wall in Fraser hall. Kansas — Mostly cloudy with showers and thunderstorms today, tenight and Tuesday, except ending western third of the state Tuesday morning. No important temperature changes, but somewhat cooler northwest portion Tuesday. Low tonight 50 to 55. Students will be limited to one book each. WEATHER The K-book, which is essentially a new students handbook, contains a school-year datebook and a large amount of reference material about the University which is useful to students. About 500 unsold copies of the 1946-47 K-book are now available, free of charge, to students at the business office student organization window, Harold Swartz, business office accountant, said today. men on the campus 6 to 1. But the ladies could still be amused. Play At Potter which had been seen in a racy little sheet which came out when women outnumbered. It was a racy little sheet which came out when women outnumbered. "Come And Play Every Evening Is The Call To Students," reads the headline on a story which did not make clear who was doing the calling. The playground was the same Potter lake and the smooth rolling green around it. Games were the same then, as now, only with different names, an informant says. That Same '70' "Get Acquainted Is Rule For Women In Breezy Session" reads another headline over the story of a party which must have been given on a windy day. It was the first get-together of the women for the session and '70 per cent of them met in 10 of Green hall to stimulate their interests in current affairs. Free K-Books At Business Office We're still having trouble with that same per cent, but with a different Green. Wilson, Simmons To Head Jayhawker Keith Wilson and Larry Simmons will head the Jayhawker during the 1947-48 school year as editor and business manager respectively. They were selected Saturday morning by the Jayhawker Advisory board. Applicants for the position of editor were William Conboy, James Mordy, and Arthur Myers. Judith Tihen, Robert Williams, and Simmons applied for the position of business manager. Members of the Jayhawker Advisory board are: Karl Klooz, chairman; Prof. M. D. Clubb; Prof. Elmer Beth; Richard Carmean; Allan W. Cromley; Tom Harmon; Dearr G. Ostrum; and Thomas Yce, University public relations director. "How can we save civilization from an atomic war?" will be the subject of Dr. Herman B. Chubb, professor of political science, in a speech before a town forum in Leavenworth tonight. Dr. Chubb will be one of the speakers in a panel discussion. A question period will follow the speaking. The forum will meet at the Leavenworth high school at 8 p.m. Dr. H. B. Chubb Will Speak At Leavenworth Tonight Hope Diamond Destination Still In McLean Will Washington — (UF) — The sealed will of the late Mrs. Evalyn Walsh McLean held the answer today whether her "accursed" two million dollar Hope diamond would go to her sons or to some institution. Mrs. McLean scoffed at the idea that the stone was ill-fated. Yet her own life was marked by a series of tragedies, culminating in her death Saturday of pneumonia. She was 60. Union Applications In By Wednesday Persons interested in applying for the positions of president, vice-president, secretary, and treasurer of Union Activities for the 1947-48 school year may obtain application forms in the Activities office in the Union. Applications will be accepted until Wednesday noon and selection of the four officers will be made that night by members of the Union operating board. Marshall Airs Report Tonight Washington.—(UP)—Secretary of State George C. Marshall will tell the American people tonight that despite the failure of the Moscow conference, there is ground for hope as well as disappointment. Secretary Marshall will deliver his report to the nation over most major radio networks from 9:30 to 10 p.m. Tonight's radio address will be his first major foreign policy pronouncement directly to the American people since he took office in January. He will not attempt to sugarcoat the failure of the seven week Moscow meeting of the council of foreign ministers. But he will try to put its failure to reach agreements on Germany into proper perspective —pointing out the danger for Europe and the world if the deadlocks remain unsolved and citing facts which justify hope for future meetings. Secretary Marshall is disappointed in that the conference failed to accomplish either of two minimum American objectives: One—completion of an Austrian treaty which would restore that nation to an independent status for the first time since he 1938 Anschluss with Germany. Two-agreement in principle on an American plan for a Big Four treaty to keep Germany disarmed for 40 years longer. YWCA Selects Cabinet Members Twenty-seven Y. W. C. A. cabinet members for next year were anounced Friday by Emma Lou Britton. The entire cabinet includes, Miss Britton, president; Patricia Graham, vice-president; Lorna Green, treasurer; Dorothy Hoover, secretary; national delegate, Betty van der Smissen; state delegates, Sheila Wilder and Melba Whiting Silha Winter and the Chairman of commissions are Ruth Murphy, worship; Shirley Sondker, call group; Joy Godbehere, freshman orientation, and her assistants, Kathleen O'Conner, Leah Uehleng, Margaret Eberhardt, and Nancy Smith. Alice Wisner, membership. Ann Learned publicity; Courtney Cowgill, Y-Knot; Betty Brothers, political effectiveness; Joan Mischner, minorities; Mary Douglass, craft room, Elizabeth Sifers, art appreciation. Dorothy James, community service; Hilda James, World relatedness and WSSF; Joan Joseph, ways and means; Jane Ferrell, social; and Mary Wisner, Elizabeth Evans, Jean Francisco, resource members. Mabel Elliot Gets Place In 'Who's Who In America' Miss Mabel Elliott, associate professor of sociology, has received notification of her inclusion in the 1948-49 of "Who's Who in America." In June Miss Elliott will receive a distinguished service award presented by the alumni association of Northwestern University. She is now on leave from the University of Kansas serving as consulting sociologist for the American Red Cross in Washington, D.C. Miss Elliott is making a study of disaster relief. Ellis Rushed Into Signing Lawyers Claim Attorneys for Mrs. Ralph Ellis intimated, today that Chancellor Deane W. Malott, Dean F. J. Morreau and Prof. E. R. Hall tried to rush Ellis into signing the $200,000 contract without legal aid. They put "undue pressure" on Ellis, the defense claimed. The defense pointed to what it termed "conflicting testimony" by Moreau and Klooz. Moreau said, "It was a meeting to talk the contract over but Ellis wanted to sign." Klooz, however, was at the meeting with his notary stamp, the defense said. Two of the main defense points were that Mr. Ellis was incompetent to make the will, and that it was made by the principle beneficiary, the University of Kansas. The attorneys reviewed the testimony of the case and asserted that Mrs. Ellis did not know what she was signing. She was called unexpectedly at 10:30 a.m. to m. to sign the contract without having previous knowledge of the document. The defense said that Ellis' behavior was like that of a spoiled child, and pointed out that he had been admitted to the Livermore sanitarium by the state of California. Summer School Vets Get Vacation And Pay Subsistence received this summer under either of these plans will be charged against the veteran's period of entitlement. Students must sign up with a V.A. representative, who will be in Frank Strong hall May 12 to 15. Veterans who plan to attend summer school may receive full subsistence for the period between the end of the spring term and the beginning of the summer session, the Kansas City, Mo., veterans administration office announced today. Veterans wishing to receive subsistence for the amount of their accrued leave, after the end of school, must sign up in the bureau office during the last two weeks of school. Earned leave is accumulated at the rate of $2\frac{1}{2}$ days a month of school. Prof. E. R. Elbel, director of the University veterans bureau, explained that if a veteran doesn't want this between-sessions time taken from his accrued leave and his period of entitlement, he need to be brought to interrupt his training. Then, when he returns to school, he will be returned to the payroll and will begin receiving his subsistence. Eight new members were initiated and a committee for the annual Founders day dinner was appointed Thursday by Kappa Epsilon, national women's professional pharmacy fraternity. KE Initiates Eight Names Committee Members initiated are: Meredith J. Baxter, Phyllis M. Bice, Geraldine R. Bobbitt, Rosemary Chamberlain, Marilyn R. Lindberg, and Hazel M. Stanley, Pharmacy freshmen; Lee Duncan Hulen, and Mina M. McKelvey, sophomores. Members of the dinner committee pre Mina M. McKelvey, chairman; Geraldine Bobbitt, and Marilyn Lindberg. Undercoes Appendectomv Carl Olander, engineering freshman. was operated on for appendicitis Sunday in Watkins hospital --- PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Official Bulletin April 28.1947 APRIL 28,1947 Kausan Board at 4 p.m. today in 107 Journalism building. Eagle staff meeting at 8 tonight in Union ballroom. Reorganization of staff. All interested invited. Registered Nurses club at 8 to night in the Pine room of the Union building. Copies of the 1946-47 K-book are now available free of charge to students at the student organization window of the Business office. Students who left activity books at the polls may pick them up at the Business office. 淖 淖 静 Formal pledging, Alpha Kappa Psi business fraternity at 7:30 pm Tuesday in the Union building. The Business School association announces election of officers for the 1947-48 school year to be held on Business School Day, May 9. Petitions for nominations may be obtained at the Business School office and must be filed with that office today. 本 课 解 Sigma Gamma Epsilon meeting at 7:30 pm. Tuesday in 402 Lindley. Dean J. O. Jones will be the speaker. Russian club at 3 tomorrow at the Russian exhibition in Spooner-Thayer Museum. Ted Beta Pi meeting at 5 p.m. Tuesday in 210 Marvin. All-Student Council at 7:15 pm Tuesday, Pine room, Union building Newly elected members please attend. Society for Advancement of Management regular semi-monthly meeting at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the Kansas room of the Union. **★★** ISA meeting at 7 p.m. Tuesday 288, Strong hall. 华书联 Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship at 7 p.m. Tuesday, Barlow Chapel, Myers hall. Don Simpson will lead Bible study. Several members will give a group chalk-talk and demonstration. Delto Phi Delta executive meeting at 4 p.m. today in projection room of Design department. Committee head required to attend. New Library Books Non-fiction highlight: "Selected Letters of William A. White" is an excellent collection from the voluminous private correspondence of this famous Kansan. The letters used throw additional light upon the events of an American era and at the same time provide interesting reading. Fiction highlight: "The Wayward Bus" by John Steinbeck, is a new novel with a new theme. Steinbeck fans will be interested in this work which contains none of the harshness of "Of Mice and Men," the tenderness of "Tortilla Flat" or the social conflict of "Graves of Wrath." Other New Books are: E. A. Burtt, "Right Thinking"; H. A. Calahan, "Geography for Grown-ups"; G. E. Elton, "Imperial Commonwealth"; E. J. Goodspeed, "How to Read the Bible"; M. A. Lowdenes "The Merry Wives of Westminster"; Mary MacDonald "The Republic of Austria"; N. S. Norway "The Chequer Board"; Eugene O'Neill "The Iceman Cometh"; G. R. Parkin "India Today"; Upton Sinclair "A World to Win"; John Somerville "Soviet Philosophy." Just Bratting Tonight 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. Universityholiday fees are $60.00 for second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan, under act of March 3, 1879. Russian Egg Art To Be On Display Paintings of good looking Russian pin-up girls, real Russian Easter eggs, and Russian money, both Czarist and Bolshevik, will be part of the Russian display to open in Spooner-Thayer museum Tuesday. The opening will be at the next meeting of the Russian club in the museum at 3 p. m. Tuesday. Two of the Easter eggs to be on display are from Russia. They are glass and wax and have the inscription "Resurrection of Christ" written on them in Russian. The other three eggs are real, and part of the many objects Mrs. Rachael Soloveitchik, instructor in Russian, obtained from an antique ship and friends in Kansas City. Karl Mattern will speak on Russian art at the opening meeting. 2:30 Hammond organ recital, Edward Uftley ON KFKU 9:30-10 Symphonic Favorites, Schumann's "Spring Symphony" 2:45 News from Mount Oread, Tom Yoe Monday 9:30-10 University of Kansas band, Russell L. Wiley, Director Tuesday -3 Band concert Wednesdav 2:30 Musical matinee 2:30 Musical matinee 2:45 Excursion in science 9:30-10 Phi Mu Alpha Chorus, all American program 2:30 Hammond organ recital, Edward Lilley. Thursday Call K.U. 25 with your news. Hook review prop $330- Book Illustrator Kansas, the Story of Flight Over Kansas Leonard Speaks To Club On Understanding Fossils 2:45 Book review program Dr. Byron Leonard, speaking before the Geology club Thursday night on "The application of Zoology to Geology", said a knowledge living organisms is necessary if we have to understand the fossils we find. Dr. Norman Storer, of the department of astronomy, will speak on "The Origin of the Earth" at the next meeting on May 8. Réad the Daily Kansan daily. Instant Service Instant Service In Our Shoe Repair Department Royal College Shop 837-38 Mass. The world's largest locomotive, Union Pacific's 610-ton "Big Boy" is handled at the Los Angeles roundhouse on the world's largest turntable, 135 feet long. 3-day Cleaning Service 100 . . 3-day Cleaning Service 4-day Laundry Service 24-hour Shoe Repair Leather and Garment Dyeing a Specialty. Village Cleaners SUNFLOWER, KANSAS Opposite School Western Union----8 a.m.-9 p.m. Free Pick Up and Delivery Phone 9009 Hamilton Street Let's Get together PHILIP MORRIS is so much better to smoke! THE VOICE OF A GENTLEMAN ESTABLISHED OVER 60 YEARS PHILIP MORRIS & CO. LTD. Finest Sweetness MADE IN U.S.A. BY PHILIP MORRIS & CO. LTD. INC. NEW YORK The grandest smoke you've ever enjoyed! It's true, if every smoker knew what PHILIP MORRIS smokers know . . . they'd ALL change to PHILIP MORRIS. Yes, the PHILIP MORRIS smoker really gets what other smokers only hope to get... PERFECT SMOKING PLEASURE. So for perfect smoking pleasure ... try a pack today! CALL FOR PHILIP MORRIS CALL FOR PHILIP MORRIS ALWAYS BETTER-BETTER ALL WAYS I Sen ter Will a c car chic Cal ceiv ition M Mr. of lege Sign Alf K pim dau Lav Jr., Re ] Ka ga Ta APRIL 28,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE ,1947 otive, py" is bound- turn- Belles AND THEIR Weddings Semon-Bideau Watkins hall announces the engagement of Beverly Semon, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. M. Semon of Chanute, to Edwin H. Bideau, son of Mrs. Marie Bideau, also of Magnette. The announcement was made after dinner by Miss Julia Ames Willard housemother, who received a corsage of gardenias and white carnations. Miss Semon wore orchids and was assisted by Esther Calvin and Patricia Moser who received talisman rose corsages. Traditional chocolates were passed. Miss Semon is a college senior. Mr.Bideau is a junior in the School of Business at Kansas State college. He is a member of Kappa Sigma. - * * Alford-Adams Kappa Alpha Theta announces the pinning of Mary Virginia Alford, daughter of Mrs. Eugene Alford, Lawrence, to Robert Hunt Adams, Jr., Salina. The announcement was made during dinner, Thursday night, by Mrs. Karl Perkins, housemother, who received a corsage of carnations. Miss Alfred wore an orchid and was assisted by Barbara Haffner who received a gardenia corsage. Miss Alfred's pledge class received pansy nosegays. Miss Alford is a college senior. Mr. Adams is also a college senior and a member of Sigma Chi. \* \* \* Reid-Reid Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Reid of Kansas City, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Jean, to Tad Reid, Jr., of Evergreen, Colo. The engagement was announced recently at dinner at the Alpha Delta Pi chapter house by Mrs. O. L. Horn, housemother, who wore a white vose corsage. Miss Reid wore an orchid corsage Her attendants were Mary Jean Peet and Mrs. J. C. Ethridge who wore Japanese iris corsages. Traditional chocolates were passed. Lensink-Adams Ricker hall announces the engagement of Lorraine Lensink, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John A. Lensink of Edgerton, Minn., to Roger P. Adams, son of Mr. and Mrs. Glenn C. Adams, Clay Center. The announcement was made at a pajama party by Mrs. Robert P. Mize, Ricker hall housemother. Chocolates were passed while the girls sang "Let Me Call You Sweetheart." Miss Lensink is a college junior Mr. Adams is a freshman in the college. - * * Kesler-Shaw I Mr. and Mrs. Homer N. Shaw of Galesburg announce the marriage of their daughter, Elizabeth, to Richard W. Kesler, son of Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Kesler of Winfield. The ceremony was solemnized on November 22, in Kansas City, Mo. The bride was graduated from Galesburg High school in 1945 and was attending the University at the time of her marriage. She was a member of the University Women's Glee club, the Kappa Phi Methodist sorority, and the choir of the First Methodist church here. Since January, she has been employed in the office of Shaw Manufacturing company, Galesburg. Mr. Kesler attended K.U. as a prema- ped student. He was a lieutenant in the Marine Air Corps for four years during the war. He is at present employed in the Architectural Firm of William Caton, Winfield. fth of Wilhambur The couple is at home in Winfield. Rraeckveldt-Mayer Kappa Alpha of Chi Omega announces the pinning of Beverly Bracekeveldt, of Kansas City, to William Mayer, of Kansas City, Kansas. Mary Braeekveldelt is a senior majoring in English at Kansas State college. Mr Mayer is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon. He is a sophomore in the College, majoring in journalism. COED'S CORNER It's 'Home On The Range' For Stablehand Carol Long It's blue jeans and horses for Carol Long, College sophomore. The curly-headed brunette with soft brown eyes and a spontaneous laugh spends two or three hours every day, at the stables, sometimes more on Saturdays and Sundays, riding or helping with classes. "I started riding in a freshman gym class, I liked it and I have been at it ever since," she said. During the summers, she taught riding in girl scout camps at both Shawnee and Lone Star lakes. She Breaks 'Em Herself Carol owns a three-year-old horse, named "Cinder," which she broke last spring. Cinder is her favorite, but the high-spirited "Satan" is a close second. She explains that the two are different. "You can always rely on Cinder, but Satan can only be expected to do the unexpected," she said. "Twice while jumping I've fallen. I've been thrown once but I've always been able to get up and walk away." She'll probably go on trying. Carol rode in the horse show here last spring doing trick riding and jumping. She participated in group drills and the Virginia reel. Shell Teach Sister A geology major, she attended the geology field camp at Canyon City. Colo., last summer. For next summer she has a special project in mind. She's going to teach her 11-year-old sister to ride. teach her 19-year-old sister. Just look for a figure in blue jeans and Spur club red shirt. It's probably Carol Long. W SOCIALLY SPEAKING Former Housemother a Guest Mrs. Edith Martin, former Chi Omega housemother, was a guest last weekend of Mrs. Ralph Baldwin, Gamma Phi Beta housemother. She was a dinner guest at the Chi Omega house Saturday and Monday. Mrs. Martin retired last year after being Chi Omega housemother for 16 years. She is now living in Coffeyville. - * * Housemothers Are Guests University housemothers were entertained by the Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity at a luncheon Thursday in the Crystal room of the Hotel Elridge, honoring Mrs. Helen Fisher, who is the new Sig Ep housemother. Have Faculty Reception Xi chapter of Sigma Kappa entertained with a faculty reception Sunday, at the chapter house. Have Faculty Reception A tea for high school seniors planning to enter college next fall was given by a group of members of the Alpha Delta Pi sorority, Saturday, at the home of Mrs. Elmer Corn, in East borough village, Wichita. A. D. Pi's Entertain 25c For LAUNDRY!! HOW?? Launderette! BRING IN YOUR LAUNDRY. Put It In a Bendix Washing Machine. DO YOUR SHOPPING. COME BACK FOR YOUR LAUNDRY IN 30 MIN. ECONOMICAL and EFFICIENT Faculty, Students Form Home Ec Board COST 25c For 10 lbs. SOAP FREE A council to act as a connecting link between students and faculty in the home economics department was set up by home economics majors recently. LAUNDERETTE 813 Vt. Phone 3368 The constitution adopted provides for one representative from each of the six major areas in the department, and three faculty members. The council will consider both complaints and constructive criticisms offered by students through the representatives. "The purpose of the group is to take care of the grips and to better the department through the suggestions and understanding of both students and faculty." Wilda Horton, president of the Home Economics club said. This club is backing the new organization. Representatives elected are Elizabeth McCune, dieticians; Ruth Cawood, child development; Kathryn Hessling, clothing and textiles; Marilyn Smart, general home economics; Violetta Richards, teachers; and Jane Ferrell, non-majors. Tou Sigma Names Three New Pledges Initiate Enns Myron Enns was initiated into Phi Delta Theta recently. The regular meeting of Tau Sigma, dancing sorority, was held Tuesday night in Robinson Gymnasium, and in the absence of their leader, Mrs. Don Powell, techniques were practiced. The names of three girls pledged recently are Corine Carter. Dorothea Hodgson and Barbara Johnson. Officers Of Kappa Phi Attend Regional Meeting Virginia Shimer and Wilma Geppelt, College juniors, recently attended a regional meeting of Kappa Phi Methodist women's sorority, at Norman, Okla. Representatives of chapters in four states attended. chairman of Virginia Shimer is president of the local chapter, and Wilma Geppart is program chairman. BEST OF CLEAR EYESIGHT is a "Must." DARK EYESIGHT is a MUSIC Studies depend upon it. If you have been having headaches due to your eyes, come in and let us check them carefully. Lawrence Optical Co. NEW!! ALBUMS NEW!! THE FILM CENTER CHOPIN—CONCERTO NO.2 CHOPIN—CONCERTO NO. 2 Pianist, Autur Rubinstein CHOPIN—ETUDES, OPUS 10 CHOPIN—CONCERTO NO. 1 Pianist, Edward Kilenyi RACHMANINOFF—CONCERTO NO. 2 Pianist, Autur Rubinstein RACHMANINOFF—SYMPHONY NO. 2 N.Y. Symphony Orch. BELL MUSIC CO. 925-27 Mass. Phone 375 Revlon's NEW COLOR "Bachelor's Carnation" A CAPRICIOUS CARMINE WITH A TENDER PASSION YES—IT'S THE GREATEST CATCH OF Revlon's NEW COLOR "Bachelor's Carnation" A CAPRICIOUS CARMINE WITH A TENDER PASSION IN NAIL ENAMEL LIPSTICK FACE POWDER "The One you Love and nothing else will do!" Weaver's Cosmetic Dept. "Bachelor's Carnation" Match Box (Nail Enamel, Lipstick, Adheren) 1.75* Face Powder 1.00* *plus tax --- IN NAIL LIPSTICK FACE POWDER "He one you love - and nothing else will do!" Weaver's Cosmetic Dept. Bachelor's Carnation Bachelor's Carnation Bachelor's Carnation Raleigh "Bachelor's Carnation" --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS APRIL 28,194 PAGE FOUR SPOTLIGHT SPORTS By BILL CONBOY Bob Reese, southpaw pitcher from Clements, Kan., owned the best earned run average among hurlers on the Oklahoma university squad up to the games Friday and Saturday with the Javahawk nine. Figures released by the Sooner sports bureau show that Reese has permitted this 2.64 earned runs a game this season. He has pitched 17 innings and allowed 5 runs. He has struck out 11 men and walked only two while receiving credit for one victory against no defeats. Elton Davis has pitched 23 2/3 innings for the Sooners, allowing 11 runs for an earned run average of 4.19. He has struck out 19 while walking 12. These statistics were computed before the weekend. Davis added another victory to his record by pitching the Norman team to a 4 to 3 triumph over Kansas Saturday. He has now won four and lost none. Other Sooner pitchers who have accounted for victories this year are Dan Burrell, Hal Cumberland, and Jack Venable. Venable was the winning hurler in Friday's game with the Kansans. Previously this season he had lost three games against no victories. The two week-end triumphs over the Javahawks brought Oklahoma above the 500 mark in conference play with a 3 won and 2 lost record. Coach Vie Bradford's Kansas crew dropped below the .500 mark by virtue of the double defeat and now own a two won and 4 lost record. The Jayhawkers outhit the Sooners in both games at Norman but were unable to convert the blows into enough runs. Oklahoma is the defending baseball champion of the Big Six, but the conference race this season looks to be a toss-up. When coach LuD Fisher's Kansas State Wildcats clawed the Sooners with a 20 to 6 victory this year, it was believed to be the worst defeat an Oklahoma baseball team has ever suffered at Norman. Oklahoma has exhibited a superb fielding team this season. Up to the week-end's twin bill with the Jayhawkers, the Sooner nine had averaged only 14 errors. The Oklahoma players had committed only 19 errors as compared to 34 miscues by their opponents. Over the weekend, the Sooners kept close to their record by making a total to four errors in two games as opposed to six for the Jayhawkers. The hitting has been weak on the Norman team this year. Before the Kansas series, the Sooners had a batting average of only .248 compared with a combined average of .266 for the teams they had played. Oklahoma had scored only 57 runs in this same time while yielding 78. 水 草 湖 It is interesting to note that a prediction made in Friday's column was fulfilled Saturday. The Kansas City Star carried an Associated Press release from Lawrence which said that University of Kansas student Tayla Thomas was in favor of admitting Oklahoma A. and M. to the Big Six conference. Nowhere in the news item was there the slightest mention of the racial issue. Nowhere in the news item was there the slightest indication that the resolution voted upon had been other than a straight yes or no ballot on the general question of admission. We prohesied Friday that the question of racial equality which prompted the balloting on the issue originally and which was the point of the resolution itself would be entirely disregarded when results of the voting were circulated elsewhere. To the framers of the resolution, to the students who voted on it, and to sources outside the University there will continue to be three entirely different interpretations of what happened at the polls Thursday. This corner sincerely doubts that the University administration will be influenced in its final decision by such confusion results. Kansas Places Six Times In Annual Drake Relays Jayhawker trackmen placed in six events at the 38th annual Drake Relays in Des Moines Friday and Saturday. The Kansas thinclads, under coach Rane Kahne, competed against 2,000 collegiate athletes in a meet which saw new records established in two hurdle events. Outstanding individual competitor for the Jayhawks was high jumper Tom Scoffield. He leaped 6 feet, 58 inches to tie for first in the event with R. J. Lennerton of Washington University of St. Louis. Karl Ebel, Kansas javelin ace, hurled the shaft 192 feet 9 inches to take second behind Herb Grote of Nebraska whose winning distance was 196 feet, 8 inches. Kansas Second In Javelin The Jayhawk distance medley relay team of John Jackson, Harold Hinchee, Hal Moore, and Bob Karnes placed fourth in the race at Des Moines. Indiana won the event, out-distancing Texas to give the Long-horn quartet its first defeat of the year. Bob Crowley gave Kansas a fifth by placing in the broad jump. He leaped 23 feet, $ \frac{1}{2} $ inch, three inches behind George Kailas of Wisconsin. Willie Steele of San Diego State won the event on a jump of 24 feet, $ 6\frac{1}{2} $ inches. K.U. Fifth In Mile Relay The Kansas mile relay team of William Binter, Jackson, Robert Hill, and Richard Shea placed fifth against a strong field in the Drake games. Ohio State won the event in 3 minutes, 14.3 seconds. The Jayhawker two-mile relay team of Hinchee, Moore, Karnes, Johnson, Johnson gained a fifth spot behind Indiana, Indiana, and Missouri in a close tag. Three other members of the Kansas squad qualified in preliminaries Friday but failed to place in the final. Frank Stannard qualified in the 120-yard high hurdles. In the final, he was clocked unofficially in the time of 14.5 seconds, but competition was unusually strong with victor Harrison Dillard of BaldwinWallace hitting the tape in 14.1 seconds. This mark set a new record for the Drake games, erasing the standard set up by Fred Wolcott of Rice Institute in 1938. Bruce Henioch and Clifford King qualified in Friday's javelin preliminaries. Both tossed the spear under 180 feet, however, and the fifth place the finals, James Cox of Arkansas, hurled it 183 feet, $4\frac{1}{2}$ inches. The second record which fell Saturday, was in the 440-yard shuttle high hurdle race. Ohio State hurlers sped over the wooden barriers in 59.4 seconds to crack the standard set up by Oklahoma A. and M. in 1941. Other Vets May Join Naval Reserve Ranks The Naval Reserve has been opened to all Navy Coast Guard and Marine Corps veterans of World War II who served honorably for six or more months according to a Navy department bulletin just released. Other persons eligible for acceptance are veterans of any other U.S. military service between the ages of 17 and 39 inclusive and non-veravers of the age group 17 to 39 inclusive since expiration of the Selective Service Act on March 31. The Naval Reserve offers courses to its members in most of the trades and skills. Periodic two-week training cruises of concentrated instruction are offered for those members who qualify. Training is available for members of the Naval Air Reserve and those who desire submarine duty. Ex-navy men of World War II who join the Reserve are enrolled in the rate they held upon discharge and for all members of the Reserve there is an increase of five per cent in base pay for each three year period of service. The status of any veteran under the G.I. Bill of Rights is not changed upon enrolling in the Naval Reserve Corbin, Kappa Win I-M Softbail Games Corbin hall stopped Chi Omega 17 to 7 in one of the easiest victories played on the softball diamond this season. Sleepy Hollow lost to Kappa Kappa Gamma in a close 4-3 game Wednesday. Jolliffe hall forfeited their game to Pibeta Phi. Outstanding players for the games were: Jones, Collidge, and Gabrielson for Chi Omega; McGee, Lamon, Myke, Yleko, and Larsen for Cortlandt; Holl, Kyle, and Stuckey, Stuckey, Kappa Kappa Gamma; and Rothenberger, Sleepy Hollow. Maxine Gunsolly, College junior was elected president of the Women's Athletic association at their meeting Thursday night. Gunsolly Elected W.A.A. President Other officers are vice-president, Frances Chubb; secretary, Donna Mueler; treasureur, Joan Anderson; business manager, Julia Fox, point system manager, Joanne Cooper; volebility manager, Josephine Stuckey; basketball manager, Marjorie Koff; baseball manager, Marie Horseman; hockey manager, Gerry McGee; swimming manager, Harriet Connor; minor sports manager, Pearl Leigh. COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals - Short Orders Sandwiches Open 5:30-12:30 "IT'S WHAT I'VE BEEN WAITING FOR" NOW you can get SERVICE for YOUR FORD MORE EXPERT FORD MECHANICS TO SERVE YOU Several more expert mechanics have been added to our staff to insure quicker and more efficient service for our customers. WE ALWAYS USE GENUINE Ford PARTS MADE RIGHT FIT RIGHT ALWAYS BRING YOUR FORD "BACK HOME" FOR SERVICE GENUINE Ford PARTS LAST LONGER We know your Ford best :: and are anxious to help keep it giving you the best possible service until that FORD IN YOUR FUTURE can be delivered, by us! Morgan-Mack Motor Company 609 Mass. Phone 277 Calves Are Victims Of Dairy Economy Mercedes. Tex.—(UP)—Economics has hit the calves of the Lower Rio Grande Valley. No longer does a calf get its milk the natural way. Valley calves now dine on milk from the can—while mamma's milk goes into bottles for humans. SANDWICHES AND CHILI As You Like Them- "Canned milk is cheaper," dairyman Pete Melton explained. "The whole milk a calf uses in a day can be sold for 50 cents. It only costs 25 cents to feed him canned milk. 'He's a victim of arithmatic.' "He's a victim of arithmetic." Where "SNAPPY" LUNCH 1010 Mass. of course 7 a.m.-2 a.m. WEEK DAYS 12 n.-12 m SUNDAY For Right Now--And This Summer POLO SHIRTS Fancy patterns, Stripes, Solid Colors— Small, Medium, and Large Priced $1.35 to $2.50 Brown, Blue, and Canary $2.25 "String" Polo Shirts— CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES "He's Service ...I'm Supply" BELL SYSTEM "Teamed-up for you since '82" "We're symbols of a unique industrial team that has been working for you for 65 years. With our research teammate—Bell Telephone Laboratories we've helped to give you the world's best telephone service at the lowest possible cost. "My part of the job is to supply high quality products that meet exacting standards. "Right now, I'm providing more telephone equipment and supplies than ever before. Using all my knowledge and skill, gained through years of experience, I'm going at top speed to catch up with the greatest demand on record. "I manufacture telephone equipment . . . purchase all manner of supplies for Bell Telephone Companies . . . distribute equipment and supplies to them from stocks maintained at my factories and my 29 warehouses . . . install central office equipment. "Remember my name . . . it's Western Electric." Western Electric A UNIT OF THE BELL BELL SYSTEM SYSTEM SINCE 1882 28,194 APRIL 28,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE m- Kansas Drops Two Games To Oklahoma Nine, 8-4, 4-3 The University baseball team lost two games to Oklahoma Friday and Saturday 8-4 and 4-3. The second game went 10 innings. The Jayhawkers opened with their batting power in the first inning of the Friday game to push across three runs. They scored again in the second to lead the Sooners 4-0. It was then that the Oklahoma club came to life with a steady hitting streak. They scored three runs in the third, two in the fourth and two in the fifth. Pitches Steady Ball Jack Venable pitched steady ball for the Sooners and, after the first two innings, kept the Jayhawker hits well scattered. It was his first victory of the season. Coach Vic Bradford used three Kansas pitchers, Guy Mabry, Dick Gilman, and Lefty Hammer. Mabry received credit for the loss. In Saturday's game a tight pitchers duel between Oklahoma's Elton Davis and Ray Ocamb developed. Davis, the cream of the Sooner pitching crop, won out when his team mates at Benton Hills break to the 3-3 tie. It was his fourth victory against no defeats this season. Ocamb Allows 7 Hits Ocamb held the Sooners to seven hits but gave up seven walks, including two in the 10th inning. The Jayhawks tagged Davis for eight. Scores by innings: Friday's game: R. H. E. Kansas 310 000 000 4 10 4 Oklahoma 003 220 10x 8 8 2 Batteries-Gilman, Mabry, Hammer and Diehl; Venable and Chyz. R. H. E. Kansas 020 000 010 0 3 8 2 Oklahoma 001 020 000 1 4 7 2 Batteries-Ocamb and Fink; Davis and Rapaca. Golfers Blank Washburn18-0 The Jayhawker golf team swept a match with Washburn university in Kansas City Saturday by 18 to 0. In a previous match at Topeka over a rain-soaked course, the two teams had finished in a 9 to 9 deadlock. Low scorer for Kansas was Bob Meeker, who shot a 37-38-75. Following him on the Jayhawker squad were Harold Delongy with 34-42-76. Jack Hines with 39-38-77 and Bill Jones with 34-71-78. Coach Bob Coyan will take the same four men who participated in Saturday's match to Manhattan today to play the Kansas State Wildcats on their home course. The lowest score by a Washburn player was Wayne Warner's 38-41. 79. Scoring in the individual and team matches was on the basis of one point for the winner of each nine holes and one point for the entire 18 holes. Summary of the matches: Jones (Kansas) won three points from Wilew (Washburn). Meeker (Kansas) won three points from Warner (Washburn). Hines (Kansas) won three points from Kline (Washburn). DeLongy (Kansas) won three points from Golden (Washburn). Jones and Meeker (Kansas) won the points from Wiley and Warner (Washington). --- Hines and DeLongy (Kansas) won three points from Kline and Golden (Washburn). Rainy Weather Postpones Three I. M. softball games have been rescheduled for this week because of rainy weather. They are Pi Beta Phi and Delta Gamma, and Kappa Alpha Theta and Independent, this afternoon, Alpha Omicron Pi and Chi Omega. Thursday. Woolley At Ohio Meeting L. E. Woolley, manager of the University book store, left Saturday for Cleveland where he will attend the annual meeting of the National Association of College stores. He will return Thursday. Baseball Results Sunday's Results: American Association Milwaukee 8, Kansas City 4 Milwaukee 7, Kansas City 1 Louisville 6, Indianapolis 4 Louisville 4, Indianapolis 3 St. Paul 16, Minneapolis 6 Columbus 9 Toledo 3 Columbus 3, Toledo 3: secon Columbus 3, Toledo 3: second game called darkness National League Philadelphia 5, Boston 4 Philadelphia 5, Boston 4 Cincinnati 2, Pittsburgh 1 Cincinnati 2, Pittsburgh 1 Brooklyn 9, New York 8 Chicago 3, St. Louis 0 American League Philadelphia 6, Boston 6 Called in tent, rain. Washington 1, New York 0 St. Louis 4, Chicago 2 St. Louis 4, Chicago 3 Standings of the Teams American Association | | W. | L. | Pct. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Louisville | 6 | 3 | .666 | | Kansas City | 5 | 3 | .625 | | Columbus | 1 | 4 | .555 | | St. Paul | 5 | 5 | .500 | | Milwaukee | 4 | 5 | .444 | | Minneapolis | 2 | 3 | .400 | | Indianapolis | 3 | 5 | .375 | | Toledo | 2 | 4 | .333 | American League W. L. Pct. New York 7 4 .636 Cleveland 5 3 .625 Chicago 5 4 .556 Boston 5 5 .500 Washington 4 4 .500 Detroit 4 5 .444 St. Louis 4 6 .400 Philadelphia 3 6 .333 National League Baltimore | | W. | L. | Pct. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Brooklyn | 7 | 2.78 | | | Chicago | 7 | 4 | .636 | | Pittsburgh | 6 | 5 | .545 | | Cincinnati | 6 | 6 | .538 | | Philadelphia | 6 | 6 | .500 | | Boston | 2 | 7 | .222 | | St. Louis | 2 | 7 | .222 | Today's Probable Pitchers American League Detroit (Troust 0-1) at Cleveland (Wolff 0-0) Only game scheduled. National League: No game scheduled. Three teams remain undefeated in intramural rife competition as the season draws to a close. Battenfield has the best record posting 5 wins without a defeat. Alpha Tau Omega and Tau Kappa Epsilon have 3 victories and no losses. The standings by divisions are: Three Teams Remain On Top In Riflery Invision I: W. L. Battenfeld 5 0 Pi K. A. 4 1 Triangle 4 2 Westminster 2 3 941 Club 1 4 Y M C A 1 5 I S A 0 4 Smith Hall 0 4 Spooner Thayer 0 4 0 4 Division II: W, Delta Upsilon ... 6 Sigma Nu ... 5 Beta ... 5 Delta Chi ... 4 Phi Delt ... 4 Phi Psi ... 2 Kappa Sig ... 2 Phi Kappa ... 1 Sig Ep ... 1 Sigma Chi ... 1 Division III: W. A T O 3 T K E 3 Hot Shots 2 Oread Hall 1 Lambda Chi 1 Delta Tau 1 S A E 1 Phi Chi 0 Phi Gam 0 Cowley, Rau Win Doubles In Ping-Pong Tournament David Cowley, business junior, and James Rau, College freshman, won the men's doubles in the table tennis tournament by defeating Lee Myers and Ernest Warnken Tuesday. The two winners were presented engraved medals by Thomas Hanna, chairman of the tournament. Cov 'y also won the men's singles table tennis tournament earlier in the spring. The Jayhawkter tennis squad defeated Washburn university, 5 to 3 in a match on the Memorial stadium courts Saturday. The Topeka team offered stiff competition than in previous match on their home courts which Kansas swept, 7 to 0 Tennis Team Downs W.U. Coach Gordon Sabine will take five men to Manhattan today for a non-conference match with the Kansas State Wildcats. Players making the trip are Dick Richards, Erwin Busiek. Harold Miller, Bob Barnes, and Frank Gage. Bob Barnes (Kansas) defeated Steve Sellers (Washburn), 6-0, 6-4. Hervey Macferran (Kansas) defeated Smith (Smith) (Washburn), 3-6, 8-6 Charles McDarmott (Washburn) defeated Charles Carlson (Kansas), 6-4, 6-3. Dick Richards (Kansas) defeated Bob Tagertig (Washburn) b- 1, 2, 8-6 Karl Losey (Washburn) defeated Harold Miller (Milens) b- 3, 8-4, 8-3. Lynn Greeley (Kansas) defeated William McComas (Washburn), 6-4, 6-2. Richards and Miller (Kansas) defeated Losey and McDermott (Washburn). 6-4. 6-2. Taggert and Smith (Washburn) defeated Erwin Busiek and Barnes (Kansas), 4-6, 6-2, 6-4. More than 5000 persons from nearly every state in the Union are enrolled in University correspondence courses, Miss Ruth Kenney, director of the correspondence study bureau of the extension division, said recently. 5000 Are Taking K.U. Mail Courses Cage Practice Starts Today The study bureau last week sent newsletters describing University summer courses and correspondence study to 6450 Kansas elementary school teachers. Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen will open two weeks of spring basketball practice today with a squad of 36 men expected to report. Eight of these are lettermen. Dr. Allen will be stepping on the court for the first time since January 9, when his physician ordered him to take a rest. He will be getting his first look at such newcomers as Claude Houchin, the 6 foot, 4 inch guard from Muncie; Bill Feagans of Kansas City's Westport High school; and Bob O'Brien, the former star performer for the Kansas City M. and O. Smokies in A.A.U. competition. This list includes: T. A. Scott, Don Auten, Mel Brown, Wendell Clark, Dan Clinger, Bob Drumm, Bill Dulaney, Harold England, Jack Eskridge, Gilbert Evans, Bill Feagans, Lynn Greeley, Bob O'Brien, Claude Houchin, Scott Kelly, Al Lukken, Ken Morrow, Bob Payne, Paul Penner, Bill Sapp, Otto Schnellbacher, Vernal Scherman, Gib Stramel, Bob VanCitters, Jack Wineter, Dick Ashley, Bob Carey, Grant Clothier, Mayron Enns, Muriel Ewarts, Ray Frisby, Dar Grimes, Henry LaRue, Marshall Martin, Larry McDonnell, and Ralph Moon. The Jayhawker cage master said that spring drills would include no new men except O'Brien, drills being limited to holdover varsity squadmen and players from last season's "B" squad. Six other cagers, including letterman Charles Penny, are participating in spring sports. Phone KU-25 with your news. De LUXE CAFE 28 YEARS OF SERVICE Same Location-Same Management You are welcome 711 Mass. --- WE SPECIALIZE IN VE SPECIFICIZE IN JUICY STEAKS AND OTHER FINE FOODS. Thick Malts Sandwiches Short Orders BILLS GRILL DESOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH QUICK COURTEOUS SERVICE Across From 1109 Mass. Court House Phone 2054 Buddy GALLAGHER MOTORS Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL Lindley's Kansas Cleaners 12 E. 8th Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices MEN'S SUITS Cleaned and Pressed ... 65c LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES— Cleaned and Pressed 69c Cash and Carry Only FOR QUALITY WATCH REPAIRS - Fully Guaranteed work - One Week Service - All Watches Time Checked on the Western Electric Watchmaster SAMPLE'S WATCH SHOP Lawrence's Most Modern Watch Repair Shop 710 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Phone 368 JAYHAWKER SEE A SHOW TONITE Shows 2:30 - 7:00 - 9:00 Now, Ends Tuesday ANN SHERIDAN AS "NORA PRENTISS" Wed., One Week LOOK WHO'S SOLVING MURDERS BOP HOPE DOROTHY LAMOUR My Favorite BRUNETTE GRANADA Now, Thru Wed. ACTION... ROMANCE... and DRAMATIC VIOLENCE! Gunfire rules his life! Beautiful Women Rue His Heart! ROMANCE! ADVENTURE! JOHN WAYNE * GAIL RUSSELL * REPUBLIC PICTURE Angel AND THE BADMAN ROMANCE ADVENTURE Now, Ends Tues. REPUBLIC ACTION Angel AND THE BADMAN PATEE JACK CARSON IN HIS FIRST BROADWAY PICTURE! JANE WYMAN IRENE MANNING MAKE YOUR BED' VARSITY Today, Ends Tuesday ROY ROGERS DALE EVANS ALL TRUCKOLOR "APACHE ROSE" AND A 60 MINUTE "Komedy Karnival". INCLUDES LEON ERROLL EDGAR KENNEDY And Disney Cartoon 1 - UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SIX APRIL 28,1947 Kansan Comments Put The Blame On Mame, Boys When Secretary of State Marshall saw that the Moscow conference was about to break up he made the blunt statement that Russia was entirely responsible for its failure. His statement is reminiscent of the recent novelty song with Molotev occupying the place of Mame. Secretary Marshall contributed little in that charge to an understanding of failure of the seven-week conference. No single nation scuttled the Moscow meeting. What really happened was that each of the Big Four ministers went to the meeting with blueprint demands on which they would not compromise and which were unacceptable to at least one of the other members. But are all of Russia's motives sinister? There may be other very understandable reasons why she has refused to budge on the reparations question. One of the biggest stumbling blocks of the meeting was the question of reparations. Russia wants 10 billion dollars in reparations and she wants payments to begin now out of current German production. We further object to placing disorganized Germany under a heavy economic servitude to Russia. Such a condition provides the groundwork for eventual Russian domination of Germany. Our government objects to heavy reparations out of current German production. The state department maintains that economic aid we send Germany will be swallowed up by this burden of reparations. Russia has a tremendous job of rehabilitation to carry out. The task ahead of her would be a strain on any economic system. A recent dispatch from a British correspondent who visited the ruined area of Leningrad has this to say. "Russia needs reparations now. Not only Leningrad's suburbs are ruined but towns and villages over a staggering area, too. The need in a short-term, urgent one-15 years hence is no good." Recent reports of large scale starvation inside Russia bears out the belief that her economic system is under a heavy strain. It hardly seems logical that Russia would allow labor power to starve to death if it could be prevented. We must recognize that Russia's reasons for refusing to compromise may be just as logical and reasonable to her as ours are to us. To dismiss her actions as being purely arbitrary and obstructionist and designed only to scuttle the peace will give us no better understanding of the problems on which we differ and will only postpone their solution. Believing an intelligent electorate should know how its representatives vote on important issues, the Daily Kansan is inaugurating a new editorial feature. How They Voted... We will endeavor in the future to publish on this page the votes cast in congress by representatives and senators from Kansas on particularly important legislation. On Friday of the past week, the House of Representatives passed a stringent labor bill (The Labor- Management Bill of 1947). The entire Kansas delegation, Representatives Cole, Hope, Meyer, Rees, Scriv- ner, and Smith, voted in favor of this bill. The bill passed by an almost three-to-one vote. Senate labor legislation is now being debated. Dear Editor---- It was with interest that I noted the letter published April 21. I wish the contents would have been more truly critical of the A. V. C. The A.V.C. Answers Mr. Joyce concludes that the A. V. C. has not been appreciative of the many benefits which the government allows to the veteran and has adopted a strictly "gimme" attitude. Nowhere does Mr Joyce cite any facts to substantiate his conclusion. We invite Mr. Joyce to examine the active program of the A. V. C both nationally and on this campus. Our motto "Citizens First, Veterans Second" is no meaningless plattitude to those of us who actively work in the organization. We have been the only veteran's organization which has recognized the economic stupidity of the bonus plan and similar "gimme" programs. We feel that wars are unnecessary and we are concerned with presenting ideas and means which may prevent another conflagration. We intend to work for the kind of country and the kind of world we were told we were fighting for. We do not claim perfection, but we ask those who are sympathetic with our ideals to actively work with us. Criticism from the outside is helpful but it reminds me of those who always damn politics but never vote. We would like to have Mr. Joyce and all other veterans come to our meetings and really get acquainted with the A. V. C. Our organization does not purposely intend to antagonize any group or interest on the campus. But we do not intend to alter democratic ideals to curry favor with any quarter. If there was ever a need for dispassionate thinking the time for it is now. We invite all veterans and all others interested to examine our past and present program and join us in our efforts to foster a program of high ideals. Marko L. Haggard Chairman K. U.A.V.C. (Editor's Note: A letter from H Bruce Wilder, College freshman, expressing similar views has also been received by the Daily Kansan.) The University Daily Kansan Member of the Kansas Press Assn. National Advertising and the Associated College Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, Madison Ave. New York. Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Managing Editor ... Marcella Stewart Assst. Man. Editor ... Martha Jewett Assst. Writer ... Will McCormick Telegraph Editor ... Marion Minor Art Editor ... Elise West Business Manager. John D. McCormick Administrator ... Thomas Cadden Circulation Manager. Thomas S. Cadden Classified Adv. Mgr ... Jon Schindling Promotion Manager ... William K. Brooks Promotion Manager. William K. Brooks Professor Eastwood Speaks To Art Club "You can't paint landscapes from an automobile," Prof. Raymond Eastwood told Art club members recently. The Kansas Press Association 1947 Member He maintained that people who paint landscapes ought to like their scenery. He said it is necessary to examine actual scenes and not paint them from memory. Knowledge of botany, geology, and related subjects is desirable in order to interpret correctly, he said. FOR PARTY RENTALS Election of officers is scheduled for the next meeting in Frank Strong hall Tuesday. Used Juke Box Records For Sale National Editorial Association A FREE PRESS--YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW WURLITZER PHONOGRAPHS John H. Emick 1014 Mass. Phone 343 THE NEXT BEST THING TO A NEW CAR IS A J AND YOUR OLD ENGINE . . . SIXES PRICED CORRESPONDINGLY LOW . . . INSTALLATION EXTRA. Ford PRECISION REBUILT FORD ENGINE MORGAN-MACK MOTOR COMPANY Your Friendly Ford Dealer Mass. Phone 277 Misses' Shop FURTHER REDUCTIONS——TO MOVE EVERYTHING OUT IN A HURRY. DRASTIC SALE! SPRING COATS and SUITS Regularly $49.95 Regularly $45.00 Regularly $39.95 Regularly $35.00 $2500 COATS in Suede coverts and fleeces SUITS in crepes, shetland, gabardines. All fabrics 100% WOOL. Size 9 to 15 and 10 to 18. DRESSES Were up To $19.95 ..$8. Were up To $25.00 .. $10 Were up To $29.95 ..$12 M. K. ROBERTS PRINTED CREPES, PLAIN CREPES, AND GABARDINE CLASSICS. SIZES 9 to 15 and 10 to 18 The Palace 843 Mass. E say sho clos or No D SLT for AVL & LAI class girls 222 947 APRIL 28.1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Classics, Essays, Exams Why Western Civ Anyhow? To give students a cross section of the social sciences, is the purpose of the Western Civilization course, Prof. Walter E. Sandelius, acting director, said today. "There is a danger of regimentation in our present system of education," Professor Sandelius explained. "After all, what we want in college is a more adult point of view. Lists Reasons The University felt that requirements were not giving students a well-rounded picture of the social sciences. A committee studied the problem, and the course in Western Civilization is the result" Other reasons given by Professor Sandelius are: 1. To understand the basic meaning of western culture, and how it is characteristic of the American way of life. 3. To observe the western world's struggle against ignorance, greed and intolerance, and to learn to protect what has already been achieved. 2. To study the beginning of doctrines with emphasis on democratic and Christian ideals. 4. To strengthen habits of independence and self-reliance in the student. Western Culture Model Only the western world is being studied because a single world civilization does not exist, he explained. "There is, in the western tradition, an idea which embraces the good of mankind. That is what those who seek a world civilization have in mind, and this study is one way of approaching that." The course is in its second year and 800 students are enrolled. It is a graduation requirement in the College, the School of Education, and in some departments of the Engineering school. Examinations are a combination essay and objective type. Records show that the grades correspond closely to those in courses with regular class meetings. Not Enough Time, Students Say What do students think of the course? Many feel that it is a good course, but they simply can't give the time to get out of it what they should. Students say that they are prone to fall behind in their reading while spending time on courses requiring class work. Miss Louise Cochran, Western Civilization proctor, summed up the course this way, "Our purpose is not to give the student a set of facts, but to equip him with the tools to think so that he can determine for himself what are facts." Designs From K.U. In Nelson Gallery A display of the work of more than 40 University students majoring in design will be exhibited in the William Rockhill Nelson gallery in Kansas City, Mo., during May. The exhibit will consist of book binding, pottery, jewelry, rings, pins, and silverware. "A cross-section of the work being done in the design department will be shown." Miss Marjorie Whitney, department director, said today. "This will include work from every student classification and every class in the department." Eight of 24 linoleum and drapery lesions sold to commercial companies, will be included in the exhibit. Six prize designs for flat silverware purchased by a silver company, and silver coffee pot designs to be submitted by request to that company will be in the display. Daily Kansan Classified Ads One Three Five day days days 25 words or less 35c 65c 90c additional words 1c 2c 3c Classified Advertising Rates Copy must be in the University Daily Kansan Business Office, Journalism bldg., 150 W. 23rd St. p.m. of the day before publication is desired. All classfields are cash in advance. For Sale FOR SALE: 1933 Chevrolet couple. Moto, just overhaulied. 16-inch wheels, new tires. See at 1646 Tenn., or phone K.U. 160. 29 BANTAM model airplane engine with accessories. Not even broken in. Also, Charvos eight-piece drawing set. Tom Koelzer, 1300 Tenn. 29 NEW 6 x 30 German Binocular. Price $75.00. Ralph L. Miller, 212 Lane "O." Sunflower, Kans., or contact me in Pharmacy office. 30 RADIOS—used. Kent Midget, $9.75–Zenith 3 way portables, $21.50. Radios, new. Olympic 5 tube plastics with lucite dial. $29.55-Olympic combination radio, phonographs and tube performance, 9 in. speaker, $135.50, less $25.00 for any train combinations, $75.00 If desired, 212 Line 'OO' (Old Village) Sunflower. 16mm. MOVIE CAMERA. B. and H. Anti- stigmatic f.3.5 lens, converted Army gun and battery. Advertised price over $100. Asking $40. Phone K U. 185. 3" * ALMOST new Kodak 35 mm. F. 3.5 lens, coupled range finder, excellent cage, sunshade and lens adapter, $75. Moore, 1140 Louisiana. 29 MEN'S spring format, white coat and tuxedo. Coat size 36. 413 Miss. Phone: 852-720-1299. For Rent SLEEPING ROOMS, Newly Redecorated for men only, 916 Ky. M.2 LARGE room with private bath, continuous hot water. Close to University. Also graage for rent. 1801 Alabama. Phone 229R. AVAILABLE for barn dances. large buy light Chl Leo Baker, T29 N9 $1/2 ½ M2 Lost ART-SHAPED mother-of-pearl brace imimental value. Please leave at Kau an office or contact Barbara Stone, Borbin Hall. 30 I BETA PHI Fraternity pin, between JiM, Jayhaw Kafe and 15th and fenneesse. Please contact R. Mayer, spanish Dept. K. U. 153. reward. 20 name of co-worker on Camp name: Name co-worker on E. Quail name: Name co-worker on R. Ranken office or 1324 Mul- nage office BLACK and red lady's bilfold. Important papers and activity book inside, and the name BERKLY Alexander printed on inside cover, please return to DAILY Kansan office. FWO - TONE brown sport coat. Dark front, light brown herringbone weave back. Vicinity Marvhl von Tuesday. Earl Earl Windisch. 1037 Tenn. Raquet. R9 BOOKS entitled "Economics" and "Principles and Types of Speech." Finder please contact Kansan office. Generous reward. 30 ONE PAIR timeless glasses last Friday. You return to School of Pharmacy macy office. TYPISTS WANTED: 3 experienced typists for part-time work. No dictation necessary. Hours to suit your convenience. Russell L. Wiley, Room 9. Hoch Auditorium. **GREEN Sheer sheff's fountain paint with name** **carved in names displayed on it. Finder** **please phone 2120 x 8650** THE VITA CRAFT COFFEE offers a real future to men qualified for a sales position part time. A college man can earn $15,000 per year with the ability to quality for supervisor and executive work upon graduation. Summer work also available. The product is quality aluminum cookware. Write Vitamina Company, 4125 Penn, Kansas City Mo. VETERANS: We will buy, trade or sell for you any Army or Navy gear in good condition that you may wish to dispose of. Lawrence Surplus, 911 Mass. tf Wanted Business Services LADIES tailoring and alteration. Ora Floyd, 923 Ain. Phone 767. 30 FORMAT Phone No. 710 SILK RACKETS and repaired Silk, nylon, or gur. Priced accordingly. $1.50 to $10. Phone 2711-W. Ed. Wellhausen, en. 1145 Ky. M-5 Activities Group Places Suggestion Box In Union Found FOUNTAIN PEN at Ballet Counting. Probably left by Independent S.P.G.L. girl election worker. Call at Kansan. Identify and pay for this aid. 28 A suggestion box has been placed on the hostess' desk in the Union lounge under the sponsorship of Union Activities. Ann Learned, publicity chairman, said all suggestions for improvement in present and new activities will be carefully considered by the Union Executive board. Phone KU-25 with your news. The Egg and I Just for you, the kind of person who wants to be happy with everything. By Revive Moe Dornal The Egg and I a BEST-SELLER becomes a BEST PICTURE! a BEST-SELLER becomes a BEST PICTURE! UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL presents CLAUDETTE FRED COLBERT MacMURRAY "The EGG and I" "Ma Kettle" "Harriet" "Pa Kettle" "The Peddler" "Tom Kettle" "Geoduck and Crowbar" "Stove" Each Wonderful Character-Each Cherished Scene! "Ma Kettle" "Harriet" "Pa Kettle" "The Peddler" "Tom Kettle" "Geoduck and Crowbar" "Stove" with MARJORIE MAIN·LOUISE ALLBRITTON PERCY KILBRIDE • BILLY HOUSE • RICHARD LONG From the Best Selling Book by Betty MacDonald Universal International Produced and Written for the Screen by CHESTER ERSKINE and FRED F. FINKLEHOFFE Directed by CHESTER ERSKINE • A UNIVERSAL-INTERNATIONAL PICTURE See It At Your Favorite Motion Picture Theatre UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 28.1947 PAGE EIGHT 115 Architects Honor Founder The 35th anniversary banquet of the department of architecture was attended by 175 alumni, students, and faculty members last Thursday night in the Kansas room of the Union building. The highlight of the program was an address by the founder of the University department, Goldwin Goldwin. Professor Goldwin, a tall, dignified man with gray hair and a trim goatie, was the guest of honor. He is now head of the country's largest architectural department at the University of Texas. Student Awards Presented Joseph McCroskrie, engineering junior, won the Scarab award in design for his drawing of a modern office building. His design was selected by advanced architectural students from among all the work done in sophomore design for the past year. Numerous student awards were presented by Joseph Kellogg, professor of architecture, after Professor Goldsmith's speech. The Alpha Rho Chi senior award for outstanding ability, service, and promise of future success went to Warren R. Jones, engineering senior. The Thayer medal and cash award for excellence in design was won by Paul R. McConnell, engineering senior. This prize is given annually to upper-classmen from a fund provided by Mrs. W. B. Thayer, doner of Thayer art collection. Samuel McCamant, engineering sophomore, won the Gertrude Goldsmith prize for excellence in freshman-sophomore subjects. The Lorenz Smith award, a 25 dollar bond, went to Donald M. Robertson, engineering freshman. Seniors Are Honored Seven seniors graduating in June received recognition at the dinner. They were: Carolyn Jeanne Bodman, John Donblaser, Lloyd Heiberg, John Horner, Warren R. Jones, Merle Masterson, and Paul McConnell. Three students who graduated in January also received mention. These were Garland Cantrell, Albert Comer, and William H. Wilson. Sociologists Wanted Speaker Tells Club There are also many jobs open to sociology majors in research work. Miss Louise Cochran, Western Civilization proctor, told the Sociology club Thursday that there is a great demand for high school social study teachers, but that anyone thinking of teaching in this field should have a definite interest in high school students. George Dixon, '41, who is doing social case work, spoke on the problems of a case worker. The club adopted a constitution and elected officers for next semester. Officers elected were: Maynard Hesselbath, vice-president; Mary Loe Stanley, junior, vice-president; Margaree Vogel, sophomore, secretary; and Charles Coughenour, sophomore, treasurer. The object of the club as outlined by the new constitution is to give members an opportunity to learnational possibilities open in sci-ology. Membership is open to any student enrolled in one or more courses in Dean Stockton To Inspect St. Louis School Today Dean Frank T. Stockton of the School of Business, will be in St. Louis today and tomorrow inspecting the school of commerce of St. Louis university. We will investigate the St. Louis university commerce school. The university has applied for membership in the American Association of College Schools of Business. 'The Face Is Familiar . . . E He was educated by his mother and a minister at Thayer until he entered high school. After high school, he attended the University and graduated with a major in Philosophy and a Phi Beta Kappa key. He was chairman of the department of journalism from 1916 to 1942 and has served as Professor Emeritus in that department. He is often called the dean of American Journalism teachers. L. E. Wolley, manager of the student book store, recently received a card from a man in Sedalia, Mo. bemoaning the lack of better and higher education in his state. The west of Missouri, he said, fare better. Wants Education Higher But Freer He said he had once had a good education and would like to review his college work. He requested obsolete, torn, dirty/ or misprinted texts and notebooks free of charge. It mattered not that the pages were torn out or the backs missing. Cards, paper, pens, pencils, office supplies, and a wood or metal filing cabinet or two would also be useful he said. The parting statement of this potential scholarship was that if Mr. Woolley had no postal fund, the material could be sent C.O.D. Express was extensive. Exploit instructions on wrapping and tying were enclosed. 'Excuses Cover Scramble For Oil' Stopping Communism and saving the Greek people are only excuses to cover the role of the United States in the world scramble for oil, Dr. Herman B. Chubb, professor of political science told the University club Friday. Dr. Chubb said that he had been expressing these views before Henry Wallace made similar statements in Europe. "I consider that Wallace showed bad judgement in using Europe as a sounding board." Dr. Chubb said. "However many of the things he said about the so-called Truman doctrine are true. "We ae worried about our own oil reserves, which were depleted by the war. We are not trying to stop Russia because she is Communicistic, but because she is powerful. She is in a position to threaten our private oil interests in Iran and Saudi Arabia," he said. Worried About Oil Reserves If we do not control our oil interests, it will lead to war, he said and emphasized that it would be a quick one. Not even the geologists know how much oil is in this region, but oil is now the most important commodity in the world. Ark For Government Pine Line "Our oil companies are opposed to any kind of government control, and yet they asked the government to allow the pipe line in the Near East," he said. Dr. Chubb said that the United States made a mistake in by-passing the United Nations in giving aid to Greece and Turkey. "We set up the machinery and then bypassed it. It was a tremendous loss to us, but the death toll is low to U.N.: The majority in U.N. would have backed us." Ask For Government Pipe Line V.F.W. Invites Student Vets To Attend Meeting Tonight The Lawrence Veterans of Foreign Wars post invites all student veterans and their families to attend a social at 8 tonight at the VFW hall, 13th and Connecticut streets. Entertainment will include a movie and several acts from "Doc' Brown's stage show. Why Waste Your Time? Get A Job This Summer Another summer project is the student-in-industry program to be held in various cities. Students may secure jobs and work for pay, live cooperatively and meet with community leaders. The students will learn industrial problems first-hand by working on the production line. To Have Work Camps Have you made plans for the summer? Will it be a worthwhile summer or just a waste of three months. Want to take a trip abroad this summer? Plans have been made for reconstruction teams of American young people to join with youth of many other nations in the tremendous task of clearing away the rubble and rebuilding destroyed villages. Work camps are being held in almost every state. Student campers If you haven't anything scheduled for summer and are looking for a job that will offer experience and education, see Mrs. Christine Allford, Y.W.C.A. secretary at Henley House. Mrs. Alford has a list of projects seminars, jobs, and conferences in which she student can invest his time this summer Forty In C. S. S. One of these is the College Summer service group, made up of 40 students which will meet in New York City. This group will work in settlements and study conditions through forums, tours and interviews with outstanding citizens of the metropolitan city. Political science majors should be interested in the Washington Student Citizenship seminar. Students may hold a full-time paid job in a government agency and spend 8- to 12 hours a week in seminar meetings learning about how our national government works. Teams To Europe In cooperative programs, students learn about co-op organization, merchandising, membership promotion, education work, and other aspects of the job, including jobs in various kinds of cooperatives. Can Work On Farms live together cooperatively, worship together, work six or eight hours a day on a project with social significance, and learn about the problems of the surrounding community through lectures, discussions and field trips. In the community service program volunteers lead recreation, conduct community surveys, and help to meet important community problems. Students interested in agriculture can work on farms, cultivating and harvesting crops, and learn about such rural problems as tenancy, the uncertainty of farm income, and the poverty of rural educational and recreational opportunities. Volunteers can give assistance to overseas relief programs this summer by helping prepare food and clothing for shipment in relief centers. In addition to the above mentioned opportunities there are chances to work at hospitals and reformatories, as camp counselors, and in community centers. Mrs. Alford will answer any questions about any of the programs or projects and aid students in applying for a summer job. News of the World U.N. Begins Special Study Of Palestine Problem Flushing. N. Y. — (UP)—The United Nations convened the first emergency session of the general assem- bly test—the problem, of Palestine. Britain, which asked the U. N. to study the status of the Holy Land mandate, and the other big powers planned to ram through the assemblage opposition and fact-finding commission and thus拼命 final debate until September. But the Arabs and Jews hoped to push the assembly into full-dress debate. 46 Iniured In Wreck Ontario. Cal.—(UP)—Forty-six passengers and railroad personnel were hospitalized today by injuries suffered in derailment of 16 cars of a Southern Pacific's New Orleans-bound train three miles east of here last night. There were no fatalities. Aleman To Arrive Tomorrow Washington—(UP)—The nation's capital began decking its streets and shop windows with flags and gay bunting today for the arrival tomorrow of President Miguel Aleman of Mexico. Army Deserter Escapes San Francisco—(UP)—A mentally unbalanced armydeser who escaped a death sentence through President Truman's intervention was at large today after escaping from a government psychopathic ward and kidnapping a medical attendant. Sailors Rebel In Paraguay Asunción. — (UP)— The interior ministry announced today that Loyal Paraguayan army troops have put down an uprising by navy men in Asunción, which was blacked out when the rebels temporarily seized the city powe rplant. Jewett Heads Soil Meeting Dr. J. M. Jewett, of the State Geological survey, will head a field conference which will study soil origins in southwestern Kansas. Soil scientists from the U.S. Bureau of Plant Industries, the U.S. Bureau of Soils, Kansas State college, and the University of Nebraska will join Dr Jewett on the trip which will begin tonight. The conference, which was planned at the request of the soils specialists as an aid in their investigations of soil origins, will include most Kansas counties north and east of the Kansas river. The conference will end Saturday. Officers Installed For Lutheran Club Officers of the Lutheran Student association were installed Sunday night by the Rev. Marvin J. Fellnor in a service at Trinity Lutheran church. The new officers are A. Glenn Sowders, president; John Taylor, vice-president; Jeanne Cooper, secretary-treasurer. A regional conference will be held May 2-4 at Camp Brewster in Omaha. Twenty-seven persons plan to drive to the retreat which is called "Ashram" in recognition of similar activity by that name among Christian Indians in the 100-year-old Lutheran mission there. Bruce E. Wells, who was graduated from the University in February, was among those killed in the explosion of the Monsanto Chemical plant in Texas City. The Marshall, Nebr., man entered the University in 1943 and received his bachelor of science degree in chemical engineering at the end of the fall semester. Alumnus Killed At Texas City He had been employed by the company only two weeks before the explosion. Funeral services were held Tuesday in Marshall. Today's face is L. N. Flint, professor of journalism. Wallace Arrives In U.S. To Begin 'Peace Crusade' Washington—(UP)—Former Vice-President Henry A. Wallace today begins a coast-to-coast "peace crusade" to tell the American people why he thinks U. S. foreign policy can lead to war. His month-long swing will be an extension of the European speaking tour that caused an uproar in congress and caused some Democrats to demand that he be read out of the party. He arrived here late yesterday after a transatlantic flight to New York from Aris. Refuse To Call Truce Austin. (UP)—Twenty-six Austin businesses joined the Newburyport movement today, announcing 10 per cent rebate on each dollar's worth of purchased goods. Austin Merchants Cut Prices Jap Conservatives Win Jerusalem. —(UP)— The Jewish underground refused today to call a truce in its campaign of anti-British violence during the United Nations session and swore to keep fighting for a Jewish state. Tokyo—(UP)—Conservative parties won a landslide victory in the Japanese election as middle-to-right candidates swept into more than 370 of the 466 seats in the Japanese house of representatives. Some Rent Control Ended Washington. — (UP)—The O.P.A. today ordered rent controls ended in 39 areas in 22 states effective Thursday. The agency said the action resulted from "a gradual improvement" in the areas listed. O.P.A. stressed that its action does not forecast a general relaxation of rent controls. No Kansas or Missouri areas were included. Bernard Wardlow, fine arts freshman, designed a $10 prize winning shield for the emblem contest sponsored by the Student Union activities. William Vandiver, chairman of the contest announced Friday. Wardlow Wins Union Contest The emblem is a shield bearing the top of the east tower of the Union, with balances that carry a lamp symbolic of wisdom, an actor's mask symbolizing student activities, and inscriptions pertaining to policy and campus service of the Student Union, Vandiver said. The design will be used on all letterheads, for the K-Union paper, for the Union Doins, and in all other publications of Union activities and advertisements. Judges for the contest were: Miss Helen Skilton, Mrs. Margaret Shanklin, instructors in the department of design; Miss Hermina Zipple, director of the Union; Joan Woodward, Union president, and LuAnne Powell, chairman of the Union decorating committee. - The winning entry will be displayed in the main lounge of the Union, Vandiver said. Prof. G. W. Smith of the mathematics department discussed "Pythagorean Numbers" at the regular meeting of the Mathematics club Thursday afternoon. Professor Smith Speaks On Math An art display by Gerald Davis, instructor in drawing and printing in the department of architecture, will be on display all this week on the third floor of Marvin hall. Art Display In Marvin Lo De On In Univ. W. church the place "M" cross the church et surs. he He in the in the here there imm mmo woom woom Blk place torti! "I am got lquite the l got peop ready sirìr Has Se camp from the s for h out, the y 1 state Ame said, educ sexu for t "v that any thin eren Just T gra sur asse insl s r 947 --- University DAILY KANSAN Tuesday, April 29, 1947 44th Year No. 129 STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS . Lawrence. Kansas By Bibler London Vicar Denies Charges On 'Immorality' In a letter received today by the University Daily Kansan, Bryan S. W. Green, vicar of Holy Trinity church, London, vigorously objected to the interpretations that had been placed on his speech concerning immorality in American schools. "My whole attitude has been grossly misrepresented and so has he lecture which I gave to my church people in Holy Trinity on my return," the Reverend Mr. Green avs. POTTER LAKE Little Man On Campus He continues by pointing out that in the reports of the speech as published in the American newspapers, here were several misstatements of facts. The estimates of 90 percent immorality among college men and 70 percent immorality among college women are not his own, he states. Thought Figures 'High' "What I said was that an American sociologist had given these figures, which were passed on to me by one of the professors I had met. I thought they were too high," he continues. Going on to a defense of his accusation that American educational standards are lower than English standards, the Reverend Mr. Green states, that here he definitely said "academic standards." He points out that the whole theory of education in the two countries is different. "The theory of American education (is) general education for citizenship as against our more selective method," he continues. Blames Press Several students on the University campus have received form letters from the Reverend Green explaining the situation. In the letter he appeals for help in straightening the matter out, and expresses his confidence in the young people of America. Blame for the entire matter was placed on the American press in distorting and misquoting the lecture. "I am terribly sorry that the press got hold of the matter at all. I am quite certain that anyone who heard the lecture would tell you that they got the impression that the young people of America were eager and ready, wanting a real faith. . . desiring the spiritual." he writes. Has Written To Students He points out several other misstatements which were printed in American papers, denying that he said, "The American system of coeducation is responsible for many sexual problems" or "is responsible for the lax morals." "What I did say was, I do not think that co-education is responsible for any laxity in morals, but I do not think it helps to correct it." Revarend Green states. 'Elijah' First Event Of Music Festival Mendelssohn's oratorio "Eliiah" will be presented by 200 singers and instrumentalists at 4 p.m. Sunday in Hoch auditorium as the opening event of the Music Week festival. It will be the first performance of the work to be given in Lawrence, Dean D. M. Swarthout said. He will direct the group. The "Elijah" is a dramatic work with the text taken from such episodes in the life of the prophet Elijah calling down fire from heaven onto the altars in a contest with the priests of Baal, and the taking away of the prophet in a fiery chariot. Four soloists will join the a cappella choir and the symphony orchestra in presenting the oratorio. They are: Marie Wilkins, soprano; Irene Peabody, contralto; Joseph Wilkins, tenor; and Reinhold Schmidt, bass. The songs in Verdi's "Requiem." Loraine Mai, fine arts junior, will also sing a soprano part. Check Those 'Fixations, Regressions' Just In Case You're Blurry-Eyed WEATHER KANSAS—Partly cloudy today with scattered showers and thunderstorms east in foremon becoming generally fair tonight and Wednesday. Somewhat warmer east today. Continued warm tonight and Wednesday. Low tonight 50-55. Do you spend 15 minutes reading one page of a textbook? Do you have to reread a paragraph three or four times to understand it? If your answer is "yes" you may be guilty of excessive "fixations and regressions," a reading clinic term for rausing and retracing in the middle of a sentence. The clinic recently received a new machine which measures both reading habits and comprehension. The Aptholm-O-Graph, a photographic instrument designed to measure visual characteristics, has been assembled, tested, and approved by instructors at the Reading clinic, and is ready to give students the tip-off The instrument uses 35 millimeter film, which absorbs reflections from the surface of the pupil of the eye. The image is received from a two-barrel lens, diverted, and emerges as a tiny pin point on the film. on their reading troubles. in taking the test, the student reads a card while looking into the machine, and is tested afterwards for comprehension. The test is repeated several times, if necessary, with a different card being used in each trial. The student must wear glasses, if he uses them, when taking the test. All test results are strictly confidential. Vets Receive G.I. Credit For 30 Days Active Duty The veterans administration has ruled that army and navy reserve personnel will not receive added credit on their G.I. training program because they are recalled to active duty for a 15-day training period. The ruling does not apply if he is called to active duty for an indefinite period and he serves 30 days or more. The law states that the veteran is eligible for an additional month of training for every month of active duty up to the maximum of four years. Marshall Blames Reds For Moscow Failure Washington.—(UP)—Soviet Russia received another American warning today that the United States is through with appeasement and "agreement for agreement's sake." That was the keynote of Mr. Marshall's radio report to the public last night on the unsuccessful Moscow conference of foreign ministers. He placed on Russia full blame for the failure to reach any agreement in Germany or Austria. Secretary of the State George C. Marshall emphasized anew the need for early peace treaties for Germany and Austria. He disagreed with Generalissimo Josef Stalin that the war-weary world can wait until the diplomats reach "compromise through exhaustion." He did not indicate what action we contemplated next. Three obvious moves are open to im: One. To intensify with the British the merger of their two occupation zones of Germany in an effort to put at least that portion of Germany on a self-supporting basis. Two. To speed up implementation of the "Truman Doctrine" aimed to prevent the spread of Communism. Three. To continue trying to woo France into the Anglo-American camp for joint development of all western Germany. Mr. Marshall 'sailed at Moscow to budge France from her insistence upon separating the Ruhr from Germany and internationalizing that industrial area. University Heads Silent On Pro-Aggie Vote Dean Werner Recently Intimated Student Vote Might Affect Policy University officials remained silent today on the question of whether the recent student vote to admit Oklahoma A. and M. to the Big Six would be considered before the final K.U. stand was determined. Students voted Thursday not to bar the Oklahomaans from the conference because of racial segregation. The administration had previously said the University did not favor the admission of the school, but Henry Werner, dean of student affairs, intimated that results of the student poll might affect the K. U. policy. Quigley Has No Comment Athletic director E. C. Quigley's answer to a question concerning Aggie admittance was a terse and abrupt "no comment." Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, also declined comment, and Chancellor Deane W. Malott was unavailable. Prof. W. W. Davis, K. U. athletic representative at Big Six conferences, said his vote on the Aggie question would be determined by the administration. "I think the student poll was about the clearest-cut expression of student opinion we can get, but I don't make the policies. I merely express the views of the administration." George Sauer, football coach, said he had not been informed of any University decision, and that the issue is to be voted upon by Big Six schools at a meeting May 22 in Lincoln, Nebr. "At the last meeting the Big Six approved the admittance of Colorado, but said the Oklahoma A. and M. application had been received too late for consideration," he said. 'Phog' Allen Favors Entry Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen, basketball mentor, said he "heartily" desired the admission of the Aggies, but the final decision would not come from him. "I'd love to have them in the Big Six. Hank Iba always has a strong team. I'm for them 100 per cent, unequivocally." he said. Six football and basketball stand-outs were interviewed Monday by a Daily Kansan reporter, and all were emphatic in their support of Aggie admittance. Typical of the comments was that of Ray Evans. "I'm all for the Aggies. Let's make the Big Six the strong conference it should be. I think this racial discrimination business is a lot of baloney." Jack Eskridge said the Big Six would be one of the strongest and most feared conferences in the west if Oklahoma A. and M. were admitted. "Tm 100 per cent in favor of it. With Phog Allen against Hank Iba, the conference would really have something." Claude Houchin said his main reason for wanting the Aggies admitted is that it would put the conference on a par with the Big Nine. He said he was tired of having Big Six sports in the background. 'Big Six Needs Prestige' Harold England echoed the sentiments of his teammates. "The Big Six is too small as it is. What it needs now is the prestige that only Aggie admittance can give it. Oklahoma A. and M. is an all-around sports school. Their admittance would put the Big Six where it belongs—in the national sports eye." Bill Sapp commented, "If we're going to play with them anyway, we'd just as well be in the same place they are admitted, we're going to beat them next year. We've already decided that." Otto Schnellbacher said he favored Aggie admittance but declined further comment. Topeka Band, Singers Present Concert Here More than 250 members of the Toreka High school band, orchestra, and girls' and boys' glee clubs presented a concert before members of the University faculty and music education majors in Hoch auditorium this morning. "This is the music groups' annual holiday," Mr. C. J. McKee, director of the high school band, said. "So we planned to present a concert in Lawrence before going on to Kansas City. We'll spend the rest of the day there but no more concerts are planned." There are 112 members in the band, 60 in the orchestra, and 75 in the combined sleee clubs. Students May Still Enter Tonight's Speech Contest It's still not too late to enter the all-University extemporaneaens tonight. Kenneth Johnson, instructor in speech, said today. The preliminary contest will be held at 8 p. m. in the Little Theater, Green hall, and finalists in tonight's contest will compete for prizes Wednesday in Fraser theater. All interested students are invited to enter. Science Does Not Contradict Religion Professor Storer Tells Religious Group Science does not contradict religion, but religion must change with science, Prof. N. W. Storer, professor of astronomy, told the Religious Seminar group Monday. "If your religion includes the Universe, your increasing knowledge must change your interpretation of religion," he said. "Science is in a position to enrich religion. It doesn't make it simpler —it makes it more marvelous. "The more we understand about the fundamental laws on which the world is based, the richer our religion will be for we have more to marvel at. "It is true that science has come to contradict some of the things that have been felt to be inseparable with religion," Professor Storer said. "But treating religious history in a scientific method, we find some of the things that seem miraculous in the literal interpretation of the Bible seemed miraculous because there was no scientific explanation at that time—or they were written with the idea that a miracle was necessary to explain the overwhelming importance of these events. Even though science does contradict some aspects that have been thought of as essential Christianity, I believe it gives something incomparable more satisfying to an expanding mind than that which was taken away." - UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE TWO APRIL 29,194 Commanche Recalls Custer's 'Last Stand' By JOHN STEWART SMITH The stirring picture of Custer's "Last Stand"—the wild whooping Indians, the flag flying and the soldiers fighting to the last man—is familiar to everyone. Most persons believe that Commanche, the stuffed horse in Dyche museum, was the only survivor of the battle of the Little Big Horn. In reality more than 360 men and officers of the seventh cavalry lived Reno continued north. The next train brought Custer had split his command into four parts. It was the 225 men under his personal command who were massacred. The rest of the regiment, under Major Reno, survived. They had been surrounded and would also have been wiped out, had they not been relieved by General Terry. Part of An Expedition The Seventh cavalry was part of an expedition against the Indians in the spring of 1876. The Indians had left their reservations and joined forces in southern Montana. Army scouts reported that they were probably in the Big Horn river valley. Custer had been ordered to scout the region south of the Yellowstone river. He was to meet General Terry at the junction of the Big Horn and the Little Big Horn rivers on June 27. Early on the morning of the 25th, Custer entered the hilly country east of the Little Big Horn. Here he divided the regiment. Captain Benteen with 125 men was ordered to scout to the west. He and Major Reno continued north. The pack train brought up the rear. Reno To Attack Indians About 15 miles further on Custer sent Reno with 150 men down a creek that led to the river which he forded, and found the Indian village, in a narrow valley protected by the river and high bluffs to the east. Following orders, Reno attacked. The opposition was so strong that he was forced to withdraw across the river and dig in on the bluffs. Captain Benteen and the pack train arrived about this time and joined the besieged troops. Historians think it was the largest Indian camp ever seen in North America. Between 8,000 and 9,000 Indians were in the village. Custer's Command Slaughtered Custer was trying to get behind the Indians to attack them from the nouth, but the bluffs prevented him from reaching the river. He was trapped in a narrow ravine. The Indians surrounded him, and slaughtered the whole command before it could put up much resistance. Four scouts who had been riding ahead escaped and carried the news to General Terry. By forced marches, he was able to relieve Major Reno at noon on June 27. The besieged troops had been under continuous fire for 36 hours. The Indians withdrew westward into the Big Horn mountains. It five times before they lost the last tribes were returned to presentations. Commanche Found By Troops Commanche was found by the Second cavalry in the Indian village. He was severely wounded and would have been killed by the men of the Seventh intervened. When he recovered, the commander of the Seventh cavalry ordered that he should never be ridden again. He was to be cared for, and would be present at all parades draped in mourning. He died at Ft. Riley in 1891, aged 31. A group of army officers gave him to Prof. L. L. Dyche of the University to mount as a memorial to the battle of the Little Big Horn. Saddled and bridled in the Seventh cavalry trappings, he has been on display in Dyche museum ever since. Approximately 2,000 barn haydriers are said to be in use on farms throughout the United States to help provide winter-long green hay for cattle. University Daily Kansan Mall 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 holiday periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1930, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. WE HAVE RUST CRAFT MOTHER'S DAY CARDS COME IN AND SEE THEM! ROBERTS Jewelry Gifts 833 Mass. Phone 827 Lost Something? Try a University Daily Kansan Want Ad no Tall stories here... Made by Lorillard, a famous name in tobacco for nearly 200 years Old Golds are long on Pleasure! --ing satisfaction. With the world's most luxurious tobaccos. With nearly two hundred years of fine tobacco experience. With scrupulous care, and with quality guarded by every known scientific device. 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For a TREAT instead of a TREATMENT ...try an Old Gold Att 29,194 APRIL 29,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z SOCIALLY SPEAKING Sig Eps Hold Violet Hunt The annual Sigma Alpha Epsilon Violet Hunt party was held Saturday at Lone Star lake. Guests were Mary Jean McCartney, Louise Lambert, Jo Compton, Melba Mather, Joan Soxman, Eileen Yorner, Sally Tremblay, Gwen Gupson, Eissy McClure, Jane Williams, Sally Wintershield, Dot Rattcliff, Mary Lind, Lou Little, Sally Shephard, Marianne Rogers, Mary Helen Baker, Dorothy Feldkamp, Eleanor Howell, Sue Newcomer, Marjorie Dinsmore, Susie Boyle, Pat Billings, Janice Jones, Caroline Merritt, Elizabeth Bradford, Shannon McKimm, Betty Brewer. Wanda Lee Dumler, Mary Lou Manderville, Barbara Olsen, Barbara Ackerman, Joan Schindling, Betty Van Liew, Barbara Felt. Virginia Daniels, Peggy Cloyd, Jo Ellen Hall, Norma Mendenhall, Joy Godbenehre Jean Cunningham, Jo Gray, Betty Sanden, Ann Allen, Gloria Williams, Mary Daugherty, Susan Wright, Mignon Morgan, Marge Kern, Dineen Summers, Joan Vermillon, Barbara Meyer, Mary Francis Jennings, Beverly Braaeckveldt. PTA Attends Founder's Day Fifteen members of Phi Theta Alpha, social sorority, attended the Founder's Day celebration of the Iota alumnae chapter of Theta Phi Alpha Sunday in Kansas City. Mo The program of the founding of Theta Phi Alpha 35 years ago at the University of Michigan. Those attending from Lawrence were: After dinner at the West Aviary inn, the group attended a meeting at the home of Miss Kathryn Burke, alumna of the inactive chapter of Theta Phi Alpha at the University of Missouri. Connie Herrera, Jane E. Johnson, Marie Creegan, Winifred Wilson, Laura Schmid, Rozanne Croff, Helen Yatsko, Evalin Honomichl, Eva Deiderio, Geraldine Koelzer, Doris Klein, Bette Krenzer, Rita Neugebauer, Evangeline Pratt, and Ladeen Steinkircher. *** Attend District Conclave They represented the K.U. colony of the fraternity at the two-day session held Friday and Saturday. James Felding, Jack Robinson, Leon Sherwood, Ron Hill, Donald Powell, and Clark Griswold returned this weekend after attending the Lambda Chi Alpha Southwestern district conclave at Tulsa. Lambda Chi Alpha Pledges One Lambda Chi Alpha Lambda Chi Alpha announces the pleiding of Robert Cox of Hume Mo. Belles AND THEIR Weddings Strange-Weber The pinning of Patricia Ann Strange to Robert Weber was announced Saturday night at the Chi Omega house by Mrs. Ernest Rice, Chi Omega alumna. Traditional chocolates were passed by Patricia Pearson and Mary Margaret Huse. Miss Strange wore an orchid. Miss Huse and Miss Pearson received garden chairs, the woodwork housemother, received a corsage of roses and gardenias. Miss Strange, Kansas City, Mo. is a sophomore in the College. She is vice-president of Chi Omega Mr. Weber, of Kansas City, Kans., isg a sophomore in the medical school at the University hospitals. He is a member of Beta Theta Pi, social fraternity, and Nu Sigma Nu, medical fraternity. Holden-Crain Traditional chocolates were passed by Mollie Wilson and Phyllis Fretwell Friday evening at the Chi Omega house to announce the pinning of Bonnie Jean Holden to Robert Crain. Robert Waiman wore an orchid. Mrs. Miller, housemother, wore a corlage of white carnations. The at- COED'S CORNER No Ice-Cold Katie' Is Briar's Ball Of Fire, Kate Hanauer "Katie" Hanauer is the small ball of fire of Briar Manor. A freshman from New York, she bubbles over with pep and ambition and glories in activities. A social chairman of her hall, her activities include Modern choir, French club, the Rhadamanthi Poetry club, United Women's council, and play production. Katie says she's homesick for Broadway and the theatre, but thinks actually being in play production at K. U. has partly made up for the loss. Does Play-acting She had parts in "Beggar on Horseback," was in the paycock," and was a stage-crew elf in "Midsummer Night's Dream," and recently did prompting and costume work for "Double Door." "In 'Midsummer Night's Dream,' we elves had to laugh at our appearance backstage. New slanting eyebrows had been painted on for the part, and backstage we could see both pairs," she said. With her enthusiasm, Katie says she's enjoyed every bit of play production, even to pressing the mid-Victorian costumes four or five hours for "Double Door." She is small, resolute, and cute. Her black hair has bangs in front and is shoulder length in back. Beeneach black brows, her eyes appear green with gold flecks if seen closely. To Study At Sorbonne Before she begins her proposed work with speech correction as it lies in with elementary school education in Kashmir to study at the Sorbone in Paris. She has always been much interested in France and thinks the best feature of a visit there would be a broadening of her outlook. line conversational French (in addition to German and Spanish) which she is taking at present are intended for use when she attends the Sorbonne. "I'll go if I have to stow away," she said firmly. Katie believes her interests in the world at large stem from babyhood. "It all started when I was nine months old and took a trip with my parents to France, Germany, and England. In London, all the taxi-cabs go 'honk, honk!' My first words were spoken when I stood up in the backseat of a London taxi and said, 'honk, honk!' " Just Call Me Katie Her reactions to Kansas are highly favorable. "I came to get away from the Eastern seaboard and see how Wes- Miss Holden, Pittsburg, is a junior in the bacteriology department. She is president of Chi Omega and of the Women's Greek Political party. Mr. Crain, Ft. Scott, is a senior in the School of Business and a member of Delta Tau Delta. tendants, Miss Wilson and Miss Fretwell, received corsages of white carnations. tern people live," Katie explained, "Being here has convinced me that people are people—and I like 'em anywhere." Kate is Katie in Kansas. "For the first time in my life, everyone is calling me Katie, and surprisingly enough. I like it." "The twang and expressions bothered me at first. I was surprised to hear people say 'want in', 'want out,' and 'want over.' At home we never used want with a preposition like that! We'd just say, 'May I get through?' Kansas Directions Confuse "Directions still bother me. At home, we always give directions by telling a person to go right or left. Here everything is east, west, north, or south. It's confusing to a New Yorker." It was time for Katie to attend a meeting: she waved her hand briskly, and hustled from the room. Another Briar Manor coed who was sitting nearby, shook her head. "I can't quite figure Katie out. She eats up being in everything which is going on—I don't think I've ever seen her study, but when her report card appears, it has straight A's on it!" Bakery Entered—Pastry Left Cambridge, Mass. —(UP)—Maybe they had to watch their figures. Anyhow, thieves who broke into a bakery shop owned by Walter Hahn drank some milk, took $5 in stamps, but ignored a stock of fresh pastry. Phone KU-25 with your news. OK Get Your 'Burgers' AT Zim's SNACK SHOP CURB SERVICE 6:30 to 11:30 p.m. Across from the Postoffice. Open: 6 a.m. to 12:30 a.m. American Veterans Com. OPEN FORUM DON ONG EAGLE vs. DOVE RHOTEN SMITH and associates DR. W. E. SANDELIUS FRANK STRONG AUDITORIUM moderator 7:30 p.m., Wed., April 30 POLLIN WILLIAMS Hold It . . . Drop in and examine our complete stock of Amateur Supplies Today. HIXON'S 721 Mass. WE SPECIALIZE IN BETTER KODAK FINISHING A Advartisers Prefer The Kansan To Reach Hill Students More beautiful than ever...in Velva Leg Film Velva Leg Film So easy to apply and quick to dry, Elizabeth Arden's leg make-up stays on the legs and off the clothes. Water-resistant. Clings, until deliberately washed away, with a blemish-concealing sheer-textured beauty that trims the ankle — slims the leg. Be sure to wear Velva Leg Film with bathing suits or shorts, it makes your legs look sun-burnished . . . far more lovely. Elizabeth Arden Sun Biege, light—Sun Bronze, medium—Sun Copper, dark Approximately 20 pairs in the 5 oz. bottle, 1.00. Almost 50 pairs in the 12 oz. economy size, 2.00. VELVA LEG FILM BUFFER. . . for polishing after applying Velva Leg Film. Must be thoroughly dry, then buff lightly for a sheer-textured finish. .75 COSMETIC DEPT. WEAVER'S All prices plus taxes, except Buffer --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 29,194794 PAGE FOUR SPOTLIGHT SPORTS By BILL CONBOY Three Missouri university football players of last year will be donning pads in professional ranks next season. Coach Cecil Isbell of the Baltimore pro team in the All-America league signed Jim Darr and Dick Keller to contracts. John Reginato will play for the San Francisco 49ers, also in the All-America conference. - * * The Tigers from Columbia claim to have developed the best tennis doubles team in the conference. Maybe Jayhawk coach Gordon Sabine can offer some racquet men who will disprove that claim. Last year's Missouri number one doubles team of Don Johnson and Rip Manning has been losing in practice to Don Block and Carl Meyer. Since Johnson and Manning are currently ranked one and two in Tiger singles play, the doubles pair of Block and Meyer does appear potent. But Richards and Miller, and Busiek and Barnes of the Kansas squad are conceding nothing in the way of doubles play to the Missouri netmen. - * * Before the weekend games with the Kansas baseball team, Rudy Rufer, Oklahoma left fielder from New York, was leading Sooner regulars in batting with an average of .379. Considering all players who have batted one or more times, the hitting leader was technically Dennis Shogren, lanky pinch hitter from Assaria, Kan. *** Friday's contest with the Oklahoma Sooners was a tough game for coach Vic Bradford's baseball nine to drop. The Jayhawkers started out with a rush, scoring four times in the first two innings. In the opening inning, Jack Venable walked Verl Anderson, Kansas leadoff man. Second baseman Harold May singled to right field. Lou De Luna, first sacker, popped out, but "Red" Hogan singled to left field. David Coffman off out. Ed Wolcott drove a safety into left field, scoring Anderson and May. Hogan came home on an error by the Sooner third baseman. The Kansans added one more run in the second when Anderson was again walked by Venable, this time scoring on a double by May. This was the last tally for the Jayhawkers as Venable settled down to throttle the Kansans with six scattered hits the rest of the way. Second baseman Jimmy Mitchell of the Sooners had a perfect day at bat with two singles and three walks in one game, and drove in three runs, and scored twice. The big inning for the Norman nine was the third when three runs crossed the plate. The big blow of that rally was a double by Mace Avant with the bases loaded. Pitcher Dick Gilman had trouble with his control and fielding in the inning and was responsible for the bases being filled when Avant smashed out his hit. Gilman walked two men and committed one error to load the sacks. They Beat The Bell By Flying To School Atlanta, Ga.—(UP)—In the muddy heart of Cobb county, Ga., are two youngsters who are never late to school regardless of the condition of rutted, deep-mudded roads. They are Gordon Lunsford, Jr., 9, and his brother Richard, 6. They fly to school. Every morning, their mother, Mrs Sarah Lunsford, bundles them into the family's small yellow plane and ferries them over the ridge to school, five miles away. Each afternoon she lets down on the field beside the school yard and picks up her passengers for the flight home. End Bubble Gum Shortage Chicago—(UP)—A shipment of 5,000,000 pieces of bubble gum from Mexico has broken up street corner trading here by juvenile users of the scarce item. Imported by a Chicago firm, the gum was reported to stretch to satisfactory ballon-size measures. Phi Delt's, Sigma Chi's Reach Volleyball Finals Phi Delta Theta and Sigma Chi advanced to the finals of the intramural volleyball championship Montay. The Phi Deits defeated Alpha Tau Omega two games, 15-6 and 15-9, while the Sigma Chi six took Beta Theta Pi 8-15, 15-11, and 15-8. The Phi Delts spotted the ATO's an early three point lead in both games, but were not pressed in scoring their wins. In the first game Evans and Harris scored consistently on spikes. Eskridge, who played an excellent role in the ATW, kept his team in the running for the first few minutes of both games, but the Phil DeLts used smooth team play to come out on top. Beta's Take First Game Sigma Chi spotted the Betas the first game in their three game thriller, 15-8, but came back strong to win the next two 15-11 and 15-8. In the first game Jones, Waugh, and Malott outspiked the Sigma Chi team and the Betas won handily, but it was too early to conclude but the Betas ran their score to 15 while the Sigma Chi's could score but once. In the second game the Sigma Chi team stopped several Beta threats by excellent team play and won 15-1. Sigma Chi posted an early 5-1 advantage, but had to come from behind to win the game. Trailing 9-11, the winners gained possession of the ball and tied the game 11-11. The serve was exchanged five times before the Sigma Chi's scored four straight points to take the game. Finals To Be Tonight In the final and decisive game, the Sigma Chi's took charge with the score tied 5-5 and built a 10-5 advantage before losing possession of the ball. Beta came back strong and closed the gap to 10-8. Stratton spiked hard and Sigma Chi took the next five points and the game, 15-8. The finals will be held in Robinson gymnasium tonight, at 8 p.m. Starting lineups for Monday's games were: ATO- Millikan, Eskridge, Laira, Case, Mazon. Clark. Phi Delta Theta—Evans, Harris, Auten, Scott, Dunn, Churchill. Sigma Chi - Stratton, Kanas, Peck, Shockkev, Berrington. Young. Beta Theta Pi—Dieh, Jones Malott, Joseph. Waugh, Nelson. High scoring predominated intramural softball games played Monday. The Fly-by-Nights defeated Oread Hall 12-10, Kappa Sigma took Phi Gamma Delta 4-2, Delta Upsilon won from Wesley 13-10, Beta Theta PI planked Kappa Eta 15-0, Kappa Alpha Psi outlasted YMCA 16-13 and Sigma Phi Epsilon won from Mom's Boys by a forfeit. Softball Games Show Big Scores Kappa Sigma remained undefeated by defeating Phi Gamma Delta. The Kappa Sigs scored all their runs in the first two innings and cut short a Phi Gam rally in the sixth to keep their slate clean. Kappa Alpha Psi measured YMCA in the late innings 16-13. Tillman hit a homer for the winners to give his team a lead which was never lost. The DU's did not have much trouble in winning over Wesley, but did have an early 10 run-lead closed considerably before the game ended. Armel got three hits for Delta Upsilon. Bill Conboy, Beta pitcher, turned in a one-hit game for his team against the Kappa Etas. Nelson hit a home run for the Betas in the fourth inning. Oread Hall tried hard, but could not overcome the early lead of the Fly-by-Nights and lost 12-10. The Fly-by-Nights made 10 hits good for their 12 runs. Mudhole Fisher Lands Marlin A new frosted food concern in Boston features a roast turkey dinner which can be prepared and served in less than 10 minutes. These unpredictable Kansans! At least that is the opinion of several Floridians who watched plainsman Ben Hibbs, '24, as he pulled in a 78-pound white marlin recently. National president Mrs. Norton H. Pearl of the American Legion Auxiliary says the girls will be acquaint- ing functions during the conference. Though far from a record-breaker the 78-pound fish automatically entered Hibbs in the $15,000 Miami fishing contest. Phil Wylie, author of many deep-sea tales, had politely, though not insistently, invited Mr. Hibbs, editor of the Saturday Evening Post, down to Florida where, as Wylie put it, "you can catch some real fish." No one was more surprised than Wylie when he learned that Hibbs, a Kansas "cane pole and mudhole" fisherman, was on his way to tackle the Gulf monsters. Indianapolis—(UP) — The American Legion Auxiliary is planning a "Girls' Nation" conference in Washington. D.C. this summer. It was too late to back out, so author Wylie hired the boat and, explaining to the Post's editor that the fish hadn't been biting very well, shoved-off on what he thought would be his last afternoon as a writer for the Post. Then the marlin struck. For an hour and five minutes Editor Hibbs, the dry-land sportsman, whose knowledge of fish ended with channel cats, played the marlin as Wylie coached. It was a tired editor that finally hoisted the marlin aboard. Girls' Nation' To Operate Mythical State Incidentally, author Wylie is still selling fish stories to Editor Hibbs. Things brightened considerably when a sailfish struck Hibb's line, even though it broke away, almost immediately. "Girl's Nation" follows the annual "Girl's State" pattern. Philadelphia—(UF)—Dr. Wallace L. Davidson dropped the working part of his fountain from a twelfth floor window in Hahne-mann hospital, but the cap remained in his pocket. Five months later, an unidentified man was brought to the hospital. Dr. Davidson searched the pocket's cards for identification, and found the missing part of the pen complete with his initials. Stranger's Pocket Holds Doctor's Pen GOOD BOOKS FOR YOUR SPRING READING The new fiction, biography, books on current affairs. Cook books for the bride; Children's books for young nieces and nephews; books for the gardner and sportsman. Come in and see them whenever you are down town. The Book Nook Dempsey Suggests Louis Fight Elimination Bouts 1021 Mass. St. New York—(UP)—To obtain a logical September challenger and to stimulate interest in boxing, Jack Dempsey suggested today that Joe Louis stage his own elimination "tournament" by boxing four rounds with each prominent contender. "This would be a very novel elimination," Dempsey admitted, "But the heavyweight division is confronted right now with a problem that apparently can be solved satisfactorily in no other way." Males Stage Revolt Against Bedroom Frills Los Angeles.—(UP)—Five ceramists here are staging a male revolt against over-feminized bedrooms. Part of their campaign is to turn out "he-man" lamps to replace the fussy, kind with which they women have flooded the American home. "Men want mathematical lamps with straight, balanced lines and perfect simplicity." Casey Roberts, who organized the Roban Guild Potters for his four World War II veterans associate, said. "We've found out that many marriages have gone on the rocks because husbands are too embarrassed to relax in a bedroom which looks like a ladies' powder room." Official G.I. Language Confuses Cop's Report Cleveland —(UP)— Patrolman Thomas McGuire of the Cleveland police department investigated a bus explosion. A former U. S. army air forces captain, McGuire turned in this report. "In obvious mechanical difficulty, some portion of the mechanical linkage or motive power malfunctioned to the extent of self-destruction, creating a local flak area at approximately the rear door of the bus." In non-technical language, the fly wheel of the bus burst and scattered through the floor boards like "flak." McGuire picked up his official GI language during his five-and-one-half years in the Army Air Forces. A single codfish will lay up to 10,000,000 eggs a season. If fish didn't eat one another and man didn't catch them, the ocean wouldn't be big enough to hold all of them, according to experts of the Atlantic Fisheries company. You'll Really Enjoy De LUXE CAFE 28 YEARS OF SERVICE Same Location-Same Management You are welcome 711 Mass. "FOR HEALTH" 834 Vt. Chi. Galloway Fritzel ICE CREAM Phone 182 PLASTICS ENGINEERING Prepare for your career in America's fastest growing industry with practical plastics instruction directed by nationally known plastic engineer and production expert. Summer course beginning June 23 includes mold design, fabrication, plastics engineering and sales. Previous plastics experience not necessary. Approved for Veterans Training. SUMMER COURSES WRITE FOR FREE CATALOG AND FULL DETAILS KANSAS CITY SCHOOL OF PLASTICS 3827 Main St. Kansas City, Missouri 10 Hey There! ALONG WITH YOUR SPRING CLEANING- MOTOR TUNE-UP GET A Job done on your car. You'll be wanting to take lots of drives now that its spring so put your car in tip-top shape. CHANNEL - SANDERS 622-24 Mass. Motor Co. Phone 616 (Ha!) 194794 APRIL 29,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE ge ort elman eland a bus y air d in Steve Renko, End '38-'39 Will Bolster Jayhawk Line When the Kansas grid machine takes the field next fall a probable starting tackle will be Steve Renko, returning letter man that few students on the Hill have heard of. Well Known At End Steve lettered here, when most of K.U.'s present day students were attending high school. He was known in 1938-39 as one of the best ends in the conference. Coach George Sauer thinks he will be as well at tackle next year. "Steve has the prime requisite for a football player, he's rough and tough. Give him a little more time to get in condition, and I think he'll be one of the best in the Big Six," said the coach. Steve lettered at end in '38, under Coach Ad Lindsey, and in 1939, under Coach Gwinn Henry. Injured In Accident. During the summer of 1940, he was injured in an automobile accident. The muscles of the upper portion of his left arm were cut severely. Doctors advised him not to play football again. He did not return to school the following fall, but went to work for a Water and Light Plant where he remained until the beginning of the spring semester. Storm Is Faster To Go Steve Is Eager To Go Steve now feels that his arm is strong enough to allow him to play football again, and is anxious to try it. "It really felt good to get back in the old uniform again," he said. "I hope I'll do all right next fall. I like Coach Sauer a lot. His methods are much better than those that 13 Teams Set For I-M Swim Thirteen teams have submitted entries for the intramural swimming meet May 6, 7, and 8. They are Phi Delta Theta, Delta Upsilon, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Sigma Chi Tau Kappa Epsilon, Sigma Phi Epsilon, Phi Kappa Psi, Delta Chi, Sigma Nu, Alpha Tau Omega, Delta Tau Delta, Beta Theta Pi, and Phi Gamma Delta. Preliminaries of the meet will begin at 4 p.m. today. These posting the best times will be eligible for tomorrow's semi-finals. Drawings of heats will be held at 3 p.m. tomorrow in the intramural office at Robinson gym. Thursday, all team managers will meet at 4 p.m. in 202 Robinson to receive final instructions for the meet. Probable Pitchers The four best times turned in tomorrow will compete in the finals at 7 p.m. May 8. One point will be awarded all swimmers qualifying for the semi-finals and the scoring for the finals will be five points for first, four points for second, three for third, two for fourth, and one for fifth. Today's Probable Pitchers American League: 86 STEVE RENKO ☆ ☆ New York (Bevens 2-0) at St. Louis (Galehouse 0-2). Boston Hugson (1-0) at Detroit (Trucks 1-1). Philadelphia (Marchildon 1-0) a Cleveland (Black 2-0). Washington (Wynn 1-1) at Chicago (Grove 0-0). National League: Chicago (Wyse 1-1) at Brooklyn (Hatten 1-0). St. Louis (Pollet 0-2) at New York (Kennedy 0-0) Cincinnati (Erautt 0-3) at Boston (Spahn 1-0). were used when I was here before. He knows how to get along with the fellows and get the most out of them." Pittsburgh (Heintzelman 0-0) at Philadelphia (Judd 0-2). Berries, Bedspreads Lead To 'Plenty Potatoes' State College, Miss.—(UP)—Berries and bedspreads have earned almost $10,000 for Mrs. Dan McKenzie, Mississippi farm wife. She has bought $9,600 worth of bonds from her earnings since June, 1942. Mrs. McKenzie made most of her profit from berries raised on three acres of land and by selling bedspreads made from fertilizer sacks. American railroads own 1,770,000 freight cars, according to the American Railway Car institute. K.U. Golfers Beat K-State, 12 $ _{1/2} $ To 5 $ _{1/2} $ The University golf team took the Kansas State linksters, $12 \frac{1}{2}$ to $5 \frac{1}{4}$, in a match at Manhattan Monday. Three of coach Bob Coyan's golfers fired par or below in the matches. Bill Jones, Jayhawker number one man, took medalist honors with a 69, one under par. Meeker and Scott shot par 70's for the Kansas team. Baseball Results Monday: KU Net Squad Defeats K-State Monday: American Association: American Association Minneapolis 9, St. Paul 3 Columbus 9, Toledo 4 The Jayhawker tennis team bested the Kansas State racquet squad, 6 to 1, in a match played at Manhattan Monday. Coach Gordon Sabine's net charges captured four sings matches and both doubles. It was a non-conference match. Indianapolis 9, Louisville 5 American League American League: Detroit 3, Cleveland 0. Only game placed. The summary; National League: National League: No games scheduled. Standings of the Team American Assoc. W. L. Pct. Kansas City 5 3 .625 Louisville 6 4 .600 Columbus 6 4 .600 Minneapolis 3 3 .500 St. Paul 5 6 .455 Milwaukee 4 5 .444 Indianapolis 4 5 .444 Toledo 2 5 .286 American League: W. L. Pct. New York 7 4 .636 Cleveland 5 4 .556 Chicago 5 4 .556 Boston 5 5 .500 Detroit 5 5 .500 Washington 4 4 .500 St. Louis 4 6 .400 Philadelphia 3 6 .333 National League: W. L. Pct. Brooklyn 7 2 .778 Chicago 7 4 .636 Pittsburg 6 5 .545 Cincinnati 7 6 .538 Boston 5 5 .500 Philadelphia 6 6 .500 New York 2 7 .222 St. Louis 2 7 .222 Dick Richards (Kansas) defeated Thompson (Kansas State), 8-6, 2-1 No games scheduled. Standings of the Teams Paying tribute to spring, the ISA will sponsor a Juke Box Mixer from 7:30 to 9 p. m. Wednesday at the Potter lake dance slab. With "meet somebody new" the slogan for the dance, all university students are invited to an evening of mixer and tag dances. Both men and women stages are urged by Shirley Wellborn, ISA president, to attend the mixer. Dancers will receive tags admitting them to the dancing surface upon presentation of ISA membership cards or 15 cents. ISA Spring Mixer To Be Wednesday Erwin Busiek (Kansas) defeated Ravmond Robbins (Kansas State), 6-4, 6-1. Harold Miller (Kansas) defeated Marvin Dungan (Kansas State), 6-0, 6-3. Roy Sherrell (Kansas State) defeated Bob Earnes (Kansas), 6-4. 6-4. Frank Gage (Kansas) defeated James Neumann (Kansas State), 6-1 6-2 Richards and Miller (Kansas) defeated Thompson and Dungan (Kansas State), 6-0, 6-3. Busiek and Gage. (Kansas) defeated Sherrell and Powers (Kansas State), 6-1, 6-1. Air Reserve Bases Are Discontinued Bases for Air Reserve training detachments at Topeka and Salina have been discontinued according to the Air Force Bulletin, official publication of the Second Air Force. About 3,000 reserve pilots will receive inactive duty training at these bases. They will get about 80 hours flying time each year. Reductions in the fiscal budget reduced the Air Reserve training program to 41 bases. Nine of these are in the Second Air Force area. The nine bases also plan to conduct training in outlying districts of their areas. They will do this either by attaching a small number of aircraft and army personnel to outlying districts, by sending a few aircraft to the outlying field for a day of training, or by flying the trainees to the home field and then back after the day's training. Aircraft for the program has been limited to 288. Two-thirds of these planes are North American AT-6 Texans. The other third are Beechcraft AT-11's. The P-51 Mustangs have been dropped from the program because of high maintenance costs, the bulletin reports. Air Reserve units have already been activated at Kansas City, Kan., Mt. Clemens, Mich., Denver, Colo., Sioux City, Iowa, Ft. Crib, Neb. Error On Ump In Texas Game Dallas, Tex.—UP)—A ruling that an unpire had misinterpreted the rules set the stage today for the replaying of a game between Oklahoma City and Fort Worth. Texas League President J. Alvin Gardner ordered the game replayed at Fort Worth with as near the same lineup as possible on May 20. Gardner's ruling was the outcome of a protest made by the Oklahoma City club on a decision it claimed cost them the April 2 game at Fort Worth. The controversy arose during the last half of the 9th inning with the score tied 1-1 and with Fort Worth running runner on third and one man out. Andy Anderson of the Fort Worth squad was at bat when the Oklahoma City battery, figuring a squeeze play was in order, called for a pitchout: Anderson stepped from the batter's box to foul off the pitch. The umpire ruled Anderson's action as a strike while the Oklahoma City players argued that he should be out for stepping out of the box. Anderson singled on the next pitch to score the winning run and the win. WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames. Lawrence Optical Co. WURLITZER PHONOGRAPHS FOR PARTY RENTALS Used Juke Box Records For Sale John H. Emick 1014 Mass. Phone 343 WE SPECIALIZE IN VE SPECIALIZE IN JUICY STEAKS and OTHER FINE FOODS. Thick Malts Sandwiches Short Orders BILLS GRILL QUICK COURTEOUS SERVICE Across From 1109 Mass. Court House Phone 2054 Lindley's Kansas Cleaners Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices MEN'S SUITS- 12 E. 8th Cleaned and Pressed ... 65c LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES— Cleaned and Pressed ... 69c Cash and Carry Only Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER Serving K.U. Students For 43 Years. 809 MASS. JAYHAWKER Shows 2:30,7,9 ENDS TONIGHT ANN SHERIDAN "Nora Prentiss" Wed., One Week LOOK WHO'S SOLVING MURDERS! LOOK WHO'S SOLVING MURDERS! BOB DOROTHY HOPE·LAMOUR in My Favorite BRUNETTE GRANADA Now, Thru Wed. A Mighty Outdoor Adventure Drama. . . As Powerful And Moving As It Is DIFFERENT! ROMANCE! ADYENTURE! ROMANCE ADVENTURE! JOHN WAYNE * GAIL RUSSELL A REPUBLIC PICTURE Angel ANDY THE BADMAN Coming Thursday PAT O'BRIEN IN "CRACK-UP" Ends Tonight IT'S THE NUTMOST IN FUN "JACK CARSON" 'Make Your Own Bed' IN PATEE JANE IRENE WYMAN MANNING PLUS VARSITY Comedy, Cartoon, Variety, News Ends Tonite "Komedy Karnival" "Apache Rose" Wed., 4 Days MASTERFUL SUSPENSI! BONITA GRANVILLE DON CASTLE "The Guilty" AND BOB STEELE "Durango Raiders" --- . UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 29,1947 PAGE SIX "Ho Hum-Care To Read The Paper?" AROUND THE WORLD IN 79 HOURS ATOM UM HERBLOCK HERBLOCK Kansan Comments Our Responsibility In World Trade . . . Since the end of World War II the United States has become an "Angel" to other countries to a degree that few people realize. The federal budget bureau has made public the figures on our civilian aid to other countries. Our government has approved, or is about to approve, $152 billion dollars in cash and goods for foreign countries since the shooting stopped in World War II. Four billion dollars of this tremendous total has been written off. We have no hope that it will be repaid. We do expect repayment of the remainder though part of those payments will be stretched over a period as long as 50 years. This money has gone only for civilian purposes. If military equipment were included, the figure would probably be several billions higher. Oddly enough, we have a powerful card of our own to play in determining whether these aid debts will be repaid. That important element is the type of tariff and world trade policy we pursue. As long as a large share of the globe is economically prostrate, or nearly so, we can have little hope of realizing a return on these appropriations. High tariffs and other restrictive trade policies will only strangle further the economies of many of these countries that are struggling to get back on their feet. Some members of congress are beginning to talk of higher tariffs President Truman tried to squelch this movement earlier this year when he made an address at Baylor University. At that time, he made a plea for a sane foreign trade policy that would work to the mutual benefit of all countries. The repayment of these aid debts is only one element in the whole world trade picture. Totalitarianism can find no better breeding ground than a country that has fallen into economic stagnation. If we really mean to pursue a policy against tyranny as the Truman Doctrine states, we must be consistent and maintain a world trade policy that will foster economic stability the world over. Dear Editor--to slip and slide through mud to reach the stadium. Eagles Not Consistent After rapidly scanning the Eagle to see what us average college Joes are supposed to be thinking I found a spot where the editorial board of that reac—uh "middle-road journal" slipped up. It is nice to have our own campus publication featuring all of the "hate Russia" crowd, the good old defenders of property rights and free enterprise, the staunch friend of other races who would rather have segregation and discrimination than have their friends needlessly stamped into trouble by those agitating reds, and the emancipators of the laboring man who are dedicated to destropping the "ol' debbil" labor unions. But regarding the place where they slipped up, I was wondering how that article sneaked in defending those socialistic New Deal relief agencies and arguing from the point of human values. Upon reconsideration I'm sure that the editorial board can't be held responsible. They probably overlooked it in the rush to re-educate us poor students who have been too long subjected to subversive propaganda. College Senior College Senior (Name withheld by request) No Time For Holdup, Thug Told To Leave I wish to express my dissatisfaction with the means of access to the stadium from Mississippi street. There is a hard-surfaced walk from Frank Strong hall to the stadium but there is no hard-surfaced approach from Mississippi street to the stadium. Improve Stadium Approach Chicago—(UP) A r.n.an walked into the office of Walter Tromper, 65, at a storage company. In dry weather it is unnecessary but during wet weather (for instance the day of the Relays) the present approach is a sea of mud. Sports fans will often brave bad weather to see a sports event but there is no reason why they should have "This is a stickup," the stranger growled. "Eh?" asked Tromper, who is hard of hearing. "This is a stickup," the intruder repeated. "Have to talk louder," said Tromper. "Can't hear a word." "THIS IS A STICKUP," bellowed the exaggerated bandit. "Oh," said Tromper. "Got no time for such things. Now, you—GET OUT OF HERE." The bandit left. It's A Mean Driver Who Blows A Horn Chicago— (UP) —H o r n blowers now get tickets—on—courtsey—from Chicago traffic policemen The tickets read: "Be a courteous demon to blow your horn-except to blow your horn." The cards, issued by the Chicago Noise Abatement Commission in cooperation with Police Commissioner John Prendergast, were meant especially for the second man behind a traffic light, who, surveys show, usually blows his horn when the light turns green. Prendergast said drivers may be fined from $5 to $200 for persistent horn blowing. Car Meets Steer; Tables Are Turned Omaha, Nebr. —(UP)—When car meets livestock on the highway, it's often disastrous for the livestock. But the tables were turned by a two-year-old steer west of Omaha. A sedan driven by Bontas Gonzales tangled with the rugged bovine. Damage to the car: broken headlights, smashed bumper, grills, radiator, hood and fenders, and undetermined damage to the motor. Damage to the steer: minor cuts, a slight limp, and some hair scraped off. Jury Wants Pay Raise, Too, A Judge's Survey Reveals Chicago—(UP) — A survey by Judge Elmer J. SchenackenB shows that jurors would like a wage increase, too. Schnackenberg polled 47 men and women who served on juries in his court. Most of them thought the present pay of $5 per day was too low. They suggested sums ranging from $8 to $15 per day. One man who has a family of six said he lost $5 during his 10 days in the jury box. I hope the University will take some action soon to remedy this condition. Robert D. Judy The University Daily Kansan College Junior Member of the Kansas Press Assm., National Advertising and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave. New York, NY. Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Editor in Chief managing Assist. Man. Editor Assst. Man. Editor Assst. City Editor Assst. City Editor Art. Editor Art. Editor LeMoyne Frederick McCormick Marion Sewett William T. Smith Jr. Wilace E. Bauer Alan J. Stewart Marion Minor John D. McCormick Calvin Arnold Joan Schindling Frank R. Schultheis business Manager. John D. McCormick Circulation Manager. Thomas S. Caden Classified Adv. Mgr...Jon Schindling Promotion Manager. William K. Brooks The Kansas Press Association 1947 Member National Editorial Association A FREE PRESS-YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW Prohibition In Painting Artist Paints Sign; Loses His Beer, Ale New York—(UP)—Waldo Peirce, one of America's best known painters, is burned up. He wants to know what happened to his beer and ale. And he is resolved not to yield until he finds out. The "beer and ale" he is referring to appears in his picture "County Fair" as a sign on a tent where bottled drinks are sold. A Boston newspaper reproduced the painting in rotografie. But the "beer and ale" sign was blocked out before printing. Wrote Editor Model T Business New Trim "County Fair" is a particularly well-known example of contemporary American art. It went to Paris in the Museum of Modern Art American exhibition. Annoyed, Peirce wrote to the editor: it was selected for color reproduction in "America" the O.W.I. Russian language newspaper, Life Magazine and Art News reproduced the painting in color—Art Digest in black and white. The New York Times, the New York Sun and the Philadelphia Record recently reproduced the painting to illustrate book reviews of Alan D. Gruskin's "Painting in the U.S.A." "... Is 'Backward Bay' and its newspapers still under prohibition? Signs are integral parts of a picture, too. Or did somebody like the beer and ale part so well they took it home with them and left the rest of the picture?" Printed In 'America' "In all my wide experience," Peirce said, "this is the first time I have come across an instance in which a reputable publication has deliberately altered an artist's work without the artist's permission." N.Y. Veterans To Get Mobile Mental Hygiene Facilities Syracuse, N.Y.—(ACP) An estimated 60,000 up-state New York ex-servicemen will soon be provided with mobile mental hygiene facilities, according to an announcement recently by George F. Havell, regional manager of the Veterans administration in Syracuse. This mobile service is organized in order to provide psychiatric care for ex-GF's in more than 35 up-state New York communities. Mr. Havell explained that the service provided by the mobile units will be available only to veterans with service-connected mental ailments as determined by VA mental hygiene clinics. Salem, Nebr. — (UP)—John and Thorval Emmert have completed at least one-twelfth of their plan to coax their 1914 model T Ford, "Flagship," through all of the 48 states and to visit the governors of each. The Emert brothers have met the governors of Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, and New Mexico since leaving Salem recently in their 35-year-old car. HIT of the WEEK WRIGHT'S CLASSIC AUDIO WORK FIELD RUSH RECORDS WRIGHT'S For Records "Across. The Alley From the Alamo," Stan Kenton 846 Mass. . : 3-day Cleaning Service . Leather and Garment - 4-day Laundry Service 24-hour Shoe Repair Dyeing a Specialty. Village Cleaners SUNFLOWER, KANSAS Opposite School Western Union—8 a.m.-9 p.m. Free PickUp and Delivery Phone 9009 DE SOTO APPROVED TO SERVICE PLYMOUTH Bradley GALLAGHER MOTORS Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL WHOA! We Can Solve Your Dining Problem You'll find complete dining satisfaction in every meal served at the DeLUXE CAFE 711 Mass. CH si la s FO er tr re pr APRIL 29,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Official Bulletin April 29,1947 - * * United Women's Council at 5 p.m. today in office of the Dean of Women. 串 串 Tau Sigma, 7:30 tonight, Robinson gym. Archery club practice from 4 to p.m. today either in Robinson gym or outside on hockey field. Women's Rifle club at 7 tonight in Military Science building. Newman club discussion group meeting at 8 tonight in Myers hall. * * * YMCA cabinet meeting, 4:15 p.m. today, Union building. Society for Advancement of Managemenl regular semi - monthly meeting at 7:30 tonight in the Kansas room of the Union. Tri Chi Iota, Independent social fraternity at 5:30 p.m. today in the Pine room. University Art club in room 315 tonight. Election of officers. Phi Sigma Iota, 7 tonight at 1121 Kentucky. *** Sigma Gamma Epsilon at 7:30 tonight in 402 Lindley. Dean J. O. Jones, speaker. Delta Lambda Iota at 8 tonight at 1121 Kentucky. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship at 7 tonight in Barlow Chapel of Myers hall. Don Simpson will lead Bible study. Several members to give group chalk-talk and demonstration. ISA meeting, 7 tonight, 228 Frank Strong. Tau Beta Pi meeting at 5 p.m. today in 210 Marvin. All-Student Council at 7:15 tonight in the Pine room. Newly elected members please attend. Alpha Kappa Psi formal pledging at 7:30 tonight in Union building. YMCA-YWCA world student service fund committee at 4 p.m. to tomorrow at Henley House. Progressive Party meeting at 7 p.m. tomorrow, Room 9, Frank Strong. Owl Society active members, brief but important meeting at 5 p.m. tomorrow in East room of the Union. *** AVC meeting at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Frank Strong auditorium. Open forum with editors of Eagle and Dove leading discussion. Dr. W. E. Sandelius, moderator. Business meeting to follow. Election of delegates to national convention. Meeting for all engineering students except graduating seniors at 10 a.m. Thursday in Hoch auditorium to select three candidates from each class (freshman, sophomore and junior) for representatives on Engineering council. YWCA-YMCA May Day party for children of North Lawrence at 4 p.m. Thursday. Leave Henley House at 3:15 p.m. and 3:50 p.m. Mathematics colloquium of department of mathematics at 5 p.m. Thursday in 222 Frank Strong. Mr John L. Yarnell will speak on "A Problem in Caloulis of Variation." Copies of 1946-47 K-book now available free of charge to students at the Student Organization window of the Business Office. Students who left activity books at the polls may pick them up at the Business office. KSC-KU "Y" Retreat, Manhattan, Saturday and Sunday. Carsan. Daily Kansan Classified Ads Newburyport. Mass.-(UP)-Six more New England cities and towns were expected recently to adopt the "Newburyport plan" under which retailers of this city voluntarily slashed prices 10 per cent in an effort to start a nationwide anti-inflation drive. Start Anti-Inflation Drive Copy must be in the University Daily Kansan Business Office, Journalism bldg., not later than 4 p.m. of the day before all copies are printed. All classmates are cash in advance. Classified Advertising Rates 25 words or less additional words GREY Parker "51." Name on bottom at gold can. John, May 1425. Tenn. 1 Lost For Sale CHEAP: 12 boxes, 12 gauge sotgun shells, size 4, 6, 8; 1 pr. ice skates, size 7; 1 jammower. K. L. Coleman, 21-8 Sunny- 1 FOR SALE: Taylorcraft L2M Continental A455, converted fuselage. Never been cracked, but has come to light. Painted pure white and trimmed in bright red, wheel pans, new red leather wheels, new cross country pro-piers well over 90. Completely covered TAN raincoat. Union Building Ballroom contact John L. Eberhardt, 1769 Mine contact John L. Eberhardt, 1769 Mine ENGLISH BOOK, "Fifteen Greek Plays. From 296 Frank Strong Lois Parker in 1911" HEART-SHAPED mother-of-pearl bracelet with a Harvard crest inset. Great sentimental value. Please leave at Kansan office or contact Barbara Storm. 518-470-2936 Business Services PI BETA PHI Fraternity pln, between Union, Jahawk Cafe and 15th_and 16th_Fraternities. Spanish Dept. K, U. 153. Reward., 30 BOOKS entitled "Economies" and "Principles and Types of Speech". Finder please contact Kansas office. Generous. FREE OFFER: Discharges valuable papers copied for terminal leave pay and educational benefits. 3 copies for price of 2. Round Corner Drug Co., 801 Mass. TENNIS RACKETS restrucing and repaired. Silk, nylon, or gut. Priced accordingly. $1.50 to $10. Phone 2711-W. Ed. Wellhaus. ep. 1145 Kv. M-5 LADIES tailoring and alteration. Ora Floyd, 923 Ala. Phone 767. 30 and finished on inside, new metal dash board, one piece windshield, large luggage compartment, brakes, air cleaner and bank indicator. Good clean ship prices to sell in the UK. Contact Danny O. Becker, 1233 Oread, next to Bricks. Phi Chi house. 1 FOR SALE: 1933 Chevrolet couple. Motor just overhauled. 16-inch wheels, new tires. See at 1646 Tenn., or phone K.U. 160. 29 BANTAM model airplane engine with accessories. Not even broken in. Also, Charvos eight-piece drawing set. Tom Koeizer. 1300 Tenn. 29 To Show Art Exhibit Here 16mm. MOVIE CAMERA, B. and H. Anti- stigmatic f/3.5 lens, converted Army gun camera complex with viewpoint new viewpoint advertised over $100 Asking 48. Phone K U 185 NEW 6 x 30 German Binocular. $75.00. Ralph L. Miller, 212 Lane "O." Sunflower, Kans., or contact me in Pharmacy office. 30 ALMOST new Kodak 35 mm., F. 3.5 lens, couple range finder, excellent case, sunshade and lens adapter, $75. Moore, 1140 Louisiana. 29 During May, the Nelson Art gallery will present an exhibition of art done entirely by K. U. students. For Rent The work of 40 students in the department of design will be featured. Miss Marjorie Whitney, associate professor of design, announced. SLEEPING ROOMS, Newly Redecorated for men only, 916 Ky. M2 AVAILABLE CLOSED, sizes large, lakes big, Baker, 729 N2. $½ mL. S., W. K. U. Campus. Wanted LARGE room with private bath, continuous hot water. Close to University. Also garage for rent, 1801 Alabama. Phone 2229R. 29 Mounted designs, miscellaneous pieces of pottery, bookbinding, weaving, jewelry and silverware will be on display. All work was done as regular class assignments and according to studio specifications. TYPISTS WANTED: 3 experienced typists for part-time work. No dictation necessary. Hours to suit your convenience. Russell L. Wiley, Room 9. Hochbordium Some of the commercial designs have been sold for professional use. Fabric, necktie, china, and book jacket designs come under commercial classification. THE VITA CRAFT company offers a real future to men qualified for a sales position part time. A college man can earn $15,000 per year and have the ability to quality for supervisor and executive work upon graduation. Summer work also available. The product is quality aluminum cookware. Write City Craft Company, 4125 Penn, Kansas State 2, Mo. The exhibit will be in the west wing of the third floor at Frank Strong hall until it is sent to Kansas City. VETERANS: We will buy, trade or sell for you any Army or Navy gear in good condition that you may wish to dispose of. Lawrence Surplus, 911 Mass. tt A "mighty great hare" was the chief god of the Algonquin Indian tribes, according to the Encyclopedia Britanica. The Indians believed they went to this god after death. Ingham sanatorium, Lansing Mich, has been added to the list of hospitals to which the University occupational therapy department will send students for hospital training, Miss Nancie Greenman, chairman of the department said today. They will begin this summer. Ingham Sanatorium Added To O.T. Hospital List "All occupational therapy students are required to take hospital training in tuberculosis," Miss Greenman said. "This rule has been made by the council on medical education and hospitals of the American Medical association, which sets up the standards for occupational therapy departments." The diadem spider has 680 tubes through which it spins its silk. By bringing its six spinneret fingers together, the spider can make one cord of 680 strands. COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals - Short Orders Sandwiches Open 5:30-12:30 Grad Employed By Hospital Mary Susan Sackett, '47, has been employed by the University hospital in Kansas City. She will begin work in the occupational department on May 15. Drink Milk FOR ENERGY, HEALTH. PEP. Drink our Grade "A" Pasteurized Milk today and Every Day Lawrence Sanitary Milk & Ice Cream Phone KU-25 with your news. Win a 10 Spot for a Crazy Shot LIKE THIS Pepsi Cola HERE'S WHAT YOU DO—Send us a crazy shot featuring Pepsi-Cola. We'll select what we think are the three or four best "shots" every month. If yours is one of these, you get ten bucks. If it isn't, you get a super-deluxe rejection slip for your files. AND—if you just sort of happen to send in a Pepsi-bottlecap with your "shot," you get twenty bucks instead of ten, if we think your "shot" is one of the best. Address: College Dept., Pepsi-Cola Company, Long Island City, N.Y. Franchiseed Pepsi-Cola Bottlers from coast to coast. PEPSI COLA Milk & Pint Gin - UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 29,1947 PAGE EIGHT 20 To Receive Certificate For Camp Work Twenty University students this week will receive certificates entitling them to jobs as summer camp counselors. Ned Linegar, Y.M.C.A. secretary, said today. The certificates go to students who attended Saturday'scamp counselor training course sponsored by the Y.M.C.A. and Alpha Phi Omega, national service organization. "The training course was the first offered by the University during the past six years. Mr. Linegar said he left trainees got a pretty good idea of what to expect in summer camps "even though most of the material was covered only briefly." Emphasizing duties and functions of the camp leader, students exchanged opinions and experiences in a panel discussion led by Mr. Ninegar. They agreed that counselor is a 24-hour-a-day job in which the leader serves alternately as substitute mother and big brother. Reginald Strait, assistant professor of physical education, addressed the group on principles of recreation. He stressed the importance of a good recreation program as an outlet for natural energy in children. Recreation Is Important Allen Crafton, professor of speech, outlined benefits of groun singing and talent shows. He predicted that a recent trend toward extensive musical and dramatical shows in summer camps would not be successful because of the large amount of time required for such productions. Miss Dorothy Farmer, instructor of design, discussed the arts and crafts programs of camps. She pointed out ways in which campers could make useful articles from trees and from such waste materials as tin cans. Lawrence Heeb, city director of recreation, outlined ideal swimming programs. Colored movies made last year in Colorado's Camp Cheley, were shown to the group in connection with the training course. International Club To Install Officers New officers will be installed at the next meeting of the International club, Richard Hawkinson, retiring president, said that John Ise, professor of economics, will speak on international cartels. Officers to be installed are Kenneth Beck, College junior, president; Dale Judy, junior, vice-president; Russell Mammel, freshman, treasurer; Margaret Meeks, sophoore, secretary. William Tincher, Glenn Varen- lorest, College freshmen, and Dale Judy, College junior, delegates to the United Nations conference at Oklahoma A. and M. reported on the progress of the conference. New members admitted are George Peterson, Phillip Carlson, Joann Webster, Robert Davis, and William Sturr, College freshman; Marjade Crossy, Fine Arts freshman; Euglyn Kerschen, Hilda James, Donald Millikan, and Frank Stannard, College sophomores. Glenn Shahman, Bud Hall, Jean Francoish, Robert Bathurst, John S. Smith, Ruth Williams, Donald Brown, John Corelain, Edward Cel- burn, Robert Mowry, George Bell, Wendell Link, James Lee, Martha Laffer, Glenn Kappelmann, Mans- field Miller, John E. Reeze, Wood Ruyan, James Scanlan, Donald Wyman, College juniors; Joseph McCoskrie, engineering junior; James Roberts, business junior. Mrs. George Mendenhall, Le- Royne Frederick, and Walter Billi- nage, College seniors; Donald Coussie, business senior; Blair Helman Ruguel Rios, graduate students. Today's face is Prof J. W. Twente. 'The Face Is Familiar...' E. R. This good natured prof. has a far reaching personality, and is known by most of the public school administrators of the state. He hangs out in Fraser hall and speaks to everyone he meets when he sees them in the halls of the building. Aleman To Get Royal Welcome Washington. —(UP)— President Miguel Aleman of Mexico will arrive this afternoon to receive the biggest welcome for a foreign visitor since the king and queen of England visited the capital in 1939. President Aleman will be greeted personally by President Truman, the cabinet and the public, including thousands of school children waving Mexican flags. The youthful and handsome Mexican president will be returning Mr. Truman's visit to Mexico City last month. To Land At 3 P. M. President Aleman and his party flying in Mr. Truman's own plane, "the Sacred Cow," were scheduled to land at the national airport at 3 p. m. The Mexican president and Mr. Truman will greet each other in brief speeches to be broadcast around the world. Tonight, Mr. Truman will entertain President Aleman at a state dinner with a guest list running the gamut of cabinet members through the chiefs of the armed services to congressional leaders of both parties. Behind the elaborate reception planned for the Mexican president was more than an effort by Mr. Truman to reciprocate the lavish welcome he received in Mexico. The friendship between this country and Mexico was being offered to the world as a prime example of good neighborliness. Furthermore, this was the first time a Mexican president in office has paid an official visit to this country. Ellis Case Ends; Final Decision Set For May 5 Final arguments in the Ellis library case were given to Judge Hugh Means in the Douglas County District court Monday. The judge took the suit under advisement and will probably give his decision May 5. This brought to a close a court battle between the University and the widow of Ralph Ellis for the possession of a $200,000 library of natural history books. Ralph Ellis brought the library to Lawrence in 1945, and signed an agreement with the University to house it. The agreement also stated that the books should go to the University on his death. He died in December of 1945, and the document was entered in the probate court as his will. Document Contested The document was contested by Mrs. Ellis. She said it was not a will, and that Ralph Ellis was incompetent to make a will. The probate court decided in her favor, and it was appealed to the district court. Judge Means ruled that the document was not a will, but allowed the trial to proceed on the assumption that it was a contract to make a will. The defense then tried to prove that Mr. Ellis was incompetent to make a contract. Lawrence Citizens Called Lawrence citizens were called to relate how Ralph Ellis would throw bottles, frying pans, and other objects through windows. The defense proved that Ralph Ellis was placed in a mental institution by the order of a California court. Chancellor Malott testified that "Ralph Ellis was an amazingly brilliant person." State attorneys claimed that Mr. Ellis was eccentric but a recognized authority on birds and mammals. Pickets Still On Campus Attorneys Intimate Conspiracy In their final arguments the defense attorneys intimated that there had been a conspiracy by university officials to do Mr. Ellis and his wife out of the valuable library. They claimed the Ellises were rushed into the agreement without an opportunity for legal advice. The state attorneys said that this was no more than the usual attack on public officials. They said the document was drawn up and signed at the insistence of Mr. Ellis, and that the University officials were only discharging their dutes. University Players To Meet The University Players will meet at 4 p. m. today in the little theater of Green hall. THIS FIRM IS UNFAIR TO LOCAL COMMUNITY AEOL News Of The World Picketing that has extended into its nineteenth day is continued by Bill Kochler and Charles Ralston, carrying the sign, both from Lawrence. They are members of the Kansas City Kansas Building Trades Construction laborers union striking against the Constant Construction company. Showing interest in the picketing, that has stopped work on emergency class room space back of Frank Strong are, from left to right, Clifford Malone, College freshman, Betsey Sheidley, junior, and Richard Oberhelman, freshman. Third Proposal May Break Phone Deadlock Bulletin Washington, (UP)—New government efforts to end the telephone strike ran into a stone wall today when the American Telephone and Telegraph co. refused to go along with a union demand for some kind of a wage offer. Washington.—(UP)—The government came up today with another plan—its third—to settle the 23-day-old telephone strike. Officials of the American Telephone and Telegraph company's long division and of the American Union of Telephone Workers reportedly were to be handed the proposal at bargaining sessions beginning at 10 a.m. Robert Creasey, chief negotiator for the long lines workers, said the first real break in the deadlocked negotiations might come today. The new proposal was described as calling for a substantial raise for the key long lines workers—possibly as high as $5 a week. Government conciliators declined comment on the new peace proposal but they appeared generally optimistic. Union Board Will Hear Applications Wednesday Students applying for positions of president, vice-president, secretary, and treasurer of Union Activities for the 1947-43 school year must appear before members of the Union operating board at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday. The four officers will be chosen after the interviews. Religion Necessary Conference Decides The religious needs of the university student and his relations to his church were topics at the state wide Presbyterian Westminster foundation conference Saturday. The Rev. Harold Barr, dean of the School of Religion, said that the religious needs of a university student must be met "by a religion on the campus which is aggressive, positive, and fearlessly intelligent." This is needed because a high majority of students are "religiously illiterate," and are meeting ideas contrary to some of the orthodox concepts of their faith, he added. The Rev. Dr. Walton Roth, Presbyterian synodical director of Kansas, said that the university student can contribute enthusiasm and healthy criticism to his church as well as live leadership and "good, hard work." Chancellor Deane W. Malott, in a welcoming address said, "Traditional separation of church from state is a lessening gap. More and more the university feels a direct responsibility for the religious and moral education of its students." Dean Posilithwaite, College senior, led the delegates in a discussion of the relations of the student to his home church. YMCA Delegates Will Meet in Manhattan Thursday Delegates from the University V.M.C.A. will meet in Manhattan Thursday for an informal panel discussion with representatives of the Kansas State group. A1 Y.M.C.A. members who wish to attend on either or both days may check with the office in the Union. Mrs. F. T. Stockton To Heed University Women's Group Mrs. F. T. Stockton was elected president of the American Association of University Women in Lawrence Thursday. Russia Sides With Arabs in UN Palestine Debate Flushing, N. Y. —(UP)—Russia showed signs today of splitting with the western powers and siding with the Arab states in the opening skirmish of United Nations debate on Palestine. Some diplomats expected the Russians to strike at Great Britain's rule of the Holy land mandate and perhaps even demand that the British begin an early withdrawal from the area. TiCc Wallace Back From Europe Washington — (UPI) — Henry A. Wallace has returned from his swing around Europe in opposition to United States foreign policy. He insists that he has been misquoted and misunderstood. But he still is against United States foreign policy. 15 Aboard 'Lost' Plane Vancouver, B. C.—(UP)—A Trans- Canada airlines plane with 15 persons aboard disappeared last night two minutes before it was scheduled to land here. Annual Music Camp To Begin June 23 The tenth annual Mid-Western Music camp sponsored by the School of Fine Arts will be held for six weeks at the University beginning June 23. Prof. Russell L. Wiley, director of the University band and orchestra who organized the camp 10 years ago, will again be director. Associate director will be Gerald M. Carney, a professor in the music education department. Nationally known guest conductors will be brought here to conduct several of the weekly Sunday concerts by the 150-piece band and 100-piece orchestra. Nearly 200 high school students from 10 states have attended the music camp in the past. Classes will be offered by 28 instructors in instrumental and vocal solo and ensemble work. Board and room will be furnished by University fraternity and sorority houses and dormitories. The highway patrol said the twister narrowly missed the town of Colby, strolling several farms outside the town as it skipped about 15 miles across the countryside. No deaths or injuries were reported. Professor Wiley says many inquiries have already been received from prospective students. Colby, Kan. (UP)—Striking telephone linemen today were back to work but only to help the company in repairing five miles of toll lines ripped out by a tornado which also caused heavy damage to several nearby farms late Monday. w. A. Eastain, business representative for the Southwestern Telephone workers union in Kansas and western Missouri, said at Kansas City the workers would "go right back on strike when the lines have been rebuilt." "The union members merely offered their services as private citizens during an emergency," Mr. Bastian said. "The union has no intention of interrupting service which would affect the safety and welfare of the public." Colby Twister Sends Linemen To Work Paul Ott Lectures At Physics Conference Paul Ott, graduate student in physics, spoke on methods used to determine the mass of a mesotron at the physics colloquium Monday. He explained that the mesotron is a particle produced by cosmic rays, weighing 200 times as much as an electron but having the same charge. University DAILY KANSAN STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Wednesday, April 30, 1947 44th Year No.130 Lawrence. Kansas. Tighten Belts, Checks May Not Come Today According to E. R. Elbel, director of the veterans bureau, there is no indication that veteran's cheeks will be delayed this month. By Bibler "We receive between 150 and 200 checks each months at the office for those who do not get them in the mail. So far, we have received 100 checks which is normal, more are expected to come in today. The veterans office has not had any notification regarding a delay of checks this month," he said. Washington—(UP)—The Veterans administration won't be able to issue monthly checks to nearly 2,780,000 veterans today because congress hasn't appropriated the money yet. The shortage affects most of the 1,120,000 veterans receiving read-justment allowances while unemployed or self-employed, and 1,600,-000 others getting subsistence payments while in school or on job training. The VA meanwhile instructed all student veterans who plan to attend summer school to notify V.A. regional offices so their subsistence checks may be continued. V. A. said the funds were provided in a deficiency appropriation bill still awaiting final action. Payments will be resumed as soon as the bill is passed. Phi Mu Alpha To Broadcast Phi Mu Alpha, men's music fraternity, will present a program of nine numbers at 9:30 tonight over KFKU. The program will include "The Dachshund" (Preyer), arranged by William Spence, played by a woodwind quintet; "Allah" (Chadwick), arranged by Melvin Zack, sung by Benjamin Shanklin accompanied by a woodwind and string ensemble; "Rondo Capriccio" (Fitzgerald), a cornet solo, played by James Sellards accompanied by Melvin Zack "Concerto for Saxophone" (Gurewich), a saxophone solo played by Richard Kell; "One Alone" from Romberg's "Desert Song," sung by Jess Rose accompanied by a woodwind and string ensemble. Terpo di Fado" (Goldman), a flute solo played by Marcus Hahn accompanied by Zack; "Serioso," by Zack, will be played by the woodwind quintet. This number was awarded first prize in the national Phi Mu Alpha competition. "A Song for Lovers" (Taylor) arranged by Zack, sung by Charles Byera accompanied by the windwood and string ensemble. This program will also be presented late in May at Winter General hospital, Topeh Habein, Peterson Speak At Tea For Topeka Seniors Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, will interview senior high school women in Topeka today, following a tea sponsored by Women's Panhellenic. She will be accompanied by Miss Martha Peterson, who will speak about rush week at the University. WEATHER Kansas—Partly cloudy today, to- night and Thursday with scattered showers in the west Thursday. Continued mild. Low tonight in 50's except 45-50 extreme west. _little Man On Campus NO SMOKING! UNV. OF KANSAS VETS OFFICE BIBLER "Did my check come today?" In the same session he was fined six dollars for four violations this semester. His appeal will be heard May 6. Harold T. Herriott was given permission in student court, Tuesday, to appeal the $140 fine levied against him last semester for 28 parking violations. New Instructors Are Scarce Dean Jones Discovers On Trip "Well, I found that traveling conditions are easing up anyway," J. O. Jones, dean of the School of Engineering, said concerning his tour of colleges and universities in the Midwest. His trip, in search of recruits for the engineering faculty, proved unsuccessful. Motion for a new trial was denied Edwin T. Mahood who was fined $25, suspended sentence on $15, for transferring parking permits. Jean Moore was defense attorney for Mahood. The Dean had hoped to get help from the heads of other engineering schools in the area, but instead he found that most of them were in a worse plight than he. "The best I could do was to get the dean of the engineering school at the University of Iowa to trade me two men who are getting their master's degree this spring. I have to send him two of ours, so we gain nothing. It's a sad situation," Dean Jones concluded as he shook his head. During the trip, Dean Jones visited the Universities of Iowa, Michigan, Illinois, and Wisconsin, Northwestern University, and two small colleges. In all of these schools he found a shortage of engineering teachers. The Dean laughed as he remarked concerning the number of old friends he had run into during his visits on the various campuses. He was especially impressed by the number of K.U. men on the faculty at Michigan. "It looks as if there are more K.U. graduates and ex-faculty men at Michigan than there are here at the University," he remarked. "I believe that we at K.U. are better staffed than most of these schools. I know that we have better equipment than most of them, so I guess that we have no room to complain," he said. Herriott's Appeal OK'd By Court Brown Wins ISA Award Darrel R. Brown, freshman engineer, will receive the ISA $50 scholarship this semester, Betty van der Smissen, chairman of the ISA scholarship committee, announced today. Brown was one of the two candidates selected from s geral applicants interviewed by the ISA council. He was chosen by a joint student-faculty scholarship committee including Margaret Habein, dean of women; J. H. Nelson dean of the graduate school; Wilms Tompkins, assistant dean of men; Betty van der Smissen and Wilma Hildebrand, college sophomores; Victor Reinking, college junior. Mud Slinging Parties To Be Fined By ASC Council Asks For Dance Reports, Must Approve Fund Appropriations Mud slinging and name calling by any political party makes that party subject to a fine of from $50 to $100, if it is convicted by the student court. This fine must be paid to the treasurer of the All Student Council before that party can enter any candidate in an all-University election. The famous Wagnerian soprano, Miss Helen Traubel, will present the final program of the University concert series at 8:20 p.m. Monday in Hoch auditorium. Miss Traubel sang at the University in 1942. Helen Traubel To Present Final Concert Monday Comments of definite news value, published by any University publication such as the Daily Kansan, will not make that publication subject to this ruling passed by the A.S.C. Tuesday night. Miss Trabuel was born in St. Louis where she received much of her early training. Her first important engagement was a six-week tour as solist with the St. Louis symphony. After hearing her sing, Walter Damrosch wrote a special role for her in his opera "The Man Without a Country." Miss Traubel's concert will include selections from the works of Schubert and Richard Strauss, an aria from Wagner's "Die Walkure," and a closing group of English and American songs. In 1937 she made her Metropolitan Opera debut. After an outstanding Town Hall recital in 1939, she sang over the radio and as solist with the New York Philharmonic orchestra. Her triumph with the Metropolitan Opera company as Sieglinde in "Die Walkure" soon followed. Students may be admitted to the concert by presenting activity books and paying tax for tickets the night of the concert. Tickets are on sale at the School of Fine Arts office, Bell's Music company, and the Round Corner drug store. Group To Honor Student Engineer The Weddings Will Have To Wait Recognition will be given to an outstanding underclassman in engineering each year, Tau Beta Pi, engineering fraternity, decided in a meeting Tuesday in Marvin hall. Details of the plan will be worked out later. Initiation will be at 5:30 p.m. May 19, followed by a banquet in the Kansas room of the Union building. Plans and ideas for the erection of a monument in the area between Lindley and Marvin halls were discussed. Chapel To Have First Baptismal Service Weddings will take a back seat in Danforth chapel Sunday when the first baptismal service will take place. John Michael, 3. a 1 Irven Kelley, three months, sons of Mr. and Mrs. Irven W. Hayden, K. J. students, will be baptized by the Rev. Edwin F. Price. Mr. Hayden is a senior in the School of Education. His wife was the former Ruth Kelley, '43. The year-old, small, stone building at the east end of the campus has been a traditional place for student weddings. More than 75 couples have been married there since March 20, 1946. Reservations for 14 weddings have been scheduled for the chapel in June. Eagle To Soar Again Universal military training, Henry Wallace's European tour, and communism and democracy will be discussed in this issue. The next issue of the Eagle, recently-organized campus paper, will appear May 14 as decided at a staff meeting Monday. After any dance that draws on funds controlled by the A.S.C., the dance manager must file a detailed report concerning the nature of the expenditures. He must give a copy of this report to the auditing committee, the A.S.C. treasurer, and the chairman of the A.S.C. social committee. Must File Application Any group that wants an appropriation of funds from the All Student Council must file an application with the A.S.C. finance committee. This application must state how the funds are to be used, a budget of the organization for the present school-year, and the names of the president and treasurer of the group. University extra-curricular organizations changing their A.S.C. representative this semester, must have that man chosen and ready to be sworn in at the May 13 meeting. The purpose is to have all of the new members in at once. John Irwin, president, said. $500 For Foreign Student Five hundred dollars was appropriated for a foreign student scholarship at the University. This practice was started last year. A committee composed of Bruce Bathurst, chairman, Allan Cromley, Tom Harmon, and Anne Scott will meet with Mr. J. H. Nelson, dean of the graduate school, to decide the country from which this student is to come. Other appropriations were $690 to finish paying the K-Book debt, $500 for the Varsity dance fund, and $302 to pay for the spring election expenses. K-Book In Two Sections The K-Book for the fall semester will be printed in two separate sections. The first will be a book of general student information while the second part will be the date book or calendar. "It is being printed in two parts because the calendar won't be decided upon definitely until September and the University wants to send out general information booklets to new students this summer." Anne Scott, publications committee chairman, said. The matter was referred to the finance committee which is to give its answer at the next meeting. Jean Moore, College senior, appeared as spokesman for the student United Nation's group and asked for an appropriation of $100 for the organization's use. This sum is to be used for the rest of this semester. Corwin Suggests Safety Regulations Convertibles and open jeeps have been violating the law by carrying an excessive number of passengers, Robert Corwin, campus traffic officer announced today. "Such violations will be punished in the future," he added. Three persons is the maximum allowed by law in the front seat of any vehicle, Corwin pointed out. He also emphasized that pedestrians had become lax in their observance of signals at intersections. "For the safety of all, hand signals of the traffic officer must be obeyed by both drivers and pedestrians," he stated. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS APRIL 30,1947 You're not dreaming lady... it's true! I Starting Tomorrow at 9 A. M. for 3 days Thurs.- Fri. - Sat. Dress Sale GREATEST $10 Value ] in our History 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 10 Here's why . . . not old Dress marked down from stock, But Brand new. Never shown before dresses. - Sheer printed BEMBERGS - Fine quality WOVEN SEERSUCKERS - One and two-piece BUTCHER LINENS - Gay, colorful PRINTED CREPES - Solid color RAYON SHANTUNGS - Eyelet-embroidered CHAMBRAYS - Crisp, smart PLAID GINGHAMS JUNIORS 9 TO 15 .. MISSES 10 TØ 20 The Palace 843 Mass. Store hours Sat. 9:00 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. THE MADISON COAT AND DRESS. 1947 APRIL 30,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE 图 SOCIALLY SPEAKING Locksley To Have Hour Dance Locksley hall will entertain with an hour dance tonight from 7 to 8 p. m. at the house. Alpha Chi Omega Entertains ** Dinner guests of Alpha Chi Omega Sunday were Robert Held, Robert Southern, Robert Gunn, Leon Barr, Stanley McEwen, Charles Lear, and Edward Surface. Tri Chi Iota, Delta Lambda Iota and Phi Sigma Iota have organized to form independent social organizations. Iota Groups Formed Charter members will invite prospective pledges to future meetings Templin Hall Entertains Templin hall entertained Saturday with a hay-rack ride followed by a dance at the hall. Guests were Jimmie Grimes, Thomas McGraw, Jack Freeman, Robert Sparling, Kenneth Bales, Francis Barrow, Harold Kaufmann, Joe Janoyak, Charles Galt, Paul Briley, Dwight Ciklson, Arnold England, W. Showalur, Milton Coughenour, Jim Bouska and Allen Cromley Watkins Hall Has Formal Chaperons were: Mr. and Mrs Emil Telfel, and Mr. and Mrs Willis Tompkins. The Watkins hall spring formal was held Saturday night. Theme of the dance was based on the house song, "Sweetheart of Lilac Lane." The guests were: Lowell Elliott, George Johnson, Oval West, William Akright, Billy Fawl, Clark Randall, Jim Mason, William Crabb, Claude Engelke, William Hinricks, Phillip Smith, Jim Croak, Azks Akaer, David Garlock, Richard McWilliams, Max Haley, Scott Lingley, Victor Berger Kita Gelson, J. Sterling Baxter, Robert Scipioni, Ed Howard, Maurice Neideno, Don Seba, Bon Brook, Edwin Bideau, Wynn Bauer, Merle Clayton, John O'Heary, Frank Meyer, A. J. Hill, Gene Cal- darera, John Marggrave, Theodore Bernard, Paul Enshel, Dale Dunlap, William Padgett, Robert Baldwin, and Robert McCullough. Kappa Sigs Have Formal Guests at the Kappa Sigma Spring formal Saturday night were: Mary Asher, Dorothy Wood, Guinevere Goerz, Marilyn Macferran, Helen Heath, Patti Vance, Peggy Herbst, Joan Vickers, Betty Join Greenwood, Riva Jean Vilent, Doris Tihn, Mary Jean Stuart, Pat Harrell, Mary Ann Sawyer, Diane Walton, Geraldine Ott, Mary McGennis, Shirley Sudendorf. Nancy Jackson, Mila Williams, Carilyn Carter, Pat Pudden, Margorie Gardner, Barbara Carges, Virginia Coppedge, Rosemary Robinson, Cleta Van Marter, Mary Jo Myers, Valerie Stagg, Patricia Marqua, Maxine Albury, Eleanor Bradford, Arnold Ahrogue, Mike Hunter, Peggy Schenkenberg, Marilyn Miller, Mary Genet, Couvette, Patrya James. Mary Ruple, Betty Hamman, Lila Hyten, Beverly Elderingo, Norma Schneider, Norma Jeane Lovett, Margie Kent, Shirley Goetz, Dorothy Stover, Emily Stacey, Kay O'Connor, Betty De Armond, Vivian Rogers, Jean Atkinson, Ann Clifford, Mary Lou Martin, Sally Houck, Doreen Wallace, Martha Gragg, Elaine Elvig, Joyce Emick, Pat Brown, Margaret Love, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Rankin, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Zimmerman, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Clifton, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Kerr, Mr. and Mrs. William Melntosh, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Finney, Mr. and Mrs. Rogers Lovett, Mr. and Mrs. Quentin Wheatley, Mr. and Mrs. Norman Herrin, Mr. and Mrs. William Hollis, Mr. and Mrs. Myron Sewell, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Bucholtz, Mr. 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. Usual Saturdays and Sundays, holiday holidays and examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. COED'S CORNER Meribah Barrett, Singer Wants To Star Gaze "I'm about sung out since the Women's Glee club tour," murmured Meribah Barrett, College sophomore, as she relaxed in an easy chair in Miss Habein's outer office. "We sang before high schools in the six towns; one couldn't have wished for more appreciative audiences," she said. But singing is a sideline to Meribah's real interest, accounting. A sophomore in the College, she finds it hard to wait till fall when she enters the School of Business. Later a position with a traveling accountant would be "fine and dandy." Dorry Worry, Says Meribah Meribah's philosophy of life deserves a word. A firm believer that life isn't as serious as lots of folks think. Her Irish blue eyes sparkle with a happy-go-lucky joy of living. Her advice to warriors is "don't." Her father, a printer, does printing jobs for all the firms in Arlington from the grain elevator to the bank. 'Pop's the former publisher of the 'Arlington Enterprise,' had to close during the war because of labor scarcity.' Maribah remembers spending her girlhood close to home but when she received her high school diploma, she decided to spread her wings. Left Home To Work "I went all of twenty miles away to Hutchinson where I spent six months in business school" she said. "Then I began secretarial work for a local motor company." "The business school has a ruling that its graduates prove their capability by working six months under the same employer before receiving diplomas. Instead of six months, I staved two years." By that time, Meribah had decided to take further business training at K. U. "I wanted higher education." Meriiah said, "but bated to climb for it. So, I stayed at Carruth where I had only a half block of hill to climb." K U. Is Hectic "I had always heard that University enrollment lines are endless, but I breezed right through, and decided that people had exaggerated. But this fall when I enrolled as a sophomore, I saw what people meant --it was hectic!" personly likes everything she's taking. "But I'm bitter on my lack of star gazing. Every night that observations are scheduled in astronomy, I've had rehearsal club practice or choir rehearsal, so I still have my first moon and star to see through the telescope," she stated. K. U. Is Hectic Meribah with characteristic complacency likes everything she's taking. when school's out, Meribah hopes to get a summer job in Wichita with a firm or department store; as an an accountant, "but naturally." Y.W.C.A. To Make Plans For Coming Year Harold R. DeLongy, Parsons, has been elected president of the pledge class. Sigma Nu Initiates - * 1 Sigma Nu announces the initiation of Norton B. Rixey of Kansas City, Md. Plans for the coming year will be discussed by new members of the Y. W. C. A. cabinet at a leadership session which will be held at 4 p.m. Friday, May 2. at Clinton park. and Mrs. Sam Lowe, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Ochs, Mr. and Mrs. Erwin Netzer, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Morrison, Mr. and Mrs. Paul Rogers, and Mr. and Mrs. Granville Bush, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Beal. Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women, will give a short talk at the meeting. Supper will be served by the Y. W. C. A. social committee following the discussion. Professor Stene's Son Has Fractured Arm Edwin Stene, son of Prof and Mrs. E. O. Stene is in Watkins hospital with a fractured arm. He was working on a car in his garage at home when the automobile rolled back and pinned him between the car and the side of the garage. Classical Music HILLIER'S BROOKLYN FOREWORD RECORDS Kchmaninoff 2nd Piano Concerto, "A. Rubenstein. WRIGHT'S For Records It's 846 Mass. Women To Hear Lectures On Etiquette This Week All women's organized houses are being visited this week by eight women who are speaking on etiquette, introductions, and courtesy. These lectures are sponsored by the Women's Executive council. The speakers are Mrs. Christine Alford, Mrs. Treva Brown, Mrs. Robert Calderwood, Mrs. John Patton, Miss Martha Petraffon, Miss Joie Stapleton, Mrs. Allen Crafton, and Mrs. Anthony Smith. Phone KU-25 with your news. Kennedy Plumbing And Electric Company 937 Mass. Phone 658 SNAPPY SERVICE! A woman serving a meal. Soups Chili Sandwiches "SNAPPY" LUNCH STOP IN TONIGHT! 1010 Mass. Outside Dance Floor NOW OPEN Starlight Dancing TUESDAY THROUGH SUNDAY, From 8 p.m. on At The 23rd & La. Dine-A-Mite Bill was blue, Will, 'Til he ate at the Blue Mill. Now he's happy 'n in good mood, All he needed was fine food. So if you're unhappy 'n hungry too, Do lik Bill did—it's the thing to do. —Writ by a pote Charlie Long's BLUE MILL 1009 Mass. Adveritisers Prefer The Kansan To Reach Hill Students A. J. BURKE There's No Doubt About It SPRING IS HERE! And your invitations to spring formals are piling up one on top another. Better check those dainty formals girls and those tuxes fellows—be sure they're clean and pressed—ready for the big fun season. ENTRUST YOUR CLEANING TO INDEPENDENT Laundry & Dry Cleaners 740 Vermont St. Phone 432 --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS APRIL 30,1947 PAGE FOUR SPOTLIGHT ON SPORTS The Big Six baseball standings continue to change with each game played. No school has displayed enough consistent strength to gain a firm hold in the upper division of play. By BILL CONBOY Nebraska, Kansas State, and Oklahoma are all tied up for the top spot with a record of three won and two lost. Missouri and Kansas are in a deadlock for fourth with a record of one won and two lost for the Tigers and two won against four lost for the Jayhawkers. Iowa State has not yet played a contest against a Big Six foe. In conference batting averages compiled from results of games played before last weekend, five batters have been at a 1000. clip. None of the five, however, has been at the plate more than twice, so the figures are not as startling as they would be a little later in the season. A contest between Missouri and Nebraska was not included in calculations since the box-score was not available. Thomas of Kansas State, and Shogrin and Davis of Oklahoma, all had batted two for two. H. Smith of Oklahoma and Ethridge of Kansas had hit one for one. No report as reached this desk on the two-game series between Nebraska and Iowa State scheduled for Monday and Tuesday of this week. For all other games played in the conference, the race stacks up in this manner: Leading batter among those with seven or more trips to the plate was Kier of Kansas State. He had pounded out 5 safeties in 8 times up for a .625 average. Next in line came Hegwold of Nebraska with .533 on 8 hits in 15 times at the plate. Rufer of Oklahoma had 5 hits in 10 trips for a straight .500 average. Bertuzzi and Mabry of coach Vic Bradford's Jayhawker squad both had 500 marks, Bertuzzi having batted four times and Mal蜜 twice. "Bud" French had a .429 average on 3 hits in 7 times up. Lou DeLuna had banged out 5 safeties in 12 times for a .417 mark. * * This has been one of the busiest weeks in Iowa State athletic history. Four varsity baseball games, two golf matches, two tennis matches. a track meet, and a "B" baseball game are included on the seventy day schedule. ... Harrison Dillard, Baldwin-Wallace hurdler who romped over the 120-yard highs in 14.1 at the Drake Relays, was facing a stiff wind all the way. Track experts calculated that his time was cut down as much as 4 seconds by the breeze. Had he hit the tape in 13.7 seconds, as might have been the case on a less windy day, he would have tied the world's record held jointly by Forrest Towns and Fred Wolcott, both of the United States. Representatives to the engineering council will be elected at the meeting in June. E.eb for mining engineer majors, must be at 5 p. m. in Lindley auditorium. Engineers To Elect Today At Meeting In Lindley Hall R. M. Dreyer, assistant professor of geology, will tell members about the national meeting of the club which he recently attended in New York City. --and WE SPECIALIZE IN JUICY STEAKS and OTHER FINE FOODS. Thick Malts Sandwiches Short Orders BILLS GRILL QUICK COURTEOUS SERVICE Across From 1109 Mass. Court House Phone 2054 Track Star Here is Forrest Griffith, Jayhawker hurdler and relay dash man. Late in reporting for track because of spring football practice, he has been bothered by a bad knee in recent workouts. 10 Five IM Teams Win By Big Scores Walk-away victories were the rule in Tuesday's intramural softball play. Scoring eight runs in the fourth inning, T. K E. downed Phi Psi, 10-5. Alpha Kappa Psi beat the Pharmacists by the same score. Other results were: Battenfeld 28, Pi K. A. 14; Phi Kappa 26, Gamma Delta 9; Sigma Chi 22, 1126 Club 4. High School Team Takes Second Place The University High school track team placed second behind Tonga-anoxie in the Tri-County league track meet at Leavenworth Monday. With a first in the 440-yard dash and second in the 220-yard dash and pole vault, James W. Erhart, senior led team scoring. The university received a trophy for second place honors. YOUR HAIR CAN BE LUSTROUS with an EGG SHAMPOO When the spring sun shines down you want it to flatter your tresses. An EGG SHAMPOO and a SET will emphasize those natural highlights, Your hair will be LUSTROUS HOME 430 BRAND BOX Beauty Shop 1844 IND. Evangelistic Services 19th and Vermont Church of the Nazarene April 30th to May 11th V. B. MARRATH Rev. Edwin E. Hole will give war experiences each night. Reverend Edwin E. Hale, Evangelist of Bethany, Okla. Wide experience as pastor, district superintendent, evangelist. Former Army Chaplain, "The Jeep Circuit Rider." Inspirational Messages, special music every night (except Saturday) at 7:45. Sundays, 11 a.m. Faultless May Win Derby But Odds Are Against Him You are Cordially invited. KEITH C. TAYLOR, Pastor Louisville, Ky. — (UP) — Calumet Farm's Faultless may become the first horse in history to win the Kentucky Derby after winning the trials, but betting odds are riding with tradition and another horse. C. V. Whitney's Phantax, winner of the Wood Memorial, is ranked as a 2 to 1 favorite in pre-Derby odds, with Faultless the second choice at 3 to 1. Six times in Derby history, the winner of the Wood has won the Derby. TENNIS Racquets ... $4.95 Balls ... $ .60 Presses ... $ .75 Shorts ... $2.49 Oxford ... $2.95 KIRK PATRICK SPORT SHOP 715 Mass. The Bus- (Adv) . -by Bibler THE KING'S BUS C BIBLER THE COUNDY BROADWAY CO. "Junior just LOVES to ride the bus!" Lost Something? Try a University Daily Kansan Want Ad Remember the Day——The Third of May S. C.I.O.Y.O.* Yes, this Saturday night come help us celebrate, for the I *SKYLINE CLUB IS ONE YEAR OLD!! One year of solid entertainment! Get a date now for Saturday night DINING 'n DANCING to the music of JOE LANGWORTHY'S BAND Tonight and every night—it's always fun at the SKYLINE CLUB 2301 Haskell—on Highway 10 Phone 3339 1947 PAGE FIVE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE. KANSAS APRIL 30,1947 Phi Delt's Win Volleyball Title Phi Delta Theta walked off with the intramural volleyball championship by defeating Sigma Chi Tuesday in two games. Although Sigma Chi contested every point, Phi Delt won the first two games 15-13 and 15-7. Sigma Chi took an early lead in the first game but the Phi Delts rallied and tied the score 9-9. From then on neither team was more than two points ahead. The score stood at 14-13 for the Phi Delts, both teams lost the ball on out-of-bounds serves. The Phi Delts steadied, however, and tallied the winning point. Again in the second game Sigma Chi took an early lead, but the Phi Delts were not long overtaking them. With the score tied 6-6 the Phi Delts pulled ahead and won the game. The lineups were: Phi Delt- Dunn, Harris, Churchill, Evans, Auten, and Scott. Sigma Chi- Kansas, Young, Shockey, Stratton, Peck and Farrington. Baseball Results TUESDAY'S SCORES: American League National League Detroit 8. Boston 3 Philadelphia 4. Cleveland 3 Washington at Chicago, rain New York at St. Louis, rain National League New York Islanders 2 Brooklyn 10, Chicago 6 Boston 4, Cincinnati 0 Pittsburgh 6, Philadelphia 2 American Association St. Paul 6. Minneapolis 4 Only game played STANDINGS: American League | | W. | L. | Pct. | G.B. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | New York | 7 | 4 | .636 | ... | | Chicago | 5 | 4 | .556 | 1 | | Detroit | 6 | 5 | .545 | 1 | | Cleveland | 5 | 4 | .500 | 1½ | | Washington | 5 | 4 | .500 | 1½ | | Boston | 4 | 4 | .655 | 2 | | Philadelphia | 4 | 4 | .400 | 2½ | | St Louis | 4 | 4 | .400 | 2½ | National League American Association | | W. | L. | Pct. | G.B. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Brooklyn | 8 | 2 | .800 | --- | | Chicago | 7 | 5 | .583 | 2 | | Pittsburgh | 7 | 5 | .583 | 2 | | Boston | 6 | 6 | .545 | 2½ | | Cleveland | 6 | 7 | .500 | 3 | | Philadelphia | 6 | 7 | .462 | 3½ | | New York | 3 | 7 | .300 | 5 | | St. Louis | 2 | 8 | .200 | 6 | | | W. | L. | Pct. | G.B. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kansas City | 5 | 3 | .625 | ... | | Louisville | 6 | 4 | .600 | ... | | Columbus | 6 | 4 | .600 | ... | | Minneapolis | 3 | 3 | .500 | 1 | | St. Paul | 5 | 6 | .454 | 1½ | | Indianapolis | 4 | 5 | .444 | 1½ | | Milwaukee | 4 | 5 | .444 | 1½ | | Toledo | 2 | 5 | .285 | 2½ | Probable Pitchers New York (Bevens 2-0) at St. Louis American League (Galefushe) Washington (Wynn 1-1) at Chicago Boston (Parnell 0-1) at Detroit (Newhouser, 1-2) Philadelphia (Marchildon 1-1) at Cleveland (Fellner 2-1) National League National League St. Louis (Munger 1-0) at New Chicago (Lade 0-0) at Brooklym (Bruno 1-4) Cineciniatt (Blackwell 2-0) at Boston (Salu, L-1) Fittsburgh (Mulcahy 0-0) at Philadel- delphia (Hughes 0-0) Salina Moves Up In Western League (By United Press) Salina moved up a notch into fourth place in the western association today by virtue of its 4-3 victory yesterday over Fort Smith, the cellar dweller. Topeka stayed at the top with four wins and one loss; Muskogee was second with five and three and Hutchinson has third with a 4-2 count. St. Joseph, Leavenworth and Joplin are knotted in fifth place with two wins and three losses each. Fraley Looks Them Over, Finally Picks Derby Winner By OSCAR FRALEY United Press Sports Writer New York—Settled in stall three at Manhattan's last livery stable, substituting hoss liniment for mint juleps and armed with the world almanac and the most batting averages. Fearless Fraley decided today that it was longshot time in the Kentucky Derby. Since 1940 the favorites have been laughing their way home ahead in Since 1940 the favorites have been the canter at Churchill Downs. Well, the "knock down the favorite club" time with a classy colt named Libis going to lift the mortgage this erty Road. We had a little trouble arriving at Liberty Road for there were a couple of other skates who looked pretty sharp. Milkwagon Joe was one of them but he was declared out when Happy Chandler's ouija board failed to tremble under the horse blanket. Phi Kappa Downs Gamma Delta, 26-9 A 28-hit barrage which the Phi Kappa intramural softball team unleashed on Gamma Delta Tuesday was the greatest offensive display seen on the diamonds this season. Included in the 26 to 9 Phi Kappa victory were five home runs. The Phi Kappa's now lead their division, with the Phi Delt's and Delta Tau Delta's tied for the runner-up spot. The Phi Kappa's and Phi Delt's will play Monday. I We've got the Pants! DUNGAREES SUNTANS ARMY & NAVY FATIGUES So Liberty Road it was, although there may be some snide critics to assert otherwise. There will be those his depth, what with horses being who point out that old fearless is over We also have complete stocks of many other types of apparel. 911 & 740 Mass. Tel. 588 & 669 Extra prints of senior pictures from the Jayhawk are ready. They may be picked up on our website, or you can time this week, and pay for at that time. Lawrence Surplus Stores Extra Prints Available as rare in this town as a seat in the subway. In rebuttal, did, you ever see anybody do better at the races than a lady with a hatipn Instant Service In Our Shoe Repair Department DE SOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH Royal College Shop 837-38 Mass. Buddy GALLAGHER MOTORS Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL USE-UR-SENSE and SAVE-UR-DOLLARS ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ with the opening of our OUTSIDE TERRACE We Now Offer OUR FAMOUS COLD PLATE including Cold Cuts Potato Salad Potato Chips Sliced Tomatoes Relishes Iced Tea JOIN THE GAY DINERS And dine at Cottage CAFE at the end of Oread YES, we are keeping prices lower Look At These CLOSEOUTS Lamp, end, cocktail, and radio tables—values up to $16.75 Closeout Price $8.95 Dinette sets, chrome, oak, and maple—regular price $74.50 to $89.50 Closeout Price $59.50 834 Mass. LOUNGE AND OCCASIONAL CHAIRS 1/3 OFF. BEDROOM CHAIRS 1/3 OFF. Frank's Furniture Co. FREE DELIVERY Phone 834 JAYHAWKER Shows 2:30,7,9 NOW, Ends Tues. LOOK WHO'S SOLVING MURDERS! LOOK WHO'S SOLVING MURDERS! BOB DOROTHY HOPE·LAMOUR in My Favorite BRUNETTE Coming Teresa Wright in "PURSUED" GRANADA Ends tonite OUT OF THE OLD WEST! JOHN WAYNE OAIL RUSSELL THE OLD WEST Angel AND THE BADMAN Starts Thursday Could a Man KILL And Not REMEMBER? One Black-out HOUR— What Happened? 110 PAT O'BRIEN CLAIRE TAVOR HERBERT MARSHALL LOVED OR LOATHED? CRACK-UP v PATEE Now Playing HISTORICAL WESTERN EDWARD SMALL Kit Carson with JON LYNN DANA HALL BARI ANDREWS Re-Retributed by Producers Reflecting Corp. Plus: Cartoon, Variety, News VARSITY Today, All week TWIN SISTERS TWIN SISTERS Wanting One Man—One Man Wanting Both Sisters— An explosive Drama Touched CITY by Flaming Jealousy "THE GUILTY" "THE GUILTY" AND "Durango Raiders" BOB STEELE - UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SIX APRIL 30,1947 "We Just Want A Washing Machine" POLITICS UNION BUSTING LABOR LAW IMPROVEMENTS HOUSE LABOR BILL TIE-IN SALE HERBLOCK © 1937 THE WASHINGTON POST Conflict Of Interests In The Holy Land Kansan Comments On Monday the special session of the United Nations assembly began in New York. At present, the agenda is limited to a study of the Palestine question. This knotty problem will provide a distinct test for the young international organization. If it can evolve a workable blueprint to end the current bloodshed, suffering, and strife in Palestine, it will gain considerable prestige as an international peace organization. The immediate object of the current session is to appoint a fact-finding committee to investigate current conditions and issues involved in the Palestine controversy. Whether this committee will have any greater success than the last such body remains to be seen. President Truman has advocated immediate admission of 100,000 Jews to the Holy Land. On moral and ethical grounds we feel bound to lean toward the Jewish cause. The Palestine problem poses a difficult problem for the United States. There are conflicting points of view within our government as to what course we should pursue. It will be interesting to watch coming developments on the Palestine problem. What will be our government's policy in this controversy? Will it be based on an impartial and just consideration of the issues involved—or will it be based on "oil diplomacy?" They point out that by supporting the Jewish position we will run the risk of alienating the good will of the Arabs, who may then turn to Russia. But certain members of the state department argue that it would be dangerous for us to throw our full weight to Zionism. This opinion is, of course, based on our large oil concessions in the Arab states. A great many Americans share the sentiments expressed recently by Mrs. Henry Wallace. She said, "I wish Henry would settle down on the farm." Dear Editor--may go NAME ___ Address ___ CP 7___ (Editor's note: All letters to the editor must be signed and must give the writer's full address. The name of the author of the publication upon request. Letters published by the editor should be prior consideration. The editor reserves the right to edit letters to meet space requirements and to consider the laws of libel and public decency. Terms Eagle Views Not Majority Opinion When we read of plans to publish the Eagle, some of us who are in the usually non-vocal majority thought that a paper that would print our ideas was a great idea. Unfortunately, the Eagle evidently believes the majority to be a pretty muddle-headed group. Their ideas of democracy which lead them to support the herding of colored people into remote sections of our local theaters don't agree very well with the democratic ideals of being born free and equal. Nor do their ideas of peaceful pussyfooting and leaving the race problem alone seem appropriate in a country that has changed itself from an uneducated, slave-holding, tyrannized colonial land to a free and forward moving nation. As for the Dove-like pressure minorities, some of us thought that movements for women's suffrage, abolition of slavery, and American independence were begun by "pressure minorities" who gained the support of the not-so-muddle-headed majority. The Eagle may be in the middle of the road—but so are all the ruts. College Sophomore WURLITZER PHONOGRAPHS Used Juke Box Records For Sale An autographed picture of the French pianist, Robert Casadesus, has been added to the School of Fine Arts "Hall of Fame", in the front corridor of Hoch auditorium. FOR PARTY RENTALS K.U.Has Photo Of Casadesus John H. Emick 1014 Mass. Phone 343 D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts, started a collection of the photos of famous musical artists when Hoch auditorium was opened to the public 20 years ago. Included in the collection are signed photos from Paderewski Schumann-H e i n k, Rachmaninoff, Kreisler, Heifetz, Rubinstein, John McCormack, Iutbi, Hoffman, John Philip Sousa, Ponselle, Grainger, John McGraw, Grimes, Tasaki, Sizegi, Elman, Feuermann, Casals, Crooks, Marian Anderson, Galli-Curci, Schipa, John Charles Thomas, and others. Philadelphia Laboratory Announces Fellowship The Walter G. Karr Memorial Fellowship for scientific personnel of the Smith, Kline, and French laboratories of Philadelphia was announced at a recent conference of the company's chemical consultants from 13 universities. A person awarded the fellowship may attend the college or university of his choice. The award pays tutelary and support during the course of study. Prof. Calvin VanderWerf, of the chemistry department, was a guest of the company during the conference in Philadelphia. Union Library Increased By Twelve New Books New books have been received at the Union library which may be checked out for three days. They are: "The Purple Testament;" "The Wayward Bus;" "With Strings Attached." "Short Stories from the New Yorker." "Informationase," "All the King's Male Lily," "Alley Baily." "All the Kings' Male Animal Farm." "America's Stamps;" "Soldier's Album;" and "U. S. Camera." Phone KU-25 with your news. The University Daily Kansan Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assn., Na- Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Ad- vertising Service, 420 Madison Ave. New Editor in Chief ... LeMoyne Frederick Managing Editor ... Marcella Stewart Asst. Man. Editor ... Martha Jewett Manage Editor ... William W. Abbey City Editor ... Wallace W. Abbey Assst. City Editor ... Shirley E. Bales Assst. City Editor ... Alan J. Stewart Telegram Editor ... John W. Abbey Editor ... Eloise W. Brooks Business Manager .. John D. Mccormick Advertising Manager .. Calvin Arnold Circulation Manager .. Thomas S. Cadden Correspondent ... Bill A. McCormick National Adv. Mgr. .. Frank R. Schultheil Promotion Manager .. William K. Brooks HICKOK BELTS Saddle Leathers Goatskins Pigskins Cowhides Suedes Plastics Dress, Slack, and Western Styles— $1 to $3.50 A complete selection in all sizes. Dean Tompkins Attends Meeting Of Advisers CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Willis Tompkins, assistant dean of men, is in Chicago attending a meeting of foreign student advisors. Mr. Tompkins is advisor to more than 50 foreign students attending the University. He will go to Ann Arbor from Chicago to attend a meeting of the National Association of Deans and Advisors of Men. COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals - Short Orders Sandwiches Open 5:30-12:30 - 3-day Cleaning Service - 4-day Laundry Service - 24-hour Shoe Repair - Leather and Garment Dyeing a Specialty. . Village Cleaners SUNFLOWER, KANSAS Opposite School Western Union----8 a.m.-9 p.m. Free PickUp and Delivery Phone 9009 MARKETING Yes sir! Now that the word's gotten around, car owners everywhere are talking about the new SQUEEGEE Tire For General's Biggest Sensation Yet See the New SQUEEGEE Tire at MORGAN-MACK MOTOR COMPANY YOUR FRIENDLY FORD DEALER 609 Mass. Phone 277 Adveritisers Prefer The Kansan To Reach Hill Students Go Vacationing! Go West! HAVE MORE FUN! VILLE DE SURVIGNE Gigantic Boulder Dam Romantle Southern California Missions LA FRONTERA DE SAN JOSE TREES ON THE RIVER WESTERN BAY TRAINING CENTER Glacier National Park GO GREYHOUND Greyhound's amazing New Travel Plan offers trips to Southern California, the Evergreen Northwest, the National Parks, Boulder Dam, Colorful Colorado, and all the Western Wonderlands. THE WEEKEND OF MAY 14, 2023 THE WEECHEN OF MAY 14, 2023 Take your choice of "expense-paid" tours, which include transportation, hotels, and sightseeing trips, or a "go-as-you-please" trip with stop-overs anywhere. Either way, Greyhound's comfort and courtesy are yours for $ \frac{1}{4} $ the cost of driving your car. Send the coupon now for colorful, free travel literature that pictures trips and "expense-paid" tours to everywhere West. Send the coupon now! FREE FOLDER Paste this epson on a gonny postcard and mail to us at **USPS** or **Dept. 2116**, Omaha, Neb., for Gorgohannan pow travel Plan and FREE Literature. (name destination) J. R. McKinley UNION BUS DEPOT 638 Mass. Phone 707, 708 OVERLAND GREYHOUND LINES Operated by INTERSTATE TRANSIT LINES APRIL 30,1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Official Bulletin April 30,1947 *** Archery club will practice from 4-6 today on hockey field behind Robinson gym. 中 中 中 Jay James senior board members at 4:30 p.m. today in the Pine room of the Union. Regular meeting of Jay James at 5 p.m., same place. General Semantics club at 8:15 tonight in 111 Frank Strong. Please bring borrowed semantic material to meeting. Law Wives at 8 tonight in lounge of Green hall to complete plans for a picnic Friday, May 2. Mrs. Charles Rankin, from Prague, will speak. YMCA-YWCA world student service fund committee at 4 p.m. today at Henley house. *** Students who left activity books at polls may pick them up at the business office. Copies of 1946-47 K-book are now available free of charge to students at the Student Organizations window of the business office. *** A. V.C. meeting at 7:30 tonight in Frank Strong auditorium. Open forum with editors of Eagle and Dove leading discussion. Dr. W. E. Sandelius, moderator. Business meeting to follow. Election of delegate to A.S.C. Owl society active members, brief but important meeting at 5 p.m. today in the East room of the Union. Be prompt. Progressive party meeting at 7 tonight, 9 Frank Strong. Meeting for all engineering students except graduating seniors at 10 a.m. Thursday in Hoch auditorium. Purpose of meeting is to select three candidates from each class for representatives on Engineering Council. 一 ★ 厂 ★ 元 0:00 p.m. YWCA-YMCA May Day party for children of North Lawrence at 4 p.m. Thursday. Leave Henley house at 3:15 p.m. and 3:50 p.m. Mathematics colloquium of department of mathematics at 5 p.m. Thursday in 222 Frank Strong. John L Yarnell will speak on "A Problem in Calculus of Variation." Alpha Phi Omega fraternity at 7 p.m. Thursday in 206 Frank Strong. Election to take place. Der deutsche Verein wird Donnerstag um 4:30 in 402 Fraser zusammenkommen. Lichtbilder werden von Fraunlein Betraut Leimert gezeigt. Alle, die sich für Deutsch interessieren, sind hierzlich eingeladen. Kaffe und Kuchen werden serviert. Christian Science organization regular meeting at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Danforth chapel. *** Meeting of Dove editorial board at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in 210 Frank Strong. *** Forensic League at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in the Pine room of the Union. \* \* \* YWCA cabinet meeting 3:30 - 7 p.m., Friday, Henley house. ** ** KSC-K.U. "Y" retreat, Saturday and Sunday in Manhattan sponsored by YMCA-YWCA. Basic Christianity seminar, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Mission room, Myers hall. Rev. H. G. Barr will lead discussion. Daily Kansan Classified Ads New members of the World Student Service Fund committee will meet at 4 p.m. today to plan their drive for next year. Hilda James, College sophomore, is chairman of the committee. *** WSSF To Meet Today Meeting of Negro Students' association at 7 tonight in Myers hall. Lost GREY Parker "51." On bottom at gold cap. John May, 1425 Tenn. 1 TAN rainstorm, Union Building Ballroom contact John L. Eberhardt, 1795 Mason, 1 ENGLISH BOOK, "Fifteen Greek Plays." Frank Strong, Frank Strong. Lois Park, 101 Tenm. HEART-SHAPED mother-of-pearl bracelet with a Harvard crest inset. Great sentimental value. Please leave at Kaminsky or contact Barbara Storc Cornbill Hall. PI BETA PHI Fraternity pin, between Union, Jayhawk Cafe and 15th and Tennessee. Please contact R. Mayer, Spanish Dept. K. U. 153. reward. 30 Phone 360 BOOKS entitled "Economics" and "Principles and Types of Speech." Finder please contact Kansan office. Generous reward. 30 Darnell Electric Business Services LADIES tailoring and alteration. Ora Floyd, 923 Ala. Phone 767. 30 TENNIS RACKETS resturing and repaired. Silk, nylon, or gut. Priced accordingly. $1.50 to $10. Phone 2711-W. Ed. Wellhaus, en. 1145 Ky. M-5 FREE OFFER: Discharges valuable papers copied for terminal leave pay and educational benefits 3 copies for price of 2. Round Corn Drug Co, 801 Mass. 1939 Harley Davidson, 61 Overhead, Searle, 1130 Emery Road. 6 For Sale FOR SALE: Taylorcraft LZM Continental A-65, converted fuselage. Never been cracked, but has complete recorder job and engine overhaul. Painted pure white, trimmed in bright red, wheel pants, new red leather seats, new cross country prop, hard shell shell, front bumper and finished on inside, new metal dash board, one piece windshield, large luggage compartment, brakes, air cleaner and bank indicator. Good clean ship priced to sell. Contact Danny O. Becker, 1233 Oread, contact Danny O. Becker, Phi Chi house. 1 TUX, size 38, worn twice. May be seen at Apt. 3-E Sunnyside after p. 5. m. CHEAP: 12 boxes, 12 guage solgut shells, size 4, 6, 8; 1 pr. ice skates, size 7; lawnmower, K. L. Coleman, 18-8 Sunnyside i. It's part mechanical, part detective work and part scientific understanding. Our motor analysis equipment is tops and if you want peak performance, come in for an estimate. NEW 6 x 30 German Binocular. Price $75.00. Ralph L. Miller, 212 Lane "O," Sunflower, Kans., or contact me in Pharmacy office. 38 16mm. MOVIE CAMERA. B. and H. Antisigmatic f/3.5 lens, converted Army gun viewfinder and battery. Advertised price over $10 Asking $40. Phone K U 185. AUTO SERVICE IS A COMPLEX JOB. 617 Mass. For Rent SLEEPING ROOMS. Newly Redecorated for men only. 916 Ky. M.2 Wanted VAILABLE for barn dances. large haw W. K. U. Campus. 729 N2. M2 S. W. K. U. Campus. 729 N2. M2 TYPISTS WANTED: 3 experienced typists for part-time work. No dictation necessary. Hours to suit your convEN-tion: Russell L. Wiley, Room 9. Host Auditorium VETERANS: We will buy, trade or sell for you any Army or Navy gear in good condition that you may wish to dispose of. Lawrence Surplus, 911 Mass. tt ANY Persons who were members of Phi Kappa Sigma at other schools or alumni of the fraternity please contact Daily Kansan office. 2 Miscellaneous JENNIE M. BURKE DON'T MISS CLASSES, ON ACCOUNT OF Broken GLASSES. Bring them into us. We duplicate broken lenses. Lawrence Optical Co. Lindley's Kansas Cleaners 12 E. 8th Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices MEN'S SUITS— Cleaned and Pressed 65c LADIES' PLAIN DRESSES— Cleaned and Pressed 69c Cash and Carry Only Cash and Carry Only THE ENGINEER'S MASTERPIECE We Doctor Your Car We took our doctor's degree in mechanics. That's why we can spot trouble fast and fix it just as quickly! At the first sign of trouble, drive in and let us check and repair your car. Winter Chevrolet 730 New Hampshire Phone 77 MATHEW AND MATHESON Lost Something? Try a University Daily Kansan Want Ad THE BLOOD CATHERINE MURRAY WHI-SH-SH-SH-SH!! "It's Moisturized" TO STAY FRESH LONGER! TO TASTE BETTER! TO SMOKE MILDER! New! ALL NEW! Raleigh "903" New Blend! New Taste! New Freshness! MISS GODDARD SAYS: "Medical Science offers PROOF POSITIVE No other leading cigarette gives you Less Nicotine Less Throat Irritants" Tests certified by a jury of 14 distinguished doctors Raleigh CIGARETTES PAULETTE GODDARD star of MIROCLE APPEN" Made by the revolutionary new "903" moisturizing process. Beneficial moisture penetrates every tobacco leaf—gives you a smoother, milder, better smoke! Get new Raleigh "903" Cigarettes today! SQ3 Raleigh CIGARETTES UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS APRIL 30,1947 PAGE EIGHT Students Give $4,189.11 To Memorial Fund Student contributions to the World War II Memorial fund during the current drive total $4,189.11 Bruce Bathurst, student chairman, said today. This amount, already $136.27 greater than student contributions last year, will increase when all organized houses have reported their contributions, he said. "We urge all houses and independent teams to complete their campaigns and to report outstanding contributions as soon as possible." Bathurst said. Kenneth Postlethwaite, organization director of the Memorial food, is meeting with Lawrence business representatives today, to organize a spring 'clean-up' campaign for the downtown district. Last year's drive netted 30 thousand dollars from downtown merchants. However, this is 20 thousand dollars short of the goal which the Chamber of Commerce set. Nearly 300 firms have not yet contributed to the fund, Mr. Postlethwaite said. Members of the Memorial committee are calling on all these firms this week and expect to reach the goal set by the Chamber of Commerce within a very few days. Poststethwaite has been in both Kansas City, Kan., and Kansas City, Mo., this week, organizing similar campaigns in those cities. "When all of these spring drives are completed, the Memorial fund should total at least 200 thousand dollars." Mr. Postlethwaite said. Former Student Dies When Glider Crashes Alvin Lee Earnett, 40 graduate of the School of Engineering, was killed Saturday in a glider crash near Cheyenne. Wowing. He attended summer school here in 1944, and was a member of Theta Tuo, professional engineering fraternity. A B-17 pilot during the war, Barbnett was employed as an engineer by United Air Lines in Cheyenne after his release from service. He joined a glider club in Cheyenne as a private instructor. Besides his parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Barnett, Olathe, he leaves his widow, Mrs. La Verne Barnett, and a daughter, Doris Kary Barnett, 3 months old, both of the home; a sister, Mrs. Doris Poland, Olathe, and a brother, Donald A. Barnett; Earlingsing, Calif. Lind And Lowrance Heard At K.C.U. Dr. L, R. Lind, associate professor of Greek and Latin, and Dr. Winnie D. Lowrance, associate professor of Latin were on the program at the 40th annual meeting of the Classical Association of Kansas and Western Missouri, held Saturday at the University of Kansas. Dr. Lind's topic was "Tadultore Traditore: The Great Ages of Translation." Dr. Lowrance reported on the meeting of the Classical Association of the Middle West and South. Next year's meeting will be at the University. Glee Club Elects Officers, Plans Annual Spring Picnic Martha Loffer, College junior, has been elected president of the Women's Glee club for next year. Other officers elected were: Joan Happy, business manager; Mildred Hogue, secretary; Lois Lee Richardson, librarian; and Betty Thomas, assistant librarian. The annual spring picnic for the glee club will be at 4 p. m. on May 19 at Potter lake. Miss Irene Peabody, director of the group, said. Juke Box Mixer At Potter Tonight An I.S.A. Juke Box mixer will be held at Potter Lake from 7:30 to 9:00 tonight, Shirley Wellborn, I.S.A. president, said today. I. S.A. membership cards or 15 cents will admit students. The dance will be held in Robinson gymnasium if it rains. Dr. L. C. Woodruff, associate professor of entomology and biology, has been elected sponsor of the organization, to replace Henry Werner, dean of student affairs. Coleman Resigns To Accept Post In New Mexico Dr. James Coleman, assistant professor of psychology since 1945, has resigned from the department and will accept an assistant professorship at the University of New Mexico in September. Before coming to K.U., Dr. Coleman was an instructor at the University of California. He received his bachelor of arts degree in 1938 and his doctorate in 1942. Phi Beta Kappa. He received his doctor of philosophy degree in 1942. Dr. Coleman taught classes in abnormal, social, and advanced psychology. He will instruct similar courses at Albuquerque. During the war he was an assistant personnel manager of the Douglas Aircraft Research laboratory, instructed in the extension division of U.C.L.A., and taught courses in psychology for the Army-Navy service program. Dr. Coleman has been preparing a text book on abnormal psychology. He hopes to have it published in 1948. Nine students from a field of 18 contestants have qualified to meet in the finals of the all-University extemporaneous speaking contest tonight. Speech Final At 8 Tonight Speeches will begin at 8 p.m. in Fraser theater. Each of nine winners of last night's preliminary contest will draw three topics at 7 p.m., and will be allowed one hour in which to prepare a six minute talk on one of the topics. Tonight's finals will be open to the public. Kenneth Johnson, in his speech, said today that he was anicipita "an interest and lively contest." The following students, were selected as finalists: Aldo Aliotti, engineering junior; Ben Foster, College junior; William Conboy, College sophomore; Edward Stollenwerck, College freshman. Hal Friesen, College freshman; Robert Bennett, College freshman; Keith Wilson, College sophomore; Ernest Friesen, College junior; William Tincher, College freshman. Judges of the preliminary contest were Lloyd Houston, manager of the Bell Music company, Fred Conger, of station WREN, John Mee, sales representative for the Pittsburgh and Midway Coal Mining company; Francis Feist and Elizabeth Stevens, instructors in speech, and Anne Martin, assistant instructor in speech. All campus organizations who want their officers listed in the new K-Book must turn in the information by June to 228 building has Betty van der Smissen, assistant editor, said today. K-Book Staff Wants Names Of Club Officers The K-Book staff of 1947-48 hopes to compile and mail to new students a complete directory of student organizations and activities, Miss van der Smissen said. Tornado Strikes At Worth, Mo., 20 Die In Storm Worth, Mo.—(UP)—A tornado and high winds killed 20 persons in Missouri and Arkansas and left this farmland community with a third of its population dead or injured today. Thirteen were killed and 59 injured here Tuesday when a tornado flattened three square blocks of homes; civic buildings, and stores. Seven others were dead and 12 injured at Bright Water. A wreck occurred on the state after high winds collapsed stores, city, and farm homes. Missouri State Highway patrolmen patrolled the debris strewn streets here to prevent looting. Business Area Flattened The tornado struck at 2:45 p. m. Tuesday. All of the town's 15 civic and business buildings were flattened. Most of the houses were damaged, and many collapsed. Two churches were destroyed and the third was badly damaged. The tornadic winds smashed automobiles, tossed mangled parts of the wreckage into tree tops, before speeding across the Iowa border, 13 miles away, where it caused heavy damage at Clio, Ia. Most of the townspeople saw the dreaded black funnel coming and ran to their storm cellars. Others to cobble from the darkened skies were killed, Mrs. Ann Trump, grade school teacher, and Mrs. N. A. Combs, a registered nurse, and the town's only "medical man," were the heroes of this devastated town. Town Without Doctor When a man ran by the school, yelling: "A tornado is coming! Find some shelter!" Mrs. Trump calmly closed her book and led her 12 pupils to a nearby fruit cellar. A few minutes later the tornado leveled the school building. The town, which has no doctor, depended on 59-year-old Mrs. Combs to treat its injured during the first hours after the tornado. The storm barely had cleared the town, when she turned her home into a first aid station and ordered the injured taken there. Forty-three persons were given first aid treatment. Sixteen persons, one critically injured, were taken to nearby towns for hospitalization. Jay Janes To Initiate The annual formal initiation and dinner of the Jay James will be held at 6:15 tomorrow in the Kansas room. Union building. The outstanding title will be named, and officers for the coming year will be elected. The International Relations club was erroneously named International club in Tuesday's story about election of officers and new members. So Sorry Please Washington—(UP)—Some 46.000 striking telephone workers in New York and Pennsylvania got back-to-work orders today as company and union officials reached the first major wage settlements in the 24-day nationwide walkout. News Of The World Some Phone Strikers Go Back To Work Maintenance and plant workers in Pennsylvania, numbering about 6,000, began returning to their jobs early this morning under an agreement providing basic wage increases of $25,000 for New York company announced that 40,000 of its workers would return to work tomorrow. The unions involved in the allergies were independents, but government conciliators believed they might speed a general settle- tion with the killoff of key strike in the strike—the National Federation of Telephone Workers. Negotiations between N.F.T.W.'s strong long lines union and officials of the American Telephone and Telegraph co., continued in Washington, and government and union sources predicted the company would be fitful to make its first cash wage offer. The company was non-committal. Federal Aid Is Necessary For Nation's School System Washington—(UP)—Congress was told today that federal aid to the nation's school system is necessary and needing collapse of education facilities. Benjamin Epstein of the emergency council of teacher organizations, Newark, N. J., said there is a mass exodus of teachers from school jobs, and that increasing numbers of "inadequate personnel" are being recruited into teaching. Income Tax Case Ends Kansas City.—(UP)—The income tax cases of Max Cohen and R. L. Carnahan, Wichita gamblers, ended Tuesday before Judge Ernest Van Fossan, who said that counsel for the government and for the Wichita men should file briefs with him during July in Washington. Mr. Cohen and Carnahan were appealing from government deficiency claims and penalties totaling about $389,000. ASC Doesn't Want To Print Directory Publication of the student directory may revert to the University, Anne Scott, chairman of the A.S.C. publications committee, said Tuesday. "The council feels that it isn't a student function, because the expense involved in printing is great," Miss Scott said. "J. K. Hitt, the registrar, is in favor of the University taking over the job and the registrar's office would handle the printing of the directory. "The A.S.C. will have to pass a bill amending its constitution to get the University to take over." Miss Scott said, "and the only difficulty with this plan is that students may not get directories if the University prints them." Never Mind What The Sign On Top Says; Just Walk In If You Have Housing Trouble "Aw, no. it can't be; it says dean of women's office!" The recent transfer of the housing office to a room in the dean of women's office has caused much confusion for shy males on the campus, who stick their heads in the door of 220 Frank Strong and then back out, dismaved by the sight of chartreuse divans and rose chairs. "It is comical to see the felons walk in," Mrs. Faye Netzer, head of the housing office, said. "They start in matter-of-factly, then look doubt-ful upon seeing the outer office filled with chattering girls. The new "Housing Office" sign hung beneath the Dean of Women sign helps a lot, however," Mrs. Netzer said. "It seems to convince the fellows they really are in the right place." “It's comical to see the fellows$^®$ When Mrs. Netzer is out and men come in to see her, the secretary asks them to sit down and wait, but few accept the invitation. "Oh, I'll be back," they say and then loiter in the hall. Hardened characters stroll in nonchalantly, sink in a divan, and pick up an issue of the "New Yorker." Mrs. Netzer added, "But it's a safe bet that these are either social chairmen or Miss Martha Peterson's math students in search of chaperones for dances or help with "analyt." "The majority of men are o. k. after they get in and start talking" said Mrs. Netzer, sitting at her desk in a gray-and-yellow cubicle, "But at first they certainly look as if they're being-led in to slaughter." 600 Phone Lines Are Cut Kansas City—(UP)—A telephone company spends 600 more home telephones in the greater Kansas City area were out of service today due to four acts of vandalism during the night. A bullet, the spokesman said, was fired into a cable in the southeast section of Kansas City, putting another 40 phones out of service. Two 200-pair cables were almost covered by an axe in Johnson county near the south city limits here, paralyzing service to 500 telephones. Nearby a 50-pair cable was hacked, and another was damaged in the southside residential district with an effecting more than 60 phones. Service was cut off Tuesday from nearly 400 telephones in the Leeds district. A suburb, when two cables were slashed with an axe. The vandals also damaged a 15-circuit transcontinental cable between Topeka and Kansas City. N L P Col. Durant Sentenced London—(UP)—The musical comedy "Oklahoma" opens in the historic Theatre Royal in Drury Lane tonight and from reports of the advance ticket sale it looks like a sell-out. House Cuts Relief Bill Washington, —(UP)— The house today stood by its decision to slash 150 million dollars from the 350 million dollar general foreign relief bill. It voted to affirm its earlier acton cutting the relief program down to 200 million dollars. Frankfurt—(UP)—Col. Jack W. Durant was convicted today of taking part in the $1,500,000 robbery of the Hesse Crown jewels and was sentenced to 15 years at hard labor. Canada Slashes Taxes 'Oklahoma' Opens In London Ottawa — (UP) — The Canadian government, which showed an overall profit of $352,000,000 last year, will slash income taxes 29 per cent for nine out of 10 taxpayers beginning July 1 and will abolish the excess profits tax Dec. 31. Semantics Club Has Seminar Students and members of the faculty interested in general semantics are urged by Phillip Persky, president of the General Semantics club, to attend the meeting at 8:15 p.m. today in 111 Frank Strong hall. The club was host to a similar group from Independence, Kan., at a seminar held in the Pine room of the Union Sunday. Robert Sayers, of the visiting club, was moderator at the informal discussion. The practical uses of general semantics as a means to better personal adjustment in the modern world, were analyzed, and scientific methodology of general semantics, as it relates to medicine, business, teaching, and other professions, was discussed. Members of the University club present were Dr. James Coleman, Betty Stevens, Carla Eddy, Alice Wismer, Betty Pretz, Jen Murray, Anita Bedell, Elaine Sawyer, Morgan Wright, William Conboy, Duane James, William Cappuille, and Phillip Persky. Those attending from the Independence club were J. D. Turner, Ralph Pearson, Paul Gillis, Dr. James Hughbanks, William Burke, and Bernard Locke. University High-To-Hold Annual High Home Night Instructors and students of University High school, together with parents and friends of students, will hold the annual High-Home night at 8 tonight in the Kansas room. George B. Smith, dean of School of Education, will be the main speaker. The program will also include talks by students, music by the high school mixed chorus and square dancing by a team of students. A dance will be held after the program.