University Daily Kansan Monday, February 2, 1943 Lawrence, Kansas Sauer To Leave For Navy Job This Week George Sauer, newly chosen Naval academy headcoach, will leave for Annapolis either Wednesday or Thursday to lay his groundwork for the 1948 football season with the Middies. The former Javahawk headcoach, who guided two Kansas eleven to two straight conference co-championships and the first major bowl game in the history of the University, will make plans for spring football practice, find a place to live and make staff arrangements while at Annapolis. Sauer said he had been notified that he could bring "two men" to the academy as part of his staff. He said earlier that he would like to take Bob calls and Vic Bradford, his two JL assistant coaches, but that their appointments had yet to be approved. appointment he resigned as headcoach of the Jayhawk Saturday to accept the Navy job because, "The Navy is 'big time' - I just can not pass up the opportunity." He had signed a new 4-year contract with K.U. in December. His resignation brought a series of verbal outbreaks from University officials. business. "Said Chancellor Deane W. Malott, "We are most disappointed in Mr. Sauor's breaking his contract, because in his new 4-year contract his every stipulation was met." E. C. Quigley, athletic director, said, "His (Sauer's) decision to leave was more than a disappointment to me. It hurt me." Quigley said he had no comment to make regarding Sauer's successor. He said that he had been assigned to find a coach and he would. 'Mikado' May Start Series --- The "Mikado" to be presente Feb. 9, 10, and 13 in Fraser Theater by the University of Kansas Operat- tia association, will be the first musi- ical production of its kind to be give- at the University for many years The long-range aim of the association is to establish an annual performance of this type, to be given only by student talent. Gerald Carney, assistant professor of music education, as music director and Don Dixon, professor of speech and drama, as director of staging are the only non-student members of the troupe. The cast of sixty includes the all-student chorus the orchestra composed of student musicians, and the solo roles, all to be sung by student talent. An interesting sidelight is the situation in which Charlie Byers, as "Nanki-Poo," the hero, finds himself. In the operetta he sneeringly spurs the advances of "Katisha," who outside the theater is his ever- loving spouse. She must then stand by and watch his love-making technique with "Yum-Yum," Harriet Harlow, the beautiful heroine. The association feels that productions of this type will fill the need of semi-classical music on the hill. Sigmund Romberg's "Desert Song" and George Gershwins' "Porgy and Bess" are already being considered for next year's production. WEATHER Kansas—Partly cloudy and cooler today with a few scattered snow furries. Clearing and much colder tonight. Tomorrow increasing cloudiness with snow beginning west. Colder east. High today 20 to 25 north border to 25 to 20 in south. Low tonight near zero or slightly below northeast to 5 to 15 in south. Vets, Here's New Requisition Routine In an effort to avert the "day-after-class-starts" rush at the Union book store, a new plan in cooperation with the registrar's office and veterans administration has gone into effect, L. E. Woolley, book store manager, announced recently. recently. As each student enrolls in his courses he will be handed a list of books and equipment required for each course. A non-veteran may then immediately purchase the required books. Veterans receive regular requisition books during enrollment. After having their books signed by the veteran's office, they can get their equipment in the usual way. This plan eliminates the necessity of attending class before buying Looks. Veterans will not have to secure instructor's signatures in order to get books and supplies. K-Staters Paint Jimmy' Again The future safety of Uncle Jimmy Green's image hung in the balance today. The problem of just what to do about the recent smear painting of Mr. Green's statue has left University officials without an answer. With plenty of suspicions but no suspects, officials are keeping one eye on the Kansas State-K. U. "peace pact" and the other on Man-hattan. natan. James D. Waugh, president of the All-Student Council, said that the ASC did not plan any action. Uncle Jimmy and his young statie-friend were sploited with varicolored paint last week. The paint was apparently in answer to Coach Forrest C. "Phog" Allen's charge that Clarence Brannum, K-State center, was not eligible for Big Seven basketball competition. By the statue was a bold sign announcing, "Down with Phog—Brannum stays!" A copy of a Manhattan newspaper with a front page story unholding Brannums eligibility was also nearby. The first K. U.-Kansas State basketball game of the conference season is at Manhattan on Feb. 18. No Revenge Dean Warns A warning that University students shouldn't try to avenge the recent painting of Uncle Jimmy Green's statue was made today by L. C. Woodruff, dean of men. Uncle Jimmy was smeared with yellow, red and green paint Thursday morning. A sign declaring, "Down with Phog—Brannum stays," and a copy of a Manhattan newspaper were left by the statue. Under the existing terms of the Kansas State-K.U. "peace pact" the maximum punishment for a violation of the pact is suspension from school for one semester and restoration of damages. The minimum punishment is restoration of the damages. the dean said that he hoped, "no misguided K.U. student would try to retaliate." J. Alden Troville, associate professor of industrial management, has resigned his job at the University to take a position with the Wichita Chamber of Commerce. Trovillo Leaves KU For Job In Wichita He had been chairman of the University parking committee for nearly one year when he resigned. Professor Troville left for Wichita Jan. 31 and was to assume his duties at Wichita today. Soviet Gets US Rejection, Asks About Iran Washington, Feb. 2.—(UP)The United States flatly rejected the Soviet protests against the presence of U.S. naval vessels in Italian ports as "without foundation." The Soviet protest about the naval vessels was the first of a series of three which the kremlin has lodged against the United States during the past two weeks. Italy has told Moscow that she is a sovereign state and it is nobody's business but her own what vessels enter Italian ports. Still awaiting answers are Soviet protests to the United States against the reopening of an army air base in Libya and the most recent protest that American flying fortresses were molesting Russian shipping. London, Feb. 2.—(UP) —R a d i o Moscow charged today that the United States was threatening the Soviet frontier by arming Iran with American weapons and helping Iran to map and fortify its border. The Moscow broadcast on Iran was part of a double-barrelled attack. Moscow charged earlier that American flying fortresses were molesting Russian shipping in the Yellow Sea and the Sea of Japan by inspecting vessels at masttop altitudes. Moscow charged that there were so many American advisers in the Iranian army and government departments as the result of an agreement signed Aug. 6, 1947, "that the Iranian army loses the character of the army of an independent sovereign state." US Assets May Be Freed Washington, Feb. 2.-(UP)—Secretary of the Treasury John W. Snyder promised today in a report to the senate foreign relations committee that the U. S. will do all it can to make available to the 16 Marshall plan countries of western Europe about $700,000,000 in "blocked" assets held in the United States. Secretary Snyder said top government officials reluctantly agreed that it was more important to aid the European nations "in dire need of dollars to permit their survival as free nations" than to continue a policy of protecting the identity of foreigners who hold property here. He said that after months of consideration this nation has decided to assist European countries in taking control of the assets of their national held here. All vacancies in the air corps R. O. T. C. at the University have been filled for the spring semester and no more students can be accepted at this time, Lt. Col. John Alfrey, military science professor, said today. Applications for the fall semester are now being accepted and students who plan to enroll in the fell should apply now to receive first consideration. ROTC Students Fill All Air Corps Units Vacancies exist in the infantry and artillery units for the spring semester. Students should apply next week bt the Military Science building. Colonel Alfrey emphasized that veterans with one year service prior to March 1943 can enroll as advanced students. They will receive $23 a month, textbooks, and uniforms. Applicants must be able to pass a physical examination and obtain a minimum score of 110 on the Army General Classification test. Here Is A List Of Closing Hours The closing hour for women will be 12:00 p.m. Monday through Wednesday, the office of Dean of Women announced today. Beginning Thursday the usual 16:30 p.m. closing hour will be observed. The Watson library, Union bookstore and the cafeteria will observe the following schedules during this week. Watson library will be open from 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. February 2, 3 and 4. Regular hours will be resumed February 5. For daily use the bookstore will be open 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. February 2; 7:30 a. m. to 3 p. m. February 3, 4, and 5. They will resume regular hours, 8 a. m. to 5 p. m. Feb. 7. The cafeteria hours for Feb. 2, 3, 4, are 7 a.m. to 9:30 a.m., 11 a.m. to 1:30 a.m. and p. 5 a.m. to 7 p.m. Regular hours will be resumed February 5. Jerusalem, Feb. 2 — (UP) — The five-story building of the Palestine Post, only English language Jewish newspaper in the Holy Land, was blasted and burned to rubble early today by Arabs using the Jewish barrel bomb technique. Arabs Bomb Jewish Paper An official announcement said that 20 persons were injured, nine seriously, and none killed in the blast. A woman in an adjoining building died of a heart attack during the excitement. Damage was set at $800,000. The Arabs carried the bomb in a truck through the heart of Jerusalem in the Jaffa road area, somehow managing to get by roadblocks set up by both the British police and Haganah Jewish militia. Bomb On Truck Arabs parked a truck carrying the bomb between the Palestine Post and a nearby apartment building and fled on foot. The blast came shortly after 11 p. m., rocking Jerusalem and breaking window glass within a radius of a half mile. The attack coincided with suppression of the Arab newspaper "Ashaab," first paper to have its license cancelled during the current outbreaks. The paper printed a seven-column account of the invasion of Palestine by Arabs several weeks ago, claiming that the invaders had "captured three settlements." The press censor warned the editor that the paper's license would be cancelled unless the paper published a seven-column denial of the previous story. This the editor refused to do. YD's To Sponsor State Convention Demanded Retraction Roy C. Baker, national president of the Young Democrats, will be the guest speaker at the state organizational convention to be sponsored at the University Feb. 28 by the University Young Democrats. The convention will be held in the Kansas room of the Union. William Rhodes, national executive director of the Young Democrats, will also speak to various groups during the afternoon. The convention will receive statewide publicity at the Washington Day dinner in Topka Feb. 21, said Robert Bock, president of the University Young Democrats. The University of Kansas World War II Memorial association has purchased Series F savings bonds in the amount of $22,200 it was announced today. This purchase brings the total cash investment in such bonds to $79,550. Buv Bonds For Memorial Enrollment Here Not As High As Expected Enrollment of new students for the spring semester fell below original estimates of 300 students made preceding orientation. Approximately 278 students appeared for psychological and attitude examinations given in Hoch auditorium, Saturday. A few more late-comers have been appearing at the registrar's office but the number won't increase enrollment materially. The unexpectedly small enrollment at the University was in contrast with Missouri university where a mid-year rush sent enrollment figures soaring to 14,000. New students first induction into the University schedule came with the opening of orientation, Saturday. A new student convocation was held Saturday night, and a second is scheduled for tonight. The period of orientation and registration officially closes Wednesday, with an all-school party. Enrollment at Kansas State college was expected to reach an all time high of between 6,500 and 6,600, A. L. Puglsay, Dean of Administration said today. Negroes Seek Entry To OU Norman, Okla. Feb. 2 — (UP) Twelve more Negroes may seek to enroll at University of Oklahoma today as another ruling from the U. S. supreme court in the nation's hottest segregation battle was awaited. Oklahoma set up a three-professor law school for Negroes. If a majority of the nine justices feel this new school provides Mrs. Fisher with "separate but equal" educational facilities, her complaint probably will be dismissed without comment. Twelve Negro school teachers announced that they would seek admission today to the O. U. graduate school. However, University officials may reject them speedily on grounds that registration for spring semester graduate courses is closed. The U. S. supreme court may announce today whether it will issue a direct command to the University of Oklahoma to admit Mrs. Ada Sipul Fisher, 23-year-old Negro, to its law school. She has complained that Oklahoma failed to carry out the Jan. 12 order of the court which held the state must afford Mrs. Fisher a legal education, as quickly as a white student could get one. But if a majority sides with Justice Robert H. Jackson's view, expressed during the original hearings, that "a law school for one student wouldn't be much of a law school," the court may direct the university to admit Mrs. Fisher to the 40-year old white law school. Meanwhile, Gov. Roy L. Turner had stated flatly that he had no intention of calling a special session of the state legislature to set up a proposed multi-million-dollar educational institution of higher learning. Academy Exhibits Sudlow's Painting Robert N. Sudlow, instructor in the School of Fine Arts, has entered an oil painting in the 143rd annual exhibition of oil painting and sculpture at the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts in Philadelphia. Sudlow's picture is "Mayetta," a painting of the Kansas town of that name. The entries were accepted by juries composed of prominent American artists. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1948 715 Admitted To Hospital Seven hundred fifteen students were admitted and treated at Watkins hospital last semester. This is 44 more patients than in the fall semester last year. Comon colds were the reason for many of the students being admitted, Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the hospital said. Other causes were stomach upset, injuries, and infections. There were 28,606 clinic calls as compared with 28,832 clinic cases last year. A large number of these cases received influenza vaccine. Flu shots were given to 4,101 students during the fall semester. Only 2,915 were given during that period last year. February 2,1948 Official Bulletin Graduate Record examination in Frank Strong auditorium tomorrow, 1 to 5 p. m. and Wednesday, 8:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. K. U. Dames, 8 p. m. Wednesday, Lindley auditorium. All men students interested in part-time jobs for the spring semester must report to the Men's Student Employment office no later than Feb. 21 if they wish to keep their employment applications active. Farm products of Nebraska consist of corn, wheat, cats, barley, rye, hay, sugar beets, potatoes, buck-wheat, flax, clover and sorghum. Read the Daily Kansan daily. THE CHATEAU IS THE PLACE TO GO CHATEAU DRIVE-IN MASS AT 18ST. - Steak Dinners - Tasty Sandwiches - Fountain Specials Have you tried one of our Fried Oyster Dinners? OPEN DAILY CURB SERVICE 11 A.M. AFTER 4 P.M. Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and summation 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 GET YOUR MAN at the Vice Versa Dance Feb.7 VOL. 10 NO. 25 BANNER FOR THE NEW YORK TIMES "He won't settle down until you take us out to dinner at JIM'S LUNCH He just loves those delicious sandwiches and hot plate lunches." JIM'S LUNCH 838 $ \frac{1}{2} $ Mass. Open all nite. A boy pushes his car over a house. A child looks on. No Brakes Breaks Garage Bring Your Car To Us For QUICK EFFICIENT BRAKE SERVICE CHANNEL-SANDERS MOTOR COMPANY Phone 616 622-24 Mass. Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers. DON'T MISS: "The Mikado" All Seats - 75c FRASER THEATER 8:15 P.M. Mon., Tues., and Fri. Feb. 9, 10, and 13 SUPPLIES A COMPLETE LINE FOR EVERY COURSE BOOKS BOOKS NEW AND USED READY MADE KITS FULL REFUND PROVIDED MERCHANDISE IS NOT DAMAGED OR WRITTEN IN AND IF RETURNED BEFORE FEB.14. TO SAVE YOU TIME SERVICE MANY ADDITIONAL CLERKS TO HELP SERVE YOU FASTER 1401 Ohio Rowlands FOR FIFTY YEARS A TAX PAYING STORE 1237 Oread MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE H ho pd hn K e d h s v H Kri Mo ad in si b Belles And Their Fiances Hamman-Kennedy Mrs. W. S. Shaw, Delta Gamma housemother, recently announced the pinning of Betty Jane Hamman, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Earl W. Hamman, Wichita, to John D. Kennedy, Jr., son of Dr. and Mrs. J. D. Kennedy, Kansas City. Keplinger-Cook Marilyn Sweet recently announced the pinning of Martha Keplinger, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. W. Keplinger, Kansas City, to Richard Cook, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gene Cook, Iola. Mrs. Dean Alt, housemother, wore a gardenia corsage and chocolates were passed. Mr. and Mrs. John C. Power of Kansas City, Mo., announce the marriage of their daughter Patricia to Miles E. File, son of Joe File of Beloit, Kansas. The wedding took place at the second Presbyterian church in Kansas City, Jan. 24. Power-File Marriage Held In Kansas City Miss Power attended the University in 1945 and 1946 and was a member of Alpha Chi Omega. The couple are spending their honeymoon in New Orleans. They will be at home in Beloit after Feb. 7. Socially Speaking- Here's Some Society News You May Have Missed Sigma Chi Party Sigma Chi "Euff Johnson" party was held in the chapter house Saturday, Jan. 17. The theme was an Algerian slave market. The living room was decorated as a Sultan's palace, and the lounge as an Algerian jail. Bob Beine was in charge of the program. Judy Torrey, Larry Ross, Mary Jean Olive, Marnie Brown, Betty Berry, Janet Crosby, Charlotte Metcalf, Janet Malott, Barbara Byrd Mary Alice White, Edith Stodard, Daren York, Katherine Culley, Ann Lawrence, Barbara Nash, Marcelie Parker, Rosie Robinson, Shirley Hoyt, Jeanne Peterson, Virginia daugherty, Jeanne Parrott, Jody Stuckey, Nancy Messenger, Be King, Carol Harris, Sally Stepler, Tish Laming, Ree John, Jane Williams, Corinne Carter. Laurie Burningham, Anne French. Guests attending were: Barbara Haffner, Shirley Corlett, Martha Goodrich, Jeanne Dressler, Mary Mid Chubb, Marianne Gear, Eleanor Pack, Marilyn Glover, Ann Warner, Joan Bagby, Rita Hartwill, Elizabeth Sifers, Inez Hall, Shirley Scheufle, Mary Warner, Patsy Clardy, Jane Schmidt, Joan Ruese, Barbara Ross, Bernardine Read, Betty Webb, Marilyn Sweet. "Always ready to serve" Daily Specials----Home Made Pies GEMMELL'S CAFE 717 Mass. Phone 2072 LAWRENCE LECTURES February 2 to 6,1948----8:00 p.m. CHURCH OF CHRIST,9th and Tenn. "In the interest of students attending school in Lawrence" Monday, February, 2—8:00 p.m. MARRIAGE & DIVORCE HERBERT BROADUS Minister, Church of Christ, Topeka, Kansas Tuesday, February 3----8:00 p.m. THE CHRISTIAN IN THE BUSINESS WORLD BEN H. HENTHORN President, College of Commerce, Kansas City, Mo. Wednesday, February 4—8:00 p.m. THE CHRISTIAN HOME C. ROY BIXLER Minister, Church of Christ, Kansas City, Kansas. Thursday, February 5----8:00 p.m. PROBLEMS OF THE YOUTH TODAY JACK SOUTHERN Minister, Church of Christ, Argentine, Kansas Friday, February 6----8:00 p.m. MISSIONARY WORK----MY RECENT TRIP TO ENGLAND JOHN ALLEN HUDSON Minister, Church of Christ, Kansas City, Mo. Betty Ann Hills, Marjorie Skidmore, Ann Guyer, Juliette Williams, Ethel Pearson, Fan McCleary, Betsy Bowers, Sue Weimer, Isobel Faurot, Jane Aitwood, Georgianne Dutton, Nancy Van Bebber, Betty Brewer, Virginia Osborne, Nancy Davis, Mary Helen Keller, Mary Helen Baker. Betty Sauder, Carolyn Carmean, Isabel Atwood, Mila Williams, Peggy Hogan, Lu Ann Powell, Beverly Fox, Nancy Goering, Rosemary Ingold, Dorothy Wood, Carolyn Campbell, Carolyn Weigand, Betty Hirleman, Connie Kendell. Chaperones were Mrs. Charles Wentworth, Mrs. W. S. Shaw, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pinet. Bounder's fraternity held election and installation of officers Monday, Jan. 12. Those elected were Lawrence Check, president; Sam Bushy, vice-president; Bob Brownlee, secretary; Carl Harbordt, treasurer; and Roger Davies, sergeant-at-arms. College Women Prefer Men With Intelligence Bounders Elect State College, Fa—(UP)—Penn State College students have decided it might be easy to wallz your way to college popularity, but the average co-ed much prefers the brainy type. A poll by students showed the most popular men with women are intelligent, honest, loyal and dependable. The survey also showed that the most unpopular students were lazy, boastful and tardy. All For A Thin Dime Milwaukee—(UP)—There's a young Milwaukee woman who likes to keep her dresses looking neat. She got on a downtown bus carrying a dress on a hanger. She bung the garment from the high hand rail, took a clothes brush from her purse, and brushed the dress during the trip downtown. Sleeping cars were first used in 1853. Pullman's patent dates from 1864. TOP JOBS WITH TOP FIRMS! GOLDEN RULE SERVICE Many select opportunities for college men and women interested in employment in Kansas City. Direct inquiries to— Direct inquiries to— GOLDEN RULE EMPLOYMENT SERVICE 1115 Grand Room 508 VI.7671 (phone) No Other Policy Like Ours In Kansas City! Two weeks free trial on any job. --- BE COMFORTABLE - in Coach or Pullman on the DAILY Streamliner "CITY OF ST.LOUIS" NO EXTRA FARE UNION PACIFIC UNION PACIFIC WESTBOUND Lv St. Louis . . . 4:00 pm (C.T.) Lv Kansas City . . . 9:30 pm Lv Lawrence(*) . . . 10:10 pm Lv Topeka . . . 10:38 pm Lv Manhattan . . . 11:27 pm Lv Junction City . 11:55 pm Lv Salina . . . 12:43 am Lv Hays . . . 2:25 am Lv Ellis . . . 2:00 am (M.T.) Lv Ockley . . . 3:12 am Lv Sharon Springs . 4:02 am Lv Hugo . . . 5:42 am Lv Limon . . . 6:01 am Ar Denver . . . 7:40 am Lv Denver . . . 7:55 am Lv Greeley . . . 8:56 am Ar Cheyenne . . . 10:20 am Ar Los Angeles . . . 4:00 pm (P.T.) Ar San Francisco . . 6:50 pm (P.T.) Ar Portland . . . 6:15 pm (P.T.*) (*) Stops only for passengers to Denver © and beyond. EASTBOUND Lv Los Angeles . 9:30 am (P.T.) Lv San Francisco 11:00 am (P.T.) Lv Portland . 8:10 am (P.T.) Lv Cheyenne . 5:35 pm (M.T.) Lv Greeley . 6:37 pm Ar Denver . 7:45 pm Lv Denver . 8:00 pm Lv Limon . 9:29 pm Lv Hugo . 9:47 pm Lv Sharon Springs 11:23 pm Lv Oakley . 12:09 am Lv Ellis . 2:30 am (C.T.) Lv Mays . 2:46 am Lv Salina . 4:25 am Lv Junction City . 5:20 am Lv Manhattan . 5:45 am Lv Topaka . 6:34 am Lv Lawrence@! ) 6:58 am Ar Kansas City . 7:45 am Ar St. Louis . 1:00 pm (*) Stops only to let off passengers from Denver or beyond. ALL COACH SEATS RESERVED For information and reservations see your local Union Pacific Ticket Agent. UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD Road of the Daily Streamliners PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1948 KU,KS Tied In Big 7 Race Kansas City, Mo. Feb. 2-(UP)—Take a look at the Big Seven standings today and ring Feb. 18 and March 1 on your calendar. On those dates, the basketball machine of Kansas State college and the University of Kansas collide and the results of those encounters may dictate the head that will wear the crown. Right now the bitter intra-state rivalns are rounding the far curve, neck and neck, each with three wins and no losses. It's a rare place for the Wildcats and it's a rare team that is wearing the purple and white this year. K.U. Comes Up To Kansas a title chase is nothing new. But this year Phog Allen's team was sold short in the early reckoning. Now with the addition of the powerful Otto Schnellbacher, Kansas is making them sit up and take notice. On Feb. 18, the first of that magic pair of dates, Kansas invades Manhattan to be entertained by Clarence Brannum and company. While awaiting Feb. 18, the conference moves along its appointed course. In conference games this week Kansas State takes to the road for games tonight at Colorado and Saturday night against a toughening Missouri team. Nebraska Here Saturday Kansas has a Saturday night meeting with Nebraska at Lawrence and Colorado moves eastward at the time for another try at third place Iowa State. Missouri sounded a warning buzzer Saturday night as it knocked off Oklahoma 49-43 to pull into a fourth place tie with the Sooners. Once the Tigers get to clicking to the fullness of their possibilities, they'll be tough for any team in the league. At the same time, Kansas State moved easily through a Nebraska team which started its six-foot, nine-inch Bus Whitehead for the first time. The score was 64-45 and the game once more demonstrated the ability of the Wildcats. US Skaters May Win Medal St. Moritz, Feb. 2—(UP)—Dick Button, 18-year-old England, N.J., star, gave America its first hope for an Olympic gold medal today as he held a commanding lead after the first three figures in the compulsory figure skating competition, as European athletes won the 1500-meter speed skating and men's and women's downhill skiing events. Button, U. S. and European champion, appeared headed for top honors in the compulsory figures event, the first half of the Olympic figure skating competition, as he received five or better scores from each of the nine judges in every effort but one to lead Hans Gerschwiler, the world champion from Switzerland. SAMBULCHE Let this be your hangout for those delightful snacks Hamburgers Home-made chili ZIM'S SMACK SHOP East of postoffice Despite the Kansas loss to Oklahoma A. & M., the outlook for the 1948 basketball season is becoming increasingly brighter. At the start of the current season, Phog Allen was doing more than his usual share of meaning, and K. U. fans were in the dumps. Sports Spotlight By BOB DELLINGER Daily Kansan Sports Editor A green team with only one veteran was the Kansas crop. Inexperience would tell, and the Jayhawker record would be a sad one. Inexperience did tell on the young squad at the start of the season, but the Jayhawkers were quick to learn from the veteran coach and his one "stabilizing" assistant, Otto Schnellbacher. Kansas started slowly, dropping a game to the off-and-on Emporia Teachers by a record score. The defense was pitiful for the first few games with the opponents cracking the 60-point mark four times, totaling seven since 1898. William Jennings Bryan of Nebraska was nominated for the Presidency of the U. S. three times by the Democratic party.. You Are Always Welcome at Snappy Lunch for Hot Chili Sandwiches Soup Malts 1010 Massachusetts In This Weather Guard Against Poor Health—Drink Plenty Of Milk Frityel DAIRY PRODUCTS 834 Vermont CHI GALLOWAY Phone 182 SAVE NOW! FRANK'S BABY CRIEFTEN BABY CRIBS HIGH CHAIRS TABLE and CHAIR Sets—$2.95 up ROCK-A-BYE BABY CARRIAGE—as fine as you want $14.95 to $22.50 STROLLER and WALKER All Metal———regular price $8.95———NOW $6.95 Baby Swings——New Shipment——$2.25 Come In! New Shipments Arriving Daily! FRANK'S FURNITURE COMPANY 834 Mass. FREE DELIVERY Phone 834 Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers CHEF SIZZLING STEAKS with FRENCH FRIED ONIONS 2 ayhawker Duck's Tavern 40 big stars in Ends TOMORROW 824 VERMONT "VARIETYGIRL" Lizabeth SCOTT John HODIAK Burt LANCASTER WED., one week plus Donald Duck Cartoon SLIDERULES in "DESERT FURY" BOOK STORE plus color cartoon "The Invisible Mouse" NO. 2—DECIMAL TRIG PICKET & ECKEL $16.50 For Architectural, Civil, and most phases of Engineering Science. NO.3-VECTOR For Chemical and Mechanical Engineering. NO.4----VECTOR HYPERBOLIC For Communications and Electrical Engineering. STUDENT UNION LOG LOG DUPLEX DECITRIG and VECTOR rules are coming through in larger quantities. If you want one of these this semester we advise your getting on our list at once. KEUFFEL & ESSER DIETZGEN & GRANADA NOW ENDS WEDNESDAY Shirley Temple That Hagen Girl RONALD REAGAN P. R. L. H. G. B. Added: World News Color cartoon and "The 49th State" THURSDAY, 3 days Joan FONTAINE Patrick KNOWLES Herbert MARSHALL "IVY" Read the Daily Kansan daily. PATEE Tonite, one week They're up to their old tricks ABBOTT & COSTELLO "NAUGHTY" NINETIES" 2nd feature Goofier than ever Stan LAUREL Oliver HARDY "BLOCK HEADS" MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE 1948 Jayhawkers Drop Decision To Powerful Aggie Squad The powerful Oklahoma Aggies, hailed as one of the country's top basketball teams, came to Lawrence Jan. 21 and left with a 47 to 35 victory over the Jayhawkers. The Aggies, after getting off to a slow start, pulled ahead of the home club, 38 to 34, midway in the final period, and piled up the score as the Jayhawkers risked everything to get the ball from the famous Cowboy "freeze" the road with a record of five It was the first time Oklahoma A. & M. had ever won on the Lawrence court, and the 12-point margin was the highest in the series of history. Coach Hank Iba of the Cowpokes moved one up on Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen of Kansas in their rivalry. Iba now leads with 10 victories to nine for Allen. Kansas started the game with a whirlwind attack, adn threatened to snow the Aggies under before their famed defense could organize. A. & M. slowed down the attack, through the first period. Kansas hit a cold spell at the start of the second half, and before the Jayhawkers could snap out of it, the Aggies had leaped into a 27 to 27 tie, with 14 minutes remaining to play. The Jayhawkers will see their next conference action here Saturday night against the Nebraska Cornhuskers, and will return to the Hoch court again Monday for a rematch with the Missouri Tigers. Kansas holds victories over both clubs, a 64 to 60 overtime triumph over the Lincolnens, and a 58 to 46 upset of the Bengals at Columbia. The Jayhawkers went six full minutes without scoring, and the Aggies piled up a 38 to 31 lead and went into a rolling stall. The Jayhawkers will be strengthened for these and subsequent clashes by the return of six-foot four-inch Johnny Dewell, a product of Newton. Dewell, barred until the semester change because of an ineligibility ruling, has been working out with the squad recently and should be a notable addition. If the Jayhawkers should take these two contests, they will go on GET YOUR MAN at the Vice Versa Dance Feb. 7 CALL FOR TAXI SERVICE CALL FOR TAXI SERVICE CALL CALL 2-800 UNION CAB CO. the road with a record of five and none, and will be very hard to dislodge from the conference top rung. The predicted "worst Kansas season since 1929" may yet develop into another conference title. New York, Feb. 2.—(UF)—As Cil Dodds, fresh from his 4:05.3 record triumph in the Wanameraker mile last Saturday, pointed today for next Saturday's Hunter mile in Boston, new records and greater victories were being predicted for him. Dodds Prepares For Hunter Mile It was considered likely that he will approach again or even erase the indoor mark he set in the Milrose games. He has become the hottest prospect anywhere in the world for the Olympic 1,500 meter run in London this summer. Call K. U. 251 With Your News FOR 22 YEARS IT'S BEEN THE BLUE MILL 1009 Mass. Open 11 till 8 WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames Lawrence Optical Co. FEBRUARY 3----6 The Bus- (Adv.) THE RAPID TRANSIT COMPAN Student Union Book Store "Here you are,Reginald—Have a 'memo' from the telephone company." Special Store Hours for your convenience 7:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday BIG SEVEN STANDINGS | | W | L | Pct | Pts Op | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kansas State | 3 | 0 | 1.000 | 109 128 | | Kansas | 3 | 0 | 1.000 | 154 128 | | Iowa-State | 3 | 2 | .500 | 128 254 | | Oklahoma | 2 | 2 | .500 | 151 162 | | Missouri | 2 | 2 | .500 | 206 268 | | Nebraska | 1 | 3 | .250 | 262 240 | | Colorado | 5 | 0 | .000 | 263 264 | Launderette Service 9 lbs. of wash, 25c 21 Bendix Washers 813 Vt. Phone 3368 Just Arrived at CARL'S The slack you've been waiting for—— GLEN PLAID SLACKS - 100% Cotton - Made in USA - Wash Cold, Dry Light - Machine Wash Only A hard finish— long wearing— All Wool Worsted slack! Expertly Tailored by— Leonard Macy Sizes 28 to 38 Price $15.95 You'll look you're best in CARLS GOOD CLOTHES P. A. BALDIN for State Senator on the Republican Ticket. CARL E. FRIEND Lawrence, Kansas CANDIDATE Former State Senator - Former Lieutenant Governor - Member Senate Ways and Means Committee - Always a friend of the University There is no substitute for experience! Exercise the Right of Franchise! Register and vote for CARL E. FRIEND Call K.U. 251 With Your News. DANCE That Others May WALK MARCH of DIMES DANCE FRIDAY,FEBRUARY 6 UNION BALLROOM SEE LEAP YEAR KING CROWNED WAYNE RUPPENTHAL featuring SID DAWSON Stag or Drag----$1.50 tax included Tickets on sale in registration line. Sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega Service Fraternity Through Courtesy of RUSTY'S MARKET UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SIX MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1948 The Editorial Page Education - Boom And 'Bust'? There's a boom on in education, and it's setting a fast pace for college students all over the country. Those of us who have just finished one semester and find another to start before we catch our breaths can attest to that. Many educators have a glint in their eyes like crafty land speculators. They're thinking about new buildings, bigger departments, and improved facilities. However, there's $^{2}$ Optimists have assumed that the present record enrollments are indicative of a long-time trend. The applications of five million veterans for benefits to be invested in higher education have been approved by the Veterans administration. This backlog of potential students plus increased enrollments of non-veterans provides the basis for this anticipatory rubbing together of the palms. However, thousands of these prospective students may never shove an enrollment card over a registrar's desk or stand in a registration line. expanded faculties. However, there's a trend in the new enrollments that suggests it's time to say "who" and let's take a look around. In many colleges more non-veteran than veteran students are enrolling this winter. Veteran students who have not yet taken advantage of their eligibility entitlements are working at various jobs. They'll think hard before giving them up. Jobs are getting scarcer—and veterans are getting older. A man 25 years old, and that's the average for veterans, is likely to be reluctant about jumping into four years of college work. At that age The years 1930-1936 were a period of exceedingly low birth rates. Children born during that time are now the ones who are entering the nation's colleges and universities. They will account for a large part of our college population for the next five or six years. Thus there will probably be fewer new students entering school than in the pre-war boom year 1939. he is probably thinking about marriage, a home, and a steady income. The prospect of giving up a good job and bringing his wife to college to live on $90 a month will cool the ambitions of thousands of other veterans. That leaves the non-veterans to bolster enrollment statistics. That there will be a continued high enrollment in schools at the college level is not questioned. But plans based on boom time conditions must be discarded when a recession begins. It is better to proceed with the prospect of a setback in mind. Booms do burst. The one in education probably will. Lower taxes will cure inflation like capital punishment stopped murder. COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals Short Orders Malts Sandwiches Air Conditioned Open 5:30—12 p.m. RISK'S HELP-YOURSELF LAUNDRY Maytag Machines Line Space Reasonable Rates Weekdays 9-6 Saturdays 9-3 1900 Ill.—Phone 623 The New Skyline tonight Rip Brown's 5 BOPS Try Our College Special Chicken Fried Steak 85c Under New Management, Student Operated Reservations Ph. 3339 University University Daily Kansan Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave, New York City. Editor-in-Chief William C. Von Meurer Managing Editor Alan J. Stewart Asst. Man. Editor Cooper Rollow Asst. Man. Editor Lance City Editor Gene Vignery City Editor Richard Jones Asst. City Editor James Robinson Betty Bacon Robert Alderson Otto Meyer Paul Warner Business Manager ... Advertising Manager ... Circulation Manager ... Classified Adv. Man. ... Rip Brown's 5 BOPS SKYLINE — Wed-Fri-Sat Something New- TIME Magazine 4 Month Subscription $1.50 LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS 12 East Eighth Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed...65c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed...69c CASH AND CARRY ONLY Rowlands BILL'S GRILL QUICK COURTEOUS SERVICE 1109 Mass. Across from Phone 2054 the Courthouse -Latest- VAUGHN MONROE HITS! BALLERINA MUSICIAN HOW SOON NINA NANA - PASSING FANCY Complete stock. Come in today! BELL MUSIC COMPANY 925 Mass. Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan. Bored? Sad? Dejected or Lonesome? -then come and have fun! At the "GET-TOGETHER" DANCE Wed., Feb. 4. 8-11 p.m. UNION BALLROOM Kass Kassinger And His Orchestra It's only 25c per person Sponsored by: STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2.1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Daily Kansan Classified Ads Classified Advertising Rates One day Three Fiv days days 35c 65c 90c 1e 2c 1e 2c 25 words or less additional words For Sale 2 SUITS, 1 green, 1 brown, size 38, Very reasonable. Call 1544J. 5 1946 FORD, Sportsman convertible, blue fenders, tan top, 10,000 miles; radio and heater. This car is perfect and priced to Winterscheidt Motors, Olathe, Kanst, P909. ZEISS IKON 120 roll film camera F 6.3 lens 1-125 shutter speed. Needs repair. Also Kodak Bantam F 4.5 lens in good condition. Kirchoff 13181³ New Hampsh. 7 38 USED Glen Miller records. Phone 755K2. 5 ONE 28-PIECE Precision drafting set, as new and reasonably priced. Case 223. NAVY OFFICER'S Bridge coat, size on new, $45. 95, Michigan. Pharagon, 745R VETERAN! We will buy, trade or sell for you any Army or Navy gear in good condition that you may wish. Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. Phone 669 HTFD Lost RED ALLIGATOR bulldog. Lost Thursday. Identification inside. Please call (612) 548-3700. WRIST WATCH on Potter Lake Saturday. Under please call Leigh Wellborn 807 253-6431. DARK MAROON *arker* "51" pen, Jan. BROWN BOGUMM Bymn Gym. Moon 5 552. For Rent APT. FOR BOYS. $4.50 a week each boy. Sleeping room with kitchenette $3.50 a week for boys with large living room and bath shared only with boys, $3.50 each boy. Single beds and on W 14th St. Phone 333-87. ROOMS FOR four boys. Single beds, automatic gas heat and water heater. Can be seen evenings after seven, 1323 Ohio Street ROOM TO share with another girl on second floor. 1147 Tenn. Phone 955. 8 Miscellaneous EXCHANGE 1 bed room ant. in new Duplex in K.C. for 1 or 2 bed room ant. in New York. Call Gladstone 6093. 1948 is Leap Year so let's leap with a K.U. calendar. Business Service NURSERY SCHOOL--Mothers who work, leave your child at Betty Yaphe's Nursery School. Hours 8 to 5, reasonable rates. 2012 Ohio. Phone 3195R. 7 It's The Sex That Counts TYPING-Thesis, term report, or notes. Accurate and prompt service by teacher typist with more than 15 years experience. Phone 2908 or 547. 2-5 Commenting upon a recent Bibler cartoon, an engineer was heard to ask an advertising student: "Can an independent be happily married to a Greek?" "Yes! If they're of the opposite sex," the huckster replied. Call K. U. 251 With Your News DESOTO AL PROVINCIA SERVICE PYLMONTA Bradley GALLAGHER MOTORS DE SOTO SERVICE Plymouth Bullingh GALLAGHER MOTORS FINE SERVICE GREAT CA SQUARE Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. AT DEEP REDUCTIONS The Palace 843 Massachusetts of desirable winter apparel from all departments BIG SAVINGS ON SMALL QUANTITIES of short lots PRE-INVENTORY SALE Neat PERSONAL APPEARANCE 20.13.1985 Requires Fine Cleaning Creases in trousers set off your clothes. You Get it at the New York Cleaners Collars and sleeves reshaped for better wear. You Get it at the New York Cleaners Careful removal of spots. You Get it at the New York Cleaners - Perfection in cleaning. You Get it at the New York Cleaners Bring your cleaning to Phone 75 New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPERANCE 926 Mass. Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers. CAMEL TURKISH & DOMESTIC BLEND CIGARETTES CHOICE QUALITY Top of the deck Record! It's MONICA LEWIS' top Decca recording ..."The Gentleman Is a Dope" HER MONIKER is Monica (Lewis, that is)...and she has one swell set of pitch pipes. When it comes to cigarettes well, let Monica sing it: "Camels are my choice they suit me to a 'T.'" Millions of smokers agree with you, Monica. That's why more people are smoking Camels than ever before! Try Camels! Discover for yourself why, with smokers who have tried and compared, Camels are the "choice of experience"! AND HERE'S ANOTHER TOP RECORD More people are smoking CAMELS than ever before! 100% R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Company Winston-Salem, North Carolina CAMELS are the choice of experience with me! Monica Lewis PACE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAC MONDAY, FEBRUARY 2, 1948 Valentine Dance Being Planned Plans are under way for another "Sweetheart Swing" this year, Feb. 14. Feature of the Valentine dance will be the presentation of candidates from 11 universities for the title of "Queen of Hearts." The girls will be escorted to the dance by 11 candidates for "King of Hearts" from the K. U. campus. Food packages for European residents will be handled by the Y.M.C. A. through the non-profit Co-operative for American Remittances to Europe. The dance will be held in the Union ballroom, with music by Harlan Livingood and his orchestra. A nighttime atmosphere will be in keeping with the "Manhattan Merry-keeping" theme of the dance. The program will include the presentation of a dance that is representative of each nightclub in Manhattan, from South American music to the most romantic waltz tune. Vocal selections will be sung by Jeanne Chambers, sophomore in the School of Fine Arts. The main event of the evening will be the introduction of the 10 guest candidates and the one candidate from the University for the crowning as Queen of Hearts. Their escorts will be selected in advance as the "ten most dateable male students" on the campus, and will compete for the King of Hearts crown. Each winner will be presented with surprise gifts from merchants of Lawrence. Schools sending candidate queens are: Washburn, Kansas State, Kansas State Teachers College at Emporia, Kansas State College at Emporia, Ottawa University, Baker University, University of Nebraska, University of Missouri, University of Kansas City and University of Wichita. Y' To Handle CARE Drive Europe Members of the Y.M.C.A. decided to sponsor CARE after receiving a letter from an Austrian professor, who wrote of his family's extreme need for food. CARE packages for European relief are guaranteed to arrive at the correct destination the sender designates. Each package costs $10. As each name is received by the V.M. C.A. office, the package and the address are forwarded by airmail to New York. From there, the address is taken to Europe, where a package is taken from a stock pile and delivered to the needy person. He signs a release, which is returned by mail to the donor. CARE is government approved and delivery is guaranteed in Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria, Czechoslovakia, Ireland, Finland, France, Germany (American, British, and French zones and all of Berlin), Great Britain, Greece, Hungary, Italy, the Netherlands, and Poland. Any individual or organization may purchase packages to be sent to specific persons. If there is no recipient named, a name may be chosen from lists of approved needy European residents. Wichita Minister To Speak Feb.8 National Race Relations Sunday will be commemorated on the campus by the third consecutive Fellowship church to be held in Danforth chapel Feb. 8. The Rev. Floyd Davidson. Congregational minister of Wichita, will speak at the service. The Rev, Mr. Davidson, chairman of the interracial clinic in Wichita and a member of the Institute of International Relations, will also be a guest speaker at the Y. M. C. A. Brotherhood week ceremonies. On Feb. 10 the Rev, Mr. Davidson, the Rev. George Towle of Lawrence, and Rabbi Samuel Levenson of Oklahoma City will speak on "Is Brotherhood Possible?" Little Man On Campus By Bibler HARMONICA MUSIC JIG SAU MUSIC BABAITS WIND MUSIC SINGER MUSIC AND ORGAN BARD MUSIC BOARD MUSIC COMO MUSIC SAU MUSIC TUBEB MUSIC ZOMBIE PHONE (phone #) (phone #) HUMMING BOW SHOW YVLOPHER More than 13,000 cars pass through the Lawrence business district on an average week day. These figures are based on a recent state highway commission survey. ENROLL HERE FOR PHYSICAL EDUCATION B.J. Dyer "I understand the new phys. ed. instructor used to direct a chorus in the fellies." University Hospital Now Has Equipment For Polio Cases A gift from a former athlete and graduate of the University, and the transformation of a storage room have made it possible for any student or person in the Lawrence community stricken with infantile paralysis to be treated at Watkins hospital. Additional figures show that the largest traffic increase is on highway 10. Daily traffic there is almost four times as heavy as in 1936, according to the survey. 13,000 Cars Daily Through Lawrence Although the tank was presented to the University over a year ago, no fixtures for the tank were available. A water valve to mix the hot and cold water at the head for the tank was recently obtained, but a special thermometer is still needed. A steel track across the ceiling of the room for the carrier to lift the patient over into the tank was also just recently obtained. Treat 20. Patients. A homemade Hubbard tank, used for therapy work on polio patients The patient can be lowered into the tank on a stretcher lifted by a motor driven carrier, given to the hospital by the local chapter of the National Foundation for Infantile Paralysis. was given to the University by Tom Poor of Olathe, in memory of his daughter, Melissa, who died of polio. The tank was made in Kansas City by friends of the Poors to help Melissa exercise her affected muscles at home when she was recovering. But Melissa died before she was able to use the tank. The key-hole shaped metal tank, named for the doctor who designed it, was placed in a storage room which was refinished in the physical therapy department at the University hospital. The tank's shape is to make it more convenient for the physical therapist to help the patient exercise. The use of warm water in the tank enables the polio victim to exercise weak muscles easier and relieve severe muscular pain. Motor For Streicher The physical therapy department has treated more than 20 patients with polio in the past two years. Three University students have been treated. The rest of the patients have been from the surrounding community, since the physical therapy department is open to the publi- Students In Reading Class Should Report To Fraser Students who have pre-enrolled or plan to enroll in the Reading and Academic Methods class should take their class schedule cards to room 16, Fraser hall. Feb. 5 or 6 between 1 p.m. and 5 p.m. Sections will be assigned that will not conflict with regular classes. Students who cannot come at these times, or in cases of pre-enrollment cannot take advantage of the program, should notify Mr. Joseph Holly, assistant director of the Reading Clinic. The appointment of John A. LaMonica to succeed D. W. McDonald manager of Sunflower Village is announced by Orvil R. Olmsted, director of the midwest regional office of the Public Housing administration in Chicago. J. A. LaMonica Is New'Village'Head Mr. McDonald expressed his appreciation of the cooperation which he has received from the tenants and community leaders." "I know that the same cooperation will be extended to Mr. LaMonica," he said. Mr. LaMonica has been with the housing agency since 1938 and has been employed in the Washington, D.C. and Chicago Regional Offices as a Housing Management Supervisor. Recently he was Housing Manager of the Spencer Park Housing Project at Hastings, Neb. Mr. laMonica and his family are living in Sunflower Village. Contributions to the Robert H. Bellamy memorial loan fund for pharmacy students have passed the $1,000 mark, J. Allen Reese, dean of the school of pharmacy, has announced. Pharmacy Memorial Has $1,000 Fund Lieutenant Bellamy, son of Mr. and Mrs. George C. Bellamy of Colby, was killed in action on Okinawa, May 10, 1945. He was awarded the bronze star posthumously. Rigid enforcement of the new one-way traffic regulation on Kentucky, Tennessee, Fourteenth, North Park, and Park streets is now underway, according to Police Chief C. A. Bilesner. Warn Students Of One-Way Streets One-way traffic on Kentucky runs south from 11th to 19th Street; on Tennessee it is north from 19th to 11th Street; on Fourteenth traffic runs west from Massachusetts to Tennessee; North Park traffic runs east from Massachusetts to Vermont; traffic on Park is west from New Hampshire to Massachusetts. The regulation became effective Jan. 20. Enforcement began Jan. 26. Charges Plot With US Planes Caracas, Venezuela, Feb. 2.—(UP) President Romulo Betancourt charged today that a movement to overthrow the Venezuelan government and possibly bomb Caracas with two American liberator bombers was taking form in Nicaragua. President Betancourt said his government had obtained information that the plot, headed by three former Venezuelan airforce officers, was aimed at preventing the inauguration of the new Venezuelan President-elect, Romulo Gallegos. President Betancourt said the planes that brought the group to Puerto Cabezas, and which may be used to bomb Caracas, came from the United States on Jan. 27. One left from Dayton, Ohio, and the other from Augusta, Ga., he said. Two Liberator bombers without bombbisms, allegedly intended for use by Vencuzuel revolutionaries, were flown away from Bush Army Air field, Augusta, Ga., by American silos Jan. 27. Bush field public relations office said the aircraft were sold to an American last summer. He advertised the planes and another American bought them and then sold them to parties said to be interested in the revolutionary plot. As a social get-together to start the second semester, the Student Union Activities will sponsor an all student dance Wednesday, in the Union ballroom. Bush field heard that the Liberators were chased to California by government agents but did not know whether they were caught. The public relations office also believed that a third plane bought here, a C-46 cargo or troop carrying craft, ultimately got into the hands of the revolutionaries. 'Two-Bit' Dance To Star New Semester's Activities Music will he played by Kass Kassinger and his orchestra. The dance will be from 8 to 11 p.m. Admission to the dance is 25 cents a person. Riots Continue As Followers Mourn Gandhi New Delhi, Feb. 2—(UP)—Devoted followers gathered the ashes of Mohandas K. Gandhi from the funeral pyre beside the sacred Jumna river today while the Indian government moved swiftly to stamp out a nation-wide conspiracy against other Hindu leaders. C. V. Deshpandes, general secretary of the extremist Mahasabha organization of which Gandhi's assassin was a member, was arrested along with several minor officials of his faction. Police said the arrests were made in connection with a plot calling for further assassinations, possibly those of Premier Jawaharlal Nehru, Home Minister Sardar V. Patel, and other supporters of Gandhi. Twenty-Seven Killed Violence flared at six new points in India over the weekend, bringing the casualty toll since Gandhi's death to 27 killed and 107 wounded. Police fired on mobs in Bombay and the Madras states. Officials said the plot against Gandhi and other leaders spread through all sections of India. Many names of those implicated have been obtained from Gandhi's assassin, Narayan Vianyak Gadse, and others are believed to be among supporters and contributors to Gadse's extremist paper in Poona. May Arrest More Officials of the criminal investigation department flew to Poona, possibly to make more arrests, and orders were flashed to all department heads in the provinces to watch for and arrest suspects. Campus Police Are All Dressed Up It's new uniforms for the campus policemen. Forest green whipwords have replaced the familiar olive drabs. Grey "scotchlike" safety tape, which glares when light strikes it, is the special feature of the suits. The safety tape is on the shoulders, sleeves, and breast pockets of the "combat" type jackets, and on the caps and overcoats. "Now we can be seen even before we're heard." Robert Corwin, campus officer said. "If anyone hits us it'll be a pure case of murder." The uniform consists of jacket, matching pants, light green overcoat, cap, Sam Browne belt, and tan poplin shirt. Trimming the uniform are, red stripes on the trouser legs and coat sleeves, a Jayhawker insignia, a traffic officer patch, and 14 silver buttons with the state motto, "Ad astra per aspera," meaning "To the stars through difficulties." Schedule For Registration And Fees MONDAY FEB. 2 Ea-Evd, 8:00- 8:15 Eve-Fin, 8:15- 8:30 Flo-Frd, 8:30- 8:45 Fre-Gar, 8:45- 9:05 Gas-Glb, 9:00- 9:15 Gli-Grd, 9:15- 9:30 Gre-Gra, 9:30- 9:45 Hah-Haq, 10:00-10:15 Hah-Hax, 10:15-10:30 Hay-Hes, 10:30-10:45 Holl-Holk, 10:45-11:00 Holl-Hr, 11:00-11:15 Is-Hz, 11:15-11:30 J-Jog, 11:30-11:45 Joh-Kam, 11:50-1:30 Kan-Kcs, 1:30-1:45 Ket-Kn, 1:45-2:00 Ke-Kz, 2:00-2:15 L-Lu, 2:15-2:50 Lav-Lh, 2:45-3:00 Li-Low, 3:00-3:15 Low-Mak, 3:15-3:30 Mal-Mas, 3:30-3:45 TUESDAY FEB. 3 Mat-MeC, 8:00-8:15 Mat-MeH, 8:15-8:30 Mei-Milm, 8:30-8:45 Miow-Moq, 8:45-90 Mor-Mur, 9:00-9:15 Mus-Nic, 9:15-9:30 Nid-Ol, 9:30-9:45 Om-Par, 9:45-10:00 Pas-Per, 10:00-10:15 Pes-Plm, 10:15-10:30 Pln-Prt, 10:30-10:45 Pru-Rec, 10:45-11:00 Red-Rid, 11:00-11:15 Rie-Rom, 11:15-11:30 Ron-Rz, 11:30-11:45 S-Schl, 1:15-1:30 Schm-Sec, 1:30-1:45 Sep-Sjl, 1:45-2:00 Sik-Shm, 2:00-2:15 Smi-Sot, 2:15-2:30 Stec-Steq, 2:30-2:45 Ster-Stz, 2:45-3:00 Su-Td, 3:00-3:15 Te-Tol, 3:15-3:30 Tom-US, 3:30-3:45 WEDNESDAY FEB. 4 Ut-Vor, 8:00-8:15 Wos-Was, 8:15-8:30 Wat-Whh, 8:30-8:45 Whil-Wil, 8:45-9:05 Wim-Wq, 9:00-9:15 Wr-Z, 9:15-9:30 A-Am, 9:30-9:45 An-At, 9:45-10:00 Au-Baq, 10:00-10:15 Bar-Bec, 10:15-10:30 Bed-Bie, 10:30-10:45 Bid-Bol, 10:45-11:00 Bom-Boy, 11:00-11:30 Boz-Brot, 11:15-11:30 Brou-Brt, 11:30-11:45 Pru-Bur, 1:15-1:30 Bus-Carl, 1:30-1:45 Carm-Che, 1:45-2:00 Chf-Clt, 2:00-2:15 Clu-Coo, 2:15-2:30 Crop-Crn, 2:30-2:45 Cro-Dau, 2:45-3:00 Dav-Dh, 3:00-3:15 Di-Dt, 3:15-3:30 Du-Dz, 3:30-3:45 University Daily Hansan 45th Year No.82 Thursday.Feb.5.1916 UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Thursday, Feb. 5, 1948 Lawrence. Kansas Five Males Try For Crown As Dance 'King' Five males will vie for the traditional Pep King crown at the annual Jay Janes Vice-Versa dance Saturday, from 9 to midnight in the Military Science building. The five men who were chosen by members of the Jay Janes at a meeting Wednesday in the Union are Forrest Griffith, Phi Delta Theta; Richard Wintermote, Delta Upsilon; Dave Ritchie, Phi Gamma Delta; Bob Mercer; Phi Kappa Psi; and Lynn Leigh Stigma Chai. Ballots will be cast at the dance for one of the five finalists. The sweater and skirt dance is the annual turn-about party where the women do the asking and furnish the corsage and ticket. Other candidates nominated by the men's organized houses were Richard Sime, Alpha Tau Omega; Gair Sloan, Delta Chi; Gerry Malone, Delta Tau Delta; Don Price, Kappa Sigma, Marion Anderson, Phi Chi; Bill Hart, Pi Kappa; Gene Bradley, Pi Kappa Alpha; Jack Hubik, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Jim May, Sigma Phi Epsilon; William Roehl, Sigma Nu; Tom Gregg, Tau Kappa Epsilon; James Nelson, Battenfeld; Kenneth Regenold, Spooner Thayer. Date Bureau Needs Girls It may be Leap year, but men aren't waiting to be asked to the Jay Jane Vice-Versa dance Saturday from 9 to midnight in the Military Science building. The date bureau set up in the Union building by the Jay Janes to get dates for those who want them has been getting most of the requests from men who want dates for the dance. "Our biggest problem is finding enough women to fill the number of male requests," Kathleen Broers date bureau chairman, said today. "Most of the men don't understand that it doesn't cost them anything to use the bureau or to go to the dance," she said. "The women pay for everything—tickets, funny or fancy corsages, and refreshments at the dance." ___ YM-YW To Aid In Brotherhood The University of Kansas Y.M.C.A. and Y.W.C.A. are attending observance of World Brotherhood week, which will be held Feb. 8 to 14. All speeches and meetings will be held in various rooms of the Union, Meyers hall, Henley house, and various churches in Lawrence. Six New Foreign Students Enroll Dr. and Mrs. Sherwood Eddy, widely known Christian leaders, Rabbi Joseph Levenson, Oklahoma City, and Floyd Davidson, minister, Wichita Congregational - Christian church, will be the visiting speakers. Six new foreign students are enrolled in the University for the spring semester, Willis Tompkins, assistant dean of men, announced today. They are: Luis Alfredo Rosania, Ecuador, engineering freshman; Antonio Marcelo Mettewie, Bolivia, engineering freshman; Jens Holst, Norway, College sophomore; Kuo Chih Hsu, China, graduate student; Robert M. Allan, Columbia, graduate student; and Ivo Malan, Italy, transfer student from Bethel college, Newton. Parking Permit Owners Must Renew by Monday The red tabs which are received upon renewal of parking permits must be added to the license plates by Monday. Four hundred permits have not as yet been renewed. Permit renewals may be procured from the parking committee, 208B, Frank Strong. Malone Will Replace Axe Paul Malone, professor of economics, has been appointed assistant to the dean of the School of Business and will direct the school while Dean Leonard H. Axe is on sabbatical leave at Harvard university. Dean Axe will leave Saturday for Cambridge, where he will live. He was chosen the past month to take part in Harvard university's program of specialized courses in school administration and human relations. Finishing his course the last week of May, Dean Axe will return to his duties in the School of Business. Enroll Late On Saturday Changes in class schedules and late enrollments for the spring semester will be made Saturday morning. Changes will be made in hardship cases and where errors have been made in the original enrollment. College students will enroll in Robinson gymnasium from 9 to 11 a.m. Engineering students will enroll in the Engineering library of Marvin hall from 9 to 11 a.m.. Education students will enroll in 103 Fraser from 9 to 11 a.m. Business students will enroll in the School of Business office from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. Fine Arts students will enroll in the Fine Arts office from 8:30 to 11:30 a.m. Pharmacy students will enroll in the Pharmacy office from 9 to 12 a.m. Law students can make changes at the Law school office at any time in the next few days. ASCE Will Hear Limit Design Talk Dr. John A. Van den Broek, author of "Theory of Limit Design" will speak on "Transmission Tower Design" at the meeting of the American Society of Civil Engineers at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Feb. 5, in the Union. Dr. Van den Broek is the A.S.C.E 1939 Normal medallist for his book on limit design. He is also the author of "Elastic Energy Theory." Limit design is a new and controversial structural theory and technique. It is important in relation to slender columns such as radio towers and airplane struts. The selection was made Tuesday at a meeting of the go-to-church committee, of the Student Religious council. The committee is being sponsored by the Rev. John Patton of the First Presbyterian church. Ronald Lively, education junior, representative from the Religious council, is chairman of the committee. Subcommittees and their chairmen include organized houses, Ala Beebe and Ray Boardman; K.U. Sunday, Sheila Wilder, Richard McClaim, and Nola Killogre: announcements, Richard Barlow, Ulysses Curry, and Ronald Lively. Feb. 15 has been selected as the 1948 "go-to-church Sunday" for K.U. students. Dr. Van den Broek was born in Holland. He attended the Universities of Kansas (1911) and Michigan. Students Urged To Go To Church Four Cash Scholarships Given Medics Recipients of four cash prizes for scholarship in the University School of Medicine were announced Tuesday by Dr H. R. Wahl, dean of the University Medical Center. James P. Carey of Pickens, S.C. received the annual Porter scholarship of $300. Carey, a senior, had the highest average in his class for the first three years of medical school. junior to the Buehner Whittenberger, junior from Mission, received the Charles T. Thompson prize of $100. This prize is given for the most scholastic improvement during the sophomore year. The L. L. Marcell prize of $100 was earned by Warren Rupker, senior, from Provo, Utah. He made the highest academic improvement during the junior year. Robert F. Cavitt of Wichita was awarded the A. Morris Ginsberg Prize in Medicine of $100. It is given to the senior with the best record in the department during his junior year. The Porter scholarship is maintained by a bequest of approximately $30,000 by the late Dr. J. L. Porter of Paola. The fund also provided three lectures a year by a physician of national prominence. Both the Thompson and Marcell prizes are new this year. VA Advises GI Medicos Veteran students about to enter medical school under the G-I bill or public Law 16 stand a better-than-average chance of completing their training successfully if they have: Obtained grades of "B" plus or better, made good grades in the natural sciences, and enrolled for medical training in the same educational institution in which they took their premedical work. After two weeks of taking x-rays of students at K-State, student health workers have come up with some unusual facts that have nothing whatsoever to do with student health. The Veterans' administration warned that scholastic aptitude tests alone and the length of the pre-medical training have little bearing upon a student's chances for success. X-Rays Give Facts On K-State Students Other information released by the V.A. states that World War II veterans are ineligible for training under the G-I bill or Public Law 16 while they are taking training in certain courses financed by other federal appropriations. When they finish such training, veterans become eligible to continue their studies or take other training under either of the two laws. 2. Many students have extra rbs. 3. Mens shirt nockets contain more gadgets than the average girls purse. 1. Men students have shorter necks than girls. 4. Several students have their hearts located on the right side. Technicians have observed that: All these facts about student anatomy were discovered by State technicians of the mobile photofluorographic unit that examined all students: KU Engineer Wins $150 For Writing Article The $150 first prize in the illustrative-technical writing contest sponsored by the "Kansas Engineer" has been awarded to George Worrall, senior in chemical engineering. Kansas City. Worrall's prize-winning article was "Soda Ash in Kansas." The $50 second prize went to Murray Rex Arrowsmith, Belleville. Honorable mention was given to Stephen Hadley, Kansas City, Mo., and Albert Reed, Lawrence. The first rehearsal of the festiva chorus that will present the "Messiah" oratorio will be held Thursday afternoon at 4:00 in the auditorium of Frank Strong hall, Dean D. M. Swarthout, director of the chorus has announced. The chorus will be formed by combining the University A cappella choir, the Men's Glee club, and the Women's Glee club, plus selected voices from the general student body, K. U. faculty, church choirs, and selected singers from Lawrence. Experienced singers not enrolled in these groups who desire to have a part in this performance should see Deen Swarthout as soon as possible to fill out an enrollment blank, or report at the meeting Thursday afternoon. The chorus will be limited to approximately 300 members Cherus members must purchase their own copy of the "Messiah." 'Messiah' Choir To Be Formed In commemoration of his 25 years as Dean of the School of Fine Arts, Dean Swarthout is bringing back to the campus as soloists four former K. U. students who, following their musical study here, have gone on with advanced study in the East. These soloists will be announced in the near future. The University Symphony orchestra will play for the performance. The public performance of the "Messiah" on Sunday, May 2, in Hoch auditorium will open the annual Music Week festival. Thiesen Will Head Memorial Drive Pat Thiessen, College junior, has been chosen to succeed Bruce Bathurst, business junior, as chairman of the student committee of the K.U. World War II memorial, Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary, announced recently. The new chairman said today he has appointed a small executive committee which will plan activities. Committee members are: Bob Malott, vice-chairman; Harriet Harlow, Ruth Brown, Bruce Bathhurst, Matt Zimmerman and Ralph Kiene. A general promotional committee, to meet regularly and to be responsible for carrying out the spring program, will consist of the following members: Thiessen, chairman; Bob Malott, vice-chairman; Carolyn Campbell, Arnold Englund, Margaret Eberhart, Helen Heath, Otis Hill, John Irwin, Hilda James, Glen Kappelman, Eileen Maloney, Margaret Meeks, John Moorhead, Art Partridge, James Sanders, Roy Shoaf, James Waugh, Mila Williams, Keith Wilson, and Joan Woodward One or more benefit shows may be promoted on the campus this spring. WEATHER Kansas — Increasing cloudiness, light snow beginning west, sleet and freezing rain southeast today. Snow west and north, sleet and freezing rain southeast tonight. Snow ending west tomorrow. Colder wedge today. Little change in temperature tonight and tomorrow. High today in 20's, low tonight 15 north, to lower 20's south. 8,848 Students Enrolled For Spring Record A record spring semester registration of 8,848 students, more than 100 above the enrollment in 1947 and more than twice any pre-war figure, was announced today by James K. Hitt, registrar. New registrations totaled 627, of which 388 are new students and 239 former students. This total is 178 lower than in 1947. Fewer students dropped from school between semesters for reasons other than graduation, than a year ago. The 481 men and 146 women among the new students is the same 3 to 1 ratio of men to women as that of 1947. Of the new enrollment, only 194 are freshmen. The College, which enrolled 329 of the new students, was followed by the engineering and graduate schools in that order. There are 5,111 veterans as compared to 5,421 a year ago, and 3,737 non-veterans, an increase of more than 400 above the figure last year. Four hundred thirty-six students are in the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City. Housing officials reported a surplus of rooms for single men and women but that married students were still finding difficulty in getting living quarters. Medics Limit New Frosh One hundred and forty-six students took the medical aptitude test which was given by the University last Monday. "With the students that take the test at other schools, we'll probably have 200 applications for the 80 places", Prof. Stolland said. Ten new women's residence hall scholarships for the second semester at the University were announced today by Miss Margaret Hall, dean of women. Seven are for Mellon hall and three for Watkins hall Only 80 students will be accepted for next fall's freshman class in the School of Medicine, Professor O. O. Stoland, University medical school secretary, announced recently. The completed test must be submitted with application for admission to the School of Medicine in next fall's freshman class. Because of many difficulties—including financial problems—connected with expanding clinical teaching facilities, it is impossible for the medical school to accommodate all applicants. Dorm Scholars Are Announced The scholarships are awarded on the basis of need and academic achievement. Each hall uses fifty women. The new scheme will till both Miller and Wat Those who will live in ler are Neda Butts, Larned; Lenrorman, Chapman; Joan Stantononey; Erma Handke, Atchierva Johnson, Bush City;irley Dusley, Lee's Summit, New residents in hall will be Pat Moser, Hiawa. Milfred Hoover, Kansas City; and Betty Hargis, Pueblo, Colo. Freshmen Urged to Report For Basketball Practice Freshman basketball practice will start tonight at 6:30 in Hosch auditorium. Howard Engleman, freshman coach, announced yesterday. He emphasized that "any new freshmen are welcome." PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1943 Climate May Cause Cancer Wind, sunlight, and general climatic conditions were all proposed as possible causes of skin cancer at the cancer and radiology refresher course held at the University of Kansas Medical center. Guest speakers at the course all agreed, however, that cancer should not be considered hopeless because many cases are curable. Stomach cancer was described as the most serious of cancers toons until it is in an advanced stage. Dr. Charles L. Martin, Dallas, Texas, told the group that climatic conditions appear to have a direct effect on skin cancer, since the disease is rare in many northern states but occurs frequently in Texas, Alabama, and California. S/Sgt. Robert Street, assistant instructor of Infantry at the University ROTC left Jan. 27 for Fort Knox, Ky., where he will go on active duty as a first lieutenant with the third armored division; Lt. Col. Kenneth Rosebush, professor of military science and tactics announced recently. ROTC Instructor To Active Duty Other guest speakers at the course were Dr. Fred J. Hodges, Ann Arbor Mich; Dr. Joseph H. Farrow, New York; Dr. Charles Huggins, Chicago; and Dr. H. Dabney Kerr, Iowa City. Sgt. Street will go on a two-year tour of duty, trying for a commission in the regular army. He was discharged in 1945 with the rank of captain. He reenlisted in May of last year at his present rank. During the war he served with an infantry regiment in Italy. Former Student to Army Post Col. Don Riley, a student in 1916, has recently been appointed as director of Service Division in Manila. Prior to departing for overseas duty to the Philippines, he served with the Army Retiring Board, in Pasadena, Calif. Official Bulletin Feb. 5,1948 Announcements are submitted at Public Relations office, 222A Frank Strong. Deadline on date of publication, 9:30 No announcements taken by telephone. Alpha Phi Omega, 7 tonight, Pine room. Student Union executive board, officers and committee chairmen, 7:30 tonight, Student Union office. Important. Quack club, 7:30 tonight, Robinson gym. Kein Deutscher Verein heute abend. All persons holding K.U. parking permits must obtain the second semester tab, and have this tab attached to their permit before Monday, Feb. 9. University Parking Committee Delta Sigma Pi, 7:30 tonight, 1604 Stratford Road. Ku Ku club, 7:30 tonight, 200 Frank Strong. Y.M.C.A. cabinet meeting, 5 p.m. tomorrow, Pine room, Union. Independents Executive committee meeting, 7:30 p.m. Monday, Union ballroom. All men interested in part-time jobs for the spring semester must report to the Men's Student Employment office no later than Feb. 21 if they wish to keep their employment applications active. University Daily Kansan Mall subscription; $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, Uni- tories beginning on Saturday period. Entered as second class matric. Date 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. Rip Brown's 5 BOPS SKYLINE — Wed-Fri-Sat COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals Short Orders Malts Air Conditioned Sandwiches Open 5:30----12 p.m. TRENCH COATS Finely tailored of wool and rayon gabardine to fit you and your needs. They are just the thing for school wear. They are all of that much-in-demand neutral shade. $32.50 Ober's First With The Finest For Over Fifty Y M Ober's Over's First With The Finest For Over Fifty Years Two Men Chosen To Fill Vacancies At Battenfeld Walter R. Cockley, College junior and Roger L. Davis, College freshman, have been chosen by the men's resident hall scholarship committee to fill Battenfeld hall vacancies during the spring semester, Willis Tompkins, assistant dean of men, said today. These men were chosen from a list of applicants by the committee between semesters. Tompkins said. Applicants are chosen primarily on the basis of financial need and scholarship. Launderette Service 9 lbs. of wash, 25c 21 Bendix Washers 813 Vt. Phone 3368 目 GET YOUR MAN at the Vice Versa Dance Feb.7 WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames Lawrence Optical Co. IT'S A NEW SEMESTER It's A New Beginning Start It Off Right And the best way to start is to make Bill's Grill your hangout for your meals (breakfast, lunch, dinner) and your in between snacks. 1109 Mass. BILL'S GRILL Across from the Courthouse cause for American Pride... THE TREATY OF PARIS ★ First formal recognition by any power of the independence of the United States. It provided, among other things, for the removal of all British troops from America. Article 10 of the original treaty, along with a hundred other famous documents in American history, is now touring the country aboard the "Freedom Train". Watch for this train's arrival in your area! Article 10. The following Applications of the present Society at provided singled out our Form shall be exchanged between the contracting Parties in the Space of Six Months or former if profiled to be compred from the Day of the Signature of the present Treaty. In Warr of sense of one the undersigned their minutes Olenipotentiary have in their Name and in Virtue of our Field Person found with ourwards the present Defence Treaty, and raised the Scale of our Aims to be affixed there: DONALD at Paris that the third day of appointed time at the year of our death one thousand seven hundred and fifty five there. — John Maitland Johann Jüng Be proud of what you write... and the way you write it! Parker"51" "5/ writes dry with wet ink! Copr. 1948 by The Parker Pen Company' Just hold a new Parker "51" in your hand! Note its tapered beauty. Already you know the pride of owning the world's most-wanted pen. You feel like writing! See how instantly the "51" starts and the way it writes . . . smoothly, effortlessly, without a skip. Truly, here's a pen that reflects credit on everything you write! So, ask for the Parker "51". Two sizes: regular and new demi-size. Both with wide range of custom points to choose from. The Parker Pen Company, Jamesville, Wisconsin, U.S.A., and Toronto, Canada. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5. 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE At Least It's One Way---had to fight the dust screen thrown up by the more fortunate home boys who rode their ponies and by the A'Hill' By Any Other Name The "Hill" was no accident, the "so-and-so's" planned it that way. "With malice aforethought" perfectly describes the motives of the three commissioners who were empowered by Governor Carney in 1863 to select a site for the state university. What A Head So you dont believe anyone could be that fiendish? Well, here's what one of the commissioners wrote $ ^{ \textcircled{8}} $ "One capital idea in connection with the location of the University—while the student is climbing the hill of science, he must every day climb Mt. Oread. This will constitute practical gymnastics to develop and strengthen the lungs, digestion, and the locomotive power! Here muscular power will be developed with brain power!" The younger generation may be "getting soft," but when it comes to climbing the Hill, times haven't changed much. One of the better bits of advice carried in an early edition of the University Daily Kansan said: Kansan's Advice "After the new student has climbed the hill a dozen times he imagines that he has every complaint known to medical science. Witch-hazel oil is good. This is no fake." Today when a slick convertible glides by while you puff up the hill muttering "lucky stiff" under your breath, consider yourself well off. In 1887 student mountain climbers also girls who drove the family horse and buggy to class. Little did these early planners know how successful their muscle building program would be. Had they been on a certain island in the South Pacific during the last war, they would have heard: "Bet you a fin the nurse that just down the gangplank is a K.U. cute." "Why, do you know her?" th other sailor asked. "No. I swear I've never seen her before. It's just something about a K.U. girl I can always spot." “OK, wise guy, I’ll take you up. You ask her,” the second sailor grinned. The Red Of The Pay Off "Pardon me, lieutenant, but Ive a bet with a buddy that you're from Kansas University. Would you please settle it for us?" "Why yes, I am. How did you know?" the nurse said. Without answering, the sailor lowered his glance below the hem of her skirt. Indeed, we have many things for which to thank our forefathers. But putting the University on a hill isn't one of them. Watch For Those Street Barricades The warning harbiricates which are placed at the top of 14th, 13th, 12th, and 11th streets every year during icy weather seem to be disregarded with the regularity of winter itself. The city engineering department wishes to urge all students to think twice before running their automobiles down the icy chutes. The streets are not completely blocked but have token barricades with red warning flags, and flares at night. Mrs. Burt Collard, Jr., Leavenworth, thinking the red flags signified an open manhole, tried her luck down 14th street recently. The result: a smashed hood, crumpled right fender, a broken windshield and one severely injured telephone pole. Students Buy 16,000 Postcards For Final Exams Final examinations caused the sale of nearly 16,000 penny-postcards by the University of Kansas post office during the past week. Students purchased the cards in order that their instructors could mail the unofficial notices of their grades. R. C. Abraham, superintendent of the campus post office, said, "They must have all been 'Grade A' postcards. We haven't had any complaints yet." Every sort of tree that is grown in the temperate zone may be found in abundance in the forest of Arkansas. Socially Speaking- Society Starts Slow With Weddings, Pledgings, Dinners Oswalt-Creigh Mrs. Creigh, a member of Delta Gamma, was graduated from the University in June, 1947. Bonnie Lou, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Lester Oswalt, Garden City, was married to Francis Comor Garden City, Jan. 14 in Garden City. Sig Eps Elect Sigma Chi Pledges Bounder's Pledge Sigma Chi announces the pledging of Roger Halliday, Pittsburg, and Bob Felts, Independence. Sigma Phi Epsilon recently held election of officers. Jack Fink was elected president; George Benscheid, vice-president; Gene Ryan, secretary; and Gene Bullinger, comprotiler. - * * Bounder's fraternity announce the pledging of Joseph Ramey, Lyle Shriver, and Herman Speckman, all from Colby. Phi Bet Pi Dinner Phi Beta Pi, medical fraternity, held the eleventh annual "Noble Pierce Sherwood" dinner Jan. 15, at the chapter house. Guests present were: Deane W. Malott, chancellor of the University, R. G. Gustafson, chancellor of the University of Nebraska, Dr. N. P. Sherwood, Dr. O. O. Stoland, Dr. Kenneth Jachim, Dr. Paek Woodard, Dr. Paul Roofe, Dr. R. C. Mills, Dr. Chambers, Prof. G. W. Smith, Dr. Shanahan, Dean J. H. Nelson, Dr. C. F. Nelson, Dr. William Young, and Dr. H. B. Latimer Phi Chi Theta, honorary business sorority, will meet at 7 tonight in the Kansas room of the Union. Phi Chi Theta to Meet Call K.U. 251 With Your News. University Extension Is UN Information Center Mrs. Virginia S. Maddox, director of the University Extension library service, will be in charge of the center. This new service will supply literature concerning the United Nations for the use of students and interested persons throughout the state. The University of Kansas has established a correspondence center with the cooperation of the United Nations department of public information. Heart Center Bricks LAWRENCE SANITARY MILK AND ICE CREAM Valentine Special to the music of Spence and Wiley ORCHESTRA DANCE 24-40 CLUB Call K. U. 251 With Your News 5 miles northeast on Highways 24-40 9-12, Sat., Feb. 7 Admission 50c tax included Parker 51 Fountain Pens Super Chrome Ink STOWIT'S Rexall STORE LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers. 12 East Eighth Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed...65c Ladies' Plain Dresses, CI. and Pressed...69c CASH AND CARRY ONLY a valentine message ... to a man! a valentine message. EMIR Dana Cosmetics, main floor A woman will never forget a man ... who remembers her with perfume — a famous perfume!" - TABU · PLATINE · 20 CARATS · EMIR Dana Weaver Perfumes are famous the world over PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1948 US Wins Two Olympic Titles St. Moritz, Feb. 5-(UP)-Richard Button, the slim ice artist from Englewood, N.J., and little Mrs. Gretchen Fraser, a 28-year-old house wife from Vancouver, Wash., won the first gold medals for the United States in the fifth winter olympic games today. Skating with all the grace of a veteran to the melody of Romanian SPOTLIGHT SPORTS By BOB DELLINGER Daily Kansan Sports Editor Kansas football fans were disappointed, and to a large extent shocked, by the departure of George Sauer for Annapolis, home of the midshipmen of the Navy. It's bad enough for Sauer to pull out, but he takes two able assistants with him, Vic Bradford and Bob Ingalls. The athletic department and University officials are angered, perhaps justifiably so, by Sauer's unannounced departure. Sauer is an excellent coach, and local fans were counting on his ability to weld replacements into the Orange Bowl squad's holes and turn out a third conference champion. Sauer leaves plenty of top-flight material for his successor—if a top-flight successor can be found in time. It will be no easy task to find an adequate replacement to fill his shoes. It does seem that Sauer left K.U. holding the well-known sack. Of course, Coach Sauer was facing an opportunity that may never come again. In spite of its bowl appearance, K.U. still is not one of the country's "name" teams. The Jayhawkers need a few more years out of the grid cellar to become among the select. And, Mr. Sauer, don't forget to return the luggage that was given to you at the football banquet with the express stipulation that you wouldn't use it to leave Lawrence. Sauer's chance to graduate to a better (supposedly) salary and a brighter position in the public spotlight are not to be overlooked. From all angles, the job at the Naval Academy a peers to be a step upward Coach Bobby Dodd of the Orange Bowl winner, Georgia Tech, says he is glad to see Sauer at the Navy helm. Although the Engineers don't meet Navy this season, Dodd can look forward to future clashes with Sauer if he stays at Annapolis. Dodd stated that he was sure that Saver would be a success at the Navy school, although he is expecting no championship teams with the expected material. Navy, Dodd says, can expect no such material as it had a few years ago for a long time, if ever. We don't blame George Sauer for going to the Naval Academy to coach the Navy; we do blame him for breaking a contract which he admitted met all his stipulations—but then, how else could he take advantage of the opportunity. Basketball Results Army 51 Penn 39 Duquesne 43, Lafayette 36 Loyola (La.) 58 Louisiana Tech 43 Seton Hall 60 George Washington 52 West Virginia 60 Penn State 32 Pittsburgh 47 Carnegie Tech 41 Temple 63 Syracuse 56 Notre Dame 53 Butler 52 Emporia State 56 St. Benedict's 50 Washington (St.L.) 77 Chicago 41 St. Louis 49 Missouri 36 Georgia Tech 68 Georgia 58 Navy 56 Duke 46 Washington 60 Oregon 59 Warrenburg 51 William Jewell 38 Sunday Supper Buffet Style 5:30 - 7:30 The Castle Tea Room 13th Mass. Phone 149 Sunday Supper Buffet Style music arranged by his trainer, the 18-year-old Button gave a magnificent performance in the free skating events to win the second championship of the day for America. Before his performance, Mrs. Fraser had become the first American woman in history to win an Olympic gold medal in skiing when she won the women's slalom. Button had piled up a commanding lead in the compulsory figure skating Monday and he added to it today in the free skating competition. The first places won by Button and Mrs. Fraser gave the U.S. the best day any nation has yet had in the games, for Americans finished second and fourth in the Cresta (one-man) bobsledding. Jack Heaton of New Haven, Conn, took second in the event, and Lee Martin, a young army corporal from Kalsipse, Mont., was fourth. DRIVE OUT TO RAYS $ \star $ Select poultry—slow fried to a crisp tenderness $ \star $ Hot tasty French fries Ask for Ray's CHICKEN DINNER which includes: ★ Chef's salad ALL FOR $1.00 COMPLETE LINE OF BEVERAGES SERVED You're Always WELCOME At Uncle Eds 24 HOUR SERVICE RAYS 24 HOUR SERVICE Five-Minute Drive From Lawrence On Highway 40 TORNEY ISLANDS Recognize This Picture? It's familiar to almost everyone because pictures and stories of the atomic bomb tests at Bikini appeared in newspapers throughout the nation within hours after the historic blast. It provides the local, Long Distance and radio-telephone, telegraph, teletypewriter and wire- Speed is a creed with newsmen and the Bell System helps make that speed possible. photo facilities over which news is channeled to presses and microphones. Keeping these facilities in top condition, ever improving and ever expanding, is the interesting job of many qualified men. It is but one phase of the many-sided telephone industry in which thousands have found challenging and rewarding careers. There's a future in telephony. BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM NATIONAL TELLERING & TELEGRAPHY CO. EXTRA SPECIAL OFFER TIME mailed to your address 4 . Months $1.50 G Rowlands Two Book Stores at the Jayhawker 9 Shows: 2:30,7,9 NOW Thru Tuesday PARKING "Desert Fury" IN BUAZING/ TECHNICOLOR "Desert Fury" IN BLAZING TECHNICOLOR FIRST EPIC DRAMA OF THE DESERT TODAY! Hal Wallis Preservation LIZABETH SCOTT·JOHN HODIAK BURT LANCASTER with Mary Astor·Wendell Corey A Paramount Picture Plus color cartoon "INVISIBLE MOUSE" WEDNESDAY, one week! DENNIS MORGAN TECHNICOLOR MY WILD IRISH ROSE The Drama of a Woman Who Violates Every Law GRANADA NOW THRU SATURDAY ker ay S DIAK ck! NOR A OSE A AY an aw 5 "IVY" starring Joan FONTAINE Patric KNOWLES Herbert MARSHALL OWL SHOW Sat. 11:45 SUNDAY—4 Days That Hilarity Team! Lucilie BALL Franchot TONE "HER HUSBAND'S AFFAIR" PATEE PATLE NOW — Ends Saturday Heroics Turn To Hysterics! LAUREL & HARDY "BLOCK HEADS" —2nd Hit— ABBOTT & COSTELLO "NAUGHTY NINETIES" THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5. 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE 1948 Phi Gam Edges Past ATO In First Night's IM Play The Phi Gam's scored a hotly contested victory over the A.T.O.'s in the first night's intramural play of the semester. The Kappa Sig's, Sig Alph's, Sig Ep's, and Phi Psi's also came through with victories. With the lead changing hands four times, the Phi Gam's had to go all out to beat the A.T.O.'s 75 to 34. The winners finally moved ahead when The Kansas team won it's season opener against Kansas State, but dropped the following conference contest to Nebraska. The Sooners won from Colorado in their only meet of the season. The University of Kansas swimming team will try for its second conference victory when Jayhawker tankmen meet the University of Oklahoma crew in Norman Saturday. OU Is Next For Tankmen In the 220 and 400-yard free style, the Jayhawker's will be represented by Ernest Friesen and Dave Ritchie. Friesen finished first in both events against Kansas State. Stan Jervis won the 200-yard breast stroke at both Manhattan and Lincoln. Kansas will be handicapped in the living competition by the loss of Dan Westerman who has dropped from school. Dick O'Neil, Ernest Crates, and Chet Laniewski remain to compete in this division. Only two of the three will make the trip. Coach Walt Mikols reports that Bill Rey, Carl Olander and Paul Banks have all improved rapidly in the shorter distance races. Also making the trip to Norman will be: Don Medearis, Gene Mahoney, Pete Mahoney, Pete Purdy, R. Harrington and Jim Connell. 110 HS Debaters Will Argue Here One-hundred ten students will participate in the regional finals for Class AA and Class A high schools in the Kansas State High School Activities association debate tournament which will be held here Saturday. Six Class AA schools, all with 500 or more students, will compete. They will be Topeka, Emporia, Russell, Atchison, Wyandotte, and Shawnee-Mission high schools. Class A schools will be Abilene, Chapman, Ellingham, Olathe, and Washington Rural. University extension will manage the tourney. The participants will meet at 9 a.m. in Frank Strong auditorium. Each school will be represented by 10 students. The two winners in each class will compete in the state championship finals at KU, Feb. 14. This year's question is "Resolved: That the federal government should require arbitration of labor disputes in all basic American industries." Davenport, in...(UP)—The heat was on in more ways than one during a meeting of the Scott county board. More'n Hot Talk Fires Board Meet While several supervisors were drawing fire for their action in a road dispute, they couldn't understand why it was suddenly so comfortably warm in the room. Austin, Tex.—(UP)—Student loans like everything else at the University of Texas are experiencing a post-war boom. A check showed that a steam pipe had broken beneath the concrete floor of the meeting room, heating it so the supervisors could feel it through their shoes. High prices and tardy arrival of checks for GI enrollees are given as causes for the increase. The loan committee chairman, Jack Hisland, said 15 students a day now seek loans. One loan a day was the pre-war average. Loans At Texas University In A Post-War Boom Overall loan loss is less than one per cent. Most applications are for 90-day loans averaging $35. *Big Ed Lee, who scored 13 points for the A.T.O.'s, pouled out in the final shot, sparked the Phi Gam's with 17 points, and Hargis had 3 for the victors.* The Sig Alph's, last year's I.M. champions, looked the part last night as they won from the strong Delta Chi's 29 to 23. Speedy Ken Thompson paced the Alph's with 14 points. Dick Tomlinson kept the losers in the game with his rebounding and 12 points. Paced by Woodring, fast little forward, the Sig Ep's won from the Delta Tau's 39 to 28. Controlling the rebounds in both courts, the Phi Psi's rolled over the Alpha Phi Alpha five 39 to 28. Using a fast-moving but controlled offense, the Phi's shook Mercer loose for 11 points and Grimes for 9. The losers high scorer was Browder with 9 points. The Kappa Sig's remained unbeaten with their easy win from the DU's 42 to 27. Philblad once more led the Sig's scoring with 15 points but ex-footballer T. A. Scott turned in a nice floor game and 11 points. Spuheler led the losers with 8 counters. All freshmen track candidates who were out for fall track should report for practice at 3 p.m. Monday at the stadium, track coach Bill Easton said today. Easton Calls Frosh Trackmen Ali men who have track equipment should check with the equipment manager immediately, Easton added. Coach Easton will take his varsity squad to Columbia Friday to meet the Missouri Tigers in the first meet of the indoor season for the Kansans. Missouri triumphed over powerful Notre Dame, 65 to 49, last Saturday at South Bend. YM Cagers Win Over Lincoln Jucos The University Y.M.C.A. basketball team defeated the varsity cage squad from Lincoln Junior college of Kansas City, 53 to 34, Jan. 25 in Robinson annex. The Y.M.C.A. team lead all the way. Payne was high point man for the Y.M.C.A. and for the game with 18 points. Scheuerman of the Y.M.C.A. scored 15. Bettis with 14 points was high scorer for Lincoln. The game was one of a pair on the regular schedule of the Lincoln team. The other game will be played Feb. 12 on the Lincoln court in Kansas City. The Y.M.C.A. team, a combination of its two intramural squads, has not lost a game this year, either in intramural play or outside games. U.S. STATE OF MICHIGAN APPROVED SERVICE PLYGADEN BULLY GALLAGHER FINE SERVICE GREAT Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St CARS SQUARE DEAL ACME TIRES CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE W. H. GATESON "What do you make of it—the note attached says fill up with Cities Service Ethyl Gasolene" ture conditions. Special compounds, too, prevent gum formation—to protect your carburetor and intake valves. CITIES SERVICE These are just a few of the features in modern Cities Service Ethyl . . . the gasoline that gives you easy starting, fast pickup and quiet, instant power. Try it today! Every day more and more motorists are discovering the advantages in Cities Service Ethyl Gasolene. Components such as butane in this outstanding, quality gasolene, allow fast vaporization to make starting easier under all tempera- CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE Phone 4 Big 8th & N. Hampshire Dimes Dance SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1948 Gardner Lake Resort 2 miles north of Gardner, Kansas Dance To Kass Kassinger And His Band Admission 75 cents per person Good Food Good Drinks Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan. Save Up To A Dime A Pound !! kroger 3 LB. Bag Hot Dated FRESH COFFEE KROGER'S HOT DATED KROGER'S SPOTLIGHT COFFEE HOUR-DATED Hot in the Box (DAY-COMMON) $1.15 - 2 ONE LB. BAGS Pure Milk 4 tall cans 47c. Kroger-Baby Pure Apple Butter 28 oz. jar 19c Every Meal Tomato Juice 46 oz. can 23c Kroger Quality Orange Juice 46 oz. can 23c Tree Ripened Spam 12 oz. can 50c Ready-to-Serve Stuffed Olives 9 oz. jar 65c Kroger SLICED BACON Cello Roll Lb. 65c WEINERS Armour Star Lb. 44c HAMBURGER Lean Gnd. Beef Lb. 49c WHITING Pan Dressed 2 Lbs. 29c Triumph Potatoes 10 lb. mesh bag 49c Idaho Tomatoes Ripe slicing LB. CTN. 29c Grapes Emperor LB. 10c Pascal Celery Crisp tender LB. 13c 79c PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1948 The Editorial Page Sauer Note The football prospects of the University have been given a jolt by Coach Sauer's departure from Annapolis. By this time the predicament has undergone a great deal of analysis and discussion. The consensus seems to be that all is not lost. Kansas still has many fine players returning for another season, a reputation to uphold, and the opportunity to pick a new coach from any number of good men who would be eager for the job. Coach Sauer was relatively unknown when he came to the University. The situation seems to spotlight one aspect of college athletics which has always caused most officials to look the other way. This is a day of huge gate receipts and profitable post-season games. College football has become big business. Professional players and coaches are forced to use businessmen's tactics. If they see a better opportunity, they take it, although their departure may not always be made under the most convenient circumstances. This'll Make Faculty Members Very Happy Cineinmati — (UP) — Arthur L. Thexton has resigned a $80,000-a-year job to do what he always wanted to do—teach. The 48-year-old Cincinnatiian quit as executive vice president of Clopay Corp. to study for a master's degree in political science at Columbia university. When he gets the degree, he hopes to find a teaching job between $5,000 and $6,000 a year. "We've got enough money to see us through," he said. "That is, as long as my wife doesn't demand cr mine." May Coach Sauer have good luck in his new coaching berth. May Kansas' new coach, whoever he is, slip easily into his new job as a member of a winning football team—the coach and the men who play the game. British capital is worried about the Moslem-Hindu dispute in Kashmir. Whose capital? MARCH of DIMES DANCE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6 UNION BALLROOM----9-12 SEE LEAP YEAR KING CROWNED WAYNE RUPPENTHAL featuring SID DAWSON Sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega Service Fraternity University Daily Hansan Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assn, Ne-Assn, and the Associated College Press. Represented by the National Ad-Service, Service 420 Madison Ave., New York, NY. Editor-In-Chief William C. Von Maurer Managing Editor Alan J. Stewart GET YOUR MAN at the Vice Versa Dance Feb. 7 GALES American Custom Chocolates, $1.75 STOWIT'S Rexall STORE DRAKE'S BAKERY Bread, cake, pie, cup-cakes, cookies, donuts — whatever you want in baked goods, you'll find the best at DRAKE'S! 907 Mass. MISS MAYER'S GARDEN Careful Men - - - YOU'RE BEING WATCHED! So always look your best Call 432 INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners 740 Vermont DON'T MISS Gilbert and Sullivan's Comic Operetta "THE MIKADO" Monday, Tuesday, and Friday -- February 9,10,and 13 Fraser Theater - 8:15 p.m. All Student Cast of Sixty FEATURING: - CHARLES L. O'CONNOR BEN SHANKLIN CHARLES BYERS HARRIET HARLOW DOROTHY O'CONNOR - HARRY O. SPENCER BERNADINE READ VINCENT MAY MARY JANE BYERS CHORUS ORCHESTRA - ALL SEATS - 75c - THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Daily Kansan Classified Ads Copy must be in the University Daily Kansan Business Office, Journalism blld., not later than 4 p.m. of the day before graduation. All classifieds are cash in advance. Classifier rule One day Three days Five days 25 words or less 35c 65c 90c additional words 1c 2c 3c Classified Advertising Rates For Sale SIAMESE KITTENS for sale. Ready for delivery. Stud service. Phi. 1956. TYPEWRITER. Underwood Standard, No. 5; Colt 32 automatic; Aviin electric phone. Phi. 2033. PORTABLE radio in plastic model with leather carrying case at only $12.50. Can be seen at 1244 La. after six. TUXEDO for sale. size, 40. Inquire at Cottage phone. Phone 2. TYPEWRITERS sold and rented. Peterson's, 6 East 8th. Phone 13. 6 EAST 8th. brown size. 35. Very reasonable. Columba, 1194. Brown size. 35. 1946 FORD. Sportsman convertible, blue fenders, tan top, 10,000 miles; radio and heater. This car is perfect and priced to meet your needs. Mitersheldt Motors, Olathe, Kaua. Phi. 805. ZEISS IKON 120 roll film camera F 6.3 lens 1-125 shutter speed. Needs repair. Also Kodak Bantam F 4.5 lens in good condition. Kirchhoff 113/8 New Hump. 7. SEED GEN Miller records. Phone 755K2. ONE 28ICE PRECISION drafting set. Good as new and reasonably priced. Call 253. NAVY OFFICER'S Bridge coat, size 39. precision, new $45. 901 Michigan. PHI. 1956. TETERANS! 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. Phone Lost WILL THE person who accidentally exchanged navy overcoats with me, at the day noon, a federita coat rack Monday noon, Feb. 2, cost the business to the chemistry office? WILL THE boy who borrowed my brown Esterbrook fountain pen during enrollment Monday afternoon, please return it. Virginia Kansan office? Please. Virginia Joseph BROWN BILLFOLD Wed, Jan. 21 in Reward, Ira Landis Phone 3126 RED ALLIGATOR billfold. Lost Thurs- sar. Inside inside. Please call Virginia Brown, 212-876-3950. WRIST WATCH on Potter Lake Saturday finder please call Leigh Wellborn a 917-286-3400 DARK MAROON Parker "Si1" pen, Jan BARNOG Bym Gym. Call Ralph Moon @ 552 For Rent A STUDENT to share a double room with an engineer. Also a single room for one man. Close to the University. One block from bus line. Phone 1676J. 11 ROGM for four boys. New home. Private entrance and bath. $12.50 per month each. 2 ROOM apartment, share kitchen with another couple. 1246% New York. Phone (855) 376-3900. NEED ONE boy for double room. Private bath—shower. Two blocks from campus, a cross street from Jahayawk cafe. Double room. See W. P. Meek. 1339 Obrien after 5 p.m. 12. ROOM TO share with girl, close to campus, 1611 Tenn. Phone 1405W. APT. FOR BOYS $4.50 a week each boy. Sleeping room with kittenette $3.50 a week each boy. 3 double sleeping rooms for boys with large living room and bath with boys. $4.50 each boy all with single beds and on W B. phone 3331. Week 5. ROOMS FOR four boys. Single beds, automatic gas heat and water heater. Can be seen evenings after seven, 1323 Ohio St. 5. ROOM TO share with another girl on second floor. 1147 Teem. Phone 955. 5 Miscellaneous FREE OFFER: Photo copies of discharge papers, marriage certificates, for military credit or school entrance. 3 for price of 2. Round Corner Drug. 801. Mass. 18 EXCHANGE I j bed room apt. in new Du- town. In December, I go to Lawrence Feb. I. Call Gladstone Feb. 1948 is Leap Year so let's leap with a KU. calendar. tt The first locomotive in the United States was invented by George Stephenson in 1814. FRIED SHRIMP A Specialty DUCK'S TAVERN 824 Vermont CHEF Business Service NURSERY SCHOOL—Mothers who work, leave your child at Betty Yape's Nursery School. Hours 8 to 5, reasonable rates. 2012 Ohio. Phone 3195R. 7 TYPING—Thesis, term report, or notes. Accurate and prompt service by teacher typist with more than 15 years experience. Phone 2908 or 547. 2-5 Wanted CAMPUS representative for new plastic item. A fast seller in colleges and local outlet outlets. Excellent commission. Write Paul Ditzel. 422 Hamilton, Evansville. Ill. RETURNING to active duty and am in need of Army Officer's uniforms. Size 39. Contact Donald Sidak. 4406 Parkway, Olathe, Kansas. 9 Transportation RIDERS WANTED: KC. C. to Lawrence, Leon Lawrence, 5:30 p.m., Call 694-881. On KFKU WANTED -Ride to Topeaki Arrive 8:00 Leaving for Wichita Leave Daily Kanson. Dwight Howard. 9:30 p. m. Women of Kansas— Doris Fleeson. Today: 2:30 p. m. Music by Radio—Mildred Seaman. Kappa Phi Open Meeting Friday: 9:30 p. m. Roundup of Editorial Opinion. All girls interested in Kappa Phi work will be guests at an open meeting of Kappa Phi, Friday evening at 7:00 p.m. in the First Methodist Church. Immediately following the business meeting, Kappa Phi members will be hostesses at a Leap Year party in Ecke hall for all Methodist students. In This Weather Guard Against Poor Health—Drink Plenty Of Milk Fritzel DAIRY PRODUCTS 834 Vermont CHL GALLOWAY Fritzel DAIRY PRODUCTS CHI GALLOWAY Phone 182 You Are Always Welcome at Snappy Lunch for Hot Chili Sandwiches Soup Malts 1010 Massachusetts Read the Daily Kansan daily. Let's Get together Let's Get together PHILIP MORRIS is so much better to smoke! PHILIP MORRIS offers the smoker an extra benefit found in no other cigarette. For PHILIP MORRIS is the ONE, the ONLY cigarette recognized by leading nose and throat specialists as definitely less irritating. Remember: Less irritation means more smoking enjoyment for you. Yes! If every smoker knew what PHILIP MORRIS smokers know, they'd all change to, PHILIP MORRIS. ESTABLISHED OVER 20 YEARS PHILIP MORRIS & CO. LTD. FINISHED ESTABLISHED ENGLISH BLEND MADE IN U.S.A. BY PHILIP MORRIS & CO. LTD. INC. NEW YORK Copperhill CALL FOR PHILIP MORRIS TRY A PACK...TODAY UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE EIGHT THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 5, 1948 President Sees Crash If Prices Go Higher By Bibler Washington, Feb. 5- (UP)-President Truman said today that unless congress acts to stop rising prices, this country faces the dangerous prospect of an economic crash. At his news conference the president reiterated in strong words his desire for legislation to curb inflation. This followed a reporter's inquiry for the president's reaction to efforts in congress to slash $2,500,000,000 from his $39,700,000 budget request for the fiscal year starting July 1. A cut of that amount was recommended yesterday by a senate-house subcommittee. Waving a chart which showed a continuous rise in the price of cost-of-living items, President Truman told reporters that unless some way is found to ston what he called this awful spiral, the inflationary trend will proceed to its logical conclusion. Mr. Truman also expressed the belief that Republican efforts to cut his budget would get absolutely nowhere. This logical conclusion, the president said, would be a crash. And that he added, we don't want to see. Students for Democratic Action will elect officers and convention delegates and draw up a charter at 7:30 p.m. today in the recreation room of the Union. The president said he had heard much the same talk last year when he requested $37,500,000,000. The budget actually ended up at $37,700,-000,000, he said. SDA To Elect Form Chapter room of Miss Jane Wilder, S.D.A. national field secretary, will help the 18 unorganized members at the University form a local chapter. She has recently organized chapters at Montana State university and Montana State college. Miss Wilder is also organizing student support for a Missouri Valley authority. She will speak on the subject, "What S.D.A. means to this Country in Liberal Terms." COUNTY HIGH SCHOOL S.D.A. has sextual chairmanships at Denver and Smith college. Both the eastern and western division have representatives in Washington pushing legislation for the M.V.A. Miss Wilder is a former student of the University of California at Los Angeles and was assistant editor of the Daily Bruin. Since graduation she has been doing organizational work for the S.D.A. in Los Angeles. Somers' Of Newton Give Twelfth Bell A twelfth bell as a memorial for John G. Somers, '42, for the Memorial carillon will be purchased by his parents, Judge and Mrs. J. G. Somers of Newton, Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the K.U. Memorial corporation announced recently. Lieutenant Somers was killed in action while on reconnaissance in front of his infantry company near St. Malo, France, August 8, 1944. He served with distinction during the invasion of France and was awarded the silver star. Social Work Department Is Professionally Accredited The American Association of Schools of Social Work has accredited the University of Kansas as a two-year professional school, Esther Twente, head of the department of social work, announced. The department was established a year and a half ago. This is the first time that the second year's work leading to the master of social work degree has been offered. The complete graduate curriculum was made possible last spring when the University absorbed the Washington university social work unit in Kansas City. Little Man On Campus = ENROLLMENT = PROFESSIONAL COLLEGE DOGKS BOOT BLACK BARK BLUE BUCKER BUCKER (SIDE S.WOOD) BRIEKRITEY BRIEKRITEY (WOODE) HUM (40 lbs.) GOWPOKE COOK FEUERFILLER DOGCATHEC DITCHDIGGER HAWNHOOWER AWHNWOVER LAWYER UNIVERSITÄR HOUSE TURNER BOATS (BEACH) THEATRE MANAGEMENT VON NOTE MANAGEMENT SPISER KICKER BETTER MOTORS' BETTER MOTORS' CAMPUSOLOGY WE FURNISH THE CURSE FOR THIS COURSE! "I don't get it—nine hours lab and no credit!" Miss Marjorie Whitney, director of the department of design, has announced that the seventh annual high school art conference will be held on the campus Feb. 20 and 21 in conjunction with the Arts and Crafts Festival. Arts And Crafts Festival Will Present Kansas Talent The festival of Kansas Arts and Crafts, to be held in the Lawrence community building February 18 to 22 will afford an opportunity for the people of Kansas to become better acquainted with the work of artists and craftsmen who call the state their home or adopted home. The festival is under the direction of Mrs. Frank Stockton, wife of the University Extension director. * Among the cartoons will be an original by Albert T. Reid, political cartoonist, loaned by the William Allen White school of journalism. There will be a concert of the University symphony orchestra and a capella choir in Hoch auditorium. Feb. 22 at 4 p.m. "The Modern Dance," written and directed by Elaine Sellicovitz, will be presented by members of the K.U. chapter of Tau Sigma Feb. 20 in the Community building. The world premiere pre-Broadway production of the prize-winning play "A Cry of Players" will be presented in Fraser theater Feb. 20 and 21 by a cast made up of University students. This play, written by Will Gibson of Topeka, is scheduled for Broadway production this year. Articles for the exhibition have been gathered from all parts of the United States, having been leased by art museums and by individual owners. The exhibition will be divided into the following divisions: Paintings, prints, illustrations and cartoons; sculpture, crafts and design; metal work, jewelry, architecture, photography, music and writing. Paintings To Be Shown Among items of major importance will be two paintings by John Steuart Curry, "Baptism in Kansas," the painting which started Curry on his way to fame is being loaned by the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York City. The other is the original study Curry made for the John Brown painting in the State House at Topeka. There will be an exhibition of wrought silver bowls by Margaret Craver, one of the foremost silversmiths in the United States. Miss Craver was born near Pratt but now lives in New York. A massive head of John Brown, by the Topeka sculptor Merrill Gage will be loaned for the festival by the Mulvane Museum of Art at Washburn University. World Premiere Here The courses include drawing, interior decoration, sewing, book reviewing, international affairs, creative writing, child care, and family relations. Each of these courses has been streamlined to meet the particular desire and need of student wives in Sunflower. Matinee Classes At Sunflower Student wives at Sunflower will be offered matinee classes by the University of Kansas in the K.U. Dames club room, Sunflower, beginning Feb. 10. The dietic internship at the University of Kansas School of Medicine in Kansas City has again received annual approval by the executive board of the American Dietic association. This notification was received recently by Dr. H. R. Wahl, dean of the school. All instructors for the courses will be provided by the University of Kansas. To be accepted, interns must be graduates of accredited colleges or universities with majors in food and nutrition or institutional management. Interns receive training in administration and supervision of peri-operative care at various cost levels, corrective diets and the filling of diet preparations. The internship is for one year. Upon completion the student is qualified for a position of hospital dietitian and is eligible for membership in the association. Med School Has Dietetic Classes What one football coach does during his season off the gridiron is now on display in the fine arts department, in Frank强壮 hall. The medical center accepts new classes of dietetic interns in March and August. Coach's Hobby On Display Wayne Replogle, freshman football coach, makes a hobby of leathercraft. His exhibit contains a rifle scabbard, knife sheathes, several purses, and billfolds. K-Club To Show Bowl Game Movies The K-Club, University letterman's organization, will sponsor free showings of the Orange Bowl movies to students Feb. 13 and 14. Students will be admitted with respect to numbered basketball tickets, with those holding ticket group one seeing the movies Feb. 13, and those with group two tickets being admitted for the second showing. The movie showings will begin at 7:30 each night. The University land will provide entertainment from 7 until the time of showing. A section will be reserved each night until 7:15 for K-Club and faculty members. Soph Medics Number 85 Eighty-five sophomores entered the University Medical Center at Kansas City for the spring semester. They include seven women, and a student from Tehran, Iran. The transferees are Robert H. Henry, Leonard H. Akes, Lars A. Almquist, Sobram Amini, Theo L. Batchcelder, Ward E. Benkelman, Haury L. Briggs, Jx. Franklin K. Bowser, Maxine T. Erillhard, Benjamin R. Bryant, John Edw, Bueron H. Buff, Paul R. Carpenter, Mack A. Carter, Daniel T. Coats, Albert F. Crumley, Frank Cvetkovich, Francis A. Davis, Marion L. DeVault, Richard L. Dreher, Byron T. Eberle, Robert C. Fairchild, Merle E. Foland, Fake Jiesen, Donavon D. Fuller, Tex. E. Fury, Wm. B. Gerach, John K. Griffith, Wayne E. Hird, Thomas W. Hogan, Waldo S. Holt, Wildard J. Howland, Glen C. Hutchison, Wesley A. Innes. Leda Grace Janke, Fred. O. Joerns, Clifford E. Jones. J. D. Kabler, Paul A. Kaelson, John S. Kirk, Kenneth L. Knuth, Warren L. Kump, Edward T. Long, Glen M. McCray, Victor G. McDonald, Jr., Stanley R. McEwen, John W. McKay, Alex. C. Mitchell, Richard E. Munns, Dewey G. Nemec, Roland D. Ostlund, George E. Omer, Barbara J. Owen. LrRue W. Owen, Jack T. Peterson, Harry O. Phillips, James C. Pike, Rust Starr Pike, Richard L. Pokorny, Charles B. Powell, Robert E.H. Puntneyen, Bartlett W. Ramsey, Earl L. Redfield, Alexander Roth, J. G. Roth, Barbara E. Russell, Robert K. Russell, Sherman F. Saffier, Eugene W. Schwartz, Ross D. Skinner, Dean A. Smith, Eugene Smith, Geo. C. Steinberger, Grant M. Stevens, Niles M. Stout, Margaret Claire Tamblyn, Robert A. Tennant, Daniel M. Thompson, Frederick U. Timms, Ernest E. Tippin, Richard N. Todd, Frederick E. Totten, Charles B. Wheeler, Katherine A. Wilson, and Charles M. Woods. Harlan F, Berthelsen, freshman medical student, received cuts on the face and a bruised shoulder in a motor car accident this morning at 19th and Massachusetts. He was taken to Watkins hospital. Berthelsen collided with a car driven by Rex E. Williams, 1046 Tennessee, as the medical student was crossing Massachusetts at 19th street Williams was going south on Massachusetts. Receives Injuries In Motor Accident Dr. Carl Althaus, associate professor of education, will be one of the speakers on "The county-unit-proposal for Kansas schools" at the three-day meeting of the Kansas State Teachers association Council of Administration, in Hutchinson. No arrests were made. Berthelsen will remain in the hospital temporarily for observation. Educators meeting at Hutchinson today through Saturday will have as a theme for their session, "Education for responsible living." Professor Althaus To Talk On County-Unity School Plan 'Solid South Talks Of Revolt From Party Washington, Feb. 5—(UP)—Southern Democrats, in open revolt against President Truman's civil rights program, struck at the Democratic party's pocketbook today to the admitted consternation of the party's high command. The new threat from Dixie was touched off by Gov. Ben Laney of Arkansas, who announced the Democratic state committee would impound the proceeds of the party's Jefferson-Jackson day dinners Feb. 19. Similar steps were being discussed in other Southern states. One Hundred A Plate The $100-a-plate Jackson day dinners have been a favored method of raising campaign funds for the Democratic party for several years. Southern legislators, who have spent the past two days in vigorous denunciation of the president's call for anti-lynching and anti-Jim Crow legislation, were awaiting a cue for their next move from their state governors. Many openly favored a bolt from the party. Republicans Have A Bill Meanwhile, house Republicans made plans that promised to fan the flame of the Democratic feud. They prepared to speed an anti-lynching bill to the floor for passage within a week or two. A house judiciary subcommittee held hearings on the measure yesterday and may approve it today. G.O.P. leaders insisted they were not trying to make political capital out of the North-South fight in the Democratic party but the effect there was just the same. The anti-lynching bill, one Republican leader pointed out, was on the G.O.P. legislative program last year. He said it would have been sent to the floor regardless of the current situation. many manufacturers said they already had received invitations from Hope to appear for testimony at the hearings. They said they would tell the committee that the only ultimate solution of the black market problem is increased production to satisfy the hush demand. Chicago, Feb. 5 — (UP) — Farm machinery manufacturers said today that despite their efforts to wipe it out, there is a flourishing black market in tractors, combines and other urgently needed farm equipment. Manufacturers said black market sales usually are made by farmers and individuals over whom they have no control. Many farmers, they said, have sold slightly used tractors to other farmers at prices $1,000 or more above the manufacturer's list price. See Black Market In Farm Machinery The farm equipment makers said they would tell their story of the black market to the house agriculture committee in Washington next week. Rep. Clifford Hope (R-Kan.), committee chairman, announced yesterday that the committee would begin public hearings on the farm black market Feb. 10. When that would be, they said, was anybody's guess. Subsidy Not Cause Of Big Enrollment Cleveland - (UP) - Contrary to popular belief, government subsidy of veterans is not the main cause of high college enrollment, but only a contributing factor, a memorandum prepared by the late president of Fenn College two days before his death said. Surveys show the average veteran would have entered college anyway, Dr. C. V. Thomas said. He pointed out that going to college is becoming part of the social pattern—becoming contagious and likely to be as common as secondary education once was. University Daily Kansan Lawrence, Kansas These 11 Men Want To Be Leap Year King Eleven candidates will compete for the title of leap year king tonight at the March of Dimes dance being sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity The dance will be held in the Union ballroom from 9 p.m. to 12 midnight. The candidates, in order of standing at the close of voting yesterday are: James Gordon Bennett, Jr., Pr. Kappa Alpha; Jesse Edwin Stewart, Beta Theta Pi; James Marion Jasper, Independent; Joseph Edward Daly, Phi Kappa; Richard A. Wegner, Lambda Chi Alpha; Harold Dexter Pershing, Sigma Kappa Phi; Robert Leo McNeive, Sigma Phi Epsilon; Clifford Charles McDonald, Sigma Chi; Dale Albert Spiegel, Al- ona Kappa Kappa; Harry William Tyrrell, Kappa Sigma; and Richard Nevin Millikan, Alpha Tau Omega Pictures On Display Pictures of the candidates are on display at the voting booth on the main floor of the Union. Voting will continue at the dance until intermission, when the name of the winning candidate will be announced. The king will be crowned by Gloria Hill, 1947 Jayhawker queen, in a coronation ceremony during the intermission Approximately $200 has been contributed to the drive to date, said Robert Petitt, chairman of the March of Dimes committee. This figure includes contributions from a few of the organized houses, balloting for the leap year king, and coverage of the registration line during enrollment. A total of $1,100 was raised last year, Petitt said. Collections at Games The dance tonight, with Wayne Ruppenthal's orchestra and vocalist Sid Dawson, will climax the University campaign. Hose and heels and suits are to be the dress, Petitt stated. Collections at the Nebraska and Missouri basketball games Feb.7 and 9 will conclude the drive. These will be taken up by the Ku Ku's and Jay James and turned in to Alpha Phi Omega. Eire May Get New Leader Dublin, Feb. 6—(UP)—Resignation of Prime Minister Eman De Valera after 16 years in office was predicted by political observers today when combined opposition parties forged ahead of the government party 53 to 52 in the Irish parliamentary elections. During the campaign De Valera stated frequently that he would not remain as prime minister over the new parliament unless the voters gave him 75 seats for a clearcut majority of the 147 seats at stake. The heavy early victory of De Valera's Flianna Fall party slowed up as the counting progressed and the combined six opposition parties began to fill seats in many areas as veteran observers had predicted. One of the greatest upsets of the election was the collapse of the Clamn Na Poblachta, headed by Sean Mac-Bride, 42-year-old Dublin attorney, which pre-election forecasts said would emerge with at least 39 seats. According to the present trend, Mac-Bride's party will win no more than 15. WEATHER Kansas-Farmland cloudy northeast. Occasional intermittent freezing drizzle southeast. Light snow west today. Light intermittent snow tomorrow. Little change in temperature. High today in 20's. Little Man On Campus By Bidler ENROLL ADV. SECRETARIAL MUST HAVE COMPLETED PRE-REQUISITES Bidler "Well, you seem to have the physical requirements." Animal House Is Remodeled Rabbits, mice, moles, and muskrat in the University animal house are having their home infested with carpenters these days. Amidst flying sawdust in the house, located at the foot of the hill behind the power plant, the little bunnies calmly nibble their lettuce and the rats scurry back and forth, disinterested in the renovation. House Remodeled House Remodeled The animal house is being remodeled for zoology classrooms and research laboratories. By-products from the animals—their skin and skulls—are sometimes saved and mounted in Dvehe museum for further study. Other animals, still alive, convesence in the animal house after being used as guinea pigs for physiology study. The laboratories will be used by graduate students, under the direction of Dr. William C. Young, professor of anatomy, for mammalian sterility research, sponsored by the United States Health service. Other research will be done by zoology and entomology students on all species of chiggers—from the small garden variety which annoy us in the summer to the largest type which live on frogs. So far, research has discovered that there are over 500 varieties of chiggers, maybe 1,000, while only a few years ago there were only 60 species known to science. The chiggers used in research are removed from animals used for other zoology courses. Tiny white specks on the animals under a microscope become another variety of chiggers. And in another part of the animal house, a colony of durmestid bettles work for the zoologists—removing meat from bones of animals and birds trapped for the osteological collection. The beetles can clean a carcas in a little less than a week. Bones are completely cleaned in an ammonia solution, which softens and removes the remaining meat and bleaches the bones. Bones are then washed, cataloged, and stored in the museum for study and comparison with any new type of bird or animal which may be found. The beetles also have to be fed other meat occasionally. Br. Productions Flenty Of Chiggers Animals, like students, have demanded improved campus quarters for the role they play in education. Call For TB-Shot Results At Watkins Hospital Students who have not yet inquired about the results of their tuberculin test at Watkins Memorial hospital should do so as quickly as possible. Clinic hours are from 8 to 12 a.m. and 2 to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Corsages will be judged for several prizes to be given at the Jay Jane Vice-Versa dance from 9 to midnight Saturday in the Military Science building. Judges will be Miss Florence Black, professor of mathematics. Maude Elliot, Spanish professor, and Mr. and Mrs. Dean Nesmith. He is the athletic department trainer. Award Prizes For Corsages The women make the corsages for the date of their choice and the results are conversation pieces. Materials used range from all varieties of garden vegetables to soap wrappers, adhesive tape ribbons, cigarette and matchstick concoctions, and ordinary crepe paper. Last year's winner was an orange peel octopus with carrot strip tentacles. Michael F. "Mike" Ahearn, 69, former athletic director at Kansas State College of Manhattan died at St. Mary's hospital in Topeka Thursday night. Mike Ahearm Dies In Topeka Hospital Abearn had been seriously ill for the hospital Thursday noon when several months, and was rushed to he lapsed into a coma. He did not regain consciousness. Job Changers: Call Employment Bureau Men who want jobs or are changing or quitting them should call the University's men's employment bureau, Fred Amelung, employment counsel, said today. There are not enough jobs open to meet the increased demand for them. Mr. Amelung added. Persons interested in part time jobs should call K. U. 215 for further information. State Asks For Separate Schools Oklahoma City, Feb. 6—(UP)—Leaders of the Oklahoma legislature ended an extraordinary strategy session at the capitol early today after endorsing continued segregation of the races in state schools. The lawmakers told state regents for higher education that they favored "such steps as necessary to institute and maintain separate schools of higher learning for Negroes with functions and facilities substantially equal to those afforded white students." The action by the legislative leaders, who were called into the capitol late yesterday by Gov. Roy J. Turner, may clear the way for the state regents to request a special session of the Oklahoma legislature to deal with segregation problems. The next regular lawmaking session is due early in 1949. A spokesman for the regents was reported to have told the lawmakers that the U. S. supreme court's mandate in the Ada Sipuel Fisher case may require the special legislative session—either to repeal Oklahoma segregation laws or to appropriate hundreds of thousands needed for additional Negro schools. Presumably, Governor Turner called the lawmaking chiefs into session in the belief that the U. S. supreme court may term the state's new Negro law school inadequate. The school, with a faculty of three, was set up in the capitol after the high tribunal ruled that Mrs. Fisher, a Negro seeking admission to University of Oklahoma, should be afforded equal educational facilities immediately. Mrs. Fisher's attorneys are now attempting to get the U. S. court to order her admission to O.U. on grounds that the new school is not equal to the university law school. Petitt Fills APO Vacancy Robert Petit, College sophomore, was elected treasurer of Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity, at a special election last night. He will succeed Charles Howard, who resigned. Howard's resignation was accepted at the opening of the meeting. Conflicting interests and duties which prevented him from giving full attention to his position prompted the action, Howard stated in a letter to the other members of the organization. A report on the March of Dimes campaign was given by Petitt. chairman of the committee, and final arrangements for the March of Dimes dance tonight were discussed. Coffeyville Fire Destroys 2 Stores Coffeyville, Feb] 6,—(UP)—Two buildings were destroyed and a third damaged by water and smoke in a blazing three-hour fire here Thursday. Fanned by a brisk north wind, the flames threatened an entire block in the business district before firemen brought them under control. 'Fall Of Stocks Doesn't Mean Break In Prices' By LOIS LAUER The sharp downward plunge in commodity and stock market prices does not mean the end of inflation, according to Leslie Waters and Johnise, professors of economics at the University. The United Press reported today that grain prices were going downward for the third day in a row in a major market break that many experts believed would be the end of the inflationary food spiral. Stock 'Jitters' "I do not look for the general price level to go down," Professor waters said. "The prices of some raw materials may go down, but they will not go down very far, and manufactured products will probably continue at present levels." The New York stock market, in what Professor Waters termed "the sympathetic jitters," fell in a two-day break that wiped out around $1 \frac{1}{2}$ billion dollars in market valuations. "Whenever you have gone through a long period of inflation, you have an erratic market," Professor Waters said. "Actually, the stock market has not moved regularly at all with commodity prices. While prices were going up, stocks were going down. They are already at the lowest point in relation to earnings in their history. I see no reason why they should drop very far now." "Shows Uncertainty." Professor Ise said that the market situation evidently showed some uncertainty by the nation's business men. "But I haven't any idea whether the decline will continue and give us much lower prices, or whether we will presently find prices going on up again," he said. "It's about 25 years too late to get any predictions from me. I don't expect prices to go down very far, but much depends on two things—the extent of our exports under the Marshall plan, and the question of tax reduction." Professor Waters pointed out that in 1947, the United States exported seven billion dollars more than it imported. Therefore if the Marshall plan continues this excess of exports, prices will remain about the present level. Professor Ise added that if congress should decide to reduce the Marshall plan by any great amount, it might start prices on a downward trend. National Experts Warehouse Richard Uhlmann, president of the Chicago board of trade, said "We've definitely seen the peak of the food price spiral." National Experts Worried National financial experts expressed a more worried view of the situation. A. W. Zelomek of the International Statistical bureau in New York predicted the release of vitally needed goods by jittery speculators when prices began to drop. Joseph M. Dodge, president of the American Bankers association, warned the public that this was an indication of the "completely unrealistic price structure on which the country has been operated." Levenson To Address University Groups Rabbit Joseph Levenson of Oklahoma City will address the Jewish Student Union at 8 p.m. Feb. 10 in Myers hall. After the meeting, the group will have an informal coffee hour with students of other denominations in the Union building. An ex-army chaplain, Rabbi Levenson will address several University groups and Lawrence organizations by the Brotherhood Week activities committee. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1948 Married Couples Need Housing The housing situation for single men and women is brighter this semester than it has been for the last two years, but for married students chances of finding a place to live have not improved. Rooms close to the campus are still needed for married couples. More than 325 vacancies for men are now listed, Mrs. Ruth Nash, housing director said today. She added that there was a surplus of rooms for women in private homes, but that most of the vacancies in dormitories have been filled. "Sunflower Village is about the only place available to them. Sunflower has a waiting list now but it doesn't take long to get in." Married students with children have the most difficulty in securing rooms. Mrs. Nash said. Irvin Youngberg, director of dormitories, said today that Sunnyside is filled with full-time faculty members. Additional vacancies are needed to meet the needs of housing full-time faculty members, he added Bloch Exhibit Has 22 Water Colors Twenty-two water colors by Albert Bloch, former head of the department of painting, are being shown at the Museum of Art. The paintings will be in the North Gallery on the second floor until Feb. 16. Since his retirement last year Mr Bloch has been devoting all of his time to painting and all the pictures exhibited are recent works. Most of the paintings are imaginative landscapes. There is one which is a design for a tapestry, "Variations on a Theme." Two particularly interesting pictures because they illustrate Mr. Bloch's handling of mood and atmosphere as well as beauty are "Mask in a Garden" and "Falling Water." Mariners To Hear Harbisons The Mariners club will have Mr. and Mrs. Stanley P. Harbison as guest speakers at its regular supper meeting tomorrow night at Westminster Hall. The speakers will discuss their work of the past five years at El Guacio, Puerto Rico. Official Bulletin Feb. 6, 1948 V. M. C. A. cabinet meeting, 5 today. Pine room, Union. All persons holding K. U parking permits must obtain the second-semester tab, and have this tab attached to their permit before Monday, Feb 9. —University parking committee. President's breakfast sponsored by Student Union Activities has been postponed until Saturday morning, Feb. 14. Unitarian Liberal club. 7 p, m sunday, Pine room. Rev G. Richard Kuch to speak on international youth organizations. Jay Jones required meeting, 8 a.m. Saturday, Military Science building. Bring tickets and money. Wear uniforms Monday. Independent Women's Senate, 7 p. m. Monday, Pine room, Union. Bring alternates. Mathematical Colloquium, 5 p. m. Monday, 211 Frank Strong, Prof. Ky Fan, Notre Dame university, will speak: "Functional Representation of Partially Ordered Additive Groups." A. W. S. conference committee, 4 p.m. Monday, office of Dean of Women. Independents Executive Committee meeting, 7:30 p.m. Monday Union ballroom. Dove staff, 7:30 p. m. Tuesday, 9 Frank Strong. House of Representatives of A. W. S., 4 p. m. Tuesday, 200 Frank Strong. Coffees and Forums committee, Union Activities, 4 p. m. Tuesday, Pine room. Refreshments. Prof. Osma to lead discussion on Franco and Republican Spain. Fencing club, 7:30 p. m. Tuesday, room 110. Robinson gym. Society for Advancement of Management for Feb. 10 postponed until Feb.17. Executive board will meet Feb.10. All new applicants and past members of Student Union Activities committees, 7 p. m. Wednesday, Union ballroom. Important meeting. University Daily Kansan Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University holidays and excess weekends cost less; class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. Do you have an initiation present to buy for either Boy or Girl? Initiation Gifts NOW is the time to order for February initiatives. Crested gifts must be ordered soon because delivery takes 3 weeks. L. G. BALFOUR CO. 411 W. 14th Phone 307 Dimes Dance SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 7,1948 Big March Of Gardner Lake Resort 2 miles north of Gardner, Kansas Dance To Kass Kassinger And His Band Admission 75 cents per person Good Food Good Drinks Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertising fraternity, will meet 7:15 p. m. Feb. 10, in 107 Journalism building. The first in a series of dance classes in the Union ballroom will be held 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday, February 14 free of charge. Dancing Classes To Start Feb.14 Miss Elaine Selicovitz. Physical Education department, will instruct. She will be assisted by students. Dance steps to be taught are the samba, rhumba, tango, and current popular steps. These dance classes are being organized to provide inexpensive entertainment for the student staying in Lawrence on week-ends. Call K.U. 251 With Your News GALES American Custom Chocolates, $1.75 STOWIT'S Rexall STORE DANCE Presidents' Breakfast Has Been Postponed to the music of the new TENOR BAND The Sweetest Thing in Music Notice: The Presidents' Breakfast sponsored by Union activities has been postponed from Saturday morning, until Feb. 14. All presidents of organized houses and various organizations are urged to attend the breakfast scheduled for the later date. 9-12, Sat., Feb. 7 5 miles northeast on Highways 24-40 24-40 CLUB Admission 50c tax included The grebe makes love to its mate by presenting her with nesting material. Charme Beauty Salon formerly Iva's Beauty Shop phone 533 All types of beauty work by capable operators. Mid-winter special price on permanents machine and machineless. Nettie L. Wolfe, Owner Envelopes for letters are mentioned by Swift in 1728. Stamped adhesive envelopes came into general use shortly after the establishment of the penny post system in 1840. Machinery for their manufacture was patented in 1844. EAT SAN MICHAEL Take a break to keep awake with SANDWICHES THICKEST MALTS Zim's Snack Shop East of Post Office MERCURES Judy Bond Blouses with the newest Gibson Girl frills. In cotton or rayon. Hi-A BRAS . . . for the youthful line of beauty $3.50 $5.95 The Palace 843 Massachusetts ONE WAY STREETS... Designed to speed up traffic, both to and from the congested areas and busy spots. ALL ROADS leading from KU to the downtown area will ultimately lead you to our door, where more and more students are finding it convenient and economical to maintain a checking account. THE LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK 647 MASS. Member FDIC FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Socially Speaking Under the leadership of Patricia Fuller, College senior, and Laura Mason, College junior, a Y-Teen organization is being installed at University High School this semester. Mrs. Vivian Scroggins will be the faculty advisory. University High YW The YWCA freshman group of Kay O'Connor recently packed 14 boxes of old clothes, weighing altogether 337 pounds. They were sent to the American Friends Service Committee in Chicago to be used for European relief. High school officers for the group are Carolene Calahan, president, Pat Daniel, vice president, Donna King, secretary, Angie Stavus, treasurer, and Ethel Mae Honk, membership chairman. - * * YWCA Packs Boxes Hugging Lambda Chi Alpha announces the pledging of Paul Kleiwer, Atchison and Dean Iden, Russel. Pledging Belles And Their Weddings Huested-Botkins Shirley Huested, niece of Mr. and Mrs. H. Van Byke, Plainville, and J. D. Botkins, Fredonia, were married Jan. 31, in Plainville at the home of the bride. The attendants were Pat Barron, Wichita, who was maid of honor, and Dorothy Feldkamp, Kansas City, who was candelighter. Tony Mura, Kansas City, Mo., served as best man. Mrs. Botkins is a member of Chi Omega, and was in the School of Fine Arts when she attended the University last spring. Mr. Botkins, College sophomore, is a member of Phi Kappa Psi. The couple are now living at Sunflower. Leckron-McBoyle the wedding of Laurel Leckron, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Leckron, Abilene, to Vincent Mc- Boyle, Abilene, will take place Feb. 8, at the First Babist church in Abilene. --- Abilene. Miss Leckron is a College sophomore, and Mr. McBoyle is a business junior. ___ Tau Kappa Epsilon party, chapter house 12. p.m. to midnight. Up And Coming house, 5 p.m. Alpha Phi Omega, March of Dimes dance, Union ballroom, 9 p.m. to midnight. Friday indugan. Kappa Phi-Wesley Foundation party, Ecke hall, 8 p.m. to 10:30 p.m. Saturday Wednesday The Jay James will hold a rush tea from 3:30 to 5 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas room of the Union. Saturday Jay James, Vice-Versa dance, Military Science building, 9 p.m. to midnight. The tea is to select women to fill vacancies in Temple hall, Monchonsia, Jolliffe, Corbin and Kappa Alpha Theta. All women who have the requirements to be a member of Jay Jones in these halls have been invited to the tea. nigh Tau Kappa Epsilon luncheon- dance, chapter house, 12 to 2:00 p.m. Wednesday The vacancies were created by women who were graduated. They are Billie Rotermund, Sally Winter-scheidt, Wilda Hosler, Barbara Stapelton, and Alberta Moe. New York—(UP)—Dr. Harry L. Shapiro, anthropologist with the Museum of Natural History, believes eventually will have heads as round and shiny as billiard balls, four toes, no appendix, no third molar, a larger brain and a smaller face. He estimated that will be their appearance about the year 501,984 A.D. Definitely Not Superman More Enroll In Dance Class What? Social dancing class. Odds? Three to one. Whose favor? Boys. When? Last semester. The odds weren't so bad as in some of the engineering classes, but then partners aren't needed in engineering. However, the odds are evening up some this semester, with almost a gir However, the odds are evenly for every boy, 150 in all. This is about twice as large an enrollment the last eight weeks of last semester, according to Miss Elaine Salicovitz, instructor. There are two classes of socia dancing during each semester. One hour credit is given for three meetings a week. Elementary social dance is given the first eight weeks when the slow fox trot, waltz, jitterbug, and beginning rhumba are taught. During the second eight weeks in the advanced class, advanced rhumba and jitterbug, and the tango, congo, and samba are taught. Besides learning how to dance, the students are also instructed in dance floor etiquette and rhythm analysis. Both men and women are taught to lead as well as to follow. Those whose rhythm is exceptionally poor are given additional aid. The class progresses as fast as the slowest beginner. Macksville, Kan. — (UP) — Leigh Abbey, country editor, snapped his fingers at the newsprint shortage and put out an extra edition of his weekly Macksville Enterprise. Macksville Editor Runs 'Rain' Extra Why? It rained. And that was news in drought-striken Stafford County. He used the biggest type he could find to spread this farm cliche across the top of the front page: Kansas Rooster Wins Movie Contract in drouth-stricken Stafford County. Figuring he could skimp later on to make up the raid on his newsprint stock. Abbey rushed the extra off the press less than 36 hours after the regular weekly edition. Handkerchiefs were first manufactured at Palsley in Scotland in 1743. Get Your Man At The VICE-VERSA DANCE See Page 5 A rooster named "Bill" has given the parents of James Kelly, business senior, an expense account in fabulous Hollywood. In fact, Bill is so valuable, the Kellys have insured him for more than $1,000. Mr. Kelly, a retired farmer and oil man from Stafford, entered his prize Plymouth Rock rooster, Bill, in the grand championship roofer show in Oklahoma City, sponsored by R.K.O. movie studio. The Kansas entry came through with flying features to become the "Charles Atlas" of all barnyard fowls. Call K.U. 251 With Your News. After Bill's victory, the owner was presented with a large trophy and a fat movie contract, with no dues out to the union. The next time you see the R.K.O. rooster crowing before the start of a movie, that will be Bill. He is just another fowl that worked his way up to success by starting with chicken-feed. But once each year they gather at the Orman house, chase their wives out of the kitchen and become what they proudly call a first-class pickling team—tomato pickling. Banking Or Pickling They're Still Good They work with production line smoothness, with Banker Orman calling the signals and running a sub-assembly line of glass jars with the necessary dill, garlic and onion in them. Banker Myers washes the tomatoes, Evans quarters them, Engineer Eakins inspects the quarters and packs the jars, and Andrews, the advertising man, handles the brine and screws on the tops. Evans, first to finish, also is chief coffee maker. Nashville, Tenn., — (UP) — Downtown, John Orman and Gene Myers are bankers, Tom Evans is a lawyer, Jack Eakin is an electrical engineer, and Charlie Andrews is an advertising man. Launderette Service 9 Ibs. of wash, 25c 21 Bendix Washers 813 Vt. Phone 3360 DEELICIOUS BARBECUED SANDWICHES COOKING 824 VERMONT Duck's Tavern "Million Dollar Rain!" Best Teacher To Get $1,000 A $1,000 award donated by the Westinghouse Educational foundation will be given the winner by the American Society for Engineering Education at its annual meeting in June. An opportunity to qualify for the annual George Westinghouse award for distinguished teaching has been offered a nominee of the University's faculty in engineering or related subjects. 3 Mo You can't wear your Marjorie Montgomery skiing — but everywhere else If You're New At K. U., HERE'S A MESSAGE FOR YOU! Harzfeld's We're all trying to beat the High Cost of Living these days. Meals are especially high. When you eat with us you get good, nourishing sandwiches or plate lunches at the lowest possible cost. Your 'Serve Us' will bring Service quick and polite at JIM'S LUNCH 838 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. Open All Nite GOOD DEALS at the Surplus Stores Coveralls $2.95 Ideal for Shop Practice Navy T-Shirts .69 The genuine article Shower Clogs .98 Sizes 6 to 12. Sweat Shirts 1.59 Extra heavy fleece-lined White Handkerchiefs ... .19 Plain or initialed These are just a few of the many values to be found at LAWRENCE SURPLUS 740 & 911 Mass. Phones 588 & 669 Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan. "Musical Fun For Everyone" JOHN H. EMICK NOVELTY CO., Local Distributor LET This Sign Lead You To Top Entertainment! WURLITZER PHONOGRAPH MUSIC You can always hear the latest hits of the big bands on our Wurlitzer phonographs. For convenient relaxation and musical enjoyment look for the place with the Wurlitzer music. Our machines are located in cafes, restaurants, drug stores and entertainment spots throughout Lawrence. AND— If you are looking for those hard-to-get favorite bands—we have a large collection of USED RECORDS. so— - Come in and browse around. John H. Emick Novelty Co. 1014 Mass. PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS FRIDAY,FEBRUARY 6,1948 SPOTLIGHT ON SPORTS By BOB DELLINGER Daily Kansan Sports Editor The guy just doesn't want to play any more football! That's the story of Ray Evans, Kansas 1947 and only all-American football player. If he decides to play pro ball, it will be because the moneyed moguls make him an offer that it would be insane to refuse. Pittsburgh Steeler Coach Jock Sutherland came all the way out here to see what he could do about signing the fellow recommended by Grantland Rice as the country's most valuable grid star. Southern left without Evans or any promise that his visit had brought results. Meanwhile, Heismann trophy winner Johnny Lujack of Notre Dame signed with the Chicago Bears of the same National league, for a salary reported around $20,000 a year. And local reports have it that Ray was getting similar offers from the Steelers. Twenty G's is a lot of money, but the guy's been playing football for 12 years, and maybe he's tired. Arch Ward of the Chicago Tribune noticed in his column that the Kansas athletic department had awarded Ray his no. 42 jersey for permanent retirement from the Crimson and Blue ranks. ☆ ☆ ☆ Coach Bill Easton's indoor track squad takes the boards at Columbia tonight, opening the season with the Missouri Tigers. The Tigers, defending conference champions, have most of their championship squad back from last year and are heavily favored, but the K.U. team will be of Bob Karnes and Tom Schofield, greatly strengthened by the presence outdoor champs in their events. Jack Phoenix, giant 6-foot, 9-inch center of Idaho university, has been declared ineligible for further competition with the Vandals. It seems that in the Pacific Coast conference the eligibility rules were written to be observed rather than just to decorate the books. A headline in the Des Moines Register sports section caught our eye the other day. It read, "Notre Dame Coach's Birthday—And Who Walks In But Kentucky"—1947 score: Kentucky 60, Notre Dame 30." The only flaw in the Register's prediction of a sad birthday anniversary was caused by the Irish's 64 to 55 upset of the favored Southerners for their 38th straight home-court victory. Kevin O'Shea of Notre Dame, who scored four points against Kansas, rang in nine goals and seven frees to stay ahead of Kentucky's Groza (23) and Beard (19). Read the Daily Kansan daily. Parker 51 Fountain Pens Super Chrome Ink STOWIT'S Rexall STORE Rip Brown's 5 BOPS SKYLINE — Wed-Fri-Sat CALL FOR TAXI II SERVICE CALL 2-800 UNION CAB CO. Call K. U. 251 With Your News DESTOY SERVICE ALYMDUKE GALLAGHER FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals Short Orders Malts Sandwiches Air Conditioned Open 5:30—12 p.m. Lawrence Laundry & Dry Cleaners Look Sharp! Feel Sharp! Be Smooth! JACKETS If you want to keep that neat, presentable appearance— always — Let us keep your clothes looking sharp too! Expert and Guaranteed cleaning service. Pick-up & Delivery—Ph. 383 LAWRENCE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 1001 N.H. 20% discount cash and carry CARL'S have the— CARL'S have the Most popular sock on the campus! INTERWOVEN CREW SOCKS A 2x2 rib sock in 9 different colors! Sizes 10 to 13 Priced at 55c "Interwoven Socks Wear You Longer" We're Glad To Show You CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES BUBBLES by WARDS FLOWERS SHERSON MACKAMER "Wonderful!--and mother will have a tray, too!" Your date will exclaim, "Wonderful"! , too, when you present her with a corsage of dainty, fragrant flowers; still fresh . . . still dewy. There's nothing that pleases a young lady's heart as much as thoughtfullness . . . and when it's expressed with flowers . . . "you're in". Remember . . . for the BEST in flowers, come to . . . 910 MASS WARDS FLOWERS FLOWERFONE 820 Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers. NEW WAYS TO MAKE THE FAMOUS FINGERNAIL TEST! HOTEL If you're not the athletic type, get yourself a Siamese twi to doodle your noodle. Then, at the first sign of dryness or loose dandruff, head (get it?) for the drug store for a tube or bottle of Wildroot Cream-Oil hair tonic. Just a little bit will help you get ahead (get it again)? with women, if you have nothing better to do. Wildroot Cream-Oil grooms your hair neatly, naturally—without that gooey look. Relieves dryness and removes embarrassing loose dandruff. Wildroot Cream-Oil is non-alcoholic. Remember, however, it contains soothing Lanolin. Try Wildroot Cream-Oil hair tonic today. See for yourself why it's "again and again the choice of men who put good grooming first!" For generous trial supply free, to Wildroot Co., Inc., Dept. C-B, Buffalo 11, New York, WILLOWROOT CREAM-OIL HAIR COMB CLEAN & CONDITION GROWS THE HAIR MOISTURES HAIR CONDITIONING T CREAM-OIL Hair Tonic WILDROOT CREAM-OIL HairTone @ at the Jayhawker Shows: 2:30,7,9 NOW Thru Tuesday "Desert Fury" IN BLAZING TECHNICOLOR "Desert Fury" IN BLAZING TECHNICOLOR FIRST EPIC DRAMA OF THE DESERT TODAY! A Hal Wallis Production FIRST EPIC DRAMA OF THE DESERT TODAY! A Hal Wallis Product LIZABETH SCOTT · JOHN HODIAK BURT LANCASTER Mary Astor · Wendell Carey A. Forment Picture Plus color cartoon "INVISIBLE MOUSE" DENNIS MORGAN TECHNICOLOR MY WILD IRISH ROSE WEDNESDAY, one week! GRANADA NOW The Drama of a Woman Who Violates Every Law of Love! "IVY" THRU SATURDAY "IVY" starring Joan FONTAINE Patric KNOWLES Herbert MARSHALL OWL SHOW Sat. 11:45 SUNDAY—4 Days That Hilarity Team! Luciliie BALL Franchot TONE "HER HUSBAND'S AFFAIR" VARSITY N O W — Ends Saturday C. Starrett — S. Burnette "SIX-GUN LAW" Co-Feature Don "Red" Barry "SLIPPY McGEE" SUNDAY — 3 Days Life Story of Governor Jimmie Davis "LOUISIANA" I.D. J. Davis — M. Lindsay PATEE NOW — Ends Saturday "NAUGHTY NINETIES" —2nd Hit— "BLOCK HEADS" SUNDAY — One Week SUNDAY — One Week "CANYON PASSAGE" —2nd Hit— "Frontier Gal" 048 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Track, Cage Action To Start Basketball Brings Huskers, Bengals Phog Allen's amazing Jayhawkers will be favored to take their fourth consecutive Big Seven victory Saturday when they line up against the Nebraska Cornhuskers in Hoch auditorium. Tagged for a lower berth in the conference standings before the season began, the young cagers from Kansas have lost most of their ragged edges since their opening loss to Emporia State and now share the top spot in the league with powerful Kansas State. Nebraska has one win and three reverses in league play. Probable Starters KANAS S Pos. NEBRASKA Schellnch'r F Retherford Eskridge F Cox Waugh Whitehead Sapp G Mosser Houchin G Brown The Allen rookies defeated the Nebraskans in a 64 to 60 overtime battle in Kansas City before conference play began, and before Otto Sahnellbacher reinforced the squad. 66 For Schnellbacher Since that game, the Jayhawkers have become polished Big Seven performers, having downed Oklahoma, Colorado, and Missouri. Schnellbacher appears to be on his way to his greatest season despite his late start. In five games he has poured 66 counters through the hoop, 28 of these from the charity line. The Jayhawkers will be further strengthened by the return of Johnny Dewell, a Newton high school product. Dewell, a 6 foot, 4 inch sophomore, has been ineligible for a year after playing with an independent team in Topeka last winter. He may be used at all three positions Saturday and promises to do some stellar rebounding. Eskridge May Start Jaek Eskridge, lanky southpaw, is slated to start at forward against Harry Good's cagers. Big Jack has been placed by flu and trick knees so far this season, but still may become a leading scorer. He bucketed five points in the overtime period to help sink Nebraska in Kansas City. The man to watch in a Cornhusker uniform will be Claude Retherford, speedy forward. Retherford is repeating his high-scoring job of last year, haviied tallied 162 in 16 games this season. Another mainstay from last year's Cornhusker quintet is Joe Brown, who tosses in a lot of points from a guard position. Undefeated NYU Is Tourney - Bound New York, Feb. 6—(UP)The Violets of New York University, seven games away from a perfect basketball season, are regarded today as certain to get a bid to either the National Invitational or the National Collegiate tournament "next month. The N.Y.U. five racked up its 14th victory without a loss Thursday night, drubbing Boston university 61 to 44 at the Boston garden while in other games around the nation Notre Dame, Kentucky, and Oklahoma A. and M. picked up added prestige. Boston managed to make last night's tilt close for 20 minutes, as N.Y.U. led only 34-31 at the half, but then the Violets blew the game apart. Big 7 Standings W. L. Pct. Tp. Op. Kansas 1 0 1000 154 128 K. State 3 0 1000 240 182 Iowa State 3 0 600 228 154 Okla. 2 2 .500 191 162 M.U. 2 2 .500 206 208 Neb. 1 3 .250 202 254 Colo. 0 6 .000 267 314 Beta Victory Tops IM Card Pulling ahead in the last two minutes, Beta Theta Pi took a thrilling to 21引tramural victory from the A. V. C. to head the Thursday basketball schedule. Other scores were Sigma Chi 29, A. K. Psi 18; Lambda Chi 28, Teke 21; Phi Delt 23, Sigma Nu 20; K. A. Psi 27, Triangle 2; A. K.Lambda 24, Theta Tau 17; PiK A. 35, Phi Kappa 24. Betas' Moon Brings Victory With the score tied six times, the Beta's and A. V. C. battled in a ragged but hotly played contest until the closing minutes when Beta's Ralph Moon found the range. Moon led the scoring with 10 points. Sigma Nu rallied from a 19 to 9 halftime deficit, outsourcing the Phi Delt's 11 to 4, but went down to a 23 to 20 defeat. Sigma Chi rolled over A. K. Psi 29 to 18 for its fourth victory in five starts. Leonard led Sigma Chi with 12 points, and teammate Connelly marked up 10. Leading 15 to 11 at halftime, Lambda Chi went on to defeat the Tekes 28 to 21 in a mild upset, Lambda Chi was led in scoring by Fulkerson and Evans led the Tekes. Each tallied eight points. Kappa Alpha Psi won a 27 to 22 victory from the Triangle five. Baker led the winners with nine points, but Crawford of the Triangle took game honors with 10. KA Psi Wins Easily Alpha Kappa Lambda won an easy 24 to 17 verdict from the Theta Tau's with Bert Canfield leading the way on nine points. Borene took game scoring honors for Theta Tau with 10. The final game brought Pi K. A. k 35 to 24 victory over Phi Kappa. Oldham, Pi K. A. pivot man dunked in 18 counters to lead scoring. KU Indoor Squad Opens At Mizzou Jayhawker trackmen will open their 1948 indoor season when they meet Missouri's defending conference champions in Columbia tonight. Fresh from a 65 to 49 victory over Notre Dame, the Tigers are heavily favored to outdistance Bill Easton's crew, which is short on experienced performers. Kansas strength will lie in its crack outfit of distance men and a topnotch highjumper and broadjumper. Led by Bob Karnes, defending conference indoor and outdoor two-mile champion, the Jayhawkers distance men will provide the Easton team with its chief scoring power. Hal Moore, Hall Hinchee, Winton Studd, Dick Shea, and Bob Morris complete the list of mile, half mile and two mile competitors. Moore and Hinchee ran second and third to Karnes in the two-mile event in 1947 and each will go to the post in two of the three distance races. Studt, Shea, and Morris will run the half mile and Morris will also start in the two mile. Tom Scofield, Jayhawker high jump specialist, will meet a capable foe in Jim Howard who cleared 6-feet 3 to win first in the Notre Dame dual meet. Broadjumper Bob Crowley, who lost to Missouri's Bob Teel by an inch in the 1947 league outdoor meet, wil again take up his rivalry with Teel in tonight's affair. Crowley is the 1947 Texas Relay champ in his event. With lettermen Bill Binter, Jonny Stites and Dick Wagstaff, the Jayhawkers hope to crack the Missouri quartermile outfit which is still led by Dick Ault, outdoor title holder, although he was beaten by Bob Schuster in the Notre Dame meet. The Kansans probably will not be able to match the Tigers' strength in the pole vault, shot put or the 60- yard dash. Frank Stannard may pick up points in the hurdles. He ran second in the outdoor high hurdles last season and third indoors. Facing Stannard will be conference champion Bud Gartiser who won both high and low events at South Bend. ATTENTION Come in and let our own exclusive seat cover department give the in- your car. Morgan-Mack side of your car that 'NEW LOOK'. CALL 646 for Phone 277 Quality Cleaning Dependable Service Prompt Pickup—Delivery 20% DISCOUNT FOR CASH AND CARRY Over 35 designs in rayon, plastic or fiber covers expertly made to fit 609 Mass. ACME Dry Cleaners Opposite the Court House 1111 Mass. Once Upon A Time. . . . . In the far off land of Make Believe, which exists only in the imagination of the young-in-heart, there lived a little girl named Two-Eyes who, by saying the magic words, could find her table spread with all sorts of wonderful food. We don't know Two-Eyes' magic words, but we know a trick that works equally as well. If you say "Bill's Grill" when you're hungry and then come in, you will find just as wonderful food waiting for you. Try it. It works every time. Bill's Grill 1109 Mass. Phone 2054 Across from the Courthouse SUGGESTED BY DUKE C. UNI "Have a pack of Dentyne. It's fine after meals!" "Just as I reached my boiling point I gave the chef a pack of Dentyne. That got me out of the royal rewl stew! Naturally—because Dentyne's keen, delicious flavor always makes friends fast! Dentyne also helps keep teeth white!" Dentyne Gum—Made Only By Adams FEBRUARY 7 Military Science Building 9-12 SWEATER AND SKIRT Harlan Livingood's Orch. VICE - VERSA DANCE Election Of Pep King PRIZES! Sponsored By JAY JANES $1.00 a Couple PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1948 The Editorial Page Always Room For One More Southern senators are letting fly a great deal of oratorical thunder about President Truman's recent civil rights message. They're threatening to bolt the Democratic party, elect their own presidential candidate, and other reprisals. The thorn in their collective sides is the racial issue. It is unfortunate for Hawaii's hopes for statehood that the islanders' ambition had to be tied in with racial prejudice in the United States. One of the requests in President Truman's address was that Hawaii be admitted to the Union because its citizens have no voice in their government while the islands remain a territory. He also asked for laws to fight racial and political prejudice in the United States. The biggest argument against statehood for Hawaii has long been directed against the islands' racial composition. Large numbers of Chinese, Japanese, Koreans, Filipinos, and others from the Far East are included in the population. In the past the race-conscious South and the anti-Oriental West have been loudest in protesting Hawaiian statehood. However, much of this prejudice subsided during the war when Hawaiians proved themselves good citizens and loyal Americans. Francs And Dollars Irate Southern senators are likely to retaliate against all the issues included in the President's civil rights address without worrying about the niceties of the points involved. Being good citizens may not win statehood for Hawaii for some time to come. Fulfillment of that dream seems to be another of those things that everyone is "for" but which never materialize. During the '20's American tourists returned from France with their luggage full of French wines, perfumes, laces, and fashion creations. Franc notes were cynically rich on their suitcases. Dollar-rich Americans may soon be able to indulge in these shopping forays abroad once more now that France has devaluated her currency. Stay-at-home Americans will benefit, too. George seems to be the man of the year—Marshall nationally, and Sauer locally. The French government has cut the value of the franc to relieve the French dollar famine. The cheaper franc means that French goods exported to the United States will cost less and encourage customers to buy more. Thus there will be an increased demand for French goods and more dollars for the French coffers. American consumers are probably the only foreigners who will be pleased. Recipe For Giving England and other European nations attempting to revive their crippled economics may now have to devalue their currency to meet French competition. In the midst of much talk about uniting Europe and reducing international trade barriers there, this development sounds like the rumblings of economic warfare. The dollar scramble may drive another wedge in European unity. Americans have traditionally responded with a warm generosity to appeals for aid and help at home and abroad. They seem always to have enjoyed tapping a goal or filling a quota ahead of time. Do recent reports about the apathy with which several current appeals are being met mean that Americans have lost this spirit? Contributions to the 1948 March of Dimes have lagged behind expectations, the William Volker memorial drive in Kansas City had to be extended because the goal has not been reached, and the W.S.S.F. drive at the University bogged down the past semester. All of these projects are worthy. Two of them are requests to aid students and children who need food, clothing, and medical care. However, these are just three of the many similar appeals which confront both students and citizens every year. In addition there are requests for donations to a cancer fund, a tuberculosis foundation, a heart foundation, CARE packages, the Red Cross, and the University memorial fund drive-to name only a few. Commercial Giving Some of these campaigns have been pushed with such a relentless commercialism that it is no more satisfying to give to them than it is to buy a cake of soap or a package of cigarettes. Movie stars, slick posters, and gigantic radio programs are busily plugging many of them. There are even whispers of highly paid administrators and publicity seeking celebrities profiting in various ways for their part in boosting these causes. One might wonder where the charity begins and the campaigning ends. On the other hand the Friendship train, although certainly not free of Daily Hansun University Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assn. National Editorial Association. Publisher of the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Society. 420 Madison Ave., New York City, NY Editor-in-Chief ... William C. Von Maurer Managing Editor ... Alan J. Stewart Asst. Man Editor ... Cooper Rollo Lois Edwards ... City Editor City Editor ... Gene Vignery Asst. City Editor ... James Robinson Telegraph Editor ... Wade Wilson Clarke Thomas Asst. Tel. Editor ... William Barger Sports Editor ... Robert Dellinger Asst. Sports Editor ... James Jones Women's Sports Editor Women Anna Mary Murphy Feature Editor John Wheeler Picture Editor Hal Nelson Society Editor Dorothy James Business Manager ... Betty Bacon Advertising Manager ... Robert Alderson Circulation Manager ... Otto Meyer Classified Adv. Man. ... Paul Warner National Advt. Mgr. ... David Clymer Promotion Manager ... Wister Shreve the dazzling presence of glamour-laden big-wigs, seems to have escaped crass commercialization. Mr. and Mrs. John Q. Donor felt they had a part in the Friendship train. They could see what they were giving and where it was going. Give The Public A Chance Give The Public A Chance It would be ungrateful not to vote a "thank you" to those in Hollywood and Washington who sincerely wanted to speed the success of national charity drives. But if the public were allowed to elbow in on some of the proceedings and do a little of the boosting itself, some of the campaigns might witness a renewal of interest. Americans are just as charitable as they ever were. But there are so many high-powered reminders of need everywhere that they must have time to catch their breaths, count their change, and decide where to give what they have. Get Your Man At The VICE-VERSA DANCE See Page 5 "Always ready to serve" Daily Specials----Home Made Pies GEMMELL'S CAFE 717 Mass. Phone 2072 Why We Claim Superiority? Because We Have— 1. Thousands of satisfied customers BUSINESS IS GOOD 2. Extensive mechanical facilities 4. Efficient, dependable service 3. An expert staff of mechanics 5. Friendly, reliable advice of Eye STUDEBAKER WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames Lawrence Optical Co. LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS 12 East Eighth Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed...65c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed...69c CASH AND CARRY ONLY The new Westinghouse Laundromat fills,washes, rinses,dampdries, cleans, drains,and shuts off automatically. ouse at s, mp- eans, and ically. Its sloped front makes it easier to load and unload. Oliver Service Company Phone 253 723 Mass. DANCE THAT OTHERS MAY WALK March of Dimes Dance FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6 UNION BALLROOM. 9-12 See Leap Year King Crowned WAYNE RUPPENTHAL featuring Sid Dawson Stag or Drag-----$1.50 tax included Sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega Service Fraternity Through Courtesy Of WINTER CHEVROLET DON'T MISS: All Seats - 75c "The Mikado" FRASER THEATER.. 8:15 P.M. Mon., Tues., and Fri. Feb. 9, 10, and 13 FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 6. 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Daily Kansan Classified Ads A Copy must be in the University Daily Kansas Business Office, Journalism bldg. p.m. of the day before publication is desired. All classifications are cash in advance. Classified Advertising Rates One day Three Flvd days days 35c 65c 90c 1c 2c 90c 25 words or less additional words For Sale SIAMESE KITTENS for sale. Ready for delivery. Stud service. Ph. 1956. 9 TYPEWRITER, Underwood Standard. No. 5. Colt 32 automatic; Armvine electric drill. Amphibian. Phone 26333. TUXEDO for large machine 40. Inquire at Cottage cafe. Phone 2. 11 TYPEWRITERS sold and rented. Peterson's, 6 East 8th, Phone 13. 11 ZEISS 120 I20 roll film camera F 6.3 lens 1-125 shutter speed. Needs repair. Also Kodak Bantam F 4.5 lens in good condition. New Airbus OVAF AVENUE Bridge type. 39 Practically new, $45. 901 Michigan. Phone 7458. 7 VETERAN! 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. HTFD 699 For Rent VERY ATTRACTIVE room for two boys campus. 1157 Kty. Mts. Glev. phi, 2234-W. VACANCY for two men on top of the Hull, 1228 Louisiana . . . . . A STUDENT to share a double room with an engineer. Also a single room for one man. Close to the University. One block from bus line. Phone 1676J. 11 ROOM for four boys. New home. Private bedroom and bath. $12.50 per month. 07. Kirkwood #11 11. LARGE ROOM to share with engineer Near KU 1031 Miss. St. Phone $625W NEED ONE boy for double room, Private bath—shower. Two blocks from campus across street from Jayhawk cafe. Double bunk beds. See W. P. Meek. 1339 Old Bethany Drive. ROOM TO share with girl, close to campus, 1611 Tenn. Phone 1450W. Wanted WANTED: Part time relief cashier at Jayhawk theater. The ideal position for a G.L's wife. Apply at manager's office. Send resume to the appropriate item. A fast seller in colleges and local store outlets. Excellent commission. Write Paul Ditzel, 422 Hamilton, Evanston, HI. RETURNING to active duty and am in need of Army Officer's uniforms. Size 38. Contact Donald Sidak. 4406 Parkway, Olathe, Kansas. 9 LADIES wrist watch with black colored band, between Corin Hall and downtown. Finder please call Bert Larsen, 860 Reward. 10 Lost WILL THE person who accidentally exchanged navy overcoats with me, at the studium Uni. cateraer coat rack MONCORA University bring the coat to the chemistry office? WILL TIE BLE who borrowed my brown Esterbrook fountain pen during enrollment Monday afternoon, please return it Kanam an office? Please. Virgil Joseph BROWN BILLFOLD Wed., Jan 21 in Ward, Reward. Ira Landell, Phone 3128R. Miscellaneous SUBSCRIBE to the Kansas City Star, call Headquarters at Round Corner Drug Group. FREE OFFER: Photo copies of discharge papers, marriage certificates, for military credit or school entrance. 3 for price of 2. Round Corner Drug. 801 Mass. 18 1948 is Leap Year so let's leap with a K.U. calendar. tt NURSERY SCHOOL - Mothers who work, leave your child at Betty Yaphe's Nursery School. Hours 8 to 5, reasonable rates. 2012 Ohio. Phone 3195R. 7 Business Service Transportation WANTED - Ride to Topeka 8:00 or 8:30. Leave 4:30 or 5:00. Leave at Dilly Kansen, Dwight Howard. 9 RIDERS WANTED: K.C. to Lawrence, daily. Reserve Lawrence 8:45 n.m. Leave Lawrence 5:30 p.m. Call 23953. 11 Houston, Texas — (UP) — Two business men, one from Mexico City and the other from New York, boarded a super airliner to keep a business appointment in Mexico City. 'Twas A Small World For These Businessmen Jose Villa was rushing back to his home city to keep an appointment with Henry Lang, whom he had never met. In Houston, Villa became curious when he heard Lang being paged at the airport. He decided to investigate. Villa was stunned to discover he had unknowingly been sitting beside Lang on the Constellation for five hours. They held their conference in Houston, and both went back home again. Read the Daily Kansan daily. another BIG community... KANSAS! We added 1,363 new customers to our electric lines during the last 12 months. 467 homes, 227 stores and small businesses, 10 new industries and 659 farms—the equivalent of $ \alpha $ brand new Kansas community with $ \alpha $ population of 5,000. ...added to Applications for service piled up all during the war years when almost no new construction was permitted. Now, two years after the war, trained manpower and essential materials are still scarce—and applications continue to pour in by the hundreds. We're not out of the woods yet and rationing of materials would further slow up our construction program. That's a man-sized job and it hasn't been an easy one! If you are waiting for electric service,you may be sure we want you for a customer. Slowly but surely we're getting results but your continued patience will be appreciated. THE KANSAS ELECTRIC POWER COMP Extension To Offer Course A two-day short course in salesmanship for employees and employers will be presented in Olathe Feb. 11-12, Quincy L. Atha, field representative for the University Extension, announced. RISK'S HELP-YOURSELF LAUNDRY Maytag Machines Line Space Reasonable Rates Weekdays 9-6 Saturdays 9-3 1900 III.—Phone 623 "Chesterfield is my cigarette-it's Mild and pleasing" DAVID O. SELZK "THE PARADINE" DIRECTED BY ALFRED HITCHCO Chesterfield CIGARETTES Valli Chesterfield CIGARETTES LUNETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. ABC ALWAYS BUY WHY I smoke Chesterfield (FROM A SERIES OF STATEMENTS BY PROMINENT TOBACCO FARMERS) "I smoke Chesterfields because I know the kind of tobacco that's in them and I like their flavor and mildness. "Chesterfield is in the market for the yellow, here know that. It's "I smoke that's in them and I like their flavor and manners. " Chesterfield is in the market for the yellow, mellow, ripe tobacco. We farmers here know that. It's good tobacco." Pursell C. Bay HESTERFIELD ALWAYS MILDER BETTER TASTING COOLER SMOKING Copyright 1948, LOGGATT & MYERS TOBACCO CO. PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1949 Arab Invasions Into Holy Land British Charge Lake Success, N. Y., Feb. 6—((UP)—An official British report that trained Arabs have invaded Palestine today strengthened a United Nations drive to create an international army for the Holy Land. The UN Palestine commission decided to use the British statement to back up its conviction that only an international force can enforce the planned partition of Palestine into Arab and Jewish states. Great Britain told the commission that Arabs invaded Palestine on four occasions: 3. About 300 non-Palestinians have established themselves in the Safad area of Gallilee. All or part of this band attacked the Yechim Jewish settlement with mortars and automatic weapons. 1. Some 950 members of the "Arab liberation army" crossed the Jar Djamiyeh bridge into Palestine the night of Jan. 29-30, and scattered into small bands. The men rode in 19 vehicles. All wore uniforms and were well-armed. 4. A group of marauders of unspecified numbers and origin entered Palestine and clashed with British security forces at Kfar Zold. 2. Some 700 Syrians, well-equipped and provisioned, entered Palestine via Trans-Jordan the night of Jan. 20-21. The men dispersed and cannot be apprehended. Four $1,000 graduate fellowships leading to the master's degree at the University of Wichita for the academic year 1945-1949 are being offered by the University of Wichita Foundation of Industrial Research Scientists May Try For Fellowships The awards are to be made in the fields of aeronautical engineering, chemistry, petroleum geology, and bacteriology. They will be made on the basis of merit to graduates of accredited colleges and universities. An additional requirement is that the thesis subject must pertain to problems of importance to the Wichita area. The stipend will be $1,000, plus tuition and fees. The University of Wichita will also reimburse the recipient for any teaching assistance which may be required. Further information may be obtained from the Chairman of the Committee on Scholarships and Student Aid, University of Wichita Wichita 6. Union Committees Take Applications To continue to hold membership in Union activities, all present members must make a new application. All other students interested in participating in any activity are requested to 6ill application blanks at once. Information regarding any of the committees and the duties they perform, may be obtained in the Uni- office, from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. daily. Applications and renewal of memberships in the 14 committees of Un on activities will be accepted until February 11, in the Union office in the main lounge of the Union building. The 14 committees are: Announcements, Publicity, Social, Entertainment, Service, Secretarial, Library, Coffee and Forums, Decorations Public Liaison, Intramurals, Clubs and Posters. School Has Sufficient Fuel According to Mr. C. C. Bayles, surveintendent of buildings and grounds, there is a sufficient supply of fuel oil available for heating purposes, even for a prolonged pari- dent of cold weather. "Natural gas is used on the basis of a 'cut-off' contract and has been available since Dec. 1 on a limited basis only, usually when the temperature rose above freezing," Mr. Bayles said. American Women's Sex Life Unhappy, British Savant Says London—(UP)—The American woman, take it from Dr. E. J. Dingwall is the most miserable in the world. From his evrie in the British mu- That's because she has everything material her heart desires, said the British anthropologist who is writing a book to prove that European women have happier sex lives than American women. From his eyre in the British museum. Dingwall views the United States as one vast and fascinating labyrinth of psychology. He is collating vast amounts of material obtained in personal-interviews with women in the United States, through correspondence with other scientists, and from relevant periodicals. Approach To Sex Unhealthy "I don't consider the approach of the American woman to sex particularly healthy," Dingwall said today. "It's something like the British approach to food—a compound of Puritanism and necessity. There's a national feeling of guilt. Ask any European psychiatrist." "The American bosom mania is all a part of the matriarchy," he said. "It is a maternal symbol, and it has an intensity in the states which does not duplicate itself anywhere else." Washroom Exhibitionism The American woman, he continued, shows her dissatisfaction in many revealing ways. Women's fashions, with their emphasis on besoms and bustles are one example. Another signpost, he said, is the "strange exhibitionism of American women in private—that is, in cloakrooms and washrooms." He declined to be more specific, saying he wanted to "save some surprises for my book." "The American woman would like to be normal, but is unable to be," he said. "Her emancipation from household chores drives her into clubs and associations and dangerous gossiping. In her effort to obtain normal sex life you find the necking party, tourist cabin and what used to be called companion marriage." Consequently, he said, the American male likewise is discontented. Roth Quartet Here Wednesday The School of Fine Arts will present the internationally famous Roth String quartet Wednesday and Thursday at 8 p.m. in the auditorium of Frank Strong hall. The Quartet appears as the third attraction on the newly organized chamber music concert series. The program for Wednesday evening will offer quartets from Haydn, Ravel, and Brahms, while the second concert on Thursday will present quartets from Borodin, Bartok, and Beethoven. Organized in Budapest, Hungary in 1926 by Feri Roth, first violinist, the Roth quartet made its American debut in 1928, participating in the Berkshire Chamber Music Festivals at Pittsfield, Mass. All four members of the ensemble are Hungarians and all studied at the Budapest Academy of Music. The Roth quartet's last appearance at the University was in 1934. Koad Rock Found In Kansas Rock usable for concrete aggregate and road material has been found in clay and shale belts of central Kansas, according to a report by the State Geological survey at the University. Even When Women Get Their Chance It's Muffed-Leap Year No Help To Cupid Chicago—(UP)—The girls are off to a slow start in the leap year manhunt. Marriage records of 14 major cities show that the number of licenses issued in January was five to 20 per cent below the totals for the same month last year. Kansas City, Mo., was the only city to report an increase. Leap year started with a "boom" there. More than twice as many licenses were issued as in January last year. But even with Valentine's day in sight, Kansas City was an exception. There were decreased in New York, Chicago, Los Angeles, Boston. Detroit, St. Louis, Miami, Atlanta, Minneapolis, Des Moines, Reno, Washington, D. C., and Elkton, Md., the state's Gretna Green. to be over. Marriage clerks disagreed about reasons for the decline, but most of them said the "war rush" appeared Detroit's county clerk Edgar Branigan discounted the high cost of living discount. He believes Detroit's drop from 2,229 to 2,083 is a levelling off after the post-war bomb. Los Angeles said the girls "have discovered that two can't live as cheaply as one these days." Licenses there dropped from 2,906 in January, 1847, to 2,673 last month. "Two people who want to get married can always convince themselves that two can live as cheaply as one," he said. SDA To Elect, Form Charter Later Students for Democratic Action did not elect officers Thursday night because of a lack of members attending the meeting. That the next senate would be Democratic was the opinion of the group. Members also thought that a third party would result in defeat of liberal Democrats. Miss Jane Wilder, national field secretary, for the S.D.A., spoke on her trips through western universities and the political situations of Montana and Wyoming. The Reverend Lynn H. Rupert, pastor of the First Methodist church of Iola and former missionary to India, will speak to Wesley Foundation members Sunday evening, 6:30 p.m., on the subject, "Hinduism." Plans to draw up a charter and elect officers for the local chapter have been left to Irvin Wesley Elliot, graduate student. Miss Wilder will visit the Iowa State Teachers college. Then she will go to Washington, D.C. EDWIN D. HUNTER, newly-repointed assistant professor of journalism, came to the University from the Oklahoma City Daily Oklahoman where he was assistant city editor. Prof. Hunter took his master of arts degree in journalism at the University of Missouri. Hinduism To Be Discussed The "go-to-church Sunday" committee, sponsored by the Rev. John Patten of the First Presbyterian church, is cooperating with other University groups in urging students to attend the church of their choice Feb. 15, making that day a K. U. Sunday. The committee is an outgrowth of the Student Religious counsel. Feb. 15 Will Be Go-To-Church Day Letters will be sent to all organized groups. Pamphlets and letters also have been sent to each of the Lawrence pastors urging them to make Sunday, Feb. 15, a day of special welcome for K. U. students. Southerners May Revolt Wakulla Springs, Fla., Feb. 6—(UP)—Governors of 10 Southern states, some of whom are in angry revolt against the Democratic party leadership, gathered today for a conference expected to bring further blasts and attempts at reprisal action against President Truman because of his civil rights program. Bitter criticism of the President's civil rights plan by several southern chief executives has indicated that the matter of possible secession of Dixie Democrats from the national party will arise during the meeting Some Support Truman Gov. Millard F. Caldwell of Florida reaffirmed his support of President Truman and is determined to keep the meeting to its original subject—consideration of an offer by the trustees of Mehairy College for Negroes in Nashville, Tenn., to turn the school over to the conference to be used as a regional Negro institution. Gov. M. E. Thompson of Georgia has also ordered he will try to hear it But Caldwell admitted the secession subject can be brought up, and Govs. Ben T. Laney of Arkansas and Fielding L. Wright of Mississippi apparently intend to begin the fireworks. He called for an organization of "every precinct in the state" so that Mississippi delegates to the Democratic national convention will be "dedicated without equivocation" to the unholding of Southern traditions. Wright Wants Secession Wright flatly advocated a Mississippi secession from the party unless the administration in Washington honouresses support of "anti-south-ern" laws. Laney announced that proceeds from the Jefferson-Jackson day dinner in Little Rock will be withheld from the national party until "we see what happens" to the president's program. Francis E. Brooks, College senior was admitted to Watkins Memorial hospital at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, after receiving a concussion of the brain his condition is improved. Senior Hurts Head In Fall On Ice Brooks was on his way to a theater downtown when he slipped on ice and struck his head on a curb. Harlan W. Berthelsen, freshman medical student, was dismissed from the hospital Thursday night. He had been admitted in the morning after receiving cuts on the face and a bruised shoulder in a car accident at 19th and Massachusetts. A sedan driven by Rex E. Williams, 1046 Tennessee street, struck Berthelsen's ar as it was crossing Massachusetts. The scholarship will cover fees, tuition, and most basic expenses. Applicants must be members of the graduate class of 1945, '47, or '48 because the courses are of graduate level, and they should have vocational inclinations toward the ministry. University Will Nominate Student For Scholarship The University has been invited to nominate a student for one of the six $700 entrance scholarships given by the University of Chicago affiliate, the Chicago Theological seminary. Dean Harold Barr of the School of Religion will select the nominee. Vets Will Get More Money If New Bill Passes Veterans attending the University will receive substantial boosts in subsistence allowances effective April 1, pending approval of the bill by President Truman. The house passed the bill which would raise the allowance for unmarried veterans in college from $65 a month to $75, and pay a married student, one dependent $105 a month, and those with two or more dependents $120. The payment for all married students now is $90. The bill has been passed by the senate in the same form as the house measure and now goes to the White House for action by President Truman. Approximately 2,014,000 veterans now in school under the G.I. bill or rights will be affected by the increase. If signed by Mr. Truman, the bill will provide much-needed help to the veterans now struggling in schools across the nation to make ends meet on the scanty allowances provided in existing laws. A second bill calling for increases in the amount a veteran taking on the-job training can receive from his employer while getting government subsistence allowances is being held up in the senate to adjust minor differences. To Take Up Rent Control Washington, Feb. 6—(UP)—The senate banking committee today takes up a rent control bill under which some 1,700,000 tenants would face the prospect of unlimited rent increases after Dec. 31. The bill would extend rent controls for 14 months beyond their scheduled Feb. 29 expiration. But it would drop ceilings from apartments whose tenants agreed to "voluntary" 15 per cent rent boosts last year in return for leases running through 1948. Hence, these tenants—about 1,700,-000 in number—could have their rents increased by any amount when their current leases expire. The bill otherwise would extend controls until April 30, 1949, but leave landlords and tenants free to agree any time before then on a lease that would run at least to the end of 1949. There is no limit to the rent that could be charged unless such an agreement. The Republican-sponsored measure was unanimously approved late yesterday by a senate banking subcommittee, and is expected to get the green light from the full committee. The sponsors are confident they can get the bill through both the house and senate. World Brotherhood week will begin Sunday with special race relations observances in all Lawrence churches. Daily devotions during the week of Feb. 8 to 14 will be held at 8:30 a. m. in Danforth chapel for students. Speakers at the devotions, sponsored by the Y. M. C. A. and the Y. W. C. A., will be Dr. and Mrs. Sherwood Eddy, internationally known missionaries; Rabbi Joseph Levenson, of Temple B'Nai in Oklahoma City, and the Rev. Floyd Davidson, minister of the Fairmount Congregational-Christian church in Wichita. Danforth Devotions To Be Given Daily Book Store Receipts Add $451 to Memorial Fund Donations of book store receipts by students since June have added $451.22 to the World War II Memorial fund, Pat Thiessen, new chairman of the student committee, said yesterday. University Daily Kansan OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Monday, Feb. 9, 1948 Monday, Feb. 9, 1948 Lawrence Kansas 'Mikado' Opens Tonight With All-Student Cast Sixty University students who have put not only their talent but also their financial assistance into the production of Gilbert and Sullivan's operetta 'The Mikado' will find out today if their investment paid off, Tuesday and Friday. The curtain goes up at 8:15 p.m. student help. The three groups sponsoring the opera are Phi Mu Epsilon, professional music fraternity, and Mu Phi Epsilon and Sigma Alpha Iota, professional music sororities. The members have provided working capital for the operetta. The operta will be presented by the K.U. Light Opera guild. It will have an all-student cast, the first at the University in more than 10 years. The all-student cast has nine principals, a chorus of 14 men and 14 women, and an orchestra of 20. Prof. Gerald M. Carney, musical director, and Prof. Don Dixon, stage director, will provide the only non-identent help. By Bibler for the opera. Charles Byers, education senior, will sing the tenor role of Nanki-Foo, the hero. Harriet Harlow, fine arts juniur, will be the soprano lead of Yum-Yum. Perpignan, Feb. 9 — (UP) — Air, sea, land and communications traffic between France and Spain will be resumed for the first time in two years when the French-Spanish frontier is opened at midnight to night. Yum-Yum. Other principals will be Mrs. Mary Kearns, Eilinger Beyers, fine arts senior; as Katisha; Harry Spencer, education junior, as Ko-Ko; Charles O'Connor, College junior, as the emperor; Vincent May, education senior; as Pish-Tush; Dorothy O'Connor, fine arts sophomore, as Piti-Sing; Bernadine Read, fine arts sophomore; as Peep-Bo. Spain-France Border Opens Problems common to the state schools were discussed today by presidents of the five Kansas state colleges and universities at a meeting here. Officials said it will be several days before traffic is normal. Two railway lines and two roads cross the mountainous border, but only one of each will be opened for the time being. The French carried off several miles of track from the other railway line, which ends at Tour de Carel on the French side, and the line will not be repaired for several days. days. One of the automobile routes also remains closed because a bridge between Bourg-Madame and the Spanish frontier, destroyed during the Spanish civil war, never has been rebuilt. Hundreds of French tried to jump the gun and cross into Spain to shop yesterday, but they were turned back by customs officials. College Presidents Discuss Problems Only one telephone line is functioning now but others probably will be ready by tomorrow, officials said. Attending were Million Eisenhower, Kansas State college; David L. MacFarlane, Kansas State Teachers college, Emporia; Rees H. Hughes, Kansas State Teachers college, Pittsburg; L. D. Wooster, Fort Hays Kansas State Teachers college, Hays; and Chancellor Deane W. Malott. Little Man On Campus TAXI "That's just the way she came in last fall, and I never did see her in anything 'cept them jeans." Expenses Will Eat Up That Increase, Couples Say Five married veterans and their wives interviewed today by the University Daily Kansan said that they spend the increased allowance on the G.I. bill "to meet expenses." Meeting expenses on $90 a month, has been a "terrific strain," they said. Now they feel they can have a little more lee-way. Professor Fan is a native of China. He came to the United States in 1846 after several years of study in Paris. He spent one year at the Institute for Advanced Study at Princeton and joined the Notre Dame faculty in September. 1947. To live on $90 a month month old baby was "impossible," said Mrs. Bob F. Barnes, whose husband is a business senior. She added that it would still be impossible on $120, but that "it would help a great deal." Jack B. Berley, business senior, said that his family was hardly meeting expenses. This increase in pay will help them out "a great deal." deal. Paying off the dentist bill will take part of the increased pay, and the rest will go to expenses for the Milford O. Brown's. Brown is a College junior. Ky Fan, associate professor of mathematics at Notre Dame, will speak at the Mathematical Colloquium at 5 p.m. today in room 211, Frank Strong hall. His subject will be "Functional Representation of Partially Ordered Additive Groups" (Chi. Mrs. Marcelle Gass, a business junior and her husband Gaylord, College senior, said that they were not able to live on $90 a month, and she doubted if they could live on $105. She added that she and her husband have a savings account on which they have been drawing. WEATHER which they will. The increased allowance will make possible a savings account for Mrs. Dorothy Beach, College senior, and her husband, Richard C., engineering sophomore. Ky Fan To Speak To Math Colloquium Kansas—Fair, somewhat warmer, central and east today. Truman May Speak At MU Washington, Feb. 9- (UP—President Truman today made tentative plans to speak at the University of Missouri on May 5 during the university's annual journalism week. The tentative arrangements were discussed with the president by Dean Frank L. Mott of the university on behalf of the university and the Missouri State Press association, Dean Mott invited the president to attend a memorial service honoring the late Lt. Gov. William R. Painter, past president of the association, a famous Carrollton, Mo., editor and an old friend of the president. White House secretary Charles G. Ross said Mr. Truman could not say definitely today whether he could make the trip but promised to give the invitation "sympathetic consideration." Dr. A. H. Turney, guidance bureau director, will attend the third annual meeting of the Big Seven directors of vocational guidance at the University of Oklahoma in Norman, Feb. 19, 20, and 21. Ross said that if the president goes to Columbia, he will speak on Wednesday. May 5. Journalism week extends from May 3 to May 8. Dr. Turney To Attend Meeting In Oklahoma E. G. Kennedy, counselor and specialist in occupational information, and William C. Cottle, counselor and supervisor of laboratory practice in counseling, will also attend the meeting as guests of Mr. Turney. Judge Means Rules On Ellis Library University, Widow Have Equal Shares; Appeal To Supreme Court Some Retailers Cut Food Prices Chicago, Feb. 9—(UP)—Grocers and butchers in cities across the country slashed prices today on meat, flour, bread and lard, but experts were undecided on whether the price drops reflected last week's break in the commodity markets. "This week will tell the story," a Chicago retailers' representative said. "If the commodity markets continue lower, more retail prices will hit the skids." Butchers shops reported markdowns on bacon, ham, pork and beefsteaks. Bacon, the so-called "barometer" of meat prices, led the way. The big chain stores led the way in slashing prices. One nation-wide group knocked a cent off the price of a 20-ounce leaf of bread. Lard was reduced as much as 20 per cent. Flour went down 10 per cent in some towns. Most retail food association spokesmen seemed to think the retail markdowns resulted from a general market decline during the past month rather than from the spectacular break in grain prices Thursday, Friday and Saturday. Inexperienced in other sections of the course, as indeed, however, that it might take two or three weeks for the full effect of the sharp commodity reductions to work their way down to the housewife's level. to the housewife. The National Association of Retail stores at New York attributed the slashes in retail prices today to increased competition rather than to lower prices on the commodity markets. "The items being reduced are really only 'loss leaders' in an increased fight for customers," a spokesman for the N.A.R.G. said. One official of a Boston chain firm warned houswives against rushing to their stores to stock up on the lower-priced foods. "That would simply push prices up again," he said. ___ Increase In GI's Studying Overseas A 350 percent increase in the number of veterans studying abroad under the G.I. bill during the past year was indicated in a recent Veteran's administration bulletin. Total enrollment of the ex-servicemen and women studying in 44 countries jumped from 1,307 last year to 6,055 this year. Nearly half of the students are enrolled in schools in the Philippine Islands. Filipinos who served in the U.S. armed forces comprise most of that group. Canada ranks second and France third in number of veterans studying under the G.I. bill. Veterans may enroll in schools in foreign countries under the bill, but they must arrange for their own passports and transportation. Democrats To Hear Rice Carl V. Rice, Kansas City attorney and Democratic national committeeman, will speak before a meeting of the Young Democrat's club at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday in the East Side of the Union The long drawn-out legal struggle between Mrs. Irene Ellis and the University for possession of the $200,000 Ralph Ellis natural history library ended at least temporarily today with both parties holding equal rights in the library. By overruling motions of attorneys for both parties for a new trial, Judge Hugh Means stuck to his decision of Dec. 21, 1947 when he ruled that Mrs. Ellis and the University were entitled to equal shares in the collection. Judge Means required only 10 minutes to review the case and to announce his decision before a half-filled court room. Attorneys for both parties announced that they would appeal the case to the state supreme court. Lawyers For Case The unique case, which has been strung out for over two years, began early in 1946 when the University presented documents for probate as a will of Ellis. Representing the University are attorneys George Melvin, A. B. Mitchell, and L. P. Brooks. Attorneys for Ellis' widow are Edward G. Kelly, of Oakland, Calif., John Brand and Robert Stone. Ellis, who died at Colusa, Calif. Dec. 17, 1945, had signed the documents along with University officials on May 3, 1945, giving the University title to his library when he died. Mrs. Ellis, court records show, was present when the documents were signed and "heart, read, and knew the contents and purport of the documents." Coutets Will Attorney for Ellis' 23-year-old widow filed a motion for a new trial. The motion was granted by Judge Means and the arguments were presented during July. On December 21, Judge Means ruled that both parties were entitled to equal shares. Contest. Ellis will was contested by Mrs. Ellis and in the summer of 1946, Judge Frank R. Gray ruled that the library to be the property of Mrs. Ellis on the grounds that the documents were not a will of Ralph Ellis, and that Ellis was incompetent to contract to make a will. The University appealed to the district court, and on April 21, 1947, Judge Means ruled that the agreement offered for probate was not a will. But he held the library to be the property of the University on the grounds that Ellis was competent and knew what he wanted to do with the library. File For New Trial The library, now stored in the basement of Frank强牢 hall, contains some 60,000 volumes on birds and mammals, including some rare editions. Two railway cars were required to bring the huge collection from Ellis' California home to the University in June, 1945. No one has been allowed to use the library since his death. AWS Counselors To Give Breakfast The Associated Women Students counseling committee will have a breakfast for new women students and their counselors on Saturday from 9 to 11 a.m. in the Kansas room of the Union. The breakfast is to give the new women students an opportunity to become acquainted with their counselors. Reservations should be made by the counselors at the dean of women's office or by calling Geraldine Ott or Ardyce Wilson by Thursday. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE TWO MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1948 State Council Elects Smith Representing the Lawrence League for the Protection of Democracy was Fred W. Taylor and Oscar White, who was a substitute for the Rev. G.E. Lindquist. Ned Linegar, YMCA executive secretary, also attended the meeting. Representatives were present from 15 civic organizations throughout the state. Swamped With Job Applications The Dean of Men's office has been swamped with applications for part time jobs the past week. Willis Tonpkins said today. So far the office has begun able to keep up with the demand, but is beginning to run out of jobs, he said. Ralph Smith, graduate student, was elected permanent chairman of the executive board at a meeting of the 22-member state council on civil rights which was held in Topeka Sunday. Loria Green, graduate student, was re-elected part-time executive secretary of the council. Approximately half of the applicants have been veterans, and a great percentage of these are married. A seven-point program to improve state civil rights laws was adopted for immediate action. The program was originally drawn up by the governor to the state legislature, but no action has been taken on it. Employment councilors are on duty in the Dean's office from one to four every afternoon and from nine to twelve on Saturday mornings. Tompkins announced that all students who turned in their applications the first semester must come in and renew them in order to receive any consideration. The greatest expansion of the U.S. since the Louisiana purchase occurred during the administration of President James K. Polk. Course To Be Given In Slide Rule Operation Instruction in the principles and operation of the slide rule will be offered to those students who wish to learn its operation this semester. Classes will meet from 7 to 9 one night each week for eight weeks. It will entail no university credit. Enrollment cards for the course may be obtained at Marvin hall. Classes will begin in two or three weeks and the details will be announced at a later date. Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Humphrey of Kansas City, Mo., will place a 300-pound bell in the University Memorial cartillon to perpetuate the Frederick G. Humphrey, the World War II Memorial office, announced name and memory of their son, today. It will cost $750. This course is being sponsored by Tau Beta Pi, national honorary engineering fraternity. This is the 14th reservation of memorial or specially inscribed bells in the University carillon. in the Oldenburg Frederick Humphrey was a student at the University from 1941 to 1943. He withdrew to enter Office's Candidate school at Fort Benning, Ga. There he received his commission and trained as a paratrooper. He fell before enemy fire while leading his platoon in night action on September 21, 1944, in Holland. As a student, Humphrey was a member of the Ku Ku Club, Scabbard and Blade, and Phi Kappa Psi social fraternity. To Dedicate Bell To Son's Memory Hospital Gives Physicals To New Students. AROTC Men Five-hundred thirty-six physical examinations have been given by the Watkins Memorial hospital in the three-day period from Monday through Wednesday. Persons taking the examinations included new students entering the University for the first time, AROTC men, and some students who did not take a physical when they entered last fall. Tickets for "The Mikado" on sale in Union lounge and center lobby. Frank Strong hall for tonight and tomorrow and a limited amount for Friday. Feb.9,1948 Official Bulletin Mathematical Colloquium, 5 p.m. today, 211 Frank Strong hall. Prof Ky Fan, Notre Dame university, will speak on "Functional Representation of Partially Ordered Additive Groups." Independents Executive committee, 7:30 tonight. Union ballroom. A.W.S. conference committee, 4 p.m. today, office of the Dean of Women. Independent Women's senate, 7 tonight, Pine room, Union. Bring alternates. All persons holding University parking permits should have second semester tab attached to tags immediately. University Parking Committee. Community Service group of Y.W.C.A., 4 p.m. today, Henley house. L. S.A. 7:15 tonight, 228 Frank Strong hall. Young Democrats, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, East room, Union, for important meeting. Carl V. Rice, national committeeman to be present. Committees to be appointed. Society for Advancement of Managemenl meeting for tomorrow postponed until Feb. 17. Executive board only tomorrow. Coffees and Forums committee, Union Activities, 4 p.m. tomorrow, Pine room, Prof. Osma, discussion leader, Refreshments. Fencing club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow 110 Robinson. A. W.S. House of Representatives, 4 p.m. tomorrow, 200 Frank Strong hall. Dove staff, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, 9 Frank Strong hall. Tau Beta Pi members helping to conduct slide rule course to meet in room 210 Marvin. 7 p.m. tomorrow. Jewish Student Union, 8 p.m. tomorrow. Myers hall, upstairs. Refreshments. Alpha Delta Sigma, 7:15 p.m. to tomorrow, 167 Journalism bldg. Chemistry club, 4 p.m. tomorrow, 205 Bailey. Movie. "Velocity of Chemical Reactions," to be shown. Refreshments. All interested invited. Sunflower Statesmen's club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, East room, Union. All past Boys' Staters invited. Student court to meet 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Green hall, to hear appeals in parking cases. Cases of following students to be heard: Edward Balda, Paul Benson, Charles Busby, Robert Cater, Martha Dawes, Elmo Gepelt, James Goodell, George Haessler, Frank Hiebert, Kenneth Hilyer, Ernest Izzard, Keith Jermane, John Kapnistos, Billy Keck F. A. Little. Camera club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow projection room, 15 Fraser. Movies on photography. All-Student Council, 7:15 p.m. tomorrow, Ping room, Union. Warren C. Neal, Clerk of Court Engineering Exposition committee tomorrow, 210 Marvin. All members. All new applicants and past members of Student Union Activities committees, 7 p.m. Wednesday, University Daily Kansan Mail subscriptions: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Books sold include The Laws of War Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. Parker 51 Fountain Pens Super Chrome Ink STOWIT'S Rexall STORE To Hold 5-Day Conference A five-day Life Insurance Marketing conference for underwriting from the Missouri valley area will be held at the University June 14-18, Hobart Hanson, manager of the Lawrence Extension center announced today. Union ballroom. Important. Phi Kappa Sigma, 110 Frank Strong hall 7 p.m. tomorrow. Alpha Kappa Psi, business meeting, 4 p.m. tomorrow, Union. SEA FOOD A Specialty DUCK'S TAVERN 824 Vermont COOKING CLASS SAN LUCIENES An engine needs refueling so does a tired brain Park-up—Snack-up Hamburgers Home-made Chili Thickest Malts © Sandwiches Zim's Snack Shop East of Post Office -TONIGHT-Gilbert and Sullivan's Comic Operetta "THE MIKADO" Monday, Tuesday, and Friday----February 9,10,and 13 Fraser Theater - 8:15 p.m. All Student Cast of Sixty FEATURING: © CHARLES L. O'CONNOR CHARLES BYERS HARRIET HARLOW BEN SHANKLIN O HARRY O. SPENCER DOROTHY O'CONNOR BERNADINE READ VINCENT MAY MARY JANE BYERS CHORUS ORCHESTRA - ALL SEATS - 75c- MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE 1948 Dean Stockton Dreams Of A State-Wide Campus A University campus with the entire state a potential student body is the dream of Dean F. T. Stockton, of University Extension. He hopes that at least a portion of his dream will be realized within the next four years. The dream evolved from the growing need for expansion of our adult education program as seen by Dean Stockton. "Such programs," he pointed out, "are moving forward throughout the United States, and unless the University is to be left behind, it is imperative that we improve our facilities." A continuation study center, nucleus of the state-wide campus, is the first and most important step. Dean Stockton hopes that a new building for this unit can be completed within the next few years. Study Center Is First The center is for benefit of persons enrolled in extension courses, institute, conferences, workshops, and other groups that come to the campus each year to attend special courses that last from two days to two weeks. More than three thousand persons came to the Lawrence center for courses during the past year. Some of these groups included the Court Reporters' school, Steelworkers Union institute. Debate institute, the Kansas Bank Management clinic, Peace Officer's school, Health Education work shop, and life and property insurance schools. They usually range in size from the art conference with an attendance of 326 down to the motor Fleet Supervisors' course with an attendance of 30. The Christian Frontiers and Pastor's conference during the Christmas holidays were attended by approximately 2,000 persons. Center To House 2.000 One suggestion is that the center be erected across the street from the Union. There it would provide easy access to the Union, and that location is the only unoccupied spot on the campus large enough to accommodate a building of the size needed. The building will be a combination hotel and University classroom. It is expected to house 2,000 persons, with small rooms for classes, committee meetings, and offices. There will also be a cafeteria, and an auditorium for visual instruction. The building would provide underground parking for cars. It should be air-conditioned and have elevators, the dean said. Adults can't scamper up and down stairs like University students, and the building will be especially for adults. Two-hundred wives of University students living at Sunflower have enrolled for the eight afternoon adult education classes starting Tuesday. The classes are to be held in the K.U. Dames club room at Sunflower. 200 Enroll At Sunflower The short courses are being offered by University extension in answer to requests made in recent weeks and will have meetings weekly, and others will have ten. Courses offered are drawing and sketching, international affairs, sewing, literature, and book reviewing, interior decoration, child care, creative writing, and marriage and family relations. A silver luster bust of Shakespeare is being shown at the museum of art as the masterpiece of the month for February. Although it is not marked, this bust was probably made by the firm of Enoch Wood who began work in 1783 in Burslem, England, or by Wedgewood, the great English potter. Mrs. Elizabeth Schreiber, K.U. representative at the village, said the enrollment fee also will include free nursery service during class hours. This bust was selected from the museum's collection of lusterware as a timely display in connection with the "Cry of Players," a play about Shakespeare, to be given in Frazer theater during the Arts and Crafts festival. Silver lusterware was produced by potters of Staffordshire in England during the 19th century. This process of using salts of platinum as a metallic glaze over a pottery base was developed for the poorer groups who could not afford items of solid silver or plated ware. Museum Displays Shakespeare Bust Forrest Griffith was crowned Pep King at the vice versa dance given by the Jay James in the Military Science building Saturday night. William "Red" Hogan, king last year, placed the crown on Griffith's head. Griffith Is King For A Night Exact copies of church plate, tea and coffee services, and even simple tableware were produced. Later statuary was attempted both in silver and copper luster. Approximately 300 couples attended the dance. Jack Moorhead presided as master of ceremonies. Prizes were given for the most unusual corsages. First prize went to William Arnold Debus, who wore a corsage made up of a light bulb backed by a cabbage leaf and surrounded by marshmallow flowers. Second prize was tied among Mr. and Mrs. Lucian Baltus Hammer, Yvonne Eileen Hammer, and Charles Hall. Third place went to Aldo Allotti. third place. The dancers tripped a net filled with balloons containing cash. Intermission entertainment was provided by Shirley Corlett and Dorothy Davies Wood who put on a skit. Chapfrons and judges for corsages were Miss Maude Elliott, Miss Florence Black, Miss Winnona Venard, and Mr. and Mrs. Dean Nesmilli. Three new chairmen have been appointed to Union committees according to Otis Hill, president of Student' Union activities. Wells, Hampton and Madden To Man Union Committees Donald Wells, College freshman, replaces Tom Hanna, College sophomore, as chairman of Intramurals committee. Craig Hampton, Fine Arts sophomore, replaces Jim Hawes, Fine Arts sophrmore, as chairman of the Decorations committee. Rose Ann Madden, Fine Arts junior is chairman of the separately organized Posters committee. the Y.W.C.A. cabinet Friday heard Mrs. Roswell Wahl talk on the qualities necessary for group leadership. YWCA Hears Talk On Group Leadership Mrs. Wahl, president of Y.W.C.A. in 1947, emphasized individual characters and their relationships to groups. "The quality of the group depends upon the qualities of the individual," she said. Joy Godbehere was put in charge of the committee for setting up the leadership training program. Dr. Kalman, of the New York State Psychiatric Institute at Columbia-Presbyterian Medical Center, has been keeping a running record of more than 500 sets of twins for the last two years. Psychiatrist Searches For 60-Year-Old Twins New York-(UP)-Dr. Franz J. Kallman is searching for twins over 60 years of age. The object of his study, he said, is to learn the social and psychological factors needed to preserve health in old age. Socially Speaking Theta Phi Alpha Pledge Theta Phi Alpha announces the formal pledging of Mary Altringer, Kansas City; Imogene Frack, Ingalls; and Mary Schreck, Independence, Thursday, at the Chapter house. Geraldine Koelzer and Eva Desiderio will return today from Milwaukee. Wise., where they were attending the Central Province convention of Theta Phi Alpha. The Province convention was held as a preliminary to the national convention to be held this summer. Tau Chapter at Marquette University is hostess to the visiting chapters. Return Today The pledges of Sigma Kappa entertained the Phi Kappa pledges at an hour dance Friday. SK Hour Dance Gamma Phi Hour Dance The Gamma Phi Beta pledge class entertained the pledges.of Alpha Tau Omega at an hour dance Friday. Tea Dance The pledges of Beta Theta Pi were the guests of the Sigma Kappa pledge class at a tea dance Saturday. Belles And Their Weddings Young-Martin Mr. and Mrs. John F. Young of Kansas City, Mo., announce the marriage of their daughter, Mary Jo, to James Martin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert E. Martin of Mullinville. The wedding took place at Danforth Chapel, Jan. 30. Mrs. Martin was graduated from the University at the end of the fall semester. Mr. Martin is a junior in the School of Engineering. ☆ ☆ Nite-Yonlev The pinning of Kittle Nite, Montezuma, Kansas, to Louis F. Yonley, Kansas City, Kans., was announced recently by Mrs. Ine Krevy. Mr. Yonley is a member of the Triangle fraternity. Graduate Speaks In Kansas City The Kansas City section of the "American Institute of Electrical Engineers" held a dinner Thursday at the Pine room in the Union station, Kansas City, Mo. Five members of the department of electrical engineering attended the dinner. They were V. P. Hessler, David D. Robb, Benjamin Levy, Hubert Sheppard and Donald G. Wilson. Mr. Robb is a member of the executive committee of the Kansas City section. The speaker was Dr. C. F. Green, consulting engineer in Aeronautics and Ordnance System Divisions, General Electric, Selenectadry, N. Y. His topic was "Rockets and Guided Missiles". Dr. Green received his bachelor of science degree at the University. He has been assisting with the test-firing of the V-2 rockets, carried on jointly by General Electric and the Army Ordnance department. He discussed new energy fuels and propellants, more powerful motors, new heat resistant materials, and more accurately guided missiles and navigation equipment. Guidance Tests Sent To Kansas High Schools High schools throughout Kansas are now sending in requests to the Guidance bureau, to secure college aptitude tests which will be given to all seniors. Requests from more than 200 high schools are already being filled. The testing, which began Saturday, will continue through March 31. Union Will Sponsor Student Show The all-school musical to be sponsored by the Union has been tentatively set for May 6. Jack Moorehead will be the producer. The entertainment committee is holding for talent for the show. The record program which is heard daily at the Union has received some new records which have been contributed by record companies. The board of selectors will soon meet to order more books for the Union library. The library is open from 11 to 5 p.m. Monday through Friday. Ohio is one of our ranking states in agriculture, natural resources, manufacturing and commercial activities. Early Birds Here But No Worms The robins are rushing the season again. With the campus covered with snow and a fuel shortage threatening parts of the nation, Shirley Thompson called the University Daily Kansan this morning to report the first robins of the year. About 50 of them were huddled together in a tree behind Fowler shops. Bullet GALLAGHER THE SOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH "The poor little dears look awfully cold," Shirley said sadly. MOTORS FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. WEST 7th CAFE 1305 W. 7th Phone 2033 13 blocks west of Massachusetts 6 blocks north, 1 west, of Snow Hall A SPECIAL 55c DINNER EVERY DAY Also Steaks, Chops, and Sandwiches 3 Contour cut for extra comfort 1. Steps low for youthful appearance 2. Let tilt for daylong nauticals It's new! It's the talk of the campus It's "comfort contour" collar styling 1. Slopes low for yourthul appearance 2. Aesthetic for daylong gownness 3. Contour cut for extra comfort Here's "Comfort Contour" the new marvel of collar styling, now featured on all Van Heusen shirts. Low-setting, neater, smarter, it's making the grade on every campus from coast to coast. You'll find it on fine white shirts and exclusive Van Heusen patterns, all Sanforized, all laundry-tested, in your favorite collar models. $3.50, $3.95 and $4.95. PHILLIPS-JONES CORP., NEW YORK 1, NEW YORK. You're the man most likely to succeed in Van Heusen Shirts TIES • SPORT SHIRTS • PAJAMAS You'll Find Van Heusen Styles at The Palace PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1948 Upsets Scramble Big 7 Race By PAUL ZEH By PAUL ZEH Assistant Sports Editor Big Seven basketball celebrated "Upset Night" Saturday as the current cage race turned into a topsy-turvy free-for-all as it neared the halfway mark. The undefended league-leaders, Kansas and Kansas State were both victimized by the "upset" fever, and the cellar-dwelling Colorado Buffers picked up their initial win in the Big Seven over the strong Iowa State Cyclones. After the weekend action Nebraska, in sixth place, was only two games from the top of the heap. The Jayhawkers had a chance to move into the number one spot as Missouri turned in its second successive giant-killing stint, hanging the second defeat of the season on the Wildcats, 48 to 16, but the charges of Phog Allen ran into trouble as a fast-breaking crew of Nebraska Cornhuskers raced to a 61 to 57 victory. Huskers Are Hot The high-scoring mele in Hoch found the visitors from Lincoln in COLLEGE BASKETBALL NASHVILLE NC Schnellbacher Waugh their best form of the conference season as they opened up their big guns in the second half to build up a lead on the fighting Jayhawkers, then stave off a late Kansas rally. The Jayhawkers were in command at the intermission, 24 to 20, after a close first half in which the two quintets were never separated by more than four points. A free toss and setup by Jack Eskridge in the final minute of the half hiked the Kansas lead to a four-point margin after Dick Schleiger, Nebraska center, had entered the game to match the locals goal for goal in the closing minutes of the stanza. This lead didn't last long as the Cornhuskers went to work early in the second half. Schleiger and Bob Cerv racked up nine counters before Otto Schnellbacher dumped in a free throw, and then Neal Mosser and Claude Rethferd helped the Nebraska cause with goals which stretched the Husker lead to nine points. Schnellbacher Sparks Rally At this point the deadly shootin' eye of Schnellbacher brought the Kansans back into the game. The Jayhawker ace accounted for the next seven Kansas points, but Nebraska's hustlers managed to cling to their slim margin. The Cormhuskers held a 47 to 1 advantage with seven minutes left when Phog Allen's rookies buckled down and tied up the score. Johnny Dewell, who played most of the contest in his first appearance this season, opened up the rally with a free toss, and schnelbacher followed it. Schnelbacher pushed one in, and Gib Stramel knotted the score with a setup which Schnelbacher opened up with some fancy ball-handling. From that point to the final gun the visitors really warmed up to the task of spoiling the evening for the home fans. They bagged 14 markers in the last five minutes of the game, with Schleiger again showing the way with four goals from the field. Hankerson pitched his fifty Rutherford clinched the verdict with a setup in the last 40 seconds. Waugh Hits 12 Otto Schnellbacher again paced the Crimson and Blue with 19 talies, some flashy rebounding, and steady floor play. Equally brilliant was Jerry Waugh, the glue-fingered quarterback, who hit for 12 points and held the Nebraska ace, Claude Retherford, to four and one. The floor work of Dewell, Eskridge, and Stranel was also an encouraging phase of the losing battle. Schleiger was the big noise in the Nebraska lineup, connecting for 14 points. Whitehead, the giant Husker starter at center, hit 10 markers. Tigers Invade Hoch Tonight Still smarting from the Cornhusker rebellion that ended in their first conference loss, the Jayhawkers will face the giant-killing Missouri Tigers tonight at Hoch auditorium in a battle for second place in the Big Seven conference. A half game is all that separates each of the three pace-setters in the league after Saturday night's court wars. Kansas State still leads the loop with a half-game margin over the Jayhawkers, and Allen's men hold a half-game advantage over the Tigers. A Kansas win tonight would move Kansas into a tie for the top, or a Missouri victory would hoist Sparky Stalcup's cagers into second place. Kansas gets the pre-game nod over the Tigers for two good reasons. First, the locals skinned out of the Tiger den at Columbia three weeks ago with a 58 to 46 win. Second, the Jayhawkers are usually a more potent gang on the home court. Tiger boosters will discount both factors, pointing to the upsurging Tiger tactics of the last few games as well as the showing of Kansas two days ago on that same home court. During the past two seasons neither of these teams has been able to whip the other before the home folks. Kansas fans and defensmen alike will be eyeing Dangerous Dan Pippin, Missouri's all-conference forward who tallied 24 of his team's 48 points against Kansas State. Fippin made 12 against the Jayhawkers at Columbia, in which Thornton Jenkins paced the men of Stalcup and Bill Sapp his 18 counters for Phog Allen's cause. In the other Big Seven game tonight Nebraska will tangle with the Oklahoma Sooners at Norman. The Cornhuskers have pulled up to within half a game of the Sooners and a tie for fourth place. This weekend all the conference batteries will be trained for action. Kansas takes on Iowa State Friday night at Ames in the first meeting of the year between these two surprise teams of the league. Saturday night Nebraska meets Missouri on the Tiger court, and Oklahoma travels to Manhattan for an important meeting with Kansas State's pace setters. Box Score BRASKA (61) fg ft ftm pf tp Retherford, f 4 1 3 3 9 Cox, f 3 1 0 2 7 Whitehead, c 2 6 2 1 10 Mosser, g 3 0 1 3 6 Cerv, g 3 1 0 5 7 Brown 1 0 0 2 2 Lawry 0 0 3 2 0 Shields 1 1 1 1 3 Schleiger 7 0 0 3 14 Srb 0 0 0 0 0 Cech 1 1 1 2 3 KANSAS (57) Eskridge, f 4 1 1 0 9 Schnellbacher, f 6 7 4 4 19 Waugh, c 5 2 1 1 12 Houchin, g 2 2 0 3 6 Sapp, g 1 1 3 2 3 Dewell 1 1 0 2 3 Stranel 2 0 0 1 4 Enns 0 0 0 4 0 Barr 0 1 0 2 1 Martin 0 0 0 1 0 Mabry 0 0 0 0 0 6,500 At K-State Set All-Time High Manhattan,- (UP)—Kansas State college has an all-time high enrollment of 6,500 students for this spring semester, the registrar announced today. This is an increase of nearly 500 over the corresponding spring total a year ago, and late enrollees are-expected to bring the total to 6,700, the registrar said. Big 7 Standings | LEAGUE | W. L. Pct. | T.P. Op.F | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kans, State | 4 1 .800 | 286 230 | | KANSAS | 3 1 .750 | 211 189 | | Missouri | 3 2 .600 | 254 154 | | Oklahoma | 2 2 .500 | 192 162 | | Iowa State | 3 3 .500 | 260 287 | | Nebraska | 3 3 .400 | 267 297 | | Colorado | 1 6 .143 | 300 346 | | ALL GAMES | | Kans, State | 15 2 .882 | 959 745 | | Iowa State | 10 6 .625 | 743 744 | | Missouri | 10 6 .588 | 730 812 | | Oklahoma | 7 6 .538 | 684 614 | | KANSAS | 8 7 .533 | 674 766 | | Nebraska | 8 9 .471 | 933 619 | | Colorado | 4 10 .286 | 691 689 | Rip Brown's 5 BOPS SKYLINE — Wed-Fri-Sat Call K.U. 251 With Your News. CALL FOR TAXI SERVICE CALL BILL'S GRILL 2-800 UNION CAB CO. QUICK COURTEOUS SERVICE 1109 Mass. Across from Phone 2054 the Courthouse WE FIT GLASSES and DUPICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinguish Frames Large Selection of Distinctive Frames Lawrence Optical Co. Why We Claim Superiority? 2. Extensive mechanical facilities Because We Have— 1. Thousands of satisfied customers 3. An expert staff of mechanics 4. Efficient, dependable service 5. Friendly, reliable advice BUSINESS IS GOOD at CHANNEL-SANDERS STUDEBAKER When You Want Something Done Well . . . You Look for the Expert Who Knows How to do it So when you want your clothes cleaned, bring them to us. We are the experts in the cleaning business. One trial and you will be convinced. Phone 75 New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPERRANCE 926 Mass. AYHAWKER Shows 2:30-7-9 NOW-Ends Tues.! INTERNATIONAL TECHNICOLOR DESERT FURY LIZABETH SCOTT JOHN HODIAK BURT LANCASTER WED. - One Week! WED. – One Week! WARNER BROS.' MY WILD IRISH ROSE A BENTON STUDIO DENNIS MORGAN ALENE DHML • ANDREA KING • ALAN HALE GEORGE TOBIAS • GEORGE O'BRIEN • BEN BLUE GRANADA NOW Ends WED. AM HILARIOUS SCANDAL! LUCILE FRANCHOT BALL·TONE Her Husband's Affairs THURS. -3 Big Days IN EYE-FILLING CINECOLOR! BLACK GOLD ANTHONY QUINN KATHERINE DeMILLE VARSITY NOW ENDS TONIGHT PLUS: Cartoon Musical News THIS LIFE STORY OF SOY JIMMIE DAVIS Louisiana with JIMMIE DAVIS MARGARET LINDSAY A NONOGRAM PICTURE PATEE Tonite: 6 Big Pay Dana ANDREWS Susan HAYWARD "Canyon Passage" 2nd Feature Yvonne DE CARLO Rod CAMERON "Frontier Gal In Technicolor MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9. 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE FIVE Kansas Indoor Trackmen Lose Opener To Missouri OU Swimmers Drawn The University of Missouri's door track squad, defending its reference championship, swampen Kansas squad 71 to 33 in a meet at Columbia Friday night meet records were broken other was tied. Jayhawkwer swimmers were defeated by the Sooners of Oklahoma in a dual meet at Norman Saturday, 55 to 29, in the third conference meet of the season for Kansas. Ernest Crates won top honors in the fancy diving event for Kansas' only first place. K. U. Coach Walter Mikols said that most of the Kansas swimmers improved their times despite the fact that they could not match the speed of the Sooners. Ernest Friesen, Dick O'Neil, Stan Jervis, and Dave Ritchie each copped a second place for the Kansas crew and Friesen, Ritchie, Paul Banks, Bill Roy and Don Medearis each added to K.U. points with third place honors. The defeat marks the second in three starts for the Kansas team. In the season opener, Kansas defeated the Kansas State Wildcats but in the second meet bowed to Nebraska. 200 Free style: Kay Burns, Oklahoma; Ernest Friesen, Kansas; Dave Ritchie, Kansas. Time 2:26.2. 300 Medley relay: Oklahoma (Elvin Crowder, Bob Hurd, Walter Farr), Time 3:18.3. 50 Free style: Harry Hill, Oklahoma; Ray Cobb, Oklahoma; Paul Banks, Kansas. Time 25.3. Individual results: Fancy diving: Ernest Crates, Kansas 72.0; Dick O'Neil, Kansas, 65.8 Rav Cobb, Oklahoma. 63.0. 100 Free style: Harry Hill, Oklahoma; Kay Burns, Oklahoma; Bill Roy, Kansas. Time 56.0. 150 Backstroke: Elvin Crowder; Oklahoma; Tom Bacher, Oklahoma; Don Medearis. Kansas. Time 1:48.2. 200 Breast stroke. Harold Brighent toward him. *Tips 3, 4*. Bob Burk, Oklahoma, Tips 3, 4. 440 Free style: Kay Burns, Oklahoma; Dave Ritchie, Kansas; Ernest Friesen. Kansas. Time 5:414. 400 Relay: Oklahoma (Elvin Crowder, Joe Racz, Ray Cobb, Harry Hill). Time 3:57.5. Conference Races Approach Climax New York, Feb. 9—(UF)—A showdown in two conference basketball races was in the offing today as the jockeying for positions for the National Collegiate Athletic association tournament reached the decisive stage. St. Louis and Oklahoma A. and M., the major rivals in the Missouri Valley conference, play a return engagement Saturday, while Texas and Baylor, both undefeated in Southwest conference play, meet on Thursday. One Billikin Loss St. Louis has lost only one game in 15 starts this season, and that was a 33-30 count to the Aggies. The Billikins beat Wichita this week, 52-41. A. and M. has lost twice in 20 games, to Kansas State and to DePaul, but it is undefeated in league play and could all but clinch the crown with a victory Saturday. Texas, loser only to the Oklahoma Aggies this season, rules the favorite in the southwest, but Baylor, fresh from bouncing Arkansas out of the running with 42 to 38 and 55 to 47 decisions last week, must be reckoned with. Baylor has lost four times this season—but not one of the defeats came in conference play. Two Tennis Upheastern The only two remaining undefeated teams, New York U. and Columbia, face potent opposition this week at the highlight of the eastern program. Columbia meets Pennsylvania on Thursday and Cornell Saturday, while N.Y.U. plays Georgetown Saturday. Kentucky and Tulane, the Southeastern conference rivals, go to the post against league opposition this week. Kentucky tackling Vanderbilt tonight and Tennessee Saturday while Tulane plays Georgia Tech tonight and Mississippi State Saturday. Tom Schofield, Kansas high jumper, soared over the bar at 6 feet $4\frac{1}{2}$ inches to break his own record of an inch less set in 1946, and also topped the Brewer field house record of 6 feet $4\frac{1}{4}$ inches. All other record performances were by Missouri as Dick Ault ran the 440-yard dash in 51.5 seconds, Ed Quirk heaved the shot put 51 feet 5¾ inches, and the Missouri mile relay team swept the course in 3 minutes, 31.7 seconds. Tiger speedster, Harry G洞 broke the 60-dash tape in 6.3 seconds to tie the meet record. Bob Karnes of Kansas was the only double winner as he raced to victory in the mile and two-mile. His two firsts and Schofield's triumph in the high jump were the only first places won by the Jayhawkers. The Missouri squad showed its depth of strength by sweeping all places in the 60-yard dash, broad jump, low hurdles, and shot put. Pole vault: Vandine, Missouri Knapp, Missouri and Wilson, Kansas tied for second. 12 feet. Mile run: Karnes, Kansas; Moore, Kansas; Chronister, Missouri. 42:73. Cash: dash: Guth, Missouri; Gartiser, Missouri; Kline, Missouri. 6.3 seconds. 440-yard dash: Ault, Missouri Schuster, Missouri; Kline, Missouri 51.5. 60-yard high hurdles: Self, Missouri; Stannard, Kansas; Fuerst Missouri. 7.8 seconds. Two-mile run: Karnes, Kansas; Moore, Kansas; Madden, Missouri 9:53.1. High jump: Schofield, Kansas; Norris, Kansas; Howard, Missouri; 6 feet, 41% inches. 880-yard run: Lancaster, Missouri; Shea, Kansas; Wilfe, Kansas 60-yard low hurdles: Bussell, Missouri; Ault, Missouri; Self, Missouri. 7.2 seconds. Broad jump: Teel, Missouri; Guth, Missouri; Klein, Missouri. 23 feet % inch. Mile relay: Missouri (Klein, Minoque, Ault, Schmidt). 3:28.1. Shot put: Quirk, Missouri; Sheehan, Missouri; Peltz, Missouri. 51 feet, 5% inches. US Places Third In Olympic Games Sweden won the big show in the unofficial team standings with 82 points while Switzerland was second with 77 and the United States third with $73\frac{1}{4}$. Third was a spectacularly high showing for a team mainly composed of youngsters who had been expected to make the long trek for the nice ride and the fresh air. St. Moritz, Feb. 9—(UP)—America's young Olympic stars moved on today, looking either for new conquests or the quickest way to get home, after exceeding expectations for a nation where most kids grow up on paved streets and big trucks haul away the snow about as soon as it falls. The surprise showing gave America's international sports leaders a more cheerful attitude toward the coming summer Olympics and silenced the crepe-hangers who had been saying openly here and elsewhere, equipped to make its usual brilliant showing in the track and field events. The athletes who elected to remain in Europe were the speed skaters, six of whom went to Normay for a series of meets there; the figure skaters, who moved on to the World championships beginning later this week at Davos, Switzerland; and a scattering of others who stuck around for exhibitions. Coal mines were discovered in the neighborhood of Newcastle about 1234. Coals were first used in London in the reign of Edward I, when the smoke was supposed to corrupt the air to such an extent that he forbade the use of them by a proclamation in 1273. Fourteen independent "A" team contests highlighted the weekends intramural basketball activities while 10 "B" team games completed the schedule. IM Games Total24 The Law School climbed to the top of division two with its thrilling 18 to 17 victory over the Smith hall five. It was big Bob Bock who showed the lawyers the way with 13 of the 18 points. Shara led the losers with seven points. Airscrews Squeeze By The Airscrews turned in a close 32 to 30 victory in their game with Alpha Chi Sigma. Armstrong was high for the winners with 14 points while Lowen and Lindenstruth each collected eight for the Alpha Chis' The Bounders finally found the formula for winning as they gathered their first victory in four games, 23 to 15 over the Shiners. Rawlings paced the Bounders with nine markers. The Army made it five straight as they downed the Oread hall five 38 to 23. York made 10 points for the men in khaki while Wykert counted eight for the losers. Led by Darling and Ankerholz with 12 points apiece, the Last Chance squad defeated the 2120 club 48 to 12. Leading all the way, the Last Chancers were never headed even though Fennell counted 10 points for the losing cause. Aces High, led by Bob Clark's 18 points, walked all over the 939 Club by a 45 to 20 count. The hapless Sigma Kappa Phi's lost their fourth straight game to the Navy Officers 28 to 20. Barley and Baumgaertel sparked the Navy gold braid with 11 points each. Pulliam garnered 6 for the losers. Ages High Have Prone The Beta "E" team set a scoring record for this intramural season as they downed the Phi Kappa's 69 to 17. Big Ralph Simmons also marked an individual high with 28 points for the winners. Aces High Have Breeze Other "B" team game scores: Phi Gam 28, Triangle 5 Phi Psi 43, Dog House 10 Sig Alph 34, Sigma Chi 18 D.U. 27, T.K.E. 22 A.V.C. 43, Army 26 Y.M.C.A. 40, Dix Club 15 Beta Kappa 29, Dream Team 24 Phi Chi 19, Spooner Thayer 13 Phi Delted 33, Sigma Nu 13. Kappa Sig 34, Delta Tau 21. Labor Institute Will Be Held Here The University of Kansas will be host to a two-day labor institute March 13-14, Dr. Frank T. Stockton, dean of University extension, announced recently. The Taft-Hartley act, human relations in the shop economics, and arbitration will be included in the educational program. It is sponsored by the Kansas State Federation of Labor. University faculty members will conduct most of the instruction. East Lansing, Mich.—(UP)—F. K. Hardy, professor of business administration at Michigan State college, said a survey he conducted proved that small business men earn more money than large corporation employees. Army, Small Businesses Best For Money-Making This will be the second institute of its kind to be held here. Hardy said the study, based on students who graduated from M. S. C. since 1933, showed that 54 graduates now in small business make an average of $452 a month, while 184 working for large corporations average only $358. However, he reported that the best money-making field was the armed services. There, the survey showed, 13 graduates reported averaging about $500 a month. When admitted to the Union Oklahoma had a population larger than 21 other states. Brown And Jordan Receive ROTC Honor Albert W. Brown Jr., engineering senior; Anderson W. Chandler, business senior; and Ira D. Jordan, College senior have been designated as Distinguished Military Students, and are eligible to receive direct commissions in the regular army and the air force. Chandler and Jordan are air force students; Brown is in artillery. Launderette Service 9 lbs. of wash, 25c 21 Bendix Washers 813 Vt. Phone 3368 GALES American Custom Chocolates, $1.75 STOWIT'S Rexall STORE Charme Beauty Salon formerly Iva's Beauty Shop phone 533 RISK'S HELP-YOURSELF LAUNDRY All types of beauty work by capable operators. Mid-winter special price on permanents machine and machineless. Nettie L. Wolfe, Owner Maytag Machines Line Space Reasonable Rates Weekdays 9-6 Saturdays 9-3 1900 III.—Phone 623 COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals Short Orders Malts Sandwiches Air Conditioned Open 5:30—12 p.m. DANCE For HEALTH'S SAKE ROLLER SKATE Yes, the Rollerdrome's a place for good clean, wholesome fun and exercise. Skate for your health at the ROLLERDROME 737 N. Hamp. Phone 2402 SKATING ACADEMY 1 block south of P.O. Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers. NG EUM "She'll snap right out of it as soon as she gets her Dentyne Chewing Gum." "I wouldn't have to put on this sleepwalking act if that dopey husband of mine would remember to bring home delicious, clean tasting Dentyne Chewing Gum with the rich, long lasting flavor. A lot he cares that Dentyne helps keep my teeth white." Dentyne Gum — Made Only By Adams 图 PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1948 The Editorial Page Votes Behind The Mountains Like Lochinvar a new economic, political, and social factor has come out of the West to tilt with the forces that comprise the American scene. Its charger is a fondness for the superlative and a war-born boom that has rattled the ballot boxes and jingled the till as a signal that the fray has begun. During the war, restless Americans headed West, and the census bureau today cites a population gain of 33.9 per cent for the three Pacific Coast states since 1940. The remaining 45 states can tally up only a 3 per cent gain. California leads the nation with a gain of 36.2 per cent or a whopping 2,484,666. Reapportionment in 1952 The real effect of this population spurt will come in 1952 when re-aportionment on the basis of the 1950 census will give California seven more electoral and congressional votes to rank it third in the nation. Oregon and Washington will each gain one. Five normally Democratic states will lose one vote each, and every vote lost to the Democrats and shifted to the doubtful column is a help to the Republicans. Politicians, with their ears traditionally to the ground, realize that the influence of the West will be substantially increased. be substantially. Economically, the West's outlook is as lush as a dollar sundae. It has a large and expanding market represented by people with incomes above the national average. California's per capita income was $1,441 in 1946, compared to $737 in 1939 and it is expected to climb to $1,500. During the war, the government invested five billion dollars in war plants in the West. Among them is a steel plant, aluminum reduction plants, an aluminum rolling mill, and nine shipyards. The postwar period has added other plant projects totalling $750,000,000. Box Office Poison However, there's one aspect of the Western boom that might turn this supercolossal, technicolor picture into box office poison. To keep going, the West needs water, more electric power, and lower freight rates. Power is short now. Water and water storage is always a problem in that area, and facilities need to be expanded. It costs more to ship materials out of the West than into it. These problems need federal aid for adequate solutions, and a pinchpenny congress has a lot of excuses for not putting up the ante. However, with the West's political potential, a Republican congress will probably see its way clear to foot the bill. With that hurdle out of the way, we'll be hearing more from the bustling Americans west of the Rockies. Money, Money There is something startling about the name of Samuel Insull and the news of suspicious fluctuations in the present day commodities market appearing in print on the same day. The association must have caused persons with long memories and gray thatches some moments of panic about their financial security. It seems that the legal tangle caused by the collapse of Mr. Insull's utility empire has finally been unraveled after 15 years. Samuel Insull was a financial wizard who reached his heyday in the booming '20's. He pyramided holding companies that controlled holding companies upon other holding companies. It was financial razzle-dazzle—all on paper—that not even Mr. Insull understood. The collapse that quickly followed left the hapless stockholders buried in a debris of worthless securities. Shares of stock that were worth $565 dipped to 4 cents a share. The '20's were the days of the plunger and the speculator. The future was rosy, the skies were bright, and money jingled in every pocket. The description sounds ominously like the '40's. Are there any Samuel Insulls today who are steeped in the alchemy of changing paper into gold at the expense of the investors? Today's trembling market quotations should cause us to think about it. Our complex financial structure could get out of hand in spite of controls. Some woolly lambs might get a fleecing. Bowl Movies Dear Editor Dear Editor. I am a student who attended all the home football games last season and cheered myself hoarse for dear old Kansas. I attended all the rallies and supported the team as much as I possibly could. Now I read that free showings of the Orange Bowl movies will be shown to students Feb. 13 and 14. But I have to present a basketball ticket to get in to see the football pictures. Not knowing this last semester when basketball tickets were on sale, I didn't get any basketball tickets. Now just what is the deal, K-club? I supported the football team wholeheartedly last semester. Do I have to support the rest of the athletic program, too, to get to see the Orange bowl movies of the football team? Doesn't the football team belong to all the students and not just those who bought basketball tickets? Name withheld by request (Editor's note: According to Otto Schnellbacher, K-club president, activity tickets will admit students to the movies on both nights. Basketball tickets were specified at first to insure that only students be admitted to see the films, Schnellbacher said.) Here's a second in your extension of good luck to George Sauer. He did much for K.U. and helped put Jeyhawkier football on the map. However, I believe there should be some reservations made in the well-wishing. If and when Navy meets Midwestern teams, particularly those from the Big Seven, all Midwesterners should hope that the Middies take a sound thrashing. In some respects George Sauer's departure was a slap at football as played in this sector. Navy Blues Dear Editor Mr. Sauer cannot really be blamed too much for his jump to the East. After all, when your team only has to win one game a season to be placed in the top ten teams of the nation by the sportswriters, Alumnus Appointed To Science Mission Dr. Warren H. Cole, '18, head of the department of surgery at the University of Illinois, has been appointed Senior Scientist attache to the United States Mission to Britain or Science and Technology. The mission is designed to promote cooperation with British scientists in various fields, including medicine, engineering, and chemistry. Dr. Cole, formerly of Clay Center, received his bachelor of science degree from the University of Kansas in 1918 and his doctor of medicine degree from Washington university. He has served as a professor of surgery at the University of Illinois since 1936. what have you got to lose? Writers all over the nation, even in our own backyard, placed Navy ahead of Kansas in their final analysis of last year's football play. During the war, the military academies had great drawing powers as regards college athletes. They issued numerous invitations to outstanding athletes throughout the country to attend their great institutions. The military academies at Annapolis and West Point have now lost their grip—both on the athletes they acquired during the war and possible replacements for them. So what is the next most promising field for these academies to invade? At the present time, it seems to be the coaching profession. The naval authorities at Annapolis knew that George Sauer had just signed a four-year contract with K.U. If we must blame somebody for Mr. Saucer's departure, let's blame the naval authorities of the Annapolis school. They should have some sense of honor or respect for ethics. If they don't, why don't athletic officials of the nation adopt a new athletic code that will make them conform to better principles? Rob Roy Moore Graduate Student Burglaries that occurred at the rate of more than four a day last year in Kansas City have produced angered protests from Kansas Citians. More convictions in burglary causes are being demanded. Let's hope that this civic pressure won't bring about hasty convictions of innocent people. . . as it has many times in the past. Call K. U. 251 With Your News Daily Hansan Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS University Daily Kansan Member of the Kansas Press Assn, Nati- tional Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Ad- dress Service, 420 Madison Ave. New York, NY Editor-in-Chief William C. Von Maurer Managing Manager Alan J. Stewart Asst. Man. Editor Cooper Rollow Asst. Man. Editor Larry Lee City Editor Gene Vigney Asst. City Editor James Robinson Telegraph Editor • Wallace W. Abbey Asst. City Editor William Burger Sports Editor Robert Dellinger Asst. Sports Editor Paul Zeh Sports Editor James Jones Women's Sports Editor Feature Editor Ann Mary Murphy Picture Editor John W. Koehler Society Editor Hal Nelson Dorothy James Business Manager Bettie Bacon Advertising Manager Robert Alderson Concussion Manager Otto Feyer National Advt. Mgr. David Cymer Promotion Manager Winter Shreve The Kansas Press Association 19 MEMBER 48 National Editorial Association A FREE PRESS—YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS 12 East Eighth Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed...65c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed...69c CASH AND CARRY ONLY THE BEST DESSERT IN ANY SEASON TRY IT YOURSELF AND KNOW THE REASON Fritzel ICE CREAM 834 Vt. CHI GALLOWAY Phone 182 Fritzel ICE CREAM TEE PEE—COKE DATE TEE PEE—COKE DATE Dancing Coking Dancing Coking and - Sunday Dinners—After 4 p.m. - Bar—B—Q Meats - Dancing—Any Time - Open Week Days—11 a.m.-12 p.m. - Open Sunday—4 p.m.-11 p.m. The Tee Pee Highway 40 Phone 2013 TEE PEE—COKE DATE TEE PEE—COKE DATE -By Bibler The Bus-(Adv.) THE RAPID TRANSIT COM BILLY RACER "I ain't interested in schedules, Reginald, my kid here says you took his wagon!" TEE PEE—COKE DATE BIVD AVOC—EE PEE BIVD AVOC— MONDAY, FEDRUARY 9, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Daily Kansan Classified Ads Copy must be in 'the University Daily Kansan Business Office, Journalism bldg., not later than 4 p.m. of the day before payment. All clauses are cash in advance. not later than 4 p.m. of the day before publication is desired. All classicals are cash in advance. Classified Advertising Rates One day Three days Five days 25 words or less 35c 65c 90c additional words 1e 2e 3e For Sale FOR SALE; One apt. size washer—like new. 1225 Ky. Phone 1735W. 11 EARN SOME easy money—twenty-five one cent peanut machines for sale, cheap. Former owner changed schools. See evenings at 321 Lane 14, Sunflower. For LURNED Parka type army jacket. $10.00. Size 38. 921 Kentucky. 11 ARGOFLEX, F.4, with carrying case, Godachrome adaptor filter case with filtered ring and filters. Excellent condition. James Parks. Ph. 2082 evening. 11 SIAMESE KITTENS for sale. Ready for delivery. Stud service. Ph. 1956. 9 TOUVER WRITER, Underwood Standard. No. 5. Tool writer,八十evin electric theater with fan. Phone 2063J. 9 UXTOED for sale, size 40. Inquire at Cottage cafe. Phone 2. 11 TYPEWRITE sold and rented. Peterson's. 6 East 8th. Phone 13. 11 VETERANS! We will buy, trade or sell our girl Single bed, warm, gear in good condition that you may wish to dispos off. Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. Phone 669 HTFD 11 For Rent BOARD AND ROOM Have three double rooms three blocks off campus. $55 per month. Call 366 evenings. 11 LARGE WELL furnished room inner spring mattress, newly decorated for new students. Close to town and K.U. Phone 1128. 1303 Vermont St. 11 WANTED ONE girl to share double room, one block from Union Bldg. 1245 Louisiana after 2:00 p.m. 13 GUARTERS FOR colored girls: Vacancy from girl Single bed, warm, private kitchen, bath and wash Room. Call 1735-R after 5:30 p.m. 13 TWO ROOMS for boys, single or double, we consider kitchen privileges—reasonably on the University Island. Call 2585-M after 3:00 p.m. 13 VERY ATTRACTIVE room for two boys, twin beds, near campus. 1137 Ky. Mrs. Oley, ph. 2234-W. 10 VACANCY for two men on top of the HUTTER 1228 Louisiana. 10 A STUDENT with a double room with an engineer. Also a single room for one man. Close to the University. One block from bus line. Phone 16765. 11 ROOM for four boys. New home. Private entrance and bath. $12.50 per month each. 20 LARGE ROOM to share with engineer student. Near K.U. 1031 Miss. St. Phone 3251W. 9 NEED ONE boy for double room. Private bath—shower. Two blocks from campus, except from Johnhawk cave. Double bunk beds. See W. P. Mest. 1329 Ohio after 5 p.m. 10 ROOM to share with girl, close to campus. 1611 Tennessee. Phone 1405W. 9 Wanted MALE STUDENT to share double room; also man to share apartment. WANTED: Part time relief caster at Jayhawker theater. The ideal position for a GLI's wife. Apply at manager's office 10. Send resume to the following item. A fast seller in colleges and local store offices. Excellent commission. Write Paul Ditzel, 224 Hamilton, Evanston, IL. MALE STUDENT to share double room; also man to share apartment with three other students. IS58 Tenn., Phone 2251-R. RETURNING to active duty and am in need of Army Officer's uniforms. Size 39. Contact Donald Sidak. 4406 Parkway, Olathe, Kansas. 9 WILL THE person who accidentally exchanged navy overcoats with me, at the student Union cafeteria trade rank Monica, bring the cell to the chemistry office? LADIES wrist watch with black colored hand, between Corbin Hall and downtown. Finder please call Bert Larsen. 869. Reward. 10 Lost WILL THE boy who borrowed my brown Esterbrook fountain pen during enrollment Monday afternoon, please return it to Kauai prison? Please. Virgin Iris Joseph BROWN BILLIFOLD Wed. Jan. 21 Browne Reward. Ira Landis Piel 3123R Found A MAN's wrist watch in twelve hundred 2734W after 7 p.m. Owner please call 11 Dreyer And Horr To Study Plant-Mineral Relations A research project concerning the use of growing plants as guides in exploration for lead and zinc deposits will soon be undertaken by N. M. Dreyer, professor of geology, and Worthie Horr, associate professor of botany. Dr. J. O. Maloney, chairman of the Industrial Research Projects committee, announced today that $2,500 has been allocated from the Industrial Research fund for the investigation. Miscellaneous ALL OR PART meals for students. Also room to share with girl. Poone 18473, Bristol. SUBSCRIBE to the Kansas City Star, call Headquarters at Round Corner Drug Store. FREE OFFER: Photo copies of discharge papers, marriage certificates, for military credit or school entrance. 3 for price of 2. Round Corner Drug, 801 Mass. ___ 18 1948 is Leap Year so let's leap with a K.U. calendar. ___ **tt** Transportation WANTED—Ride to Topeka. Arrive 8:00 or 8:30. Leave 4:30 or 5:00. Leave at Daily Kansan. Dwight Howard. 9 RIDERS WANTED: K.C. to Lawrence, daily. Arrive Lawrence 8:45 a.m. Leave 6:30 a.m. RIDERS WANTED: Leaving every Friday evening for Emporia, Newton, and Wichita. Returning every Sunday evening. Call 3170. Harry Shultz. 11 RIDERS WANTed: Driving to and from Emporia. Returning every Sunday. Chestnut 6208 K.C., Mo. or leave name at Daily Kansan Business Office. 11 "Age of Enlightenment," a photographic exhibition prepared by the editors of Life, will be shown at the Museum of Art through February. Photo Exhibition Shown At Museum Among the artists and architects whose work is pictured are Boucher, Fragonard, Nattier, Rigaud, Watteau, David, Greuzet, Ledoux, Delamaire and Soufflot. The exhibition is arranged in three sections and depicts the intellectual and social changes in France during the 18th century. The first sections shows Versailles as it was under Louis XV. The second shows the contrast between the ideas of the philosophers and the ruling class. The third section reveals the beginning of the Revolution. The exhibition closes with the Oath of the Tennis Court and the Coronation of Napoleon. Intercollegian magazine carried a picture of the University of Kansas campus in its February issue. The view is of the intersection at Mississippi street and Jayhawk drive and the immediate surroundings. Magazine Runs Pictures Of University Campus The picture was carried in conjunction with an article on campus politics which Collier's magazine carried in its December 20 issue. Prof. Ethan P. Allen of the bureau of government research will be in Topeka Tuesday to speak to the League of Women Voters on the work of the Juvenile Code commission, which was appointed by the governor in July to revise all laws of Kansas regarding children. Allen To Speak In Topeka The year's longest day lasts about fifteen hours; the shortest, nine and a half. Engineering School Professor Returns Prof. Eugene A. Stephenson has returned from leave of absence to resume teaching duties in the petroleum engineering department, Chancellor Deane W. Malott said today. He will teach advanced classes formerly taught by Prof. Rex Woods who has returned to his position as chief engineer for the Creole Petroleum company in Venezuela. Professor Stephenson was chairman of the department from 1937 until last summer, when he asked his former duties because of poor health. Gerald Freeze, a graduate of the University of Oklahoma, has been added to the petroleum engineering staff as instructor, and Sailendra Chakrovorty, a native of India and a graduate of the Colorado School of Mines, is serving as an assistant during the spring semester. Let's Get together Let's Get together PHILIP MORRIS is so much better to smoke! PHILIP MORRIS offers the smoker an extra benefit found in no other cigarette. For PHILIP MORRIS is the ONE, the ONLY cigarette recognized by leading nose and throat specialists as definitely less irritating. Remember: Less irritation means more smoking enjoyment for you. Yes! If every smoker knew what PHILIP MORRIS smokers know, they'd ALL change to PHILIP MORRIS. CALL FOR PHILIP MORRIS TRY A PACK...TODAY CALL FOR PHILIP MORRIS UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE EIGHT MONDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1948 Brotherhood Week Brings Four Speakers World Brotherhood week, observed annually since 1922 as "Go to Church" week, and for the promotion of inter-racial tolerance, will bring four Christian leaders to the University for meetings, class discussions and personal conferences beginning today and ending Friday. Beginning A special program submitted by Ned L. Linnegar, executive secretary of the Y.M.C.A., and sponsored by the Student Religious council, will be put on with the cooperation of several Lawrence churches. educators around With Dr. Eddy is his wife, Mrs. Louise Gates Eddy, former general secretary of the national Y.W.C.A. of Canada. She served with the Y.W.C.A. in Rio De Janeiro and Montreal, and will address the Council of Church Women at 2:30 pm. Friday in the Trinity Lutheran church. several Lawrence churches All the speakers are available for speaking engagements, Mr. Linegar said. Offers from organized houses will be accepted. Dr. Eddy To Speak Dr. Sherwool Eddy, author and missionary, will speak at a community meeting sponsored by the Plymouth Congregational church at 8 p.m. Friday. His topic will be "War or Peace with Russia." Dr. Eddy To Speak will be 'War of Peace' Dr. Eddy is the author of 35 volumes on international, social and religious questions and for 20 years has conducted a traveling seminar of educators around the world. The Rev, Ted Thornton, executive secretary of the Y.M.C.A. of the University of Missouri, will also be the program. He replaces the Rev, Floyd Davidson, minister of Wichita Fairmount Congregational church, who will be unable to appear. Rabbi Joseph Levenson, regional director for the Union of American Hebrew Congregations and now at the Temple B'Nai Israel, Oklahoma City, will address several University organizations and Lawrence groups. Rabbi To Speak Two Lawrence churches held special services Sunday. The Rev. O, E. Allison, minister of the First Methodist church, spoke on the importance of race and class in American life. The High School fellowship of the First Baptist church heard John McCleland, Haskell institute student, whose topic was "It's Their World Too." in the Office of Professor Osma, who has travelled in Spain will explain the attitude of the Republicans with regard to Franco and tell of personalities and causes connected with the Republican movement prior to the recent Spanish Civil war. There will be a question period after the lecture. Prof. J. M. Oma, romance language department, will speak on "Franco vs. Republican Spain" at a meeting of the Coffee and Forums at 4 p.m. Tuesday in the Pine room of the Union. Osma Will Speak On Franco Spain Annes, Ia.—(UP)—Because of increasing interest in crime problems in rural areas, Iowa State College's curriculum includes a course in criminology for the first time this year. Iowa State Offers Course In Criminology This Year This meeting is open to all faculty members and students. Coffee and doughnuts will be served following the lecture. ___ year. Students registering for the new course will visit Iowa's correctional institutions. Training films on the treatment and care of offenders will be shown. The course is directed by Dr. Walter A. Lunden, sociologist, who served as an army prison officer in England, France and Germany during World War II. Dolch And Krieger Report For Duty Howard Henry Dolch, Jr., '48 and Earl Robert Krieger, '48, received their commissions as ensigns in the Navy following their graduation at the close of the fall semester, Captain John V. Peterson, professor of Naval Science announced. Ensign Dolch is stationed temporarily with the Bureau of Supplies and Accounts, Navy department, Washington, D.C. Ensign Krieger proceeded early last week to the Army Information school, Carlisle, Pa. Following a short term of duty there he will be stationed on the destroyer USS Compton. These men received their commissions following completion of their course in the Navy ROTC, at the University of Kansas. MP To Speak On Coal Crisis Thomas Frederick Peart, Labor member of the British parliament, will discuss the nationalization of the coal industry in a special convocation at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Fraser theater. Mr. Peart will show a sound movie about production problems in the British coal industry. He will discuss the background of the coal crisis and what is being done to solve it. There will be no change in class schedule for convocation. Geological Map May Aid Mining Publication of a map to guide exploratory drilling for a possible extension of the Tri-State mining area into Crawford county was announced today by the State Geological survey at the University. The results of a geophysical study conducted by Dr. R. M. Dreyer, associate professor of geology, show that lead and zinc ores may underlie the county to an extent that drilling for ores in Crawford county is justified. Dr. Dreyer used magnetic techniques, which employ the principle of the toy magnet, to map in detail the geological structure of southeastern Crawford county. The resulting geological map will show zones that might contain lead, zinc, coal, or oil. Leap Year King Is Crowned At Dimes Dance James Gordon Bennett, Jr., engineering sophomore was elected leap year king Friday night at the annual March of Dimes dance sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity. Joseph Edward Daily, engineering sophomore, was chosen crown prince. Topeka, Feb. 9—(UP)—Mrs. Anna Carlson, 81-year-old mother of the Kansas governor, is ill at her home in Concordia. The dance added $100 to the fund far infantile paralysis, Robert Petitt, chairman of the University campaign, said. Total contributions have not been announced following a collection at the basketball game Saturday, but were in excess of $500 following the dance, Dettitt added. Mrs. Carlson has been sick about a week with a severe cold. The Governor, who cancelled an appointment in Kansas City to visit her yesterday, said she was "a little improved over the day before but still so weak she could not leave her bed." Bennett, one of 11 candidates, was crowned by Gloria Hill. 1947 Jayhawker queen, in a coronation ceremony during internession. All money donated to the University campaign will be sent directly to the national headquarters, Petitt said today. Money ordinarily is divided equally between the national headquarters and county chapter. Any money not retained by the national headquarters will be given to Watkins hospital, Petitt said. Governor's Mother Is Ill Her son, Gov. Frank Carlson, said today her condition "is not at all good." The gray-haired, dark-complexioned woman has been restricted in her activities for some time, but was up and about during her governorson's preceding visit a week earlier. A native of Sweden, Mrs. Carlson came to Kansas at the age of 17. Her late husband also was a Swedish immigrant. Born May 27, 1866, she settled in Kansas north of Clifton in 1883. She has been a resident of the state since that time. Tonight Is The Deadline To Enter Union Contests Organized houses and any other groups who wish to submit entries for the Miss Student Union and the Most Dateable Male contests must do so by tonight. Anyone who wishes to enter should see James D. McBride at the Sigma Alpha Epsilon house. Green Criticizes Third Party The contest will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, in the East room of the Union. Cleveland, Feb. 9—(UP) —John Green, president of the C.I.O. Industrial Union of Marine and Shipbuilding workers, today called Henry A. Wallace's third party a "mad movement and a foolhardy attempt to split the ranks of labor." He told 300 delegates to the union's 13th annual convention that "we cannot support this mad move for a third party at this time. Its supporters are motivated by a program identical with that of the Kremlin and blessed by Moscow." Green spoke in favor of the Marshall plan and charged that Congress "is messing around with the European recovery plan, trying to cut it or turn it into a charitable program, which is what those opposed to the Marshall plan want." On the domestic front, Green warned of any approaching depression and outlined a union program to combat it. The program, he said, should include more "real" wage increases to restore purchasing power, repeal of the Taft-Hartley law, a national program of public works in readiness, increased public housing and extension of social security programs. He charged that President Truman, on the Maritime question, was "shortsighted" and was permitting America to become a "seventh-rate maritime nation." The convention, which continues through Friday, will also be addressed by such top C.I.O. aides as President Phillip Murray, Walter Reuther, president of the United Auto Workers, Emil Rieve, president of the Textile Workers, and Jack Kroll, chairman of the Political Action committee. ISA Meeting Canceled I. S.A. council meeting for this week has been canceled, according to Alice Wismer. I.S.A. president. Members will be notified of the date of the next meeting. NO TRESPASSING NATURAL RESOURCE GUARD IN CANADA ATOMIC ENERGY PROJECT - SECURITY ENHANCED BY ARMED GUARDS ARMED GUARDS keep watch over Canada's $20,000,000 atomic energy plant at Chalk River, Ontario, where research and production of isotopes is closely allied with important ventures into tracer chemistry and biology. New techniques have been devised for isolating and handling these radioactive materials, which cannot be converted for military use, and for their shipment to qualified workers abroad. (International) State Geologist Funeral Tuesday Dr. George E. Abernathy, Pittsburg, head of the state Geological Survey for southeastern Kansas died Friday morning at Barnes hospital in St. Louis. He was 59 years old. Head of the College geology department from 1920 to 1937, Dr. Abernathy was on the University faculty as a member of the survey in charge of the southeastern section. Dr. Abernathy received both his master's and doctor's degrees from the University of Kansas. The funeral will be held in Pittsburg tomorrow. Three faculty members here at the University who will attend the funeral are Dr. John C. Frye, executive director of the State Geological Survey here; Dr. Raymond C. Moore, director of research of the Geological Survey; and Dr. J. M. Jewett, also of the State Geological Survey. State Geologist Surviving are his widow, Mrs. Anna Abernathy, of the home; a son, Gene, Eureka; a brother, Roy Abernathy of Chaffee, Mo., and two grandchildren. Harold K. Kramer, chairman of the council's operating committee, pointed out that winter weather conditions usually slow the trip to school or to work. "Hurry is a contributory cause of many serious accidents," he added. "Allow yourself a few extra minutes to get wherever you're going and your chances of getting there alive and sound will improve." New York — (UP) — Early risers during the winter months probably will live longer, the Greater New York Safety council believes. Kappa Phi chapters in Oklahoma, Nebraska, Colorado, and Kansas will charter two busses for the trip, Mrs. Edwin F. Price, Alpha club sponsor, announced Friday. The delegates will also make a sightseeing trip to New York City, Lexington, Concord, and other points of interest. After an overnight rest at Key West on Feb. 20, the President will fly to San Juan, P.R., where he will be joined by Secretary of Interior J. A. Krug and Secretary of Agriculture Clinton P. Anderson. Using plane and ship, the President will spend the better part of a week in the Caribbean. He may stay in Key West as long as 10 days. Two city detectives and a Missouri liquor control officer walked into Gerken's place after closing hours and asked for service. House and topones are scheduled in Puerto Virgin Islands, Cuba and Key West, Fla., where Mr. Truman will take a vacation. Mr. Truman will leave Washington Feb. 20. He will return no later than March 5. Truman To Go To Caribbean Kappa Phi, Methodist girls' club, plans to send about 20 members to the biennial national council June 29 to July 5 at Wellesley college Boston, Mass. Early Risers In Winter Will Have Longer Life Washington, Feb. 9.-(UP)-President Truman will tour American possessions in the Caribbean beginning late thi smonth, the White House announced today. St. Louis—(UP)—Joseph A. Gerken, 59, operator of a tavern, made a wiscrack he regrets. Kappa Phi Members To Attend Council Cops Can Give You Trouble Even In A Wet State "I guess you fellows are police officers or state men, eh!" Gerken laughed when the cops paid for the drinks. The officers solemnly said they were. That brought another laugh all around, until the cops showed their badges and carted Gerken off. University 45th Year No.85 45th Year No. 85 Daily STUDENT NEWSPAPER kansan OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Tuesday, Feb. 10, 1948 Lawrence Kansas Student Stars Make 'Mikado' A New Success For the first time since 1909, Gilbert and Sullivan's "Mikado" was presented at the University, Monday in the first of three performances. However, it is possible to conceive that the artistry of 1909 could equal that of 1948. W. S. Gilbert did not like stars and tried to make his parts of equal importance, but the Light Opera guild had a star in Ben Shanklin. He made Ko-Ko a believable character with his excellent singing voice and unfailing comic sense. Jane Byers, as Katsuia, ran Shanklin a close race for top honors. She dominated the finale of Act I from the moment of her entrance and gave a remarkable connotation of tragedy. The high point of the performance and the delivery of rapid patter came in Mrs. Byers' and Mr. Shanklin's duet, "There Is Beauty In the Bellow of the Blast." Miss Harlow Artistic Harriet Harlow's radiant tones and beauty made hite audience believe in "Yum-Yum." There was a subtle artistry in her singing of "The Sun Whose Rays." Charles Byers was a convincing Nanki-Poo and realized all the values in the tuneful "A Wandering Minstrel." Incidentally, he displayed a shapely pair of legs and danced a nimble hornpipe. Harry Spencer, as "Pooh-Bah," got more than his share of laughs. His interpolated remark during his Act I enadenza stopped the show. Great G'Connor Plays Mikado Vincent May should be commended for his brisk narrative song, "Our Great Mikado." Charles O'Connor's portrayal of the Mikado as a tyrant with a perpetual scowl was not in keeping with the conventional idea of the title role. William Danforth used to bring down the house regularly by singing "My Object All Sublime" in a light, playful manner accompanied by a jaunty dance. O'Connor sang the catchy ditty as if it were the Prologue from "Pagliacci." Dorothy O'Connor was a pert Pittling and frolicked on her solo passages like a lovable kitten. Bernadine Reed as Peep-Bo, didn't have much to do, but she provided plenty of eye-appeal. Chorus Excellent The choros should have been larger, but made up for its lack of size by its singing. In general, the orchestra discoured Sullivan's witty score expertly, although a few clinkers marred the even flow. Gerald Carney, assistant professor of music education, conducted the orchestra and did a remarkable job of keeping his forces together. Tonight's performance is a sell-out, and only a limited number of tickets are available for Friday. The Light Opera guild's presentation of the "Mikado" warrants these productions becoming annual events. Quack Club Will Hold Second Semester Tryouts Second-semester Quack club try-outs will be held at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Robinson gymnasium. All women interested in competing for membership should attend, Miss Ruth Hoover, faculty sponsor of the club said today. Quack club members will meet and swim after the tryouts. WEATHER K a n s a s—Partly cloudy and warm east. Snow flurries and becoming much colder northwest tonight. Tomorrow snow flurries and much colder. High today 35 to 40, low tonight 25 to 30 east and south, 5 to 10 northwest. 100 Vacancies In Messiah Chorus There are approximately 100 vacancies in the University Festival chorus which will present the "Messiah" May 2. Enrollment cards may be secured at the Fine Arts office, 128 Frank Strong hall, or at rehearsal, 4 p.m., Thursday. This will be the last opportunity to join the chorus, according to Dean D. M. Swarthout. Members of the University faculty and student body, church choirs and independent singers in the city are welcome to join. Rehearsals will be held at 4 p.m. every Thursday. May Raise Fare To Sunflower Bus fares for University students commuting from Sunflower village will be doubled after March 8 if the State Corporation commission grants the request of the Santa Fe Trail company to cancel the present round trip fare of 30 cents. Students living at Sunflower can now purchase books of 6 round trip tickets to Lawrence for $1.80, or 12 round trip tickets for $3.60. The regular one way fare is 30 cents. The Santa Fe Trail company has applied to the State Corporation commission for authority to cancel the commuter rates. If the request is granted students will have to pay the regular one way fare unless a new commuter rate is established. The application does not provide for a new rate. A hearing on the proposed change will be held by the State Corporation commission in Topeka March 8 at 10 a.m. Opposition to the proposed change can be made at that time. 'Youth Aren't Set-Up,' Kuch "We don't have a set-up for making American youth conscious of future participation in political affairs," the Rev. G. Richard Kuch told the Unitarian Liberal club Feb. 8. Rev. Kuch is associate director of the American Unitarian youth and has made two recent trips to Europe. He said that in Eastern Europe national and quasi-national youth organizations have prestige and enjoy considerable favoritism. No tuition is charged at any Eastern University if the student can make good grades. Technology and sociology are nationalized and emphasized. Karl Mattern, associate professor in the department of drawing and painting, and Robert N. Sudlow, instructor, will each enter a picture in the 10th annual exhibition of Painters West of the Mississippi, at the Colorado Springs Fine Arts Center. 2 Faculty Members Enter Art Exhibit "Europe makes no bones about it," he said. "Youth are being trained for the future." Theta Tau Pledge The exhibit, which will last until April 11, consists of works invited by the curator. Fred S. Bartlett. Professor Mattern's entry is a recently completed oil painting, "Big Snow," and Mr. Suddlow's is a water color, "Rocky Pastures." Theta Tau, professional engineering fraternity, announces the pledging of David E. Wilson, freshman. Jack N. White, junior, was elected treasurer of the fraternity at a recent meeting. Big Program Planned For 'Sweetheart' The "Sweetheart of America" will be escorted by the "Most Dateable Male" at the Sweetheart Swing, from 9 to 12 p.m. Saturday in the Union ballroom. Representatives from nine nearby colleges and universities will compete with K.U.'s "Miss Student Union" for the title of "Sweetheart of America." The winner will be chosen during intermission by Lawrence business men. The "Most Dateable Male" will be chosen from a group of 10 University men, who will escort the queens. Colleges and universities to be represented are Baker, Washburn, Nebraska, Missouri, Kansas State, Kansas State Teachers at Pittsburg, Kansas State Teachers at Emporia, Kansas City, and Wichita. The following schedule will entertain the visitors all day Saturday: At 8:30 a.m., the Presidents' Breakfast at the Union; at 10:50 a.m., the Campus Parade at which time further announcements of the dance will be made; at 11 a.m., talks with the dean of women, dean, of men, and the chancellor; at 12:30 p.m., the Student Union Executive board luncheon at the Union. At 2 p.m., the Unixiversity dance class will be held in the Union ballroom with visitor participation. R. N. Bibler will be on hand to draw caricatures and refreshments will be served. At 3:30 p.m., visitors will be taken on a tour of the campus. Culminating the day will be the Sweetheart Swing from 9 p.m. to midnight. It will be held in the Union ballroom with decorations on the "Manhattan-Merry-Go-Round" theme. During the intermission, the "Sweetheart of America" will be selected. Songs by Jeanne L Chambers and Mary Lou Peckenschneider, and a group of dancing numbers will be presented. Union Plans Latin Dancing If you've wanted to learn to rhumba, samba or tango, but haven't been able to contact Arthur Murray, you now have a new opportunity. Under the direction of Miss Elaine Selicovitz, physical education instructor, the Student Union activities are sponsoring dancing classes and a social hour combined. Called the S.U.A.-Combo Dance club, Miss Selicovitz and 17 student assistant instructors will hold sessions on Saturday afternoons from 2 to 3:30 p.m. in the Union ballroom starting this week. Miss Selicovitz gave her assistant instructors advance lessons last week and worked out a simple plan for teaching students the basic steps of rhumba, samba and tango. Later more complicated versions of these dances will be taught. The student instructors agree that students will find the dance sessions beneficial and different from the typical dancing class. With the increase of South American music being played by orchestras throughout the country, a knowledge of these dance steps is as necessary as the frotto or waltz. Students who are assisting Miss Selicivitz are: Joy Godhebene, Carey Campbell, Pat Brown, Althea Voss, Jean Rankin, Bunny Denson, Jeanne Peterson, Helen Manka, Inez Hall. Pat Thiessen, Jack Kendree, Mead Almond, Bill Leonard, Bob Woods. Slide Rule Course Will Be Offered Principles and operation of the slide rule will be explained to engineering students in an eight-week no-credit course beginning the second or third semester week, Harry W. Johnson, president of Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity, announced today. Instruction will be given by members of the fraternity from 7:00 p.m. until 9:00 p.m. one day a week in Marvin hall. The exact date will be announced soon. Attendance will be voluntary, Johnson said. 28 Compete For UnionTitle Twenty-eight candidates will compete for the title of "Miss Student Union for 1948." The contest will be held at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in the East room of the Union. Dorothy M. Baldwin, Sigma Kappa; Ladeen Stinkirchner, Theta Phi Alpha; Jacqueline E. Campbell, Briar Manor; Nancy L. Cole, Carruth hall; Janet Downs, Carbin hall; Virginia L. Cuddy, Foster hall; Joanne L. Varnum, Hopkins hall; Edna L. McCarty, Jolliffe hall, Marijeen Kent, Miller hall; Merle M. Collins, Mon- chonsia hall. The contestants are Eleanor M. Howell, Alpha Chi Omega; Norma L. Mendenhall, Alpha Delta Pi; Betty Jo Bloomer, Alpha Micron P; Ruth L. Walters, Chi Omega; Sarah Jane Belt, Delta Gamna; Kay Collins, Delta Delta Delta; Betty L. Martin, Gamma Phi Bieta; Nina L. Green, Kappa Kappa Gamma; Ann M. Lawrence, Kappa Alpha Theta; Katharine N. Hoag, Pi Beta Phi. Shirley N. Sondker, Ricker hall; Katherine C. Turner, Turner Hollows; Eleanor L. Bradford, Templel hall; Carole L. Ruhlen, Watkins hall; Alita York, Harmon Co-op; Marjorie H. Dilsauer, Locksley hall; Lavonne L. Simpson, Campus house; and Twila Talbert, Hillcrest hall. The winner of this contest will be one of a group of 10 who will compete Saturday night at the Sweetheart Swing for the title of "Sweet-heart of America." All candidates for this contest except "Miss Student Union for 1948" will be guests from surrounding colleges and universities. Lindley Gets New Labs The mining and metallurgical engineering department in Lindley hall is being remodeled to accommodate the increased enrollment. Kenneth E. Rose, of mining and metallurgy said that the metallographic laboratories will be located on the first floor and the fire assaying and heat treating equipment on the ground floor. The mineral dressing laboratory is being revived. Lindley hall will also have a new sample preparation room and shop, a new balance room and more storage space. Frank W. Bowdshi joined the mining and metallurgical engineering department the first of the year as assistant professor, teaching mining and mineral dressing. Professor Bowdshi was employed in the research laboratory of Oliver Iron Mining Co. before coming to Lawrence. He is a graduate of the Montana School of Mines and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Scholars To Have Dinner John H. Michener, College senior, and Harry W. Johnson, engineering senior, will be the after-dinner speakers at the Summerfield dinner to be held at 6 p.m. Thursday, in the Kansas room of the Union. Russians Charge US Responsible For Second War Moscow, Feb. 10—(UP)—The Russian government said today it would soon release captured German documents proving the United States was responsible for the second world war by rearming Hitlerite Germany with a "golden rain of American dollars." Britain and France were equally guilty, Russia charged, by completing a series of separate pacts with Germany which broke down the European policy of collective security against a German resurgence. The Soviet statement was made in answer to the U.S. state department's publication of secret 1939-1941 Russian-German diplomatic documents. These charged the Russians and Germans with a conspiracy to conquer and divide the word. The 6,000 - word statement was described as only the "first half" of the Soviet accusations. The second half will be released later, the Russians said, and then the documents proving the accusations will be published. U. S. "Faked History" Other secret documents showing the guilt of the Western powers have been concealed, Russia charged. The statement said these are the documents which Russia will publish. The Russians asserted that World War II would have ended in the 1940 year with Hitler's defeat if Germany had not been bolstered by American capital and Anglo-French appeasement. "The fakers of history would like to forget all this as they try to evade responsibility for their policy that unleashed the second world war," the statement said. Germany's Reperations Cut Among the steps that helped to rebuild the German armaments industry was the Dawes reparations plan, which reduced Germany's World War I reparations, the statement said. The Russian statement also stressed the role allegedly played by such Anglo-American financial interests as DuPont, Morgan, Rockefeller, Lamond, Standard Oil and the British Imperial chemical trust. It singled out John Foster Dulles and Allen Welsh Dulles, and Defense Secretary James V. Forrestal for having connections with German capitalists. The Second Stage The second stage in the Western powers' responsibility for war was the appeasement of Germany, Russia charged. The Western powers believed there was no danger in fostering German aggression because they planned to direct it to the East, the statement said. It charged that the rise of German aggression was fostered by the Western failure to oppose German violation of the Versailles treaty and failure to defend Ethiopia and Spain. All this time, the statement said, Russia was pleading for collective security in the League of Nations but was being blocked by Anglo-French diplomacy. Rabbi To Address Religious Council Rabbi Joseph Levenson, regional director for the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, will address the Student Religious council on "What Every Christian Should Know About Judaism" in the Mission room of Myers hall at 4 p.m. Wednesday. Rabbi Levenson is a graduate of West Virginia university and a Phi Beta Kappa. He served as chaplain in the air force for three years and is now at Temple B'Nai Israel, Oklahoma City. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS Kansas Author Rises From Poverty To Fame "A cry of Players," the rst play by a Kansan to receive a professional production in New York, was written by Will Gibson, whose success story as a playwright and poet repeats the poverty-to-fame story so often told in America. Hia play, the first on Shakopee Broadway, will be presented Feb. 20 and 21 in Fraser theater during the Kansas Arts and Crafts Festival, and for three nights the following week. It will be Lawrence's first pre-broadway production. Although born in New York, the author has lived in Topeka for several years. Did Not Complete Education Gibson never finished his education. He spent his time day dreaming and writing when he should have been attending to his school work. Out of school, he continued to write, but could not sell his work. He earned what little money he had by playing the piano in small cafes. Gibson appeared over KFKU three years ago on a program given by the Topeka Civic theater. While in Lawrence he asked Allen Crafton, professor of speech and drama, to help him obtain a card which would give him use of the private files in Watson Library. His request granted, he immediately went to work on the material on Shakespeare's life and plays. Later he wrote a play on the early life of the Englishman. Entered Toneka Contest Eventually Gibson married. He wanted to quit writing in order to find a job in which he could earn more money. His wife, however, insisted that he continue, and for the following ten years he received only small payment for his work. At the time Gibson finished his play on Shakespeare, the Topeka Clos theater was offering a prize of $500 for the best play by an American author. Gibson, a member, entered the contest but instead of signing his own name to the manuscript he sent it to a relative in the East who signed another author's name to it. The relative then returned it to Topeka. But the story doesn't end here. Eddie Dowling, New York producer, read the play and persuaded Margaret Webster, one of America's finest directors to produce the play in New York. The play will reach Broadway later in the year. A Book of Verses Mr. Gibson will be in Lawrence during the Arts Festival and for production of his play in Fraser theater. Shortly after the announcement of his winning the prize, the Oxford press accepted his first book of verses. During the third week of February, Gibson will see his play produced and inscribe his name in his first book of poems, "Winter Crook." 2,801,687 Veterans On CI Bill A record high of 2,801,657 veterans were enrolled in schools or job training programs under the G.I. bill and Public Law 16 (for disabled veterans) on January 1, 1948, the Veterans' administration announced recently. State approving agencies and the VA. have okayed nearly threequarters of a million educational institutions and on-the-job training establishments for veterans. The VA's Advisement and Guidance services helped more than one million veterans in selecting their educational programs. Camera Club Will Meet 7:30 Tonight The Camera club will meet at 7:30 tonight in the projection room of the visual aid department, in the north end of Fassar basement. Two movies will be shown on photography. The club will also discuss organization for the second semester, and outline future programs and activities. Anyone interested in any phase of photography is welcome to attend, Tom Dealy, secretary of the club, said. Read the Daily Kansan daily. Parking Renewals Must Be Picked Up Unless the renewals for last semester's parking permits are picked up in the Parking committee office by Friday, all persons desiring them will be required to re-apply for permits, Wayne Gugler, clerk of the office, announced today. Chancellor Deane Matott said this morning that the vacancy of Prof. J. A. Trovillo as chairman of the parking committee will not be filled until the reorganization of all committees for the school year of 1945-1949. Research Bureau Adds New Service The bureau of government research announced recently that it is now able to analyze administrative problems of cities, counties, and school boards in Kansas. The service will be offered at cost. Problems in organization, personnel, and fiscal procedure will be studied at the request of local governing bodies. Members of the research staff and technical analysts of the bureau will make on-the-spot investigations, outline the difficulties, and present detailed recommendations for improved methods of local government administration. Tom Page of the bureau said that requests from city managers had led to the establishment of the service. 'Alaska Still Has Gold' He Says Erie, Pa. —(UP)—Haroled Eide. Alaskan prospector, believes there still is "gold in them that hills" for the sourdough who can withstand the rigors of Arctic weather. Eide, a Norwegian, told an audience here that Alaskaan gold fields have "barely been scratched," while oozes to the surface in other areas. Elide warns against over-optimism, however. For instance, he said he spent 18 months alone in a country before he made a "doubt." Eide also warned potential prospectors that Alaskan economy is hard on the pocketbook. He estimated prices there to be about 40 per cent higher than in the United States. 50 Student Increase Fifty more students are enrolled in the School of Education this semester than were enrolled for the fall term. About 60 of the 400 students enrolled are either transfers from the College or new students at the University. 50 Student Increase In School Of Education F. J. Moreau, before the Law, will speak before the Lyon county bar association, in the Emporia country club at 7:30 p.m. today. His subject will be "Taxation and the National Budget." Moreau To Speak At Emporia Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year. (in Lawrence and $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Uni- tary days and examination periods. Entered as a graduate student in 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence Kan., under act of March 3, 1878. University Daily Kansan A. W.S. senate, 4:45 today, office of dean of women. Official Bulletin Mortar Board will not meet tonight. Feb. 10, 1943 Inter-Dorm council, 5 p.m. today, 210 Frank Strong. Newman club discussion group will not meet tonight. TUESDA $ ^{70} $ , FEBRUARY 10, 1948 A. V.C. executive meeting 7:15 p.m today, 206 Frank Strong. K. U. Mountain club, 7:30 tonight 103 Green hall. Professor Clubb speaker. Phi Kappa Sigma, 7 tonight, 110 Frank Strong. Alpha Kappa Psi, business meeting, 4 today, Union Bldg. University Art club, 7:30 tonight, 315 Frank Strong. Young Democrats, 7:30 tonight, East room. Union, for important meeting. Carl V. Rice, national committeeman to be present. Committees to be appointed. Society for Advancement of Man-agement meeting scheduled for tonight postponed until Feb. 17. Executive board only tonight. Fencing club, 7:30 tonight, 110 Robinson. Coffees and Forums committee. Union Activities, 4 today, Pine room. Professor Osma, discussion leader. Refreshments. Dove staff, 7:30 tonight, room 9, Frank Strong. A.W.S. house of representatives, 4 today, 200 Frank Strong. Tau Beta Pi members helping to conduct slide rule course, 7 tonight, 210 Marvin. Chemistry club. 4 today, 305 Bailey. Movie. *Velocity of Chemical Reactions.* to be shown. Refreshments. All interested invited. Jewish Student union, 8 tonight. Myers hall, upstairs. Refreshments. Camera club, 7:30 tonight, projection room, 15 Fraser. Movies on photography. Alpha Delta Sigma, 7:15 tonight, 107 Journalism. Sunflower Statesmen's club. 7:30 tonight, East room. Union. All former Boys' Staters invited. Student court, 7:30 tonight. Green hall to hear appeals in parking cases of following students: Edward Balda, Paul Benson, Charles Busy, Robert Cater, Martha Dawes, Elmo Geppelt, James Goodell, George Hacssler, Frank Hiebert, Kenneth Hillyer, Ernest Izzard, Keith Jermane, John Kapistos, Billy Keck, F. A. Little—Warren C. Neal, clerk of court. Engineering exposition committee, tonight, 210 Marvin. All members. K.U. Dames bridge, 7:30 p.m. to- morrow, 516 Indiana. Quack club tryouts, 7:30 p.m. Thursday. Robinson gym. Members, 7:15. Practice periods, 4:15-5:15 to day and Thursday. Meeting for all June graduates of School of Business, 4 p.m. tomorrow, Frank Strong auditorium. STOWIT'S Rexall STORE GALES American Custom Chocolates, $1.75 GALES 9 lbs. of wash, 25c Launderette Service 9 lbs of woch 25c DE SABOR SERVICE PLYMOUTH 21 Bendix Washers 813 Vt. Phone 3368 Phone 3506 BULLY GALLAGHER FINE Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SOUARE DEAL Attendance required. Any other June graduates wishing services of business placement bureau welcome. Job opportunities and registration forms to be explained. Interview schedules to be outlined. Chancellor Malott to speak briefly on business opportunities. All-Student council, 7:15 tonight, Pine room, Union. Announcements committee meeting of Union Activities tomorrow night includes all old and new announcers. Student Religious council, 4 p.m. tomorrow, Myers hall. All new applicants and past members of Student Union Activities committees, 7 p.m. tomorrow, Union ballroom. Important. Christian Fellowship, 7 p.m. tomorrow, Danforth chapel. Rev. Lynn Hodges of Topeka, guest speaker. Eagle staff, 8:30 p.m. Thursday, English room, Union. Any others interested welcome. K. U. Archery club, 7 p.m. Thursday, room 204, Robinson gym. Bring dues. Anyone interested in joining invited. Le Cercle francais se reunirai jeudi le 12 fravier a sept heures et quart dans la salle 113 de Frank Strong hall. Y.M.C.A. cabinet, 5 p.m. Friday, East room, Union. The typewriting machine was invented by Charles Thurber in 1843. Record Number See Caves In 1890 Yosemite, Sequoia and General Grant national parks were established in California. Carlsbad, N. M.—(UP)—Visitors to the famed Carlsbad Caverns in 1947 set an all-time high, with more than 400,000 persons seeing the caves. The peak month was August, when 7,000 persons saw the caverns. for Soup You Are Always Welcome at Hot Chili SNAPPY LUNCH Malts Sandwiches 1010 Massachusetts Eye WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames Lawrence Optical Co. Eye "Always ready to serve" Daily Specials----Home Made Pies GEMMELL'S CAFE 717 Mass. Phone 2072 DIAMONDS Fine Color Brilliant Distincti $50.00 to $500.00 Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER 809 Mass. 50.00 50.00 Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER GASOLINE PRICES ARE UP BUT OUR PRICES REMAIN LOW! Gasoline refineries have raised the price of their products to service stations. Therefore, prices are up. We have been forced to raise our prices slightly, but our high-test "Vickers" gasoline is still between one and two cents cheaper than average. REGULAR 225 TAX PAID ETHYL $ 2 3^{5} $ U USED CARS We Buy, Sell, or Trade—Cash or Terms Crystal Oil Company Sixth and Kentucky TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Socially Speaking Sig Ep Pledges Sigma Phi Epsilon announces the pledging of William Wells, Boise; Idaho; William Paxton, Lawrence; William Spann, Kansas City, Mo.; Jack Williams, Joplin, Mo.; Herb Mesigh, Atchison; William Fisher, Topeka; and William Hausler, Kansas City, Mo. - * * Tri Delt Pledges Delta Delta Delta announces the pledging of Louise DeLay, Topeka; Barbara Fletcher, Kansas City, Mo.; Ruth Henry, Des Moines, Iowa; Priscilla Richmond, Kansas City; Rosetta Snow, Bartlesville, Okla.; and Gloria Wasson, Wichita. Dinner Guests ATO Affiliation Alpha Tau Omega announces the affiliation of Gene Mariani from Colgate University, and Jim Hops from the University of Idaho. Hour Dance Monchasia Hall, 1014 Miss., will hold an open hour dance Wednesday, Feb. 11, from 7 to 8:00 p.m. Teke Party "The Court of Two Sisters," first party of the second annual Teke Mardi Gras, was held Saturday night at the Tau Kappa Epsilon chapter house. Music was furnished by Charles O'Connor's swing quintet. Dinner Guests Guests for Sunday dinner at the Alpha Tau Omega house were Agnes Husband, Anne Shafeer, Doty Miller, and Lucille Murray. Teke Party Guests included: Celeste Beesley, Rosalee Bishop, Bernice Brady, Virginia Brown, Betty Byam, Virginia Coppedge, Nancy Cameron, Ann Cowger, Betty Crawford, Kahy Culley, Dolores DFries, Margaret Dickinson, Virginia Daugherty, Jean Gillie. Nina Green, Jo Ann Hepworth, Nancy Jackson, Barbara Karges, Betty Land, Mildred Marks, Mary Jean McCartney, Pat McClure, Marjorie McCullough, Norma Mendenhall, Charlotte Metcalfe, Veda Nicholas, Mary Lou Peckenscheider, Jeanne Marie Smith, Nancy Smith. Dorothy Stevenson, Marilyn Swenson, Joanne Varnum, Bonnie Louise Warner, Kathy Watkins, Kathleen Brode. Other guests were: Mr. and Mrs. John Beach, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Watson, Col. and Mrs. John Alfrey. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Bolthe, Mr. and Mrs. Nick Nichols, Mr. and Mrs. Eugene C. Kane, Georgia Pepercorn, Nancy Johnson, Barbara Philson, Jeanette Alexander, Ione Watley, and Ben Foster. The chaperones were; Mrs. H. P. Ramage, Mrs. T. Wayne Harris, Mrs. H. J. Overholser, and Mrs. C. W. Jackson. Tekes Entertain The pledge class of Tau Kappa Epsilon entertained the pledges of Kappa Kappa Gamma at a dinner and hour dance Saturday afternoon. S.A.S. Meeting Postponed Society for the Advancement of Management executive meeting scheduled for this evening has been postponed, according to L. J. Tolle, S.A.M. president. Kenneth A. Spencer will be guest speaker at the executive meeting next Tuesday evening, February 17. Some of the finest garnets in the world have been brought to the surface by ants in New Mexico. Charme Beauty Salon formerly Iva's Beauty Shop phone 533 All types of beauty work by capable operators. Mid-winter special price on permanents machine and machineless. Nettie L. Wolfe, Owner Dorothy, A Steno, Crosses Her Bridges As She Sees Them Washington—(UP)—Take stenographers, for instance, said the witness. A gal named Dorothy, say, sits at a desk next to a guy named George. She writes as many letters a day as he does. They both put in eight hours a day, including half an hour for lunch. All right, then, said the brunette lady legislator from California. Dorothy ought to get as much money ___ as George. The brunette was Rep. Helen Gahagan Douglas, one time actress and singer. She was up before an all-male house labor subcommittee to tell about her bill that would give equal pay to women who do the same work as men. "But," butted in Rev. O. C. Fisher of Texas, sending up a smoke screen from his fat, round cigar, "Let's take a situation in reverse. "Suppose our gal is pretty—our Dorothy. She wears a faceful of personality and smiles at everybody who comes into the office. She has a lot of contacts among the boss' customers. Shouldn't she get more at the end of the week than old George over there, who probably is a dope to start out with and hasn't smiled since his fourth kid arrived?" "Well," said Mrs. Douglas, reversing her field and smoothing the skirt of her trim, blue serge suit, "in that case Dorothy ought to be_classified as a public relations person." "Now," said Mr. Fisher, "aren't most office workers public relations people when you get right down to it?" Mrs. Douglas, talking with both hands, said maybe so. But that wasn't her point. She said she'd be satisfied if Dorothy made as much as George, and if she could talk the boss into more—well and good. The spectators in the little committee room were mostly women. They bobbed feathered hats in approval. Mr. Fisher came up again. The speculators leaned forward. The Texas congressman said that from the tone of Mrs. Douglas' bill, with women getting discriminated against at the pay window—it would seem to add up that we consider the ladies inferior to the men. He said this being election year and with Weddings And Engagements Waddell-Hawkins The engagement of Harriet Waddell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. G. N. Waddell, Salina, to Thomas Hawkins, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Hawkins, was announced Friday at the Kappa Kappa Gamma house. Assisting Miss Waddell were Eileen Maloney, Elizabeth Shears, and Marty Waddell. Mrs. A. G. McKay, housemother, and the attendents received gardenia corsages. Marty Waddell received a carnation corsage and Miss Waddell, a corsage of Spanish iris. Miss Waddell, is a College junior. Mr. Hawkins, a College sophomore, is a member of Phi Gamma Delta. women having more votes than men, according to statistics, it would seem that Mrs. D. was outsmarting her fellow congressman. Nobody in his right mind could afford to vote against it. Mrs. Douglas smiled. Rep. Samuel K. McConnell, Jr., of Pennsylvania, chairman of the subcommittee, said far be it from him to argue with a woman. He agreed, he said, with the objective of Mrs. Douglas' bill. But wouldn't it be awkward to administer? Wouldn't we, he suggested, have to have a lot more machinery and people? And wouldn't Interstate Commerce raise hob with classifying workers? Mrs. Douglas said she understood the labor department had a plan all worked out. Being a woman, she Fort Wayne, Ind.—(UP)—The Fort Wayne public library has opened a phonograph record department enabling literary pairons to borrow albums and single recordings as well as books. Public Library Lends Records, Too Three sound-proof albums equipped with record players have been built in the main library building so that borrowers may choose their music before they take it home. An adjoining concert room will be ready soon. Library officials say some 900 albums from a collection of 3,250 are available to the public for a deposit fee of $5 remitted at the end of borrowing. The remainder of the albums and some 4,200 single records, all valuable and irreplaceable, may be heard at the library only or at private concerts arranged by the library. said, she wasn't worried about what would happen tomorrow. Women, she concluded, cross a bridge when it comes up in the road. Rip Brown's 5 BOPS SKYLINE — Wed-Fri-Sat 21 Send Her A Book THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Phone 666 Valentine's Day We have a wide selection from which to choose. And we gladly wrap for mailing. Let Us Dry Clean Your Clothes Regularly Odorless Cleaning We pick up and deliver any day at any time. Open 7:30-6:00 Mon. through Sat. Hillside FOR ARROW TIES & HANDKERCHIEFS The Palace BAND BOX CLEANERS 9th & Indiana Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers. Ph.123 4. The cost? Very low—ties, $1 up. (You might get him a box of handsome Arrow Handkerchiefs while you're at it.) How to get your man the EASY way For A Complete Line of Arrow Products GO TO- I ❤️ I ❤️ (We have some brand new patterns for college men.) 1. Buy one of Arrow's neat-knotting ties. 2. Slip it around the Boy Friend's neck (He will purr like a kitten.) 3. Tie a knot! There! You have him! (He will love the way his Arrow ties up into a full, firm knot.) CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES LADIES! THROW AWAY THOSE BEAR TRAPS 中 Lasso your Lil' Abners come Valentine's Day with a couple of well-chosen Arrow ties. We suggest a couple of Arrow knits in solid colors or stripes, $1.50 (made especially for college men) or some smart Arrow stripes and English patterned foulards from $1.00. Drop in at Drop in at your Arrow store and pick out a brace of beauties. Arrow handkerchiefs with your man's initials from 35c. e rt ing- oulards ARROW SHIRTS and TIES UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1948 KU Tripped By Tigers, Drops To Tie For Third By BOB DELLINGER Daily Kansan Sports Editor The University of Missouri Tigers took advantage of an extremely cold basket-shooting by the Kansas Jayhawkers Monday night to eke out a 42 to 39 victory and move past the Jayhawkers into second place in the Big Seven conference race. The loss, third in a row for Kansas, dropped the Jayhawkers into a third place tie with the Oklahoma Sooners, who snowed Nebraska under a 79 to 57 score at Norman. Nebraska defeated Kansas here Saturday for the locals' first conference loss. The game was a rough and tumble affair from the start, but referees Cliff Ogden and Andy Skraddski kept the game well in hand, calling 59 fouls, and the only temper flares of players were raised at the officials. Three Tigers and two Kansans left the game on fouls. Teams Hit Free Throws Both teams hit an amazing number of free throws, with the Jayhawkers sinking 1 in 30 tries, and the visitors 18 in 29 attempts. Kansas was cold from the field, however, making only one line goals in 55 shots for 16 per cent, while the Tigers sank 12 out of 44 for 27 per cent. Kansas went 10 minutes in the second half before scoring a feld goal, but stayed even with the Tigers on charity tosses. Making their points one at a time, the two teams remained even all the way, with the final score providing the greatest second half margin. Missouri once pulled away to a five-point lead midway in the first period, the greatest lead of the game, but the Jayhawkers closed the gap with four fives and a goal. Eskridge Finds Range Big southpaw Jack Eskridge of Kansas, playing the single post position at forward, dunked in over half the Kansas basket total with five, and added an equal number of free throws to lead the Jayhawkers in scoring with 15 points. The brilliant defensive play of Kansan Jerry Waugh held Missouri's "Fancy Dan" Pippin to three free throws, two of them coming on fouls by another Kansas player. Waugh scored one goal and two frees for four points. Missouri's other league-leading scorer, Thornton Jenkins, hit the basket three times from the field and twice from the charity line for an eight-point total, but had to give up team scoring honors to guard Karl Pierpoint who hit an equal number of baskets and two more free throws. Otto Schnell-bacher of Kansas hit nine points. The Jayhawkers led 39 to 38 with three minutes to go, but Jerry Fowler, 6 foot 6-inch Tiger center, drove off the post for the basket which put Missouri out in front for the final time. The Tigers went into a stall, and when Kansas took up a rushing game, Jenkins drove in for a basket to ice the game. Both teams refused free throws in the final two minutes. Kansas held a 22 to 20 edge on the Tigers at halftime, but had to outscore Missouri from the charity line to get it as the Tigers hit one more field goal. The Tigers came into an inisthesis into a one-point lead, and from that time the lead see-saved within a two-point range. Baltimore, Feb. 10—(UP) — J o e Louis expressed confidence today that he would do more harm to Jersey Joe Walcott in June than he did to Leo Matricianni in a four-round exhibition bout last night. Louis Has Trouble In Exhibition Bout The heavyweight champion predicted. "Till stop Walcott." But he didn't stop Matricianni, a Baltimore Italian, who gave the somewhat blubbery champ a stiff workout at the Coliseum. Only once did Joe hurt his opponent. That was in the third round when Louis, hooked by face blows, sank a solid left hand to Matricianni's stomach. Although half jackknifed by the punch, the Baltimore belter recovered quickly and fought back. Box Scores MISSOURI (42) fg ft ffm pf tp Pippin, f 0 3 1 5 3 Jenkins, f 3 2 4 5 8 McMillen, c 0 4 4 2 4 Haynes, g 3 1 1 5 7 Pierpoint, g 3 4 0 3 10 Wachter 1 1 0 1 3 Fowler 1 1 0 2 3 Stroot 0 0 0 0 0 Bidewell 1 0 0 1 2 Smith 0 2 1 4 2 TOTALS 12 18 11 29 42 KANSAS (39) Schnellbacher, f 2 5 1 3* 9 Dewell, f 0 2 0 5 2 Waugh, c 1 2 4 3 4 Sapp, g 1 3 1 5 5 Houchin, g 0 2 1 1 2 Eskridge 5 5 2 5 13 Enns 0 0 0 2 0 Barr 0 0 0 3 0 Stramel 0 0 0 0 0 Mabry 0 0 0 0 0 England 0 2 0 2 2 Penalties 0 0 0 0 0 *—Technical foul; Schenclbacher **Officials:** Ogden and Skrandski Billikens Whip Irish 68-51 New York, Feb. 10—(UP)—Notre Dame's famed 38-game winning streak on its own basketball court lay, in ruins today, pounded to dust last night, 68 to 51, by the rampaging Billikens of St. Louis university—perhaps the best college team in the nation. The ease with which the Billikens racked up their 15th win in 16 games at the expense of the Irish amazed the court world and assured St. Louis of a final high ranking nationally. A post-season tournament invitation, with its shot at a clear-cut national championship, was a foregone conclusion. The standout performer for St. Louis was "Easy Ed" MacAuley, graceful 6 foot, 8 inch pivot man who ranks as the leading giant in the collegiate game today. The 21 points he scored and his mastery of the backbxoards were the big factor in the Irish defeat, the first they have suffered at home since bowing to Western Michigan on Dec. 4, 1943. Aggies Are Stingy The Oklahoma Aggies, the game's foremost exponent of "old fashioned" control basketball, gave a masterful exhibition by beating Creighton, 35 to 15. Creighton tried to match the Aggies in their defensive wiles and the result was a weird game featuring styles of play rarely seen any more. After 10 minutes the Aggies led, 7 to 2, and at the half they were on top, 13 to 6. During the second half scoring "speeded up" and the Aggies scored 22 points, Creighton nine. J. L. Parks of A. and M. was high scorer with 10 points. Iowa Moves Up Purdue, after trailing most of the way, rallied to beat Minnesota, 53 to 51, and take fourth place in the conference. Andy Butchko of Purdue scored 13 points himself and held the Gophers' high-scoring Jim McIntyre to the same total. In the Big Nine, Iowa climbed into a first-place tie with Wisconsin by beating Illinois, 70 to 61. Freewheeling Murray Wier dropped in 24 points for the victorious Hawkeyes while Dwight Eddleman canned 24 for Illinois. The Ohio river is nearly 1,000 miles in length, is 1,500 feet in width in several places and contains numerous islands. Philadelphia, Feb. 10.—(UP) — Lightweight Champion Ike Williams eyed Ray "Sugar" Robinson's welterweight crown today after handing Italy's Livio Minelli the first defeat of his career. Ike Williams Starts Toward Welter Title The Trenton, N. J., lightweight kid showed definitely he could handle the bigger game in the welter Towle Leads Y.W. Discussion The community Service group of Y.W.C.A. did not meet Feb. 9, as scheduled, but several members participated in an informal religious discussion led by Father Towle in the Union. class last night as he won a unanimous 10-round decision over the previously unbeaten Italian welterweight champ in a non-title bout here. --in ATTENTION! Come in and let our own exclusive seat cover department give the inside of your car that 'new look'. Over 35 designs in rayon, plastic, or fiber covers expertly made to fit your car. MORGAN-MACK 609 Mass. Phone 277 SILVER FORK ROYAL DANISH PATTERN International Sterling ROYAL DANISH stands alone among the American adaptations of modern Scandinavian design. Impeccable in every detail of balance and proportion, Royal Danish made in U. S. A. — is the finest flowering of New England craftsmanship in solid silver. A pattern for bold voyagers . . . for those who seek the unusual, the new, in all things . . . for whom the merely adequate is not enough . . . Ask us to show you Royal Danish. Feel its great strength, see the lovely logic of its flawless design. Jewelry 833 Mass. ROBERT'S Gifts Phone 837 AYHAWKER Shows 2:30-7-9 —Ends Tonite!— XLARBAT SCOTT BURT LANCASTER DESTRICT FIRE network Plus Tom & Jerry Cartoon WEDNESDAY - One Week! It's Magnificent! Dennis MORGAN WHOSE DAYS YOU CAN CHARM THE STARS RIGHT OUT OF THE SKY "My Wild Irish 'Rose" m TECHNICOLOR 16 Gay SONGS ARLENE DAHL ANDREA KING ALAN HALE GEORGE TOMBS GRANADA NOW—Ends WED. THAT MOST HILARIOUS COMEDY TEAM! Lucille BALL Franchot TONE "HER HUSBAND'S AFFAIRS" 3-$24.95 Emerson Radios FREE from our Stage THURSDAY----9:00 P.M. On the Screen: — "BLACK GOLD" That story of thoroughbred horses and humans! VARSITY TUESDAY ONLY Quarterback Showing of Orange Bowl Game Afternoon & Evening WED. — 4 Days "TRAILING DANGER" plus "WHITE STALLION" PATEE TONITE—ALL WEEK Gateway to Romance! Brian Donkowy Susan Hayward "CANYON PASSAGE" —2nd Feature— Torrid—Terrific! Yvonne De Carlo Rod Cameron "FRONTIER GAL" the b T the w t to so N a se q d t s s l e se c t b se m to TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE FIVE SPOTLIGHT ON SPORTS By BOB DELLINGER Daily Kansan Sports Editor Kansas fans at the Missouri-kansas game put on the most disgraceful and disgusting exhibition of "sportsmanship" seen on any court in many years. The so-called "rooters" deliberately hurt their team's chances to win an important game by booing members of the Jayhawker team and the Kansas coach. We've little to say regarding booing or yelling at officials—that's been an accepted part of the game since it was invented. But the utter stupidity or deliberate opposition to the team—call it what you wish—displayed Monday night completely destroys any sympathy we ever had for a basketball crowd. Coach Allen has been in the game for 39 years, winning championships in 27 of them and coaching a losing team only once. He is recognized as one of the all-time greats of the game. It's obvious that the basketball knowledge of any grandstand coach pales into nothing in this comparison. There can be no question that his decisions are made for the betterment of the team, and there can be no question that he is more qualified than anyone else to make those decisions. Crowds at other Big Seven schools have been rated harder on the officials, but no other crowd we've ever seen could top the K.U. spectators in unsportsmanlike conduct. We won't plead with members of that crowd not to let it happen again—anyone who would pull that type of stunt is either too stupid to know the difference, or too steeped in his own ego to care. The officials take a lot of abuse in any basketball game but the arbiters at Saturday's game with Nebraska must have left the game with wet shoulders to add to their troubles. The wet shoulders must have been caused by the excessive crying over decisions by the Nebraska team. It surprised us that no one tossed a towel onto the floor as the red-shirted Nebraska players / continually pulled the cry-baby act after every foul was called. The pained looks displayed by Nebraska players after fouling, even extremely obvious fouls, would have put the war crimes pictures to shame. No other team we have played this year has been so out- and-out babyish without particular cause. The Missouri and Kansas players uttered mild beeps after some fouls, and ten clammed up—a trick for which we admire them (for shutting up, that is). Perhaps we'd better issue the warning to all visitors to Lincoln to take along life preservers to keep from drowning in Nebraska tears. Doc Flibel, our genial announcer at basketball games, issued what seems to us an unreasonable request at the Nebraska game Saturday. He asked all spectators not to try to reserve seats, while at the same moment several of our varsity football players were busily engaged in holding some of the best seats in the house for the Chancellor and other University brass. There might be some complications in fighting off some husky bruiser from some choice seat reserved for a friend, but if the administration can get someone else to do the job, surely we're entitled to fry. Oklahoma 79, Nebraska 57 Tulane 59, Georgia Tech 55 Georgia 73, Chattanooga 55 Kentucky 82, Vanderbilt 51 Centenary 69, La. Tech 36 Bradley 76, North Dakota 51 Iowa 70, Illinois 61 Wisconsin 51, Mich. State 39 St. Louis 68, Notre Dame 51 Purdue 53, Minnesota 51 Northwestern 47, Ohio State 45 St. Benedicts 84, Pittsburg (Kans. Teachers 37 Basketball Results Oklahoma A, & M. 35, Creighton 15 Drake 69, Tulsa 53 THREE-TIME ALLEL CONFERENCE FORWARD AND A GOOD BET TO BE CHOOSEN AGAIN! OTTO SCHNEILBACHER KANSAS FORWARD "PHOS' ALLEN CALLS HIM ONE OF THE BEST ATHLETES IN K.U. HISTORY. HE WAS ALL-CONFERENCE GRID END THREE TIMES. CO-CAPT OF HIS SQUAD IN 47. LED THE CONFERENCE IN PASS RECEIVING FOR THE FAST TWO YEARS. HARD TO GUARD, TRICKY UNDER THE BASKET, AND BEST ON RUNNING ONE-HAND SHOTS AND HOOK SHOTS 2.5 YEARS OLD, 6'3" 175.lb. SUBLETTE, KANS." Members of the Ku Kus will pass the hat at basketball games for donations to the March of Dimes drive sponsored on the campus by the Alpha Phi Omega service fraternity. The Ku Ku club will sponsor an all school dance April 16, Raibh Reg Robertson, acting president, said at the business meeting Thursday night. 'Outside Pressure' Forces Masterson To Quit NU Lincoln, Neb., Feb. 10—(U)P —University of Nebraska officials expressed bitterness today over "outside pressure" which prompted football coach Bernie Masterson to resign after two unsuccessful seasons. Masterson, a former Cornhusker football star, admitted that "circumstances beyond my control" caused Ku Kus Announce Dance To Be Heid April 16 28 Letters Are Given Twenty-eight varsity football letters and 40 freshman numerals have been approved for award, University athletic officials announced to-day. The following varsity team members, who carried Kansas through a season of undefeated play and into the College bowl games, Years day, were named for letters; John Amberg, Hally Brot, Jack Fueber, Dave Fischer, Shenel Garnett, James Griffith, John R. Idoux, Henry Lamping, Albert R. Lowrie, Mike McCormack, Wm R. Reinders, im Sattierdecker, Imse Schröter, Dylan Galgall, R. Stinson, Simon J. Wall, Donald Wilson, Robert Wolfe, Glen W. Bloom, Gene Cox. Hoyt Baker, Richard Bertuzzi, Ralph Brown, Joseph Crawford, Dot Ettinger, Ray Evans, Don Fambrough, Jack Fink, Clarence French, Forrest Griffith, William Hogan, Hugh Johnson, Ed Lee, Clifford McDonald, Lynne McNutt, Charles Moffett, Dick Monroe, Terry Monroe, Frank Pattete, Steve Renko, David O Schmidt, Otto Schnellbacher, T. A. Scott, Marvin Small, Brian Sperry, Kenneth Sperry, Richard Tomlinson, and D. D. Pittenger, manager. Jack W. Bushno, John Eutlich, John Goodson, Jr., Phil Hawkins, Duane Kimball, Albert Krause, Ted Law, Jim Lord, Kenneth Medearis, Ernst C. Meis, James A. Mooney, Victor Nalley, Bob Near, Tom Nelson, Frost Noll, Frederick Reith, Jim Retter, Matt Rodina, Glenn Starmer, and Thomas White. Freshman numerals were awarded to the following players: him to take the surprise move. Chancellor R. G. Gustavson issued a caustic statement in reply, castigating pressure groups, mainly alumni in Lincoln and Omaha, who had been clamoring for a new coach. Most of the clamor has been for Col. Lawrence "Biff" Jones, who is leaving his post as graduate manager of athletics at the West Point military academy. "When the university hired Masterson as its football coach, it was aware, or should have been aware of his qualifications for the job it gave him," Gustavson said. "It gave him a five-year contract in 1946. "The real principle here goes beyond the football scene. I regret that Masterson has resigned because of pressure from a segment of public opinion which by no stretch of the imagination was unanimous over the state. I hope that a situation of this kind will never occur again." Eight men were recently initiated in to the Alpha Chi Sigma, professional chemistry fraternity. AXE Initiates Eight Masterson, in his letter of resignation indicated he didn't want to take the step but thought it best to do so. Masterson was quarterback for the Huskers in 1931, 1932, and 1933, and starred for the Chicago Bears before returning here for the 1946 season. His teams won only five of 18 games during those two seasons, but material at the school hit a low point during the war and the one-time big recruiting system which combed the state for football players was not put back into operation. They are John H. Gerety, Judson E. Goodrich, Harold M. Hubbard, E. Eugene Innis, David R. McGuire, Russell B. Mesler, Ralph Reg, Robertson, and R. Joseph Steininger. A small lake or fish pond is a valuable asset to any farm. Doris Dodson JUNIOR ORIGINALS Doris Dodson JUNIOR ORIGINALS As seen in Junior Bazaar, Dark Wings...rayon bengaline faille two-piece by DORIS DODSON. Black or brown; 9 to 15. $16.98 The Grayce Shop SAMBURY IT'S A PLEASURE to wear a well laundered shirt IT LOOKS BETTER IT FEELS BETTER IT LASTS LONGER INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners 740 Vermont St. PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1948 "Up, Jumbo, Up!" WORLD ECONOMIC PROGRAM STASSEN HERBLOCK The Editorial Page One And One Make Bizonia Bizonia sounds like a mythical kingdom in a comic opera. Actually it is the name of the newly merged Anglo-American occupation zones of Germany. There is little comic opera relief in the new union. One sour note is contributed by Russia. Tub-thumpers for the plan to merge all the German zones have always insisted that Russia would make it a trio sooner or later. The combined English and American zones give those two powers control over two-thirds of Germany's population and three-fourths of her industrial resources. Russia, with 18 million Germans in an area largely devoid of resources, was supposed to come running into the fold. So far the iron curtain has remained as tightly closed as a medieval portcullis. In the past, Russian diplomats have blandly reversed policy decisions apparently without a care for the consequences. However, a move to join hands with the western powers in a union of the three German zones of occupation might be a diplomatic maneuver even the Russians would not dare undertake. In view of Russia's sniping at the United States and Britain, the decision would call for a preparatory barrage of counter-propaganda that would surely throw European Communists into a state of confusion. Russia's non-aggression pact with Germany just before the war had much the same result. No doubt Russia remembers the incident. It is difficult to see how there can be any unity in Europe with a "cold war" in full swing. The case of Germany is just an illustration. The propaganda exchange between the West and Russia has set the path of relations between the two. Any contrary action must come slowly. A change in the propaganda line takes a lot of spadework and deep digging. A senior class gift of benches and seats on the campus would be acceptable, but who would have time to sit on them? Magic Circle Statistician Roger W. Babson has drawn a "magic circle" around his Utopia college at Eureka, Kan. Within the 400-mile radius of this circle would be, he claims, the safest spot in the United States in an atomic world war. When Babson founded Utopia college in a small prairie town and suggested that eventually it should be entirely underground for full security against future attack, people laughed at his plan and forgot about it. Now he has extended it to a community prospect involving parts of seven states. His plans are to make this area of 15 million people self-sufficient. All the area needs is heavy industry to make it a self-supporting economic unit. These elaborate preparations for protection in a future war merit attention in the light of accurate predictions by Roger Babson. Babson's Reports, Inc., tells clients throughout the United States and Canada when to buy and when to sell shares of their investments. He has his own newspaper syndicate. Publishers Financial bureau, which distributes his views to the newspapers. He is the founder of several business institutes, the author of many books on money and investments, as well as some on his other interest—religion in relation to business and better living. His explanation of his forecasts is based on the law of action and reaction. He believes that "an abnormal depression must follow abnormal activity; lower prices must follow higher prices, or vice versa; and that as classes or nations we must ourselves get what we give and must prosper as we serve." This belief-enabled him to forecast clearly the 1925-35 business cycle. His most famous prediction was made on Sept. 5, 1929—a drop in stock prices of 60 to 80 points. When stocks did make the predicted drop, people began to Dear Editor Time Balm Dear Editor, No we're really quite fond of oranges, as well as gators, deltas, salads, cigars, etc. Due to the cinema and press sections' unusual length, our sport department was limited to a single page in the Jan. 12 issue—with the result that our Miami report, along with several other items, unfortunately had to be killed. Like our sister magazine Life, which led off with the Orange bowl on a five page bowl spread, however, Time was watching Kansas' fortune that day, you can be sure. Cordially, Charlotte Gray for the editors of Time magazine (Editor's note: The sport section of the Jan. 12 issue of Time magazine omitted any comment about the Kansas-Georgia Tech Orange bowl game. The editor of the Daily Kansas wired Time and asked, "Allergic to oranges?" look to Roger Babson for economic guidance. Now Babson is predicting the coming of a third or atomic world war. Deciding that his college in Wellesley Hills, Mass., was too close to the large industrial and economic centers for comfort, he evolved his self-sufficiency plan for the most remote central section of the nation. Here he established Utopia college and the "magic circle" as a practical evasion of the atomic bomb. The "seer of Wellesley Hills" foresees a dark future for the world. Lois Lauer Wallace has started the third party, but no one can decide for sure which other party is supposed to be glad about it. Deane W. Malott, chancellor of the University, was present at a dinner Sunday night honoring Henry J. Haskell, editor of the Kansas City Star, who celebrated his fifteenth anniversary with the newspaper. Malott Attends Dinner Honoring K.C. Star Editor Mr. Haskell, who has won two Pulitzer awards, received congratulatory messages from President Truman, ex-President Hoover and many other nationally known personalities. Chancellor Malott was photographed with Mr. Haskell and Dr. Frederick A. Middlebush, president of the University of Missouri. Larson Will Resume Teaching Miss Mary E. Larson, instructor of parasitology, who has been absent the past week with a broken arm, plans to return today. Call K. U. 251 With Your News University Daily Hansan Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assm. National Advertising Association and the Associate Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Bureau, 420 Madison Ave., Brook City, Ky. Editor-in-Chief ... William C. Von Maurer Managing Editor ... Alan J. Stewart Asst. Man. Editor ... Cooper Plow Asst. Man. Editor James Lain City Editor ... Gene Vignery Asst. City Editor ... James Robinson Telegraph Editor ... Wallace W Abbey George Thurston Asst. Tel. Editor ... William Barger Sports Editor ... Robert Dellinger Asst. Sports Editor Paul Zeh Sports Editor James Jones Women's Sports Editor ... Anna Mary Murphy Feature Editor ... John Wheeler Society Editor Halsey Lewis Society Editor Dorothy James Business Manager ... Betty Bacon Advertising Manager ... Robert Alderson Circulation Manager ... Otto Meyer Classified Manager ... David Clymer National Advt. Mgr. ... David Clymer Promotion Mgr. ... Winston Shreve PRESS KANSAS The Kansas Press Association KANSAS 19 MEMBER 48 National Editorial Association A FREE PRESS—YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW KANSAS 19 MEMBER 48 MEMBER BILL'S GRILL 1109 Mass. Phone 2054 QUICK COURTEQUS SERVICE Across from the Courthouse 1009 Mass. BLUE MILL Open 11 till 8 THE MODERN HOUSEWIFE carries her radio with her. It's a Westinghouse 125 portable electric Capsule size WHITEBELL Mellow console tone - Styled on all sides Oliver Service Company AUTHORIZED Phone 253 DEALER 723 Mass. Topeka, Russell Win Debates Topeka high school won the Class AA Kansas regional high school debate tournament held at the University last Saturday. Russell high school won second place in the Class AA division. Abilene won the Class A regional title with a record of six wins and no losses. Olathe was second. Both Topeka and Russell won 9 out of 10 debates. However Topeka speakers had a higher total of speakers ratings than Russell. All four of the schools are qualified to compete for the state championships here next Saturday. The top two teams in each class from the other three regionals will also compete. Russell is defending its 1547 Class AA state championship. Junior Class To Meet Open discussion on the junior class project will be held at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Pine room of the Union. The class will decide whether to hold a concert or a dance on April 10. If a dance is given, the juniors will decide whether to hire a name band or a local band for the music. Parker 51 Fountain Pens Super Chrome Ink STOWIT'S Rexall STORE FRIED SHRIMP A Specialty Duck's Tavern 824 VERMONT CHEF the fashion spotlight is on RED LIFE HOLLYWOOD INSPIRED Jolene SHOES $8.95 The Walker Shop Music All Day X-ray Fittings 813 Mass. Phone 259 LIFE TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10. 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Daily Kansan Classified Advertising Copy must be in the University Daily Kansan Business Office. Journal bldg. later than 4 p.m. of the day before publication are fired. All classifications are cash in advance. Classified Advertising Rates Classified Advertising dates three days five days days days 25 words or less 35e 65e 90e additional words 1e 2e 3e For Sale PRACTICALLY all Charva drawing newborn, trailer house, 13 Mass. evenings REIMINGTON Deluxe Portable Typewriter. Nearly new. Phone 3187R. 12 PRACTICALLY new Motorola Radio with Chevrolet head control, Good hot water heater. H. E. Wright 1224 R. I., 1308M. 16 DIETZTG Commander drawing instruments. Used one semester. Excellent Quinten Ph. Quinten Long at 3338 after 7:00 p.m. FOR SALE: One apt, size washer-like new, 1225 Kv., Phone 1733W. 11 EARN SOME easy money - twenty-five for sale. Former owner changed school. See evenings at 321 Lane 14, Sunflower. ARGOFLEX, f4.5, with carrying case, Kodachrome adapter, filter case with filter retaining ring and filters. Excellent condition. James Pinks. Pn. 2082 ever- TUXEDO for sale. size 40. Inquire a Cottage cafe. Phone 2. 1 TYPEWRITERS sold and rented. Peter son's, 6 East 8th. Phone 13. 1 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. HTFD 99 Transportation WANT ride to and (or) from K.C., Mom, Wed, and Friday. Arrive Lawrence, 9 a.m. in K.C., Dk for Let Noe. in K.C., Dk for Let Noe. RIDERS WANTED: K.C., to Lawrence, daily. Arrive Lawrence 8:45 a.m. Leave Lawrence 3:00 p.m. Call 29353. I RIDERS WANTED: Leaving every Fri through Sat. Returning every Wishita. Returning every Sunday evening. Call 3170. Harry Shultz. I RIDERS WANTED: Driving to and from Lawrence. Arrive Lawrence, 9 a.m. Chestnut 6206 K.C., Moe, or leave name at Daily Kansas Business Office. I For Rent TWO nice single or double rooms for men students. Good location on bus line. SWELL two-room apartment. See Clint Edwards at 80, Indiana. BOARD AND ROOM. Have three double chairs, and dorm room. $55 per month. Call 664 866 events. LARGE WELL furnished room, inner spring mattress, newly decorated for new students. Close to town and K.U. Phonp 1128. 130 Verm St. $1'$ WANTED ONE girl to share double room, one block from Union Bldg. 1245 Lousi- la Place. QUARTERS FOR colored girls: Vacancy for one girl. Single bed, warm, neat, private bath, kitchen and wash room. Call 1735-R after 5:30 p.m. 13 TWO ROOMS for boys, single or double. Will consider kitchen privileges—reasonably priced. 1016 Rhode Island. Call 2855-M at 3:00 p.m. 13 VERY ATTRACTIVE room for two boys, campus, 1157 Ky Meyer, Oph, 2324-W. VACANCY for two men on top of the Hill. 1228 Louisiana. 10 A STUDENT to share a double room with an engineer. Also a single room for one man. Close to the University. One block from bus line. Phone 18763. Bathroom. Kids New home. Private entrance and baths. $12.50 per month each. 2027 Kentucky. 11 Wanted YOUNG man to share room with K.U. student. Downtown, modern, near K.U. bus line. 714 N.H. 16 room to share large room. to share large room. 721 M., 3086 M. K.U. Bus stop one-half block. 16 MALE STUDENT to share student room; also man to share apartment with three other students. 1356 Tenn., Phone 2281-R. WANTED: Part time relief cashier at Jay-hawk theater. The ideal position for a G.I.'s wife. Apply at manager's office. 10 A college student. Apply to a fast seller. A fast seller in colleges and local store outlets. Excellent commission. Write Paul Ditzel. 422 Hamilton, Evanston, Ill. A MAN'S wrist wrest in twelve hundred Owner please c1 2734W after 7 p.m. ALL OR PART meals for students. Also room to share with girl. Phone 18473. Found Miscellaneous SUBSCRIBE to the Kansas City Star, call Headquarters at Round Corner Drug Stor. FREE OFFER: Photo copies of discharge papers, marriage certificates, for military credit or school entrance. 3 for price of 2. Round Corner Drug. 601 Mass. 18 Lost 1948 is Leap Year so let's leap with a K.U. calendar. tt PAIR clear plastic-rimmed glasses, brown leather case. Ph. 2521M. 12 I. D. bracelet. Return to Robert O'Neill in care of C. T. Hell. 1308 Kg. 12 LOST between Union and Frank Strong—one Lifetime Sheeffer paper, gold and plastic. Name Jim Gould on barrel. Return to Daily Kansan or Phone 1251L. LADIES wrist watch with black colored band, between Corbin Hall and downtown. Finder please call Bert Larsen. $80. Reward. 10 WILL THE person who accidentally exchanged navy overcords with me, at the student Union cafeteria cost rack Mackenzie to bring the coat to the chemistry office? A Bell Tolls At Ten; Minors Disappear Firebaugh, Cal.—(UP)—A curfew bell is now sounded at 10 o'clock every night here from the belfry of the city hall in accordance with a new city ordinance requiring minors to be off the street sat night. Police Chief Thomas Sarubo warned that the city council has made it unlawful for any person under the age of 18 to loiter on the streets or be in public places after 10 p.m., unless accompanied by an adult. Parents have been made responsible for their children. Fines ranging from $25 for the first offense to $500 for each subsequent offense and imprisonment from 10 to 90 days are provided. Call K.U. 251 With Your News. LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS 12 East Eighth Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed___65c Ladies' Plain Dresses, CI. and Pressed___69c CASH AND CARRY ONLY --- By Popular Demand... We're continuing that welcome "study-time-snack throughout next semester. Listen for the "FOOD MAN" Each Night-Sunday through Thursday KU Food Service "Food of Superior Quality" Phone 3406 Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan. This Record Goes Hum-hum-humming Along! This Record Goes Hum-h It's JEAN SABLON'S... "A TUNE for HUMMING" (RCA Victor) IN ENGLISH or French, his singing is terrific! His fans range from bobby-soxers to the lavender-and-old-lace set. Why, he even lights his Camels with a Continental charm. Takes a leisurely puff and says: "Great!" Try Camels! Discover for yourself why, with smokers who have tried and compared, Camels are the "choice of experience!" Yes, Jean, and millions of smokers agree with you about Camels. More people are smoking Camels than ever before! And here's another great record— More people are smoking CAMELS than ever before! CAMELS um-hum-humming Along! THE CIGARETTE THAT SUITS ME BEST IS CAMEL Jean Salton R. J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. Winston-Salem, N.C. CAMEL TURKISH & DOMESTIC BLEND CIGARETTES UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 194$^{a}$ PAGE EIGHT US Communist Taken By FBI In New York Washington, Feb. 10.—(UP)The justice department announced the arrest in New York today of John Williamson, national labor secretary of the Communist party of the United States. Williamson, the department said, will be held for deportation to his native Scotland. A department spokesman referred to the arrest as "the most important Communist arrest so far." Agents of the Federal Bureau of Investigation had been watching Williamson for some time, the Justice department said, and picked him up "on upper broadway." Immigration agents participated in the arrest. Williamson, who sometimes uses a couple of middle names, too—"Blake" and "Beattie"-was arrested under the Act of 1918 which bans immigrants hostile to the United States government and those who plan its overthrow by violence. He is being held without bail at Ellis island pending an appearance before an immigration inspector in deportation proceedings. Want Wallace On Ballot Topeka, Feb. 10.—(UP) Statewide support of Henry Wallace for President was sought in Kansas today following a mass meeting for the third party presidential candidate attended by approximately 100 persons. George Lurie, attorney taking graduate work at the University of Kansas, predicted success in the circulation of petitions to get Wallace's name on the Kansas presidential ballot. To accomplish that, 2,500 names must be obtained for each of the state's eight presidential electors. Lurie told the gathering in the Topeka Municipal auditorium that Wallace should be supported because the two-party system was currently a myth in this country, with the Democrats and Republicans "without a basic difference of opinion." Other speakers championed Wallace and asserted that the Communist sympathies attributed to him were smears unfounded in fact. Posters Chosen For Soph Dance Designs for posters and stickers publicizing the Sophomore Leap Year Hop, to be held Feb. 28, were agreed upon at a meeting of the dance publicity committee Monday. Tickets for the dance will go on sale in a short time. Representatives will sell tickets in every men's or women's event at the Frank Strong hall and the Union. Mat Benson's orchestra from Kansas State college will play for the dance. Personalized favors will be presented to every woman attend- Vets Get Credit For Courses In Hospitals Members of the public committee are William H. Roehl, chairman; Robert S. Leonard, Ruth Keller; Charles H. Finney, Charles S. Lindbergh, Margaret Louise Hoopes, Lyle Casebourn, Melba Elizabeth Mather, and Evans J. Francis. Educational facilities for veterans forced to drop from school to enter a Veterans' Administration hospital have been made possible in 10 V.A. hospitals in Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma. Full credit may be received from the bedside courses. Members of the V.A. educational therapy staff assist the patients in preparing their lessons and give examinations. In the four state area 7,928 students have taken advantage of the education program. New Frosh Coach To Be Named A new freshman basketball coach will be named within the next few days, Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen, varsity coach, said today. Howard Engleman, former freshman coach, was graduated from the Law school this past semester. He finished with top scholastic honors in his class and plans to practice law in Salina. Dr. Allen said that he would confer with E. C. Quigley, athletic director, today to decide who would be the new coach. French-Spanish Border Opens Hendaye, France, Feb. 10—(UP)—The French-Spanish border, close since Feb. 17, 1946, opened on schedule today and the first French train crossed the frontier into Spain shortly after noon. Confusion developed when the earlier Paris-Lisbon express pulled into Hendaye station at 8:40 a.m., however, its 80 passengers had to get off and walk across the International bridge to Irun in Spain. The border opened officially a moment after midnight, marked by photographers' flashbulbs sparking in the darkness. No one crossed the bridge at that hour. Classes for Sunflower wives will begin today. They will be held in the KU Dames club rooms at Sunflower. Wives Begin School Today Drawing and sketching, interior decorating, sewing, creative writing, literature and book reviewing. The Family, and international affairs are being offered. Classes will be held Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday, but each class will meet once a week so that those who wish may enroll in all the courses, Mr. Tomkinson said. The courses have been set up by University Extension in co-operation with the office of the dean of men, in response to popular demand. A free nursery service will be provided for children of mothers attending classes. F. T. Stockton, dean of the University Extension, R. M. Davis, professor of law, and Herman B Chubb, professor of political science, will teach international affairs. Black Will Talk On Engineering Engineering opportunities, salaries, and research will be the subject of a talk by E. B. Black,'06, at 7:30 p.m. Thursday, John C. Sells, president of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, announced today. The lecture is also sponsored by the American Society of Civil Engineers and the American Institute of Electrical Engineers. It will be given in Lindley auditorium and all engineering students are invited. Mr. Black is a partner in the firm of Black and Veatch, consulting engineers, Kansas City, Missouri. He received his masters degree in engineering from the University in 1924. KU Grad Begins Work At Watkins Hospital Dr. Bertha Ewing Bell, '43 graduate from the University of Kansas school of medicine, is beginning work today as a part-time staff physician at Watkins hospital. Dr. Bell took her undergraduate work at Eaker university. She spent her internship at the University medical center and her residency in medicine at the St. Mary's hospital, Kansas City, Mo. Dr. Bell practiced in Kansas City, Mo. for three years. University Art club will meet at 7:30 tonight, 315 Frank Strong hall, to reorganize and to make plans for the remainder of the year. Art majors are eligible for membership. Reorganization Meet Of Art Club Tonight Francis E. Bell, her husband, is a junior in the School of Pharmacy. Ketchikan, Alaska — (UP) — B. Frank Heintzleman, regional forester, reported a record cut of national forest timber in 1947 from Alaska's forest areas. Karl Mattert, associate professor in drawing and painting, Marjorie Whitney, professor of design and Ray Ottinger, instructor in design, sponsors of the club, will be introduced at the meeting. A Record Cut Of Timber In Alaska During 1947 He said the cut amounted to 93-. 663,000 board feet on the two national forests in the territory. The cut of 1946 was 54,390,000 board feet. Money received from the stumpge and commercial cut was $142,-35. The territory receives 25 percent of the sum for operation of schools, roads and trails in the national forests. Chairman of the junior class project will be appointed from persons attending the class meeting 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Pine room of the Union. A general discussion will decide whether the class will hold a concert or a dance. If a dance will be given the group will decide whether to get a name band for the Junior prom April 10. Juniors Will Meet To Pick Project Stork Works Overtime; Starts '48 With A Bang Carlsbad, N. M.-(UP)-The maternity ward of the Carlsbad hospital got a good workout with the start of 1948. Within three weeks, there were two sets of twins and one set of triplets. New Zoology Courses Ornithology and paleontology of higher vertebrates are two new courses offered this semester in the zoology department. M. Dale Arvey teaches ornithology, and Dr. Robert W. Wilson is the instructor of paleontology of higher vertebrates. Two Will Visit Naval Academy Two Navy ROTC midshipmen from the University of Kansas will receive a trip to the naval academy at Annapolis some time after the 31st of March Captain J V Peter prepares for final science announced today. The applicants will be chosen in recognition of outstanding academic and aptitude attainment. Arrangements have been made by the Navy department with the superintendent of the academy for a limited number of NROTC midshipmen from universities all over the country to visit the naval academy. During the three day visit, the students will live in Bancroft Hall with the academy students, attend classes and drills with them, and become acquainted with the grounds and history of the academy. The purpose of the visits is to provide an opportunity for NROTC midshipmen to learn something about life at the naval academy. NO PRICE INCREASE IN 5 $ \frac{1}{2} $ YEARS! YOUR BIGGEST BARGAIN: YOUR DAILY KANSAN $1. A Semester in 1942 $1. A Semester in 1948 When the Daily Kansan was put on the Activity Ticket in 1942, the subscription price WAS REDUCED from $1.50 to $1.00 a semester. The Kansan was being published only FOUR times a week then. For The 1942 Price Five issues a week, never less than 8 pages; often 12 pages o THE DAILY KANSAN NOW BRINGS YOU: MORE ISSUES, MORE PAGES EARLIEST DISTRIBUTION—— BIBLER CARTOONS Copies ready at 3 p.m. for each student leaving the campus then—at least two hours earlier than in Spring, 1942. Exclusive daily feature by America's host-known college cartoonist (now syndicated to other college papers). Our daily cost at least $5 for drawings, engravings, express charges, etc. UNITED PRESS NEWS---- The Daily Kansan is FIRST with the biggest world, national, and state news, received by teletype from the full leased wire service of U. P. METRO AD SERVICE---- The best advertising picture service in the country, to improve our ads —to serve our readers and our advertisers better. NEWS AND FEATURE PHOTOS---- Exclusive shots by our own photographers—and cost of engravings has rocketed. In November, 1942, our total costs were $1,076; printing, $824. In November, 1947, our total costs were $4,184; printing, $2,775 (Our Net Income for November, 1947, was $135.13) Support Your All-American Paper THE DAILY KANSAN Our Income Is Invested To Serve You And K.U. Better. University Daily Kansan STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Lawrence, Kansas --- Student Council Refers Absences To Committee Sixteen of the 30 members of the All Student Council took time from other business Tuesday night to discuss the lack of interest of the 14 absent members. The possibility of publishing the names of absent members and their party was considered and the matter referred to a committee for further investigation. By a unanimous vote, $30 was appropriated to pay on a debt incurred by the "Get-Acquainted" dance Feb. 4. The balance of the debt will be paid by the Union Activities committee. A debt of $328 left by last year's council from the varsity dance fund has been paid from the current appropriation. Appoint Committee The 16 members present voted to increase the appropriation for the student directory from $1,000 to $1,164, which would make free distribution of the directory to all students possible. A motion by Theodore Utschen, inter-dorm council representative, resulted in the appointment of a committee to investigate the possibility of constructing a concrete walk from Oread hall to Mississippi street. A motion to arraign the Kansan board, governing body of the University Daily Kansan, before the student court on charges of violating the A.S.C. constitutional rule on publications was defeated by 14 to 2. The motion said that the Kansan board had violated the rule by publishing the Bibler book without permission of the council. Beth Eynailis Bibler Book Beth Explains Bibler Book Prof. Elmer F. Beth, acting director of the William Allen White School of Journalism, told the council that "the Bibler book was not looked upon as a separate publication, but as an attempt to recoup investment in the special engraving necessary for the printing of cartoons in the University Daily Kansan. It was also a promotional scheme in the interest of national advertising." An amendment to the bill on publications which would prohibit any council member from holding a paid position on a University publication was defeated when the president, James Waugh, cast the deciding vote to break a tie. Miss van der Smissen Resigns Betty van der Smissen submitted her resignation. She is now vice-president of the Independent Student's association. She will be succeeded by James Peterson, College junior. Other business included the reading of a letter from William Jewell college, Liberty, Mo., concerning the expression of opinion on the European recovery plan. Copies of the letter had been sent to 900 schools and colleges and the 531 members of congress. The letter was referred to the forum committee. Violations of the smoking regulations in Frank Strong hall were referred to another committee. An amendment to the parking regulations, passed at a previous council meeting, and allowing unrestricted parking after 3 p.m., was disapproved by Chancellor Deane W. Malott. Members Present Members present were Waugh George Robb, Nancy Welker, Helen Heath, Elizabeth Sue Webster, Lynn Leigh, Duane Postlethwaite, Robert K. Thayer, Robert W. Campbell, Richard Gunn, Arnold England, Edwin Kelley, Miss van der Smissen, George McCarthy, Philip C. Hill, and Utschen. Union Committees Will Meet Today The first meeting of the 13 committees of Union Activities for this semester will be held at 7 p.m. Wednesday in the Union ballroom. Duties of each committee will be discussed by Clarence Hill, president, and plans for the semester will be announced. New committee members as well as those from last semester should attend the meeting. Committees for which applications have been made are: announcements, social, publicity, public lionship, coffees and forums, service, intramurals, decorations, library, posters, secretarial, clubs and organizations, and entertainment. String Quartet Concert Tonight The Roth string quartet will appear as the third attraction on the newly organized chamber music concert series at 8 p.m., today and tomorrow. The quartet brings slightly changed personnel this year. However, it is still headed by Feri Roth, its founder and first violin. Other members are Jozser Smilovits, violin; Sandor Salgo, viola, and Janos Scholz, violinello. The program follows: String Quartet in D Major. Op. 76, No. 5 ... Haydn Allegretto-Allegro Menuetto Menuetto 1180 String Quartet in F...Ravel ing Quartet in F. Allegro Moderato Assez vif et bien rhythme Tres lent Vif et agite String Quartet in A minor, Op. 51 No. 2 ... Brahms Allegro non troppo Allegro non troppo Andante Moderato Quasi Minuetto, Moderato Finale, Allegro non assai. Classical Club To Meet Miss Mary Grant, associate professor of Latin and Greek, will speak on her recent trib to Europe at the meeting of the Classical club at 7:30 tomorrow in room 212 Fraser. Everyone who is interested is invited. Indict CIO Head For Violating Taft-Hartley Act The indictment charged the C.I.O. and Murray with illegally participating in the campaign of Rep. Edward A. Garmatz, (D. Md.) in a special congressional election in Maryland last summer. Washington, Feb. 11 — (UF) — A federal grand jury today indicted the C.I.O. and C.I.O. President Philip Murray for violation of the Taft-Hartley labor act ban on political activity by labor unions. University Medical School Offers Refresher Course Under the Taft-Hartley act, a labor union is forbidden to make any expenditure, directly or indirectly on behalf of any candidate for a federal office. The indictment said that the publication of an endorsement of Garmatz by Murray in the C.I.O. News on July 14, 1947—the day before Garmatz election—constituted a direct violation of the law. The Kansas state board for the examination and registration of nurses and the National Council on Nursing Education face a problem of raising the standards of schools to encourage young women to enter nurses' training, Mrs. Hartley said. Special clinics in medicine, dermatology, neurology and psychiatry conducted by the University faculty have been added to the program. Drs.Ralph H.Major, Joseph E.Welker and P.T.Bohan will conduct the medical clinics.Drs.Charles C.Cenneil and Richard L.Sutton Jr., will present the clinical work in dermatology.Dr.A.T.Steegmann will present neurology and Dr.William F.Roth.Jr., will handle the nevchiatry clinic. By improving nursing education, Mrs. Hartley declared young women would consider the nursing field to be a value and more worth while to enter. It was the justice department's first action against the Taft-Hartley act's no-politics ban and will lead to a court test of the constitutionality of those provisions. More nurses are needed, Mrs. Dorothy Hartley Jackson, R.N., examiner and educational director for the Kansas schools of nursing, said at a meeting of the Nurses' club at Watkins nurses' home Monday. A refresher course in internal medicine will be presented by the University School of Medicine Feb. 16 to 19. The course will be given at the University medical center in Kansas City. The Kansas Medical society and the Kansas state board of health are cooperating with the school in offering the course. Special Clinics Offered Among the seven nationally-known guest instructors will be Osmond H. Clark, orthopedic surgeon at the London hospital and recently chief consulting surgeon to the Royal air force. State Needs More RN's' Mrs. Hartley said that the University has one of the highest standards for nurses' training of the 33 schools of nursing in Kansas. H. G. Ingham, director of post graduate medical education for University Extension, estimated attendance would exceed 50 physicians from Kansas and nearby states. Others present will be Dr. George T, Harrell, professor of medicine, Wake Forest college, Winston-Salem, N.C.; Dr. Drew Luten, professor of clinical medicine, Washington university, St. Louis; Dr. Joseph F. Sadusk, Jr., associate medical director, Prudential Life Insurance Co., and teacher at New York university; Dr. John H. Talbott, professor of medicine, University of Buffalo, N.Y.; Dr. John P. Berger, Wichita; and Dr. Edward J. Ryan, Emporia. 50 Doctors To Attend Other K. U. physicians on the faculty will be Drs. M. S. Allen, M. G. Berry, James H. Danglade, Lee H. Leger, Franklin D. Murphy, and Don Carlos Peete. WEATHER Kansas—Cold wave today and east tonight. Temperatures falling to 10 below zero northwest to zero to five above southeast by Thursday morning. Light and drifting snow and strong northerly winds today and tonight. Thursday clearing skies, continued cold, diminishing wind. Student Killed As Car, Truck Collide Edward R. Weatherill Dead, Harvey Levy Injured In Highway Crash One University student was killed and another critically injured at about 9 a.m. today when their Dodge and a light panel truck crashed head-on about 3 miles east of Lawrence on highway 10. The dead student was identified as Edward Ray Weatherill, 21, College junior Student Court Upholds Fines The student court Tuesday reversed five parking fines and upheld two after hearing appeals. The case of Martha Dawes was not called. ___ Edward Balda, with six violations, had five affirmed for a $7 fine; Paul Benson, three violations, three affirmed for a $3 fine; Robert Cater, four violations, three affirmed, $3; Elmo Pegelt, three violations, one affirmed, no fine; Keith Germane, three violations, three affirmed, $3. calef. Bernard E. Nordling presided as chief justice. Associate justices were Dorothy Scroggy and William Cowboy. The prosecutor was Donald Johnson. Fines on nine students were affirmed because they failed to appear for the appeal. They are Charles Busy, four violations, $5 fine; James Goodell, two violations, $1; George Haessler, five violations, $7; Franklin Hiebert, 13 violations, $23; Kenneth Hilzer, three violations, $3 Ernest Izzard, eight violations, $13 John Kapnistos, two violations, $1 Billy Keck, 11 violations, $19; E. A Little, four violations, $5. Forum Hears Racial Talks Two religious leaders appearing on the campus in connection with Brotherhood week discussed phases of the racial question before an informal gathering at a coffee forum in the Union Tuesday. The Rev. L. T. Thornton, Y.M.C.A. secretary at the University of Missouri, said that people are inclined to classify races into economic, religious, and cultural classes Rabbi Joseph Levenson, regional director for the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, said that the all racial groups will have to live together in harmony to insure a lasting peace. He stressed equality of the biological and physical traits of races. "Too much emphasis is put on education, occupation, and the monetary gains of the racial groups," he added. Mountain Club Sees Grand Canyon Pictures The Rev. Mr. Thornton, who speaks here during the current Work Brotherhood week, told an assembly of University High school students recently that "we should help the various groups and races in our society become a part of our culture." Color slides of the Grand Canyon were shown by M. D. Clubb, professor of English, to the Mountain club. Tuesday in Green hall. Professor Clubb's tours have given him a knowledge of Indian lore and rock formations throughout the Grand Canyon. He has also taken many pictures of his trips in the Grand Canyon area. A retreat for Catholic students, sponsored by the Newman club in connection with the University Religious week, will be held Feb. 12 to 15. The Rev. Alfred C. Langley, Leavenworth, will be the retreat master. The driver of the truck was not seriously injured. He was taken to Lawrence Memorial hospital for treatment of minor injuries. He is Duane Duguil, 23, of Topeka. He was driving a truck belonging to the Palmer News company of Topeka. 23. the injured student, Harvey Levy, 23, engineering sophomore, was taken to Lawrence Memorial hospital where attendants described his condition as "critical." He received a number of fractures and is suffering from shock. He has a fracture of the right arm, left wrist, left kneebone, and skull. He was unconscious following the accident but soon regained consciousness, after reaching the hospital, attendants reported. Both students were married veterans living at Sunflower Village. State Highway Patrolman Harvey Schmedmann said the crash was caused by a slick spot on the highway. The panel truck was traveling east and the car belonging to Levy was traveling west. Weatherill was thrown clear of the car and killed instantly. Mr. Schmedemann said that he believed that Levy was driving the Dodge. Both vehicles were completely demolished. The panel truck turned over. Weatherill first entered the University in the fall of 1945. His home town is listed in the registrar's office as Huron, S.D. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Alice M. Weatherill, and two children, Bruce, 2 1-2, and Mary, 6 months old. Catholics To Hold Retreat The retreat will open at 7:30 p.m. Thursday with a sermon and benediction by Father Langley. Mass will be held at 6:50 and 8 a.m. Friday and Saturday, to be followed by private conferences 9:30 to 10:30 a.m. and 3 to 4 p.m. At 4:30 p.m. the Stations of the Cross will be held, and each day's activities will close with a sermon and benediction at 7:30 p.m. Sunday Mass will be at 8 and 10 a.m., with sermons by Father Langley. A breakfast for the club will follow the 10 o'clock service. Meninger Doctor To Speak At University Seminar Dr. Murray Glusman of the Menninger foundation in Topeka will speak on "Nutritional Diseases" and "Experiences in a Japanese Prison Camp" before a combined anatomy and physiology seminar at 4:45 p.m. tomorrow in 103 Haworth. Dr. Glusman is doing research in nutrition on mental patients. urination on mental patients. The lecture is open to the public. All Business Graduates: Notice Change In Meeting Date for meeting of all June graduates of the School of Business was incorrectly announced in Tuesday's official bulletin. Meeting is scheduled for Wednesday, Feb. 18 at 4 p.m. instead of today. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1948 FREE - $300.00 - FREE 12 $24.95 "BLACK GOLD" EMERSON RADIOS Thursday 9 p.m. AT ALL Lawrence Theaters 3 RADIOS FREE At Each Theater JAYHAWKER NOW, ends Tues. you'll be WILD About the COLOR- Comedy and Dancing Colleens! Dennis MORGAN in "MY WILD IRISH ROSE" 16 Songs! with Arlene Dahl, Andrea King, Alan Hole and George Tobias BLACK GOLD See the Picture - Hear the Radio "BLACK GOLD" ELYSE KNOX Featured in Allied Artists' "BLACK GOLD" in Glorious Color Emerson Radio Model yne - a thor- latest en- Emerson Fine art and Technology 0 10 20 30 40 50 60 70 Emerson Radio ONLY $2495. "Portable Perfection" Emerson 3-Way Portable Model 536. Nothing like its super power and life-like tone. Handsome carry case with sliderce dial. New engineering features. Plays everywhere — on AC and DC house current and own power. $3995 Less batteries Less batteries 电视机使用方法 SEE THESE GREAT RADIO VALUES ON DISPLAY NOW AT THESE EMERSON FRANCHISE DEALERS AT THESE EMER BOWMAN RADIO SERVICE 900 Mass. * BELLINGER ELECTRIC 814 Mass. GRANADA THURSDAY 3 Days Down-to-earth human story of a horse, a dog and'a boy . . . with a horse race that you will remember always! "BLACK GOLD" is grand entertainment for the entire family. All in Glorious New Cinocolor plus selected shorts VARSITY THURSDAY 3 days 2 Swell Westerns! Johnny Mack Brown "TRAILING DANGER" with Raymond Hatton and A Saga Of The Open Plains! "WHITE STALLION" PATEE 2 Proven Hits Susan HAYWARD Dana ANDREWS Brian DONLEVY "CANYON PASSAGE" and Yvonne DE CARLO Rod CAMERON "FRONTIER GAL" WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Socially Speaking Formal Dance The Institute of Aeronautical Sciences held a formal dance Saturday at the Community building. The following members of the department of aeronautical engineering and their friends were present: Shirley Guenther, Jerry Lee Horney, Joan Duvall, Marion雅 Shendon, Nancy Ann Jolly, Janice Oehrle, Betty Clason, Erma Lee Schreiber, Norma Sellers of Baker University, and Beulah Jackson. Mr. and Mrs. L. A. Barnes, Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Paus汀t, Mr. and Mrs. Robert A. Simons, Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Duggins, Mr. and Mrs. George Huendick, Mr. and Mrs. John R. Fowler, Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Shoffner, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Henoch, Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Shive, Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Wilkerson, Mr. and Mrs.W. F. Armstrong, Mr. and Mrs. Forest Haynes, Mr. and Mrs. James L. Bowman, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Snowden. Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Spieth, Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Price, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Garrison, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Wade, Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Wolfe, Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Schuler, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Wetz, Mr. and Mrs. Carl Schreiber, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth McGregor, Mr. and Mrs. Duff Ginter, Mr. and Mrs. James L. Bolliner, Mr. and Mrs. John . Loser, Mrs. Willard W. Dean, Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Bovo, Mr. and Mrs. Ammon S. Andes, Prof. and Mrs. A. N. Paul, Dean and Mrs T. D. Carr, Prof. W. M. Simpson. Jay Jones To Give Tea For Possible Members The Jay James will give a rush tea today between 3:30 and 5 p.m. in the Kansas room of the Union to select new members. Houses with vacancies will send all girls who are qualified and interested to the tea. The houses with vacancies are Kappa Alpha Theta, Joliffe hall, Templin hall, Monchonsia hall, Corbion hall, and Delta Delta Delta. Phi Chi Eleets Kappa Upsilon chapter of Phi Chi, medical fraternity, announces the following officers for the spring semester: William Scott Mowrey, presiding senior; Floyd Grillot, presiding junior; Dick Walters, secretary; Joseph Elliott, treasurer; Norman Jennings, corresponding secretary; Chester Moore, judge advocate; James Morgan, house steward; David H. Rau, chapter editor; Dean Frazier, song leader; Russell Gridwell, librarian; Robert Jongema, sergeant-at-arms; Dick Emerson, rush captain; and Bob Rawlings, Bill Chapuille, and Tom Baty, senior council members. AKL Elects Alpha Kappa Lambda announces the election of the following officers: Charles Killon, president; J. Gleem Hahn, vice-president; Dale Spiegl, recording secretary; Robert Davis, corresponding secretary; Everett Simmons, treasurer; Harry Robson steward; and Dean Paul B. Lawson, faculty adviser. Kappa Eta Kappa Pledges Kappa Eta Kappa, professional electrical engineering fraternity recently pledged Glenn Fordham Elton Noble, Elmer Weigel, and William Miller. "I Love You" in any language Compact by Elgin American "I Love You" in any language Compact by Elgin American ♥ ♥ ♥ This new Elgin American compact says those three little words, "I love you,' again and again for you There can't be a girl who wouldn't be thrilled with such an exciting gift, so beautifully finished and crafted. Very Valentine! COSMETICS, MAIN FLOOR Weaver AWS To Give Party For Social Chairmen A coke party for the social chairmen of all women's organized houses will be at 4 p.m. Thursday in the English room of the Union. It is sponsored by the Associate Women Social committee. Each social chairman will discuss one social activity of her house this year. Miss Margaret Haben, deam of women, will give a brief talk. Grace Gwinner, College sophomore, is chairman of the arrangements committee. Assisting her will be Mary Lou Redmond, College junior. KEK Initiates Kappa Eta Kappa recently initiated Charles Grimmett, Carl Paden, Walter Cheng, Walter Heinrich, Theodore Bernard, Donald Knott, Forrest Haynes and Calvin Remmers. Alumni from Kansas City and Topeka attended the initiation and dinner. Hour Dance Jolliffe hall will hold an open hour dance Wednesday, Feb. 11, from 7 to 8 p.m. Lipstick Red! FLIP Lipstick Red! University Daily Kausan Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (with a charge for postage) postemestate, Published in Lawrence, Kan.. every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, Uni- ferent day and examination. Entered as second class on Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence. Kausan, under act of March 3, 1879. University Daily Kengan FLIP In a saucy little bowed wedgie. 9.95 In green sling back 9.95 SHOES, SECOND FLOOR WeaverS Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan. SPECIAL LASTE They keep y Pantie-girl nylon-an el. Re SPECIAL PURCHASE LASTEX UNDIES by Van Raalte Mail and Phone Orders Filled They keep you in line - with ease! Weaver It's wonderful how trimming to waistline—how slimming to hips—these tactful little girdles can be! For they're as dainty and comfortable as lightweight undies. Beautifully designed of firm yet action-yielding lastex — they're the last word in gentle control. There are slight irregularities which will not impair the wearing quality. Pantic-girdle of nylon powerelastic—a strong nylon-and-lastex net—with rayon satin panel. Reinforced crotch—snug-fitting legs. Regularly 4.50. Special 1.98 Companion girdle (not illustrated) Regularly 4.00. Special 1.98 Both in sizes Petite, Small, Medium and Large. In colors: maize, blue, pink, white and black. Phone 636 KNIT UNDERWEAR DEPT. — MAIN FLOOR 901 Mass. HAVE YOU SEEN: ALL SEATS----75c "The Mikado" FRASER THEATER 8:15 P.M. FRIDAY — FEB. 13 PAGE A 2018 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1948 SPOTLIGHT SPORTS By BOB DELLINGER Daily Kansan Sports Editor One change suggested for college basketball, and one which has been plugged by coaches from various regions, is the delayed whistle. Under the delayed style, the whistle would be withheld on a foul, until the play has been carried out, as in football. Howard Cann, coach of the unbeaten N.Y.U. Violets has this to say about the delay proposal: "When an official detects a foul in football he drops a red handkerchief to indicate that a foul has been committed, but he does not stop the play. If the team with the ball is fouled, and goes through with the play successfully, the play is legal. If the offensive team loses ground on the play, or does not make a substantial gain, it has the right to accent the penalty. "That is what we need in basketball. When a player starts his drive for the basket and is fouled as he breaks into the clear, the official should designate to the scorers that he has been fouled—by using a red handkerchief or some other effective means. "Then, if the player goes on and makes the basket it should be allowed and written into the scorebook. If he misses the try for the basket, the official should sound his whistle and allow him to shoot the foul." Such a ruling in basketball would have helped the Jayhawkers intensely Monday night. Several times Kansas players, notably post man Jack Eskridge, would wheel in and sink a shot only to have the goal nullified and get one free toss. Eliot Cushing of the Rochester, N.X., Democrat-Chronicle points out that this very play is the reason that Coach Cann's N.Y.U. team is one of the nation's two unbeaten teams. With the Violets leading Temple 55 to 54 Saturday and only nine seconds remaining in the game, Temple's Nelson Bobb stole the ball and drove in for the winning basket. Referee Jocko Collins ruled, however, that Violet guard Ray Lumpp had fouled Bobb before he shot. Instead of getting credit for making the winning basket, Bobb became the goat for missing the tying free loss. But what else could Referee Collins do under the present rules? - * * A word of explanation on the technical foul called on Kansas' Otto Schnellbacher Monday night on an out-of-bounds play under the Kansas basket. The technical foul was not called because Schnellbacher was protesting, but because the situation calls for a technical foul rather than a personal. According to the basketball rules, ANY foul called while the ball is out of play is automatically a technical, whether or not it involves bodily contact. Warren G. Harding is the only journalist to become President of the United States. DEELICIOUS BARBECUED SANDWICHES DUCK'S TAVERN 824 Vermont Rip Brown's 5 BOPS SKYLINE — Wed-Fri-Sat CHEF DUCK'S TAVERN 824 Vermont Rip Brown's 5 BOPS SKYLINE — Wed-Fri-Sat Holy Cross Wallops Temple To Stay In Cage Spotlight New York, Feb. 11—(UP)—There was more evidence from the Holy Cross Crusaders today that they will be in the thick of things when it comes time to defend their N.C.A.A. basketball championship next month The Crusaders gave their most impressive performance of the season Tuesday night when they trounced Temple, 71 to 44, at the Boston garden. For eight minutes the Temple Owls, who earlier in the year beat Kentucky and last week lost by only one point to unbeaten New York U., led the Crusaders, but after that the N.C.A.A. champions ran riot. Holy Cross led 35 to 23 at the half and continued to pile it up in the second half. The second game of the Boston garden twin bill saw Bowling Green of Ohio overwhelm Boston college, 74 to 48, as six-foot, 10 inch center Charlie Share scored 14 points. DefPaul's Blue Demons registered their 16th win in 20 games by troubling Lawrence Tech of Detroit, 73 to 58 and paced the Demons with 18 points. Washington State, leader in the Northern division of the Pacific Coast conference, came from behind by 10 points to beat Idaho, 38 to 35, in a conference game. Another lop-sided triumph was scored by Marquette, which used only one first string player in beating Loyola of the South, 81 to 52. Washburn Upsets Emporia Teachers Emporia, Kan., Feb. 11—(UP) — Emporia State college lost its first Kansas Central conference game in 15 starts to Washburn university, 66 to 58, here last night. The Washburn victory gave them undisputed possession of first place in the standings with five victories against one loss. Emporia has a record of four and one. The Ichabods gave a torrid exhibition of floor accuracy, connecting on 44.8 percent of their field goal attempts. The victors jumped into a 9 to 1 lead in the first few minutes of play which Emporia could never overcome. Washburn led, 33 to 26, at halftime. Wesleyan Moves Up In Kansas Race Baldwin, Kan., Feb. 11—(UP)—Kansas Wesleyan took over second place in the Kansas Conference basketball standings here last night, defeating the Baker quintet, 53 to 51. The victory gave Wesleyan five victories against two losses and left Baker with a five and three record. Top Bowlers Stretch Lead The pace-setting Pi Kappa Alpha keglers will meet the fourth place Sig Alph's and Sigma Nu will face the Tekes in the feature pairings of the Inter-Fraternity bowling league Thursday. Pi K. A. now holds a two-game lead over the Sigma Nu's with five weeks, or 15 games, remaining. Triangle, which entered the league five weeks late, has pulled up to a strong third with 16 wins and eight losses. The three leaders all swept their series last week, but the surprise performance was by Triangle, which knocked off the Sig Alph's in all three. Gene Royer was the hot-shot for the engineers, posting a 235, new high 10 for the season, and a 548 series to walk off with individual honors for the night. Sigma Nu cornered team honors as they took three from the Kappa Sig's. They rolled a 790 high team score and a 2328 high series. | | W | L | Ave. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Pi Kappa Alpha | 32 | 7 | 187 | | Sigma Nu | 30 | 9 | 760 | | Triangle | 16 | 8 | 719 | | Sigma Phi Epsilon | 25 | 14 | 746 | | Sigma Alpha Epsilon | 23 | 16 | 729 | | Tau Kappa Epsilon | 19 | 20 | 712 | | Alpha Tau Omega | 17 | 22 | 707 | | Kappa Sigma | 11 | 19 | 736 | | Sigma Chi | 14 | 25 | 678 | | Phi Delta Theta | 7 | 32 | 641 | The standings: The population of the United States when the first census was taken, in 1790, was 3,929,314. Launderette Service 9 lbs.of wash,25c 21. of wash,Wkd 21 Bendix Washers WE FIT GLASSES end DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES 813 Vt. Phone 3368 Large Selection of Distinctive Frames Lawrence Optical Co. Once Upon A Time... Five and twenty blackbirds were baked in a pie (food was flying high in those days too) When the pie was opened, the birds began to sing (the pie was half-baked, but the birds were probably stewed) Now wasn't that a dainty dish to set before a king? (it's enought to make one—if you'll pardon the expression—turn vegetarian) MORAL: If it's a songbird you want, you can get one at a petshop. But for good food, it's always Bill's Grill. And we guarantee that our steaks won't talk back to you. Bill's Grill 1109 Mass. Phone 2054 Across from the Courthouse US Offers Food For'48 Olympics London, Feb. 11—(UPI)—An offer by the United States to supply food for all the athletes at the summer games today awaited acceptance or rejection by the Olympic executive committee. The offer was made Tuesday by President Avery Brundage and Treasurer Owen V. Van Camp of the U.S. Olympic committee. Who Is House? CARL'S have those NEW UNIVERSAL CAPS A swell cap for golf, tennis, baseball or any sport. A long billed cap with a Sun Visor on a hinge. Good right now — this summer — or next fall (when you sit on East side of stadium). All Sizes Colors—Red and Tan Price $1.65 See this cap at—— a wise cupid chooses a FOR HIS Valentine GEE BROADCASTING $42.50 to $2500.00 Including Federal Tax When the heart seeks something very special to bestow ... rely on the loveliness of HARMONY matched ring sets, modernly styled, traditionally designed, your guide to jewels to be worn with you, each Harmony diamond is backed by a full coverage insurance policy, yours without cost for a year. SAMPLES WATCH SHOP 710 1/2 Mass. Ph.368 JAYHAWKER Shows 2:30-7-9 NOW ONE WEEK My Wild Irish Rose starring Dennis Morgan with Andrea KING Arlene DAHL Color by Technicolor G GRANADA —ENDS TONITE— Lucille BALL Franchot TONE "Her Husband's Affairs" THURSDAY—9:00 P.M. FREE From Our Stage 3-$24.95 Emerson Radios —On Our Screen— "BLACK GOLD" That unforgettable story of thoroughbred horses & thoroughbred humans! with Anthony QUINN Katherine DeMILLE VARSITY NOW ENDS SATURDAY Hit No.1 Johnny Mack Brown in "TRAILING DANGER" —Hit No. 2— Ken Maynard in "WHITE STALLION" Serial PATEE TONITE thru SAT. Dana Andrews Susan Hayward "CANYON PASSAGE" 2nd Feature That Lovin' Woman! Yvonne De Carlo Rod Cameron "FRONTIER GAL" in Technicolor 1 948 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Sigma Nu, Pi KA Win Easy Intramural Victories Sigma Nu defeated Triangle, 41 to 18, and Pi KA knocked off Alpha Kappa Psi, 38 to 22, in the only intramural basketball games played Tuesday. Sparked by Ashley, who scored 13 points, the Sigma Nu's tallied their third victory of the season as they rolled over the winless Triangle five. Women's IM's Resume Play Delta Gamma, Alpha Chi Omega, Foster hall, and Kappa Kappa Gamma, won one-sided basketball games Tuesday night as women's basketball activity resumed for the second semester. Pi Beta Phi won from Templin hall by forfeit. Donna Mueller and Nancee Bell each contributed 10 points to the Delta Gamma 22 to 5 victory over Chi Omega. The Alpha Delta Pi 37 to 6 rout of Alpha Chi Omega was lead by Joan Anderson and Jeanne Cooper who scored eight field goals each for 32 of the 37 points. Rachel Cooper was outstanding at her guard spot for the winners. Eleanor Howell, Alpha Chi forward, scored all her team's points with 3 field goals. In the night's closest game, Foster hall won over Alpha Omicron Pi, 12 to 9. Frances Wolfskill, Foster forward, contributed six points. Beverly Pepper led the A.O.Pi scoring with four. The Kappa Kappa Gamma 23 to 9 victory over Gamma Phi Beta was marked by a tight defense by Josephine Stuckey, Helen Piller and Kathleen McKelvy, Kappa guards, and a smooth functioning offense led by Virginia Harris with 12 points and Maxine Gunsolly with 11. Charlotte Metcalfe scored 7 of Gamma Phi's 9 points. Basketball Results DePaul 73, Lawrence Tech. 47 Springfield 59, Harvard 58 Bowling Green 74, Boston Col. 38 'DePauw 58, Earlham 35 Marquette 81, Loyola (La.) 52 Wabash 46, Butler 31 Alabama 37, Mississippi 36 Duke 47, Wake Forest 45 Washington State 38, Idaho 35 Call K.U. 251 With Your News. > let's with '1d' points help needs to > hit the halftime advantage. Strong defensive play by the Sigma Nu's held the Triangle squad to five field goals. The Pi K.A.'s had little difficulty in winning from Alpha Kappa Psi in a game that was lopsided from the beginning. The winners led 20 to 9 at the half and were never threatened. Clinger with 13 and Oldham with 12 points were the high point makers for the Pi K.A.'s while DeYoung and Briley both tallied six for the losers. Sports Day To Be At Baker Saturday A women's Volleyball Sports day will be held at Baker university Saturday. Teams from Ottawa, Washburn, Baker and Kansas universities will compete in a round robin tournament. Fifteen University women will make the trip. Honorary varsity players will have first chance to go, but other women will fill out the team. Miss Ruth Hoover, associate professor of physical education said. This will be the second in a series of sports days being sponsored by the four universities. Washburn will hold a swimming meet in March, and Ottawa university will hold a softball tournament later this spring. The University sponsored a hockey day last fall. Javhawker Needs Ad Staff The Jayhawkner needs a new advertising staff, Robert L. Bottoms, advertising manager, said today. Anyone with experience in advertising who is interested in a Jayhawker position should apply at the staff office in the Union, he said. GALES American Custom Chocolates, $1.75 STOWIT'S Rexall STORE RIŠK'S HELP-YOURSELF LAUNDRY Maytag Machines Weekdays 9-6 Line Space Reasonable Rates Saturdays 9-3 1900 III.—Phone 623 1937 FIRST NATIONAL BANK 1930 TAKE YOUR NEXT TRIP BY AIR WHEN YOU FLY----YOU TRAVEL Quickly Safely In Comfort Make Your Reservations at THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK CITY TICKET OFFICE of Lawrence TRAVEL AGENCY Miss Rose Gieseman, Manager 8th and Mass. Phone 30 VALENTINE FLOWERS. Featuring Special Arrangements CHRISTMAS Celebrations ROSES Choiceest quality SPRING FLOWERS CORSAGES Orchids, camellias, gardenias It takes so little to mean so much when said: WITH FLOWERS FROM ALLISON AT THOMAS Flower Shop Phone 363 "FLOWERS BY WIRE!" 941 Mass. --- UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1948 PAGE SIX The Editorial Page Let George Do It? The army's new chief of staff, Gen. Omar Bradley, hasn't figured in the nation's news the past two years. He has been quietly ironing out GK affairs as head of the Veterans Administration. His new job assures him a top priority on the front pages of the newspapers. Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower's step-down speech took care of that. General Eisenhower reminded General Bradley and all Americans that the U.S. army is deplorably undermanned. Considering America's responsibilities abroad, the army's present strength of 500,000 men sounds like peanuts. The army needs 100,000 recruits to meet its requirements. The new chief of staff will have to do battle with an economy-minded Congress. The law-makers are apt to ask the army to get along with two pieces of equipment here where three are really needed. They'll suggest that two men there can do the duties of the three the army says it needs. Any soldier knows that the army fares best with congress when the bullets are flying. During peacetime our congressmen are inlined to roll up military appropriations like miserly string savers. We, the public, will be busy making things tougher for General Bradley, too. It seems that Americans are "traditionally opposed to military conscription." We all agree that America needs to be strong, but when it comes right down to issues, we're found pointing at each other in a "let George do it" stance. Yes, the general has a big task on his hands. His picture will be in all the newspapers. But the real question is whose pictures will be on all those draft cards, if there are any, and where is the money coming from to pay for them? Men And Manners Any pedestrian who has survived a day of mingling with the University multitude along the walks of Jayhawker drive might well wish several hundred thoughtless persons could view their daily breaches of common courtesy through the eyes of a candid camera. Naturally the University's large population makes for cramped quarters everywhere—inside buildings and on the sidewalks. The mad rush to and fro is necessary because of scattered classrooms and limited time between classes. No one expects to walk with or opposite a mass of humanity without brushing a shoulder occasionally. Conversely, no one should be expected to be brushed off a sidewalk, kicked in the shins, or decapitated by a hastily slammed door. At the current rate of disregard for fellow men, there should be safety zones for the weak and the halt. Most common offenders are the "buddies" who must gallop cross-campus four to six abreast. These animated tanks cut a wide swath. To sidestep such a united front, one must take to the grass, gravel, snow, or mud alongside, only to collide head-on with others detouring for the same purpose. Also monopolizing the sidewalk is the "lover-boy." This species is so intent on chivalry to its companion that it heedlessly assaults the passing parade with not so much as an "excuse please." The "door-slammers", though, are technicians. Having reached a destination in questionable humor but Jingles Jangle The excuse "it's what the people want" has long been the byword of the radio for the plague of soap operas, singing commercials, and quiz programs that beset the listening public. This reason is largely an assumption. It behooves the nation's broadcasting systems to look about for ways to improve themselves. Instead of soap operas, why not dramatize some of America's better adult literature and present it serially? The same could be done with children's programs. Instead of singing commercials, why can't radio advertising grow up and draw a little dignity about itself? The American public might be flattered if beseeched to buy by other than jarring jingles and words spelled backwards. Radio might discover, it it experimented a bit, that soap operas may charm some American housewives, but that there is a large group who would appreciate a higher level of entertainment. At the most, there can be no plausible explanation as to why this group of listeners should be so sadly neglected. They buy soap, too. still breathing, one advances under a feeling of false security until safely past the doorway. But to reach for a half-open door on the heels of a predecessor is stark deulsion. You can never make it. That split second of frustration is ample time for the excited crowd to carry you back down the steps where the encounter began. At the present rate of deterioration, the future of human understanding appears lost if these citizens in training believe social graces are a tea-time must and a worktime nuisance. Lyle Young Midnight JINX SHOW FRIDAY 13th, 11:45 p.m. There is no better way to break the Jinx than to have a good laugh! 8 units of Spooky Shorts Here A Few: "Host to a Ghost" "The Spook Speaks" "Donald and the Gorilla" "The Friendly Ghost" with your favorites— Edgar Kennedy Leon Errol — 3 Stooges Donald Duck etc. A GHOST'S PICNIC! You're All Invited At Regular Low Prices GRANADA University Daily Hansan Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assn, Na- tional Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Ad- dress Association 420 Madison Ave, New York City Editor-in-Chief .. William C. Von Maurer Managing Editor .. Alan J. Stewart Asst. Man. Editor .. Cooper Rollow Man. Editor .. Lamie City Editor .. Gene Vignery Asst. City Editor .. James Robinson Telegraph Editor .. Wallace W. Abbey Cancer Editor .. Charles F. Asst. Tel. Editor .. William Barger Sports Editor .. Robert Dellinger Asst. Sports Editor .. Paul Zeh Asst. Sports Editor .. James Jones Women's Sports Editor Anna Mary Murphy Feature Editor .. John Neesner Henry Neesner Society Editor .. Dorothy James Business Manager .. Bettie Bacon Advertising Manager .. Robert Alderson Circulation Manager .. Otto Meyer Journal Editor .. David Clymer National Advt. Mgr .. David Clymer Promotion Manager .. Wister Shreve The Kansas Press Association 19 MEMBER 48 National Editorial Association A FREE PRESS—YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW MASSACHUSETTS UNIVERSITY OF MASSACHUSETTS Parker 51 Fountain Pens Super Chrome Ink STOWIT'S Rexall STORE LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS 12 East Eighth Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed...65c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed...69c CASH AND CARRY ONLY Valentine Heart Center Brick LAWRENCE SANITARY MILK AND ICE CREAM DAYSTROM TUBULAR CHROME KITCHEN NEW 4 Chairs $59.95 & up $12.00 down $1.25 weekly Streamline your living-sparkle up your kitchen with a new Daystrom kitchen set. Beautiful decorator-designed table tops are chip-proof, heat and stain resistant, washable plastic. The frame is heavy chrome-plated steel tubing. Chair backs and seats are upholstered in wear-resistant Duran plastic, in red, green or blue. And every beautiful inch is famous Daystrom quality. Come in to see them today. DAVSTROM ANCIENT ASSOCIATE S STERLING FURNITURE CO. 928 Massachusetts WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN The University Daily Kansan Classified Advertising Copy may be in the University Dally Kansan Business Office, Journalism bidg., not later than 4 p.m. of the day before publication is desired. All classmates are required. Classified Advertising Rates day day's day day dic dic dic dic dic dic dic additional words dic additional words For Sale LINGUAPHONE, Russian records; complete course, fine condition, Phil Bilhan. 1323 La. After 4 p.m. 13 SELMER CLARINET: Boerm system, 17 keys, 7 rings, articulated G-sharp. Excellent condition. Tom Sagmone. Phone 3021. HUDSON Super Six coupe, 14,000 miles. Fully equipped and like new in every respect. See at 1423 New York after 1:00 p.m. 13 ONE K & E Log-Log Duplex Decigrin slide rule and one set Laserco industrial dynaform punch. For Ken Klamm. 13 PAIR OF Women's white Hockey skates, size 9. Good condition; too large for owner. Call 358, ask for Grace. 13 CROSSLY Tube Radio: Grey double-breasted skate size 37. Call 3479W after Taizan. 13 1937 PLYMOUTH coach, radio, heater, good tires, 1131 Ky. 13 PRACTICALLY new Carys drawing set. See Dean Holben, trailer house, 1304 Mass., evenings. 13 REMINGTON Deluxe Portable Typewriter. Nearly new. Phone 3187R. PRACICALLY new MacroRadio with Charcically new control. Good hot water heater. H. E. Wright 124 R. J. 1308M. 16 DIETZT Commander drawing instruments. Used one semester. Excellent condition. Ph. Quentin Long at 3338 after 12:45 p.m. 14 FOR SALE: One apt. size washer—like new. 1225 Kyg. Phone 1733M. EARN SOME easy money—twenty-five one cent peanut machines for sale, cheap. Former owner changed schools. See evenings at 521 Lane 14, Sunflower. 11 ARGOFLEX, f4.5, with carrying case, Kodachrome adapter, filter case with filter retaining ring and filters. Excellent condition. James Parks. Ph. 2828 ever-nights. 11 TUXEDO for sale, size 40. Inquire at Cottage café. Phone 2. 11 TYPEWRITERS sold and rented. Peterson's, 6 East 8th. Phone 13. 11 VETERANS! We will buy, trade or sell your equipment condition that you may wish to dispose of. Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. Phone 669 HTFD For Rent FRONT ROOM: Furnace heat. Share with sophomore engineering student. Must not smoke. 315 E. 19th St. 13 LARGE SOUTH room and small kitchenette containing sink and light cooking facilities and now read for use at 1363 Ohio St. 13 TWO nice single or double rooms for men students. Good location on bus line. Also garage for rent. Ph. 23067. 12 BOARD AND ROOM. Have three double rooms three blocks off campus. $55 per month. Call 366 evenings. 13 LARGE WELL furnished room, inner spring mattress, newly decorated for summer parties and to KY Phone 1128, 1303 Vermont St. 11 WANTED ONE girl to share double room, one block from Union Bldg. 1245 Louisiana after 2:00 p.m. 11 QUARTERS FOR colored girls: Vacancy for one girl, single bed, warm, neat, private bath, kitchen and wash room. Call 1755-R after 5:30 p.m. 13 TWO ROOMS for boys, single or double. Will consider kitchen privileges—reason- ly priced. 1016 Rhode Island. Call 2858-M a after 3:00 p.m. 13 A STUDENT to share a double room with an engineer. Also a single room for one man. Close to the University. One block from bus line. Phone 1676J. 11 Transportation ROOM for four boys New home. Private room with kitchen $12.50 per month each. 2027 Kentucky. WILL COMMUTE daily from Topeka if I can get four permanent riders. For further information ph. 3-3481 in Topeka at 5 p.m. or two to Wichita, Friday evening or Saturday morning Call 2355R. WANT ride to (or) from K.C., Mom, Wed. and Fri. Arrive Lawrence, 9 a.m. Lawrence, Sterling Apts. in K.C. Ask for Lee Noe! RIders WANTED: K.C. to Lawrence, daily. Arrive Lawrence 8:45 a.m. Leave Lawrence 5:30 p.m. Call 2935M. RIders WANTED: Leaving Lawrence for Emporia, Newton, and Wichita. Returning every Sunday evening. Call 3170. Harry Shultz. RIders WANTED: Driving to and from Emporia. Returning every Sunday afternoon. Chestnut 6206 K.C. Mo., or leave name at Daily Kansan Business Office. Miscellaneous WILL PERSON who accidently exchanged tan finger-tint coat Monday noon, Feb 8. Union Cafeteria coattrack contact Orin Wagner, 1125 Rhode Island Phone 2842M. Phone 1842M. ALL OR PART meals for students. Also room to share with girl. Phone 1847J. SUBSCRIBE to the Kansas City Star, call 17. Headquarters at Round Corner Drug Store. FREE FOFFER: Photo copies of discharge papers, marriage certificates, for military credit or school entrance. 3 for price of 18. Headquarters at 801 Michigan Street. 1948 is Leap Year so let's leap with a K.U. calendar. tf Wanted YOUNG man to share room with K.U. student. Downtown, modern, near K.U. bus line. 714 N.H. 16 WANTED: One boy to share large dou- bly room. 3086 M. K.U. Busi- stone one-half block. 16 MALE STUDENT to share double room; also man to share apartment with three other students.-1536 Tenn., Phone 2231- R. CAMPUS representative for new pli- ture. A fast seller in colleges and local store outlets. Excellent commission. Write Paul Ditzel, 422 Hamilton, Evston, Ill. Found FOUNTAIN PEN found Monday. Owner can have same by identifying and paying for ad. Inquire at Kansan office. 13 A MAN'S wrist watch in twelve hundred block on Tenn. St. Owner please call 2734W after 7 p.m. 11 BROWN ZIPPER billfold, between Zone I Walkein or Mers. Reward. Phone 2672. Doris Edminshi. 13 PAIR OF metal-framed glasses in brown leather case. Lost Sat, Feb. 7 in Union Cafeteria (downstairs) about 5:30 p.m. Please leave in Daily Kansan Business Office if found. 13 Lost GREY PARKER 15 pen, gold top, slightly dented. Lost Monday noon somewhere between Frank Strong and Phi Delt Reward. Bill Mitchell. Phone 1357. *AIR clear plastic-rimmed glasses, brown earth case. Ph. 2521M. 12 I. D. bronceel. Return to Robert O'Neill in care of C. T. Hell. 1308 Ky. 12 LOST between Union and Frank Strong — one Lifetime Scheme paper penil, gold and plastic. Name Jim Gould on barrel. Return to Daily Kansan or Phone 125LH. WILL THE person who accidentally exchanged navy overcoats with me, at the student room, a caterina rack back Rockton. Feb. 6, bring the coat to the chemistry office? Read the Daily Kansan daily. flowers Valentine Flowers Flowers — the perfect Valentine gift! Stop by or call Ward's for a beautiful corsage, bouquet, or plant. WARD'S FLOWERS 910 Massachusetts DELIVERY SERVICE Phone 820 Swing Your Sweetheart At The "SWEETHEART SWING" Sat., Feb.14 9-12 P.M. UNION BALLROOM MEET THE 11 CONTESTANTS FOR "SWEETHEART OF AMERICA" $ \textcircled{1} $ MEET THE 11 MOST DATEABLE MALES ON CAMPUS MANHATTAN MERRY-GO-ROUND ATMOSPHERE SPECIAL ENTERTAINMENT HARLAN LIVINGOOD And Orchestra 1. 50 couple UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE EIGHT ERP Boss To Be Independent Of State Secretary Washington, Feb. 11 — (UP) — The senate foreign relations committee was over the first hurdle today in its effort to write a European recovery program satisfactory to Republicans and Democrats alike. The decision represented the first major compromise on the so-called Marshall plan. It settled, at least for the moment, what Sen. Arthur H. Vandenberg, chairman, called a "maier controversy." The committee voted unanimously to put ERP under an administrator independent of the state department, but subject to presidential orders. Under the committee's proposal, the $20,000-a-year ERP administrator would run the program without interference from the state department. In the event of a conflict, President Truman would act as ampire. This administrative setup was similar to the one suggested by the Brookings institution. Secretary of State George C. Marshall indicated it would be acceptable 'to him'. Tentative settlement of the administrative problem left the question of funds as the major disputed issue in the recovery program. The administration wants a $6,800 00,000 downpayment for ERP. AVC Fights Fare Hike The American Veterans committee Tuesday discussed the problem created by the Santa Fe Trailway's appeal to the state corporation commission to cancel the present round trip bus fare from Sunflower to Lawrence. Students living at Sunflower can now purchase books of 6 round trip tickets for $1.80. The regular one-way fare is 30 cents. If the state corporation approves the appeal, commuters from Sunflower will have their transportation fare doubled to 60 cents per day since the application does not provide for a new round trip rate. The matter was shelved until more complete information concerning the fare hike can be obtained. A report will be presented at next Tuesday's meeting. The committee will then decide whether delegates will be sent to Topeka for the hearing March 8. Three new members were elected at the first spring semester meeting of the Entomology club. Tuesday. Entomology Club Elects Three New Members Elmer LeRoy Bortz, College junior; Arthur Lloyd Duell, College senior; and David Thomas Dalley, freshman were those voted into membership. Thomas W. Porter, assistant biology instructor, showed several insect slides to the group. Camera Club See Films Two films on photography were shown to the Camera club Tuesday. The next meeting will be held Feb. 26 in Lindley hall, when Dr. L. R. Laudon, head of the geology department, will show a series of slides. An exhibition of photographic art is being planned for next month under the direction of John Loman, College freshman, chairman of the program committee. ISA Holds Dance Tonight The first in a series of midweek dances will be held from 7 to 9.p.m. today in the Kansas room of the Union. These dances are sponsored by the Independent Student association. Music tonight will be recorded. M. A. Self, '42, has been elected vice-president in charge of sales and director of the board of the Bee Chemical company of Chicago '42 Graduate Is Promoted 'Most Dateable Male' Will Be Named Tonight Ten male contestants will meet at 7:30 tonight in the Pine room of the Union for judging of the "Most Datable Male" contest. The winner will escort the "Sweetheart of America" to the Sweetheart Swing Saturday night in the Union ballroom. K. U.'s "Miss Student Union" will compete with representatives from nine nearby colleges and universities for the "Sweetheart of America" title. Gibbs School Has Scholarships The Katharine M. Gibbs Memorial Scholarship committee has announced the continuation of its national scholarships, awarded annually to two college seniors. The scholarships are for women interested in secretarial training. Previous secretarial training or experience is not necessary. The student must be regularly enrolled as a senior in a college or university of recognized standing. The application must be supported by the recommendation of a college official and by a transcript of grades to date. Awards will be based on scholarship and excellence of personal and character qualifications. The financial need of a student may be a determining factor. Each of the two scholarships will consist of tuition in any one of the Katherine Gibbs schools for one year and in addition a cash award of $300 payable in two installments. Applications for the scholarship must be completed and filed not later than April 1. Those who are interested in applying must fill out a student application form, which is available at the office of the dean of women. A small photograph must accompany the application form. Juniors To Meet Today The junior class will meet at 4 pm. today in the Pine room of the Union. Lu Ann Powell, class president, announced today. The class project will be discussed, and committee chairmen will be chosen from the group which attends. Grain Falls Limit In Seventh Day Of Market Drops All new applicants and past members of Student Union Activities committees, 7 tonight, Union ballroom. Le Cercle français se reunira juudi le 12 fervier a sept heures et quart dans la salle 113 de Frank Strong hall. Announcements committee, Union Activities, tonight includes all old and new announcers. Correction! All June graduates of School of Business to meet 4 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 18, instead of today. Frank Strong auditorium. Also for any other June graduates wishing services of business placement bureau. K.U. Dames bridge, 7:30 tonight, 516 Indiana. Chicago, Feb. 11 — (UP) — Wheat, corn, oats and soybeans dived to the permissible limits again when trading opened on the board of trade today. Junior class meeting, 4 today, Pine room, Union. Committee chairmen for junior class project to be appointed. The stock market yesterday had sunk to the lowest level since last June. Nearly 1,500,000 shares were traded, the largest turnover of the year. The heavy selling which yesterday drove all grain futures in the nation's three major grain marts to bottom prices was resumed at the starting bell today. Within seven consecutive sessions, wheat has crashed the limit five trading days and corn six. Positions of editor and business manager of K-Book open for application. Submit letters stating classification, qualifications, and previous experience to Betsey Sheidley, Gower Place, on or before Feb. 18. Official Bulletin Aside from the break in the 1946 week when prices on meats were rolled back, this week's decline was the widest in history. Student Religious council, 4 today. Myers hall. At New York, stock losses extended yesterday's sharp loss in the market, which wiped out a billion dollars in valuation of listed issues. Bonds were lower, too, and cotton fluctuated. The Associated Women Students senate will hold four precinct business meetings at 5 and 7 p.m. today and Thursday in the English room of the Union. Representatives to the A.W.S. senate will be elected from each of the seven precincts of women students living in private homes. Feb.11,1943 Wholesale food prices making up the Dun & Bradstreet index broke 31 cents during the last week, the widest decline since Sept. 3, 1946 Christian fellowship, 7 tonight. Danforth chapel. Rev. Lynn Hodges of Topeka, guest speaker. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 11, 1948 I. S.A. midweek, 7:30-9 tonight, Kansas room, Union. Non-members, 15c. ASW To Elect 7 Representatives Every woman student living in a private home is invited to one of the meetings. If she is unable to attend her particular precinct meeting she is invited to attend one of the others, Shirley Wellborn, presiding officer of the A.W.S. senate said today. Translated in terms the housewife could understand, the break in wheat prices means that for every 30 cent a bushel drop, the price of a loaf of bread eventually will come down a penny. Archery club, 204 Robinson, 7 p.m. tomorrow. Bring dues. Anyone interested in joining is invited. Quack club tryouts, 7:30 p.m. to-morrow. Robinson. Members, 7:15 p.m. Practice period 4:15-5:15 p.m. to-morrow. A. S.M.E. regular meeting to be held pointly with A.S.C.E. and the A.I.E.E.. 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Lindley auditorium. All engineering students welcome. Eagle staff, 8:30 p.m. tomorrow. English room, Union. Any others interested welcome. Snow Zoology club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, 206 Snow, Speaker, Wayne Reeve. "Seaside Zoology." Colored slides and movies. Refreshments. Pre-Nursing club, 4 p.m. tomorrow, Fraser dining room. All students in pre-nursing. Classical club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, 212 Fraser, Miss Grant, speaker. Alpha Phi Omega, 7 p.m. tomorrow, Pine Room, Memorial Union. Engineering council, 5 p.m. tomorrow, 210 Marvin. Christian Science organization, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Danforth chapel. Phi Sigma, Monday noon, 301 Snow. Anatomy department in charge of program. Amateur Radio club, 5 p.m. to- morrow, 205 E. E. Lab. All men students interested in part-time jobs for the spring semester must report to Men's Student Employment office no later than Feb. 21 if they wish to keep employment applications active. Y.M.C.A. cabinet, 5 p.m. Friday, East room, Union. British M P To Speak At Convocation Today Thomas Frederick Peart, Labor member of the British parliament, will speak in a special convolution at 4 p.m. today in Fraser theater. Mr. Peart comes from a coal-mining section of England and will discuss production problems in the British coal industry. There will be no change in class schedule. Snow And Cold Blanket Kansas Topeka, Feb. 11-(UP)—A whistling north wind flung snow at Western Kansas today in extreme cold temperatures. The temperature at 6:30 a.m. had reached five degrees below zero at Goodland, which first felt the brunt of the storm in Kansas. Wind velocity there was 32 to 38 miles an hour with gusts up to 40 m.p.h., the federal weather service here reported. Two inches of snow had fallen. S. D. Flora, Kansas meteorologist, said the storm would sweep across Kansas eastward during the day and that temperatures would decline rather than rise during the daylight hours. The high north winds, threatening to pile drifts along roadways, were generally in the western half of the state. Concordia, Ellis and Dodge City this morning all reported strong and cold north winds. Concordia had 4 inches of new snow, with the dawn temperature down to 6 degrees. At Ellis the new snowfall measured 3 inches and Dodge City reported an inch. The temperature was down to 2 at both places. The entire state was receiving snow today, Flora said. On KFKU Today: 2:30. Johnny Jayhawk Keeps Well. 2:45. Doorway to Knowledge. Todd Douglass; 9:30, K. U. Brainbusters. Thursday. Thursday: 2:20 Music 2:45 W. D. Paden reviews 9:30 Women of Kansas. Who Is House? Professor Gets Service Award Eugene A. Stephenson, professor of petroleum engineering, has been notified that he will be the first to receive the newly created certificate of service award by the petroleum division of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers. He will formally receive the award Feb. 17 at the institute's annual meeting in New York. The award is for "great organization service and long and valued devotion of time, effort, thought and action in furthering the aims of the petroleum division, and is to be issued only to those relatively few individuals whose contributions stand out sharply even above the excellence of the services rendered each year by members of the division." Professor Stephenson has recently returned to his teaching duties in the petroleum engineering department after a requested leave of absence because of poor health. Funds from the faculty drive are being handled separately and are not included in March of Dimes figures announced by Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity, which conducted the campaign for student contributions. Donations by faculty members and employees will be turned in to the county chapter for infantile paralysis. One half will go to the national headquarters. Polio Drive Gets $400 Approximately $400 has been contributed to anti-polio funds this year by faculty members and employees of the University, M. C. Slough, chairman of the University polio drive, announced Tuesday. A goal of $1,000 has been set for the close of the drive Feb. 15. All types of beauty work by capable operators. Mid-winter special price on permanents machine and machineless. GE SOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH Charme Beauty Salon formerly Iva's Beauty Shop phone 533 Nettrie L. Wolfe, Owner Bullet GALLAGHER MOTORS FINE Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. 45 L N A Meals Short Orders Malts Sandwiches Air Conditioned Open 5:30—12 p.m. FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL COURT HOUSE LUNCH DEAL There's no denying that a good typewriter helps! For the Type Your Way To A's - To buy or to rent - Phone or stop by at Best in new and used typewriters Lawrence Typewriter Exchange 735 Mass. Phone 548 or m o e e m b f e e e e d d d e e w s e d y n -- University Daily Kansan Thursday, Feb. 12, 1948 OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Thursday, Feb. 12, 1948 Lawrence, Kansas Nina Green Adds Crown As Union Queen Nina L. Green, Kappa Kappa Gamma, added another crown Wednesday night when she was selected Miss Student Union for 1948 at a contest held in the Union. Miss Green will represent the University at the Sweetheart Swing Saturday night, competing with nine other college women for the title of "Sweetheart of America." The judges were Joseph Wilson, president of the Chamber of Commerce; John R. Chaney, president of the junior Chamber of Commerce; Oscar B. Rumsey, president of the Lions club; C. W. Pollen, president of the Kiwanis club, and Ogden S. Jones, president of the Rotary club. was Homecoming Queen Miss Green, a 20-year old College senior, was Homecoming Queen in 1946. She is majoring in psychology, is a member of the social committee of the Union and the Y. W. C. A., and was chairman of the Union carnival held last fall. Four faculty women also chose the escorts for the queens. The escorts are William T. Cavaugh, Phi Kappa Psi; Joseph E. Daly, Phi Kappa; Ada G. Glass, Sigma Alpha Epsilon; Joe L. Levy, Alpha Tau Omega; John C. Neeb, Delta Chi; Walter O. Quinig, Delta Theta; Walter T. House, Phamma Delta; Paul D. Williams, Phma Triangle; Roland D. Williams, Kappa Sigma; and Jack Warley, Lamda Will Escort Queens Each man will escort a queen for the day, and one man, to be known as the "Most Datable Male," will be selected to escort the "Sweetheart of America" after she has been chosen. The judges who selected the men were Miss Irene Cebula, romance language department; Mrs. Margaret Y. McKay, political science department; Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women; and Mrs. Dorothy Simons, English department. YWCA To Organize Frosh Committees Y. W.C.A. Committee chairmen will be introduced at a special freshman Y.W.C.A. meeting to be held at 4 p.m., February 16, in the Kansas Room of the Union. This meeting is the first step in the reorganization of the freshman program, according to Joy Godbehere, College senior, and director of freshmen activities. Emmalou Britton, Y.W.C.A. president, will present the chairmen of the committees, who will in turn explain the functions and activities of their respective groups. Following the meeting, both old and new freshmen will be able to join the committees of their choice. During the first semester, freshmen members attended only the commission meetings. Committees that will be open to membership are political effectiveness, social, community service, ways and means, publicity, music and art appreciation, worship, membership, world relatedness, and campus problems. Refreshments will be served, and all freshmen women are urged to attend, whether or not they belonged to the Y.W.C.A. previously or were enrolled in a commission group. WEATHER For Kansas—Mostly cloudy today. Diminishing light snow west. Continued cold. Clearing east, partly cloudy west tonight. 200 Tickets Go On Sale About 200 tickets for a Friday afternoon performance of the "Mikado" will go on sale tomorrow morning. The performance will be given for Lawrence high school and junior high school pupils. A few seats will be available for KU students, Arnold England, business manager, said today. Tickets will be sold in the rotunda of Frank Strong hall and in the Union. All tickets for the Friday night performance have been sold. Kerensky Here February 23 Alexander Kerensky, former prime minister of the Russian government after the fall of the Czarist regime, will speak in Fraser hall at 4 p.m. on Feb. 23. Mr. Kerensky's talk was initiated by Mrs. Rachael Soloveitchik, instructor in Russian. Mrs. Soloveitchik and her husband, Dr. Samson Soloveitchik, associate professor of history at the University of Kansas City, have been politically and socially allied with Mr. Kerensky for many years. Mr Kerensky is a visiting professor at the University of Kansas City this month. As commander-in-chief of the Russian armies (comparable to the office held by President Truman in the United States), Kerensky visited the front in 1917 in an attempt to persuade the Russian forces to support the effort of the Allies. Lenin, however, also visited the Russian troops and persuaded their ultimate desertion from World War I. Mr. Kerensky was a member of the Imperial Russian duma (parliament) from 1912 to 1917 and was leader of the democratic labor group. The Czar had set up some liberal reforms after the first revolution in 1805. Congress Sees 'Death Blow' To Rationing Washington, Feb. 12—(UP)—The slump in commodity prices was viewed in congress today as the death blow for rationing and price control proposals. But there were conflicting opinions on its effects on other legislation. It was conceded that the price trend, if it becomes serious, may force a re-appraisal of legislative plans. However, there was no indication that Republican leaders considered it serious enough yet to revise their thinking on such things as tax reduction and rent control. Soap and meat prices dropped in groceries and butcher shops across the nation today as a result of the worst commodity market slump in history. They never have been friendly toward President Truman's requests for price, rationing and allocation controls. The downturn in prices merely strengthened their resistance. Soap, Meat Prices Drop Charles Luckman, president of Lever Brothers, the world's largest manufacturer of soap, slashed prices of all soap products five per cent "in view of declining raw material prices." Lever Brothers previously cut the price of their shortening 2 cents a pound. Detroit Steak Prices Down At Detroit, the Great Atlantic & Pacific Tea company announced new price cuts on round steak bringing it down to 69 cents a pound, a 16-cent drop in 10 days. Ham dropped as much as 22 cents a pound in South Dakota and bacon was down as much as 14 cents. Flour was cut 95 cents for 100 pounds as Walsenburg, Colo. Little Man On Campus The market were closed today in observance of Lincoln's birthday after crashing grain prices broke all records for a single month's drop in the 100-year-old history of the Chicago board of trade. REGISTRY B. Bike "Here we allow the foreign students to wear the costume of their choice—however, in your case, Miss Boom Boom, we feel—" New Bitter Bird On Sale March 3 The Bitter Bird is being refeathered. The campus humor publication, which became so noted for satire in it's first issues, will apparently come back into character in its next issue. Based on a parody of the University Daily Kansan, complete with cartoons and advertisements, the Bird will be on sale March 3. Otto Of Austria To Speak Here His Imperial Highness, Otto of Austria, will present the first of the community lecture series for the second semester at 8 p. m. Feb. 16, in Hoch auditorium. He will lecture on "World Danger Zones" based on information gathered in Europe, Africa, and the Middle East. His Highness traveled in the stricken areas and returned to the United States in January from his most recent tour of world spots. During the early stages of the Hitler conquests, Otto issued a proclamation from France to the Austrian people, inviting them to oppose Hitler by underground methods. After the Germans issued an order for his arrest, he escaped to the United States and took up residence here in 1940. He visited the University in 1942. Otto returned to Europe in the fall of 1944 to help liberate Austria. Bill Sears Is Back Having ended a 16-week tour throughout Kansas and five neighboring states, Bill Sears, the authority on baton twirling and drum majoring, is once again at the University. Sears, a graduate student, began his tour last September and since that time has made nearly 200 public appearances exhibiting baton twirling, gun spinning, and flag swinging. He performed before elementary, high school, and college groups. A married veteran, Sears graduated from the University last spring with a major in education. After completing his education he plans to continue baton twirling as a hobby and as an extra part of music instruction. "I really don't care too much for the show part," he said. "Baton twirling is a lot of fun there are always new angles, and it is an unlimited field," he commented. "No one will ever know all about it." The tour was arranged by the department of lectures and concert artists at the University. Five University art students and a former student have been represented in exhibits in various parts of the country recently. 5 Art Students Exhibit Pictures Evangeline Pratt, Fine Arts senior; exhibited a silk screen design at the annual Missouri Art show in St. Louis during December. De Arlene Thornhill, Fine Arts sophomore, Billie Rotermund, Fine Arts senior, and Charles Schafer, Fine Arts sophomore, each entered a screen in the National Print show at Webita during January. Dora Ann Brown, Fine Arts senior, and Geraldine Nelson, 47, were picture exhibitors in the National College Art show at the University of Alabama January 27. Both of the latter pictures were water colors. Funeral Plans Incomplete For Crash Victim BULLETIN Funeral arrangements for Edward R. Weatherill, 21, College junior, who was killed in an auto-truck crash three miles east of Lawrence Wednesday, had not been completed early today. His body is at Funk's mortuary. Harvey Levy, 23-year old engineer sophomore, from New York, died today in Lawrence Memorial hospital. He was the driver of the car in which Mr. Weatherill was a passenger. He is survived by his wife Mrs. Ruth Levy, also of New York. He lived at 108 Lane N, Sunflower. Color designs of stage settings and costumes for the Russian ballet, created by Leon Nicolayevich Bakst, are on display on the third floor of Fraser hall. Early this morning it was reported by hospital attendants that Mr. Levy had spent a "poor night" and was "in very critical condition." Weatherill is survived by his wife, Mrs. Alice M. Weatherill, pianist for the Sunflower Community church, two children, Bruce, $2\frac{1}{2}$; Mary, 6 months, and his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Weatherill, route 2, Huron, S.D. He came to the University in the fall of 1945 and completed the 12-week naval R.O.T.C. course before leaving to attend Northwest Missouri State Teachers college. He returned to the University in the spring of 1947. He lived at Sunflower Village for little more than a year. Armanav Won't Talk Vincent S. Di Carlo, new Armanav president, today declined to comment on what Armanav's reaction would be to the proposed bus fare changes between Sunflower and Lawrence. He said, however, that the matter will be brought up at the first meeting of the semester Tuesday. Both Armanav and the American Veteran's committee have expressed disapproval of the fare hike. One of the main purposes of both groups is to help the veteran live within subsistence allowances. Russian Ballet Costumes Shown The designs are from the W. B. Thayer library and have been arranged with notes by Mrs. Rachel Soloveitchik, instructor of Russian. "Bakst has been a great influence on modern designing, both in the theatre and otherwise," commented Mrs. Soloveitchik. "His designs are characterized by extraordinary richness and brilliance of color and by a fertile imagination," she added. One of the costumes was designed for Nijinsky in the role of the Faun from the ballet, 'L'Apres Midi D'I Faun'. Others include Beotien from "Narcisse", the Young Rajah from "Scheherazade", Bacchanale from "Cleopatre" and the Fiancee from "Le Dieu Bleu." Jones' Condition Improved Jacob O. Jones, professor of applied mechanics, who received a fracture of the back in a fall from a ladder in his home Jan. 30, is improving satisfactorily. He is in Watkins Memorial hospital. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1948 Extension Courses Start In Kansas City, Topeka Two University Extension classes started Tuesday, one in Topeka and the other in Kansas City, Mo., Gerald Pearson, director, announced. Dr. Carroll D. Clark, chairman of the sociology department, will conduct a course in human relations for nurses and welfare workers at the Kansas City Y.M.C.A. The classes there will be sponsored by the Uni- Dr. E. G. Kennedy, counsel for the University guidance bureau, will direct a two-hour credit course in "Occupational Information" as part of the evening class program of the Topska night school. The class was organized by Ken Dodderidge, special representative of University Extension. Official Bulletin Feb. 12, 1948 A. W. S. Senate, 4 today, office of dean of women. Deutscher Verein wird sich Donnerstag um 4:30 in 492 Fraser versammeln. Herr Peter Baumann und Herr Ernst Kuhn werden Volkslieder singen. Alle sind eingeladen. Members of Sachem Circle of O. D. K. please turn in copies of second semester class schedules to secretary's office, 228 Frank Strong. Four-No Bridge club, 7.30 tonight, Union recreation room. Duplicate bridge session. Business meeting and election of officers. All interested invited. Phi Chi Theta tea, 4 today, Pine room. Christian Science organization 7:30 tonight. Danforth chapel. K. U. Amateur Radio club, 5 to day, room 205, E. E. Lab. Classical club, 7:30 tonight, 212 Fraser. Miss Grant, speaker. Engineering Council, 5 today, 210 Marvin. Alpha Phi Gigma, 7 tonight, Pine room, Union. Snow Zoology club, 7:30 tonight 206 Snow, Wayne Reeve, speaker. Color slides and movies on seaside zoology. Refreshments. Pre-Nursing club, 4 today, Fraser dining room. Eagle staff, 8:30 tonight, English room, Union. Any others interested welcome. Quack club tryouts, 7.30 tonight. Robinson gym. All members, 7.15. Practice period, 4.15- 5.15. A. S. M. E. regular meeting, 7:30 tonight. Lindley auditorium, to be held jointly with A. S. C. E. and A. I. E. E. All engineering students welcome. K. U. Archery club, 7 tonight, 204 Robinson. Bring dues. Anyone interested in joining is invited. Le Cercle français se reuina jeudi 12 fevrier a sept heures et quart dans la salle 113 de Frank Strong hall. Orange Bowl pictures will be shown in Hoch auditorium at 7:30 p. m. Friday and Saturday, Feb. 13 and 14. Phi Sigma, Monday noon, room 301 Snow. Anatomy department in charge of program. Independents monthly meeting, 7 p. m., Monday, Kansas room, Union. Positions of editor and business manager of K-Book are open for application. Submit letters stating classification, qualifications, and previous experience to Betsey Sheidley, Gower Place, on or before Feb. 18. Meeting for all June graduates of School of Business, 4 p. m. Feb. 18, Frank Strong auditorium. Attendance required. Any other June graduates wishing services of Business Placement Bureau welcome. Job opportunities and registration forms to be explained. Interview schedules to be outlined. Chancellor Malott to speak briefly on business opportunities. Production of the farm. orchard and dairy in the state of Mississippi is large and valuable. Class Of '48 Rings May Be Bought Now Rings for the class of '48 are being sold at the business office. A sample of the ring is on display and orders taken now will be filled promptly, probably before the end of the semester announced Ardienne Hiseco, chairman of the senior ring committee. The ring is gold with a red stone. Surrounding the stone is the class motto. A Jayhawker and a sunflower also decorate the mounting. Democracy To Aid Russia, Rice Says Democracy for any nation is inevitable, Carl V. Rice. Democratic national committee, told the Young Democrats Tuesday. "Even Russia will become democratic after she has had some prosperity and peace," he said. "The people need an opportunity to think and democracy has the only program which offers that chance." George Nesselroad, Young Democratic national committeeman, attended the meeting. The University chapter will sponsor a dance at the Washington Day activities for the Kansas Democratic club Feb. 21 in Topeka, Gael Sullivan, executive director of the Democratic national committee, will be the speaker for the banquet. University Daily Kansas Mail station. Published $5.00 a year, in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan. every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, Uni- verse holidays and examination portions. Borrowed from the Post Office at 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. University Dally Kansan A nominating committee for Alpha Kappa Psi, business fraternity, was appointed Wednesday by Donald Baumunk, president. The election will be held March 9. Alpha Kappa Psi Nominators Chosen Committee members include: Arnold J. England, business senior; John Taylor Jr., business senior; and Morse E. Murray, business senior. Baumunk announced that Louis Rothschild, Kansas City merchant, will speak at the professional meeting, 7:30 p.m. Feb. 18, in the Kansas room in the Union. Members and their guests are invited. New chairman appointed to replace graduating seniors are; auditing, Billy Keith, Brackman, business senior; social, Clifford Russell Stephenson, college freshman; alumni, Jack Dwight Van Meter, engineering sophomore; research, Arnold J. Englund, business senior; rushing and pledging, Park Crummer Pennington, business junior; housing, John Davis Mason, business senior. Publicity, Franklin Ellsworth Fearing, college junior; special projects. Frank C. Pomeroy, business junior; athletics, Leon Roger DeYoung, college sophomore; efficiency, William Hansford Dunn, college sophomore; photography, Edwin Ernest Kirchhoff, college junior; and chaplain, Carl Norman Hanson, business senior. Who Is House? Charme Beauty Salon formerly Iva's Beauty Shop phone 533 All types of beauty work by capable operators. Mid-winter special price on permanents machine and machineless. Nettie L. Wolfe, Owner Let Us Dry Clean Your Clothes Regularly Odorless Cleaning Odorless Cleaning We pick up and deliver any day at any time. Open 7:30-6:00 Mon. through Sat. Hillside Ph.123 BAND BOX CLEANERS 9th & Indiana Ph.121 looking for a faster, quicker, more efficient way of cleaning. quik way of HERE THE HERE IT IS! EVERY HOUSEWIFE IS THE WESTINGHOUSE AUTOMATIC Oliver SERVICE CO. Authorized dealer Pho.253 Mass.723 ATTENTION seat cover department give the inside of your car that 'NEW LOOK'. Come in and let our own exclusive Over 35 designs in rayon, plastic, or fiber covers expertly made to fit your car. Morgan-Mack Phone 277 609 Mass. Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan. kroger Fresh Ground Spotlight Coffee 2 lb bgs 79c Bread Butter Nut or Loaf 14c Wonder Libby's 80TH YEAR CANNED FOOD SALE LIBBY'S PEACHES 27c Sliced in Syrup—Delicious Clings—No. $ 2 \frac{1}{2} $ can LIBBY'S PLUMS 28c In Heavy Syrup—No. 2½ Can LIBBY'S FRUIT COCKTAIL 35c in Light Syrup—No. $ 2 \frac{1}{2} $ Can LIBBY'S PEAS 35c Jumbo Sweet—2 No. 303 Cans LIBBY'S DEEP BROWN BEANS 25c Serve Hot or Cold—2-14 oz. Cans. LIBBY'S TOMATOES 25c Vine Ripened—No. 2 Can CHUCK ROAST 49c Tender—Juicy—Choice Cuts — Lb. Cod Fish Fillets 39c No. Pike lb 39c Whiting lb 20c Si'd Bacon lb 63c ICEBERG LETTUCE lb 10c Fresh—Crisp Potatoes 53c Red Triumphs—10 lb. Bag Brussle Sprouts 39c -Carton Cauliflower lb 19c Snowwhite Mushrooms 29c Fresh-Carton M T ver bet and F€ W --- FUNDAMENTAL EQUATION OF THE GENERAL EQUATION THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12. 1948 PAGE THREE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Males Tired Of Gift-Giving Philadelphia—(UP)—A "cold war" between the sexes has developed college campuses in the Philadelphia area. "It isn't fair," said members of the new anti-gift organization. "We're The issue at stake? Emancipation of the American male gift-giver. Particularly on St. Valentine's day. "It isn't fair," said member, tired of giving something to our women and receiving it from the girls on the cheek. "It's time for the girls to give us presents." The group, which calls itself the "GETS"—short for the Guild of Enlightened and Thrifty Spenders—already has branched out from Temple university to the University of Pennsylvania and other nearby institutions, and looking to carry its crusade to more distant fields. **GETS Advertise** The GETS have launched an advertising campaign in their fight between "them that gives (the men) and them that gets (the women)." St. Valentine's day particularly is dreaded by the mere male, said the founder, Aaron Katz, because of "its undemocratic practice of sending presents to women who selfishly accept them as their due." This year, he said, the worm will turn, and "we will demand as our rightful due a gift from every girl who accents our Valentine presents." Women students stuck back with a threat—published in campus newspapers—to boycott any and all memorial services on the dates. Get-Geets Organize. A counter organization was formed promptly. It calls itself the Go-Getters and its reported purpose was to it exists itself the GS-Getters and its reported purpose was to all the GETS where to get off, to picket all rallies, and to uphold woman's historic right to receive. It is more blessed to give than to "It is more blessed to give than to receive," the girls reminded the GETS. "It is also more expensive," said Katz. Socially Speaking KKG Pledges Kappa Kappa Gamma announces the pledging of Mary Virginia Douglas, Pittsburgh, Pa., and Joyce Rock, Kansas City, Mo. Phi Gam Pledges Pni Gamma Delta announces the pledging of Robert Buck, Kenneth Carey, and William Mulhern of Wichita. Gamma Phi Elects Officers recently elected by Gamma Phi Beta are Dorothy James, president; Barbara Byrd, vice-president; Katherine Culley, secretary; Doris Tihen, treasurer; Grace Gwinner, rush chairman; Barbara Johnson, pledge trainer; Peggy Grager, house president; Ann Allen, standards chairman; Alix Neville, executive representative; Etta Mae Cooper, scholarship chairman; Carol Ann Hastings, activities chairman; Joan Manuel, librarian; Barbara Felt, historian; Bee Brady, Crescent correspondent; Catherine Jarboe, publicity chairman. Festival Programs Will Be Broadcast Part of the program of the Kansas Arts and Crafts festival to be held Feb. 18 to 22, will be transcribed and broadcast over station KFKU. "Sunny," a children's operetta, to be given by the Lawrence public schools, will be transcribed and later broadcast as one of the "Women of Kansas" series, sponsored by the Radio Council of Kansas Women. A concert by the University Symphony orchestra and University A Cappella choir will be broadcast directly from Hoch auditorium over KFKU. At Snow Zoology Club Graduate Student To Speak Wayne L. Reeve will speak on gea shore zoology at a meeting of the zoology club at 7:30 p.m. today in 206 Snow hall. Mr. Reeve, a graduate student, will describe animals he observed on Pacific coast last summer. Colored movies and slides will be shown. Weddings And Engagements Mrs. Eugene Alford of Lawrence announces the marriage of her daughter, Mary Virginia, to Robert H. Adams, Jr., son of Mrs. Robert H. Adams of Salina. Alford-Adams Dr. Fosberg Hughes read the ceremony at the Plymouth Congregational church Feb. 7. The reception was held at the Kappa Alpha Theta chapter house. Mrs. Hughes, a member of Kappa Alpha Theta, was graduated from the University in 1947. Mr. Hughes, who was graduated at the end of fall semester, is a member of Sigma Chi fraternity. Mr. and Mrs. Adams will be at home in Salina where Mr. Adams is associated with the Salina Advertiser-Sun. Call K.U. 251 With Your News Men Think Courses Help Men as well as women are taking an interest in courses in marriage and family relationships. They feel that the home is not just their wives responsibility but their own too. In taking the courses they have taken, they are able to carry part of this responsibility. One man who has previously enrolled in one of these courses said that he took it because his wife made him. Now he is glad she did. Miss Sarah Patterson, assistant professor of home economics, says that the courses offered in marriage and the family are thought of to be just for women but that they are also important. "There is common for men to be enrolled in these courses but she feels that more men should take the courses. "Men contribute quite a bit to class discussion in presenting their views," Miss Patterson added. 'Faith In Jesus Christ' Is Topic Of CF Speaker The Rev. Lynn Hodges of Topeka, was the guest speaker at a meeting of the Christian Fellowship in Danforth chapel Wednesday. His topic was "Belief and Faith in Jesus Christ." Dean Anderson, president, announced plans for a party Feb. 27, in Myers hall. The next meeting will be Feb. 18 in 113 Frank Strong. DESOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH Rally GALLAGHER MOTORS FINE FINE SERVICE GREAT Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. CARS SQUARE DEAL EYE WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames Lawrence Optical Co. DIAMONDS Fine Color $50.00 to $500.00 Brilliant Gustafson Distinctive THE COLLEGE JEWELER 809 Mass. Closest To The Campus PHONE 430 BAND BOX Beauty Shop 1144 IND. Appointment Hours from 8-6 Junior Prom Date Set, Chairman Will Be Chosen The Junior Prom will be held April 10, class members decided at a meeting Wednesday. A chairman for the dance and all committee chairmen will be appointed soon. Names of class members interested in helping plan the dance should be turned in to the president, Lu Anne Powell. John Adams was the last member of the Federalist party to be elected President of the United States. Join our RENTAL LIBRARY The new books you have been wanting to read are here. 15c for 5 days 15c for 5 days THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Phone 666 GALES American Custom Chocolates, $1.75 STOWIT'S Rexall STORE EAT SANDWICHES Take a Break—Keep awake Perk-up—Snack-up ● Hamburgers ● Home-made Chili ● Malts ● Sandwiches ZIM'S SNACK SHOP East of Post Office OLDTOWN Trotters HANDSEWN ORIGINALS 0 Red Brown Green Tan nce you wear them you'll never be without them! 1 $8.95 That's how you're sure to feel about these handsewn moccasins that embody every staunch characteristic and sensitive detail that creates utter foot bliss! That's why we're so proud to have them for you, exclusively, in this city! Royal College Shop 837-39 Mass. PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1948 SPOTLIGHT SPORTS By BOB DELLINGER Daily Kansan Sports Editor When the Star Spangled Banner was played before the basketball game Monday, one flag shared the spotlight with the Stars and Stripes. Was it a Kansas pennant, or even a pennant of some conference school? No. It was marked Notre Dame. During the football season, pannants of conference members and of other opponents fly at every game. Out in the open, it is not easy to see how tattered and worn these flags are, but when they are brought inside they show the wear. At every basketball game, Hoch auditorium is decorated with some of these pennants. Not all the conference schools are represented; some of the pennants are of opponents whom we meet only once or twice in a decade. And all of them are so disreputable in appearance that should—and probably do—shame those who are responsible for them. We recommend one of these steps: 1. Remove all the pennants completely. They fail to add to the attractiveness of the building. 2. Replace those of teams we will not meet again with those of conference members. 3. Buy some new ones if they just have to be put up there. 4. Or if nothing else, drape them in such a way that a Kansas pennant is the one in the spotlight when the national anthem is played. - * * Kansas will take the road against Iowa State tonight, and will travel with the encouraging prospect that visiting teams have won an unprecedented percentage of conference games this year. Home teams, usually invulnerable in Big Seven conference play, have won only 11 of 20 games this year. Oklahoma, now in a third-place tie with Kansas, is the only team in the conference which has not won a road game. The Sooners hope to shed this distinction Saturday or Monday when they meet the Kansas State Wildcats and the Colorado Buffs at their respective lairs. Another Saturday game takes the sixth-place Nebraska Cornhuskers to Columbia. A Tiger victory coupled with a Kansas State loss would send Missouri to undisputed possession of first place, a position which they were favored to take at the start of the season. Four Teams Win In Women's IM Ricker hall, Kappa Alpha Thets, I. W. W., and Harmon co-op were victorious in women's basketball games played Wednesday. Watkins hall won from Jolliffe hall by for- feit. Ricker's 17 to 16 defeat over Campus house was the closest game. Amick of Ricker was bigh for her team with eight points. Vera Hodges, guard, displayed brilliant defensive play for the winners. Connor and Marshall of Campus house each contributed eight points for the losers. Led by Smith with 17 points, the Theta's defeated Sigma Kappa 36 to 13. Doane and McCune were outstanding in guard positions for Theta. Burnham, Sigma Kappa forward, made seven points. Loveless, Hoffman, and McGee sparked I. W. W. who defeated Sleepy Hollow 32 to 13. Loveless scored 18 points. Fox and Kaff displayed solid guarding. High scorer for Sleepy Hollow was Shinn with six points. Harmon co-op, led by Stoll, who scored 11 points, and backed by Ratlzaff, guard, cutplayed Monchonsia hall 20 to 13. Schmalzird scored high for Monchonsia with five points. Maryland's farm production is large, with wheat and corn the principal crops. KU Indoor Track Squad To Meet OU Sooners Jayhawker trackmen will travel Saturday to Norman, Oklahoma, for their second indoor dual meet of the season. Still smarting from a sound defeat at the hands of the Missouri Tigers, defending conference champions, the Kansas team has high hopes of outpointing the Sooners of Oklahoma. Commenting that he considered the Missouri track team one of the best in the nation, Coach Bill Easton said his men should run the weaker Sooners a very close race. The outcome of the meet will probably depend on the winners of the field events. K. U., with Bob Karnes and Hal Moore, is expected to dominate the longer distance races, while Oklahoma appears stronger in the dashes. Both teams have been handicapped by cold weather which has prevented practice. The O. U. indoor track has been dubbed "Pneumonia Downs" by Harold Keith, Sooner sports publicist, and weather conditions now may make Saturday's event unpleasant for the tracksters. Kansas will go to the post without the services of Herman Wilson, best Jayhawker pole vaulter, who hurt an ankle at Missouri last weekend. Hal Hinchee, distance man, is also on the injured list. Kansas entries; 60-yard dash—Danneberg, Stites and Binter. 440-yard run—Stites, Binter and Wagstaff. Mile run—Karnes and Moore. Two-mile run — Karnes and Moore. 880-yard run—Shea, Winton and Studt. High jump -Delvin Norris, Zimmer and Scofield. Pole vault—Darrell Norris. Broad jump—Crowley, Bunten and Nearing. High hurdles—Stannard Low hurdles-Stannard and Follansbee Shot put-Lee. Yellowstone National park, established in 1879, was our first National park. Robinson Will Sign Today New York, Feb. 12 - (UP) -Jackie Robinson, who played with distinction as the first Negro in organized baseball, was expected today to sign with the Brooklyn Dodgers for 1948 on the birthday of Abraham Lincoln, the Great Emancipator. Robinson, the rookie of the year last season, was expected to be paid around $15,000 for 1948 which is nearly three times as much as he earned from the club in straight salary last year. Rickey, who made it possible for Robinson to break down the very real barriers existing against Negroes in organized baseball, said he would hold a press conference at which it was a foregone conclusion he would announce the signing of Jackie. The Dodgers also were having holdout troubles. Eddie Stanky revealed from Mobile, Ala., that he wanted upwards of $12,000 whereas he reportedly was offered $9,000. He joined Pete Reiser, Bruce Edwards, and Hugh Casey as bonafide holdouts. Meanwhile, the Dodgers signed Gene Hermanski, who is expected to take over Dixie Walker's right field post. He capitulated for about $7,500 not much more than one-third what Walker got. Hermanski hit .279 in 79 games but was a powerful factor in the late season, batting .357 in September. Call K. U. 251 With Your News BILL'S GRILL QUICK COURTEOUS SERVICE 1109 Mass. Phone 2054 Across from the Courthouse Washing - Lubricating - Batteries - Tires FRANZ CONOCO SERVICE 9th and N.H. Phone 867 Lawrence Laundry & Dry Cleaners Look Sharp! Feel Sharp! Be Smooth! S If you want to keep that neat, presentable appearance— always — Let us keep your clothes looking sharp too! Expert and Guaranteed cleaning service. Pick-up & Delivery—Ph. 383 LAWRENCE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 1001 N.H. 20% discount cash and carry SEA FOOD CHEF A Specialty A Duck's Tavern 824 VERMONT REMEMBER February 14 Is the last day you may return books on our money-back guarantee. Rowland's TWO BOOK STORES Read the Daily Kansan daily. Sweetheart Swing Sweetheart Swing Feb. 14 Union Ballroom 9-12 P. M. Harlan Livingood and Orchestra $1.50 couple Feb. 14 Tonite 9 p.m. From Our Stage $24.95 Emerson Radios F. F. F. E. JAYHAWKER Shows 2:30-7-9 NOW Ends Tuesday NEW MAGICAL MUSICAL! 1234567890 My Wild Irish Rose starring DENNIS MORGAN with Andrea KING · Arlene DHAH Color by TECHNICOLOR GRANADA From Our Stage TONITE 9:00 p.m. 3--$24.95 Emerson RADIOS FREE On the Screen- TONITE Thru Saturday The Screen's Most Glorious adventure story of a Thoroughbred Horse! BLACK GOLD ANTHONY QUINN KATHERINE DEMILLE IN EYE-FILLING CINECOLOR ! BLACK GOLD NOW ENDS SATURDAY VARSITY NOW ENDS SATURDAY Johnny Mack Brown "TRAILING DANGER" co-feature "WHITE STALLION" Special Tonight 3 EMERSON "Black Gold" Radios Given away Tonight PATEE TONITE—Ends Sat. TONITE—Ends Sat. Drama of the Old West! Dana ANDREWS Susan HAYWARD "CANYON PASSAGE" 2nd Feature That Salome Gall! Yvonne DE CARLO Rod CAMERON "FRONTIER GAL" THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 12. 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Beta's Set Unbeaten Pace; Theta Tau Rallies To Win The Beta's downed the D.U.'s 23 to 27 while the Theta Tau's staged a last half rally to win from the Lambda Chi's 25 to 22 in the only games on last night's intramural card. Leading only 16 to 14 at the half, the Beta five finally found the range in the last few minutes to pull ahead of the D.U.'s 33 to 27. Bob Wood kept L.M Standings Fraternity—Division One Team W L Sig Alph 5 0 Phi Delt 4 1 A.T.O. 3 2 Delta Chi 3 2 Sigma Nu 3 3 Phi Gam 2 3 K, A, Psi 1 4 Triangle 0 6 Division Two Sigma Chi Sig Eps Phi Psi Pi K. A. Phi Kappa A. K. Psi Alpha Phi Alpha Delta Tau Division Three Beta Kappa Sig T. K. E. A. V: C. D. U. Lambda Chi Theta Tau A. K. Lambda Independent—Division One Independence—Division One Deuces Wild Rollin Pin Five Airscrews Kappa Psi Jokers Alpha Chi Sigma Fightin Five Division Three Law School Friends and Demons Battenfeld Smith Hall L. M. O. C. Wheelin Dealers NeNown's A. C. Nubbins 4 ElDorado A. C. N. R. O. T. C. Armanav Bounders Tom's Boys Shiners Division Four Army Dix Club Married Men Crazy Kats Ind. Oilers Oread Hall Castaways Division Six Division Five Acces High Spencer Thayer Last Chancers Five G's Phantoms 939 Club 2120 Club Y. M. C. A. Gamma Delta Navy Officers Wesley Dine-A-Mite Kappa E. Kappa Sigma K. Phi You Can't Eat Jewels Either Tulsa—(UP)—A haul of $500 from the office of W. L. Herring won't do the burglar much good. Herring, an independent oil man, explained the currency was Confederate money and a family keepsake. The burglar overlooked $1,000 in jewelry. Who Is House? *the losers in the game by scoring 13 points with uncanny, left-handed hook shots. Shelton got eight points and Moon seven to lead the Beta's to their sixth straight win. Bellu, Rests, Lurdea, Chi.* REMEMBER February 14 is Valentines Day Cards and Gifts at Rally Beats Lambda Chi Theta Tau staged an amazing last half recovery act to score an upset decision over the Lambda Chi's. The Tau's trailed 10 to 16 at the halfway mark, but shook their star, Borene, loose in the second half for some crucial buckets. Borene topped the game's scorers with 10 points while Fulkerson tallied nine for the losers. Trailing by three points the Lambda Chi's passed up a golden opportunity to tie the game in the closing minutes when they missed four straight setups. Robinson Annex Rowland's TWO BOOK STORES Eighteen "A" teams will square off tonight. The sechedule: 10 Rockson Amex 5 p.m. Sig Alph vs Phi Gam 6 p.m. Phi Psi vs. Sig Ep 7 p.m. Kappa Sig vs. T.K.E. 8 p.m. Phi Delt vs. Delta Chi 9 p.m. Sigma Chi vs. Alpha Phi Alpha 10 p.m. Denver Wild vs. Rollin 10 p.m. Deuces Wild vs. Rollin Pin Five Robinson Gym 8 p.m. A.T.O. vs. Kappa Alpha Psi 9 p.m. Kappa Psi vs. Jokers 10 p.m. Delta Tau Delta vs. Phi Basketball Plus Name Bands Boost Detroit Game Gates 10 p.m. Delta Tau Delta vs. Phi Kappa Detroit—(UP)—Basketball served piping hot with a side-dish of big name band music has caught the fancy of Detroit fans. Lawrence tech moved in bands like Tommy Dorsey's and Gene Krupa's for post-game dances. Couples liked the idea so well they put up $4 for the package evening and boosted attendance to an all-time high. Girls' Rifle Team Starts With Bang The girls' rifle team, sponsored by the R. O. T. C., is starting the semester with a bang. The girls have matches scheduled every week until the middle of April with 19 different colleges. Exchange meets will be held this week with New Mexico A. and M., Pennsylvania State, and Beaver college. Each school mails its respective scores to its opponent and the team with the highest average wins. Members of the University team are: Mary Anna Ward, Dorothy Jane Keith, Kathleen Broers, Barbara Cleaves, Margaret Connolly, Inez Hall, Mildred Rowe, Virginia Loveless and Elaine Sawyer. The University team will be picked each week from among members of the rife club. The following have been most active during the past semester: Mary Anna Ward, Dorothy Jane Keith, Kathleen Broers Barbara Cleaves, Margaret Connolly Iez Hall, Mildred Rowe, Virginia Loveless, and Elaine Sawyer. Other members who may be used in inter-school matches are: Barbara Johnson, Joanne Cochreham Lucille Murray, Eleanor Ann Brown Caroline Hamma, Lois Fallis, Myrna Lynch, Katherine Sowders, Nancy Cameron, Billie Bowman, Katherine Ann Smith, and Ardis Sly. Basketball Results Okla. A. & M. 32, Colo. 30 (overtime) Penn St. 42, Georgetown 40 R. I. State 84, Coast Guard 72 Manhattan 48, St. Francis 41 Cornell 68, Penn 57 Muhlenberg 65, St. Josephs 55 Youngstown 59, Wash. & Jeff. 57 Brown 46, Anhters 40 Princeton 35, Yale 52 George Wash. 65, Maryland 49 Syracuse 81, Rochester 46 Pittsburgh 51, Allegheny 33 West Virginia 38, Navy 37 Rutgers 40, Army 37 Long Island 84, Bergen 42 Indiana St. 70, Charleston 62 Kansas Wesleyan 57, Ottawa 56 Wash. & Lee 65, Richmond 57 Hardin 61, Southwestern 44 Mississippi 50, Jacksonville 48 THE CHATEAU IS THE PLACE TO GO CHATEAU DRIVE IN MAIL AT 18TH - Steak Dinners - Tasty Sandwiches - Fountain Specials Have you tried one of our Fried Oyster Dinners? OPEN DAILY CURB SERVICE 11 A.M. AFTER 4 P.M. DANCE HEALTH'S SAKE ROLLER SKATE Yes, the Rollerdrome's a place for good clean, wholesome fun and exercise. Skate for your health at the For SKATING ACADEMY ROLLERDROME 1 block south of P.O. 737 N. Hamp. Phone 2402 MIDNIGHT JINX SHOW FRIDAY 13th-11:45 p.m. All Comedy and Cartoon Program - "A Host to a Ghost" - "The Spook Speaks" - "Donald and the Gorilla" - "The Shivering Sherlocks" - "The Friendly Ghost" and Many Others—with Edgar KENNEDY——Leon ERROL The 3-Stooges—Donald Duck—etc. FREE Tickets! FREE Pop Corn! If your regular admission ticket number has a "13" in it-you receive another admission FREE. If the number on your pop corn box flap has a "13" in it — you receive another 10c box FREE. Make up your own spook party NOW! FRIDAY the 13TH At regular low prices GRANADA Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers. CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE BATTERIES ETHYL ABBA KADABBA SEES ALL KNOWS ALL READINGS # "Ah-h-hh! That's the Oil I've been looking for-give me five quarts!" CITIES CITIES SERVICE It doesn't take a crystal ball to discover the advantages of Trojan Motor Oil. All it takes is one crankcase filling—and you'll find them all out for yourself. Trojan is an outstanding premium type motor oil. It is chemically fortified for added resistance against bearing corrosion, sludge, gum and other objectionable formations. Remember, a properly lubricated engine is a better performing engine; much cheaper to operate and more enduring. That's why it's so important to use the best oil you can get—Trojan Motor Oil. It's an exclusive Cities Service product. Try it today! CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. Phone 4 CITIES SERVICE 8th & N. Hampshire PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1948 The Editorial Page A New Language Requirement The College faculty will soon vote on two reports concerning the present language requirements for students in the College. The majority report proposes that "the college foreign language requirement shall consist of an attainment in high school or college equivalent to not less than that of 12 semester hours in one foreign language or combination of two foreign *** languages." The minority report proposes "that a requirement be established as an alternative to the foreign language requirement for the B.A. degree. The following is the case for both sides. The majority report supports its plan for a change in the College language requirement with these arguments. Majority Report 1. Knowledge of one or more foreign languages has long been recognized as (a) one of the marks of the liberally educated man. It is (b) an indispensable tool in nearly every kind of advanced study and (c) is an essential means of communication between the several nations of the world and between the people of these nations. 4. Language study helps development of the virtues of speed and accuracy in the student. 3. Language study has disciplinary values. 2. The most obvious value of foreign language study is the acquisition of a linguistic tool. 5. The study of languages is generally conceded to give training in logic, applied logic, not theoretical or formal. 6. The study of languages is also good training in understanding the limitations of logic. 7. The greatest single value of language study is the understanding which it gives of the system of symbols which is called speech. 8. Foreign language study improves the students's English. \* \* \* Minority Report The minority committee does not oppose the study of a foreign language, but it is against a foreign language requirement for all students. The minority report has replied to the majority report with these points. 1. Students are not and will not be proficient in foreign languages upon completion of the present requirement or the proposed plan of the majority committee. 3. An alternative requirement would serve the needs of some of our students better than would a foreign language requirement. 2. Whatever slight proficiency may be attained is soon lost when foreign language study is discontinued. 4. Foreign language courses are not the only courses wherein discipline may be acquired. Mathematics or any of the exact sciences could provide it as well. 5. A study of the derivations of words in common use in English might not only enrich the student's general background but help to make him word conscious and perhaps more discriminating in the use of his own language. 6. Students for whom foreign languages are practical tools in their businesses or professions will take foreign languages whether they are required of all students or not. 7. Most students would gain much more in international understanding by reading in translation from the literatures of other countries than by spending ten or twelve hours in language study. What You Can Do - * * Unfortunately students can't do much to bring their opinions to bear in this matter. The most they can do is to talk to their professors and let them know how they feel about either side. However, the faculty members can weigh both sides and consider which one will be of the most value to the students. Then they can make it a point to attend the meeting when the vote is being taken and cast their vote for the student. Abraham Lincoln Today is the birthday of the "Great Emancipator", Abraham Lincoln. Historians have delved and probed into his life in an attempt to find what just his significance has been on the American scene. One vexing question is his motive in freeing the slaves. Scholars can't decide whether Lincoln signed his proclamation merely to gain a political advantage or whether it was the act of a great humanitarian. Less fastidious men have accepted Abraham Lincoln as an American symbol. To them he stands for the ideal of an America of equality and tolerance. Ideals like that need a rallying point. What nation has a better one than Abraham Lincoln? Recent actions by law enforcement officers in searching for liquor in Kansas has centered much discussion upon the right of officers to search private property without a warrant stating what is to be searched, and what is to be searched for. Justice Douglas of the United States Supreme Court stated the situation very well in a recent decision. He said, "It is better, that certain violators escape than all citizens be subject to unreasonable search." The Library of Congress owns about 85,000 books on the cultural and physical development of Russia. Why doesn't someone inform the state department of this fact? Many answers might be found as to why the Russians act as they do. To annihilate the human race seems to be the main topic of conversation. First it was DDT (drop dead twice) and now it is FFFFFT (fall fatally forward five times). A new sidewalk was recently completed on the campus, but they seem to have forgotten that it would have two ends. One leads to one of our new buildings, the other to a big mud hole. Fencers Organize Elect Garcia Raymond Garcia, College junior, has been elected president of the reorganized University Fencing club, which has been inactive since 1941. Plans for fencing competition with Wichita university and Kansas City university are being made, Other officers of the club are Ann Michener, vice-president, and Margaret Brewster, secretary-treasurer. William Belt, assistant instructor of romance language and physical education, is faculty adviser. "The purpose of our organization is to promote interest in fencing in the Midwest, where it is sadly lacking. We welcome anyone, whether they can fence or not for we feel we can give adequate instruction," Garcia said. Members are: Russell L. Goodpasture, Kenneth R. Steele, George H. Cousins, Walter Billau, Hugh Watson, John Killinger, Curtis Nystrom, George Rolland Cole, Ann Michener, Patricia Perkins, Mary Helen Keller, Saul Zabar, Leigh Wellborn, Kenneth Steele. Thieves Steal Garage, Too Medford, Mass.—(UP) —Automobile thieves are taking along the garage, too. A two-car garage reported stolen here was found by police a mile from its original site. University Daily Hansan Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assn, Natl Aoma, and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Ad- vocate Association 420 Madison Ave. New York City. Editor-in-Chief ... William C. Van Murer Managing Editor ... Alan J. Stewart Asst. Man. Editor ... Kevin Bauer Asst. Man. Editor ... Lois Lauer City Editor ... Gene Vignery Asst. City Editor ... James Robinson Telegraph Editor ... Wallace W. Abbey Telegraph Editor ... William Thrush Asst. Tel. Editor ... William Barger Sports Editor ... Robert Dellinger Asst. Sports Editor ... Paul Zeh Asst. Sports Editor ... James Jones Anna Mary Murphy Feature Editor John Wheeler Picture Editor Helen Sillan Dorothy James Business Manager Betty Bacon Advertising Manager Robert Alderson Circulation Manager Otto Meyer Classified Adv. Man Paul Warren Mark, Mgr. David Clifford Promotion Manager Wister Shreve The Kansas Press Association 19 MEMBER. 48 National Editorial Association A FREE PRESS—YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW THE KANSAS 19 MEMBER 48 MEMBER 48 Robber Foiled By 11 Cops MEDICAL ASSOCIATION OF MIDDLE-ENGINEERING Carlisle, Pa.—(UP)—A man brok into a house where 11 state police men were quartered, upset a pile of dishes in doing so and left behind a jacket bearing his name and address. He was arrested promptly. Dog Pound Stays Empty Las Crudes, N. M. -(UP) -A ban on unmuzzled dogs here didn't "take," despite promises by city officials of strict enforcement. City fathers couldn't find anyone to accept the job of dog catcher. DRAKE'S BAKERY Bread, cake, pie, cup-cakes, cookies, donuts whatever you want in baked goods, you'll find the best at DRAKE'S! 907 Mass. 907 Mass. BARGAINS - SWEATERS LOAFER COATS - SOCKS SPORT SHIRTS - TIES Plenty Of Our Ridiculous Sale Is Now On! AT RIDICULOUS PRICES The Palace 843 Massachusetts 100% Cotton Look At Your Shirt! EVERYONE ELSE DOES! An Independent laundered shirt assures the kind of appearance you want to make. INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners Call 432 740 Vermont Last Chance To See: ALL SEATS----75c "The Mikado" FRASER THEATER 8:15 P.M. FRIDAY — FEB. 13 THURSDAY, FEBUARY 12, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE SEVEN 400 To Attend Art Meeting Approximately 400 students and teachers are expected to attend the seventh annual high school art conference here Feb. 20 and 21, Prof. Marjorie Whitney, head of the design department, announced today. Date of the conference was set ahead this year to coincide with the Kansas Arts and Crafts festival. A board of three experts will criticize student work from junior and senior high schools which will be exhibited. Miss Julia Keeler high school art teacher, Des Moines, Iowa; Robert Cook, assistant professor of art, Wichita university; and Mrs. Mary Margaret Warner, curator of Thayer museum, will be the critics. There will be continuous demonstrations of art and craft processes both days in University studios. "A Cry of Players," by Will Gibson of Topeka, and other entertainment features of the festival will be offered evenings. Water color painting, oil painting, silver plating, pottery making, elementary drawing, cartooning, flying, sculpturing, forming plastics, commercial art technics, ceramics, magazine art production, silk screen printing, and weaving, will be included in the demonstrations. Rehearsals are becoming quite an ordeal for four University students, Tom Rea, Tom Shay, Loren Kennedy, and Herk Harvey, who will be in the cast of Will Gibson's pre-broadway production, "A Cry of Players." The play will be presented in Fraser theater Feb. 20 and 21 in connection with the Kansas Arts and Crafts festival and for three days the following week for K.U. students. Players 'Cry' Over 'A Cry Of Players' Tom Rea plays the lead roll of Will Shakespeare. Supporting roles are taken by Tom Shay as Master Roche, schoolman friend and adviser to Shakespeare; Loren Kennedy as Kent, chief player of the group of players in the production; and Herk Harvey as Sir Thomas Lucy, squire and landowner. Since the play is a Topeka civic project, the K.U. actors have had to travel to and from Topeka for every practice. Student actors who carry full class schedules are really crying. Play practicing in the capital each evening just isn't conducive to proper studying. The rehearsals have been both numerous and lengthy and the actors have spent each weekend practicing in Topeka. Rehearsals have been from 7:30 to 11:30 p.m. and will continue to be so until Feb. 17. Sunday rehearsals are from 2 to 9:30 p.m. The theme of the drama is built around the last three days of Shakespeare's life in Stratford before he breaks all home ties and follows a company of actors to London. The play is under the direction of Louis Sweet, with Allen Hancock as assistant director. Playwright Will Gibson has also been assisting. All are from Topeka. Prof. E. O. Stene was re-elected president of the University chapter of the American Association of University Professors at its annual meeting Tuesday. Prof. W. D. Paden was re-elected secretary. Other officers are Prof. Winnie D. Lowrance, vicepresident; Prof. J. O. Maloney, board member; and Prof. E. E. Bayles, chapter representative on the state committee. Ralph E. Himstead, executive secretary of the national association, will speak at a meeting of the University chapter March 6. Stene Re-Elected AAUP President Invitations have been sent out to other chapters in the state and the state meeting may be held March 6, Professor Stene said. Call K.U. 251. With Your News. Daily Kansan Classified Ads Copy must be in the University Daily Kansan Business Office, Journalism bldg., not later than 9 a.m. of the day before you desire desired. All classifications are cash in advance. Classified Advertising Rates 25 words or less additional words For Sale 1934 CHEV. Tudor Master Deluxe. Good condition, fair tires. Excellent school transportation. Call 1637 between 4 and 5.30 p.m. Monday thru Friday. 18 LINGUAHAPONE. Russian records; com- mended condition; Phil Bilaria 1323 La. After 4 p.m. SELMER CLARINET: Boerm system, 17 keys, 7 rings, articulated G-sharp. Excellent condition. Tom Sagmoen. Phone 3021. 1946 HUDSON Six coupe. 14,000 miles. Fully equipped and like new in every respect. See at 1423 New York after 1.00 p.m. ONE K & E Log-Log Duplex Decitig drafting instruments. 3.p33.SM. 13 drafting instruments. 3.p33.SM. 13 PAIR OF Women's white Hockey skates, for coach of the women's team. owner. Call 358, ask for Grace. 13 CROSLEY Tube Radio: Grey double wire. Call 3479W after 7:00 pm. Ask for Dean 1937 PLYMOUTH coach, radio, heater, olts lites, UU3, Ky 33 PRACTICALLY new Charvas drawing trailer, trailer house, trailer Mass., evenings. REIMINGTON Deluxe Portable Typewriter Nearby now, Phone 31578 PRACTICALLY new Motown Radio with Chevrolet head control. Good hot water heater. H.E. Wright 1224 R.I. 1308M. 16 DIETZGN Commander drawing instruments. Used one semester. Excellent condition. Ph. Quentin Long at 3338 after 7:00 p.m. 12 VETERANIS! We will buy, trade or sell for you any Army or Navy gear in good condition that you may wish. Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. Phone 859 HTFD WILL GLADLY pay $10.00 for information about or the return of a black portion of their clothing. No questions asked. Needed urgently by Gregory Simms, 1024 Miss. Ph. 1834R. Miscellaneous SHAVER'S CAFE and service. Opening Lawrence on Highway 53—just "around the bend." Come out and see us! 18 SPECIAL RATE on "Harvard Business School" on Highway 53. WILL PERSON who accidently exchanged tank finger-tip coat Monday noon, Feb. 9 at Unger Catheter coattrick conference in Ugner, 125 Rhode Island Island 92849 ALL OR PART meals for students. Also have a meal with girl. Phone 1843 1974 Near Stadium. SPECIAL RATE on "Harvard Business Year at the Student Union Book Store. SUBSCRIBE to the Kansas City Star, call headquarters at Round Corner Drug Store. 1948 is Leap Year so let's leap with a K.U. calendar. *tt* FREE OFFER: Photo copies of discharge papers, marriage certificates, for military credit or school entrance. 3 for price of 2 Round Cornor Drug. 801 Mass. 18 Transportation WILL COMMUTE daily from Topeka if I can get four permanent riders. For further information ph. 3-3481 in Topeka after 5 p.m. WANTED: Ride for two to Wichita, Fri. Evening or Saturday morning. GI 3355R WANT ride to and (or) from K.C., Mon, Wed., and Fri. Arrive Lawrence, 9 a.m. leave 4 p.m. Call VA3750 (Sterling Apts) in K.C. Ask for Lee Noel. 12 CAMPUS representative for new plastic item. A fast seller in colleges and local store outlets. Excellent commission. Write Paul Dittz, 422 Hamilton, Vanaston, Etl. WANTED: One boy to share large dou- bly room. 2086 M K.U. BK. stop one-half block. MALE STUDENT to share double room; also man to share apartment with three other students. 1536 Tenn., Phone 2281-R 19 YOUNG man to share room with K.U. student, Downtown, modern, near K.U. Wanted Parker 51 Fountain Pens Super Chrome Ink STOWIT'S Rexall STORE For Rent LARGE SOUTH room and small kitchenette containing sink and cooking facilities. Redecorated and now ready for use at 1316 Ohio. 16 VACANCY for one man student, 1416 Tenn. student leaving school, 16 FRANT ROOM: Furrace heat. Share with apptomobile engineering student. Must have BSC or equivalent. TWO nice single or double rooms for insurance. A car lift and luggage lits in "garage for rent." Fn. 23904. QUARTERS FOR colored girls: Vacancy for one girl. Bed, warm, bed, neat, private bath, kitchen and wash room. Call 1735-R after 5:30 p.m. 13 TWO ROOMS for boys, single or double. Will consider kitchen privileges—reasonably priced. 1016 Rhode Island. Call 2585-M after 3:00 p.m. 13 Lost BROWN ZIPPER bilffold, between Zone 6216. Doris Edmiston, Reward Phone 2675. Doris Edmiston, GREY PARKER 51 pen, gold top, slightly dented. Lost Monday noon somewhere between Frank Strong and Phil Delti Reward. Beard Bill Mitchell. Phone 957. PAIR clear plastic-rimmed glasses, brown leather case. Ph. 3521M. 12 PAIR OF metal-frame glasses in brown leather case. Lost Sat. Feb. 7 in Union townships) about 5:30 p.m. Please leave in Daily Kansas Business Office if found. I. D. bracelet. Return to Robert O'Neill in care of C. T. Hell. 1308 Ky. LOST between Union and, Frank Strong — one Lifetime Schaffer paper, gold and plastic. Name Jim Gould on barrel. Return to Daily Kansan or Phone 1251L. Found AR KEYS - in brown case. Owner call 32od Burns, Ph. 1426M. 801 Inc. 12 BUTAIN EBE found Monday. Owner call for aid. Incoming for ad. Inquiry at Kansan office. 13 Want Accountants In Civil Service Applications will be accepted until Feb. 27. Application forms and information can be obtained by writing to the Kansas department of civil service, 801 Harrison, Topeka. Mr. Herrick expects a few appointments to be made early this spring with the possibility of 10 or more appointments later in the year. Two years of residence in Kansas is required of all applicants. It is safe to hold a queen bee in your hand since they only use their stings on other queen bees. LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS You Are Always Welcome at SNAPPY LUNCH for 12 East Eighth Hot Chili Malts Soup Sandwiches 1010 Massachusetts Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed...65c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed 69c CASH AND CARRY ONLY Discuss Geology Conference R. M. Dreyer, associate professor of geology, and Cecil G. L. Lalicker, professor of geology, were principal speakers at a meeting of Sigma Gamma Epsilon, geological fraternity, Tuesday. The professors gave reports of the meetings held by the Geological Society of America at Ottawa, Canada, during the Christmas holidays, Professor Dreyer spoke on the economic and mineralogical aspects of the meetings, and Professor Lalickar discussed the paleontological side. Call K. U. 251 With Your News Launderette Service 9 lbs. of wash, 25c 21 Bendix Washers 813 Vt. Phone 336i Rip Brown's 5 BOPS SKYLINE — Wed-Fri-Sat Sunday Supper Buffet Style 5:30 - 7:30 The Castle Tea Room 13th Mass. Phone 149 In This Weather Guard Against Poor HealthDrink Plenty Of Milk 834 Vermont Fritzel DAIRY PRODUCTS CHI GALLOWAY Phone 182 Free-To Students and Faculty ORANGE BOWL MOVIES (in color) HOCH AUDITORIUM----7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday Reserved Section For Faculty Activity Books Admit Students ODD NUMBERS----FRIDAY EVEN NUMBERS----SATURDAY Sponsored By The K-CLUB Valentine's Day IS SATURDAY,FEBRUARY 14 1234567890 TIES SHIRTS See our special set of Valentine red four-in-hands. By Wilson Brothers. Bows in a number of patterns. from $1. Both in colors and white and in the right collar styles too! They're made by Manhattan, Enro, and Arrow. from $1. from $3.50 X Ober's AUTO BOTTOMWARES First With What Men Want Most. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSA $ ^{90} $ PAGE EIGHT 111 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1948 CORE Is Fine Democratic Rabbi Says "The establishment of a just economic order is needed to abolish the psychological factors of racial prejudice. Actually the institutions of Judaism and Christianity are alike in many respects, but too many persons look no farther than the economic situation." "The Congress on Racial Equality is doing a fine democratic job," Rabbi Joseph Levenson, regional director for the Union of American Hebrew Congregations, told two groups Wednesday night. He further illustrated the similarity of Judoism and Christianity by stating that love of God and man are the fundamental principles in both religions, and that a better understanding between Christians and Jews would not only benefit the people of the Christian faith, but would also help them understand their own religion. Rabbi Leventson spoke to the Student Religious council and the C. O. R. E. in connection with Brotherhood week. The former air force chaplain went on to say that there are too few persons in America who care enough about racial equality to do anything about it. Racial prejudice has two big causes which are the psychological and economic aspects of life, Rabbi Levenson said. Engineers To Show Work At Relays Student engineers at the University will have a hand in making the annual Kansas relays, held April 16 and 17, more of a success. Directed by the engineering exposition committee, students in the School of Engineering will stage displays of work performed in their respective departments. The last exposition was in 1940, when 7,000 persons saw the displays. John L. Margrave, chairman of the committee, said that this year at lease 10,000 are expected to see them. The importance of engineering, and the latest scientific developments in the field, will be stressed, Margrave said. The project is a student undertaking, with faculty members acting only as advisers. All departments of the School of Engineering are taking part. Displays will be held in Marvin hall, Lindley hall, experimental stations, Military Science building, Fowler shops, and engineering laboratories Information about the exposition is being sent to junior colleges, high schools, and chambers of commerce in Kansas, Oklahoma, and Nebraska. Martin To Replace Hopkins In Engineering Library Mrs. Betty C. Martin will replace Miss Wanda Hopkins as librarian of the engineering library, Charles M. Baker, director, announced Wednesday. Eldred Jones, educational senior will replace Richard W. Heard, graduate law student, who has been in charge of the night reserve desk at the Main library. Stories On Election Year To Headline Next Dove The next issue of the Dove will go on sale on the campus March 10, it was announced last night at the staff meeting. Articles on the coming presidential race concerning Wallace, Truman, and Taft will appear. Also included will be cartoons and stories on E. Haldemann-Julius. On the staff with Robert W. Campbell, editor, are Frank H. Lawler, Joyce A. Harkleroad. Stanley Kelley, Austin H. Turney, Carolyn R. Covert, and Elmer R. Rusco. Freedom Honored On Coins This, the 138th anniversary of the birthday of Abraham Lincoln, is being observed as Freedom day. Little did Lincoln realize that someday one of the slaves which he freed would someday lead the Negro race to higher education. The slave, Booker T. Washington, is to be honored by the distribution of Freedom Coins, the "Booker T." Washington memorial half-dollar." At the time Abraham Lincoln's emancipation proclamation was read Washington was 8 years old. Although he had been a slave, his life was as carefree as that of any other child. Freedom brought new problems to the Negroes. Washington was soon old enough to face these problems and help his people solve them. The former slave worked in a salt furnace and in coal mines to earn money to put himself through school. At Hampton Normal and Agricultural Institute he worked as a janitor to play for his food; his tuition was arranged by the school-master. After graduating in 1875 he became a teacher. Heads New School In 1881, Washington was recommended for the post of heading a new normal school in Alabama. That was the beginning of Tukegee Institute, which he guided to prominence as the most famous Negro school in the world. As a leader of his race Washington's messages inspired his people to work and work faithfully, disdaining no occupation. Realizing that the Negro race must face difficulties in its relations with the Southern whites he believed that patience, perseverance, power to endure wrong and to withstand temptations would bring equality among all races in this nation. Honored Books And Poems Among the honors he received were world wide recognition of his books. Some are "Up from Slavery," "The Future of the American Negro," "Tuskegee and its People," "The Story of the Negro," and "My Larger Education." He was given the honorary degree of Master of Arts by Harvard university and a degree of Doctor of Laws by Dartmouth. After his death in 1915 he was selected for the Hall of Fame. Now with the issuance of the memorial coin bearing his likeness and the motto "From slave cabin to Hall of Fame" he has received one of the highest honors accorded any man. Money for Memorial Five million of these commemorative half dollars are to be distributed and sold at a premium of one dollar, the difference between their par value of fifty cents will go to the Booker T. Washington birthplace memorial. This project, WSSF Drive Nets $2,746; KU Thanked University students donated $2,746 during the drive of the World Student Service Fund, Hilda James, cochairman of the drive, announced today. This sum is almost double the $1.500 raised last year. The regional secretary of the organization, Isabel Crim, in a letter to Miss James and co-chairman Bob Stewart, wished that the following gratitude be expressed to K.U. students: "Will you please express my thanks and appreciation to the students at the University for their contribution which, sent in forms of food, books, and medical aid, will bring to many students a new hope, a hope for peace and understanding. It seems fitting that this plan should become effective on Lincoln's birthday for these two great men were alike in many ways. Both, as children, were poor and had to struggle for their education. Both believed in the equality of man and worked for a greater humanitarian feeling among men. Both rose to the highest point in their chosen fields and have been revered by the whole world. "Your money has been sent directly to Geneva, Switzerland for immediate use and I can assure you that it will bring much help and encouragement to students throughout the world who, in despair, are faced with cold and hunger this winter. through its industrial training would offer the Negro an incentive to become contributors to their communities and the nation. "W.S.S.F. is the last remaining link among students the world over and a link which is still existing only because of the deep concern of students such as was shown at your University." A. R. S. Dick Bibler, popular University Daily Kansan cartoonist and creator of "Little Man on Campus." will draw free caricatures of guests at the Spring Thaw open house, to be held from 2 to 4 p.m. Saturday in the Union lounge. The open house will be a part of the annual Union day Sweetheart Swing celebration. Flu Bug Is Still Here; Get Protection Now Although influenza cases on the campus have been few and scattered this winter, the cold season is not yet over. Influenza shots are still being given at Watkins hospital during clinic hours, 8 a.m. to noon and 2 to 5 p. m. Monday through Friday and 8 a. m. to noon Saturday. The shots are available without charge for all University students, their families and children over six, faculty members and other University employees. Aggie Statue Gets Painted The old rivalry between K-State and K.U. was renewed yesterday when the statue of William Alexander Harris, distinguished soldier and statesman, was found covered with white paint on the K-State campus. A copy of the University Daily Kansan was found beneath the paint-splattered statue. An inscription on the newspaper read, "This is for Uncle Jim." This is the first time the "Bill" Harris statue has been painted in five years. "Jimmy" Green's statue has been painted often, most recently on Jan. 29. A peace pact to prevent such anties as painting statues was signed by K-State and K.U. several years ago. The pact has been violated many times. No word has been received by Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of men, concerning the painting of the K-State statue. Dean Woodruff does not believe the pact will be broken. "I sincerely hope that students will not, and have not, stooped to such childish antics in connection with the rivalry between the two schools," he said. The Roth Quartet has established itself as one of the foremost string ensembles in the world, and it did not disappoint its audience Wednesday night. Roth Quartet Is Success The four members presented a near-perfect performance of balance, ensemble, and phrasing. Their interpretation was injected with warmth and vitality. They played with enthusiasm and freshness. The tone quality was sparkling and alive. The program was varied and inspirin- ing, including Haydn, Ravel, and Brahms. As an encore the quartet played "Andante Cantabile" by Tchalkowsky. Bowl Movies Will Be In Hoch Holders of odd numbered activity books will be admitted Friday and holders of even numbered books will be admitted Saturday. Orange Bowl color movies will be shown at 7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday in Hoch auditorium, Lynn L. Leigh, vice-president of the K-club has announced. Seats will be reserved for faculty members and K-club members on- The University band will provide a short program prior to the showing of the movies. Three Hi-Y Clubs and YMCA Go To Emporia Conference The Rev. Russell Carter, director of religious activities at Haskell Institute, Mr. Robert Eri Wood, professor of chemistry at Liberty Memorial High school and Mr. William Flaas, professor of chemistr at the University High School will accompany the respective Hi-Y groups to the conference. Three Lawrence Hi-Y clubs and the University Y.M.C.A. will send delegates to the Kansas district Hi-Y conference at Emporia today, Ned Linegar, executive secretary of the D. Y.M.C.A. announced. Mr. Paul Harris, author and lecturer of Putney, Vt., will be the main speaker at the conference. Coal Will Decide English Crisis, Speaker Says 4-FI- SWL The outcome of the economic crisis now faced by England depends upon the battle of production," which in turn depends upon the output of the coal mines, Thomas F. Peart, Labor member of the British parliament, said at a convocation here yesterday. Mr. Peart, parliamentary representative of the mining district of Cumberland, received his education at Durham University and was a member of the Royal artillery in North Africa and Italy during World War II. He reported that the mine goal of 200 million tons was reached in 1947, and said that the goal of 211 million tons in 1948—if attained—would be sufficient for England's needs and would allow some for export. He added that within the past few weeks, first export shipments had gone to Sweden. The miners of England have always felt a neglect, have had an insecure economic status and have had to live under drab conditions," Mr. Peart said. "When the Labour government nationalized the mines, their chief problem was to recruit workers. By offering better working conditions and other inducements, the number was increased 28,000 in 1947." "Nationalization of the mines is not a new idea," he pointed out. "Such action was recommended as early as 1919, and again during World War II by a committee appointed by the Conservative government to study the mining industry." The speaker said that in addition to the economic change brought about by nationalization, the mines are undergoing a technological change because of the increased use of mechanized equipment in an effort to increase the efficiency of each worker. Coal has been mined in England for three centuries, and Mr. Peart, estimated that the known reserves would last for another period of equal length. Student work from junior and senior high schools will be exhibited and a board of three will give criticisms for each piece. The critics are Miss Jill Keeler, high school art teacher, Des Moines, Iowa; Robert Cook, assistant professor of art, Wichita university; and Mrs. Mary Margaret Warner, curator of Thayer museum at K.U. The conference is being held earlier this year in conjunction with the Kansas Arts and Crafts festival which will be held here from Feb. 18 to 22. Demonstrations of art and craft processes in the K.U. studios will be continuous during both days. They will include water color painting, oil painting, silverplating, pottery making, elementary drawing, cartooning, fly tying, sculpturing, plasties forming, commercial art techniques, ceramics, weaving, magazine art production and silk screen printing. During the evenings the visitors will attend the drama, "A Cry of Players," by Will Gibson of Topeka, or other entertainment which will be featured in the Arts and Crafts festival. .. The seventh annual high school art conference will be held Feb. 20 and 21 at the University, Prof. Marjorie Whitney, head of the design department, announced today. High Schools To Show Art About 400 students and teachers are expected to attend. SAI Plans Sale, Musicale Sigma Alpha Iota will hold a rummage sale Feb. 21. Maxine Albury, president, said today. The place of the sale will be announced at the next meeting Feb. 18. Tentative plans were made for a musicale to be held April 12. 1948 e University Daily Kansan 45th Year No. 88 Friday, February 13, 1943 STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Friday, February 13, 1948 Lawrence, Kansas STUDENT NEWSAPER al- in- ave ans, abo- ines, ruit king ents, 8,000 heart,erves of and bited criti- are art bert art, Mary layer Student Forum Will Discuss Language Study A debate and discussion on the proposal to revise the College foreign language requirement will be sponsored by the Forensic league at 4 p. m. Feb. 16 in Fraser theater. The debate and open forum will sample student opinion for faculty consideration. The faculty will vote on the proposal Feb. 17. The discussion will be especially concerned with the majority report of the foreign language requirement committee. This report recommends a language requirement of 12 semester hours. The discussion will also include the minority report which suggests that "an alternate plan would serve the needs of some of the students better than a language requirement." Speakers defending the requirement will be Aldo Aliotti, engineering senior from Rome, and Edward Stollenwerck, College junior. Kenneth Beasley, College senior, and Jean Moore, second year law student, will take the negative. All are members of the University debate team. Open discussion will follow. Hal Friesen, business junior who will be moderator, urged members of the faculty to attend. He also asked all students who have an opinion on the proposal to be at the meeting. Friesen added that the faculty cannot help being influenced by student opinion. Dr. Eddy To Talk Tonight Dr. Sherwood Eddy, internationally known author and missionary, here for World Brotherhood week, will speak on "War or Peace with Russia" at 8 tonight at the Plymouth Congregational church, Ninth and Vermont. Dr. Eddy and his wife, Mrs. Louise Gates Eddy, who accompanied him here, will also speak at the Coffee and Forums group of Union Activities at 4 p.m. today in the English room of the Union. Having conducted annual tours of Russia for twenty years, Dr. Eddy is well acquainted with conditions in Russia. He is the author of "What shall we do about Russia," and 35 other volumes on international, social and religious questions. Dr. and Mrs. Eddy, who was the former general secretary of the national Y.W.C.A. of Canada, have lectured to students in all parts of the nation, and in foreign countries They are interested in any religious or social problems arising among students concerning the national or world situation. Miss Grant Tells Of Italian Trip Miss Mary Grant, associate professor of Latin and Greek, spoke on her summer trip to Italy at the Classical club meeting. 7:30 p. m. m. Thursday, in room 212 Fraser. Miss Grant's general impression of the people of Italy was that they were dazed from the war, and had little of their usual exuberance. She last visited Italy in the summer of 1938. The travel through Italy was by chartered bus as the railroads were still disrupted as were the telephone and telegraph connections. Italy had excellent accommodations and plenty of food, especially in the Riviera, she said. To Hold Services Throughout Lent Morning devotions in Danforth chapel began Wednesday and will continue thru Lent. The devotions, sponsored by the Student Religious council will be from 8:30 to 8:50 am. Monday through Friday. A weekly meeting will also be held in the chapel from 4 to 5 p.m. on Tuesday. Speakers will include Miss Margaret Habein, Dean Paul B. Lawson, Prof. Robert McNair Davis, Prof. M. D. Clubb, and Prof. Calvin Vander-Werf. An all-day communion service will be held March 23. Otto Will Talk To Class Groups Otto of Austria, who will lecture at Hoch auditorium at 8 p. m. Feb. 16, will extend his visit to two days. The subject of his lecture is "World Danger Zones," and is sponsored by the Community Lecture course. The two-day extension was arranged by Chancellor Deane W. Malott to give student groups a chance "to meet the distinguished visitor," because "he is popular with student audiences." Otto will be interviewed at 3 p. m. feb. 16 by journalism students. The interview will be held in the Pine room of the Union. He will lecture to Prof. C. B. Reayle's class in Modern Europe at 10 a.m. Feb. 17, and to Prof. Hilden Gibson's class in Soviet culture at 3 p. m. An informal hour at Corbin hall will follow at 4:30 p. m. The schedule for Feb. 18 will include a lecture to Prof. W. E. Sandelius' class in Principles of Government at 10 a.m. and to Harold Addington's class in Feature Writing at 3 p.m. The Forums board and International Relations club is sponsoring an informal discussion at 4:30 p.m. in the Pine room of the Union. Polio Drive Nets $500 Student contributions to the University March of Dimes campaign will total approximately $500 when all expenses are paid, Robert Petitt, chairman of the drive, reported at a meeting of Alpha Phi Omega Thursday night. Eight University faculty members will take part in the College day program sponsored annually by the Topeka high schools. About 25 colleges and universities will be represented on today's program. Members chose Dallas as their preference for the 1948 national convention site. A resolution indicating the chapter vote will be sent to the national headquarters. Faculty Will Be On Topeka Program Clarke Thomas, vice-president, made a preliminary report on the pledge meeting scheduled for Feb 26. William Smith discussed plans for conducting the lost and found department this semester. Representing the University will be D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts; George B. Smith, dean of the School of Education; Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women; James K. Hitt, registrar; Gilbert Ulmer, assistant dean of the College; Elmer F. Beth, acting director of the William Allen White School of Journalism; Willis L. Tompkins, assistant dean of men, and Tom Yoe, director of public relations. Gala Union Day Will Feature Queens, Dance Meeting of the 10 queens who will compete for the title "Sweetheart of America" at the Sweetheart Swing will start gala Union day tomorrow. Scheduled events are: Presidents' breakfast at 9 a. m. in the Union; a campus parade at 10:50 a. m.; talks with the dean of women, the dean of men, and the chancellor at 11 a. m.; Student Union Executive board luncheon in the Union at 12:30 p. m. At 2 p. m., the University dance class will meet in the Union ballroom with visitor participation. Dick Bibler will draw caricatures, and refreshments will be served. At 3:30 p. m., visitors will go on a tour of the campus. The Sweetheart Swing from 9 p. m. to midnight will end the day. Music for the informal dance will be furnished by Harlan Livingood and his orchestra. Winners of the contest will be chosen at intermission. At that time the "Most Dateable Male" will be announced. A short program will feature Jeanne Chambers and Mary Lou Ou Pecenschneider, vocalists. James Hawes, Fine Aris sophomore, will be master of ceremonies. Nine nearby colleges and universities are sending representatives to compete with Nina L. Green, "Miss Student Union of 1948," for the title, "Sweetheart of America." They are: Mary Lewis, Washburn; Violet Hall, Kansas State Teachers at Pittsburg; Patricia Ford, Kansas State Teachers at Emporia; Joan Grosse, Kansas City university; Dorothy Jean Soulen, Baker; Peggy Dull, Wichita; Carol Campbell, Kansas State; Kay Menke, Nebraska; and Peggy Field, Missouri. The following committee will chaperon the dance and select the "Sweetheart of America" and the "Most Dateable Male". Mr. and Mrs. Ogden S. Jones, Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Woodruff, Mr. and Mrs. Ross M. Robertson, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Simons, and Miss Hermina Zipple Tickets to the dance are on sale in the Union, the rotunda of Frank Strong hall, and at the business office. Engineers Hear Kansas City Man E. B. Black, senior partner of Black and Veatch, consulting engineers in Kansas City, Mo., told engineering students Thursday that his firm "is not interested in men unless they are graduates of an engineering school." He spoke in Lindley auditorium at a combined meeting of the University chapters of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers, the American Society of Civil Engineers, and the American Institute of Electrical Engineers. Use Activity Book To See Pictures Black and Veatch employ 55 graduates from the University School of Engineering. The speaker's son, John B. Black, is a senior in the school. Mr. Black explained that engineering firms do not have time to "train men further in mathematics and the necessary problems of engineering." Confer On Guidance Service L. B. Hartley, supervisor of guidance, at the Missouri educational rehabilitation center, Jefferson City, conferred with Dr. A. H. Turney, director of the guidance bureau, Thursday morning about a plan to establish a testing service for rehabilitation cases in Missouri. Colored movies of the 1948 Orange Bowl game will be shown at 7:30 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium to those having odd numbered activity books. The K-club is sponsoring these movies. Married students who have opposite activity tickets may go either night, the athletic office said today. Seats for K-club and faculty members will be reserved until 7:15. Students who have even numbered activity books may see these movies at the same time Saturday night. The University band will play a short concert before each showing. Plans Complete On Hobnail Hop Hobnail Hop arrangements were completed at the Engineering council Thursday. The dance, to be held March 13, is in celebration of St. Patrick's day. It is sponsored by engineering students. Ten candidates for queen will be selected by judges who will observe the women as they dance. During intermission the prospective royalty will be called to the band-stand. The one who receives the greatest amount of applause, will be crowned queen. "This will be one queen judging on the hill that is truly democratic because candidates aren't appointed before the dance, and the audience will do the judging." John L. Margrave, president of the Engineering council, said. The semi-formal affair will be held in the Union ballroom. Wayne Ruppenthal and his orchestra will play. Reservations for tables will be made when students buy tickets. The ticket purchase date will be ann To Nominate For Institute Outstanding students of at least a junior level who are taking work in political science, economics, or related fields will be nominated by University professors for 35 scholarships which will be given for the summer session of the Institute of World Affairs at Salisbury, Conn. Students who are preparing for diplomacy, broadcasting, or teaching are preferred. The scholarships will be worth $150 toward the total cost of $250 for tuition, board, and room. Dr. Irwin M. Tobin of the State department and Dr. William Y. Eliott of Harvard, staff director of the Foreign Affairs committee of the House of Representatives, will be institute leaders. Ten Names Added To Bellringer List Ten more names have recently been added to the Memorial Drive "bellringer" list, it was announced Thursday. A $100 contribution is necessary to qualify as a bellringer. The recent additions are: Kelley Asbestos Products company, General Heating and Cooling company, John W. Starr, and W.F. Humphrey, all of Kansas City, Mo. W. T. Foley Electric company, Kansas City, Ks.; Moe Lois Straight, Bartlesville, Okla.; Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Hoyt, Iola, Mr. and Mrs. J. G. Gomers, Newton; D. Allen Harmon, Oklahoma City; and Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Ruppenthal and Mary Lois, Russell. New Record Set As Corn Prices Drop Full Limit It was the sixth time in eight days that corn had broken the full eight-cent limit. Wheat, however, opened 2 cents a bushel lower to 4 cents higher. Chicago, Feb. 13 — (UP) — Corn prices dropped the limit on the Chicago board of trade today in a renewal of the sharpest downward plunge in the market's 100-year history. Meanwhile, a survey by the National Association of Retail Grocers showed that the big break in the commodity markets already has resulted in "substantial price reductions" at retail grocery stores across the nation. It showed flour down five to 16 cents on 10-pound bags, lard down 3 to 8 cents, shortening down 2 to 4 cents, butter down 5 to 6 cents, bacon down 5 to 10 cents, pork loins down 2 to 12 cents and pork chops and eggs down 10 cents. An important marketing specialist at the Chicago stockyards estimated today that wholesale meat prices dropped as much as five cents a pound in the past week. KU To Ignore K-State Feud No official action on the renewal of K-State-KU. rivalry was foreseen today by Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of men. The old feud broke out again Wednesday when a statue of William Harris at K-State was found covered with white paint. Jack Gardner, K-State basketball coach, is reported to have expressed concern for the maintenance of order at the K-State-K.U. game at Manhattan, Feb. 18. Gardner said he would write an editorial for the Collegian, the K-State paper, stressing proper conduct. Dean Woodruff said he thought reaction would depend on the outcome of the game. He pointed out that few if any K.U. students would be present. "I like to think that no comment is demanded, that students will be good sports about the situation," he added. Esther Calvin, College senior, has been awarded the Delta Delta Delta scholarship, Dean J. H. Nelson of the graduate school announced recently. Esther Calvin Wins Scholarship The scholarship was awarded to Miss Calvin on the basis of her scholastic record, showing of success, and her financial need, he said. She lives in Pittsburg, Kan., and is majoring in bacteriology. After she is graduated in June she will go to the University of Kansas Medical Center in Kansas City for a year. Miss Calvin has a residence scholarship to Watkins hall. She is a member of Kappa Phi, Methodist girl's sorority; the Independent Women's senate, and the Jay Janes. WEATHER Kansas—Partly cloudy west. Light snow ending east this afternoon, followed by partly cloudy in afternoon. Slightly warmer. Partly cloudy tonight and tomorrow. Becoming colder north tomorrow afternoon. High today in 20's. Low tonight zero or a little lower west border to 10 to 15 cast border. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1948 Official Bulletin Feb. 13, 1943 Feb. 13, 1948 Orange Bowl pictures will be shown in Hoch auditorium at 7:30 tonight and tomorrow night. SWEETHEART SWING - FEB. 14 - S.U.A. COMBO DANCE CLUB - FEB. 14 - S.U.A. COMBO DANCE CLUB FEB. 14 Independents, monthly meeting, 7. d. m. Monday, Kansas room, Union. Sunday, Kansas room. Union. Positions of editor and business manager of K-Book open for application. Submit letters stating classification, qualifications, and previous experience to Betsey Sheidley, chairman ASC Publications committee, Gower Place, by Feb. 18. Phil Sigma Monday noon, 301 Snow. Anatomy department in charge of program. Members of Sachem Circle of ODK please turn in copies of second semester class schedules to secretary's office, 228 Frank Strong I. S. A. meeting for both old and new council members, 7:15 p. m. Monday, 223 Frank Strong. Students who have not learned their fall semester grades may obtain them at the Registrar's office on the following days according to the schedule of last names: Monday, A-C; Tuesday, H-N; Wednesday, O-T; Thursday, U-Z. Friday, those who failed to get them on the regular day. First slide rule class, 7 p. m. Monday, Lindley auditorium. "Introduction and Multiplication." Some material to be repeated 7 p. m. Thursday. Attendance at only one section necessary. Morning devotions each morning, Monday through Friday, 8:30 to 8:59. Danforth chapel during Lent. Phi Kappa Sigma, 7:30 p. m. Monday, Pine room, Union. votions each many through Friday, 8:30 to 8:50, Danforth chapel during Lent. Meeting for all June graduates of School of Business, 4 p.m. Wednesday, Feb. 18, Frank Strong auditorium. Attendance required. Any other June graduates wishing services of Business Placement Bureau welcome. Job opportunities and registration forms to be explained. Interview schedules to be outlined. Chancellor Malott to speak briefly on business opportunities. Konsan Board meeting, 4 p. m. Monday, 107 Journal blbg. Valentine's Day Is An Old Celebration Saint Valentine, whether he be praised or blamed, seems to have had nothing to do with the customs of the festival which bears his name. It was once believed that on Feb. 14 the birds selected their mates. It was also supposed that men and women would choose their mates on this day and that persons so chosen would be called "valentines". The origin of these peculiar observances of St. Valentine's day is obscure. It is an ancient custom celebrated in England and Scotland The original ceremony of St. Valentine's day was the drawing of a lottery. On the eve of the festival an equal number of young unmarried men and women gathered. Each signed his or her name to a piece of paper which was drawn by lot. The maids taking the men's notes and the men those of the maids. The valentines treated each other with candies and other dainties. After several days of this the couple often discovered they loved each other and were later married. AWS Breakfast Is For All Women The Associated Women Students counseling committee will have a breakfast for women students and their counselors from 9 to 11 a.m. tomorrow in the Kansas room of the Union. The breakfast is for both new and old women students. A story in Monday's University Daily Kansan said that the breakfast is for freshmen women only. University Daily Kansan University Daily Kansan Mail subscription: $2 a semester, $5 a postage. Mail subscription: $10 a postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan. every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Uni- versity holidays and examination periods. Until 1777, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. "SPRING THAW" - FEB. 14 - SWEETHEART SWING - FEB. 14 - "SPRING THAW" - FEB. 14 Saturday FEBRUARY 14 IS STUDENT UNION DAY (All Day!) COME ONE! COME ALL! IT'S THE "SPRING THAW" UNION BUILDING 2 - 3:30 p.m. • OPEN-HOUSE RECEPTION • REFRESHMENTS • ENTERTAINMENT • MUSIC • DICK BIBLER and his CARICATURES IT'S FUN! IT'S NEW! IT'S DIFFERENT! S. U. A. Combo Dance Club Learn: SAMBA, RUMBA, TANGO UNION BALLROOM 2—3:30 p.m. • Miss Elaine Selicovitz, Faculty Instructor • 17 Student Assistants Bring a date! IT'S THE DANCE OF THE YEAR! IT'S A MUST! Swing Your Sweetheart at the SWEETHEART SWING Union Ballroom 9-12 P.M. • MEET "MOST DATEABLE MALE" • MEET "SWEETHEART OF AMERICA" • MANHATTAN MERRY-GO-ROUND ATMOSPHERE Harlan Livingood and His Orchostra $1.50 couple SPONSORED BY STUDENT UNION ACTIVITIES P Tin 4 ab sv A P P E R I n O c h I f s I v d s k I l a r s l a m o c I l a r s l a m o c FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1948 PAGE THREE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Socially Speaking Phi Chi Tea A rush tea was given by Phi Chi Theta, business women's sorority, in the Fine room of the Union from 4 to 5 p. m. Thursday. After the tea a short business meeting was held by sorority members. Invitations for pledging will be sent out this week. Pledging services will be held Feb. 19. AO Pi Pledging Alpha Omicron Pi announces the pledging of Martha Ann Nichols, Kansas City, Mo. Martha Ann is entering the college as a junior from Kansas City Junior College. Pi Beta Phi Pi Beta Phi announces the pledging of Nancy Wilkinson, Kansas City, Mo. Nancy is entering the college as a sophomore from Wellesley College Mass. Phi Kaps Initiate Phi Kappa recently initiated the following; Donald Schauf, Redwing; Steve Herrera, Kansas City; Victor Hoffman, Claffin; Jack Brooks Wichita; Thomas Conroy, Beloit; Jack Tajchmann, Tampa; Joseph Ziegler, Oakley; and Eugene Caldara, Ponca City, Okla. Phi Kaps Pledge Phi Kappa announces the pledging of Richard Conroy, Beloit; James Yoder, Kansas City, Mo.; Francis Scott, St. Joseph, Mo.; Robert Rupp, Hutchinson; Gerald Fitzpatrick, St. Joseph, Mo.; A. John Wilkus, Kansas City, Mo.; Leroy Farley, St. Joseph, Mo.; and Vernon Lang, Calfin. AKA Elects New officers of Alpha Kappa Alpha for the spring semester are; Janice Clark, president; Margie Harrison, secretary; Ronah Raymond, treasurer; and Helen L. Smith, reporter. Pi Kappa Alpha Pi Kappa Alpha announces the election of Harold Hanshaw, vicepresident. Daniel C. Stark, Arkansas City; Jack Lynn, Horton; and Thomas C. Mahan, Coldwater, were recently pledged. Alpha Kappa Alpha The Ivy Leaf club of Alpha Kappa Alpha announces the following as new members: Jean Thomas, Kansas City; Geneva Evans, Kansas City; Mercer Taylor, Kansas City; and Dorothy Carrington, Kansas City, Mo. PK Sigs Pledge The Kansas colony of Phi Kappa Sigma, social fraternity, announces the pledging of Stanley C. Searles, Willmette, Ill., and James R. Wilson, Meade, Kan. ATO Pledges Alpha Tau Omega held formal pledging ceremonies Tuesday for Roy Wonder, Manhattan; Loven Parker, Wichita; Paul Gibbs, Kansas City; Richard Day, St. Joseph, Mo., and David Breidenthal, Kansas City, Mo. Wisconsin U Professor To Talk On Literature Dr. Walter Agard, professor of Greek at the University of Wisconsin will lecture at K. U. Feb. 24 on the three themes in classical literature. His speech will be the fourth in the University series on the Humanities. FRIED SHRIMP A Specialty DUCK'S TAVERN 824 Vermont COOK Hash Slinging Not Easy For Dean The role of waitress was too much for Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, when she served as a waitress at Locksley hall Wednesday night. Miss Habein had sold her services to Locksley hall in the recent W.S.S.F. drive. The members of the hall kept Miss Habein busy by dropping silverware on the floor and then demanding new silver. Miss Habein did not know it at the time, but a pail was under each table. Whenever she was not looking, the women would empty their glasses of water into the pail and then ask for more water. Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women, was a guest at Locksley hall last night. She and the Locksley women found a small flashlight in Miss Habein's purse and after placing it on one of the dinner plates they complained of finding things in the food. Miss Habein had to wash a few dishes after the dinner. She was not allowed to eat until after everyone was served. It was announced after the dinner that any complaints on the service could be reported to the office of the dean of women. Coffee was served after the dinner in the living room. Miss Habein did not have to serve it. Weddings And Engagements Tice-Tate The engagement of Betty Tice, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Galen M. Tice, Kansas City, to Eugene Tate, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Tate, Lawrence, was recently announced by Mrs. P. H. Klinkenberg, Alpha Omicron Pi housemother. Miss Tice wore a corsage of yellow tea roses. Her attendants, Arlene Johnson, Jo Ann Spaalding, and Mary Lucille Garton, received corsages of red carnations. Mrs. Klinkenberg wore white carnations. Miss Tice and Mr. Tate are College sophomores. Christianson-Rice The Rev, and Mrs. M. F. Miller announce the engagement of their daughter, Esther L. Christianson to Harry D. Rice. Miss Christianson, College freshman, lives at Corbin hall. Mr. Rice is a member of "Alpha Kappa Psi business fraternity. Miller-Hitt Mrs. Marion Miller of Kansas City, Mo., recently announced the engagement of her daughter, Marion Knapp Miller, to Richard Hitt of Kansas City, Mo. Miss Miller is a graduate student in the chemistry department and a member of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority. Mr. Hitt is a business junior. William Howard Taft is the only President of the United States buried in Arlington National cemetery. Friday Up And Coming TKE dinner-dance, chapter house, 2 to 8:00 p. m. Delta Gamma party, chapter house, 9 to midnight. Ricker hall dance, 745 Ohio, 8 to midnight. Sweetheart Swing, Union ballroom 9 to midnight TKE luncheon dance, chapter house, 12 to 2:30 p. m. --is the word for your Valentine. Swank products 50c to $10.00 plus tax. Theta Tau Elects Four New Officers Theta Tau, honorary engineering fraternity, has elected the following officers for the spring semester: Roy K. Boren, scribe; Clayton W. Williams, corresponding secretary; John G. Montfort, pledge father; and Leonard M. Rickards, assistant treasurer. Recent initates are Rickards, Williams, Robert J. Greenwell, Robert D. Talty, Montfort, Curtis E. Ottinger and Bruce R. Pennington. Call K. U. 251 With Your News Charme Beauty Salon formerly Iva's Beauty Shop Mid-winter special price on permanents machine and machineless. phone 533 Nettie L. Wolfe, Owner All types of beauty work by capable operators. 20% Discount for Cash and Carry LEAT THE LAWNFAY NO. 10 ACME Youngest Deputy Is 21-Year-Old Girl Phone 646 BACHELOR'S LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 1111 Mass. Lebanon, NH.—(UP)—The youngest of New Hampshire's several women sheriffs is Mary Ann Peckett, 21-year-old graduate of a Boston secretarial school. She was sworn in as deputy by her father, Sheriff Robert Peckett of Franconia, at the start of the January superior court term, primarily to help with women jurors, now serving for the first time. The capable Miss Peckett took over numerous other details of the sheriff's office. Soon she hopes to serve writs and other papers. No Turnover On Fost Buck Savannah. Ga.-(UP)-Evidently Americans are suspicious of dollar values. A newly-opened jewelry store here advertised silver dollars for 79 cents but could sell only 700. Average College Joe Is T twoYears Older State College, Pa.—(UP) —The average male college student today is two to three years older than he was before the war. A survey conducted by Registrar W. S. Hoffman at Pennsylvania State college showed that the average senior now is 23, while the majority of seniors before the war were 21. The survey noted no rise in the average age of the co-eds, although there was almost no difference in age between the men and women before the war. Parker 51 Fountain Pens Super Chrome Ink RISK'S HELP-YOURSELF LAUNDRY Maytag Machines Line Space Reasonable Rates Weekdays 9-6 Saturdays 9-3 STOWIT'S Rexall STORE 1900 III.—Phone 623 Meals Short Orders Air Conditioned COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals Short Orders Malts Sandwiches Air Conditioned Open 5:30—12 p.m. DE SQOT APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH Randy GALLAGHER MOTORS Phone 1000 632-34 Moss, St. THE SOTO ASSOCIATED SERVICE PEYMOUTH Buddy GALLAGHER MOTORS FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL FINE M The Pin Klip centers but does not pierce the tie. $2.50 Perfect Mates Initialed Pin Klip and cuff tinks, fashioned by SWANK in matched designs. Perfect mates, a perfect gift. The set: $5.00 M M The exclusive SWANK ELBO links assure correct alignment of the cuffs. $2.50 *Patented Men prefer SWANK Subject to Federal Tax SWANK The Palace 843 Mass. PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 13, 1948 Engleman To Coach KU For Iowa State Game Howard "Rope" Engleman will handle the reins of the Jayhawkers in place of the ailing Phog Allen tonight when Kansas and Iowa State, the two early season surprises of the Big Seven conference, meet for the first time this year at Ames. This is the third time in 31 years of coaching that Allen has called for a substitute to pilot his cagers. In 1935 he missed two games and last season he dropped out at mid-season in favor of Engleman, who turned in a commendable performance. Allen was feeling better this morning, and will probably take the helm again next week. Both Teams In Slump Both teams will be trying tonight to break mid-season slumps after winning starts. The Jayhawkers found the range early to take their first three contests, then fell before Nebraska and Missouri on their home floor to drop to a tie for third. Coach Allen has been working his basketeers on fundamentals since the Missouri disaster, blaming the sudden Jawhacker tailsin on ☆ ☆ HOWARD ENGLEMAN ☆ ☆ 'We've Tossed Games Away' the 17-day layoff in January. Allen recalled his early-season prediction that the season would be marked by erratic performances. "We have tossed the last two games away with silly passes and bad shots," the Doctor said. The 15-point Nebraska splurge could have been averted by some careful ballhandling. The team went scoreless in the first half, but Missouri, although they needed only two goals to top the Tigers. K U Has Edge in Series At Ames, the Cyclones are also reorganizing their forces after slipping before Colorado last week They have been a tough home-court team for the Jayhawkers, having nicked Kansas three out of the last four years at Iowa State. Last year the Cyclones sent the Crimson and Blue home with a 44 to 56 loss to explain. Kansas has met Iowa State on the court every season since 1908, and has won 62 out of 76 games. This year's Cyclone lineup is one of the strongest in Cyclone history, boasting balance in the starting lineup and strength on the bench. Setting the scoring pace for the Staters are Bob Petersen, tiny guard, and Don Paulsen, 6 foot 4 inch center. Call K. U. 251 With Your News KU Meets K-S In Local Pool Coach Walt Mikol's Jayhawker swimmers will be trying for their second victory of the season when they meet the Wildcat tankmen from Kansas State in Robinson gym Saturday at 3 p.m. The Kansas team defeated Kansas State 48 to 33 in the first meet of the season, but lost the next two to Oklahoma and Nebraska. Entries for the meet are: 300-yard medley—K.U.: Medearis, Jervis, and Olander. K. S. Holder, Sigman, Wilder. 220-yard free style—K.U.: Frieser and Ritchie, K.S. Nichols and Gillispie. 200-yard breast strokc—K. U. Jervis and Olander. K.S.: Hechathorn and Sigman. 60-yard free style—K.U.: Roy and Banks. K.S.; Grieshauer and Leitt. 440-yard free style—K.Y: Friesen and Ritchie. K.-S.; Gillespie. 400-yard relay - K.U.: Harrington, Olander, Banks, and Roy. K.S.: Grieshaber, Wilder, Nichols, and Leitt. 100-yard free style—K. U.: Roy and Olander. K.S.: Leitt and Nichols. 150-yard backstroke-K.U.; Medearis and Mahoney, K.S.; Holder Diving--K.U.: Crates and O'Neil K.S.: McClay and Lindley. Lions Win Again After Penn Scare New York. Feb. 13—(UP) -Columbia university's Lions, titans of the Eastern Intercollegiate league, remained today as one of the nations only two unbeaten college basketball teams-by the margin of a single basket. The Lions, who are reportedly interested in playing in the N. C. A. A. tournament next March, beat Pennsylvania Thursday night, 52 to 50, for their 13th victory without a loss. It required a second-half rally, however, to keep the record clean. Penn, with Bob Carlson doing fine work, held a 28 to 26 lead at the half. The Quakers increased that margin to 32 to 26 before the Lions caught fire and pulled ahead. Leading at one point, 48 to 43, Columbia had to stand off a desperate Penn rally. Baylor university, driving toward the Southwest conference championship, trounced defending champion Texas, 48 to 39, in what may be the most significant conference game of this season. Rip Brown's 5 BOPS SKYLINE — Wed-Fri-Sat "ALWAYS READY TO SERVE" "ALWAYS READY TO SERVE" GOOD FOOD — with a menu of well-rounded meals. GEMMELL'S CAFE 717 Mass. Phone 2071 LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS 12 East Eighth Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed----65c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed----69c CASH AND CARRY ONLY Button Wins World Title Davos, Switzerland, Feb. 13—(UP) —Dick Button, 18-year-old Olympic champion from Englewood, N. J. today won the men's world figure skating crown Button's victory gave him a clean sweep of the "big three" figure skating championships Previously, the handsome American youth had won the European title at Prague, Czechoslovakia, Jan 14, and the Olympic championship at St Moritz last week Button finished second to defending champion Hans Gerschwiler of Switzerland Thursday in the compulsory figures, first half of the competition, but won the title with a brilliant exhibition in today's free skating events, regarded as his specialty. Gerschwiler, who finished second to Button in the European title meet and in the Olympics, also placed second in the World championships. In third place was Ede Kiraly of Hungary who was fifth in Olympic competition. A fine snow which had fallen during the night stopped just before the C.C.N.Y. 81, Dickinson 52 Fordham 51, St. Johns 44 Columbia 52, Penn 50 Guilford 53, High Point 50 Georgia Tech 73, Georgia 64 Virginia 61, Virginia Military 47 Savannah 44, Florida State 42 Louisiana 61, Mississippi Col. 59 Kansas Wesleyan 57, Rockhurst 55 DePaul 51, Regist 37 Detroit 52, Michigan Normal 37 Washburn 42, Southwestern 36 Baylor 48, Texas 39 Arizona 62, New Mexico 59 Basketball Results start of the free figures events, but the sky remained a dull, leaden color and the temperature was three degrees below zero Centigrade. The high ranking finishers in Thursday's compulsory figures competition had the privilege of starting in the favored middle spots on the program when the newly cleared ice had lost its "edge." Arizona 62, New Mexico 59 Launderette Service 9 lbs. of wash, 25c 21 Bendix Washers 113 Vt. Phone: 21 813 Vt. Phone 3368 Free-To Students and Faculty ORANGE BOWL MOVIES (in color) JOHN H. EMICK NOVELTY CO., Local Distributor HOCH AUDITORIUM----7:30 p.m. Friday and Saturday 1014 Mass. Reserved Section For Faculty Activity Books Admit Students ODD NUMBERS----FRIDAY EVEN NUMBERS----SATURDAY Sponsored By The John H. Emick Novelty Co. "Musical Fun For Everyone" LET This Sign Lead You To Top Entertainment! WURLITZER PHONOGRAPH MUSIC You can always hear the latest hits of the big bands on our Wurlitzer phonographs. For convenient relaxation and musical enjoyment look for the place with the Wurlitzer music. Our machines are located in cafes, restaurants, drug stores and entertainment spots throughout Lawrence. $\textcircled{5}$ If you are looking for those hard-to-get favorite bands—we have a large collection of USED RECORDS. AND— - Come in and browse around. SO— AYHAWKER Shows 2:30-7-9 NOW THRU TUESDAY Color, Comedy, Colleens & 16 Lifting Songs in a MAGICAL MUSICAL! TOM HUNGSTON DENNIS MORGAN ANDREA KING • ARLENE DALK Color by TECHNICOLOR My Wild Irish Rose Wednesday ONE WEEK Mesa Gallega Moya Mickey ROONEY as KILLER M.COY with Brian Donlevy Ann Blyth James Durp GRANADA NOW ENDS SATURDAY 1 ANTHONY QUINN KATHERINE DE MILLE "BLACK GOLD" Owl! Show Sat. 11:45 P.M. SUNDAY — 3 Days For MEN, WOMEN, GIRLS and BOYS ONLY! Larry PARKS in "THE SWORDSMAN" with Ellen DREW George MACREADY Edgar BUCHANAN Added: World News Color Cartoon VARSITY NOW EN. SAT. "TRAILING DANGER" Co-Feature "WHITE STALLION" SUNDAY—3 Days Fun Flinging ROMANCE! Campus Honeymoon 'BIG SIX UNIT PROGRAM' PATEE TONITE—Ends Saturday Susan Hayward "CANYON PASSAGE" —2nd Feature— Yvonne De Carlo "Frontier Gal" FR SUNDAY Claudette Colbert Fred MacMurray "THE EGG & I" Oh dei fan F mo b y an x he pas reta of 1 M tha sta imu tain was f Pro FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE FIVE Demanding Grid Fans Stir 3 New Coaching Flareups New York, Feb. 13—(UP)—Failure of downtown quarterbacks and the ever-effervescent alumni to subscribe to the principles of the N.C.A.A. football purity or de-emphasis code, was blamed today for outbreaks of bitterness at three major universities. Sited feuding at the Universities of San Francisco, There was two-fisted feuding. Ohio State, and Nebraska and un- derneath it all was the discontent of fans over mediocre football teams. McKeever Lists Ineligibles Coach Ed McKeever, brought to San Francisco from Cornell in a program designed to build up the school to big time football status, apparently went too far in his efforts and resigned to become coach of the Chicago Rockets of the all-America pro loop. McKeever, bitter over differences with athletic officials at the school, wrote a letter in which he listed 21 players of questionable eligibility, all of whom apparently were persuaded to quit other colleges and play football under him at San Francisco. Father Jerome Sullivan, athletic moderator at the school, retaliated by stating that McKeever was so anxious to build up a winning team, he advised players to conceal their past collegiate records in order to retain eligibility for longer periods of time. McKeever also stated in Chicago that the athletes were paid "substantial sums" in excess of the maximum allowed by N.C.A.A. regulations for work done in order to obtain athletic scholarships. This, too, was denied by the university officials. The situation was a little different at Ohio State where Athletic Director Dick Larkins was quoted as saying that former Buckeye Coach Paul Brown "has started a terrific drive in Columbus and around Ohio to return as football coach." Pro Coach Tries Return Brown, most successful young coach in the pro business with two consecutive All-America conference championships with his Cleveland Brown, has been urged by Buckeye Alumni to return to State where football fortunes 'hit low' ebb last fall as Wes Fesler in his debut season won two games, lost six and tied one. Larkins, who allegedly isn't sold on Brown returning to State, was quoted as saying that "Brown has been stealing football players on our campus by the dozen and has done everything in his power to hurt Ohio State." 'Not Happy With Pros' "But he is not happy in the pro atmosphere," Larkins was quoted as saying. "He has a good bank account and wants to coach college kids again." Earlier in the week, Bernie Masterson, former Nebraska and Chicago Bear star quarterback, resigned from his coaching job at Nebraska stating that "circumstances beyond my control" prompted his decision. Larkins inlisted he was misquoted but Brown was upset over what he called a "smear campaign" and called newspapermen to state flatly he was not campaigning for the job. "I take this step with but one thought in mind—the welfare of my alma mater," he said. Masterson had two disastrous seasons in a college which long has been used to gridiron glory, winning but five of 18 games during his tenure. Archers To Hold Practice Sessions In order to hit the bulls-eye the archer has to practice or at least that was the opinion of members of the Archey club Thursday night when they decided to hold two practice sessions each week. The practices will be held Tuesdays and Wednesdays at 5 p.m. in Robinson gym, the first session starting Tuesday, Feb. 17 Tentative plans to show films on the various phases of archery were also decided upon at the meeting. also decided upon it the meeting. According to Miss Alice Myers, publicity chairman, the Archery club is open to any persons interested in learning the fundamentals of archery, or those interested in improving their ability to pierce the bulls'-eye. Baylor Takes Lead In SW The Golden Bears of Baylor university today had one hand on the Southwest conference basketball crown. Baylor remained the only team unbeaten in conference play by shellacking the University of Texas Longhorns, 48-39, Thursday night at Waco. Baylor now has only three more games to play in conference competition, two of them at home and a third, with Texas, at Austin. Texas Still Has Chance Texas still was not considered out of the running completely, however. The Longhorns still have six games to play, two of them on the home court of the perennially tough Arkansas Razorbacks, and therefore, because of a more favorable schedule, Baylor was given the nod for the 1948 care title. Tonight, Texas Christian opens a two-game series with Arkansas at Fayetteville, Ark., while Rice meets Texas A & M at College Station. T.C.U. winds up its series with Arkansas tomorrow night. It was the first conference loss suffered by Texas since 1946. That was when Baylor beat Texas and went on to win the championship. Game Only Even Once Only at one point did Texas get even with Baylor. That was when the Longhorns pulled into a 19 to 19 tie during the first half. But the Bears quickly untangled the knot and led. 22 to 20, at halftime. With only six minutes to go, Baylor had a mere three-point lead. Then the Bears put on a dazzling exhibition of expert ball-handling which put the Steers completely out of the running. Don Heathington, the brilliant Baylor center, was high scorer with 24 points. This total gave him a total of 106 points in nine conference games, just eight points less than George Kok of Arkansas has sunk to lead the loop in scoring. Al Madsen, Texas guard, was high for his team with 11 points. 'Good' Man Beats Wife In Texas Alice, Texas—(UP)—A housewife, with a little time to reflect, told a Texas judge she felt her husband was justified in beating her with a belt when she insisted he hang out the wash. When the judge asked the woman if she thought her husband did the right thing by her, she replied: "Yes, sir. At first I didn't think it was right, but now I do. I want my husband back. He's a good man." Sig Alph Wins Sixth The Sig Alphs ran their victory string to six games as they walked away from the Phi Gams in Thursday's IM basketball play. The Sig Ep's, Phi Delt's, Sigma Chil's, Jokers, Delta Tau's, and Deuces Wild also emerged winners. Kenny Thompson racked in 12 points in leading the Sig Alph's, 37 to 29, over the Phi Gam's. Daugherty collected seven points for the winners while Hargis tallied seven for the Phi Gam's. It was the Phi Gam's fourth loss. Sig Ep's Into Second The Sig Ep's moved into second place in division two with a 39 to 30 defeat of the Phi Psi's. McNeive scored 11 points for the Ep's and the Psi's shook Mercer loose for eight. Leading 13 to 11 at the half, the Phi Delt's won from the Delta Chi's 25 to 19. Griffith was the spark in the Phi Delt offense with seven points while Davis got five for the losers. Using only five men, the Sigma Chi's scored an easy 44 to 22 victory over the Alpha Phi Alpha's. Charley Wagstaff was the evening's high scorer with 16 points for the Sigma Chi's. Jokers Also Move Up In a tight, clean contest the Jokers bested the Kappa Psi's 25 to 22. Long marked 10 points for the Jokers and Greenhaw got eight for the losers. The triumph moved the Jokers into second place in division one. Delta Tau Delta came from behind in the closing minutes of the game to take a thrilling 29 to 28 contest from the Phi Kappa's. Glaser counted 10 points to pace the Delt's while Culhane's 10 points kept the Phi Kappa's in the game all the way. The Deuces Wild remained unbeaten as they handed the Rollin Pin Five their first defeat, 20 to 16. The game was close all the way with Martin's 10 points for the Deuces being the big difference. Iowa's Ris Breaks Weismuller Record Iowa City. Feb. 12—(UP)—Johnny Weismuller's 22-year-old national record for the 100-yard free style swimming event was beaten Thursday night by Wally Ris, Iowa's star swimmer from Chicago. Ris made the distance in :519, trimming a 10th of a second off the record Weismuller set for the Illinois Athletic club in a Seattle, Wash. meet in 1925. His time also set a new international collegiate record, pre- viously held by Dick Weinberg of the University of Michigan. GALES American Custom Chocolates, $1.75 STOWIT'S Rexall-STORE Why We Claim Superiority? Because We Have— 1. Thousands of satisfied customers 2. Extensive mechanical facilities 4. Efficient, dependable service BUSINESS IS GOOD 5. Friendly, reliable advice 3. An expert staff of mechanics at CHANNEL-SANDERS STUDEBAKER Doris Tihen, Gamma Phi Beta, defeated Marilyn Sweet, Pi Beta Phi, in the finals of the table tennis tournament Tuesday. The team championship went to Pi Beta Phi with 94 points. Pi Beta Phi Wins In Table Tennis The final match game scores were 21 to 11, 21 to 9, and 21 to 16. The match was a long one with each player using a cautious, defensive style. Final team standings: Team Team Pi Beta Phi Kappa Kappa Gamma Alpha Delta Pi Alpha Omicron PI Locksley hall Gamma Phi Beta Kappa Alpha Theta Delta Delta Delta Watkins hall Hawks Joliffe Sleepy Hollow Delta Gamma Corbin hall Harmon Co-op Foster hall Miller hall Theta Phi Alpha Sigma Kappa Chi Omega Ricker hall I.W.W. Briar Manor Point 94 88 78 65 60 59 58 48 47 39 38 37 34 32 31 30 24 23 20 17 17 15 8 Who Is House? Hurry down to CARL'S and see the NEW KNIT TIES Vertical Stripes Horizontal Stripes Solid Colors New Bright Colors just right for spring Price $1 and $1.50 Get Ready For Spring Once In— CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Upon A Time. Mary had a little lamb Whose fleece was white and true. It had to use some extra care Or end up in the stew. So it followed her to school one day Which was very rash And what was once a lamb, they say Is now a plate of hash. MORAL: Don't hash around! If you're hungry, and in a stew about where to go. We can tell you. Go to Bill's Grill 1109 Mass. Phone 2054 Across from the Courthouse Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers. WEEK-END SPECIALS at the Surplus Stores Top-Grain Cowhide Brief Cases ---- $9.95 Brand New Air Force Surplus All-Wool Gabardine Coveralls 6.95 Also, Many Other Styles from $2.95 up Sheep-Lined Flight Boots 5.95 Plenty Warm for Snowy Days Basketball Shoes 4.95 Built-in Arch, Cushion Soles & Heels Athletic Socks 49c to 69c Sizes 9 to 13 Boot Socks 49c to 98c Various Lengths and Weights Genuine Navy T-Shirts...69c Another Shipment Just Arrived Plus, Many Other Big Values Too Numerous To Mention LAWRENCE SURPLUS 740 & 911 Mass. Phones 588 & 669 PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1948 The Editorial Page He'll Learn, If He Remembers You know, it is most remarkable how short a memory the human mind has, at least when it comes to remembering misery and suffering and the bitter pills of life. Perhaps it's a good thing, this short memory. If humans never forgot, the insane asylums would be more jam-packed than they already are. On the other hand—maybe we forget too much. I can't help but shudder when I hear someone say, "We should fight the Russians now, damn 'em, and get it over with. We'll have to do it sooner or later anyway." Or, "Why doesn't the United Nations give up? All they do is yakety, yakety, yakety. Besides, Uncle Sam shouldn't have to take any lip off anyone. We won the war and we paid for it—the least we should get out of it is to be able to dictate the peace to those yokunks." The really astounding aspect of all this mouthing is the persons who do it. They aren't exclusively politicians and draft-dodgers as you might think. Many are ex-GI's. GI Propaganda In an army of 11 million men such as the U.S. had, everyone wasn't in a foxhole. There were plenty of the "never-had-it-so good boys", and they are doing their share of the war-mongering. But the infantry man, the dogface, the guy that actually dug and sat in the foxholes, the guy that got trenchfoot, the Joe that shed the blood is also shedding his share of "America fight the world" propaganda. How can he forget? In just two or three years how can he forget what it was like to see a man die? How can he forget what it was like to be so scared he couldn't breathe, but yet so tired and cold and hungry and miserable and disgusted he wished the next barrage would get him? Yet when the next barrage came, he prayed to God that it wouldn't. How can he forget? Short Memory In just two or three years how can he forget what it was like to go without a bath for a month at a time, to eat food that any self-respecting dog would turn down, to haw nothing to look forward to each day but the prospect of getting an arm or leg blown off—or maybe just a belly full of 30 caliber slugs. How can he forget? It seems to me that those memories would be so sharp in the real fighting man's mind that he would fight his heart out—for peace. He, above everyone else, should realize the futility of war. He shouldn't scoff and make fun of the United Nations—he should pray to the good Lord above that it will Who Is House? Who Is House? CALL FOR TAXI SERVICE CALL 2-800 UNION CAB CO. work. He shouldn't want to fight anyone at any time—because he is the one who will have to do the fighting. He should pray that the world's problems will be settled in a conference room and not in a ready room. He should want peace so badly and appreciate it so fully that to take it away from him would be harder to do than to tear his arm from his shoulder. CALL FOR TAXI SERVICE CALL CALL FOR TAXI SERVICE CALL 2-800 UNION CAB CO. 'We Have Failed,' Rabbi Declares Democracy has not failed, but Americans have failed democracy. Rabbi Joseph Levenson told the Lawrence Kiwanus club Thursday. How can he forget? How can he forget? —I W. Robinson Rabbi Levenson is the regional director for the Union of American Hebrew Congregations. "There must be no master class and no slave class," he added. "The best slogan for America would be, 'Let us live for freedom and not die.'" He also said that college students of today have an idea of the world they live in and the kind of world they would like to see. Duck hunters in the Midwest should be red-faced when they read that thousands of ducks are dying in Missouri of self-inflicted lead poisoning. Comes word from Hollywood now of the promising young actress who shocks people with her sage, witty conversation. Chances are she won't be around long enough to become a star. Seems likely the song writers would starve to death without such standby rhymers as "you" "do" "true" and "blue." But then it could be worse if they all started grinding out such monstrosities as "Bloop, Bleep." Daily Hansau University Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., Suite 160, Oak Park, William C. Van Muster Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Editor-In-Chief William C. Von Mauren Managing Editor Alan J. Stewart Ex-Chaplains Discuss Faith Three ex-chapains of protestant, Catholic and Jewish faiths, reached an agreement last night at an informal meeting in Myers hall "that although religious conflicts are inevitable, cooperation is necessary before civilization will survive." Rabbis Joseph Levenson, speaker here during the current World Brotherhood week, said he respected Dr. John Patton, of the First Presbyterian church, and his right to believe in Protestantism and understood Father George Towle's love for Catholicism. Giving examples of cooperation among the religious faiths in the United States, Dr. John Patton stated that sympathetic respect should be given every man's beliefs, dogmas and concepts, "even if they oppose your own." The discussion was in observance of the current World Brotherhood week. "I understand a man's devotion to his religion because an individual learns to love his religion from birth." Rabbi Levenson said. Father George Towle, in agreement with his fellow-ministers, asserted that he respected a man's religious faith if he was sincere. Positions Open On K-Book Staff The K-Book staff is in need of additional personnel according to Betsey Sheidley, chairman of the A. S. C. publications committee. Anyone interested in working on the new K-Book may submit their application to Miss Sheidley at the Kappa Kapna Gamma house. Applications should be in by Feb. 18. Washington.—(UP)—The bureau of printing and engraving admits it is purposely going to misspell Mississippi on its forthcoming stamp commemorating the state's anniversary. But it doesn't want the nation's school children to take offense. There's a reason for the mistake, spelling in setting up sample designs of the state's official seal. It The bureau spotted the mis- Anniversary Stamp Lacks 'S,' So Does 'Mississippi' Seal Richland, Ga.—(UP)—Postman Lee Rey Lungsford was making his rounds in his automobile when he met an airplane coming down the highway. He passed it by driving under one of the plane's wings. MOM asked state authorities to take another look at the official seal, and, sure enough, there it was: M L S J S U I P J P L. only three "S.'s." OPEN ALL NIGHT JIM'S LUNCH 8381/2 Mass. IN SS S I P P I. Only three "S's." So that's how it will be on the new stamp. Takes Mailman Under Wing "You're looking better, dear. The rest is good for you. Oh — if you want me, I'll be eating all three meals at Jim's Lunch." Every Day - More New Furniture! $\textcircled{1}$ Study desks, $9.95 up - Maple desks, kneehole, 7 drawers. - Tables, Gateleg or Duncan Phyfe, walnut or mahogany, all sizes. - Dish cupboards, steel or wood. Baby cribs, high chairs, swings. $\textcircled{1}$ Study lamps. Frank's Furniture Co. 834 Mass. Biggest Savings Of The Year! 843 Massachusetts RIDICULOUS SALE OF LEFT-OVERS The Palace Lots too small to mention but some from every department in the store at RIDICULOUS PRICES MIDNIGHT JINX SHOW FRIDAY the 13TH IF the jinx is on you — Break it with LAUGHTER — TONITE The Spooks Picnic! - "A HOST TO A GHOST" with Edgar Kennedy - "THE SPOOK SPEAKS" with Leon Errol - "DONALD AND THE GORILLA" — Donald Duck - "THE SHIVERING SHERLOCKS" — 3 Stooges - "THE FRIENDLY GHOST" — (color cartoon) And Many Others It's More FUN at a SPOOK SHOW Party with your Best DATE!-But COME! FRIDAY the 13th Comes but TWICE in 1948-So Don't Miss this chance to CELEBRATE! FREE Tickets! with If your regular admission ticket number has a "13" in it—you receive another admission FREE. TONITE 11:45 P.M. at regular low prices A FREE Pop Corn! If the number on your pop corn box flap has a "13" in it — you receive another 10c box FREE. the ish ma D GRANADA also QUIT for vate 1755 Will ably 2585 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1948 AWS Plans 12-Day Meet "Blueprinting Tomorrow" will be the theme for a conference sponsored by the Associated Women students from Feb. 24 to 26. Guest speakers representing the fields of home, community, world citizenship, music, education, recreation, religion, literature and art have been invited to attend. Group conferences, a tea at Corbin hall, and a panel discussion on "Women's Education" will be open to all University women. "The purpose of the conference is to help University women realize the possibilities of enriching their lives through a better understanding of these fields." Elizabeth Evans, chairman of the conference committee said. Conference committee members are: Elizabeth Evans, chairman, Miss Margaret Habein, Miss Margahta Peterson, Mrs. Deane W. Malott, Mrs. Roger Barker, Miss Mattie Crumrine, Mrs. Robert Calderwood, Mrs. Christine Alford, Anita Bedell, Marjorie Dinsmore, Wilma Shore, Jean Dressler, Marjorie McCullough, Marjorie Syrell, Grace Gwinner, Anne Scott, Joann Ruese, Redmond. Jewish Students Appoint Four To Executive Group Four members were appointed to the executive committee of the Jewish Student Union Tuesday by Sherman Steinzeig, president. They are Don Oppenheimer, Oscar Resnick, Frank Rotman, and Elaine Selcovitz. Joseph Manello and the All-Student Religious council. Rabbi Joseph Levenson of Temple B'Nai Israel, Oklahoma City, led an informal discussion. PAGE SEVEN '48 K-Book Needs Editor K and Business Manager The positions of editor and business manager of the 1948 K-Book are now open. Letters containing qualifications, school classification, and previous experience should be submitted to Betsey Sheidley, chairman ASC publications committee, Gower place, on or before Feb. 18. Applications will be considered by the Publications board and appointments will be made before March 1. Union Sponsors Dancing Contest A feature of the annual "Sweetheart Swing" sponsored by Student Union activities on Saturday, will be a contest to discover an original interpretation of a "Sweetheart Swing" dance routine. The contest will be held Friday, from 3 to 5 p.m. in the Kansas room of the Union. First prize will be $5 and second prize $1. The dance contest is open only to couples. The routine can be an adaptation of any kind of ballroom dancing, including waltz, froott, jitterbug, samba, rhumba or original dance steps. Contestants are asked to bring their own phonograph records. New Women's Officers Must Be Reported Today Any changes in offices in women's organized houses must be reported to the dean of womens office by today, the Inter-dorm council decided Tuesday. Several new members to Interdorm council were present to fill vacancies that occurred between semesters. The new representatives are Glenda Holcomb and Jean Spaid of Ricker hall; Nancy Cole and Darlene Zimmerman from Carruth hall; and Eileen Szczygiel from Briar Manor. Daily Kansan Classified Ads Copy must be in the University Daily Kansan Business Office, Journalism bigg., not later than 4 p.m. of the day before all classes are cash in advance. Classified Advertising Rates Classified Advertising Days Three Five Day Three Five 25 words or less 35c 65c 90c additional words 1e 2e 3e For Sale CHARVOS drawing set. No. 614, new, never used. See afternoons or even- ly. 730 Arkansas. 17 1934 CHEV. Tuor Master Deuxe. Good condi- tion, fair tires. Excellent school transportation. Call 1637 between 4 and 5:30 p.m. on Friday. 18 SAPHONE. Russian records; complete course, fine condition, Phil Billan. 1332 Ln. After 4 p.m. 13 GELMER CLARINET: Boerm system, 17 days, 7 rings, articulated G-sharp. Exc- ient condition. Tom Sagmone. Phone 3021. 1949 HUDSON Super Six coupe. 14,000 feet. Fully equipped and like new in every respect. See at 1423 New York after 1:00 p.m. 13 ONE K & E Log-Log Duplex Decitring slide rule and one set Lasico industrial drafting instruments. Ph. 3353M. 13 PAIR OF Women's Hockey skates. Good condi- tion. Call 353, ask for Grace. 13 CROSLEY Tube Radio: Grey double- breasted suit, size 37. Call 3479W after 7:00 p.m. Ask for Dean. 13 1937 PLYMOUTH coach, radio, heater, good tires, 1131 Ky. 13 PRACTICALLY new Charvos drawing. See Dean Holben, trailer house, 1304 Museum. 13 PRACTICALLY new Motorola Radio with Chevrolet head control. Good hot water heater. H. E. Wright 1224 R. I. 1308M. 16 VETERANS! We will buy, trade or sell for you any Army or Navy gear in good condition that you may wish to dispo- side. Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. Phone 669 HTFD For Rent SINGLE ROOM, three blocks from campus. Call 2340R. 17 VACANCY for one man student, 1416 Teen, student leaving school. Build a room, Share with sophomore engineering student. Must not smoke. 315 E. 19th St. 13 LARGE SOUTH room and small kitchenette containing sink and cooking facilities, corrated and now ready for use. 1416 QUARTERS FOR colored girls: Vacancy for one girl. Single bed, warm, neat, private bath. kitchen and wash room. Call 1735-R after 8 p.m. 1735-R after 8 p.m. MISS MAKEUP, single or double, with consider厨房 privileges—reason- TWO ROOMS for boys, single or double. Will consider kitchen privileges—reasonably priced. 1016 Rhode Island. Call 2585-M after 3:00 p.m. Miscellaneous WILL GLADLY pay $10.00 for information about or the return of a black portfolio with the request that the student be asked. Needed urgently by Gregory Simms, 1034 Miss. Ph. 184R. SHAVER'S CAFE and service. Opening at our new location 1½ miles south of Lawrence on Highway 58—just "around the bend." Come out and see us! 18 SPECIAL RATE on "Harvard Business Review" per year at the Student Book Store. WILL PERSON who accidently exchanged tank finger-tip coat Monday noon, Feb. 8, at Union Cafeteria contract coorkd an ugler, 1125 Rhode Island? 13 28421M ALL OR PART meals for students. Also serve with girl. Gloria 1845 13 Nort Stadium SUBSCRIBE to the Kansas City Star, call 17. Headquarters at Round Corner Drug Transportation 1948 is Leap Year so let's leap with a K.U. calendar. tt RIDERS WANTED to Columbia, Mo., this weekend. Feb. 14-15. Leave Lawrence 2:00 p.m. $3 round trip. Call 267-850 after 6:00 p.m. Julian Been. WILL COMMUTE daily from Topeka if I can get four permanent riders. For further information ph. 3-3481 in Topeka after 5 p.m. WANTED: Ride for two to Wichita, Friday evening or Saturday morning. Call Wanted YOUNG man to share room with K.U. student, Downtown, near KU. WAYFED: One boy to share large double room 723 Bills. 2006 M. K.U. Bus. 920-826-1430. MALE STUDENT to share double room to share abap work with other other studies R$28,538*R BROWN ZIPPER bilftilt between Zone Wheel. Reward. Phone Darin Palmeri www.brownzipper.com Lost BREY PARKER 510, gold top, slightly-lented. Last Monday, noon somewhere between Frank Strong and PhD Doctor. Reward. Bill Mitchell. Phone 13 PAIR OF metal-frame glasses in brown leather case. Lost Sat. Feb. 7 in Union Cafeteria (downstairs) about 5:30 p.m. Daily Kansan Business Office if found. Alumnus Accepts Position With Kansas City Bank Found FOUNTAIN PEN found Monday. Owner paying for ad in Advertiser at Kamsa office. 1234567890 Phillip Bramwell, "26, has resigned his position as vice-president of the First National bank of Belleville to accept a similar position in the First National bank of Kansas City. Mo. The resignation was effective Feb. 1. Queck club tryouts last night netted the club two new members. They are Marilyn Smith and Anne Stodder. Quack Club Gets Swimmers Several who tried out were asked to come back for further tryouts next week. Georgians To Get Religion Bowdon, Ga.—(UP)—Bowdon residents have one less excuse now for failing to attend church on Sunday. A local taxi firm announced it will carry anyone within the city limits to church or Sunday school without charge. A CIGARETTE CAN BE MILD BE "The more I smoke Chesterfields the more I appreciate how good they are" Jack Oakie STARRING IN "NORTHWEST STAMPEDE" AN EAGLE-LION PRODUCTION DENVER MARIE H. BURKE Chesterfield CIGARETTES --- (FROM A SERIES OF STATEMENTS BY PROMINENT TOBACCO FARMERS) WHY I smoke Chesterfield "When I bring my tobacco to market I'm always looking for the Liggett & Myers buyers because I know when I've got real good milk, ripe sweet tobacco they'll pay the top dollar for it. "I've been smoking Chesterfields for about 25 years. I like their taste and I know the kind of tobacco that's in them." ABC ALWAYS BUY Arthur Williams TODACCO FARMER GREENVILLE, N.C. YES. CHESTERFIELDS SMOKE SO MILD SO MILD THEY SATISFY MILLIONS SO MILD THEY'LL SATISFY YOU. HESTERFIELD ALWAYS MILDER BETTER TASTING COOLER SMOKING Copyright 1948, LUGGY & MYERS TOBACCO CO. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE EIGHT FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1948 Britain Gives Rollback Order London, Feb. 13—(UP)—The British press generally welcomed today a government program to roll prices back to their December-November level for manufacturers and fix profit margins for distributors and retailers. Across the channel in Europe, France battled inflation with a government bill freezing prices at the Jan. 15 level and Belgium conscripted utility workers to stop what was described as inflationary wage demands. The British anti-inflationary measure was announced in commons Thursday night by Sir Stanford Cropps, chancellor of the exchequer, in answer to workers' demands for strict price control in lieu of wage increases. Official Belgian circles said that coal miner workers might not be mobilized in addition to gas, water, and electricity workers to keep wages stabilized. More than 200 articles will be included in the rollback order, including furniture cutlery, china, glassware, cooking utensils, and electrical equipment. Labor Arbitration To Be Debated Six Class AA and six Class A high schools will compete for the state debate championships at the University Saturday. Each team was the winner of runner-up in a regional tournament held last week. Russell is the defending Class AA state champion. In Class AA for high schools of 500 or more enrollment, the fourman teams will be from Topeka, Russell, Winfield, Wellington, Newton and Wichita North. Competing in Class A will be Ablene, Olathe, Stafford, Ellinwood, Oberlin and Hays. Quill Club Will Sell 'Trend' Feb. 16, 17, 18 "Trend," the Quill club magazine, will be sold Feb. 16, 17, and 18. The publication will include the short story by Maurice Kellogg which won first prize in the Quill club short story contest this fall. Other articles in "Trend" will be the creative writing of Quill club members. The magazine will be sold in Fraser hall, Frank Strong rotunda, and the Union lobby. Too Sexy Says Faculty Evanston, Ill., Feb. 12—(UF)—Two Northwestern university co-eds said today they have resigned as editors of the university humor magazine because faculty members criticized the publication for placing "undue emphasis on sex and liquor." Joan Forsythe, 21, St. Louis, and Mary Helen Woods, 21, Evansville, Ind., co-editors of the magazine, said they submitted their resignation to the university's board of publications after they were given a choice of making drastic changes in the magazine or resigning. The board accepted the resignations and announced it would receive petitions from applicants for the vacant jobs. Extension To Hold Gas Service School An L. P-gas service school will be held in Wichita by the University Extension Feb. 23 to 26, Gerald Pearson, director of extension classes, announced Thursday. Working with the University Extension will be the state fire marshal's office and the state vocational education board. The course will cover all phases of the bottled-gas industry. It will be sponsored by the Kansas L. P.-gas service association. 24 Graduates Are Lawyers Twenty-four University L a w school graduates were among the 55 new Kansas lawyers who took their oath Thursday before the Kansas supreme court in Topeka. Justice William A. Smith welcomed the 54 men and I woman into Kansas practice. The graduates, who received their law degrees from the University at mid-year, are Charles E. Russell, Howard G. Engleman, Cecil H. Frey, Thomas F. Seed, Robert C. Helse, Robert C. Foulston, Jr., Stanley L. Lind, Kenneth Ray. Charles D. Knapp, John Q. Royce, Albert Poznik, Clemens R. Mong, Milo L. Harris, Robert S. Hill, William D. Stephenson, Robert F. Staddler, T. Gra Gaston, Robert B. Booz, Granville M. Bush, David W. Kester, Walter L. McVey, Jr., and Bill R. Cole. Keith U. Martin, '47, practicing attorney in Kansas City, Mo., and Leo L. Kerford, '47, instructor in the Law school of the State Agricultural and Mechanical college, Orangeburg, N.C., were included in the group. Mrs. Barbara Rrud, wife of Prof. Millard H. Ruud, assistant professor of law, also took her law oath Thursday. Feb. 15 should be a very important Sunday to all K. U. students, the Rev. John Patton of the First Presbyterian church said today. The Rev. Mr. Patton is sponsoring the "go-to-church Sunday" committee of the Student Religious council. Sunday Important Minister Says "The goal of the go-to-church committee is to make religion real in the life of the students," the Rev. Mr. Patton said. "Religion is not just for one day of the week or year, but it should be present in all of the students activities every day." The first lecture of the no-credit slide rule course for student engineers will be held from 7 to 9 p.m. Monday, John R. Fowler, chairman of the committee of instruction, announced today. Because of the large number of students wishing to take the course, there will be a similar lecture from 7 to 9 p.m., Feb. 19. Meetings will take place in Lindley auditorium. First Slide Rule Lecture To Be Monday In Lindley Principles of multiplying and dividing with the slide rule will be explained. The course is being sponsored by Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity. The Eagle To Be On Sale Feb.24 The Eagle will be on sale Feb. 24, it was announced at a staff meeting by Bruce T. Bathurst, editor, Thursday. Local subjects will cover prohibition, Senator Capper, Lawrence restaurants, parking at the University, campus politics, required courses and prerequisites, and the English department. Stories on national and international subjects will include universal military training, atomic energy, the U. N. O. and the veto power, and the coming elections. Personnel on the Eagle are Bruce T. Bathurst, Keith Wilson, Wallace B. Foster, Ralph C. Eacock, Gary J. Kerston, Charlie Thayer, James H. Raglin, Helen E. Ward, Richard S. Hawkinson, James O. Jones, Jerald K. Bales, and L. Edward Stollenwerk. June Graduates To Meet June graduates interested in the services of the business placement bureau will meet at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Frank Strong auditorium. All graduating students of the School of Business are required to attend. Business placement registration forms will be explained and interviews schedules outlined for the spring semester. Cancellor Deane W. Malott will speak briefly on business opportunities. UN Army Urged For Holy Land In Official Report Lake Success, N. Y. Feb. 13—(UP) The United Nations Palestine commission agreed today on major provisions of its appeal for a UN army to enforce holy land partition and prepared to submit the demand to the security council this week-end. An authoritative source said the five small-nation diplomats of the Palestine commission had agreed on "all major points" in the long-awaited emergency report on the violence in Palestine. The official said the group would complete work on the report during the day, forwarding it to the security council as soon thereafter as it can be printed and distributed to the council's 11 members. The report is known to ask for an international army to put down Arab resistance while the UN commission, beginning May 15, starts splitting Palestine into separate Arab and Jewish states. This demand, fortified by renewed Arab threats to wage full-scale war against any UN army, threatened to push the council into a vital bate on far-reaching consequences for the Middle East and the world's three great powers, America, Russia and Great Britain. Final work on the commission's security report was accompanied by the disclosure that the state department has neither advised nor consulted the American UN Delegation about this country's position on the issue of sending a UN force to Palestine. U. Club To Give Party A Valentine party has been planned for members of the University club, today at 8 p.m. at the clubroom $1007^{2}$ Mass. avenue. Mrs. L. J. Heeb and Mr. Mrs. Kenneth Jochim are hosts. Gifts To The "SWEET" - HEART OF AMERICA And Her Escort At The SWEETHEART SWING SATURDAY SATURDAY ACHNINGS HARDWARE 822 Mass. Pearl handled pocket knife LAWRENCE HARDWARE 724-26 Mass. Tela-lite KM electric heating pad MALOTT'S HARDWARE 736 Mass. Bed Lamp MILLER FURNITURE 729 Mass. A Surprise Gift ADELANE'S 823 Mass. Silk chiffon scarf GRAYCE SHOPPE 841 Mass. One compact HARZFELD'S 1144 Indiana A big surprise JOHNSON'S DRESS SHOP 835 Mass. Head scarf SWOPE DRESS SHOP 943 Mass. One white lady's sweater WEAVER'S 901 Mass. Rhinestone necklace F. H. ROBERT'S JEWELERS 833 Mass. Rhinestone bracelet L. G. BALFOUR CO. 411 West 14th One novelty lighter B. G. GUSTAFSON'S Jewelers 809 Mass. One gold bracelet ED PARSON'S JEWELERS 725 Mass. One key case CARTER'S STATIONERY 1025 Mass. One box stationery 2 45th M La Le Fc B6 VICKER'S GIFT SHOP 1023 Mass. A Churchill Weaver scarf VERNON'S HARDWARE 1029 Mass. 2 pieces china LAWRENCE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. One copy "Omar Khayam" T afte gin wit wor VI'S GIFT SHOP Eldridge Hotel One handkerchief OBER'S Leading Clothiers 821 Mass. A surprise gift. will Gwsi servspl GT T Jug enn We film University Daily Kansan 45th Year No.89 Monday, Feb.16, 1948 STUDENT NEWSPAPER Lawrence, Kansas Lenten Services For Afternoons Begin Tuesday The first of a series of Tuesday afternoon Lenten services will begin in Danforth chapel at 4 p. m. with Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, as the guest speaker. Lee H. Reiff, College freshman, will conduct the worship service. Gwendolynne S. Jones, College senior, will play the organ for the service. Donna Rumsey, fine arts sophomore, will sing a solo. The services are being arranged by a committee from the Student Religious council of Donald K. Parnell, College sophomore, chairman, and Bonnie M. Brown, College junior. The Rev. C. Fosberg Hughes of the Plymouth Congregational church is sponsoring the committee. The service is an additional program of the Student Religious council for the Lenten season. Morning devotions are also being held from 8:30 to 8:50 a. m. Monday through Friday in Danforth chapel. The morning devotional services are entirely student-led. The Tuesday afternoon vespers will be student-led, but faculty members will deliver short talks appropriate to the season. German Film To Be Shown The German sound film, "Singende Jugend," ("The Orphan Boy of Vienna") will be shown at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Fraser theater. The film will have English sub-titles. In the picture Toni, a young orphan who loves to sing, enters the school of the Vienna choir boys with the help of a street musician. His adventure with the choir concerns popular and classic music, J. A. Burzle, associate professor of German, said. No admission will be charged. Highlighting the story are excerpts from Mozart, Schubert, Handel, and Strauss played by the Vienna philharmonic orchestra. Passages of the Kyrie are sung by the famous choir in the cathedral in Vienna. Peterson To Serve On Committees Capt. John V. Peterson, U.S.N. professor of naval science, left Sunday for Alameda, Calif. to serve on a five-man board planning the operations and policies of a three week summer training cruise for contract N.R.O.T.C. students. The committee consists of naval officers from various naval establishments. The conference will end Feb. 22. Immediately after this meeting the captain will attend a conference in Pensacola, Fla. The navy department has invited leading educators from all parts of the country to acquaint them with the naval aviation flight training program offered in connection with the N.R.O.T.C. program being given in 52 colleges and universities. Captain Peterson will return to the University Feb. 28. Freshman Hurt In Accident William A. Childs, College freshman, received a fractured nose in an accident one mile west of Tonganoxie Feb. 14. He is in Watkins hospital. Bookstore Funds Provide Radios Funds from rebate slips swept up off the floor in the Union bookstore enabled L. E. Woolley, manager, to present six table model radios and one RCA Victor phonograph to Watkins hospital and the University nursery school, respectively. The equipment was delivered Friday. The phonograph plays plastic records which an older phonogaph in the nursery school does not. The radios will be used by bed patients in the hospital. Truman Urges Inflation Curbs New York, Feb. 16.—(UP)—President Truman warned again today that without new inflationary curbs "the living standard of millions of families will be critically endangered." The president, in a letter to the United States Conference of Mayors, which opened a three-day meeting today at the Waldorf Astoria hotel, did not mention the recent slump in the commodity markets. He asked the mayors to assist him in obtaining inflation controls from congress. Mr. Truman pointed out that he had made specific recommendations for economic controls in his state of the Union message, in his budget message, and in his economic report to congress. "These recommendations directly affect the continued progress and welfare of our great municipalities," the president said, "and the millions of our citizens who now live in urban areas. "Of basic importance is our duty and obligation to establish our economy on a sound basis. The sharp rise in the cost of living index points to the undermining of our whole economy. If this rise is not permanently checked, the living standard of millions of families will be critically endangered. "Moreover, you and your colleagues know from first-hand experience that the financial stability of our city governments is being threatened by increased costs resulting from inflation. First Buehler Speech Contest To Be March 18 The first annual Lorraine Buehler oratorical contest will be held March 18 in Fraser theater, Mrs. Natalie Calderwood, instructor in English and chairman of the contest committee, announced today. A special meeting of students interested in entering the contest will be held in the Little Theater of Green hall at 7:30 p.m., Wednesday. Prof. E. C. Buehler of the department of speech and drama will answer any questions as to the details of the contest and will lecture on how to organize and work an oration. Any undergraduate student, man or woman, is eligible to compete. Orations will be limited to 1,350 words, or approximately 10 minutes long. Any subject may be used as long as the work is original. The event will be offered for five years as a memorial to the late Lorraine Buehler, who was the wife of Prof. E. C. Buehler of the speech and drama department. Following the death of Mrs. Buehler last year, many former students of both Professor and Mrs. Buehler asked to contribute to an appropriate memorial. Chancellor Deane W. Malott appointed a Lorraine Buehler memorial committee of Dean Paul B. Lawson of the College; Prof. Allen Crafton, Prof. Margaret Anderson, Mr. Kenneth Johnson, and Mrs. Natalie Calderwood, chairman. The committee decided that an oratorical contest would be the most appropriate memorial. The contest, sponsored by Delta Sigma Rho, national honorary debate fraternity, will be the largest all-school speaking event ever held at the University. First prize will be a set of the Encyclopedia Americana. Second prize will be a cash award. Kansas-Fair today, tonight and tomorrow. A little warmer today east and central. Continued mild tomorrow. High today in 50's. Low tonight in 30's. Equalization Of Rail Rates Won't Cause Business Boom WEATHER The industrial boom so many persons expect to result from the equalization of railroad freight rates will not materialize. That is the conclusion of a report prepared by Mignon Mortor, instructor in economics, and released by the bureau of business research. Class rates for Kansas are approximately 45 to 60 per cent higher than The report emphasized the fact that equalization may be a two-edged sword. It will allow Eastern manufacturers to ship into the Midwest more cheaply, thus removing the "freight rate protection" that has allowed some local industries to thrive. "Many years may pass before any visible signs of expansion and shifting of industry in the West and South present themselves. Freight rate changes alone will not cause the decentralization," the report said. Class rates for Kansas are those in the industrial East. The equalization, ordered by the Interstate Commerce commission in 1945, will not go into effect for several years. The report predicted that equalization will create industrial jobs for the surplus agricultural population of the South and West, and a better balanced economy. The report said that equalization will allow each region to develop industrially along the lines its resources best suit it for. Washington, Feb. 16—(UP)—The interstate commerce commission today authorized western and southern railroads to increase their passenger coach fares 13.63 per cent. ICC Grants Boost In Railway Fares The increase, which can be put into effect on five days notice, will boost the one-way coach fare from 2.2 to 2.5 cents a mile, with proportionate increases in round-trip fares. The coach fare boost will give the 85 western carriers additional revenues estimated at 21 million dollars a year. The 11 southern roads will receive an estimated $4,200,000 additional income. Similar increases were granted to eastern and other southern roads by the commission last year. [Photo of a man in a suit and tie]. OTTOM OF AUSTRIA State Expenses Totaled By Page It is believed to be the most complete compilation of estimated Kansas receipts and expenditures ever made. A report of the receipts and expenditures of the state government of Kansas has been made by Tom Page, instructor of political science. The report was released by the university bureau of government research. Although the state government is now spending well over 100 million dollars a year, according to the report, no central point of responsibility accountable for its fiscal affairs exists in the state government. Including grants to local governments, estimated state expenditures for the two years ending June 30, 1949 will be $239,348,000, the report said. Reappropriated base expenditures for the estimated dedicated revenues total $344,777,000. Estimated balances will be $105,429,000 at the end of the two-year period. Grants to local government units and shared tax revenues were estimated at $95,050,000 for the biennium, or 40 per cent of state expenditures. Of this amount only 28 per cent was specifically appropriated by the legislature. The remainder will be dedicated revenue. Dedicated revenues are those received from a particular source and devoted to a specific purpose. Library Is Open For Architects A newly decorated architecture library is available to students according to Prof. George M. Beal of the architecture department. The library, which was closed for decorations is now open week days from 8 a.m. to noon, from 1 to 2 p.m., and from 3 to 5 p.m. Professor Beal said that the library includes only general architectural reading and that books for current classes are still kept at the engineering library on the first floor of Marvin hall. The architecture library includes many current architectural magazines and books, and also many of the older books on the various phases of architecture. The library is located on the third floor of Marvin hall in the right wing and is open to all students who wish to use it. Seniors To Take Tests The final will be given at the University April 9 to 10. A select group of high school seniors will take the preliminary Summerfield scholarship test March 15. Not more than five percent of the men in each senior class in Kansas are eligible. Otto Of Austria To Talk In Hoch At 8 Tonight Otto of Austria, who will speak in Hoch auditorium at 8 p.m. today, has spent most of his life in the troubled spots of the world. The subject of his lecture tonight, "World Danger Zones," will deal with the result of his recent trip through North Africa and central Europe. He will stay on the campus for two days and visit several classes. The Forums board and International Relations club will sponsor an informal discussion at 4:30 p.m. Wednesday in the Pine room of the Union. He was born in 1912, the oldest son of Charles, last emperor of Austria-Hungary, and fled with his family to Switzerland when the Austro-Hungarian empire dissolved in 1918. From Switzerland, the family went to the Island of Madeira where Charles died in 1922. Otto then lived and studied in Spain and France, and, at the age of 21, received his doctor's degree in political science from the University of Louvain, Belgium. "Two days are allowed by the administration to prevent the student body from taking unauthorized holidays." Dean Pugsley added. As early as 1933, he openly opposed Hitler and became active in the underground movement. He was tried in absentia by the Nazis and condemned to death. He came to the United States in 1940 and lived in Washington until 1944, when he returned to Austria and took part in liberating Austria from the Nazis. While in Washington, he worked with the leaders of central Europe and for the common cause of the United Nations. A. L. Pugsley, dean of administration of Kansas State college, told the University Daily Kansan in a long distance telephone conversation today that a holiday for the K-State students if their basketball team defeats K. U. is "in line with our regular policy of reserving two moveable dates during the football and basketball seasons-for victory holidays." K-State Plans Holiday-If University students have protested that they would not have a holiday if K-State was defeated. The student council requests in advance the holiday to follow an athletic event during each of the two seasons, he explained. "If the dates are approved by the faculty council and the president of the college, they are declared legal holidays celebrating Kansas State victories," he added. Sun Causes Wreck In Front Of Hoch Early morning sunlight and an illegal U-turn caused an accident this morning in front of Hoch auditorium. A 1936 Ford driven by Burt A. Robson collided with a 1939 Oldsmobile driven by Victor M. Eddy. Both are College freshmen. Eddy tries make a U-turn from the one-way drive west of Frank Strong hall, Robson, blinded by the sun, hit the right side of Eddy's car Traffic Officer Robert Corwin said. No one was injured. Mr. Corwin estimated the damage to the cars being from $100 to $150. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS XCELA EXECUTION 000404 PAGE TWO MONDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1949 War Not Answer Dr. Eddy Says "America must build a new world, but this cannot be done by war with Russia," Dr. Sherwood Eddy, author and world traveler, said at a World Brotherhood week lecture Feb. 13. The United States may win the "cold war," Dr. Eddy said, if we establish an equality of all races in America, adopt the Marshall plan, obtain an agreement with Russia in Germany and China, and do not appease Russia and Communism." "If we attempted to bomb innocent people and their cities we would be worse than Hitler." Before Dr. Eddy's lecture, the Lawrence League for the Practice of Democracy awarded certificates of merit to Dr. R. Q. Brewster, professor of chemistry; Miss Ruth Quinlan, Miss Libuse Driz, L. J. Heeb, and the Rev. C. Fosberg Hughes, Mrs. Eugene Wallace, league president, received a special certificate. Kansan Board, 4 p.m. today, 107 Journalism building. Independents monthly meeting tonight, Kansas room, Union. Official Bulletin Feb. 16, 1943 Dr. Eddy added that we should not even consider an atomic war with Russia. Positions of editor and business manager of K-Book open for application. Submit letters stating classification, qualifications and previous experience to Betsey Sheidley, Gower Place by Wednesday. Boundaries fraternity, 7:30 tonight. Union recreation room. LSA. meeting of both old and new council members, 7:15 tonight, 228 Frank Strong. Students who have not learned their fall semester grades may obtain them at the Registrar's office on the following days according to the schedule of last names: today, A-G; tomorrow, H-N; Wednesday, O-T; Thursday, U-Z; Friday, those who failed to get them on the day specified. Morning devotions each morning, 8:30-8:50, during Lent at Danforth chapel. All men students interested in part-time jobs for the spring semester must report to Men's Student Employment office no later than Feb. 21 if they wish to keep employment applications active. First slide rule class, 7 tonight, Lindley auditorium. "Introduction and Multiplication." Some material to be repeated 7 p.m. Thursday. Attendance at only one section necessary. Phi Kappa Sigma, 7:30 tenight Pine room, Union. Sunflower Junior Statesmen club, 7:30 p. m. tomorrow, Union ballroom. Former Kansas and Missouri Boys' Stats invited. S. A. M., 7:30 p. m, tomorrow, recreation room, Memorial Union. E. B. Friederich, Spencer Chemical CO, speaker. Progressive Party reorganizational meeting, 7 p.m. tomorrow, 110 Frank Strong. All persons interested welcome. Armanav meeting, 7 p. m. tomorrow, Pine room, Union. Open to all interested. K-Club Key design contest extended until 5 p. m. Wednesday Rules posted on bulletin boards or can be obtained at Athletic office. S. A. M. field trip leave rear Marvin hall, 12:10 p. m. Wednesday and Thursday. Y. M. C. A. cabinet, 5 p. m. to- morrow, Pine floor, Union. . University Young Democrats, 7 p m. Wednesday, Recreation room. Union. Meeting for all June graduates of School of Business, 4 p. m. Wednesday, Frank Strong auditorium. Attendance required. Any other Physical Therapy club, 7:30 p. m. tomorrow, Watkins Memorial hospital. Mortar Boards Will Meet Here Mortar board chapters of the Midwest will hold a regional meeting at the University April 10. Carolyn Campbell, education senior, will be in charge of the meeting. Chapters expected to attend are from Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma A. and M., Kansas State college, and Washington university, St. Louis. June graduates wishing service of Business Placement bureau welcome. Job opportunities and registration forms to be explained. Interview schedules to be outlined. Chancellor Malott to speak briefly on business opportunities. K-Club banquet for installation of members, 6:30 p. m. Thursday, Kansas room, Union. Picture for Jayhawk to be taken. Tickets from Business office, Athletic office, or executive committee by tomorrow evening. Community service commission of Y.W.C.A.will meet at 4 p.m. today at Henley house. West Virginia is America's greatest bituminous coal producing state. The University now has a cartography or map room which is considered one of the best in this area, according to Thomas R. Smith, associate professor of geology. He added that he rates it as being better than the map room at Harvard. University Has Room With 30,000 Maps The cartography room is a join geography departments. It is situated in 418 Lindley hall and is being used to process a map collection being developed here. The collection contains from 25-000 to 30,000 maps obtained from the army map service and the office of strategic services. One half of the collection is on foreign countries and the other half on the United States. The whole collection will be housed in the geology library in Lindley hall, and will be available to campus groups. Call K. U. 251 With Your News Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Unregistered students may be Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence. Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. University Daily Kansan Two Win Prizes At KU Dames Party Mrs. Catherine Porter won the door prize and Mrs. Doris Fisher received the prize for the high bridge score at a meeting of the K.U. Dames. Mrs. Harold W. Klein was the hostess. The 24 members present spent the evening knitting and playing bridge. Reorganized Art Club Hears Talk On History Austin Harmon gave a short resum e of the history of the University Art club at a reorganization meeting recently. Valerie Stag, Mary Helen Baker, and Shirley Sudendorf were appointed to the refreshment committee. The club will meet Tuesday in the East room of the Union. Scott Lilley, free-lance artist, will conduct the discussion. Who Is House? LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS 12 East Eighth Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed...65c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed...69c CASH AND CARRY ONLY X X "I'll be up there soon!" X CAREERS WITH A FUTURE U. S. Army and U. S. Air Force UP WHERE the ceiling's unlimited and the horizon's as wide as the world! Up where there's freedom and adventure—and a man can dare to do what no man's done before! You're on your way up there when you join the Aviation Cadets. After a year's pilot training, it's silver wings for you—and a commission as Second Lieutenant in the U.S.Air Force Reserve. You are eligible if you're single, between 20 and $ 2 6 \frac{1}{2} $ ,and have completed at least half the requirements for a degree from an accredited college or university (or can pass an equivalent qualifying examination). You'll fly the very best planes during your 12 months of pilot training. Then, after graduation, you'll pilot jet fighters and bombers. And you'll get a starting salary of $336 a month. During your three years on active duty you'll be given a chance to win a commission in the Regular Air Force. This is a priceless opportunity for alert young men with the urge to carve their future in American aviation. Ask for details at your U. S. Army and U. S. Air Force Recruiting Station. Or, write to Headquarters, U. S. Air Force, Attention: Aviation Cadet Section, Washington 25, D. C. U. S. ARMY AND U. S. AIR FORCE RECRUITING SERVICE Del MONDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE Socially Speaking Delta Tau Pledges ** Delta Tau Initiates Delta Tau Delta announces the pledging of John Gloser, Pittsburgh; Richard Nesch, Pittsburg; Robert Meacham, Lorraine; James Retter, Leavenworth; and William Reinders, Maryville. Delta Tau Delta announces the initiation of Dave Mordy, Wallace McKee, Darrrell McNiel, Donald Defendorf, Frank McCoy, Dean Frisbie, Dick Bradley, Kenneth Hillyer, R. C. Harris, Robert Blincoe, Fred Woods, William Layman, Warren Weaver, Bill Grosser, Gerald Maloney, Carl Stallard, and William Summerour. Dr. J. W. McKee and William F. Grosser Jr. were present for the initiation of their sons. Dinner Dance The pledges of Tau Kappa Epsilon entertained the pledges of Chi Omega with a dinner and dance Friday. Hopkins Dance A dessert dance with a Valentine theme was held at Hopkins hall Feb. 11, Guests included Richard K. Tomlinson, Paul S. Gratnny, James O. Piggott, Dale D. Farr, Joseph W. Davis, Paul E. Fortmiller, Don Walker, Marvin Inloses, Charles L. Palmer, Fred McCracken, Will Ostrum, Raymond S. Bowers, and Vern L. Birney. Weddings And Engagements Harger-Carsey The wedding of Gwen Harger, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Harger, Kansas City, Mo. to Lambreth S. Carsey, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Carsey, Merrville, La., took place Jan. 15 at the Calvary Baptist church in Kansas City, Mo. Mrs. Carsey, who attended the University last year, was a sophomore in the College. She is a member of Alpha Delta Pi. The couple are now living in Kansas City. The engagement of Joan Rettig, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick William Rettig, Fredonia, to Irvin H. Messor, Plains, was announced Feb. 8 at the Sigma Kappa house. Rettig-Messer Betty Black, who made the announcement, wore a corsage of pink carnations. Geraldine Ott, who passed the chocolates, also wore a carnation corsage. Miss Rettig wore a corsage of camellias and spring flowers. Mrs. Mary Younkman, housemother, received a corsage of gardenias and rosebuds. Miss Rettig is a College senior. Mr.Messer is a pharmacy sophomore. The wedding will be Aug. 22. Call K. U. 251 With Your News Tau Sigma To Present Dance For Arts And Crafts Festival Tau Sigma, honorary modern dance sorority, will present "The Coming of the Churches to Kansas" at the Community building Friday in connection with the Kansas Arts and Crafts festival. education instructor. The music has instructor or organ and theory. Harriet Ruth Reisner and Calvin Curtis Glover, both fine arts sophomores, will provide background voices. Director and choreographer of the dance is Elaine Selcovitz, physical education instructor. The music has been composed by Katherine Mulky, Part of the dance shows the missionary influences in Kansas, a dance of love, and a marriage. Students in the dance include Glendri Mae Luchring, Mary Louise Peckensneider, Marilyn Sue Jones, Rosemary Robison, Shirley Ann Kyle Lavaughn Hodgson, Mildred Gulnik, Delores Travalent, Betty Jo Lorbere, Zola Parke, Jeanne Hillyer and Ann Allen. Construction of churches in Kansas, disappointment, and renewed strength makes up part two. The dancers in this part are Judith Ann Tihen, Doris Jane Tihen, Marilyn Steinert, Eleanor Wells, Mary Ann McClure, and Peggy Graber. The third division, the choral group, will depict a scene of solemnity and prayer. Corrine Carter, Dorothea Fuller, Carolyn Coleman, Bette Krezener, and Rozanne Croff will take part in this section. Methodist Sorority Elects Officers LaVaughn Hodgson, education junior, was elected present of Alpha chapter of Kappa Phi, Friday. Other officers are: Adrea Hinkel, vice-president; Joyce Walker, recording secretary; Nola Killgore, treasurer; Marilyn Raney, corresponding secretary; Shirley Sonderkler, chaplain; and Ethel Swart, historian. Six New Members To Join Jay Janes Eight girls were given the degree of the pine pledge service following the election and business meeting. Pledges are Georgia Mary Ginther, Margaret Jane Lutz, Maxine Heller, Kathryn Momoe Mita, Joan Elaine Harris, Winona Klotz, Betty Land, and Evelyn White. Six new members will be pledged to Jay Janes at 5 p.m. Feb. 25 at Watking hall. A rush tea to fill the remaining vacancies will be held from 4 to 5:30 p.m. Wednesday at Watkins hall. the pledges are Zola Parke and Phyllis Debus, Corbin hall; Patricia Tomlinson, Kappa Alpha Theta; Merle Collins, Monchonshall; Mildred Crandall, Jollie hall; and Eleanor Bradford, Templin hall. Awarded To Marvel Senti Designers Plan Bustles And Spats Marvel Senti, education junior, has been awarded the Gamma Phi Beta scholarship, Dean J. H. Nelson of the Graduate school announced recently. Miss Senti lives in Junction City and is majoring in art. After graduation she plans to be a high school handcraft teacher. Paris—(UP)—Bustles and spats led Parisian fashionists on a march back to Victorianism as the world-famed fashion designers showed their spring collections. Schiaparelli flared her skirts in back in a manner reminiscent of a Victorian side-saddle riding habit. Some afternoon versions were pulled up behind to expose a flounce of petticoat. Skirt lengths varied with the time of day and the whim of the designer. Hems averaged 12 inches from the floor for morning clothes and tailored suits, 10 inches for afternoon, nine inches for cocktail and dinner hours and ankle or full to the floor for evening. Captain Edward Molyneux's Victorian flavor came in ruffles and spats. Dainty ruffs of white lace edged the high necklines and candy striped spats matched the parasols his models carried. Jacques Fath used the same up-in-back trick without a petticoat for startling bridal gown in white satin. The long front skirt was pulled up to a bustle, with ends of the material hanging down for a train. Lucien Lelong calls his back fullness a "prow" silhouette. Dresses are molded to the torso in front, flowing in back, to simulate the wind-whipped silhouette on the prow of an old sailing ship. Kansas Stations Use KU Program Three Kansas radio stations are rebroadcasting the weekly "Women of Kansas" program, sponsored by the Radio Council of Kansas women, which is presented by KFKU at 9:30 p.m. each Thursday. Transcriptions of the original program are being broadcast from KFH, Wichita; KSOK, Arkansas City; and KXXX, Colby. The program is attracting wide interest among women throughout the state, according to Miss Mildred Seaman, KFKU program director. Each week the life story of a distinguished Kansas woman is given. The script is written by Gene Courtney and directed by Mary Jane Dean. The stories given to date have concerned Osa Johnson, Cora Downs, Mabel Walker Willselrandt, Ann Nichols, Zasu Piftis, Chloe Owings, and Amelia Earhart. Precinct Meetings Are Unsuccessful The four prefect business meetings of the Associated Women Students, held Feb. 11 and 12 were unsuccessful, Shirley Wellborn, presiding officer of the A. W. S. senate, said today. Due to bad weather there were not enough members of the precincts present at the meetings to elect representatives, she said. One representative was to be elected to the A. W. S. senate from each of the seven precincts in which students live in private homes. Another date will be set to elect these representatives, later, Miss Wellborn said. Women, Counselors Meet At Breakfast Approximately 100 women students attended the breakfast given by the Associated Women Students, Feb. 14. The breakfast was given to provide an opportunity for women students to become acquainted with their counselors. Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, and Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women, attended. Dorothy Quirk, engineering freshman, played the piano. The following is the broadcasting schedule at the Union from today through Friday. Hours are p.m. Monday Union Broadcasts 5:30-5:45: "Up and Down the Scales" (WDAF) 5-45-6: Records and announcements. 12 N-12:15; Records and an- nouncements. Tuesday, Feb. 17. 6-6:15. "Supper club" (WDAP). 6:15:30. Records and announcements. 6-6:15: "Supper club" (WDAF). 12:15-12:30: "Noontime Melodies" (WDAF) 12:30-1: Records and announcements 5. 30-6: Records and announcements 6-1: 15; "Supper club" (WDAF). 6-1: 50-30 Records and announce- Wednesday, Feb. 18. 12 N-1; "Noon Hour Clock" (KC-KN) 5:30-5:45: Tip top tunes (KCKN). 5:45-6: Records and announcements. 6-6:15: "Supper Club" (WDAF). 6:15-6:30: Records and announcements. Entomologists Wear Beetles As Honor Few campus organizations can claim more original pin than that of the University Entomology club The badge, which was designed in 1912, is made from the actual scarab beetle, a common tumblebug, according to Dr. Raymond Beamer, professor of entomology. Only the hard green and orange ex-skeleton of the beetle is used. This is filled with a mixture of plaster of Paris and glue approximately one-fourth of an inch thick. After drying, the unfinished product is sent to a jeweler, who completes the manufacturing by supplying it with a safety catch, Dr. Beamer explained. Dr. H. B. Hungerford, professor of entomology, said the pin was adopted in 1912 but the designer is no longer known. The United States is the richest country in the world in natural resources. The pin was prominent for several years but the idea eventually faded away so that today only a few of them are in existence. ___ RISK'S HELP-YOURSELF LAUNDRY Maytag Machines Weekdays 9-6 Line Space 1900 III.—Phone 623 Reasonable Rates Saturdays 9-3 Executive Positions in Retailing AWAIT TRAINED MEN AND WOMEN Attractive, responsible positions in stores or in teaching early the graduates of foremost School of Retailing. Careers in buying, advertising, personnel, management, fashion and other specialized fields beckon to college-trained men and women of varied talents. The unique one-year program offered by New York University for graduate students is designed to combine practical instruction, learned contacts, and invaluable "New York experience" (planned, supervised work experience—with pay) in well-known New York stores. Write for full details. ans. Request Bulletin C-33 NEW YORK UNIVERSITY School of Retailing 100 Washington Square, New York 3, N.Y. DANCE For HEALTH'S SAKE ROLLER SKATE Yes, the Rollerdrome's a place for good clean, wholesome fun and exercise. Skate for your health at the 737 N. Hamp. Phone 2402 ROLLERDROME SKATING ACADEMY 1 block south of P.O. TEE PEE—COKE DATE TEE PEE—COKE DATE V Dancing Coking Dancing Coking and - Sunday Dinners—After 4 p.m. - Bar—B—Q Meats - Dancing—Any Time - Open Week Days—11 a.m.-12 p.m. - Open Sunday—4 p.m.-11 p.m. The Tee Pee Highway 40 Phone 2013 TEE PEE—COKE DATE TEE PEE—COKE DATE TEE PEE—COKE DATE TEE PEE—COKE DATE COKE DATE TEE PEE—COKE DATE --- PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAN 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 MONDAY. FEBRUARY 16, 1948 Bengals, OU Move Up; Jayhawkers Bow Again The opportunists from the University of Missouri seized the lead in the Big Seven basketball derby, and Kansas State and Oklahoma shared the second slot as each conference team reached or passed the half-way mark in three week-end games. The University of Kansas sank to fifth place, a game and a half out of first, by losing to Iowa State, 52 to 50, in a close one Friday at Amos The talented Tigers continued on the comeback trail after a poor early-season showing when they handled the Nebraska Cornhuskers at Columbia Saturday, 47 to 14. Bespeckled Don McMillen, Missouri's sophomore guard, furnished the TNT as the two Bengal hot-shots, Dan Pippin and Thornton Jenkins, were cooled off by an alert Nebraska defense. McMillen took scoring honors with 15 points, followed by Rod Cox, Huskers forward, who tailed 13. Sooners Pave Wav Friday night's loss at Ames was the fourth in a row for the slipping Jayhawkers and again dropped their season record below the 500 mark. Phog Allen's crew has now won eight and lost nine for the season. But the Wildcats had no Houchin, so this Courty effort brought victory to his team and left the Oklahoma cagers all even with the Wildcats in the conference race at mid-season. The way was paved for the Tigers to move up as Oklahoma's Sooners stopped the Kansas State Wildcats on the Manhattan court in a 49 to 47 thriller. Paul Courty, lefthanded Sooner forward, duplicated a feat he had pulled earlier in the year against Kansas when he sank a desparation shot six seconds before the gun. Engleman At Helm With Howard Engleman directing the Kansans for Dr. F. C. Allen, who was temporarily laid up with a cold, the Kansas cagers turned in a performance similar to their last two conference losses. Although trailing at the end of the half, the Jayhawkers remained in striking distance throughout the second canto, but always lacked the spark to take over the lead. Otto Schnellbacher and Claude Houchin found the range with close-in shots often enough to keep the men from Mt. Oread in the battle, but the Cyclones were hot enough to match the visitors. Schnellbacher Still Scores The referee's whistle dominated plav throughout most of the contest as four men poured out late in the game. The Jayhawkers hit 18 out of 27 at the charity line, and the Staters 14 of 23. Leo Schneider, sub Cyclone center, tied the Kansas forward for ten game honors as he netted five goals and three free shots. In addition, the big Iowa worked well on rebounds for the winners. Otto Schnlelbacher climbed on the individual leaders in the conference as he held his average with a 13-point barrage. Missouri's Pinpin tillied 6 at Columbia, teammate Jenkins counted 8. Kansas State's Howey was 'stopped with 6 points, and Nebraska's Retherford was slowed up to 2 points. K-Club To Have Banquet Thursday Membership certificates will be issued to all members of the newly reorganized K-club at an installation banquet in the Kansas room of the Union at 6:30 p.m. Thursday. All members will be officially installed at the banquet, according to Lynn L. Leigh, vice president. Following the banquet pictures will be taken of the group for the Jayhawker. Members are asked to wear shirts, neckties, and letter sweaters. Tickets may be obtained from the Athletic or Business offices or members of the executive committee. Tickets must be bought not later than tomorrow, Leigh said. No Complaint On Tax Report St. Louis—(UP)—A chiropractor submitted proof positive with his 1947 income tax report to the internal revenue office here. He attached to the return a 1947 calendar on which he had jotted down the expenses of each day as they occurred. KU Swimmers Win Second In a repeat performance, the University of Kansas swimming team defeated Kansas State, 48 to 36, Saturday in Robinson gym to make it two victories in four starts for the season. In the opening meet of the season the Jayhawkers defeated the Wildcats but later lost to Oklahoma and Nebraska. Dave Ritchie, Gene Mahoney, and Stan Jervis each turned in firsts for the Kansas Crew. Ernest Friesen, Paul Banks, Dick O'Neill, and Pete Purdy added points with second place honors. Coach Walt Mikols said Ritchie and Friesen showed improved form in finishing first and second in the 220-yard free style and that he was pleased with Jervis' time in the 220-yard breast stroke. 220-yard free style—Ritchie (K) Friesen (K), Nichols (K, S) 2.29.5 50-yard free style—Leitt (K-S) Banks (K), Roy (K) 24.4 Results. 300-yard medley relay—Kansas (Medearis, Jervis, and Olander) 3:13.8. Diving~McClay, (K-S), O'Neill (K), Crates (K). 100-yard free style—Leitt (K-S) Nichols (K-S), Roy (K) 57.5. 200-yard breast stroke—Jervis (K), Sigman (K-S), Heckathorn (K-S), 2:36.4. 440-yard free style—Ritchie (K), Friesen (K), Gilliesk (S) 5-258. 400-yard relay — Kansas State (Grieshaber, Wilder, Nichols, and Leit) 4:02.5 Charles Dunn of Oak Park, Ill, formerly of Kansas City, Mo., was named Friday as chairman of the student committee of the 1948 Kan- tle. Dunn Will Head Relays Committee 10 ROYals by Director Bill Easton. A senior in the School of Business, Dunn graduated from Southwest high school of Kansas City Mo., in 1942, lettering there in football and basketball. Fourteen University of Kansas underclassmen will complete the 1548 student committee for the twenty-third Jayhawker games April 16 and 17. Box Scores IOWA STATE g ft ftm f tp Kester, f. 0 2 0 3 4 Hay Whede, f. 5 0 2 4 10 Paulsen, c. 1 3 2 5 5 Morman, g. 3 2 2 2 8 Paterson, g. 3 3 0 4 9 Roy Whede 3 1 1 1 3 Schneider 5 3 2 5 13 Ferguson 0 0 0 0 0 Block 1 0 0 2 2 KANSAS Schnellbch'r, f. 3 7 5 5 13 Eskridge, f. 3 2 1 4 8 Waugh, c. 3 2 0 0 8 Houchin, g. 3 4 1 5 10 Sapp, g. 0 0 0 0 0 Penny 1 0 0 1 2 Stramel 1 0 0 1 2 Dewell 0 0 0 0 0 Enns 2 2 1 4 6 Mabry 0 1 1 2 1 Barr 0 0 0 0 0 I-M Managers To Meet Tuesday Football Is A Man's Game? Columbia, Mo.—(UP)—After this, Joe Ossvick will play football with Joe Joe, a University of Missouri student, got into a tough football game at a Stephens college picnic. As he skirted right end, a fragile Susie tapped him on the right shoulder. Down went Joe, with a broken clavicle. A meeting of all intramural team managers will be called Tuesday at 4:30 p. m. in 202 Robinson gymnasium, according to Don Powell, intramural director. The meeting is to plan the basketball playoffs and coming spring sports. The proposed schedule of volleyball, swimming, and track contests will be discussed. Entry blanks for volleyball teams will also be handed out, Powell said. Powell urged all managers to contact the intramural office if attendance was impossible. Wichita Skyliners Win AAU Tourney Ponca City, Okla., Feb. 16—(UP) —A walk-away contest last night gave the Davis Skyliners of Wichita Kans., the fourth annual invitational A. A. U. tourney title here as the visiting Kansans walloped the Conoco Oilers, 53 to 23, before 1,300 bottles Bobbie Monty, former Wichita university star, lead the Skyliners to the title by scoring 18 points during the first 14 minutes of the game. During the evening, Monty hit for 22 markers to lead in that department. Third place went to the Cessna Bobcats of Wichita, who racked St. John's college of Winfield, Kan., 41 to 39. 2 Old Foes Added To '48 Grid Slate Kansas will renew football relations with two old opponents, George Washington university, and Colorado, during the 1948 season, it was announced Monday by Jayhawker athletic Director E. C. Quigley who released a 10-game schedule. Quigley also disclosed that the TCU game might be moved from its present site in Kansas City to Lawrence, a shift which would give the Jayhawkers five games on their home field. The 1948 schedule: Sept. 18 TCU Lawrence or K.C. Sept. 24 Denver U., Denver Oct. 2 Uni. of Colo., Lawrence Oct. 9 Iowa State, Ames Oct. 16 G. Wash U., Wash, D.C. Oct. 23 Nebraska U., Lawrence Oct. 30 Okia, A. & M., Lawrence Nov. 13 Kansas State, Manhattan Nov. 20 Okla. U., Lawrence Nov. 25 Missouri U., Columbia Mo-Valley Adds Two Kansas City, Mo., Feb. 16—(UP)—The Missouri Valley conference expanded its membership today to include the University of Detroit and Bradley university of Peoria, Ill. Prof. E. G. Barrett of Drake university announced the action at the close of an executive session yesterday. Barrett is conference president. Conference commissioner Artie Ellers said it was not known when the two schools would be ready to start competition in the circuit. Detroit and Bradley were not represented at the meeting. They had applied for membership after a committee committee visited their campuses. Schools represented at the meeting were Drake university, Oklahoma A. & M., St. Louis University, Tulsa University, Wichita University and Creighton University. The conference has been playing only a five-team football schedule and is not competing. All members have had teams in the basketball competition. Washington University of St. Louis withdrew last year, making it necessary for school officials to solicit new members. Launderette Service 9 lbs.of wash, 25c The Bus- (Adv.) 21 Bendix Washer 813 Vt. Phone 3368 Who Is House? SIZZLING STEAKS Duck's Tavern 824 VERMONT By BIB. THE RAPID TRANSIT COMP 3BJER By Bibler "I say, the boss wants to know since when did the 'West Hills run' take in 'Lone Star Lake?' " JAYHAWKER Shows 2:30-7-9 Ends TUESDAY My Wild Irish Rose WEDNESDAY one week MICKEY BATTLES A TOUGH RACKET! MICKEY BATTLES A TOUGH RACKET! Mickey ROONEY as KILLER MCCOY with Brian DONLEVY Ann BLYTH James DUNN MoneyGadget/Mager.com Mickey ROONEY as KILLER MCOY GRANADA NOW ENDS WEDNESDAY On Guard! ADVENTURE CALLS! Larry PARKS Ellen DREW The in SWORDSMAN In TECHRICOLOR! AUDED: World News and "'Childrens Village" BUMPUS ON THE CAMPUS! CAMPUS HONTYMOON Lyn-WILDE - Lee WILDE Cadela MARA Richard CRANE PLUS: Comedy, Cartoon Sport, Variety, News TONIGHT, Ends Tuesday EGGSPLODING WITH Laughter and Fun PATEE VARSITY NOW, Ends Tuesday MO Claudette Froh COLBERT·Mac MURRAY The EGG and SA O on tool point seve broc vict put roll spec othe K ner ter rece B mile Fram mee with inch high (K) ord$^d$ M Smj 61 (O) aris geeo (K) sec M Cor bro 60 Star (ne Lee (ne for Car B Gil: 4%8 P Nor rece E P F star pla Pit Pro ers Ev VOL 01 OF 5 VOLUME 1 VOLUME 2 VOLUME 3 VOLUME 4 MONDAY. FEBRUARY 16, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Sooners Nose Out KU As 9 Meet Records Fall The University of Oklahoma indoor track squad handed a visiting squad from Kansas a 54 2/3 to 48 1/3 defeat on the Norman track Saturday. Nine meet records were broken, four by Kansas performers. Bob Karnes, Kansas distance star, swept two firsts in the mile and twomile runs, setting new meet records in both events. Bob Crowley and Frank Stannard of Kansas turned in meet record-breaking performances at the first meet. He fit 12 inches and an 8-second lift in the high hurdles respectively. Oklahoma put five new records on the books. "Hobe" Gilstrap, who took meet scoring honors with 11 points, topped the low timbers in seven seconds, and Landon Westbrook streaked to a quarter-mile victory with 52.5 seconds. Simpson put the shot 44 feet $8\frac{1}{2}$ inches, Carroll vaulted $12\frac{1}{2}$ feet, and Biggins sped the half-mile in 2:00.3 for the other new marks. Order of finish: 440-yard run: Westbrook (O), Binter(K), Stites (K). 52.5 seconds (new record). 60-yard dash: Harp (O), Gilstrap (OI) Sites (K), 6.5 seconds. Karnes was the only double winner of the meet. Two-mile run: Karnes (K), Canaris (O), Moore (K). 9:57.5 (new record. 880-yard run: Biggins (O), Shea (K), Gregory (O). 2.00:3( new record). Mile run: Karnes (K), Moore (K) Smith (O). 4:28.5 (new record). 60-yard high hurdles: Stannard (K), Finley (O), Weaver (O). 8.0 seconds (new record). 60-yard low hurdles: Gilstrap O), Stannard (K), Post (O). .7 seconds (new record). Mile relay: Oklahoma (Shelby Cornelison, Biggins, and Westbrooke). 3:35.4. Shot putt Simpson (O), 44, $ \frac{1}{8} $; Lee (K) 42, 2; Finney (K) 37, $ \frac{1}{2} $. (new record). High jump: Scofield (K) 6.1%; tie for second, Norris (K), Weaver (O), Carroll (O). 6 feet. Broad jump: Crowley (K), 22, 11%; Gilstrap (O) 22, 7%s; Weaver (O) 22, 4%, (new record). Pole vault: Carroll (O) 12, 6; Norris (K) 11, 3. (no third—new record). Ray Evans, Jayhawker football star, has turned down an offer to play professional football with the Pittsburgh Steelers of the National Professional Football league. It was understood that Dr. John Sutherland of the Steelers had called Evans long distance and Evans made known his decision at that time. Sutherland was in Lawrence two weeks ago and talked to Evans. Evans Turns Down Pro Grid Offer Meanwhile, the Pittsburgh Steelers will continue efforts to sign Ray Evans, a club spokesman said. Charles E. Grey Elected President Of Geology Club It was believed that Evans has been offered about $20,000 to sign with the Steelers. The club spokesman said he did not believe Evans was trying tot bid up his price by dickering with the San Francisco 49ers of the All-American conference, but was considering a deal which would bring him considerably less than what the Steelers are willing to pay. Friends said Evans had several offers, both football and business, and that he probably would make up his mind in the next few days. Evans has indicated he favors going into business rather than professional football. Missouri 5 2 .714 343 334 Kansas State 4 2 .667 333 279 Oklahoma 4 2 .667 319 266 Iowa State 4 3 .571 312 287 KANSAS 3 3 .500 302 283 Nebraska 2 5 .286 361 423 Colorado 1 6 .143 304 346 "As far as we know," the spokesman said, "Evans has not made any definite commitments." One of the groups of ceramic tiles in the British museum is an early 14th century series illustrating the infancy of Jesus. Charles Edwin Grey, graduate student in geology, was recently elected president of the Geology club. Other officers elected were Wayne Calvin Granger, College senior, vice-president and Doris Eulalia Zeller, graduate, secretary-treasurer. The principal speaker was A. C. Spring, who showed slides and talked on the Wapiti lake area in British Columbia, which the graduates visited last year. Big 7 Standings YMCA Sets Scoring Mark In Feature Weekend Game Forty-eight "A" and "B" teams tangled in a weekend of intramural basketball featured by the scoring record of the Y.M.C.A. as they routed Gamma Delta. 76 to 22. Gamma Delta, 76 to 22. Paced by Payne with 23 points, Scheuerman with 22, and Clark with 20, the Y. M. C. A. rode over the Gamma Delt's for their fifth straight win while establishing a scoring record for the present season. The ElDorado A. C. handed the Bounders a 48 to 15 defeat in demonstrating their potent offense that makes them a championship threat. Heartbeat led scorers with 23 points. Bertuzzi Paces Battenfeld Battenfeld, led by Bertuzzi with 13 markers and McCaughey with eight, racked up a 43 to 17 win over Smith Hall. Shara paced the losers with six counters. The Kappa Sigs ran their win string to six games with a 46 to 33 victory over the Tekes. Pihblad starred for the winners with 13 points and Swope led the Tekes by scoring 16 points for the game's high total. Meeker swished 10 points to lead the A. V. C. to a 43 to 18 victory over the A. K. Lambda's. Kelling made six points for the losers. It was the veterans' third victory against as many losses. Agos High Show Power Aces High rolled on undefeated with a 56 to 31 win from the Phantoms. Clark potted 15 points and DeLuna 12 for the high flying Aces. Leading 16 to 12 at the half, the Married Men stopped the Army 30 to 25. Stanley was the game's high scorer with nine points. Roberts made 11 and Barley 10 points to pace the Navy Officers to a 32 to 24 decision from the Dine-A-Mite squad. Vaughan tallied 13 for the Mites. Alpha Chi Sigma, sparked by Johnson with 12 points, out-fought the Fightin' Five, 31 to 25. Bradley eight counters for the losers. Tom's Boys looked like men in their 29 to 11 victory over the Shiners. Armstrong hit 14 points to lead the winners while they were holding the Shiners to three field goals. Dix Club Wins Thriller The Dix Club took a thrilling 32 to 30 win from Oread Hall although the game's scoring ace was DuVinney for Oread with 12 points. Ashlee led the winners with 10 markers. Ankerholz with 11 points and Branum with 10 spelled the big difference as the Last Chancers won from the Five G's, 35 to 23. Riley led the losers with eight points. The Fiends and Demons climbed into a tie with the Law School for first place in division two with a 59 to 13 victory over McNeown's A. C. Clogston was top score with 15 points. In a battle to get out of their division cellar the 939 Club overran the 2120 Club, 27 to 12. The winners were paced to victory by Mesigh with 12 points. Wesley trounced Sigma Kappa Phi 45 to 16 in a game featured by the scoring of Emirie with 17 and Hargett with 16 points. Trudeale Tigers 42, Beta Kappa 23; Kappa Sg 24, Phi Gam 19; Sig Eps 45, Triangle 33; A. T O. 34, A. K. Psi 18; Phi Psj 46, Sigma Nu 27; Pi K A. 26, Lambda Chi 23; Nu Sigs 37, Dog House 20; Phi Chi 53, Dix Club 10. In the "B" team games the Sig Alph's cinched a first place division berth with a close 29 to 28 verdict from the Beta's. Other "B" team results were as follows: Fiends, Lawyers Tied Albuquerque, N. M. — (UP) — A 22-year-old divorced father of two children had a novel explanation when arrested for theft. He said he took the merchandise because he wanted to be sent to Father Flannagan's Boys Town in Nebraska. Second Childhood Already? Deep Freeze Is Respected New York, Feb. 16—(UP)—Oklahoma A. & M.'s Calculatin' Cowboys, who operate on the old saw that "possession is nine points of the law," were getting revised respect today from a lot of shrewd observers who think they are headed for their third national basketball title in four years. The "Deep Freeze" kids from Stillwater, Okla., virtually clinched the Missouri Valley conference championship by topping St. Louis university's Billikens for the second straight time, 47 to 38, in what generally was considered the most significant game last week. Previously, St. Louis had been rated the nation's number one team, having lost only to the Aggies in an earlier match, while winning 16 games. But when Coach Henry Iba's Aggies tied the Billikens a second time, the experts switched to their bandwagon. The Ags have won 21 games and lost but two, to Depaul and Kansas State. Won In '45 And '46 In order to quality for a section berth in the national collegiate tournament, which they won in 1945 and 1946, the Aggies have to clinch their conference crown officially, then defeat the winner of the Big Seven race in a sectional playoff. Even in defeat, the Billikens came close to assuring themselves of a national invitational tournament berth, since they made a rousing hit in Madison Square Garden, and probably would be welcomed into the brackets if they lose no more games. Holy Cross and Columbia also looked like safe bets for N.C.A.Tournament berths while New York University was figured a "Shoo-in" for the invitational. The Holy Cross Crusaders, defending N.C.A.A. champions, now have won 16 games and lost three and are the New England standouts. Columbia must vie with New York U. for the Mid-Atlantic berth but it seemed likely that the Lions would go to the N.C.A.A., while the Violets will accept an invitational bid since they are regular Madison Square Garden performers. They are the only unbeaten teams left in the nation, New York having won 16 games and Columbia 14. Holy Cross Strong Again MP Wants Skater To Go To College Ottawa, Can. Feb. 16. — (UP)—Jean Richard, Liberal member of parliament, urged Prime Minister W. McGownie King today to recommend that the government pay for a university course for Barbara Ann Scott, newly-crowned world's figure skating champion. Mr. Richard, said he was making the suggestion because he understood Miss Scott wished to remain an amateur and therefore could not accept a cash prize from her proud countrymen. He said that the government should undertake to send her to a university of her own choosing for whatever studies she wished to pursue. More Night Tilts In NL This Season New York, Feb. 16—(UP)—Although one of its members, the Chicago Cubs, still frowns on afterdark tilts, the National league has set aside approximately one quarter of its 1948 schedule for night games, it was revealed today with release of the schedule for the coming season. President Ford Frick approved a senior loop slate of 616 games, 163 of which will be night contests. The American league already has announced scheduling of 194 night games, but the ratio between the leagues remain almost identical since all stalia in the junior circuit now are outfitted with lights. Postponement of early season games are expected to be lessened this year since the first game is not scheduled until April 19, nearly a week later than last season. Pittsburgh plays at Cincinnati on that date. The general openers follow the next day, April 20, in which Brooklyn plays at New York, Boston at Philadelphia, Chicago at Pittsburgh, and Cincinnati at St. Louis. Parker 51 Fountain Pens Super Chrome Ink STOWIT'S Rexall STORE Charme Beauty Salon formerly Iva's Beauty Shop phone 533 All types of beauty work by capable operators. Mid-winter special price on permanents machine and machineless. Nettie L. Wolfe, Owner Read the Daily Kansan daily Engineers Wanted Bachelors Degree. Large College offers $3,000 Approximate half time teaching-studying. Masters to $6,500. South Western College needs Engineers Teaching research-opportunity do grad work. Associate Professor $4,500 -- Assistant Professor $4,000. Vacancies Other Fields Give phone, photo, qualifications. CLINE TEACHERS AGENCY, East Lansing, Mich. There is a swing, there's a style, there is an alertness to Varsity-Town Clothes that identifies them as the smartest in America. VARSITY-TOWN CLOTHES "Pacemakers For Smart America Your NEW Varsity-Town suit will be at- CARLS GOOD CLOTHES FOR FEBRUARY PARTIES COTTAGE CHEESE AND ICE CREAM Fritzel Jayhawk DAIRY PRODUCTS 834 Vermont CHI GALLOWAY Phone 182 Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers. You Be The Judge! WE ONLY ASK THAT YOU TRY OUR DRY CLEANING SERVICE___ ... then you will realize that New York cleaned clothes are all that we say they are. Our trained personnel will give your clothing the expert's care that they deserve. Phone 75 New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPERRANCE 926 Mass. PAGE FOUR PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY. FEBRUARY 16, 1948 "How Are You Coming With That Atomic Power?" U.N. TOTAL ENERGY COMMITTEE BRITISH COAL HEADACHE U.S. COAL HEADACHE RUHR COAL HEADACHE 278428000 By Daniel Bishop, St. Louis Star-Times Things A Dollar Could Do The Editorial Page The explanations of economists for the skittish activities of market prices are eye-brow raising in their variety. No one seems to know just what the break in prices means for the future. The expert's opinions range from gloomy forecasts of depression to a "there, there now everything's going to be all right" attitude. In spite of this confusion, some things seem pretty certain, if the market remains depressed. Buyers Will Hesitate With prices skidding recklessly, the average buyer will probably hesitate to make any important purchases for a while. If he waits, they may cost him less in a few months. One of the reasons given for the price decline is that prices have risen so high that purchasers are reluctant to buy, no matter how fat the family bank account might have grown. Paradoxically, now that prices are going down, the prospective buyer will continue to hold his money, hoping for a still greater price drop. Farmers are in a different corner. Many of them have held agricultural products on their farms in hopes of higher and higher prices. The fall in commodity prices leaves them holding the sack-albeit full of wheat. The prospects of good harvests in Europe, South America, and Australia aren't going to help bolster American farm prices, either. Part of the boom in farm prices has been due to the demand for food abroad. Agricultural prosperity overseas would limit the demand for American products and lower prices even more. The "Have-Nots" Then there are those who have nothing to sell and no money to buy. The advisability of incurring debts while prices are dipping is doubtful. A dollar borrowed now may be a lot harder to repay in a year. The "have-nots" will be doing less business with their bankers and department store installment managers. There will be less money exchanging hands for consumer items. These trends may be helpful in that a new respect for the dollar will result. Unbridled spending by corporations and individuals has been lamented as one of the causes of inflation. The squeeze on the dollar may soon become a reference to the consumer's grip. Flowing Stream America's declaration of war on the Axis was much like a boulder thrown into the waters of a flowing river. The river is the stream of human institutions, ever changing and ever moving forward. The boulder, the declaration of war, merely agitated the stream, sending currents and cross-currents here and there faster than before. One of these ripples was education. Today the waters have calmed somewhat, but education has moved far downstream. American universities and colleges grew up in an environment that was "doing things and getting things done." It was only natural that our institutions of higher learning should reflect this mood. Even before the war, most Americans went to college to train themselves to make a living when they were graduated. Culture was respected and wooed—but much in the way Americans sought after foreign royalty. Princes and dukes were trimmings on the cake. Culture was regarded in much the same way. Today education, still astir from the influx of new ideas and emphases brought by the war, is beset by a louder clamor than ever for practical education. Culture or the liberal arts too often is neglected. The tragedy is that only through the liberal arts can the always widening schism between science and culture be bridged. The liberal arts alone can temper the atom bomb. Senator Capper has asked for legislation to bar newspaper liquor advertising. Now he's asking the army and navy to co-operate with Kansas in producing rain. Dear Editor Language Reports Recently a faculty committee was appointed to study the present College language requirement and make recommendations if it appeared that the present system of requirement could be improved. From this committee, which included four faculty members from the language departments and four varied other departments, has come in the form of a majority report the final recommendation to increase the present language requirement to 12-13 hours. Dear Editor, An important point made in a minority report submitted by another faculty group is that the values of language study as stated in the majority report are attained only if the student gains proficiency in the language, and it is agreed in both reports that to attain such proficiency a minimum of 16-20 hours in a language is necessary. The minority report further declares that those benefits gained from the mere study of language (regardless of proficiency attained) can be just as well obtained in other courses. We feel that the best suggestion is the minority report's recommendation to appoint a new committee which would study an alternative plan as now used at the University of Minnesota. Such a plan would give the student an alternative of choosing a language requirement with a sufficient amount of hours required to attain proficiency in the language, or choosing a substitute requirement which would include courses taught in English by the language departments containing studies in foreign literature in translation, culture, and history; and also include courses chosen from a wide range such as logic, mathematics, derivation of English words, etc., to gain other values now claimed for foreign language study. This latter alternative may be taken by students who feel they would profit more from such a plan than from the foreign language study. Mortar board has taken a special interest in this matter because the minority report recommendations are quite similar to recommendations presented at a student-faculty conference sponsored by Mortar board two years ago. When this question comes up for further consideration and perhaps to a vote next Tuesday, we hope that all of the College faculty will be present to show their interest in this important issue, and that they will Daily Hansan University Member of the Kansas Press Assm. Nat- hern, and the Associated Collegeg Assm., and the Associated Collegeg Press. Represented by the National Ad- dress Office 420 Madison Ave. New York City. Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Editor-in-Chief... William C. von Maurer Managing Editor ... Alan J. Stewart Asst. Man. Editor ... Cooper Rollow Asst. Man. Editor ... Lois Lauer Girlfriend ... George Kline Asst. City Editor ... James Robinson Telegraph Editor ... Wallace W. Abbey Asst. Tel Editor ... Clarke Thomas Asst. Tel Editor ... Wendy Burger Sports Editor ... Robert E. Doherty Asst. Sports Editor ... Paul Zeh Asst. Sports Editor ... James Jones Women's Sports Editor Anna Mary Murphy Feature Editor ... John Wheeler Picture Editor ... Hal Nelson Dominant James Business Manager ... Betty Berry Advertising Manager ..Robert Alderson Circulation Manager ..Otto Meyer Classified Advt. Man.. Pat Warner Dearborn Dr. Promotion Manager ..Wister Shreve 1700 See Movies Of KU Bowl Game Approximately 1,700 students and faculty members saw the Orange bowl movies, starring Ray Evans, with Forrest Griffith and the Kansas football team playing good supporting roles, at Hoch auditorium Feb. 13 and 14. The newsreel of the Collier's all-American team was an added attraction. Nearly 1,000 odd-numbered activity book holders attended the first showing and heard guard Don Fambrough's running account of the game delivered in a genuine Texas drawl. The 700 even-numbered activity book holders who attended the next night heard quarterback Bill Hogan's version of the game. The University band, which had a halftime part in the movies, played a short concert before each showing. consider very carefully the recommendations presented by the minority report. Members of Mortar Board Close Freshman Frolic Date March 20 is now a closed date, the dean of women's office recently announced. The date was closed because the Freshman Frolic will be held then. Call K. U. 251 With Your News GALES American Custom Chocolates,$1.75 STOWIT'S Rexall STORE CALL FOR TAXI SERVICE CALL 2-800 UNION CAB CO. CALL FOR TAXI II SERVICE CALL COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals Short Orders Malts Sandwiches Air Conditioned Open 5:30-12 p.m. DESOTO APPROVED SERVICE PEYMOUTH DESOTO SERVICE PAYMENTS APPROVED Rodlington GALLAGHER MOTORS FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. Let Us Dry Clean Your Clothes Regularly Odorless Cleaning We pick up and deliver any day at any time. Open 7:30-6:00 Mon. through Sat. BAND BOX CLEANERS 9th & Indiqno Hillside Ph.123 WINS POPULARITY CONTEST T NO, the man in this picture is not upside down! You must be reading this standing on your head. Little wonder you can't pass the Finger-Nail Test. Better straighten up and streak down to the corner drug store for a bottle or tube of Wildroot Cream-Oil Hair Tonic. Just a spot of Wildroot Cream-Oil grooms your hair neatly and naturally—gives it that meat, well-groomed "college" man look. Relieves annoying dryness and removes loose, ugly dandruff . . . It's non-alcoholic, so don't try drinking it. Remember, however, it contains soothing Lanolin. Get Wildroot Cream-Oil hair tonic today and see for yourself why it's "again and again the choice of men who put good grooming first." For generous trial sumpy free, send this with with this supply tree, send this ad with your name and address to Wildroot Co., Inc., Dept. C-D, Buffalo 11, N. Y. WILDROOT CREAM-OIL Hair Tonic WILDROOT CLEAN-POOL GARDENING THE ROOF RESTORING WETTED BRAINY GROUND DOCTOR CREAM-OIL Hot Tonic MADE AT WATERHOUSE VACATION UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1948 PAGE SEVEN Russell Wins Class AA Debate Russell and Stafford placed first in the class AA and A state high school debate final Feb.14, in one of the hardest fought tournaments ever held at the University, Hobart Hanson, director of University Extension announced. Twelve four-man teams in both classes debated the proposition: "Resolved, that the federal government should require arbitration of labor disputes in all basic American industries." Each debate was judged by three officials picked from the faculty and University debate squad. The teams earned the right to attend the final state tournament by placing first or second in their district meets held earlier. In class A. Russell tied with Wichita North High school in the number of wins and judge's decisions. By totaling speak ratings, Russell beat the second place Wichita team by two points. Teams entered in the tournament were Russell, Wichita North, Wellington, Winfield, Newton, and Topeka in class AA; Stafford, Abilene, Olathe, Ellinwood, Oberlin, and Hays in class A. Stafford and Abilene tied in class A with nine wins apiece, but Stafford had more judge's decisions and earned top honors. Vets To Get More Money President Truman signed a bill Friday to be effective April 1, boosting G. L. bill allowances $10 and $30. A monthly increase from $65 to $75 will be given veterans without dependents; from $90 to $105 for those with one dependent; and from $90 to $120 for those with two or more dependents. An estimated total of 217 million dollars will be added to the annual benefits of two million student-veterans. Limits on monthly earning capacity are not affected by the measure. Student-veterans or on-the-job trainees without dependents may not have a combined monthly earnings over $175, and those with dependents no more than $200. Chairmen Report Senior Activities The executive committee of the senior class recently heard reports from committee chairmen on senior activities. Discussions ranged from selection of a band for the senior cakewalk on May 8, to methods of smoking the traditional peace pipes at the senior breakfast. Committee chairmen are John J. Irwin, senior dance; Robert K. Ready, senior breakfast; Anne Scott, senior history; John William Mahoney, senior prophecy; Adrienne Hiscox, rings; George H. Caldwell, cap and gowns; Betsy Sheidley, senior directory; Richard S. Hawkinson, alumni association; William A. Conbey, publicity; and Glenn L. Kappelman, senior gift. Enrollment for the late winter and the spring University Extension classes in Leavenworth will begin tomorrow, Gerald Pearson, director of extension classes, said. These classes are co-sponsored by the University, Extension and the Leavenworth city schools with O. R. Young, director of adult education for the Leavenworth schools, as co-ordinator. Leavenworth Begins Extension Classes Counsel to be offered include Gardening and Landscaping, How the Young Child Grows, Home Mechanics for Women, Nutrition and You, Sewing-Dress Clinic for Beginners, Sewing-Dress Clinic Advanced, Elementary Spanish, and Arts and Crafts. Univesity Daily Kansan Classified Advertising Copy must be in the University Daily Kansan Business Office, Journalism bldg., 120 North Park st. p.m. of the day before publication is desired. All classified are cash in advance. Classified Advertising Rates Classified One day Three days Five days 25 words or less 35c 65c 90c additional words 1c 2c 3c For Sale KODAK BANTAM, f. 4.5 camera and leather carrying case. Nearly new. See at 2E Sunside, after 6 p.m. 20 CHARVOS drawing set No. 614, new, never used. See afternoons or evenings. 730 Arkansas. 17 1934 CHEV. Tudor Master Deluxe. Good condition, fair tires. Excellent school transportation. Call 1637 between 4 and 18 hours thru Friday. PRACTICALLY new Chavras drawet. See Dean Holben, trailer store. 1304 Mass., evenings. 16 PRACTICALLY new Motorola Radio with Chevrolet head控件, Good hot water heater. H. E. Wright 1224 R. I., 1308M. 16 VETERANIS! We will buy, trade or sell you any Army or Navy gear in good condition that may wish to dispose of. Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. 669 HTFD For Rent SINGLE ROOM, three blocks from campus. Call 2240R. 17 VACANCY for one man student, 1416 Teen, student leaving school. 16 LARGE SOUTH room and small kitchenette containing sink and cooking facilities. Redecorated and now ready for use at 1316 Ohio. 16 SHAVER'S CAFE and service. Opening at our new location 1¼ miles south of Lawrence on Highway 58—just "around the bend." Come out and see us! 18 Miscellaneous WILL GLADLY pay $10.00 for information about or the return of a black portfolio with the initials GFS on it in gold. No questions asked. Needed urgently by Gregory Simms, 1034 Miss., Ph. 1548M. 16 ALTERATIONS and general seeware Reasonable prices. Ph. 1956M, 1101 Term. Mrs. Barr Gorrill. 20 SPECIAL RATE ON "Harvard Business Review." $4.50 per year at the Student Union Book Store. 18 SUBSCRIBE to the Kansas City Star, call 17. Headquarters at Round Corner Drug. 19 FREE OFFER: Photo copies of discharge papers, marriage certificates, for military credit or school entrance. 3 for price of 2. Round Corner Drug, 801 Mass. 18 Transportation RIDERS WANTED: Leaving every Friday evening for Emporia, Newton, and Wichita. Returning every Sunday even- Wanted YOUNG man to share room with K.U. student. Downtown, modern, near K.U. bus line. 714 N.H. 16 Lost BILLFOLD in Robinson Gym Thursday night. Please return paupers and billfold. See George Knighton, 1002 N.H., or call 2092. 18 WANTED: One boy to share large double room. 721 Miss. 3086 M. K.U. Bus stop one-half block. 16 ARKER 51" foundation Blue. pinel ball George Newton at 306, 1244 Ohio. ball George Newton at 306, 1244 Ohio. More than a thousand years ago, the English called January the "wolf month." The World Book Encyclopedia explains that during that month fierce wolves entered the villages in search of food. Miss Your Dinner (if you have to) Miss Your Date (if you must) —but don't miss... THE NEWEST, MOST THRILLING TALENT HUNT IN AMERICA INCLUDING TOP STARS FROM THE COLLEGES... "PHILIP MORRIS NIGHT WITH HORACE HEIDT" ESTABLISHED OVER 10 YEARS PHILIP MORRIS & CO LTD. FINISH SHARPENING VIVIDLY BLENDED MADE IN U.S.A. BY PHILIP MORRIS & CO LTD. IN NEW YORK Pizza Napadon - Every Sunday Night Over NBC, PHILIP MORRIS FINDS A STAR in a search for the great stars of tomorrow. Performers from all over the country ..including the top talent picked from the colleges! Music, drama, thrilling entertainment... weekly prizes of $250 ... and to the winner of the year - movie and radio contracts, plus a grand prize of $5000 in cash! Yes! Yeo! For perfect listening, make a date for Sunday night and hear the stars of tomorrow with PHILIP MORRIS! And for perfect smoking...today, tomorrow, always...light up a PHILIP MORRIS, America's FINEST Cigarette! BE WITH US EVERY SUNDAY NIGHT OVER NBC...UNTIL THEN 1. (3分) 计算 $4x - 2y + 6z$ 的值。 CALL FOR PHILIP MORRIS PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS 6 Truman To Ask More Help For Greece, Turkey MONDAY, FEBRUARY 16, 1949 Washington, Feb. 16. —(UP)—President Truman today denounced "ruthless" communist activities in Greece and notified congress that he will ask for "additional military assistance" for Greece and Turkey. Mr. Truman sent to the house and senate his second quarterly report on the American aid program for the two Mediterranean nations. In an accompanying letter he said that continued economic assistance for Greece will be provided through the European Recovery program if it is approved by congress. He be added that E.R.P. will not provide "for any additional military assistance required for Greece and Turkey, which will, at the appropriate time, be sought from congress." In connection with Communist activities in Greece, Mr. Truman did not mention Soviet Russia by name. "Greece has been subjected to ever-increasing pressure by the Communist minority, which, subservient to the foreign influences from which it draws support, would impose its will on the Greek people by force of arms," the president said. The president's report gave an accounting of the manner in which the American mission to Greece has been spending the 300 million dollars appropriated for that country by congress last year. In connection with his statement that funds for additional military assistance will be sought later, the president described "deliberate and wanton" Communist guerrilla warfare against the people of Greece. He said that any prospect of substantial economic recovery is being obstructed by the continued internal warfare. The result, Mr. Truman said, is that the guerillas are sapping the economic strength of Greece while this country is attempting to build it up. "Although economic programs most effective under the circumstances will continue to be actively prosecuted, the benefits from them can be fully realized only when the warfare against the guerrillas has been successfully concluded," he said. Cardinal, 97, Dies At Vatican City Vatican City, Feb. 16—(UP)—Gennaro Cardinal Granito Pignatelli di Belmonte, 97, dean of the Sacred College of Cardinals, died today. Death came at 10:30 a.m., shortly after the cardinal received a special apostolic blessing from Pope Pius XII. He was visited by the pope Saturday when the pontiff made an unprecedented journey to the clinic of the sisters of St. Anne inside the Vatican and spent five minutes with Cardinal Pignatelli. When the cardinal first became ill his physician reported he was suffering only from a slight indisposition. However, his advanced age brought complications. Cardinal Pignatelli's death reduced the College of Cardinals to 60, of which 37 are non-Italian. He will be succeeded as dean by Francesco Cardinal Machetti-Selvaggiani, 76, who was created a cardinal in 1930. Cardinal Machetti - Selvaggiani is ill, and the active work of the dean's office will be carried out by Enrico Cardinal Sibilia. AKPsi To Have Smoker Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business fraternity, will hold a smoker at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday, in the Kansas room of the Union. Louis Rothschild, Kansas City merchant and member of the Kansas City planning and development council, will speak on merchandising. Most Dateable Male Is KU's, America's Sweetheart Isn't Pat Ford, of Kansas State Teachers college at Emporia, was chosen "Sweetheart of America" at the Sweetheart Swing Feb. 14. Miss Ford is 20 years old, and was homecoming queen at Emporia State last fall. William T. Cavanaugh, College sophomore who was the sweetheart Veterans Can Change Schools Veterans who plan to transfer to another school must first obtain approval from their V.A. regional officer or training officer to obtain continued G.I. Bill benefits. Delays in payment of subsistence allowances and unnecessary paper work will be eliminated in this way. In most cases there is no objection to veterans changing schools, the V.A. said. The V.A. also announced that legal action will be taken against any attorney or agent who attempts to charge veterans for representing them in claims against the Veterans administration. Fees will be paid by the V.A., and deducted from money due the veteran at the time the claim is allowed. Statutes fix fees at $2 for a claim to obtain increased benefits, and $10 for an original claim. The V.A. also announced that veterans with service connected disabilities may receive out-patient treatment from osteopathic physicians under Public Law 293. Court Won't Give Order Washington, Feb. 16—(UP)—The supreme court today refused to order the state of Oklahoma to admit Mrs. Ada Llois Sipul Fisher, 23-year-old Negro woman, to the University of Oklahoma's all-white law school. In a 7 to 2 ruling, the court said "it is clear" that Oklahoma courts "did not depart" from the supreme court's mandate of Jan. 12 directing that Mrs. Fisher be given a legal education as quickly as a white student could be given one in the state. Tickets for the sophomore class Leap Year Hop will be placed on sale at the business office this week. Representatives will sell tickets in men's organized houses. In response to the Jan. 12 high court mandate, Oklahoma set up a three-professor law school for Negroes in the state capitol. Mrs. Fisher refused to enter it and appealed again to the supreme court to order Oklahoma to admit her to its regular law school. The dance, Feb. 28, will feature Mat Betton's band from Kansas State college and an intermission program of local talent. Tickets are $1.75 a couple. The supreme court specifically left open to Mrs. Fisher an application directly to the Oklahoma courts to admit her to the state's white university. Plans to distribute red and gold posters on the campus and at each organized house to advertise the publicity committee meeting Feb. 13. University students who live in Lawrence are eligible for an exchange scholarship to Sweden, if their parents will provide room and board for a Swedish student in Lawrence. This was announced Wednesday by the office of the committee on aids and awards, 227 Frank Strong hall. Sophomore Dance Tickets On Sale Students from the University would receive free room and board from the parents of Swedish students who are studying here. Lawrence Students Can Study In Sweden The Sweetheart Swing was attended by approximately 700 persons. escort, was chosen the "Most Dateable Male." On the program at intermission were Jeanne Chambers who sang "Embraceable You" and "I'm in the Mood for Love;" Mary Lou Pecken Schneider who played and sang "My Man;" and Eugene Mariani, who played a boogie woogie solo on the piano. James Hawes, fine arts sophomore, was master of ceremonies. The visiting queens were officially greeted by the chancellor, dean of men, and dean of women in the East room of the Union. Other highlights of the day were the Presidents breakfast and the Student Union executive board luncheon. The queens were introduced at the breakfast by Jack Kendree, master of ceremonies. Other guests were L. C. Woodruff, dean of men; Willis Tompkins, assistant dean of men; Miss Hermina Zipple, director of the Union; Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women; and Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women. On the program were songs by Miss Peckenschneider, a piano solo by Sarah E. Webb, and a group discussion led by Shirley A. Wellborn on "Limiting Activities for Students." Guests at the luncheon included Mr. and Mrs. Odgen S. Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ellsworth, and Joan Woodward, ex-president Union activities and founder of the annual Union day. Sweetheart songs were sung by the Delta Upsilon quartet of Robert W. Gowans, Roderick E. Weltner, Donald W. Patton, and Charles Howard. A group of 280 voices has been chosen for the "Messiah" chorus which will open the annual Music Week festival May 2. 280 Voice Chorus To Sing 'Messiah' Enrollment has been closed except when it has been impossible to attend the previous rehearsals. Special arrangements for late admission should be made with Dean Swarthout by 4 p.m. Thursday. Enrollment in the slide rule class sponsored by Tau Beta Pi has reached 350, Henry Fowler, chairman of the project, said. First Slide Rule Class To Be In Lindley Tonight The first class in the short course will be presented in Lindley auditorium at 7 p.m. today. The period, which will cover multiplication, will be repeated at 7 p.m. Thursday in the same place. Enrollees need attend only one of the two periods, Fowler said. The large enrollment will require two sections the first week. Attendance next week will determine the subsequent scheduling, according to Fowler. Vote Extension Of Rent Law Washington, Feb. 16-(UP)-The house banking committee today approved legislation to extend the present rent control law one month until March 31. The present law expires Feb. 29. The committee voted 18 to 5 for the one-month extension. This is designed to give congress more time to assess the economic situation before deciding on the nature of a longer rent control extension. Committee Chairman Jesse P. Wolcott (R-Mich.) offered the proposal for the one-month extension. He said the committee is disposed to continue federal rent control for at least one year in some form. But, he said, the committee wanted to study the situation further "in the light of any changes in the economic situation that might come about as a result of price cutbacks." The committee overwhelmingly rejected two motions to extend the present law without change for longer than one month. "The action taken today was not with any idea of killing rent control," Wolett said. "This action does not prejudice any further action with respect to the form rent control will take." he said. Dwight Day Succeedes Shaaf As Employment Counsellor Dwight Day, College junior, has succeeded Roy Shoaf as counsellor of the men's employment bureau. Shoaf did not return to the University this semester. Little Man On Campus By Bibler Biffle "I think it's about time someone told Professor Flapjaws that his lectures are too long;" Grain Costs Hold Retail Prices Drop In 16 Cities Chicago, Feb. 16 — (UP) The sharpest break in grain prices in the history of the Chicago board of trade appeared to have been checked today, but the cost of food in the corner grocery store still was sliding downward. Most traders on the board of trade believed that markets were showing their latest trend at the close of dealing Saturday. Corn prices were holding their own and wheat had even gained a few cents. Some experts believed livestock prices were due for another tumble this week on the basis of forecasts that farmers would ship more cattle and hogs to market. But livestock receipts at the major markets again today were extremely small, and the Chicago hog market opened 50 to 75 cents a hundred pounds higher. Hogs at Omaha were up as much as $1. Wholesale butter on the New York market rose 2 to $2^{1/2} cents a pound. Four outstanding economists in Washington told housewives that they can never expect to see prices hit pre-war levels—at least in foreseeable time. They said it was virtually impossible. Retailers in many cities announced new price cuts effective today. At Kansas City, Mo., a list of 300 lowered prices was sent out to the independent associated stores. Russia refused to permit the commission to enter the northern zone. Members voted Feb. 6 to send chairman K. P. S. Menon of India back to the little assembly for further instructions. Seoul, Korea, Feb. 16—(UP)—The Russian-controlled radio at Pyong Yang announced today that north Korean authorities have proclaimed a "demonocratic people's republic" in the Soviet-occupied zone which ultimately is intended to embrace the American zone with the capital at Seoul. North Korea A 'Republic' American military authorities immediately said the formation of a republic in northern Korea was a violation of the Moscow decision providing that Russia and the U. S. should work together to create an independent Korea. No immediate reaction was available from members of the United Nations commission on Korea, who arrived here Jan. 8 under a General assembly mandate to prepare for elections in both zones. The broadcast called upon the north Korean people's council to adopt a constitution which will be used to govern south Korea when that area comes under the new republic. University students who want to vote in the local primaries in March must be residents of the state six months, residents of the precinct 30 days, be 21 years old by the date of the elections, and must declare a Lawrence address. Fisher also said there would be more interest in the August and November elections and that he will cooperate with the University in establishing an absentee ballot system on the campus then. Harold Fisher, city clerk, said he doubled that there would be much student interest in the local primaries except for those who are permanent residents. Must Be Resident To Vote In March Add To Engineering Staff Bruno F. Loewen, '48, has been added to the teaching staff of the electrical engineering department Mr. Loewen spent $ 3 \frac{1}{2} $ years with the army engineers in the Panama Canal zone. University Daily Kansan 45th Year No.90 Tuesday, Feb. 17, 1948 STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Tuesday, Feb. 17, 1948 Lawrence, Kansas Christianity Is Best Weapon Says Archduke Christianity is our best weapon to stop the spread of Communism in the world today, Otto of Austria said in Hoch auditorium Monday night. "The world situation is graver now than at any previous time," he said, in calling attention to such trouble spots as Greece, Palestine, and eastern Asia. In these places, the creating of unrest and economic chaos has been carried out by the Communists, Otto declared. The speaker was one of several lecturers appearing at the University on the Community Lecture course. He spoke on "World Danger Zones." Archduke Otto, pretender to the Austrian throne, recently arrived in the United States after an extended trip through Central Europe and North Africa. He lived in Washington from 1948 until he returned Australia in 1944 to aid in the restoration of his country. Greek Civil War Greek Civil War The Greeks, who have an unfertile and unproductive country, are being subjected to a civil war which has caused 450,000 persons to lose their homes and has thoroughly disrupted the country's economic life, Otto said. The countries that border Greece, Bulgaria, Albania, and Yugoslavia, are Communist-dominated, and supply the guerillas with arms, food and what training they do receive, with the result that the war may continue indefinitely. In Palestine, some of the persons who know the situation despair of any peaceable settlement, Otto asserted. The Russians, who have taken no stand on the United Nation's partition plan, are aiding both the Jews and the Arabs in their struggle against each other. "The recent strikes instigated by the Communists in France were not to help the worker but were to disrupt the economy of the country," he said. "In eastern and Southeastern Asia, the United States is losing ground rapidly. Burma now has a Moscow-trained ruler and Indo-China is ruled by a Chinese also trained in Moscow." Otto said that in these countries the aim of Russia is not to conquer, but to weaken the country by political and economic strife. He stated that in the United States there is an increasing realization of the menace of Communism, but cautioned that many illusions should be dispelled. Don't Count On Stalin "Even if Stalin were to die to tomorrow, it would make no difference in the course of Russia's plans. His appointed successor would be accepted without question and there is not one chance in a million for a revolution." Otto warned that the manpower and equipment of the Red army should not be underestimated. Workers returning from factories in the Urals have reported great industrial expansion under the direction of German technicians. "At present, a positive step in opposition to Communism is dangerous, but that action should be taken while there is yet time." He reminded the audience that the appeasement of Hitler was a tragic mistake and said that the same mistake should not be repeated. WEATHER AWS Reception For Otto Today An informal reception for Otto of Austria will be given by the Associated Women Students at 4:30 p.m. today at Corbin hall. Each organized house is sending a representative, and various organizations, faculty members, national affairs have been invited. Mrs. George B. Smith and Mrs. Lawrence C. Woodruff will serve tea. Careers Meeting Begins Feb.24 "Blueprinting Tomorrow," a two-day career conference sponsored by the Associated Women Students, will be held at the College of Business, professor of economics will speak. Other guest speakers will attend the conference on Feb. 25 and 26. They will represent the fields of home, community, world citizenship, music, education, recreation, religion, literature and art. "The purpose of the conference is to help University women realize the possibilities of enriching their lives through a better understanding of these fields." Elizabeth Evans, chairman of the conference committee, said. The dinner, group conferences, a tee at Corbin hall, and a panel discussion on "Women's Education" will be open to all University women. The dinner is at 5:30 p.m. in the Kansas room of the Union. Anyone desiring to attend is invited, and should telephone Grace Gwinner or Elizabeth Evans at 267 as soon as possible. Tickets are $1 each. Wesley Foundation Elects New Officers H. Kieth Bradley, education junior, was elected president of Wesley Foundation recently. Other officers are Samuel E. Peacock, College sophomore, vice-president; and Louise Hemphill, freshman, secretary. Carlson To Speak At Opening Of Arts Festival Gov. Frank Carlson, honorary chairman, will formally open the Kansas Arts and Crafts festival with an address at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Community building. A dinner at 6 p. m. at the Eldridge hotel for guests attending the festival will precede the formal opening. The governor will be introduced by Mayor James H. Parsons of Lawrence and an address of welcome will be given by Mrs. Frank Stockton, general chairman of the festival. To Present Painting Following Governor Carlson's address, a painting will be presented to the Lawrence Memorial High school. The painting is entitled "By the Fireside" and is an original by Henry Salem Hubbel who once attended the Lawrence High school. It will be presented to Neal Wherry, principal. Four University students will take part in the opening event. Sidney Dawson, education senior, will sing "Home on the Range." His accompanist will be Frank E. White. "By the Waters of Minnetonka" (Thurlow Lieurance) will be sung by Lorraine Mai, fine arts senior. She will be accompanied by Edith Maxine Dunkelburg. To Honor Guests A coffee hour honoring guests will be held on 8:30 to 10, p. m. Paintings, prints, illustrations and cartoons, sculpture, crafts and design, metal work, jewelry, architecture, photography, music, and writing will be exhibited in the Community building beginning at 9 a.m. tomorrow. The articles have been gathered from art museums and from individual owners all over the United States. The festival will continue until Feb. 22, and the exhibits will be open from 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. each day. Little Man On Campus By Bibler STUDENT PHYSICAL TO-DAY! Oil Company Will Interview Engineers W. B. Kendall, representative for the Amerado petroleum company, will be at the office of the dean of the School of Engineering at 9 p.m. Feb. 23 to interview seniors who will be graduated in June. The company is interested in all types of engineers, and also majors in geology, physics, and mathematics who wish to do field work. "Which of you students is next?" The Amerado petroleum company explores oil well sites for oil companies. Arrangements for interviews can be made at the School of Engineering office. Speech Contest Starts March 2 To promote an active interest in speech activities among the students, the Forensic league will sponsor an intramural speech program beginning with an informative speaking contest March 2. The complete program will include the informative speaking contest, oratory, and extempore speaking. All contests will be open to students who are not on the debate squad, in the Forensic league, Delta Sigma Rho, or who have not placed in a campus speech contest. Hal Friesen, president, said. No Experience Needed The program is for persons who have had no experience in speech and who are interested in competing with other inexperienced speakers in a series of contests. In each contest there will be a men's and women's division with the winners receiving awards for top honors. A speaker may or may not represent an organized house or group. After the program is completed, the teams with the highest total points in the mong and women's divisions will receive a sweepstakes trophy. "A competitive speech program such as this is one of the best means of acquainting the students with the benefits of speech work." E. C. Buehler, professor of speech and sponsor of the Forensic league, said. "Never before in the history of the University has such an extensive and courageous speech activity been attempted, and it is a credit to the Forensic league for inaugurating the program." Friesen emphasized the fact that there is a need for the extension of speech activities to reach those students without particular talent or ability, but who need and are interested in an opportunity for speech practice. Students Can Use Training Committees have been appointed by the Forensic league to take charge of the operation of the intramural program and to contact organized houses and independent students with information about the contests. The committees and their chairmen are: judging, Newell Jenkins; personnel, William Conboy; clerical, Scott Nininger; contest, Keith Wilson, and publicity, Edward Stollenwerek. The informative speaking contest which will be the first in the series will be held March 2. Subjects may be of the individual's choice, and speeches will be eight minutes in length. There will be three judges who will determine the winners in both men's and women's divisions. Friesen said that the program will resemble the present intramural athletic program and is without precedent anywhere in the United States. Because of the demand for more emphasis on speech training, the Forensic league is taking this opportunity to open the field to a greater number of students, he added. Vote'No' Today Students Say To Faculty "No, we don't want a foreign language requirement," said 19 out of 20 students in a poll of student opinion conducted by the Forensic league at the discussion program Monday. From the 1,000 students interviewed by the Forensic league, an overwhelming majority favored the language study proposed by the minority report of the foreign language committee. The committee suggests that the study of a language should be optional for each student. Hal Friesen, president of the Forensic league, said the discussion and poll were sponsored in an attempt to supply an indication of general student sentiment on an issue that effects them so closely. Friesen continued the faculty should consider very carefully the results of the discussion and the poll because they present such a united front against the proposed increase of the requirement. Defend Requirements The discussion held yesterday was a debate or the advisability of any language requirement. Aldo Aliotti, engineering senior, speaking in favor of the requirement, said, "Culture is the mark of a liberally educated man, and certainly the study of a language aids in developing that culture." Edward Stollenwerck, college junior, also defending the requirement, emphasized the value of languages in understanding English, in developing a discipline in mind, and producing a linguistic tool that can be further developed for a practical use. Jean Moore, second year law student, opposing the requirement, pointed out that the suggested requirement would not give the student enough understanding of the language studies to enable him even to read billboards. Kenneth Beasley, college senior, pointed out that the place to begin learning English is in the English class not in a French or German classroom. "It would be better to let the students decide if they wanted to study a language," he said. Friesen, who also acted as moderator of the discussion said that by far the great majority of students present in the theater were unquestionably opposed to the requirement as suggested by the majority report of the faculty committee. In his summary of the forum he made a plea to faculty members to vote on this question with an open and observing mind. He said that such violent opposition to the requirement as demonstrated by the student body should be definitely considered before they cast their votes. "If the faculty is sincere when they ask for student opinion," he continued, let them take into consideration this demonstration of opinion when they vote at 4 p. m. Veloz, Yolanda To Dance Here Veloz and Yolanda, internationally-known dancing artists, will appear in a new program, "Dansation of 1948," at Hoch auditorium Wednesday evening. In addition to their own program they will present: Cardini the magician; Patricia Lynn, Universal picture starlet; Amelia Gilmore, ballet tap dancers; Robert Garreillon and William Teaford, two-piano team; and John Molinari, accordian virtuoso. Student activity tickets will admit. Tickets for reserved seats are available in room 128 Frank Strong hall. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1948 Praise To KU From Alumnus From elevator boy to college professor. This may read like the traditional Horatio Alger novel but it's the life story of Dr. John A. Van Den Broek, '11, who visited the campus recently. Dr. Van Den Broek once received the highest recognition granted a member of the civil engineering profession, the Norman Medal, and has written several books, challenging After receiving his B.S. in civil engineering here, Dr. Van Den Brook did graduate work at the University of Michigan and later received a professorship there. But the wonders of Kansas never ceased to amaze him. When Dr. Van Den Brook returned to his alba mater last week, he visited Professor Ise and another old friend, Prof. J. O. Jones of the engineering department. success to the University of Rancho He was 19 years old when he landed in the United States from Middletown, the Netherlands. Arriving in this country nearly penniless, he worked at any job he could find, hoping to save enough money to enter college. The night he decided to take 50 cents from his seven dollar weekly paycheck to hear the Boston Symphony orchestra proved to be the turning point in his life. At the concert he met Prof. William C. Hoad, on leave from the University, and the Kansas instructor arranged for the entrance of Dr. Van Den Broek into the University. After losing his left hand in a saw mill accident in Oregon, Dr. Van Den Broek became a sheep herder, then a cattle tender and finally worked in Boston as an elevator boy. One of the first students he met at KU, was Prof. John Ise, now head of the department of economics. The two became close friends and Dr. Van Den Brook spent Christmas vacation at the Ise home. Medical Center Makes New Plans Dr. Van Den Brook is currently on leave of absence from Michigan and is lecturing at various universities. He addressed the Kansas chapter of A.S.C.E., Feb. 5. Curriculum proposals were voted on recently by the faculty of the School of Medicine, according to Dr. H. R. Wahl, Dean of the Medical Center in Kansas City. The proposals were recommended by the curriculum committee. The plans to be recommended to the chancellor and the board of regents are: The last two years of the School of Medicine are to be on a quarter system, with 4 quarters of 11 weeks. Under this plan there would be 61 students instead of 84 in each class, thus enabling students to work in smaller groups and also making the hospital clinical material available to students during the summer quarter. Juniors would serve in the hospital as clinical clerks and seniors would work in the out-patient department. There would be fewer class exercises and more emphasis on practical experience. More instructors will be needed to carry out the proposal effectively but the faculty believes that the better teaching job which will result will outweigh the increased expenditures. A number of medical schools in the United States have adopted similar plans. State Experiments With New Oyster Seattle — (UP) — The Washington state department of fisheries has announced it will experiment with a new type of Japanese oyster—the Kumamoto species—found in the province of the same name. Smaller than the Pacific oyster, the new species is still nearly twice the size of Washington state's native Olympia oyster and is reported to be of excellent flavor. University Daily Kansan Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $450 a year, (in addition add $1 00 a semester postage) Published in Lawrence, Kan. every afternoon during the University of Kansas School of Dentistry university 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. Water Tower Receives Another Paint Job The long-standing feud between K. U. students and Kansas State students flared up again, Sunday night. "K. S. C." was painted across the West Hills water tower in five-foot high red letters. The lettering is 120 feet above the ground and can be seen from the north side of the Union. 20 Year Profits Kept In Pockets Indianapolis — (UP)—Police were called to settle a tenant-landlord dispute over $1.50. "How much cash do you have with you now?" a patrolman asked the tenant, Edgar Martin, 39-year-old handman. About $500. "was the reply." "Because," demanded the skeptical cop. "About $500," was the reply. From the two pairs of pants he was wearing, Martin pulled a bill-fold, four money bags and assorted cash. A count revealed nine $50 bills, 31 $20 bills, 126 $10's and hundreds of $1 bills, each folded separately. The total: $2,934 - Martin's savings from 20 years of odd-job work. Students, Not Profs, Are Absent-Minded State College, Pa.—(UP)—Professors are not as minded-minded as their students, George L. Donovan, manager of the Student Union at Pennsylvania State college believes Of the $7,000 worth of items found at the Union and returned last year, Donovan said; "We almost never receive an item belonging to a professor. Women students are more forgetful than men." Books and spectacles led the lost-and-found list, but oddities ran to a pound of butter and one student even lost his trousers. Semantics Club Meeting Changed The meeting of the General Semantics club, scheduled previously for tomorrow has been changed to Thursday to avoid conflicts with the dance program on that night. All members of the club are asked to return borrowed reading material for redistribution. Delta Upsilon Will Be Host Delta Upsilon will be host to delegates from 11 universities, at the annual D.U. fifth provincial conference, to be held Friday and Saturday. Twenty-two visiting men are expected to attend. During their stay, the visitors will participate in discussion sessions, to be held in the Pine room of the Union, and dealing with topics of fraternity organization, management, and policy. Schools to be represented are Minnesota, Chicago, Manitoba, Northwestern, Illinois, Wisconsin, Iowa, Nebraska, Missouri, Iowa State, and Oklahoma. Prof. John Ise, head of the department of economics, will be the guest speaker at a banquet Friday. Saturday night the delegates will be guests of honor at a formal dance. The conference will be the first of its kind to be held at the Kansas chapter since 1923. Who Is House? Whether it's a snack "Always ready to serve" or A FULL-COURSE MEAL, you'll enjoy eating at GEMMELL'S CAFE 717 Mass. Ph. 207 Hen Hikes Home— 7 Miles In 5 Days Exeter, Cal.—(UP)—Pigeons aren't the only birds with a homing instinct. A hen owned by Ralph Blaz proved it. This little hen walked home—seven miles. When her owner planned to be away on a trip, he took the hen to another ranch for safekeeping. The chicken was put in the same yard with a flock of turkey hens, which gave the newcomer a rough reception. The little hen vanished one day. Five days later, tired and bedragged, she showed up again in the ard of the Binz home. Call KU 376 with your Want Ads. Dreyer Will Speak At Science Meeting Colored photographic slides on transparent rocks will serve as illustrations when Dr. Robert M. Dryer, associate professor of geology, speaks on the microscopic study of rocks and their economic applications at 7:30 p.m. Thursday in Blake hall. The talk will be given at the monthly meeting of Sigma Xi, honorary science fraternity. The public is invited. Backs Up But Gets There Du Quoin, Hill—(UP)—Dr. G. H. Gutridge left his car in reverse gear on a cold night. After he had backed out his driveway the next morning, he found the gears wouldn't shift. He backed up the six blocks to his office. Shall House FIRST CLASS SHOW AND NO PINS ACCEPTED TICKETS HERE "Sorry, Mrs. Higgenbotham, no exceptions. You'll have to pay your package of Dentyne Chewing Gum or you don't get it!" "Sure, Dentyne Chewing Gum is keen-tasting! Sure, it'll help keep your teeth white! So what? Who's gonna stop you from getting yourself another pack of Dentyne - after you've seen my swell show?" Dentyne Gum — Made Qnly By Adams A DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH AND DRAMA presents in THE TOPEKA CIVIC THEATER A Pre-Broadway Premiere of A CRY OF PLAYERS A New Play by Will Gibson FRASER THEATER FEBRUARY 23, 25, 26 CURTAIN 8:15 P.M. ACTIVITY TICKETS ADMIT Make Reservations Now TICKET OFFICE, GREEN HALL Open Daily 9-12 a.m.,1-4 p.m. CALL K.U.-412 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE THREE Socially Speaking TKE's Entertain Tau Kappa Epsilon entertained members of Pi Beta Phi with a luncheon dance Saturday at the chapter house. Kappa Sigs Elect Recently elected officers of Kappa Sigma include: Paul Hill, treasurer; Jack Parker, grand scribe; Bud Wright, assistant scribe; and Robert L. McKim, house manager. William Burris has been appointed rush chairman, and Bud Wright, editor of the rush book. Dinner Guests Dinner guests Thursday at the Sigma Kappa house were: Mr. C. P. Osborne, Mr. and Mrs. R. Q. Brewster, Mr. and Mrs. L. Woodruff, and Miss Margaret Habein. Kappa Sigs Pledge Kappa Sigma announces the pledging of Maurice Martin, and Vincent Coffman, Topeka. Kappa Sigma announces the initiation of the following: Ralph Eacock, Edwardsville; Robert Thayer, Manhattan; Clemeth Abercrombie, Barnard; Judson Greer, Topeka; John Sorem, Clay Center; Robert Rygh, Omaha; Richard Randall, Climax; Philip Smith, Arkansas City; Paul Casterline, Dodge City. Kappa Sigs Initiate Winwood Kline, Emporia; Howard Teeter, Hutchinson; Roland Williams, Topeka; Donald Dean, Wichita; and Thomas Steinle, Russell. Initiation services were held Sunday. * * Sig Eps Initiate Sigma Phi Epsilon announces the initiation of the following: Robert Ausherman, Kansas City; Richard Caldwell, Goodland; John Campbell, Kansas City, Mo.; Theodore Col-Utah University, Baxter Springs; Clifford DeLauve Leavenworth; William Evans, Lawrence; Don Glasco, Wichita. Vernon Hawver, Lawrence; Cletus Kappelman, Augusta; James McCaig, Wichita; Charles Medlock, Atchison; Noble Melencamp, Dodge City; Douglas Paddock, Kansas City, Mo.; Robert Reece, Wichita; Jack Scott, Merriam; Winn Seroy, Independence, Mo.; Russ Stephenson, Kansas City; Robert Vignery, Concordia; George Williams, Lawrence; and Donald Wright, Lawrence. Ben Craig was elected honor initiate and Robert Vignery took high scholastic honor. Initiation services were held at the chapter house Sunday. DU Guests Dinner guests at Delta Uplisa Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. R W DeLay and son, Dick, Kansas City, Mo., Mr. W. C. Salome, Wichita city commissioner, Barbara Nash Dorene Wallace, Margaret Gowans and Sara Webb. \* \* \* Delta Upson acted as host to the "Sweetheart" of America candidates Saturday night after the Sweetheart Swing. Members of the Student Union executive board and their guests were present. Mrs. James Hooke, housemother, poured the coffee. Dinner Guests Dinner guests of Gamma Phi Beta Sunday were: Richard Bradley, David Bradley, Everett Land, Max Falkenstein, and Robert Weeks. Dinner Guests Dinner guests at the Alpha Chi house Thursday were: Mable Ellen Cable, Joseph Butler, Jr., George McCarthy, Robert Wiedemann, Leslie Pihiblad, Max Hand, George Winters, Jr., and Robert Stouffer. Sigma Nu announces the initiation of the following: Robert Edman and Marvin Arth, Great Bend; Melvin Clingan and William Benz; Salina; William Warren and Jack Wolfe, Wichita; Phil Hawkins and Roy Lowe. Olathe; Sand Beeds Bud Buffer, Richard Rait, Ray Martin, Sigma Nu Initiates To See Mars In Closeup McDonald Observatory. A top Mount Locke, Tex., Feb. 17.—(UP) If their hopes come true, astronomers here tonight may determine whether life exists on Mars. For weeks work has been progressing toward tonight when, at 1:15 a. m. C. S. T., Mars will approach within 63 million miles of the earth. Astronomically speaking, that's almost as close as your next door neighbor. Scientists will be using McDonald observatory's 82-inch reflecting telescope—the third largest in the world. And through it, if the weather is good, Mars should appear about four times as large as a full moon. The observatory, situated on this rounded mountain top far out in the wastelands of west Texas, is operated jointly by the Universities of Texas and Chicago. Preparations for the work tonight have been supervised by Dr. Gerard P. Kuiper, director of the Yerkes observatory at William bay, Wisc., as well as the observatory here. Before the sun crests these mountain peaks tomorrow, Dr. Kuiper hopes to determine whether water can stay on the earth and green vegetation cover maps. If they do, then speculation might logically follow that some form of animal life exists there, too. He has pointed out that this could be expected "from a climate that resembles earth at an elevation of 50,000 feet. Lichen act like sponges, suck up water vapor present in the air. Rain is not necessary for their existence." From these basic facts, scientists have long speculated that life might exist on the far-off planet. Summons Husband To Court Tonight - weather' permitting— they hope to learn the answer. Gary, Ind.—(UP—Mrs. Lucretia Fowler, outgoing chief deputy clerk of courts, signed as one of her final official acts a summons ordering her husband to appear in court. The Rev. Newton P. Fowler, president of the Gary school board, was ordered to appear to answer a $10,000 damage suit against the city schools. and Logan Holtgrew, Kansas City; Tom Collins, Belleville; Gene Balloum, Russell; Thomas Foster, Bartleau, Okla.; Kenneth Smith, Webb City; Norman Crane, Long Beach, Calif.; and Scholes, Council Grove. Melvin Clingin, honor initiate, and Mrs. R. H. Wilson, housemother, presided over the initiation banquet yield Sunday at the chapter house. Phi Delts Pledge Phi Delta Theta announces the pledging of John Russell, Wichita. * * * Gamma Delta, international Lutheran student association, announces the election of the following officers: Emerson Sheilds, president; Walter Mueller, vice-president; Rosemary Landrey, secretary; and Victor Gradert, treasurer. Gamma Delta Elects Alpha Chi Omega announces the pledging of Wileta Mae Graham, Dodge City, and Betty Joan Spotts, Ashland. Alpha Chi Pledges * * Lambda Chi Alpha announces the initiation of the following; Kent Shraer, Richard Groft, Richard Hite, William Altamari, Thomas Fuller, Alvin Row, Hubert Grabau, Robert Houvener, William Josefak, Phillip Martinek, Vernon Parsons, John Fulkerson, Edward Downward, Bernard Sherman, and Donald Blachly. Watkins hall is having an open hour dance 7 Wednesday at the hall. * * * Hour Dance Lambda Chi Initiates Kent Shearer was elected honor initiate. AD Pi Pledges Weddings And Engagements Alpha Delta Pi announces the pledging of Rayma Hotchkiss, Bonner Springs; Jane Keith, Hiawata; and Mary Flo Spilman, Fredonia. Alpha Chi Omega announces the engagement of Norma Lee Loske, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Loske, Kansas City, to George Winters, Jr., Kansas City. Loskc-Winters The announcement was made Thursday evening by Mrs W. G. Jackson on Sunday. Attending Miss Loske were Betty DoArmong, Jody Bushey, and Mable Ellen Cable. Miss Loske wore n corsage of white orchids. Mrs. Jackson and the attendents received nossegays of red and white carnations. Miss Loske is a College senior and Mr. Winters is a senior at the Kansas City University. Sewell-Morrill Kappa Kappa Camma announce the pinning of Georgiana Sewell, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Sewell, Sabetha, to Edmund N. Morrill, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. N. Morrill, Ihwataa. Mrs. A. J. McKay, housemother, received carriages. The assistants, Mary Valentine, Barbara Olson, and Marjorie Stark received gardenia corsages. Miss Sewell wore an orchid. Miss Sewell is a junior in the School of Fine Arts. Mr. Morrill, Business junior, is a member of Phi Delta Theta. ☆ ☆ Fox-Williams Gamma Phi Beta announces the pinning of Beverly Fox, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James E. Fox, Kansas City, Mo., to Odd Williams, son of Mr. Dick Williams, Lawrence. The ambushed theft was made by Mrs. Ralph Baldwin, housemother, Assisting Miss Fox were Barbara Byrd, and Elizabeth Evans, who both received gardenia corsages. Mrs. Baldwin received a corsage of pink roses, and Miss Fox, a white orchid. Miss Fox, is a graduate student, and Mr. Williams, Business junior, is a member of Sigma Chi. Who's A Crook. You Crook? York, Neb.—(UP) —Two boys-Butler Ivory, 14, and Frank Riggins, 13—robbed a filling station of $25.57 in pennies, nickels, dimes and quarters. They quarreled over division of the loot. Ivory called Riggins a crook and the battle was on. They wound up in jail. x x y = x y xy x z = xyz x x z = "The young lady in the back now — in the Marjorie Montgomery dress." YW Uses New Plan For Frosh Members Harzfeld's Y. W. C. A. entertained new freshmen at an introduction meeting Monday. Chairmen of the various committees were introduced and the purpose of Y. W. C. A. was discussed. A new Y. W. C. A. program for freshman service has been put into effect. Under the new program, freshmen enter committees immediately rather than going through an orientation program. This plan permits freshmen to take an actual part in the work. Emmalou Britton, president, presented the following committee chairmen: Betty van der Smissen, campus affairs; Hilda James, community service; Shirley Sondker, campus affairs; Mary Douglass, art appreciation; Courtney Cowill, Y-Knot, Ruth Michener, minorities. Mrs. Christine Alford, WY secretary, spoke on the benefits of Y. W. C. A. to the individual and the community. "Intermissionaries," a novelty combo featuring Norma Jean Guthrie as soloist, will be a high point in intermission entertainment at the Sophomore Leap Year Hop, Feb. 28, Stanley M. Englund, class president, said. Buy Tickets Now For Leap Year Hop Practically every basic metal is deposited within the borders of the United States. Also on the program is a skit presented by Dorothy D. Wood and Margaret Scoyld. James W. Hawes will give a speciality number. Master of ceremonies will be Robert F. Beine. Mat Betton's band from Kansas State college will play at the dance. Tickets are on sale at $1.75 a couple at the business office and in every men's organized house. Next week booths will be set up in the Union and in the lobby of Frank Strong hall to sell tickets to students who do not live in organized houses. Summerfield Banquet Honors Candidates Five senior boys and six senior girls were honored at a Summerfield scholarship banquet Monday in the Lawrence Memorial High school cafeteria. Zoology Professor Honored Candidates for the scholarships are Roger Beth, son of Prof. and Mrs. Elmer F. Beth; Chapin Clark, son of Prof. and Mrs. Carrol D. Clark; Norman Luallin, David Nieder, and Robert Olmstead. Examinations will be held in the spring for the scholarships which provide eight semesters of undergraduate college training. While not eligible to compete for Summerfield scholarships, the six girls were also honored for maintaining the highest scholastic rank the first semester. The girls are Betty Balls, Rita Carl, Dolores Dean, Dot Pearson, Mary Selig, and Jeannine Schildler. A birthday cake with 70 candles was presented to Dr. H. H. Lane, zoology professor, at the zoology conference Monday. Dr. Lane's birthday is today. After cake and coffee had been served, Dr. Lane reviewed the development of the zoology department at the University. Parker 51 Fountain Pens Super Chrome Ink STOWIT'S Rexell STORE Charme Beauty Salon formerly Iva's Beauty Shop phone 533 All types of beauty work by capable operators. Mid-winter special price on permanents machine and machineless. Nettie L. Wolfe, Owner THE CAR RENTAL MAN NO JOB IS TOO TOUGH When the trouble lies deep in your auto motor, you can depend on our experienced FORD mechanics to get to the bottom of it. Drive in today for a cold weather check up. Morgan-Mack 609 Mass. Phone 277 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FOUR TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 17, 1948 Big 7 Upsets Add Fire To KU-Wildcat Clash The long-awaited court clash between Brannum and the Kansas State Wildcats against the University of Kansas Jayhawkers has taken on added significance today, thanks to a pair of stunning upsets turned in by Iowa State and Colorado last night. When the battle lines are drawn Wednesday at Manhattan, Kansas State SPOTLIGHT SPORTS By BOB DELLINGER Daily Kansan Sports Editor Charlie "The Hawk" Black, former Kansas basketball great, now with the Anderson, Ind., Packers of the National Pro Basketball league, dumped in 17 points including the winning goal to lead the Packers to a 57 to 66 victory over the Rochester Royals at Anderson Friday night. The Packers are now three and a half games in front of the second-place Royals, and have virtually a stranglehold on the eastern division championship. Black lost game scoring honors to Rochester's Arnie Risen, but his baskets came at crucial times, and the rebounding ability which made him famous in the Midwest as "The Hawk" was a deciding factor. The game story in the Rochester Democrat-Chronicle uses an interesting simile in describing Black's game-winning tally. With Anderson leading 55 to 52. "Charley Black bouncing like a big rubber ball, leaped up to tap in a ball, running the count to 57-52 with 50 seconds remaining." A moment later, Black goal-tended a Rochester shot and handed the Royals their 60th point. The 48 minutes of game time saw 65 fouls called, but Black went the route, ringing up five goals, seven frees in 12 attempts, and four fouls Black, a rookie in the pro leagues this year, already has gained acclaim as one of the all-time defensive greats of pro basketball. Against such stars as Jim Pollard and George Mikan of the Minneapolis Lakers, "The Hawk" has performed creditably while maintaining an eight-to-nine point average. It seems that Black will tangle again with these two aces of the court because the Lakers have all but cinched a playoff berth from the western division. Anderson, with four victories in five starts against the defending champion Royals, will be heavily favored to scoot into the playoffs, as an eastern representative. * * Kansas players and rooters may expect rough treatment at Manhattan, if early reports are any indication. A Manhattan writer to Governor Carlson requests a police escort for Coach Phog Allen, and K-Staters are preparing for a holiday in case of victory. And to top the insult, the Aggies have named their ineligible center, Clarence Brannum, to captain the Kansas State team Wednesday. Brannum, playing in spite of the league eligibility rules, was exposed by Dr. Allen, but the faculty committee ignored the rule book to save face for representative H. H. King of Kansas State. Basketball Results George Wash. 68, Wash. & Lee 65 Duke 60, Georgia Tech 55 Virginia 68, Maryland 56 Loyola (La.) 46, Louisiana St. 45 Tennessee 63, Vanderbilt 48 Rice 54, Texas 47 Colorado 56, Oklahoma 54 Brightam Young 79, Colo. A & M 48 Denver 83, Colo. College 68 Oregon State 52, Idaho 45 Michigan 66, Indiana 54 Ohio St. 53, Wisconsin 47 Purdue 54, Minnesota 38 Iowa State 48, Missouri 47 Creighton 31, Wichita 28 Ottawa (Kans.) 61, Maryville 50. The mineral resources of the United States comprise the cornerstone of American manufacturing. will be in first place and the fifth place Jayhawkers will be only one game behind them. Missing 21 free throws, Missouri's pace-setting Tigers dropped out of the lead into a second place tie with Iowa State as the Cyclones shocked the Missourians, 48 to 47, at Columbia last night. At the same time, the last-place Buffs from Colorado were amazing the Sooners from Oklahoma, 56 to 54, in a game at Boulder. Anbody's Race Thus the Big Seven title race once again becomes anybody's guess with five of the teams still in the thick of the fight as the teams swing into the home stretch. Kansas State, winner of four and beaten in its last two starts, is alone at the top. Missouri and Iowa State come next, each with 5 and 3 records, ahead of Oklahoma, winner of four games and beaten in three. Kansas, perennial title contender, still has a chance with a 3 and 3 record. Big 7 Standings W L Pct Pts ©p Kansas State 4 2 6.67 395 219 Missouri 5 3 6.25 390 382 Iowa State 5 3 6.25 360 384 Oklahoma 4 3 5.71 373 223 KANSAS 3 3 5.00 300 283 Nebraska 2 5 2.86 361 423 Colorado 2 6 2.50 356 400 Kansas will do or die tomorrow night. The scene will be Manhattan, Kan., the opponent Kansas State, and the court drama will have a spotlight on Dr. Forrest C. Allen, the Kansas Coach, and Clarence Brannum, the star K-State center who Allen has contended is ineligible for Big Seven competition this season. Big Games Saturday This all-state battle is the only conference activity until Saturday night when all the championship contenders will be back in action. Kansas meets Oklahoma at Norman Saturday while Missouri engages Kansas State in Manhattan. A third contest Saturday sends Nebraska against Iowa State. Last night's major upsets threw the race into a wild schamble, for neither Iowa State nor Colorado had figured to extend their rivals. But Iowa State showed amazing ability to control rebounds and Missouri showed amazing inability to connect from the free throw circle and therein lies the story of Missouri's upset. At Boulder, the Buffs jumped into an early lead, commanded a 10-point edge at the half. 34 to 24, and then choked off a sizzling Oklahoma rally in the closing minutes to bag the victory. Metzger and Besemann scored 13 and 10 points, respectively, to lead Colorado to its triumph. Paul Courty continued his horrid pace as a conference scoring leader with 15 points. Topeka Irishman WinsAnotherBout Victor now in fights in Wichita, Omaha and here, McCaffery has come along fast since a knockout defeat by Deacon Logan of St. Louis, and he said today he was ready for a rematch. Promoter Max Yeargain indicated a return bout would be arranged shortly. Topeka, Feb. 17- (UP)—Young Pat McCaffery, Topeka's fighting Irishman, knocked out lanky Bert Ellis of Kansas City in 1:14 of the fourth round to step forth again as Kansas' leading light heavyweight. No favorite over Ellis, McCafferty landed the first solid blow, dumping Ellis to the canvas in the opening round, and from there on he pushed his advantage relentlessly, sending the Missouriian down for counts in each stanza before the haymaker landed in the fourth round. ANGAS 6 JERRY WAUGH, Kansas quarterback-forward and defense ace, will have a try at throttling the Kansas State attack tomorrow night when the Jayhawkers invade Manhattan. Waugh has been named "The Sheriff of Sumner County" by his teammates because the Wellington athlete "always gets his man" on a basketball court. Michigan Takes Big 9 Lead With Win As Badgers Lose New York, Feb. 17.—(UP)The Michigan basketball team, seeking to duplicate on the court the success enjoyed by the Wolverine football team last fall, was out in front in the muddled Big Nine race today and a big step nearer a spot in the N.C.A.A.tournament next month. The Wolverines took over undisputed first place in the conference last night, when, playing at home, they $ The Wolverines took over undispl night when, playing at home, they routed Indiana, 66 to 54, while Wisconsin was beaten at Ohio State, 53 to 47. By losing, Wisconsin dropped into a second-place tie with idle Iowa. Michigan has won six games and lost two in the conference, while Wisconsin and Iowa have each won six and lost three. In another Big Nine game, Purdue held big Jim McIntyre to 14 points and beat Minnesota, 54 to 38. Dick Axness of Purdue led with 16 points. Baylor almost was assured of the Southwest Conference basketball championship today as Texas apparently was bounced from title contention. The Golden Bears of Baylor play their next-to-last home game tonight when they meet the dangerous Mustangs of Southern Methodist at Waco. Undefeated in conference play after nine games, Baylor can expect trouble from S. M. U., the team which gave Baylor its biggest scare of the season in their first clash, which the Bears finally won by one point on a last-second field goal. Texas, which had not bit the dust in conference competition in two years until it lost to Baylor last week, dropped its second loop contest of the season last night to Rice. Would Erect Patton Statue Boston—(UP)—A bronze statue of the late Gen. George S. Patton, Jr., third army commander of World War II, will be erected on the Charles River esplanade under a plan recommended by a Massachusetts legislative commission. The statue would cost $65,000. Launderette Service 9 lbs. of wash, 25c 21 Bendix Washers 813 Vt. Phone 324 FRIED SHRIMP A Specialty COOK DUCK'S TAVERN 824 Vermont A New Service for our Classified Advertisers We will now take your want ads by telephone. Call KU 376 (Hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. except Sat.) Let our 9,000 (plus) readers know what you want to BUY, RENT, or SELL. University Daily Kansan Call KU 376 with your Want Ads JAYHAWKER Shows 2:30-7-9 Ends Tonite DENNIS MORGAN 1st TECHNICOLOR MY WILD IRISH ROSE WEDNESDAY one week MICKEY BATTLES A TOUCH RACKET! MICKEY BATTLES A TOUGH RACKET! Mickey ROONEY as KILLER MCCOY with Brian DONLEVY Ann BLYTH James DUNN GRANADA NOW ENDS WEDNESDAY Larry PARKS Ellen DREW "The SWORDSMAN" (In Technicolor) THURSDAY, 3 DAYS OST in a strange house of hate. OS OST in the eyes of an ancient woman. from the World-Famous novel by Henry James "THE ASPERN PAPERS" Robert CUMMINGS Susan HAYWARD "The LOST MOMENT" VARSITY Ends Tonight A fun story of campus Cut-ups! "CAMPUS HONEYMOON" Wednesday, 4 Days Rocky LANE "Bandits of Dark Canyon" Co-Feature Boris KARLOOF "TRACY MEETS GRUESOME" PATEE Ends Tonite Claudette COLBERT Fred MacMURRAY "THE EGG AND I" Wednesday, 4 Days The greatest novel of our time Henry FONDA "Grapes Of Wrath" A TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Division Championships Won By Beta And Sig Ep Sigma Phi Epsilon and Beta Theta Pi won division championships Monday by defeating Sigma Chi and Kappa Sigma. Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Gamma Delta and Gamma Delta came out winners in other "A" games played. Delta Chi and Delta Tau Delta were winners in the two "B" contests of the evening. New K-Club Will Initiate Charter members of the reorganized K-club will be initiated and the design of a membership identification key will be revealed at the K-club banquet, at 6:30 p.m. Thursday, in the Kansas room of the Union, according to Harold Moore, secretary. A new constitution has been drafted and the club will become active on the campus again after a period of wartime idleness, said Lynn Leigh, vice-president. The K-club was first organized in 1918. To qualify for membership, a person must have earned a Varsity letter in athletics and meet with the majority approval of the members of the club. After the initiation Thursday the club will have 85 members. Plans for this year include a banquet for all participants and officials the Kansas relays. The K-club will also sponsor a Crimson and Blue day this spring. A baseball game, an intra-squad football game, and a track meet will be held in the afternoon and the K-club dance will be held on this special day, said Leigh. Next year the club plans to promote a program to entertain team members of schools competing with the University in athletics, he added. Officers this year besides Leigl and Moore, are Otto Schnellbacher, president; Warren Riegle, treasurer; Dexter Welton, chairman of the organization committee; and Richard Shea, chairman of the program committee. Faculty advisors are Millard Easton, varsity track coach, and E. R. Elbel, director of the veteran's bureau. 4 Sororities Play In IM Semifinals The women's intramural basketball tournament goes into the semifinals tonight with Kappa Kappa Gamma meeting Kappa Alpha Theta and Alpha Delta Pi playing Delta Gamma. Both games will begin at 8 p.m. in Brooklyn annex. Wakins hall and I. W. W, will decide the Division IV winner at 7 p.m. The winner of this game will play the winner of the Kappa-Theta game Wednesday night for the right to meet the winner of the A. D. P-Delta Gamme game in the finals Feb. 24. No Red Influence On Bums, Says Rickey Wilberforce, O., Feb. 17—(UP)—Branch Rickey, president of the Brooklyn Dodgers, insisted today that he had not been influenced by Communist groups in signing first baseman Jackie Robinson, the first Negro player in the history of major league baseball. Speaking here last night at a banquet honoring members of the Wilberforce college Negro football team, Rickey charged that the Communists attempted to pressure the Dodgers into hiring Robinson and were now trying to convince the Negro race that they were responsible for Robinson getting his big chance. Short On Ad Space? Albuquerque, N. M. — (UP) — Democrats and Republicans used an underpass here to its finest advantage. On the west side, Democrats strung up a banner advertising their Saturday night dance; on the east side, Republicans put up a banner calling attention to a political talk the night before the Democratic dance. The Sigma Ep's annexed the Division II title by easily outdistancing the Sigma Chi's, 46 to 23. The undefeated Beta team just managed to defeat Kappa Sigma, 20 to 17, in winning the Division III crown. Roberts paced Phi Kappa Psi with 10 points to lead his team in a 35 to 24 victory over Phi Kappa. Although Moore of Kappa Alpha Fsi was high point man of the game IM Meeting Todav A meeting of all intramural team managers will be held at 4:30 today in 202 Robinson gym, Don Powell, intramural director, announced. Plans for basketball playoffs and for spring sports will be discussed. with 13 points, his team bowed to Phi Gamma Delta, 30 to 25. Hargis scored 11 points for the Phi Gam's. Graham tossed in 16 points and Henderson 14 to lead the Delta Chi team to 23 victory over the Lambda Chi. Row tallied 9 for the Lambda Chi. Wesley bowed to Gamma Delta. 27 to 26, after leading at the half 14 to 11. Emrie of Wesley lead scorers with 12 points. Reith chalked up nine for Gamma Delta. The Delta Tau "B" squad out-scored the A.T.O. "B" team, 24 to 21 in a game which produced 32 fouls. Rienders lead scorers with nine for he Delt's. KU Women Win Volleyball Meet The University women's volleyball team emerged undefeated to win the round-robin volleyball tournament sponsored by Baker university at Baldwin Feb. 14. Scores of the games played by the University team are: K. U. 37, Ottawa 8; K. U. 25; Baker 9; and K. U. 43. Washburn 17. Baker finished second with 2 victories and 1 defeat, Ottawa was third, and Washburn last. K-State Trackmen To Meet Nebraska The Kansas State track squad will meet the cinder crew from Nebraska at Lincoln tonight in a conference dual meet. It will be the next to last dual meet for Nebraska before the conference indoor championship meet in Kansas City on Feb. 28. The University of Kansas will be the last Husker花 on the cinders next Saturday afternoon. These women made the trip: Betty van der Smissen, Jody Stuckey, Maxine Gunsolly, Joan Anderson, Barbara Connell, Frances Chubb, Shirley Hoffman, Harriet Connor, Marjorie Kaff, Marie Larsen, and Marilyn Smith. Wildcat Coach Ward Haylett will have a 21-man crew on hand to give the Huskers, some stiff competition. Color Pictures Wanted For Maps Anyone having color photos of Kansas scenes may help show Kansas to tourists next spring and also make a little extra cash. The Kansas highway commission will pay from $5 to $15 for each photograph reproduced on the back of the new Kansas road map. Transparencies of combines in action during wheat harvest, grazing cattle, oil fields, flour mills, places of historic interest to travelers and other typical Kansas scenes are wanted. The photos must be mailed, with return postage enclosed, to Myron George, secretary, state highway commission, Topeka. A BRILLIANT LAW STUDENT. ENGLEMAN WAS THE ONLY UNIVERSITY HONOR MAN EVER CHOOSE DIRECTLY OUT OF HIS CLASS. NAMED UNANIMOUSLY. "ROPE" WAS ALL-AMERICAN AT KANSAS IN 1940 AND 1941. IN 1940 HIS LASTHINE GOAL AGAIN WAS THE NATIONAL FINALS, THE HIGHEST ANY KYU TEAM HAS GONE. AS A SOPHOMORE HE TRIED A SINGLE-GAME SCORING RECORD OF 1905 WITH 27 POINTS AND IN 1941 A BIG SIX RECORD OF 168 POINTS IN OVER 100 Howard FREE FOOTBALL WEEKEND ENGLEMAN COACH HE TOOK OVER THE K. L. SQUAD AS COACH ON THE EVE OF THE FIRST CONFERENCE ING THE INJURED COACH "PROG ALLEN, AND LET THE K. L. TO VICTORIES IN 14 STARTS AND ATTE FOR THIRD FLACE IN THE BIG G HE HAILS FROM AKAANSAS CITY HIGH-SCHOOL AU- STATE TNICE LIVES IN SRLNA WITH WIFE AND 20 MOS. QUEVERS Dark Horse Pirates First Club In NL To Report All 1948 Players Signed general unhappiness which preyailed in 1947. New York, Feb. 17—(UP)—The Pittsburgh Pirates, who finished at the bottom in the National league last season, reversed themselves today and led the field for a change, being the first club in the majors to report all players signed up and happy for 1948. The Pirates, with a new manager, Bill Meyer from Kansas City, and with virtually a complete new starting lineup, are the number one dark horse team in the National league race. There was a brand new attitude among the players from the I-M Schedule Not a bonafide holdout was listed during the entire period of salary negotiations and the club had to deal with some established major league stars. These included Dixie Walker, the old "Pride of Flatbush," who admitted that in his first year at Pittsburgh he is being paid more than he ever made in Brooklyn or anywhere else; Pitchers Kirby Higbe, Hal Gregg, and Vic Lombardi, three more ex-Dodger sharpies; and Ralph Kiner, the sophomore home run star who blasted 51 round-trippers last season. Tuesday (Robinson) 8 T. K. E. vs. Theta Tau 8 T. K. E. vs. Theta Tau 9 Delta Chi vs. Triangle Television Gets Boost 10 Rollin Pin Five vs. Jokers Wednesday (Robinson) Wednesday (Robinson) New York—(UP)—There is new hope these days that isolated communities—even those surrounded by mountain ranges—will be able soon to pick up television broadcasts. 8 Kappa Eta Kappa vs. Gamma Delta 9 D. U. vs. A. K. Lambda 10 Sigma Nu "B" vs. Nu Sig "B" Wednesday (Annex) Wednesday (Annex) GALES American Custom Chocolates, $1.75 STOWIT'S Rexall STORE 8:15 Phi Delt vs. Sig Alph 8:15 A. T. O. vs. Kappa Alpha Psi. It is because of the new microwave relay equipment. This technique, which picks up the television, gives it a boost and sends it along to another station, already has been tested in the Wilkes-Barre, Pa., region, deep in the Wyoming valley. The test of a program broadcast from New York 105 miles away was made by the Radio Corporation of America and the National Broadcasting Company. Persons in the Wilkes-Barre area saw their first television. America, Ill.—(UP)—The honeymoon dreams of the newlywed Mr. and Mrs. Harve Calvin, Jr., went up in smoke when their new home here, financed by a G. I. loan, burned to the ground while they were being married in a church a few miles away. Dreams Go Up In Smoke The door to the receptionist's office, one of the narrowest in Milwaukee is slightly less than 18 inches wide. Television differs from radio in that it follows a line of sight, and thereby any obstruction such as a mountain interrupts the program. The curvature of the earth prevents the successful sending of television more than 50 to 75 miles. Coaxial cables have been used to transmit television, and such cables are being laid through the south and southwest. Television experts believe, however, that the microwave relay stations, which do away with the cable, will be the answer to getting television "over the humps." Marjorie Krohn, present receptionist, gets in by turning sidewise. Gets Slim Receptionists And His Wife Can't Complain GALES Milwaukee—(UP)—The Frank H. Bercker office is guaranteed a slim receptionist so long as it stays in the Grain Exchange building. REMEMBER the "FOOD MAN" will be around each night (Sunday through Thursday). KU FOOD SERVICE "Food Of Superior Quality" Phone 3406 IF You're a Designing Woman— You'll set your bonnet for a man with a professional laundered shirt. INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners Call 432 740 Vermont TOLL FREE 1-800-555-7232 PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS 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 TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1948 Watch Where You Focus! ELECTION YEAR POLITICS CONGRESS INFLATION VICTIM DANIEL RISHOP By Daniel Bishop, St. Louis Star-Times The Editorial Page A Look In The Back Yard Thomas Peart, the English member of parliament who spoke at the University the past week, said that it was "perhaps unfortunate that we are wedded to the Mercator type of map projection." He was explaining why many Americans cannot understand why England is not as thoroughly alarmed about the Russian problem as we Americans are. Mr. Peart reminded us that England is more remote from Russia than is America. Because we have always been familiar with the Mercator map many of our geographical, and thus our political, concepts are in error. Gerhard, Kramer was a European who lived in the 16th century and assumed the classical name of Mercator. He set about to make a flat map of the world. The result was a map that represents the earth's surface as if a paper cylinder, touching only at the equator, had been placed over the globe, and the outlines of the continents projected onto it. when this piece of paper is laid flat, it is accurate in scale only at the equator. North and south of the equator the land masses become successively more and more exaggerated. The island of Greenland appears two or three times larger than the United States. Actually, it is only one-fourth as large. Russia appears six times larger than the United States, but it is only three times as large. The whole European continent seems to be a straight shot across the Atlantic ocean. "round." We've pictured the relationships of land masses in the distortions of the Mercator projection. We've been thinking about shipping lanes and overland routes in a world of great circle routes. There are many other kinds of projections but most of us learned our geography from a Mercator map on the blackboard explained by a teacher jabbing a long, wooden pointer here and there. We've been thinking "flat" as a result; when we should have been thinking Directions on a Mercator map are accurate. The lazy ship's navigator can plot his course straight across the world's oceans and arrive at his destination every time, but the navigator who thinks "round" will select a great circle route which considers the curvature of the earth's surface and save a couple of hundred miles. The same route plotted on a Mercator map would appear to be only a doodle that no real navigator could be serious about. The world considered globally presents an entirely different picture of geographical relationships than the ones we learned on our Mercator maps. We have more neighbors than the ones we talk with over the back fence. We just don't realize who they are. With such a heritage from the scholarly Mercator, it is extremely difficult to realize that Kiska in the Aleutians is 2,600 miles closer to Darwin, Australia, than is Los Angeles, or that Boston is several hundred miles closer to Dakar, West Africa than Miami. Or, again, picture the student with a Mercator map before him trying to figure out why the direct Denver-Moscow route would cross central Greenland. Maybe Attorney General Arn has read this, too. Kansas has been dry for 67 years because the prohibition laws never seriously interfered with anyone's drinking. "Popular road show price" is just another name for highway robbery. Lend An Ear In the next few days two men of widely different backgrounds will have spoken to students here. They are Alexander Kerensky, former prime minister of the Russian government after the fall of the Czar, and Otto of Austria, the oldest son of Austria's last emperor. It is a long way from Vienna and Moscow to Lawrence. Yet we students at the University of Kansas, 1500 miles from either ocean, will have the opportunity to listen to these men and to ask them questions. They are figures of historical significance. We often run across their names in our textbooks and newspapers. Too often we neglect the opportunities we have to hear University sponsored lecturers. As students we shouldn't. The speakers who come to our campus are some of the best references to which we will ever have access. Out Of Focus In recent months there has been a parade of investigations and probes conducted by congressional committees in Washington. Men in high government positions have been charged with and admitted speculating in the stock markets and all kinds of political skull-duggery. Klieg lights blazed and the motion picture cameras whirred. In a few days the movie audiences of the nation were snickering at the antics of the men who are supposed to uphold the traditions and dignity of some of the highest offices in our land. A new motion picture, "The Senator was Indiscreet," presents a United States senator as a vote-pursuing buffoon who does little besides chuck bathing beauties under their chins and make pompous speeches. Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS It's true that Americans have seldom treated with awe the men they put in office. One of the things of Daily Hansan University Member of the Kansas Press Assm. National Editorial Association. Represented by the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., Editor-in-Chief William C. von Maurer Managing Editor Alan J. Stewart Asst. Man. Editor Cooper Rollow Asst. Man. Editor Lauren Lacey City Editor Gene Vignery Asst. City Editor James Robinson Telegraph Editor Wallace W. Abbey Asst. Editor Clarke Telegraph Editor Werner Burger Sports Editor Robert E. Dellinger Astr. Sports Editor Paul Zeh Astr. Sports Editor James Jones Anna Mary Murphy John Wheeler Feature Editor Picture Editor Hallway Editor Dorothy James Business Manager ... Bettie Bacon Advertising Manager ... Robert Alderson Circulation Manager ... Otto Meyer Classified V. Man. National Advt. Mgr. David Clymer Promotion Manager ... Wister Shreve The Kansas Press Association 19 MEMBER 48 National Editorial Association A FREE PRESS--YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW which we are proud is that we are free to laugh at the men who make our laws. Laughter lets off steam. Ridicule destroys. It is unfortunate that the spotlight rarely focuses on the men in office who are quietly and faithfully fulfilling their public duties. There are many conscientious and capable men in our house of representatives and in the senate. Your congressman may be one of them. Farm Loans Made To 6,100 Veterans Guaranteed farm loans to 6,100 veterans in the Kansas, Arkansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma area had been granted by Jan. 1, 1948, a Veterans Administration report said. An average of 206 new loan applications has been made during recent months. Total value of the loans amounts to nearly 20 million dollars. The V. A. is liable for 50 per cent of the amount under the G.I. bill. Nearly half the veterans using the loans do specialized farming. Nineteen per cent produce dairy products; 20 per cent raise grain, vegetables, and cotton; and the remainder do general farming. Gas Truck Runs Out Of Gas; Driver Has To Borrow Fuel Goshen, Ind.—(UP)—Police were asked to check on a gasoline tank truck found parked at a peculiar angle on a city street. They looked up the driver and asked him if it had been stolen. The red-faced trucker explained he had just run out of gas and was trying to borrow some from a service station his firm owned. Call KU 376 with your Want Ads. DE SOTO APPROVED SERVICE PLEMOUTH Who Is House? FREE SOTO SERVICE PLYMOUTH Bradley GALLAGHER MOTORS FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. Farm reality loans may be made payable up to 40 years and non-reality to 10 years. Payment time for the average realty loan is 15 years. Over six million dollars for years and for non-reality, three 3,000 farm loans has been repaid by the veterans. 1009 Mass. FOR 22 YEARS IT'S BEEN THE BLUE MILL 12 East Eighth Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed...65c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed...69c CASH AND CARRY ONLY LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS 12 East Eighth Electric Tuning on Delco AUTO Delco radios eliminate push buttons and dial twisting. Stop in for a demonstration and hear its mellow tone. Oliver Service Company Authorized Dealer Phone 253 723 Mass. TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Official Bulletin Feb.17, 1948 Tau Sigma Choral group, 4:30 p.m. today; Builders, 7 p.m. today; Indian Love dance, 8:30 today. Robinson gym. Costumes to be fitted at 6:30. International Relations club, 6 to night, Kansas room. Union. Pre-medical students who did not take the medical aptitude test on February 2 and wish to enter medical school in September, should arrange at Guidance Bureau office for special examination. University Art club, 7:30 tonight, East room, Union. Fencing club, 7:30 tonight, 110 Robinson, Bring dues. Delta Phi Delta, 5 today, projection room, Frank Strong. Attendance required. Student court will not meet tonight. All cases docketed for this session will be heard next Tuesday, Feb. 24. —D. Johnson, Prosecutor Scarab, 7:15 tonight, 205 Marvin. Election of new officers. Students who have not learned their fall semester grades may obtain them at the Registrar's office on the following days according to the schedule of last names: today, H-N; tomorrow, O-T; Thursday, U-Z; Friday, those who failed to get them on the day specified. Progressive Party reorganizational meeting, 7 tonight, 110 Frank Strong. All interested welcome. Morning devotions each morning, 8:30-8:50, during Lent at Danforth chapel. Sunflower Junior Statesmen, 7:30 tonight, Memorial Union ballroom, Former Kansas and Missouri Boys' Staters invited. Armanvay meeting, 7 tonight, Pine room, Union. Open to all interested. Physical Therapy club, 7:30 to night, Watkins Memorial hospital Y. M.C.A. cabinet, 5 today, Pine room, Union. S. A.M. 7:30 tonight, Recreation room, Memorial Union, E. B. Friericher, Spencer Chemical Co., speaker. Meeting of all June graduates of School of Business, 4 p.m. tomorrow, Frank Strong auditorium. Attendance required. Any other June graduates wishing services of Business Placement Bureau welcome. Job opportunities and registration forms to be explained. Interview schedules to be outlined. Chancellor Malott to speak on business opportunities. K-Club key design contest extended until 5 p.m. tomorrow. Rules posted on bulletin boards or can be obtained at Athletic office. University Young Democrats, 7 p.m. tomorrow, Recreation room, Union. S. A.M. field trip leave rear Marvin hall, 12:10 p.m. tomorrow and Thursday. K.U. Dames, 8 p.m. tomorrow, Lindley auditorium. Positions of editor and business manager of K-Book open for applications. Submit letters stating classification, qualifications, and previous experience to Betsey Sheidley, Gower Place, by tomorrow. General Semantics club will meet on Thursday, 7:30 p.m., instead of Wednesday. Room 111, Frank Strong. Russian club, 4 p.m. tomorrow, 402 Fraser. Election of officers. "The Orphan Boy of Vienna". German sound film (with English sub-titles) 4 p.m. tomorrow, Fraser theater. Free. Phi Alpha Theta, 4 p.m. Thursday, East room, Memorial Union. Campus Missionary Fellowship, 4 p.m. tomorrow, Myers hall. Engineerettes, 8 p.m. Thursday, Pine room, Memorial Union. For all wives of engineering students. K-Club banquet for installation of members, 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Kansas room, Union. Picture for Jayhawker to be taken. Tickets from Business office, Athletic office. Math club, 5 p.m. Thursday, 211 Frank Strong. Joe Hull to speak on "Sine Waves." Refreshments. Sociology club, 4 p.m. Thursday, Little Theater, Green hall. C. S. Smith, speaker. Refreshments. Daily Kansan Classified Ads Phone KU 376 Classified Advertising Rates Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be delivered by 10 a.m., or during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University business office, Journalism bldg, not later than 5 p.m. the day before publication is desired. Washington's Birthday party for Home Economics club, Tuesday, Feb. 24, 7:30 p.m. Members sign up in office before 4 p.m. Friday. For Sale One three Five day days five 25 words or less 39c 65c 90c additional words 1c 2c 3c LAW BOOKS: Excellent condition; also 15 ink cares, bargains. See Wiley, 799 1932 4-DOGR Nash. 43,500 actual miles, good shape throughout. Good transportation. Very good on road. Great for a bid. BROWN. 1134 Miss. phone 3382. 23 BEAUTIFUL five-diamond ring. Call 684. REMINGTON typewriter: for sale or rent. condition. A good buy 30 Samsyide KODAK BANTAM, f. 4.5 camera and kamera, new. Seven.迎2 E Sunnyday, after six p.m. CHARVOS drawing set No. 614, new never used. See afternoon or evenings Wanted VETERANS! We will buy, trade or sell for you any Army or Navy gear in good condition that you may wish to dispose Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. 669 HTFT 1984 CHEV. Tuxor Master Deluxe. Good condition, fair tires. Excellent school transportation. Call 1637 between 4 and 5:30 p.m., Monday thru Friday. 18 ONE K.U. student to share two-room suite. 937 Ohio, Ph. 2521M. 23 FENCING FOIL; Spanish handle preferred. Call Ann Michener at 1245M. Transportation RIDERS WANTED: Leaving every Friday evening for Emporia, Newton, and Wichita. Returning every Sunday evening, Call 3170. Harry Shultz. 18 For Rent ROOM for two boys or married couple. Rooms to host up to 19 versity, Ph. 1587J, 704 Mass Miscellaneous VERY attractive room for two boys, twin campus. 137 Kt. Mrs. Olef. Ph2. 224W. SINGLE ROOM, three blocks from campus. Call 2240R. 17 DANCE every Saturday night at Odd Felldows hall. Informal. Joe Langerworthy's orchestra. BONY JOE OAT small for you? Your's too large for me. Please contact Dail Kansan for exchange. EXPERIENCED baby sister--mother, 35c an hour plus transportation; after midnight 50c an hour. Ph. 1879M, 1213 Ohio. SHAVER'S CAFE and service. Opening at our new location $1½ miles south of Lawrence on Highway 59—just "around the bend." Come out and see us! 18 ALTERATIONS and general sewing. Prices uncle. Ph. 1890M, 1101 Term. Mrs. Barr Gorrill. SPECIAL RATE on "Harvard Business Review," $4.50 per year at the Student Union Book Store. SUBSCRIBE to the Kansas City Star, call 17. Headquarterers at Round Corner Drug Store. FREE OFFER: Photo copies of discharge papers, marriage certificates, for military credit or school entrance. 3 for price of 2. Round Corner Drug. 801 Mass. 18 BLACK AND GOLD Evershard pen and Jacket 3129 B. O. C. King J. written on barrel Lost EVERSHERP pen and pencil set, Gear Evening. Reward. Phone 2078. Jim Collins. BLACK AND SILVER Parker "SI" fountain pen. Lost in or near Green hall wall. Feb. 12. Has name C. L. Peterson written on it. Under please pet at Daily Kansen office. BILFOLD in Robinson Gym Thursday night. Please return pans and billfold. See George Knighton, 1002 N.H., or call 2082. PARKER "51" fountain pen. Blue and Black. Call George Newton at 386. 1244 Ohio. 18 Red Cross Takes Over Baby Sitting At Ohio State Columbus, O.—(UP)—A free baby sitting service is being set up by the Red Cross college unit at Ohio State university for the parents of children whose budgets won't allow a paid baby sitter. Fort Site To Be Monument Cairo, Ill. — (UP) — The land around old Fort Defiance, which stood at the joining of the Ohio and Mississippi rivers here, has been bought by the city of Cairo. Officials said they will restore the fortress as a permanent Civil War monument. Nashun, N.H.—(UP)—French Canadians who drop down to visit relatives in Nashua are a constant nuisance to city firemen. Mail boxes in Canada are a bright red. Visitors from the Dominion persist in trying to mail their letters in Nashua fire alarm boxes. "I'VE TRIED THEM ALL, CHESTERFIELD IS MY 'VORITE CIGARETTE' Claudette Colbert STARRING IN A TRIANGLE PRODUCTION "SLEEP, MY LOVE" RELEASED THRU UNITED ARTISTS Chesterfield GARETTES LUGGETT & MEYERS TOBACCO CO. CHESTERFIELD AUTHOR ABC ALWAYS BUY WHY I smoke Chesterfield FROM A SERIES OF STATEMENTS BY PROMINENT TOBACCO FARMERS) "I am at the auction sales practically every day and Liggett & Myers buy the best cigarette tobacco grown in this section. "I am a Chesterfield smoker. So put me down. Wing a good cigarette and I like it." "I am at the and Liggett tobacco grown in this section. "I am a Chesterfield smoker. So put me down for that. It's a good cigarette and I like it." born D. T.McLawhorn TOBACCO FARMER, WINTERVILLE, N.C. ABC ALWAYS BUY HESTERFIELD ALWAYS MILDER BETTER TASTING COOLER SMOKING Copyright 1948, LOGRIT & MYRA TOBACCO CO. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE EIGHT TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1948 Palestine Army Is A Question For US Heads Lake Success, N.Y., Feb. 17—(UP) Most United Nations diplomats were convinced today that America's position would determine whether or not there would be a U.N. army to enforce the partition of Palestine. As principal supporter of the U.N. plan, the United States was believed to be the only security council member capable of rounding up seven votes in favor of a U.N. army—or any other action which might be proposed as an alternative to dispatching forces to the troubled Holy land. The security council planned to begin debate on the issue in a few days, probably Feb. 23 or 24. The U.N.'s Palestine commission asked for urgent action by the security council to enforce partition and peace between Jews and Arabs when the British lay down their mandate May 15. Whether the United States would come out in support of the Palestine commission's appeal or search for some measure short of such drastic action remained a closely guarded secret here and in Washington. One responsible official of a foreign delegation said, however, that the state department had been "dallying" with the idea of sending the entire partition program back to the U.N. general assembly with the notation that it is unworkable because of the Arab world's violent opposition to it. That would require a resounding retreat from the biggest decision the U.N.'s 57-nation assembly has ever taken. Registrar Has Grades James K. Hitt, registrar, has announced that students may obtain their grades at the registrar's office according to the following schedule; Persons whose last names begin with the letters H-N may see their records today; O-T tomorrow; and U-Z. Thursday. Those who fail to get their grades on the regular day may see them on Friday. Mr. Hitt pointed out that even though the student left a post card for his instructor to mail the grades, the student should come in and check with the registrar's records. Instructors, who are under great strain at the time of final examinations, do make mistakes in mailing the grades; however, the records of the registrar are correct and will be the only grades accepted as official, he stated. 150 To Attend School Conference Approximately 150 educators from Kansas and Missouri are expected to attend the annual school administrators conference at the University June 8 to 11. Prof. J. W. Twente of the School of Education announced that the conference theme will be the enlargement of secondary education to meet the changing needs of high school students. Representatives from the U.S. office of education will appear on the program. Graduate Sent To Okinawa Lt. Bernard L. Harden, a graduate of the University Medical school, has been assigned to duty on Okinawa as medical officer at the Naha Port dispensary. Lieutenant Harden, whose home is in Parsons, was formerly assigned to the 4th replacement depot in Japan. He interned at the St. Francis hospital, Wichita, before going into the armed forces. Natty Archduke 'At Ease' Amid Journalism Students Members of the University Daily Kansan Monday met His Imperial Highness Archduke Otto of Austria, lecturer, world-traveler, author, and last heir to the defunct Austrian throne. At the end of an hour they left the Pine room of the Union impressed by his sincerity, gracious manner, and thorough knowledge of the European situation. ISA Installs New Officers Alice Wismer, College senior, and new president of the Independent Students association, took her oath of office from Shirley Wellborn, retiring president last night at a meeting of the executive council of the organization. In an inaugural speech to the council, Miss Wisner outlined the purpose of the I. S. A., reading portions of the constitution. She emphasized that, "The I. S. A. is an organization whose purpose is to direct and augment the social life of the independent student." Other council members who took their oath of office were: Margaret Van der Smissen, vice-president; Wilson O'Connell, secretary; and Ralph Moberely, business manager. David Wilkie, dance manager; Laura Mason, historian; Robert Clore, publicity director; Betty Brooker, social events chairman; Jack Pringle, social welfare chairman, and Maxine Holsinger. Plans to send delegates to the national I. S. A. conference to be held May 7 and 8 were discussed along with rejection of a motion to send delegates to a district meeting to be held in Boulder, Colo., March 5 and 6. A finance investigation committee composed of Ralph Moberly, James Petersen, Wilkie, and Pringle, was appointed to report at the costs of the mid-week dances which the I. S. A. has been sponsoring, next meeting concerning future and will continue to sponsor this semester. A get-together party for old and new council members will be held in the social room of Miller hall from 4:30 to 5:30 p.m. Thursday. The next meeting of the executive council will be held at 7:15 o. m. Feb. 23, in 228 Frank Strong hall. Briar Manor Suit Filed The suit for an injunction to set aside the University's lease on Brian Manor brought by members of the Lawrence Women's club, owner of the building, was taken under advertisement Monday by Judge Hugh Means. The club leased Briar Manor to the University for use as a women's residence hall. The suit was brought by several members of the club who expressed dissatisfaction with the present arrangement and tried to obtain the use of the full facilities of the building for the club activities. Moreau To Speak At Medical Center F. J. Moreau, dean of the School of Law, will give his annual address to the graduating class of the school of nurses at the medical center, in Kansas City, Kan. at 4 p.m. today. Thirteen witnesses were called by both sides in Monday's testimony. Attorney for the suing members are Milton P. Allen and Oscar Learnard, while J. J. Riling and A.B. Mitchell represent the defendants. "What the Lawbooks Show to be the Usual Pitfalls in Nursing," will be the subject of his speech. Scott Lilley, free-lance artist from Kansas City, will speak at the meeting of the University Art club at 7:30 p.m. today in the East room of the Union. Art Club Will Hear Artist Dressed neatly in a foreign-styled gray flannel suit with a beige shirt and dark tie, the slim royal visitor discussed questions ranging from the failure of Socialism in England to the effect of the Marshall plan in Europe. As each question was phrased, the Archduke, whose features are typically Hapsburg—gently sloping forehead and sharp nose, leaned forward eagerly in his chair to catch each word. Then, with a mixed French-Oxford accent, he quickly answered the questions as easily as he would deliver a prepared lecture. He did not attempt to side-step a single question. When introduced to members of the group, Otto, following the European custom, bowed slightly and inaudibly brought his heels together as he offered his hand. He was introduced by Elmer F. Beth, acting director of the William Allen White School of Journalism. Getting almost immediately to a serious level, the Archduke said that the current cold war between the United States and Russia could possibly develop into the real thing if any of the Russian satellite leaders started a quarrel without the official sanction or knowledge of Moscow. "Contrary to popular belief, these puppet leaders do not telephone Moscow for advice on every move they make. And if they started anything, Moscow would back them up and it could develop into world revolution. The first World War developed from a similar instance in Serbia." Satellites Act Independently He added that the Red army is strong enough to take over Europe in three weeks if necessary. Of the Marshall plan, the Archduke had this to say: "Moscow pronaganda, stating that the Marshall plan is an expansionist program by the United States, is not believed by the most Europeans. But the Russians will do their utmost to block the Marshall plan or any plan to hasten the recovery of Europe." U. S. of Europe Possible "Even in Russian-occupied countries the trend is strongly toward a United States of Europe. Within the next 20 years it will undoubtedly become a reality." Turning from the Marshall plan to another plan, that of a United States of Europe, Otto said that it has a popular following and would be accepted by Western Europe, except possibly by Spain. There is still a strong nationalistic feeling in that country, he explained. When asked what Europeans thought of the 1948 presidential race, Archduke Otto answered that an overwhelming majority of the people "don't even know the race is on." He explained that European newspapers are severely limited in space and vary in size from two to four pages. Foreign news is usually limited to one-quarter column and quite often news of the U. S. presidential race is entirely omitted. However, he added, the plan would not be practical now, and Russia would not permit it. Asked about the prospects for the continuance of the Socialist government in Great Britain, Otto declared that with the exception of coal-mining it has been a "dismal failure and will be abandoned." He predicted that if an election were held now the Socialists might stay in by a narrow margin, but in another year the Conservatives will return to power. 'English Socialism Will Fail' The artificial partition of Palestine is "absurd," he said of the Palestine question. It won't work because too many persons want to keep alive the conflict there. His Highness will leave the campus some time Wednesday to continue his extended lecture tour which will take him to the West Coast. To Discuss Jobs For June Grads There will be a required meeting of all June graduates in the School of Business at 4 p.m. Wednesday in Frank Strong auditorium, Frank Pinet, director of the business placement bureau announced today. Any other graduates wishing to use the services of the bureau in obtaining a job may attend. Registration forms for business placement, and interview schedules for the spring semester will be outlined. Chancellor Malotl will speak briefly on the opportunities in business. Tickets Go On Sale Tomorrow --design contest has been extended to 5 p. m. tomowon, Lynn L. Leigh, vice president of the K-club, an nounced today. Students may secure tickets for the pre-Broadway production of "A Cry of Players" at the ticket office in the basement of Green hall beginning tomorrow. "A Cry of Players" will be presented at Fraser theater Feb. 23, 25 and 26 for holders of activity and season tickets to the University season of plays. However, the play will first be presented Thursday and Friday so that visitors who will have come to the Kansas Arts and Crafts Festival may also attend. Admission will be $1 plus tax for the performance Thursday and Friday. Tickets for these may • be bought at the Community building tomorrow, or by calling the theater ticket office. KU 412. Gibson's play is being presented by the Topeka Civic theater under the direction of Louis Sweet. Four university students, Tom M. Shay, Tom P. Rea, Loren W. Kennedy, and Herk Harvey, are also in the cast. The lead is being played by Shav. Gibson has been awarded a prize of $500 by the Topeka Civic theater for the play as being the best on William Shakespeare by an American author. The play concerns the last three days of William Shakespeare's life in Stratford before he breaks all home ties and follows a company of actors to London. The play will be produced on Broadway under the direction of Margaret Webster. Nanki-Poo Returns Home—To Katisha Jane Byers says she is glad that the Light Opera Guild did not take the "Mikado" on the road. "It's easier to keep a husband in line when you're in home territory," she insisted. Jane had to stand aside while her husband pursued the lucious Yum-Yum, in the person of Harriet Harlow, Charles Byers, as Nanki-Poo, spurned the love of the elderly Katisha, played by Jane, and ran away from his father's court to avoid her. All this was pretty hard to take, but she had her revenge when she was pursued by Ben Shanklin as Ko-Ko. "Things were a little awkward at first," Jane said, "but I accustomed myself to the situation as rehearsals progressed. However, I'm glad it's over." Rally In Robinson To Be Tomorrow A rally will be held in Robinson gym at 11:50 a.m, Wednesday, Dick Wintermute, head cheerleader announced today. The rally will be held to send the basketball team to Kansas State. The bus leaves from the gym at noon. Plan Concrete Walk For Fowler Grove A promotion plan for a concrete sidewalk through Fowler grove, between Frank Strong and the Union, was discussed Monday at a meeting of the Independents in the Kansas room of the Union. The path now has a cinder surface. Allies Moved For Own Peace Russia Charges Moscow, Felix. 17—(UP)—Soviet Russia charged today that the U.S. and Britain conspired individually for separate peace with Germany and that France planned an attack on Russia from the Middle East. These allegations were contained in the fourth and last installment of Soviet propaganda attacks, issued since the U.S. published documents on pre-war Soviet-German relations. The U.S. move for a separate peace, Russia said, was made in Switzerland in February, 1943, by Allen Dulles, brother of Republican foreign adviser John Foster Dulles. The Russian charge said Dulles talked with a Prince Hohenloe, proposing to join Germany in establishing a zone of safety in Europe against Bolshevism and Pan-Slavism. This, the Russians said, was a move for a separate peace. (In New York, Dulles said the Russian charges were "nonsense." He said he dealt with the anti-Hitler underground as an officer of the O.S.S. in Berne, but that he never took part in any negotiations similar to those described by the Russians. The British move for a separate peace, the Russian charge said, was made by Max Aitken, son of Lord Beaverbrook, in Lisbon in September, 1941. Aitken was said to have talked to Gustav von Koever, a Hungarian. (In London, Aitken said he was on duty with a night fighter squadron in Coltishall, England, in September, 1941. He said he stopped in Lisbon in January, 1943, on his way to the Middle East but never had heard of a Gustav Von Koever.) Aitken was represented as proposing a separate peace sometime during the winter and spring of 1942. Marko Haggard, president, said the committee would vote whether to take action against the proposed bus fare raise between Sunflower and Lawrence, after the committee report concerning the Santa Fe Trail company's appeal for a higher rate has been read and discussed. E. B. Friederick, administration assistant to the president of the Spencer Chemical company, Kansas City, Mo., will speak to the Society for Advancement of Management at 7:30 p.m. today in the recreation room of the Union. Mr. Friederick, a former member of the S.A.M. chapter in Washington, D.C., and an associate of the Johns Hopkins Research institute of Washington, D.C., will speak on "Application of Management to the Chemical Industry." "Planks For the Veterans Platform In '48" will be the feature topic of a discussion to be held by the American Veteran's committee tonight. Tom Page, instructor of political science, will lead the discussion. The meeting will be held at 7:30 p.m. in 206-A Frank Strong hall today. Veterans' problems will be discussed in connection with various national problems such as inflatio control, rent control, the Marshall plan, universal military training, and the national bonus. Friederick To Speak At SAM Meeting AVC Platform Seen For '48 K-Club Extends Deadline Rules for the contest and prizes to be awarded are posted on the bulletin boards in most campus buildings and additional copies may be obtained at the athletic office in Robinson gym. University Daily Kansan STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSA Wednesday, Feb. 18, 1948 Lawrence, Kansas College Releases Names Of 133 To Be Graduated Graduates from the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences were announced today by the faculty Senate. The list consists of 133 persons including 10 from the William Allen White School of Journalism. Graduates and their degrees follow: Bachelor of arts—Charles W. Allphin, Jr., William Anderson, Jr., Vernice Stone Barr, Theodore Laverne Batchelder, Maurice Y. Beardmore, Mary F. Beeler, Beth Hinkson Bell, James W. Bibb, Jr. J. O. Biggs, Josephine E. Bradney, Wilson G. Branch, Donald L. Brown, Joseph E. A. Bukaty, Robert E. Burdge, Laird S. Campbell. Milton Cougheon, Leland D. Crapson, Wayne A. Culver, Clyde Daniel, Virginia C. David, John B. Deiter, Betty Lay Lion, Marjorie E. Dinsmore, Donald H. Dorge, Earl A. Edwards, James C. Estill, Max G. Falkenstein, Milo Farneti, Patricia A. Ferguson, Robert L. Groom. Ray F. Harris, Elwyn C. Henry, Laurel H. Hodgen, Mary J. Hoi- man, Martha B. Hogan, Richard K. Hollingsworth, Marie Horseman, Kathleen V. Howland, James R. Hunsucker, Grant E. Hunter, Barbara Lou Ireton, Robert H. Isaac, Donna C. Jackson, Joan Jay, Newell Jenkins. Donald M. Johnson, William W. Johnson, Virgiline Wieman Kittell, Paul G. Klein, Geralee Kreider, Earl Kreiger, Martha Jean Laffer, Louise Looker Lawler, Wendell H. Link, Martha Lephan Lipscomb, Floyd A. Lunsford, James F. Marshall, Helen M. Mather, James C. McCov Jr., Lynne W. McNutt. Mansfield A. Miller, Merle M. Mills, Charles R. Minich, Alberta L. Moe, Max Dale Moody, Frank C. Neff, Jr., Jean Oberlin, Warren Perry, Jr., William D. Phillips, Dorothy M. Pinkston, James R. Robertson, James R. Scanlan, Elton K. Schroder, Florence A. Schutte, Eugene Schwartz. Myron L. Sewell, Dorothy J. Shelden, Edgar L. Sherbenou, Patricia A. Shields, Charles B. Simkins, William D. Sommerville, Elma Roseman Stauffer, Verlene E. Steele, William A. Stewart, Patricia A. Stryker, M.Ruth Larson Taylor, Donald E. Underwood, Milo M. Unruh, Oval A. West, Jr., Virgil H. Whitstis, Mary Jo Moxley Wilson, Alma R. Wutnow, Norman G. Wycoff, Donald M. Wyman, Mary Jo Young Bachelor of Science in Chemistry -Mack Harold McCormick Bachelor of Science in Geology—Alice A. Fitzgerald, Ernest C. Gimblet, Frank D. Holland, Jr., Jules A. MacKallor, John W. Meek, Norris N. Requisit. Bachelor of Science in Medicine— Jack, W., Passmore. Bachelor of Science in Nursing—Marie L. Hunt Baum, Audrey Harris Chew, Letha M. Davis, Tresen M. Gilmore, Margaret Krehbiel Goertz, Dorothy J. Hamilton, Elinor P. Kline, Joyce Illene McCoy. Bachelor of Science in Physical Therapy-Helen L. Brunker, Martha Legler, Nancy L. Nevin. Bachelor of Science in Journalism—Robert H. Adams, Wendell M. Bryant, Allan W. Cromley, Richmand A. Dalton, Jr., John W. Finch, Margery Stubbs Handy, Wilmer J. McGlasson, Cleo O. Norris, Harold D. Sandy, Kenneth E. White. Dislocates Vertebra Alfred Moore, education sophomore, dislocated a vertebra in a wrestling class Tuesday and was taken to Watkins hospital. His condition is reported as good. Proficiency Test To Be April 10 Date of the proficiency examination in English composition has been changed from March 6 to April 10. A detailed announcement will be made later. Candidates for degrees in the College and students majoring in academic subjects in the School of Education must take the examination in their junior year. Inquiries about the examination may be made to John Adams, 313 Fraser hall. AVC To Contest Bus Rate Change The American Veteran's committee voted Tuesday to send representatives to the hearing concerning the proposed change in bus rates between Lawrence and Sunflower. The hearing on the proposed bus fare changes by the Santa Fe Trail company will be held by the state corporation commission March 8 in Topeka. The A.V.C. delegates will be chosen at the committee's next meeting Feb.24. Marko Haggard, president, declined to outline the committee's counter-appeal until he received further information and statistics. He made clear, however, that the appeal, which, if approved will double the student commuter's transportation bill, will be challenged by the delegates. Tom Page, instructor in political science, also spoke at the meeting. Inflation and housing are the two most important national issues in relation to the veteran, he said. The cloud of jumpy markets has passed, but the high cost of living still remains. He added that there must be a roll back in prices, selective price control of basic commodities, and control of allocation of basic raw materials. Progressive Party Dies The Progressive political party, started by six fraternities when they withdrew from the Pachacamac in December 1946, was dissolved at a meeting Tuesday. The motivating idea of the party, at the time it was formed, was to foster cooperation between the Greeks and Independents and to bring about a more democratic control of campus politics. "Failure of the Independents to cooperate and the action of certain Greeks who took advantage of the organization for their own personal ends brought about failure of the organization," said Thomas J. Alexander, president. The six fraternities active in the organization of the party were: Kappa Sigma, Sigma Chi, Delta Tau Delta, Delta Upsilon, Sigma Phi Epsilon, and Sigma Alpha Epsilon. The unveiling of a portrait of William Chase Stevens, professor emeritus of botany, will be held at 4 p.m. Saturday in Snow hall. The portrait, by Mrs. Bernice Lopes, will be presented to the botany department by the Linnean club. Botanists To Get Stevens Portrait Professor Stevens, a graduate of the University in 1885, began teaching in the botany department in 1892 and retired as chairman in 1937. The occasion marks his 87th birthday. The program consists of an open house by the botany department at 3 p.m., the unveiling ceremony at 4 p.m., and refreshments after the ceremony. Third Party Man Wins In Bronx By Almost 2-1 New York, Feb. 18- (UP)—Henry A. Wallace's third party movement gained a surprising and powerful impetus today with the election of a Wallace candidate, Leo Isaacson, to congress in a special election in the 24th congressional district of the Bronx. When the votes in Tuesday's balleting were counted, Isaacson, 38-year-old lawyer, had piled up a plurality of 10,119 over Karl Proper, Democratic candidate, in the four-way race. Wins By Landslide Isaacson, running on the American Labor party ticket, polled 22,697 votes compared to 12,578 for Propper. The other two candidates were left far behind. Dean Alfange, Liberal party nominee, polled 3,840 votes, and Joseph A. De Nigris, Republican, trailed with 1,482 votes. Only 40,597 votes were cast out of a total registration of approximately 96,000. Isacson Opposed Marshall Plan It was the first test in the nation and the result definitely was an upset. Propper, who supported President Truman's foreign and domestic policies and had the backing of Edward J. Flynn, former Democratic National committee chairman, Mrs. Eleanor Roosevelt and Mayor William O'Dwyer, generally was expected to win. In a predominantly jewish district, Isacson and his supporters, including Wallace, pitched their campaign largely on lifting the arm embargo on Palestine. Isacson also opposed the Marshall plan, asserting it was in reality a scheme of imperialists to cut off democratic forces abroad. tsacson polled approximately 55 per cent of the total vote and the Democratic candidate 31 per cent. In the 1946 congressional election in the same district, the Democrats polled 43 per cent, the A.L.P. 27 per cent. Ireland Has New Premier Dublin. Feb. 18—(UP)—The 16-year regime of Eamon De Valera as premier of Eire came to an end today when he was defeated for re-election in the Irish parliament. The long rule of the man who has had an almost continuous grip on the helm of Ireland since its emergence into independence was ended by a vote of the Dail at 5 p.m. Language Change Not Made Yet As anticipated, a coalition of De Valera's opponents defeated his bid for another term as premier and named John A. Costello, a member of the Fine Gael opposition party, in his place. A vote will be taken on the foreign language requirement at a special meeting of the College faculty at 5 p.m. Feb. 24, Dean Paul B. Lawson said today. He added that no action was taken at the meeting held Tuesday on the proposed change. Dean Lawson said that the faculty discussed reports by the committee. The majority report is in favor of language requirements. The minority report advocates that the study of foreign languages should be made optional for each student. TREVOR TURNER VELOZ AND YOLANDA President Asks Aid For China Washington, Feb. 18—(UP)—President Truman today asked Congress for 570 million dollars for China to halt the "continued deterioration" of the Chinese economy. The money will be used largely to finance imports into China of essential items which the Chinese now are virtually unable to buy. The president in a message to the congress recommended that 510 million dollars be made available through loans or grants to finance such relief imports. He also asked for assistance in reconstruction projects, .in areas sheltered from military operations" Defines Construction Projects The construction projects envisioned by the President included work on railroads and fuel and power operations. The new China aid program did not include any funds for direct military help for the Nationalist government in Nanking. The President expressed "deep concern" over the deterioration of the Chinse economy. He blamed the civil war waged between Communist and Nationalist forces for much of the delay in postwar recovery. Chief Burden Is China's Mr. Truman made it plain that this country would do what it could to assist the rebuilding of the Chinese economy, but that the principal burden of recovery would still remain with the Chinese government. The proposal for new China aid was seen in some congressional quarters as a bid for Republican support of the European Recovery program The European program goes to the senate floor March 1. Many Republican senators repeatedly have urged that Chiang Kai Shek's government also receive help. Laudon To Leave At Semester's End Dr. L. R. Laudon, chairman of the geology department, is leaving the University at the end of this semester to accept a professorship at the University of Wisconsin. Dr. Laudon, who came to the University in the fall of 1941, organized the geological field trips to the Canadian Rocky mountains and to Alaska. Last summer he and his wife and a group of University geology students flew to northwestern Canada to do geological research. Veloz, Yolanda To Give Program In Hoch Tonight The 14 numbers to be presented by Veloz and Yolanda vary from burlesque to Strauss. In addition to their own program they will present: Veloz and Yolanda will present a diversified program of dancing, songs, music and magic in their "Dansation of 1948" at 8:20 tonight in Hoch auditorium. Student activity tickets will admit. Cardini the magician, a new member of the troupe; Amelia Gilmore, ballet and ballet-t dance; Robert Garretson with his new partner, William Teaford, at two pianos; Patricia Lynn, singing starlet from Hollywood, and John Molinari, accordian virtuoso. The program follows: Part I Overture Veloz and Yolanda Robert Garretson and William Teaford, at two pianos Rhapsody in Blue...Gershwin **Veloz and Yolanda** Anniversary Song, Jolson-Chaplin Baile Cubanite Fernandez Bambuco-Cuabas Urdánte, R. Darktown Strutters Ball ..Brooks Amelia Gilmore Acceleration Valse ... Straus Polka ... Shostakovich Veloz and Yolanda Brass Ring Capers ... Ann Ronnell LeBamba ... L. Martinez Barrano Improvisation ... Frank Veloz Mexican Applause Waltz, Gonzalez Patricia Lamp. Lovely Lady of Song Lady of Song John Moliniati Accordion Virtuoso *Veloz and Yolanda* *“Innovation”* ... Schonberger Robert Garnetson and William Tea- ford, at two pianos Rito ... Infante Concerto No. 2 in C Minor (abtidged) ... Rachmaninoff Cardinal Amilson Gillmore Intermission Tarantella...Rossini-Liszt 2nd Hungarian Rhapsody...Liszt Patricia Lynn Veloz and Volanda The Blue Danube ... Straus "Ad lib" ... ? ? ? Samba-Marcha de Brazil, Darraso Minuteu Comique ... Paderewski The Gauche Tango .. Frank Veloz AVC To Hold Celebration The American Veteran's committee will hold a banquet April 1 to celebrate the raise in veteran's subsistence allowance which will be effective on that date. The banquet will also commemorate the second year that A.V.C. has been at the University. Two-hundred A.V.C. organizations over the country will celebrate the raise with dances, banquets, and special meetings, said Marko Hag-gard, president of the University A.V.C. President Truman signed the bill Feb. 14. It increases the monthly allowance for veterans without dependents from $65 to $75, those with one dependent from $90 to $105, and those two or more dependents from $90 to $120. WEATHER Kansas—Continued generally fair and mild today, tonight and tomorrow. High today 65 to 75. Low tonight 35 to 45. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE TWO WEDNESDAY. FEB. 18, 1948 Mademoiselle Opens Contest Mademoiselle magazine recently announced its College Fiction contest for women students. Two $500 prizes will be awarded to the best two manuscripts submitted. The contest is open to women undergraduates only. The story should be between 3,000 to 5,000 words in length. It must be typewritten on one side of the paper, double-spaced, and accompanied by the contestant's name, home address, college address, and college year. Entries must be postmarked no Inter than midnight, April 15, 1948. The judges will be Mademoiselle cases, and all decisions will be final. The two prize winning stories will appear in the August 1948 issue of Mademoiselle. Other stories acceptable will be purchased by Mademoiselle at their regular rates. Mademoiselle assumes no responsibility for manuscripts, and will return only those accompanied by stamped, self-addressed envelopes. Manuscripts should be submitted to College Fiction Contest, MADE-MOISELEL, 122 East 42 Street, New York 17, New York. Law Says To Give Landlady 30 Days Students are required by law to give a 30-day notice to landlords before moving, Mrs. Ruth Nash, housing director, cautioned today. She added that a 60 day notice is required by the inter-fraternity council if the student is pledging a fraternity. Mrs. Nash said that students are not advised to move until the semester ends. She explained that the housing shortage has eased for single men, and that students who do move at the start of the semester make it difficult for landlords to get new roomers. "When it was difficult for men to find rooms, home owners cooperated and provided places for those needing them. Although the shortage is less serious, we still wish to retain the cooperation of Lawrence citizens," she said. "Students can help by giving adequate notice of their intention to move." Will Protest Hike In Sunflower Fare A request for an interview concerning the Sante Fe Trail company's appeal for a bus fare raise between Sunflower and Lawrence was passed by Armanav, Monday in the Pine room of the Union. Vincent S. Di Carlo, president, said a letter will be sent to Saute Felecia Islands immediately and several Felecia Islands will be sent. Kansas City to discus the fare hike. The Santa Fe Trail company has applied to the State Corporation commission to cancel the special commuter rate, of 30 cents round trip. A bearing will be held by the State Corporation commission at Topela, March 8. Scholar's Medallion Goes To Brackman Billy Keith Brackman, business senior, will be awarded the Alpha Kappa Psi scholarship medallion tonight at 7:30 at a professional meeting in the Kansas room of the Union. Paul Malone, acting dean of the School of Business, will present the award, which is made annually to the business senior with the highest scholastic average for the first three years of college work. University Daily Kansan Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year. (In Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage.) Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Unpublished. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. American Male Next In Line Say Paris Fashion Designers Paris—(UP)—Men, steel yourselves for a body blow. Paris is plotting a "new look" for you, too. The revolution is taking place very quietly, however. Plotters to change men's styles, which have remained virtually static since 1900, are working underground, unknown to the innocent man in the street, who still walks daily clad in his cotton or silk shirts, his vest, trousers and coat. D-Day for the announcement of the "new look" for men is still a closely-guarded secret. Only here and there were there dangerous overtones that style priests were ruminating such a revolution. Men Are Timid Mme. Elsa Schiaparelli, veteran revolutionary in the fashion world, said this week; "Unfortunately, there are two things which make a change in men's clothing difficult. They are afraid of wearing colors they like, and they are afraid of looking affeminate." But she, too, is indicating subtly the revolution to come; "The white summer uniform of a sailor is nice, don't you think? A tunic of this kind, in gabardine, well-cut and fitted, looks splendid, and would be a perfect answer to the complaint that men are too hot in summer." Home of the coming revolution, however, is not in the Parisian "haute couture" houses, but in the little tailor shops in the old section of the city. Tailor Spills Beans Jean Van Acker, a well-known tailor, spilled the beans. "The new look for men," he said, "is as follows: No vest, matching coats and pants, but with the pants cut like ski trousers. "Thin-soled shoes for men in winter are silly. 'The new look' to come will include heavy - soled shoes, much like our after-ski boots now, with pants cut in a 'V' shape narrowing at the ankies, with a strap under the foot. No. Seam. No Summer Coats "Jackets, I feel, will remain much the same, except in summer men will order thin, light gabardine or linen shirts, with tailored collars, to be worn with a tie, a pocket for the inevitable fountain pen and cigarettes, and cuffs. This idea is largely gaining popularity after the American soldier's summer uniforms." Van Acker, who owns a little tailor shop in the business district of Paris, said the wrist-watch was largely responsible for the death of the vest. "Young men aren't ordering them any more," he said. "They don't need the pockets, because they don't have any watch or chain. Waistcoats aren't warm enough, either. If a young man wants to keep warm, he wears a bullover under his coat—even in Paris." Post-war expansion of plastics and metal working industries has brought increasing demand for cutting tools for plastics and soft metals. Legal Group Will Initiate Phi Alpha Delta, law fraternity will initiate new members Saturday in the supreme court chambers in Topeka. Their names will be announced after the ceremony. Jay Kyle, of the state corporation commission and alumnus of the Topeka chapter, will be the presiding officer at a banquet to be held in the Walnut room of the Kansas hotel following the initiation. Three chapters of Phi Alpha Delta; Benton chapter of Topeka, Bechson chapter of Kansas City, Mo., and Green chapter of Lawrence will take part in the initiation ceremony and banquet. "Sludge in Blood" will be the topic of Dr. Melvin H. Knisely, associate professor of anatomy at the University of Chicago, when he speaks to freshmen medical students at 11 a.m. Saturday, in Haworth hall. Dr. Knisely has had non-technical explanations of his findings published in Time, Life, and other national magazines. He spoke here in 1946. Medical Students To Hear Knisely Dr. Knisely has made a special study of blood circulation for about 15 years, and was a pupil of Dr. Kroig, in Copenhagen, Denmark. Dr. Krog won a Nobel prize in 1925 for his medicinal achievements. Poetry Readings Begin Tomorrow The first in the series of informal readings' of poetry for the second semester will be held at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in 110 Fraser. W. D. Paden, associate professor of English, will read two narrative poems of the Romantic period: *Sorrow with the Midnight Keat* 'The Eve of Saint Armes.' Other readings this semester will include a Greek drama prepared and directed by Prof. M. D. Clubb and the poetry of Shakespeare, Milton, and T. S. Eliot. William B. Bracke, instructor in English, is in charge of the program. ADDITIONAL DONATIONS Call KU 376 with your Want Ads For SWEETHEART SWING Sweet-Heart of America and Her Escort ware: Novelty Lighter Al Louter Jewelry Dozen Rozes for Queen L. G. Balfour 411 W. 14th. 411 W. 14th. 10.00 Cash Gift $\textcircled{2}$ Independent Laundry Box Stationery $\textcircled{3}$ Keeler Book Store 5.00 Cash Gift Keeter Book Store 5.00 Cosh Prize Free 8 x 10 Photo Estes Studio - Acme Bachelor Laundry - Zipper Note Book - Rowland's 7. 50 Mer. Certificate - Allison-Thomas $\textcircled{2}$ Bell Music Co. Bowman Radio Shop Programs and Tickets Rusty's Food Market 4.00 Gift Certificate 3.00 Gift Certificate Wright's Appliance Palms for Decorations Ward's Flowers 'Shack' Stinks From Test Tubes To Ink There may be some hope for the smells of Bailey chemical laboratories. The odor may some day change to something pleasant like dead frogs, even printer's ink. Proof of the possibility is the case history of the Journalism building. Chemistry was the first subject taught in the "shack" in 1883. Five years later, the pharmacy students $ \textcircled{4} $ moved into the building. Dr. Ida H. Hyde made an animal room of the sky parlor when the School of Medicine took over the building in 1900. She brought along skeletons and a menagerie of laboratory experimental animals including rabbits, guinea pigs, and rats. When the department of Journalism moved in in 1923 they spent about five years removing the smell of rats from the top room. The odor successfully resisted scrubbing and fumigation and only yielded half-heartedly to time and fresh air. No connection has been found between the recent practice of calling journalism students "shack rats" and the rat odor of the building in the past. Alumni who graduated more than 10 years ago are unfamiliar with the term as it is applied now. The original laboratory space is now the news room of the University Daily Kansan. The sky parlor, which was a club room for Theta Sigma Phi, journalism sorority, is now being converted into offices for journalism faculty members. Who knows? In 50 years, Bailey chemical laboratories may smell like printer's ink, and from the sky parlor of the "shack" may float the faint "aroma" of a sour soprano. "Always ready to serve" Daily Specials----Home Made Pies GEMMELL'S CAFE 717 Mass. Phone 2072 LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS 12 East Eighth Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed...65c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed...69c CASH AND CARRY ONLY Fine leathers cut with the grain give you more flexibility no pinching! Only softest leathers, finest workmanship, expert styling and U-Turn flexibility could give you such comfort and smartness combined. U "U-TURN" FLEXIBILITY Perfect Support Without Confinement THE SHOE OF TOMORROW Allen Edmonds MacGregor $17.95 Faithfully yours—a truly great wing tip style for those who demand the finest available made of selected Scotch grain in light tan, with waterproofed full double sole. Exclusive with us THE Walker SHOP 813 Massachusetts X-ray fittings Phone 259 Music All Day invited Charge and lay-away accounts invited , 1948 WEDNESDAY, FEB. 18, 1948 UNIVERSITY·DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE rats" ing in ituated namil- plied ce is river- arlor, Theta- yis, is ffices ers. ailey like sky the noo. Socially Speaking Delta Chi Initiates Delta Chi announces the initiation of James Underwood, Carl Brown, William Straight, Dwayna Tarver, John Wesley, Fletcher Abbey, Marshall Braily, John Neal, James Vaughan, Charles Burclek, Vic Nalley, Phil Savory, Dan Reillev, and Robert Bramfield. William Straight was honor initiate. Delta Chi Delta Chi announces the reaffiliation of Larry Channell, who has recently been serving in the armed forces. Corbin Open House Corbin hall will have an open house dance from 9 p. m. to midnight Friday. Pi Kappa Alpha announces the initiation of James Bennett, James Townsend, Quentin Long, Robert Miller, Eric Ericsson, Jere Kimmel, Channing Hiebert, William Howard, James Small, Harold Koch, Richard Harper, Richard Tatum, Edward Eagle, William Burkhalter and Jack Crawford. KU Magazine Has Big Role Dr. E. H. Taylor, professor of zoofrya, was a guest at the initiation ceremony. Pi K A Initiates The functions of the K. U. Graduate magazine were explained by Ken Postlethwaite, associate editor, at the weekly meeting of Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertising fraternity, Tuesday. "The Graduate magazine plays the role of the country newspaper among the 35,000 University graduates," he said. He further emphasized that the activities of the little-known graduates were stressed as well as the outstanding ones. Before coming to the University, Mr. Postlethwaite was editor and publisher of the Leavenworth Chronicle and worked for the Kansas City Star. John Bergstrom, former vice-president of the fraternity, gave a report on the national Alpha Delta Sigma convention, held in Chicago the past summer. He also announced that Oregon has been chosen as the site of the 1949 convention. Managers To Hear Stockton Dean Frank H. Stockton of University Extention will speak tonight at the meeting of the Wichita chapter of the National Office Manager's association. His subject will be "Office Management in the Business Curriculum." In Spite Of Everything The Whistle Blows On "Old Faithful" blows every hour at the University, but it's not a geyser. It's the class whistle which has been heard by students for 36 years. Twice the whistle has been replaced and twice it has made a comeback. A few years after its first installation atop the boiler building of the University heating plant in 1512, it "blew off." Another whistle was used for a few months, but the plant engineers couldn't stand this screeching monstrosity, so they welded the old one and put it back in place. Number Three A Souvenir There it remained until whistle number three made its short-lived appearance in May 1946. This one was a war souvenir donated by Capt. Robert A. Haggard of the United States maritime service, a former student. He got it from a German transport ship which had been scuttled in Leghorn bay, Italy. This second replacement wasn't loud enough and caused classes to be held overtime. So, after three weeks, down it came and back went old faithful. It can be heard as far as Lone Star lake, nearly 16 miles away. The whistle is now blown automatically by an electric motor attached to a clock, except on special occasions. Following a convocation, the whistle is blown by hand after a telephone call from Hech auditorium is received. The steam comes from the same boilers which provide heat for University buildings. Formerly A Fire Alarm Formerly it was the custom to blow the whistle when there was a fire on the campus, but this practice has been discontinued. Townspeople used to flood the plant with telephone calls asking "where is the fire?" Workmen were kept from their jobs of getting the water pumps into operation because of the calls. Dual Citizenship Doesn't Hinder Allan, He Has His Cake And Eats It Too' Besides serving as a fire alarm, the whistle has also performed the duty of a church bell. In 1914 it was blown 30 minutes before the first hour class to announce chapel. These services are no longer held, but the whistle is still hear at 7:30 a.m. A third attempt to replace "Old Faithful" will be made soon. The 53 carillon bells of the World War II Memorial tower are to be used to announce classes, but, if history repeats itself, the whistle will be back. A citizen of two foreign countries taking advantage of the American G.I. bill of rights is Robert M. Allan, 29-year old graduate student. The tall, sandy-haired citizen of Great Britain and Columbia recently and his paradoxical status to a University Daily Kansan report "While attending Wheaton college in Illinois, I was drafted into the United States army, my status being that of a 'friendly alien.' After my discharge, I was entitled to full American citizenship under the provisions of the G. i. bill of rights. Because no one else would use me, I would lose my citizenship with Columbia and Great Britain." Has Dual Citizenship He wants to retain his Colombian citizenship so that upon completion of his graduate work in Spanish he may return to Columbia to do bilingual broadcasting. Allan has a dual citizenship because his parents, British missionaries in Bogota, filed his birth certificate with the British legation in order to give him British citizenship. This plus his Colombian citizenship by birth gave him two native countries. Allan took most of his elementary schooling in Bogota, learning to speak both English and Spanish fluently. Conning to the United States in 1938, he completed his high schooling at Wheaton academy in two years. He attended Wheaton college from 1938 to 1942, concentrating on radio dramas and romance languages. Likes Radio Work After his discharge from the army, he roughnecked in the Texas oil fields, worked as a longshore- Collecting Barbed Wire Is Pastime Of Grad Student And History Professor Collecting barbed wire is the unusual hobby of Luther Buchele, graduate student, and James C. Mallin, professor of history. Professor Malin became interested in barbed wire 20 years ago because of its importance of fencing in the grass country in Kansas. Earled wire became the cheapest kind of fencing in the last part of the 19th century and remains one of the cheapest today. Although the basic principle of making barbed wire has remained the same, the competition for patients has caused variations of it to be manufacturer. The first official patent was obtained in 1867, the last in 1891. Buchele's interest in barbed wire was aroused when he was plowing one day, and accidentally unearthed some of the material. He began noticing the different kinds of barbed wire and soon began making a collection. After ten years, Buchle's collection has reached 30 pieces. Most of them have come from Chautaqua and Douglas counties, Kansas. The first kind contained but one were twisted. Today the barbs straight wire on which the barbs are on wries which are also twisted. This prevents the barbs from sliding. Professor Malin's collection consists of 10 pieces which he collected from within a 50-mile radius of Lawrence. However, he has' not collected any pieces since about 12 years ago. The professor will display his collection on the first floor bulletin board in the west wing of Frank Strong hall this week. According to Professor Malin barbed wire, like anything else, has gone through stages of development. Iron was the first metal used. Because of its brittleness, however, another metal was sought which wouldn't break so easily and which could be obtained more cheaply. man in Galveston, and played in stock and radio shows around the country. A radio announcing job took him to Pittsburgh, Penn. After a few months he resumed his schooling at Washington and Jefferson college, Washington, Penn., and received his bachelor of arts degree in August 1847. After two semesters of graduate study, Allan intends to enter the radio field in Colombia. Degrees In Nursing Awarded To Six Six students were awarded the degree of bachelor of science in nursing at the University hospitals in Kansas City, Kan., Tuesday. F. J. Moreau, dean of the School of Law, gave the commencement address. Students receiving degrees were Marie Baum, Kansas City, Kan.; Audrey Chew, St. Joseph, Mo.; Helen Gilmore, Highland; Elinor Kline, Salina; Joyce McCoy, Kansas City, Mo.; and Margret K. Goertz, Hillsboro. Sunflower Statesmen Elect Browne, Raise Dues Club dues will be raised and meetings will be bi-monthly, on Thursdays, instead of once a month as they have been. Allyn Campbell Browne, College freshman, was elected vice-president of the Sunflower Statesmen club Tuesday night. Members are former Boy Staters attending the University. Miss Lilyn Warner, instructor in physiotherapy, will speak on the Warm Springs foundation in Warm Springs, Ga., at a meeting of the Speech Therapy seminar at 4 p. m. tomorrow in 8 Green hall. Speech Therapy Seminar Instructors, graduate students, and speech correction majors are invited to attend. The Jay Janes will give a rush tea from 4 to 5:30 p.m. today at Walkins hall. New members will be directed to fill the places still vacant. Jav Janes To Give Tea The houses which have vacancies are Alpha Delta Pi and Delta Delta Delta. YD Club To Hear Briman Ray Briman, Topeka lawyer, will address the University Young Democrats' club at 7 p.m. today in the recreation room of the Union. The field of endocrinology still has many problems unsolved, and it affords many opportunities to anyone interested, Oscar Resnick, graduate student in anatomy, told members of Phi Sigma Monday. Phi Sigma' is the honorary biology fraternity. Phi Sigma Hears Of Gland Studies Resnick said that some hormones found in other animals are related to those found in the human body. He outlined the principles of endocrine function in the human body. Resnick took his master's degree in physiology at Harvard university. He came to the University from the University of Iowa. Union Broadcasts Thursday. Feb. 19. 12 N-12:15. Records and announcements 12:15-12:30 "Noon Time Melodies" (WDAF). 12:30-1; Records and announcements. 5:30-5:45: "Afternoon Melodies" WDAF.) 5:45-6: Records and announcements. 6-6:30: "Dance With America" (KCKN). Friday, Feb. 20. 12 N-1: "Noon Hour Clock" (KCKN) 5:30-5:45: Tip top tunes (KCKN). 5:45-6: Records and announcements. 6-8.15: "Supper Club" (WDAF). 6:15-6:30: Records and announcements. Among points of historical interest in Virginia are Mount Vernon, Monticello and Richmond. CARL'S have a NEW Shipment of — SPRING SLACKS 100% All Wool Slac • Bedford Cords • Coverts • Grey Flannels • Gabardines • Glen Plaids 100% All Wool Slacks Expertly tailored by— Leonard Macy Sizes 28 to 40 Price $13.95 up See Them Today At— CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES DESOTO APPROVED SERVICE FLYMOUTH Burlington GALLAGHER MOTORS FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. THE BEST DESSERT IN ANY SEASON TRY IT YOURSELF AND KNOW THE REASON Fritzel ICE CREAM by Ward's Flowers 834 Vt. CHI GALLOWAY Bubbles Phone 182 COMPLAINT DEPT. WOMEN'S WEAR ONLY COMPLAINT DEPT. MEN'S WEAR ONLY S.K.A.R. "Uh-h—Never mind—" No complaints from "Her" when you send her a lovely bouquet of flowers from Ward's! Beautiful blossoms are always apropos, no matter what the occasion. If she prefers plants . . . we know she'll like one of the gorgeous ones we now have on display. "When you think of flowers... think of ours!" 910 MASS. WARDS FLOWERS FLOWERFONE 820 PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEB. 18, 1948 1948 KU-Wildcat Fireworks To Blaze Again Tonight By PAUL ZEH Assistant Sports Editor The famed 41-year old basketball rivalry between Kansas and Kansas State may flare into an all-time high for excitement tonight when Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen takes his Jayhawkers to Manhattan to tangle with the favored Wildcats in an important Big Seven court clash. Reports from Aggieville indicate that pennant-starved fans at Man- SPOTLIGHT SPORTS By BOB DELLINGER Daily Kansan Sports Editor Phil Handler, line coach of the Chicago Football Cardinals, 1947 National league champions, dropped by Lawrence Tuesday on the way home from the West for a little "chat" with all-conference end Otto Schnellbacher. "We just had a little talk, that was all," said Schnellbacher but it seems that the Cards have some interest in the rangy Jayhawker star. The Cards and the New York Yanks of the All-America conference have draft rights on Schnellbacher. No salary terms, or even the idea of a Chicago contract, were discussed. Schnellhaeher insists, but "little talks" can lead to major negotiations. The Kansas two-sport star admits he wants to play both pro football and pro basketball, and we can see a place in each sport for him. *** Speaking of little chats, it seems Otto broke one short the other day with the mention of money. A small Kansas college put in a bid for Schnellbacher's services as grid coach, and apparently was startled into a quick withdrawal by the salary Otto named. A word to the wise: the best things on the market cost the most. When Phog Allen's Jayhawkers invade the Wildat lair at Manhatan tonight, Coach Jack Gardner's crew will be out to stay on top of the Big Seven by hook or crook—to date it's been mostly crook—and must win over the Jayhawkers to do it. A Kansas victory would throw the race into a virtual five-way tie, with two of the teams having one less victory, but an equal number in the important loss column. At this stage of the game, in a league where all teams meet all other teams, it's the number of losses that count. The team with less losses is bound to have more on the credit side when the season ends. A loss to the Wildcats would kill Kansas chances for the title, or at least deal them a severe blow. In such a case, the Jayhawkers would still remain as title-busters to the hopes of other clubs. But, forget such thoughts, because we think that the Kansas team will pull out of it tonight and beat the Aggies. No word has come from the athletie office on the identity of the Jayhawkers new football coach. Reportedly under consideration is Volney Ashford of the Missouri Valley Vikings, a team which has won 33 straight in small college competition. Ashford seems to be a big wheel in the Missouri Valley machine, as he holds the jobs of athletic director, football, basketball, baseball, track, and golf coaches, and is intramural sports director. Sounds as if he would be a hard worker. Basketball Results St. Joseph's 59, Temple 54 New York 73, Manhattan 58 Holy Cross 45, Boston College 34 Rhode Island St. 79, Providence 61 Long Island U. 55, Duquesne 48 Notre Dame 51, Michigan St. 44 Loyola (Chi) 60, Marquette 58 St. Louis 58, DePaul 56 (ot) Baylor 51, Southern Methodist 49 Oregon State 58, Idaho 44 Fordham 51, Georgetown 50 North Carolina St. 89, Davidson 52 nattan have been sharpening their Wildcat claws for the Jayhawkers ever since Phog Allen came near disrupting their prided basketball team by baring the facts in the Brannum eligibility case. Despite Allen's protests, the Wildcat center has been allowed to continue as the Gardner's quintet tonight against Aggie center, and will captain the Jayhawkers. Nevertheless, the Aggie pride was hurt, and to fan the fire, their dream-team hasn't fared too well in recent games. A loss to the Jayhawkers would not only destroy the Wildcat pride, but would also knock Kansas State out of the lead in the muddled Big Seven race. So as far as K-Staters are concerned, nothing else matters except to beat the Javahakers. KU Holds Big Edge This will be the 110th court meeting between the two schools, with Kansas holding a series advantage of 76 games won and 33 lost. Before the Wildcats blasted local hopes last February at Manhattan, winning 48 to 45, Kansas had rolled up 22 consecutive victories on their country cousins. Since that game the 'Cats added another win in the pre-season tourney at Kansas City. Since that game the Aggies have been great, the Jayhawkers mediocre. Kansas State dropped only one game, in Madison Square Garden, before hitting the skids at Missouri, 46 to 18, and against Oklahoma, 47 to 49, in its last two conference games. They now cling to a shaky perch atop the league, thanks to strange happenings last Monday when the Tigers and Sooners were both unset. Kansas On Losing Streak Kansas, too, is fighting a losing streak, during which it has bowed three times by a total of only nine points. Last Friday's 50 to 52 loss to-Iowa State followed a three pointer to Missouri, 39 to 42, and a 57 to 61 verdict to Nebraska. The Jayhawkers are in a fifth place, but only one game out of first. However, Missouri would move into the lead if Kansas should stop the Wildcats tonight, and a four-way tie would exist for second place. Added game interest is the return of Allen as active coach of the Red and Blue, after missing the Ames contest because of the flu; the promised holiday tito Agggilev in the event of a Kansas State triumph; the anti-booing campaign this week, backed by the faculty, student publications, and athletic department; and the refusal of Allen to accept a police escort while in the vicinity of the Wildcat lair. Otto Schnellbacher will play the lead role in the Jayhawker bid for an upset. Gardner has five potent scoring threats to match the Kansas forward, all five starters being bracketed between seven and 10 points per game in conference play. Guard Howard Shannon and forwards Hal Howey and Rick Harmon hold positions among the league's top ten scorers. Eyes Are On Otto Schnellbacher is tied for second in the individual scoring race with 11.9 average per game, while Shannon, K. State's best, is in fifth place with a 10.0 average. The starting lines: KANSAS Eskrge (6-4)₂ Schnelly (5-3) Waugh (6-0) Houchin (6-4) Sapp (5-1) KANSAS STATE f. Howey (6-0) f. Harmon (6-2) c. Branum (6-5) g. Shannon (6-1) g. Dean (6-1) Parker 51 Fountain Pens Super Chrome Ink STOWIT'S Rexall STORE KANSAS 23 RANGY JACK Eskridge, one of Phog Allen's favorite forwards, is playing his second year of basketball at KU. A 6-foot, 4-inch ex-marine. Eskridge has proved effective under the basket and in single-post pattern plays. He is feared by opponents because of the deadly accuracy of his left-handed hook shot. Hornets Buzz Back To Whip Ichabods Topeka, Kan., Feb. 18-(UP)—Emporia State's Hornets buzzed back into strong contention today for the Kansas Central Conference basketball title. Slapped from the league leadership last week by Washburn, the Emporators decided not to turn the other cheek, but instead lashed out at the state capital quintet for a 52 to 48 victory last night. The Hornets held the lead most of the game, lost it temporarily four minutes before the finish, then soared ahead to stay. It was the first cage game ever played to a sellout throng of more than 3,000 in Whiting field house. Emporia's victory pulled the Hornets into a second place tie with St. Benedict's, Washburn's next league fo tomorrow night. The Topekans lead the runner-up teams by half a game. Call KU 376 with your Want Ads. DEELICIOUS BARBECUED SANDWICHES CAREER GUIDE Duck's Tavern 824 VERMONT A New Service for our Classified Advertisers We will now take your want ads by telephone. Call KU 376 (Hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m.except Sat.) Let our 9,000 (plus) readers know what you want to BUY, RENT, or SELL. University Daily Kansan Call KU 376 with your Want Ads JAYHAWKER Shows 2:30-7-9 NOW, Ends Tuesday Mickey IN A NEW ROCK'EM, SOCK'EM TYPE OF ROLE! Mickey ROONEY as KILLER McCOY with Brian DONLEVY Ann BIYTH James DUNN Added: World News GRANADA Ends Tonite "The SWORDSMAN" THURSDAY, 3 DAYS CURSED... By an Ancient Woman By a strange house. . . . YET they found the most fascinating love ever known! Robert CUMMINGS Susan HAYWARD in Added: News and Cartoon "THE LOST MOMENT" VARSITY NOW, Ends Saturday Hit No. 1 "DICK TRACY MEETS GRUESOME" (Boris KARLOFF) Hit No. 2- Allan LANE "BANDITS OF DARK CANYON" PATEE TONITE, 2,7,9 p.m. From the Greatest novel of our time!——At Regular Prices! 11. Greatest Novel of Our Time! DARRY OF SANICK'S writings THE GRAPES OF WRATH Mr. James S. McLaughlin HENRY FONDA WEDNESDAY, FEB. 18, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Nation's Top Cage Squads Aim For National Tourneys New York, Feb. 18—(UP)—National Invitation Basketball tournament officials were about ready today to direct cheery "hellos" to the Blackbirds of Long Island university, who less than a month ago were counted out of the post-season jamboree because of four early season setbacks. L, I. U.'s loss column shows defeats by the Oklahoma Aggies, U.C. L, A., St. Louis, and Western Kentucky—all listed as potential tournament teams. But the Clair Bee coached team boasts some prominent victories, too, and one of the latest was a 55 to 48 victory Tuesday night over a husky Duquesne team at Madison Square garden. Dukes Fold Late Duquesne, which also harbored tournament hopes with only two previous setbacks in 18 games, battled the Blackbirds on even terms during the first half. The Dukes' zone defense slowly folded with the start of the second半, however, as drive-in plays by little Nat Miller and Lou Lipman swept LIU. to a 7 to 37 lead with only eight minutes remaining. A crowd of 18,415 at the New York arena watched New York university run its unbeaten string through 17 games as it overwhelmed Manhattan college, 73 to 58, in the second game of the doubleheader The Violets, who are a virtual cinch for either the Invitational or N. C. A. A. tourneys, presented a diversified attack, with four players scoring more than 15 points. Big Dolph Schayes led the winners' assault with 18 points. At St. Louis, Ed MacAuley's four points in an overtime session enabled the St. Louis Billikens to outlast DePaul, 58 to 56, and moved another step closer to an invitational bid. Billikens Win 17th It was the 17th St. Louis triumph in 19 games and the Demon's fifth defeat. DePaul tied the game at 51-all at the end of the regulation game but was no match for the Billikens in the extra session when they were suffering from the loss of four men evicted on fouls. In another exciting midwest encounter, Notre Dame dought off a determined Michigan State rally in the second half to win, 51 to 44. Bob Brannum, formerly of Kentucky, sparked the Spartans' late rally and walked off with high-scoring honors with 21 points. Leo Barnhorst got 18 tallies for the Irish. At Boston, the N. C. A. A. champion Holy Cross five also suffered a second half scare before downing arch-rival Boston college, 45 to 34. In the first game of a doubleheader at the Boston garden, Boston university turned back William and Mary, 71 to 61. In other major games, Fordham downed Georgetown, 51 to 50; Rickey Exposes Anti-Negro Pact New York, Feb. 18—(UP)—In the face of denials, "no comment," evasions, and forgetfulness by other club owners, Brooklyn Dodger President Branch Rickey stuck to his assertion today that there was at one time a concerted movement to keep Negro Jackie Robinson out of the Majors. Rickey, who arrived by plane from Chicago, admitted he saw little to be gained by further discussion of the matter, but said that "if there is any need, I will do so at some future time." He refused to indicate when that time would be and intimated that the matter would not be discussed when the Dodgers hold a luncheon for newsaperman today to present information on some of their more promising rookies. Rickey said he hadn't seen newspaper accounts of the speech he delivered Monday night in Wilberforce, O.. "I report that the 15 other owners in a joint Major league meeting prepared and adopted a report which said the use of Negro players would hazard all the physical properties of baseball," he said. Rhode Island state swamped Providence, 79 to 61; North Carolina State whipped Davidson, 99 to 52; Baylor edged Southern Methodist, 51 to 49; and Oregon State defeated Idaho, 58 to 44. Browns Sell OU's Rapacz Norman, Oklah., Feb. 18.-(UP) University of Oklahoma officials made no secret of their feelings today after John Rapace, star O.U. football center, admitted signing a contract with the professional Cleveland Browns although he still has a year of college eligibility. Rapace, who earlier had denied signing with the Brown's of the All-American league, said he gave the team an undated agreement in exchange for a promise it would not become effective until after his college career. Since then, however, the Cleveland team has traded him to the Chicago Rockets. Rapace stated flately he will refuse to play with the Rockets. Won't Play With Rockets "I agreed to play with the Browns because I wanted to be with the champions," he said. "I don't know anything about the Rockets, but I don't want to play with them." The latest flare-up of college footballs biggest off-season battle brought criticism of the professionals from both Dr. George L, Cross, O.U. president, and Bud Wilkinson, football coach. "I think Rapacz is telling the truth." Cross said. "I sincerely hope this whole mess brings some long-needed pressure to bear on those who continually tamper with amateur athletes before their college eligibility has been completed." Wilkinson said he will investigate the matter because his space's eligibilty must be preserved. "It does seem a shame that a boy who wants to play as badly as John does should be deprived of the chance by such dealing." Couldn't Reach Brown Coach Rapacz said he had tried to get in touch with Coach Paul Brown and Crowderland officials by telephone, but that "they don't want to talk to me." "What I hate worst about all this," the two-time all-Big Six center amended, "is not getting to finish school. I want to get a degree and to into coaching. Now it looks as though it is out. The disclosure that Rapacz had been traded was made Monday after officials of the All-American league clubs met in Chicago to divide up "I kept my promise, but Cleveland didn't." "The Cleveland people told me the agreement I signed was just a promise that—when I finished school I would play for them and not for anyone else. That's why I didn't make any promises to any other team. JOHN CAMPBELL HAL HOWEY. Kansas State forward, is expected to sparkplug the Wildecat attack against the Jayhawkers tonight. Howey led the Aggies in scoring last season, and bids to repeat this honor, but probably will run into trouble in penetrating the defenses of Kansas' Jerry Waugh. Waugh limited him to three points in their last meeting. Four Games On IM Card The Tekes, Delta Chi's and Jokers came through with easy victories in Tuesday night's intramural games as they downed Theta Tau, Triangle, and the Rollin' Pin Five. Big Bill Swope couldn't miss with the Tekes taking a 42 to 33 decision from the Theta's Taus. Swope counted 15 points for top scoring honors, welve of the 15 points came in the first half which closed with the Tekes ahead 18 to 14. Reid was high for the losers with 12. Dick Tomlinson hit five field goals and an equal number of free throws as he披ed the Delta Chl's to a 35 to 13 victory over Triangle. from both boards and played a from both boards and played a good floor game. Winters tallied six points to aid the winning cause. Triangle found their offense completely bottled up and never had a chance to rally. The Jokers downed the Rollin Pin Five 28 to 21 in the closest game of the evening. Long dropped in 13 points to lead scoring for the winners and Crane aided the cause with six points. Warkentine topped the losers with five markers. some players to strengthen weaker members of the circuit, including the Rockets. Jonas Ingram, commissioner of the league, has said he would investigate the signing of the O.U. center, which was done without consulting Wilkinson, in violation of the league's rules. Ready Guns Back Defiance Of Ku Klux By High School Cage Coach In Georgia Rossville, Ga., Feb. 18—(UP)—A husky ex-marine who reportedly aroused the antipathy of the Ku Klux Klan set the stage Tuesday night for a pitched battle with the hooded order but rumors that the Klan would put on a big demonstration against him failed to materialize. The innocent-enough setting in gymnasium where Coach Walter Bowland, who was supposed to have seen the object of the demonstration, his Luke view high basketball team entered in a prep tournament. Bowland, whose trouble with the Klan was said to have stemmed from a fight with a former student over his methods of disciplining the basketball squad, came to town ready for trouble. He stationed seven close friends with two guns apiece at strategic spots in the gym among the cheerling high school kids. And he kept a pistol handy at his own side as he sat with his team during the game. A group of reporters, photographers and radio men who had been The innocent-enough setting for the battleground was the municipal Stationed Friends Strategically Winner Of IWW-Theta Game To Meet AD Pi For Title After the basketball game, a small caravan of cars loaded with the curious followed Bowland to his home of Lakeview. He had left his pregnant wife there, under guard of two friends, armed with shotguns, while he was away. Alpha Delta Pi and Kappa Alpha Theta won semi-final games in the women's intramural basketball tournament Tuesday night, and I.W.W. defeated Watkins hall to take the Division IV title. The Theta team will play I.W.W. tonight to determine which team will meet Alpha Delta Pi in the finals Feb. 24. attracted to this small North Georgia border town by rumors of the anticipated trouble watched Ross-ville high trounce Bowland's team 41 to 26 in the seventh district tournament. Nothing else happened. Down the street, the local K. K. K. Klaven held a quiet meeting while the game was in progress, but there was no parade—with or without sheets and hoods. Left Wife With Guard The A. D. Fi's and Delta Gam-ma's traded goal for goal during most of the first half which found the A. D. Fi's holding a 15 to 11 halftime lead. The second half was a different story. The A. D. Pi's paced by Patricia Bentley with four field goals, knocked 21 points while holding the Delta Gamma's to nine points. The final score was 38 to 20. John Anderson led the A. D. Pi's scoring with 18 points, while Nancee Bell was high for the Delta Gamma's with 11 points. Kappa Alpha Theta was pressed Pro-Amateur Open Starts New Orleans, Feb. 18—(UP)—A field of the hottest professional golfers in the world, teamed with about 100 local amateurs, today play a pro-amateur tournament over the Metairie country club course, where the $10,000 New Orleans Open starts tomorrow. Gene Sarazen won it that year, and only a handful of entrants for the current tournament were entered then. Among them were Ralph Guldahl, Ben Hogan, Tony Penna, Dick Metz and Ky Laffoon. For the pros, it was an opportunity to try out, under competition, a course that has been toughened from the first hole to the last. The last big tournament at Metairie was played in 1932. Bobby Locke, the dapper South African, looked like the man to beat on the basis of early practice rounds. hard all the way by Kappa Kappa Gamma. However, a 16 to 9 half-time. Theta's lead proved too much for the Kappa队, although they held the Theta's on even terms during the second half. The final score was 25 to 16. Marilyn Smith led the victors with 14 points, Maxine Gunsolly scored 13 of the losing Kappa's 16 points. The final I. W. W.-Watkins score was 35 to 22. Shirley Hoffman and Geraldine McGee led the winning I. W. W. team with 15 and 13 points respectively. Charlotte Thomas with 11 points and Annette Stout with 9 points were high scorers for Watkins. Rip Brown's 5 BOPS SKYLINE — Wed-Fri-Sat CALL FOR TAXI SERVICE CALL CALL 2-800 UNION CAB CO. WEST 7th CAFE 1305 West Seventh A Special 55c Meal Every Day. Fellas, Get Your Dates Now HOB NAIL HOP March 13 BILL'S GRILL QUICK COURTEOUS SERVICE 1109 Mass. Across from Phone 2054 the Courthouse GASOLINE PRICES ARE UP BUT OUR PRICES REMAIN LOW! - Gasoline refineries have raised the price of their products to service stations. Therefore, prices are up. We have been forced to raise our prices slightly, but our high-test "Vickers" gasoline is still between one and two cents cheaper than average. . REGULAR $ 2 2^{5} $ TAX PAID ETHYL $ 2 3^{5} $ U S E D C A R S We Buy, Sell, or Trade—Cash or Terms Crystal Oil Company Sixth and Kentucky --- PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEB. 18, 1948 The Editorial Page A Point System For Women Plans for a point system to limit the number of activities that women students may participate in is now being weighed on the campus. It has long been a problem whether activities should be limited or how they can be curbed. The Associated Women Students have written to 76 schools and have found that about one-fourth of them have a system to limit activities. They learned that all schools which have a point system feel that it is worthwhile. Some schools wrote that they had tried a limiting system, but they found it didn't work. There are three plans which the schools used with individual variations: 1. Each organization office is assigned a number of points, and students are limited to the number of points they may have each semester. 2. The organizations are classified as major, intermediate, and minor activities. Only the officers are affected, and they may have certain combinations of the three classifications—such as one major and one minor office. 3. An activity file system is set up during enrollment and students are asked to list their activities or interests. This file is available to beads of organizations, and from it they may select members or workers. An evaluation of work already accomplished is on the cards so that the officer does not have to take a pig in a poke. The A. W. S. has not yet decided which system would be the most practicable for K. U., but they are eyeing the last one. The plans are only in the committee stage and will have to be passed by the A. W. S. senate. Advocates of limitations believe that they are for the individual's good. They believe that a person's academic work suffers when the extra-curricular load is too great. The chief cry of the opponents is that persons who like activities and are willing to work are those who will get into them. Others who don't like the politics and clubbing of university life won't participate no matter how smooth the path is made. The idealistic viewpoint of such a situation is that by the time a person reaches college age he should be able to set his own limits and act accordingly. According to this view, the organizations are to be blamed for not censuring officers that have taken on more than they can handle. It is a problem that has many sides. Limiting plans have shown both a measure of success and failure, if the A. W. S. undertakes this project, their biggest problem will be to educate the organizations to use the file cards. It is always going to seem easier to pick an officer whose merits have been proved than to dig for an unknown.—Marian Minor. In 1769 a Frenchman built a three-wheeled wagon equipped with a boiler and an engine. In 1947 a California manufacturer built a three-wheeled car with radiator and engine. Time and progress march on. The way the University is expanding, the annexes will soon need annexes. Old Army Game News that the army recently planned to buy 161,172 custom built chairs for officers is likely to bring loud guffaws from ex-GI's. The fact that the specifications for the chairs were so complicated they covered four typewritten pages will probably cause the laughter to be punctuated with knowing shakes of the head. Men who were in the army can't forget the absurdities which army administration sometimes reached. Letters written in triplicate and covered with puzzling endorsements were necessary to get the slightest thing done. Such apparent inefficiency was often painful to the soldier who could see an easy short cut for doing the same job. Today these are the voters the army is going to have to convince that it needs more money and more men. It's not going to be an easy job. News stories like the one about the chairs don't help. Former members of the organization are too often reminded that the army still needs a lot of reforming. Foot Notes Say, are you the guy that has the unmannerly habit of putting your feet on the chair of the person in front of you? If you are, then you are not alone. In the hurry and scurry of school life too many of us forget the other fellow. There is nothing more nervewracking than to have the person behind you vainly trying to rock you to sleep. Each individual seems to have his own style so the experience is varied somewhat from class to class. First of all, there is the student with nervous energy who is constantly placing one foot and then the other on your chair in the manner of a ballet dancer. Then there is the "rocking chair" type who insists on using your chair for a brace while he tilts back in his own chair somewhat in the manner of a "junior birdman in graceful flight." The rugged individualist feels no pain as he plants his number twelves squarely and solidly against the back of your chair with a blow that sends you forward with a lurch. Only complete balance on your part saves the decorum of the class and keeps you from finding yourself face downward on the cold floor. There are many more varieties, but the person with the new twist seems to be the most irritating of all until you become accustomed to his style. It's a good idea to keep up on your toes, but keep them to yourself—Dave Clymer. Even the more timid souls are not to be excluded for they seem to be musically inclined. You can spot one in a minute as he incessantly taps out one of the latest song hits on the leg of your chair. According to scientists, on the bases of animal life expectancy, man should live to be 150 years old. The way prices are going up, it would be much cheaper to die at the average mortality age of 68. New York subway maps are made from a waterproof, stainproof plastic that is produced with rosin from southern pine trees. 12 Perplexed KU Students Fight 'Name' Double-Trouble This seems to be "double or nothing" semester at the University, a recent survey conducted by the University Daily Kansan, indicated. Six pairs of students currently enrolled at the University bear identical names, and the situation sometimes becomes confusing. Especially is it bewildering when the "identical" pair unknowingly enroll in the same class. Daily Hansan The parents of James Resson, College freshman from Kansas City, Kansas, and the parents of James Robert Wilson, College freshman from Meade, were startled last mid-semester when they received cards from the College office showing their respective sons to be taking courses totally different from the ones in which they had enrolled in September. Upon investigation they found that the mid-semester grades had been sent to the wrong parents. Marilyn June Brown, College freshman from Kansas City, Mo, became confused last fall when her date cards for rush week were scrambled with those of Marilyn June Brown, another freshman, from Salina. They later found themselves enrolled in the same Speech, Spanish, and English classes. "The school records can usually be cleared up," said Patricia Ann Smith, College freshman from Great Bend. "But I know that the other Patricia Ann Smith, a College freshman from Lawrence, gets tired of receiving my telephone calls and mail." Donald Eugene Greenhaw, pharmacy sophomore from Canton, and Donald Eugene Greenhaw, College freshman from Overland Park, have never seen each other on the campus, as far as they know. Donald Eugene Wilson, business senior from Hutchinson, and Donald Eugene Wilson, College freshman from Moscow, also reported little trouble with their common names. The two William James Millers, one from St. John, and the other from Erie, Penn., have managed to confuse just about everybody. Since both are engineering sophomores, the Millers found that the only workable solution was to request instructors to refer to them according to their home towns. Record Demand in 1947 For Automatic Controls Minneapolis, —(UP) - Automatic controls which run machines without the human hand, and control devices for many other fields were in big demand in 1947. Harold W. Sweatt, president of the Minneapolis - Honeywell Regulator Company, said in a year-end interview. Sweatt noted that demand for automatic controls in manufacturing has doubled from the 1955 total, and today is at a new high for the 100-year history of the controls industry. University Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland District, College Press, Republic of Korea Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 240 Madison Ave., Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Editor-in-Chief .. William C. von Maurer Managing Editor .. Aian J. Stewart Asst. Man. Editor .. Cooper Rollow Asst. Man. Editor .. Larry L. City Editor .. Gene Vignery Asst. City Editor .. James Robinson Telegraph Editor .. Wallace W. Abbey Asst. Editor .. Charles F. Tel. Editor .. William Barger Sports Editor .. Robert E. Dellinger Asst. Sports Editor .. Paul Zeh Sports Editor .. James Jones Women's Sports Editor Feature Editor ... Anna Mary Murphy Picture Editor ... John Sullivan Picture Editor ... Hal Nelson Society Editor ... Dorothy James Business Manager ... Betty Bacon Circulation Manager .. Roberto De Meyer Circulation Manager .. Otto Meier Classified Adv. Man. .. Paul Warner Ast. Class. Adv. Mgr. .. Don Waldron Promotion Manager .. Wister Shreve The Kansas Press Association 19 MEMBER 48 New Bridal Rings Worn On Ears MEMBER O. M, Resen, the designer, call them "wed-earrings," the "ear mate" of the wedding band is o white palladium, one of the platinum metals, which is light it weight and easy on the lobes Carved in a floral motif, the two mates dangle like hoops from pendant ear attachments upon which cobchon rubies gleam. New York—(UP)—The newest idea in marital customs introduced here provides husbands with duplicates of the bridal ring to put in their wives' ears. Brooklyn Sends Gifts To Namesake in Holland The dictionary definition of palladium is significant, Resen pointed out. Besides being a precious metal, palladium also means "a safeguard or protection." It stems from the palladim, or white statue of Pallas Athene. When ancient Troy held the palladium the Greeks considered the city safe from capture. "Jealous husbands seem to like this additional way of telling predatory males "hands off," Resen said. National Editorial Association A FREE PRESS—YOURRIGHT TO KNOW UNIVERSIDAD ESPAÑOLA DE LAS ARTES MUSEO DEL CIVILIZACIÓN New York—(UP)—The first postwar shipment of gifts has been delivered to Breukelen, Holland, from Brooklyn, N. Y., which was named for the tiny Dutch community. Miss Marguerite A. Salomon founded the Brooklyn Adopts Breukelen project, which was taken up officially by the Brooklyn Heights Garden club. At the suggestion of the Breukelen burgmeister, Dr. M. L. Holthe to Echten, the Brooklynites sent only necessities, with the exception of some candy for children and tobacco for men. Stockings Decide Colors Of Lehigh Rethickom, Pa.-(UF)-Of all the shades and colors to which American college men swear their allegiance, none owes its selection to a fairer inspiration than the Brown and White of Lehigh university. The Lehigh colors were selected at a student meeting on Feb. 9, 1876. William L. Raeder, Scranton, Pa., a senior when the choice was made, revealed the behind-the-scene story of their selection. He related that women of that day wore stockings with horizontal stripes of alternating color. Shortly before the meeting, a kindly wind revealed the shapely legs of a miss clad in brown and white hose. $440 Buys Lincoln Wire The sight lingered and when the question of colors came up, he proposed brown and white. The students assented. "You will succeed. God bless you all." Mary A. Benjamin bought the telegram, in which Lincoln told Grant: New York—(UP) —A telegram sent by President Abraham Lincoln to Gen. Ulysses S. Grant 84 years ago was sold for $440 during an auction of books, manuscripts and letters at the Parke-Berne galleries. GALES American Custom Chocolates, $1.75 STOWIT'S Rexall STORE GALES Charme Beauty Salon formerly Iva's Beauty Shop phone 533 All types of beauty work by capable operators. Mid-winter special price on permanents — machine and machineless. Nettie L. Wolfe, Owner RISK'S HELP-YOURSELF LAUNDRY Maytag Machines Line Space Reasonable Rates Weekdays 9-6 Saturdays 9-3 1900 III. Phone 623 COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals Short Orders Malts Sandwiches Air Conditioned Open 5:30----12 p.m. Eye WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames EYE Lawrence Optical Co. DRAKE'S BAKERY Bread, cake, pie, cup-cakes cookies, donuts whatever you want in baked goods you'll find the best at DRAKE'S! 907 Mass. WALMART WEDNESDAY, FEB. 18, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Dr. Lane Looks Forward To Rest, Research, Writing For half a century Dr. H. H. Lane has been teaching students the difference between Euglena and eugenics. A professor of zoology, he says 50 years of teaching will be enough and is looking forward to retirement in June. Research and writing will have top priority when he retires, he said. "I'm teaching five classes and 160 students this semester," he said. "That is a lot more than I started with back in February, 1899, but I doubt if there is any great basic difference between the two groups." In 1905 Dr. Lane became professor of zoology and head of the newly established zoology department at Hiram college in Ohio. A year later he moved to the University of Oklahoma to become its first professor of zoology. While in Oklahoma, he served as the first president of the Oklahoma Academy of Science. Dr. Lane began teaching the second semester of his senior year at DePauw university, Greencastle Ind. He received his bachelor of philosophy degree in 1899 from DePauw and after graduation taught for three years in the high school at Lebanon, Ind. He was a laboratory instructor at the University of Indiana in 1903 while working for his master's degree, and in the same year received his master of art. He earned a doctor of philosophy degree from Princeton university in 1915. After two years at Phillips university, Enid, Oklah, he came to K.U. in 1922 as chairman of the zoology department. From 1935 to 1944 he was director of Dyche Museum of Natural History. Became Lab Instructor Wrote Three Books Dr. Lane has written three books, His first, "Correlation Between Structure and Function in the Development of Special Senses in Mammals," was published in 1917. This was followed in 1923 by "Evolution and Christian Faith" and in 1929 by "Animal Biology." His research has been chiefly in recent and fossil mammalogy and vertebrate paleontology. His articles have appeared in several publications including those of the Carnegie Institution of Washington. The concluding article of a three-year series entitled "Survey on Fossil Vertebrates of Kansas," will appear in the March issue of Transactions of Kansas Academy of Science. Dr. Lane is a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma Xi, and Sigma Chi, and belongs to 12 scientific societies. He has been in "Who's Who in America" since 1916. Boy Friend Clouts, Carries Akron, Ohio—(UP)—Miss Elenan Heard charged in court that Robert Fields, her suitor, clouted her with a 3-foot board and then carried her "like a—sack of grain over his shoulder." Fields was fined $50, given 30 days in jail to modernize his courting tactics and placed on probation for three years. Call KU 376 with your Want Ads. Because the V.A. has been more strict in the past than the armed services in requiring documentary evidence, birth certificates for children and affadavitis for dependents may have to be filed by veterans to receive the increased G.I. bill benefits, Dr. E. R. Elbel, director of veterans' bureau, announced today. Married veterans without children, or without dependents such as their parents, will automatically receive the increased benefits without filing extra documents. Vets May File Certificates This procedure has been followed concerning subsistence allowance for veterans attending school under Public Law 16. If this ruling is extended to include all student-veterans, those with children will be required to file birth certificates and those with other dependents to file affidavits. It would be a wise measure for veterans to file such papers anyhow Dr. Elbel added. Something Worth Waiting For— Diamond-Point Drill Kills Dental Pain Pittsburgh. Pa.-(UP)—The trip to the dentist twice a year soon may be a less unpleasant experience. "The painless dentist," more or less, is here at last. Science has developed a way to eliminate the pain of the drill. Faculty, Ministers In Panel Discussion The discussion, sponsored by the Rev. John Patton, was held in Westminster hall. Those taking part were Gilbert Ulmer, assistant dean of the College; professors C. P. Osborne, Harold Gibbard, N. W. Storer, E. S. Robinson; the Rev. Edwin Price; the Rev. Fosberg Hughes; and instructors W. Howie, Seldon Knudson, and D. N. Linegar. Dr. Howard Hillenbrand, secretary of the American De- Eight faculty members and two ministers took part in a panel discussion Sunday on "The University, Christianity, and the Community." Phone KU 376 Daily Kansan Classified Ads Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted upon understanding that the bill will be paid during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University business office. Journalism publication not later than 5 p.m. the day before publication is desired. Classified Advertising Rates One day Three days Five days 25 words or less 35c 65c 90c additional words 1c 2c 3c For Sale MUST SELL: Excellent 1940 Commodore Hudson. 1940 condition, completely equipped, white sidewall tires. Will sell for $1800. Joseph Gagoson, Jae Gagoson, after 6 p.m. 18 LAW BOOKS: Excellent condition; also 15 ok cases, bargains. See Wilson, 709, Mass. 12 For Rent 1932 4-DOOR Nash, 43,500 actual miles, good shape throughout. Good transportation to appreciate. Come on in. n bid. Bought $3822. 3822. 8 BEAUTIFUL five-diamond ring. Call 684. KODAK BANTAM, f. 4.5 camera and leather carrying case. Nearly new. See at 2E Sunnyside, after 6 p.m. 20 CHEV, Tudor Master Deluxe. Good camp airplane excellent school transportation. Call 1637 between 4 and 5:30 p.m. Monday thru Friday. 1 VETERANS! We will buy, trade or sell you any Army or Navy gear in good condition that you may wish to pose with of Lawrences Surplus 911 Mass. HTFD 609 Wanted BOOM for two boys or married couple for entrance. Close to Ursul versity, Ph. 19049. ONE K. U. student to share nine 2-room suite. 327 Ohio. Ph. 2521M. 23 FENCING FOOL; Spanish style handle preferred. FAIL; Ann Michler at 1245M. VERY attractive room for two boys, twin campus. 137 Ky. Mrs. Ole. Ph2. 224W. ONE DOUBLE room for two college men Good location, reasonable rates. 1329 Kg. (40) 561-6789 Transportation RIDERS WANTED: Leaving every Fri- evening for Emporia, Newton, and Washington. Sunday afternoon, Call 3170. Harry Shultz. RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Passons at Iola, Chanute, Erie, every Friday at 4:00 a.m. Call 3312 at 7:00 p.m. Walt Cox. Miscellaneous SHAVER'S CAFE and service. Opening at our new location 1¹/4 miles south of Lawrence on Highway 59—just "around Come out and see us!" 18 ALTERATION, and general sewing. Reasonable prices. Ph. 1968M, 1101 Tem. Mrs. Barr Gorrill. DANCE every Saturday night at Odd Fellows hall. Informal. Joe Langworthy's orchestra. KS WHAT DO AT small for you? rites is too large for me. Please contact Daily Kansan for exchange. EXPERIENCED baby sitter—mother. 3:06 an hour plus transportation; after midnight 5:06 an hour. Ph. 18798, 1213 Ohio FREE OFFER: Photo copies of discharge papers, marriage certificates, for military credit or school entrance. 3 for price of 2. Round Corner Drug. 801 Mass. 18 SUBSCRIBE to the Kansas City Star, call Headquarters at Round Corner Drug Story. SPECIAL RATE on "Harvard Business Year" at the Student Book Store. Lost BLACK AND GOLD Ewersharp pen and pencil. Call 5129. O. C. King. written pencils. EVERSHAIR pen and pencil set. Gear EVERSHAIR pen and evening. Reward. Phone 2018) Jim Coulson BILLFOLD in Robinson Gym Thursday night. Please return papers and billfold. See George Knighton, 1002 N.H., or call 2092. . . . . BLACK AND SILVER Parker "i"51“found, Lost in or near Green Hall wheelhouse. His name C.L. Peterson written on it. Finder please teach at Daily Kansan office. PARKER "S1" fountain pen. Blue and black, with silver trim. Call George newton at 366. 1244 Ohio. 18 The latest tool which the war added to the kit of the "painless dentist" is a diamond-tip drill. Found of the American Dental association. $\textcircled{2}$hailed progress in "pain control" both in extractions and fillings—as one of the most significant of the war-time advances in dentistry. FOUNTAIN FEN: Monday p.m. Owner may claim by identification and paying The old style drill, usually made of hard steel, generated heat which would react on the nerves of the teeth and cause pain. The diamond drill produces little heat. Hence, no pain. Dr. Hillenbrand said much progress had been made in local anesthetics designed to deaden pain without endangering the patient "Hartman's solution." w h i c h stirred up enthusiasm a few years ago, proved a disappointment. It was an anesthetic which was applied directly to the tooth. It was supposed to deaden the tooth while the dentist pulled it or worked on a filling. But the solution evaporated too quickly and lost its effectiveness. A Blue Cross hospitalization plan may soon be available to students living at Sunflower, Samuel Zollicker, service officer of the Veterans of Foreign Wars, Memorial post 4454, said today that students will be able to obtain services of the Kansas physicians and surgeons group under this plan. Six N.R.O.T.C. students have received commissions in the United States naval reserve following graduation at mid-term, Capt. J. V. Peterson; professor of naval science, announced recently. Blue Cross Hospital Plan Expected At Sunflower Complete information on the benefits will be explained at a mass meeting to be held early in March, Zollicker said. Twelve faculty members from the department of architecture will go to Wichita, Saturday, to attend a meeting of the Kansas chapter of the American Institute of Architecture, Prof. George M. Beal said today. Twelve To Go To Wichita Six Receive Commissions They are Jackson P. Burke. Byron De Haan, Billy B. Gwin. Herbert W. Jessup, William W. Johnson, and Harry E. Willford, Jr. The meeting will include business motion pictures, a social hour, and an evening dinner and program. Must Take Aptitude Tests Medical students who missed the aptitude tests given Feb. 2 can take tests before March 1, Glenn Cole, guidance bureau counselor, announced today. Arrangements have been made to give the tests on an individual basis, but the price has been increased to $15. Each student must make his own appointment with the guidance bureau. No Quail, So He Shoots The Mule And The Farmer Is Grateful, Too Harrisburg, Pa.—(UP)—This practical joke left George stranded 16 miles from town, but he said it was worth it. Spotting a promising piece of hunting land near a farm house, George left his three companions in the car while he went to ask the tenant's permission to hunt. George found the farmer tendings an aniling mule. "The vet told me the only thing to do is to put him out of his misery, but I can't bear to do it," the farmer told George. George told the farmer he'd put the mule out of pain and headed back to the car for his gun. His companions eagerly asked if it was all right to hunt. George's friends were horrified. "Don't shoot!" one of them cried. "We'll all go to jail!" "No," growled George picking up his gun and loading it. "That old so-means if he won't let us hunt. I'm going there and shoot his mule!" Shields Elected President Emerson H. Shields, college, sophomore, was elected president of Gamma Delta, young peoples' organization of the Emmanuel Lutheran church, Sunday. Other officers are Walter H. Mueller, vicepresident; Rosemary Landrey, secretary; and Victor C. Gradert, treasurer. Launderette Service 9 lbs. of wash, 25c 21 Bendix Washers 813 Vt. Phone 3368 The gun went off, the mule fell, the car sped away, and George and the farmer were alone—16 miles from town. You Are Always Welcome at SNAPPY LUNCH for Sandwiches Hot Chili Soup Malts 1010 Massachusetts Majoring in economy? $350 $395 $495 Yes, prices are an important item in every college man's curriculum these days, and that's one thing that makes Van Heusen shirts so popular. For these fine shirts are priced amazingly low! Other things that college men like are: smart new low-setting "Comfort Contour" collar styling; the action-tailoring; the figure-tapered fit; the tug-proof pearl buttons. In white and exclusive patterns, in your favorite collar models. Sanforized—these shirts will stretch your budget but they'll never shrink out of size. You get a new shirt free if one does. $3.50, $3.95 and $4.95. PHILLIPS-JONES CORP., NEW YORK 1, NEW YORK. Van Heusen Shirts You're the man most likely to succeed in Q TIES • SPORT SHIRTS • PAJAMAS --- YOU'LL FIND VAN HEUSEN STYLES AT The Palace UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE EIGHT WEDNESDAY, FEB. 18. 1949 Governor Will Speak At Festival Opening The formal opening of the Kansas Arts and Crafts festival will be held at 8 tonight in the Community building. Gov. Frank Carlson, honorary chairman, will make the principal address. He will be introduced by Mayor James H. Parsons of Lawrence Mrs. Frank D. Stockton, general chairman, will give the address of welcome. The opening program will include the presentation of a famous painting, "By the Fireside" by Henry Salem Hubbel, to the Lawrence Memorial High school. the festival will continue until Feb. 22. It will have three parts, the exhibition, the catalog, and the program features. Divided Into 11 Sections The exhibition is divided into 11 sections, architecture, book manuscripts and books, crafts and design, music manuscripts, ceramies, illustrations and cartoons, metal work and jewelry, photography, painting, prints, and sculpture. Representative work of Kansan artists and craftsmens will be exhibited. Among the exhibits will be two paintings by John Steuart Curry, "Baptism in Kansas," the painting which started Curry on the way to fame, is being loaned by the Whitney Museum of American Art, New York. The other is the original study which Curry made for the John Brown mural in the capitol at Topeka. Head of John Brown The Mulvane Museum of Art at Washburn university is lending a massive head of John Brown by the Toonek sculptor, Merrell Gage. Topeka sculpt. An original cartoon by Albert T. Reid, political cartoonist, newspaperman and painter, is being lent by the William Allen White School of Journalism. An original manuscript by William Allen White is also being exhibited. Twenty past and present members of the University faculty will have exhibits of their work at the festival. Professors Albert Block, A. Dwight Burnham, Gerald Davis, Raymond Eastwood, Robert Green, Joseph M. Kellogg, Karl Mattern, and Robert Sudlow will have pain-ting exhibited. To Exhibit Works Weaving and jewelry will be exhibited by Miss Marjorie Whitney, and paintings and prints by Arvid Jacobson, professors of design. Prof. Michael Andrews will be represented by sculpture and Prof. Sheldon Carey by ceramics. Textile designs by Rosemary Ketchum, once head of the department of design, will also be displayed. Non-text books will be exhibited by Profs. John Ise, Mary Grant, Helen Rhoda Hoopes, and Margaret Lind. Prof. Allen Crafton will exhibit a play. Professors who will give demonstrations at the festival are Michael Andrews, sculpture; Sheldon Carey and Norman Plummer, ceramics; Carlyle Smith, jewelry; and Jane Busch, assisted by Janet Malott, fine arts sophomore, serigraphy. Bill Schafer, fine arts senior, will assist Professors Carey and Plummer. 112-Page Catalog The second part of the festival is a 112-page catalog which will contain 11 sections parallel to the 11 divisions of the exhibition. Biographical material is given for the 250 persons whose work is being exhibited. Dr. Ray B. West, associate professor of English, is editor of the catalog. Profs. D. Gagliardo and Mary Margaret Warner are cochairman of the catalog. The book is on sale at the Community building. An Indian pageant, "Teepee Tales of the Prairie," will be presented at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow at Haskell institute. "Music Kansas Loves" will be given by theh Liberty Memorial High school band at 3 p.m. Friday in the Community building. "Early Kansas Dances" by members of the University High school will also be on the program. Tau Sigma On Program Tau Sigma, national honorary dance sorority, will present "The Coming of the Churches to Kansas" at 8 p. m. Friday in the Community building. Following the dance will be music from nine Kansas colleges. Also at 8 p. m. will be the presentation in Fraser theater of the cre-Broadway production of "A Cry of Players" by Will Gibson. A second performance will be given at 8 p. m. Saturday. "Sunny," a children's operetta with a cast from Lawrence schools, will be presented in the Lawrence Memorial High school auditorium at 2 p. m. Saturday. A second performance will be given at 8 p. m. Choral readings by a group of students from Lawrence schools will be given at 4 p. m. Friday in the Community building. Carlyle S. Smith, associate professor of sociology, will speak to the Sociology club at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Little Theater of Green hall. He will talk about trends in anthropology. Smith To Speak To Sociology Club Election of a new treasurer will be held to replace Charles Coughenour, who was graduated last semester. The election of new members will be held soon. All who have studied sociology in college and are interested in the club are invited to the meeting. Otto To Talk On Russia The Russian situation will be discussed by Archduke Otto at 4:30 p.m. today in the Pine room of the Union. This talk will be sponsored by the International Relations club and the Union Coffees and Forums committee. The meeting is open to all students and faculty members. Buckets And Beer Bottles Fly, Jimmy Green Has Close Call Jimmy Green almost got it again this morning. Night officers said the battle was short and ineffective. A car drove Jimmy Green almost came out undamaged, but a bucketful of paint caught him just below the knees. The sidewalk and steps of Green hall were liberally splashed with paint. Persons unknown, armed with a paint-filled beer bottle and a bucket, attempted to coat him with white enamel at about 1:45 a.m., Robert Corwin, traffic officer reported. up in front of the statue and stopped. Several persons started to get out of the car but threw the paint and left quickly when they saw the officers. "We cannot condone such actions either on the part of our students or theirs. I sincerely hope that these unwarranted, childish activities will stop immediately," Lawrence C. Woodruff, dean of men, said. The statue of William Alexander Harris has received a cost of bright blue paint according to reports from Manhattan. Signs reading "Yea Phog" and "Yea K.U." were painted on the pedestal and a paint can was perched on the head of the statue. The two night officers will remain on duty tonight as a precaution against another attempt. A review of the peace pact between the two schools is possible. Don Ford, president of the K-State student council, said that a meeting will be held in Manhattan to determine if the pact has been broken. 3 Nations Race To Gain Areas In Antarctic Buenos Aires, Feb. 18-(UP)—Australia offered today to send one of her own warships into the Antarctic to help Great Britain in her dispute with Chile and Argentina over possession of the Falkland islands and its dependencies. Sydney reports said Australian newspapers were up in arms over the Chilean-Argentine claims, with the Daily Telegraph declaring editorially, "If the lion has claws, now is the time to show them." The Argentine task force of several "large and small" ships sent to the Falklands to consolidate the Argentine claim is expected to reach the Antarctic zone over the weekend. All Argentine newspapers, including the Communist "La Hora," continued to support their government's claims Tickets are now on sale at the Lawrence Community building for Will Gibson's pre-Broadway production of "A Cry of Players." 'Cry Of Players' Opens Tomorrow The play will be presented at 8 p.m. Friday and Saturday in Fraser theater for visitors to the Kansas Arts and Crafts festival. Official Bulletin Pre-medical students who did not take medical aptitude test on Feb. 2 and wish to enter medical school in September should arrange at Guidance Bureau office for special examinations. Students who have not learned their fall semester grades may obtain them at the Registrar's office according to the following schedule: Today, O-T; tomorrow, U-Z; Friday, those who failed to get them on the day specified. New York, Dec. 18—(UP)—Dun & Bradstreet, Inc., today reported another decline in the wholesale price of food, which is now 7 per cent below the all-time high reached on Jan. 13. Morning devotions each morning, 8:30-8:50, during Lent at Danforth chapel. Activity books will admit students to the play Feb. 23, 25. and 26. Student tickets are available in the basement of Green hall today. Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship tonight, 113 Frank Strong. Feb.18,1948 Campus Affairs commission, Y W. C. A., 4 today, Henley house. Food Prices Show Decline Meeting of all June graduates of the School of Business, 4 today, Frank Strong auditorium. Attendance required. Any other June graduates wishing services of business placement bureau welcome. Job opportunities and registration forms to be explained. Interview schedules tot be outlined. Chancellor Malott to speak on business opportunities. Declines were made by wheat corn, rye, barley, beef, bellies cheese, coffee, cocoa, beans, potatoes lambs, butter and raisins. Advances were in oats, hams, lard, sugar, cottonseed oil, steers and hogs. Archery club practice, 4-6 today. Robinson annex. Tau Sigma Choral group. 6:30 to night, Builders. 7:30. Robinson gym. Jay James rush tea 4-5:30 today Watkins hall. K-Club Key Design contest extended until 5 p.m. today. Rules posted on bulletin boards or can be obtained at Athletic office. Positions of editor and business manager of K-Book open for application. Submit letters stating classification, qualifications, and previous experience to Betsey Sheidley, Gower Place by tonight. University Young Democrats, tonight. Recreation room. Union. K. U. Dames, 8 tonight, Lindley auditorium. Young Democrats, 7 tonight, Recreation room. Union. Ray Briman, Topeka, speaker. General Semantics club will meet tomorrow at 7:30 instead of tonight. Room 111, Frank Strong. Russian Club, 4 p. m. today, room 402. Fraser. Election of officers. "The Orphan Boy of Vienna" German sound film (with English sub-titles) 4 p. m. today, Fraser theater. No admission charge. Campus Missionary Fellowship, 4 p. m. today. Myers hall. Math club, 5 p. m. tomorrow. 211 Frank Strong. Joe Hull to speak on "Sine Waves." Refreshments. Engineeretees 8 p. m. tomorrow, Pine room, Memorial Union. For all wives of engineering students. S. A.M. field trip leave rear Marvin hall, 12:10 p.m. tomorrow. Phi Alpha Theta, 4 p. m. tomorrow. East room, Memorial Union. Slide rule class. 7 p.m. tomorrow, Lindley auditorium. Repetition of material presented Monday. Sociology club, 4 p. m. tomorrow. Little Theater, Green hall. Mr.C.S Smith, speaker. Refreshments. Deutscher Verein wird sich Donnerstag um 4:30 in 402 Fraser versammeln. Christian Science organization, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Danforth chapel. All new undergraduate students who failed to take the entrance tests given at the morning session, Jan. 31, should report to Lindley hall auditorium before 2 p. m. Saturday, for the make-up. Home Economics club Washington's birthday party, Feb. 24, 7:30 p. m. Sign in office before 4 p. m. Friday. A. I. Ch. E. dinner dance, 6:30 p. m. Saturday, Kansas room, Union bldg. Intermission entertainment program. $2.75 per couple. Alpha Phi Omega, 7 p.m. tomorrow, Pine room, Union. Quill club will meet at 8:30 p. m. tomorrow in Wilcox museum, Fraser hall. Members should bring money from Trend sales. Book Display For W.A. White William Allen White's birthday anniversary is being observed this week in Watson library by an exhibition of books and pictures. White was born Feb. 10, 1868 and died Jan. 29, 1944. White was a student at the University in 1886. He worked on the old Kansas City Journal and the Kansas City Star, and later bought the Emporia Gazette for $3,000. "His editorial, "What's the Matter with Kansas," won him national fame and his editorial on the death of his daughter won him the Pulitzer prize. On exhibition are the two editors mentioned, two picture of White and a letter from him to Prof. W. H. Carruth, author of the book, "Each in His Own Tongue." The books on display are "Autobiography of W. A. White—the Man from Emporia," by Everett Rich; "A Man from Kansas," by David Hinshaw; "William Allen White's America," by Walter Johnson; and "William Allen White of Emporia," by Frank C. Clough. Learning is dangerous only when it stops, Max Foresman, assistant director of industrial relations of the Kansas branch of the Spencer Chemical company said Tuesday. He spoke to the Society for the Advancement of Management. "The management at Spencer has begun to realize that men who want to keep on learning after their regular schooling is completed are worth helping." He described to the members of S.A.M. the extensive educational program of the Spencer Chemical company. Mr. Foresman said that the Taft-Hartley labor act is not going to cure any evils because management will depend upon the act too much. "Cases of poor management pointed out as examples by labor are generally extreme situations. I am convinced that no other class is more concerned with the problems of labor than management." SAM Told To Study "Seniors in college should go on and obtain a master's degree if it is at all possible." Mr. Foresman said. Little Man On Campus By Bibler BIDER University Daily Kansan 45th Year No.92 Thursday,Feb.19,1948 STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Thursday, Feb. 19, 1948 Lawrence, Kansas Meteor Causes Blast In Sky Over Kansas Norton, Feb. 19 — (UP) Authorities said today they believed the terrific explosion high in the Kansas sky Wednesday night was caused by a meteor which blew up when it entered the earth's atmosphere. Concussion from the blast broke windows, rocked buildings and terrified residents over a wide section of Kansas, Nebraska and Oklahoma. (N. W. Storer, associate professor of astronomy, told the University Daily Kansan today that "there is nothing unusual about the meteor. Twenty million of them hit the earth every day. This was just an unusually large one." The meteor left a smudge of bluish-white smoke extending across a wide segment of the sky just before it exploded about 5:01 p. m. No one appeared to have seen the actual explosion. There was no flash. Felt 230 Miles Away The meteor was felt as far away as Buffalo, Okla., 230 miles south of here, and Sharon Springs, Kan., 115 miles southwest. Reports came from Dodge City, Brookville, Beleit, Solomon, Salina, Russell, Concordia and Osborne all south of here. "It sounded as though the gasoline station a block away had blown up," said M. R. Rebhiel, editor of the Weekly Norton unty News. People Run Out To See It Mr. Krehbiel said the meteor apparently exploded directly over the town of Norcatur, Kan., 16 miles west of here. By estimating the angle from the earth to the point of explosion, he decided that the meter or blew up about 30 to 35 miles above the earth. "It it was just about the most exciting thing that happened around here in a heckuva long time," he said. "Everybody in the area ran cut of their houses. They stood around for hours looking at hat long streak of smoke up there. The smoke trail started over Nebraska and ran southward, twisting itself in "jelly-rolls" like the vapor trail of a plane out of control. It was broad at the explosion point and narrowed back to the point where the meteor first entered the earth's atmosphere. Robert Coles, associate curator of Hayden planetarium, in New York, said today that the blinding explosion probably was caused by a large meteor, or "fire ball." Mr. Coles, long a student of meteors and meteorites, said there was no way of determining just how large the meteor might have been. Was 'Tremendous' "From the reports it must have been of tremendous size, and had it hit the earth it would have raised plenty of cain," he said. This particular meteor, Mr. Coles believed, came close to the earth and became red hot, he said. This is what caused it to explode. All meteors become red hot as they speed through the air at about 40 miles a second. Mr. Coles said it was unlikely that any of the fragments of last night's meteor would be found. "It apparently disintegrated, as so many of them do," he said. Fire Department Answers To Call Of Burning Log The Lawrence fire department answered an unusual fire alarm Tuesday, when a hollow tree at and Tennessee streets caught fire. The tree is now a hazard to traffic and will have to be removed by the street department, said Fire Chief Paul R. Ingles. Otis Hill Resigns As Union Head Otis "Bud" Hill told the Student Union executive board Wednesday that he will resign as president of Union activities Feb. 21, LuAnne Powell, vice-president, will replace him. Other changes in committee head personnel are as follows; Peggy Sue Cloyd replaces Bruce T. Bathurst on the Announcements committee; Phillip J. Carlson replaces Frank G. Pomeroy on the Library committee; and Pomeroy replace Paul W. Dillon on the Service committee. These changes are not expected to affect the present scheduled program of the Union activities. Malott Advises June Graduates "Careful planning may mean the difference between a successful career and one of frustration," Chancellor Dean W. Malott told June graduates of the School of Business Wednesday. Stressing the importance of interviews and first impressions, the chancellor advised prospective employees to show an active interest in the companies they want to work for, and to "put yourself in the place of the interviewer." On the job, he recommended a policy of hard work and "a smile for everybody." Students face important decisions in choosing a business and community suitable to individual tastes and abilities the chancellor said. Answers to these problems lie within the student and should be considered before accepting employment, he added. Frank Pinet, director of the Bureau of Business Placement, explained registration forms and interview processes to an estimated 200 seniors in Frank Strong auditorium. The forms will be used to set up interview schedules and as interview aids. Interviewing will start Wednesday, Feb. 25, Mr. Pinet said. Governor Opens Arts And Crafts Festival Events The cultural accomplishments of Kansas are just as important as its material wealth, Gov. Frank Carlson told an audience of 300 persons Wednesday night. The governor spoke at the formal opening of the Kansas Arts and Crafts festival. He was introduced by Mayor James H. Parsons of Lawrence. Mrs. Frank D. Stockton, general chairman, gave the address of welcome. The governor said that Kansas was established by men and women who were driven here by the force of ideas as well as by economic need. "When one speaks of the arts or culture, he usually refers to ideas or ideals. The art of painting, for example, is more skill than putting paint on canvas," he said. "It implies abstraction, something in the realm of thought and feeling." The honorary chairman said that Kansas became a battleground in 1854 when two ideas clashed. "It was inevitable that the struggle for freedom in Kansas should attract hundreds of men who had a background of culture and education," he said. An original training of "By the Fireside" by Henry Salem Hubbell was presented by proxy to the Liberty Memorial high school. Mrs. C. O. Bowman, niece of Mr. Hubbell, made the presentation to Neal M. Wherry, principal. Mr. Hubbell is a graduate of the school. Mrs. William Allen White was recognized by Mayor Parsons for the influence which her husband exerted on the life of Kansas. A large hand - lettered illuminated panel with lines from White's "To an Anxious Friend" is on display at the Community building. The writing won the Pulitzer award in 1922. Little Man On Campus By Bible "We let them have it now and then—I had the boys practice all week with a bowling ball." Fine Arts Degrees Opened To Seven The faculty of the School of Fine Arts has made the following recommendations for degrees: name the following recommendations for degrees: Bachelor of fine arts, Billie Jean Rotemterm; baccalaureate of music John Edward Conrick; baccalaureate of science in occupational therapy, Virginia Louise Gorrill Coffin, Florence Kathryn Hope, Mary Jeanne Johnson, Doris Annette Klandt, and Nancy Lou Stephan. Mrs. Carlson,81 Dies Early Today Concordia, Feb. 19—(UP)—Mrs. Anna Carlson, mother of the Kansas governor, died quietly in her sleep at 5 a.m. today. She was 81. She had been ill more than two weeks, losing strength after contracting a severe cold. Gov. Frank Carlson, notified in Topeka of his mother's passing, said "she had a great Christian faith that sustained her throughout her life; she died with it." The governor and Mrs. Carlson immediately left the executive mansion for Concordia. Born May 27, 1866. Mrs. Carlson settled north of Clifton in 1883. Burial services for the woman who came to Kansas from Sweden as a girl of 17 will be at the white frame Carlson farm homeplace. It was there that she and her husband, also a native of Sweden and who preceded her in death by a dozen years, established a home as a young married couple almost 55 years ago to the week. Mrs. Carlson had been visited by her son and his wife each of the last several weekends. She recognized the governor Sunday, but not his wife. Governor Carlson said his mother apparently knew the end was near at that time, for she talked to him and her pleasure in remembering it. Besides the governor, Mrs. Carlson leaves a daughter, Mrs. Edna M. Johnson of Concordia, who cared for her during her final illness. Funeral services tentatively were set for Saturday afternoon or Sunday. In the state capital, the flag was lowered to half staff on the 70-foot pole fronting the state house. The governor's office called off all his engagements and cancelled a scheduled weekend trip to Washington to testify before a senate subcommittee concerning the federal-state tidelands controversy. It was thought at the capitol that the written testimony of Governor Carlson may be forwarded for presentation in his absence. John Ise To Talk At AWS Meeting "The Myth of the Good Life" will be the topic of a talk by Dr. John Ise, professor of economics, at a dinner in the Kansas room of the Union at 5:30 p.m. Feb. 24. His talk will open the cultural conference sponsored by the Associated Women Students and entitled "Blue Printing Tomorrow." Dr. Ise will include in his talk a discussion of art, literature, music, and religion, and their importance in the everyday lives of women. Shirley Wellborn, president of the A.W.S. will preside over the program at the dinner. Approximately 300 women will attend, she said. WEATHER Kansas-Partly cloudy, becoming much colder today and tonight. Partly cloudy tomorrow. Continued cold. Strong northwesterly wind today. High today in 40s north and 60 south. Veterans' Rent Goes Up April 1 At Sunflower Rents for veterans living at Sunflower will increase when the veterans subsistence bill goes into effect April 1, Mrs. D. S. McClintock, rental adjustment secretary at Sunflower, said today. A married veteran living in Sunflower now pays a rental charge of one-fourth his $90 a month income, plus a furniture rental ranging from $3 to $6 a month. Students who commute on the bus from Sunflower to Lawrence pay slightly lower rent than those who have cars. Transportation costs are subtracted from the original $90 before the 25 percent rental fee is figured. A maximum fee of one-fourth the new subsistence income will be charged. Students receiving $105 a month will pay a monthly rent of $26; those receiving $120 will pay $30. This is an increase of approximately $4.50 a month. Furniture rents won't change. These increases will not affect disabled veterans going to school under Public Law 16, as they will not receive any boost in subsistence. NY Editor To Talk Here John Mason Brown, associate editor of the Saturday Review of Literature, will speak at an all-University convocation March 11. His subject will be "Seeing Things." Mr. Brown, called the "dean of New York drama critics," is the author of several books including, "Two on the Aisle," "Broadway in Review," "Upstage," "Insides Out," and "The Modern Theatre in Revolt." In 1923 he was graduated from Harvard university with a degree cum laude. For the next four years he was associate editor and dramatic crific of Theatre Arts Monthly. He went to the New York Evening Post in 1929 as dramatic critic and there there until 1941, when he left for the radio adaptation with New York World-Telegraph. Shortly after the outbreak of World War II, he entered the navy and took part in both the Sicilian and Normandy invasions. Education Dean To Speak In East George B. Smith, dean of the School of Education, will leave today for Atlantic City, N.J., to speak before the American Association of School Administrators and the National Association of Colleges and Departments of Education. He will then attend the meeting of University alumni in Washington, D.C. He will show the film of the Kansas-Missouri football game. He will return Feb. 29. Scarab Elects Bradley Head; Pledges To Give Party Jack R. Bradley, Jr., engineering senior, was elected president of Scarab, professional architectural fraternity, at a meeting Tuesday. Other officers are Glenn A. Horst, vice-president; Edward G. Hart-ronft, secretary; Wayne D. Johnson, treasurer; John C. Monroe, sergeant-at-arms; and William G. Yost, historian. The officers will be formally installed at a business meeting March 2. Pledges will give a party for initiates Feb. 25. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, FEB. 19, 1948 Internal Revolt Improbable Says New Indian Student Civil war is not expected by the people of India, Baagar Shirazi, new K.U. student from India, told a-University Dally Kansan reporter today. Shirazi, who left Bombay Jan. 1, said, "The fighting is not organized by any political party. The rioting is mostly led by hoodlums. The government can not stop it because it flares up in one place and dies down and Official Bulletin Feb.19,1948 Fhi Chi Theta, 7 tonight, East room, Union. A. W.S. Senate, 4 today, office of dean of women. Mortar board, 9 tonight, office of dean of women. International club, 7:30 tonight. Henley house. Tau Sigma dress rehearsal, 6:30 10 tonight, Community building. Attendance requested. Pre-medical students who did not take the medical aptitude test Feb 2, and wish to enter medical school in September, should arrange at Guidance Bureau office for special examination. ___ Students with last names beginning with letters U-Z may obtain fall semester grades today at Registrar's office. Any others who failed to get grades earlier this week may do so tomorrow. Morning devotions each day, 8:30- 8:50 a.m., during Lent at Danforth chapel. Math club, 5 today, 211 Frank Strong, Joe Hull to speak on "Sine Waves." Refreshments. Slide Rule class, 7 tonight, Lindley auditorium. Repetition of material presented Monday. Sociology club, 4 today, Little Theater, Green hall. C. S. Smith, speaker. Refreshments. spiker hierher Verein wird sich Donnerstag um 4:30 in 402 Fraser versammeln. Christian Science organization 7:30 tonight, Danforth chapel. Alpha Phi Omega, 7 tonight, Pine room, Union. All new undergraduate students who failed to take entrance tests given at the morning session, Jan. 31, should report to Lindley Hall auditorium before 2 p. m. Saturday for the make-up. A.LCH.E. dinner dance, 6:30 p.m. Saturday, Kansas room, Union building. Intermission entertainment program. $2.75 per couple. Home Economics club Washington's birthday party, Tuesday, Feb. 24, 7:30 p.m. Sign in office before 4 p.m. tomorrow. All men students interested in part-time jobs for the spring semester must report to the Men's Student Employment office no later than Saturday if they wish to keep employment applications active. Unitarian Liberal club, 7:30 p.m. Sunday, Fine room, Union building. Tom Rehon to speak on "German Faschin, American Style." Quill club will meet at 8:30 p.m. today in Wifeo museum, Fraser ball. Members bring returns from Trend sales. Students Need Part-Time Jobs Dwight Deay, student employment counselor, will canvass Lawrence merchants this week to find job opportunities for students. Applicants now outnumber jobs two (to one), but all jobs have not been tifed, said Wilfis Tompkins, assistant dean of men. Those still open require special hours or bureau records show. Letters urging the employment of students have been sent to all University departments as a part of the campaign for jobs. University Daily Kansan Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage) Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and weekends. Faculty hayship information periods vary. In second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence. Kan., under act of March 3, 1870. "and then flares up again in another place." Fighting Between Two Parties Shirazi said that letters he has received from home say that fighting now is between the two Hindu parties, the Mahasabha party and the Congress party. The assassination of Mehandas K. Ghandi by a member of the Mahasabha party has caused friction between the two parties, but Shirazi believes only minor riots have resulted. "Communism is not a threat to India," Shirazi went on to say. "The Communist party is one of the minority parties." He believes that India has a strong central government and can suppress any threat of Communism that might come into the country. Ghandi Death Makes No Difference The death of Ghandi will not make any difference for the present time in government affairs of India, Shirazi believes. He added that Ghandi was loved by everyone, and he strove for peace between the two Hindu parties. "Ghandi is not dead to the people of India, he is a living symbol. He has left so much behind him to remind the people of him." Shirazi believes the American people do not get enough thorough news about India." They receive only enough news to give them a vague idea of what is going on and they then jump to inaccurate conclusions," he said. Shirazi's home is in Bombay, and he studied for two years at the University of Bombay. He is majoring in mechanical engineering. UN Meeting Opens May 1 The third annual United Nations conference at the University will open May 1 with general assembly debates. The conference is sponsored by the International Relations club. Kenneth Beck, will be genera: chairman. His assistant will be Dale Judy. Both are College sophomores. Other committee chairmen are Marvin J. Martin, agenda committee; Margaret Meeks, secretarial and correspondence; Glenn Varenhorst, delegates; Eugene Martin, Jean Francisco, and Charlotte Thayer, agenda research listings; Clarke Thomas and John Hinde, publicity. Any student who wishes to be a delegate to the conference should notify the political science department or the business office. Students Thanked For Generosity DE SOTO ADMINISTRATIVE SERVICE PEVENHURT A letter, received recently from the University of Trieste and addressed to students here, reads: "The students of the University of Trieste have greeted in the "Friendship" cargo ship, "Hoesier State," the everlasting symbol of the human brotherhood of the American people towards the Italian one. They beg you to present to the American people the sentiments of most heartful gratitude of the Italian people. We will not forget." Who Is House? BULLAGHER MOTORS PINE SERVICE GREAT Phone 1000 632-34 Moss. St. CARS SQUARE DEAL COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals Short Orders Malts Sandwiches Air Conditioned Open 5:30—12 p.m LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS 12 East Eighth Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned andPressed...65c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. andPressed...69c CASH AND CARRY ONLY You'll Be TOP MAN ON THE TOTEM POLE with a spring wardrobe from OBER'S CORD COATS in gray and tan, in cardigan and regular sport coat style, and in regulars and longs. $19.75 T SPRING SWEATERS both long sleeve and sleeveless and in a wide range of colors. $3.95 upward , SLACKS GALORE in gabardine and flannel and in the colors you like to wear. from $8.95 1 Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUTFITTERS First With What Men Want Most Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers. The Sophomores Score Again! First The Slobbovian Stomp And Now The Leap-Year Hop AN ALL STUDENT DANCE With Matt Betton and his Orchestra Saturday, Feb. 28 $1.75 A Couple Union Ballroom Weaings Ma Engagements Smith-Durr The engagement of Beverly Ann Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Merle Smith, Dodge City, to Victor Durr, son of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Durr, Dodge City, was recently announced at Templin hall by Mrs. Albert Schrumpt, housemother. Miss Smith wore a corsage of gardenias and roses. Ailean Beal and Eleanor Bradford, attendents, received corsages of red and white carnations. Mrs. Schrumpf wore Vanda orchids. Williams-Brooks Miss Smith is a College junior. The pinning of Mila Williams, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Williams, Topeka, to William K. Brooks, Kansas City, Mo., was announced recently at the Alpha Chi Omega house. Miss Williams was assisted by Jane Williams, Norma Lea Jones, Patricia Link, and Patricia Rutledge. She wore a corsage of orchids, and her attendants wore red and white. Cultra-Bales The engagement of Constance Cultra, daughter of Mrs. Nettie Cultra, Herington, to Gerald Bales, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. V. Bales, Herington, was announced recently at Templin hall. ☆ ☆ Miss Cultra wore a corsage of gardenias and roses. Norma Turpin and Rosemary Alderman, attendants, received corsages of red and white carnations. Miss Cultra is a College junior, and Mr. Bales is a College sophomore. Socially Speaking DU Pledge Delta Upsilon announces the pledging of William Salome, Wichita. - * * Delta Tau Officers Newly elected officers for Delta Tau Delta are: Dale Farr, president; Dale Marshal, vice-president; Ross Baker, recording secretary; Ron Wedble, corresponding secretary; Frank Wendland, treasurer; Pete Stubbs, sergeant - at - arms; Jack Emerson, guide. Phi Kappa Psi Entertains The pledge class of Phi Kappa Psi entertained the pledge class of Kappa Kappa Gamma at a dinner and dance Wednesday evening at the chapter house. Alpha KappaLambda announces the pledging of Alfred Moore, Kansas City, Mo., and Eugene E. Tinberg, Bonner Springs. Kanna Lambda Pledges Rabbi Speaks Rabbi Spokes Rabbi Joseph Levenson, Oklahoma City, spoke recently at Alpha Kappa Lambda. Pity The Woman Driver Chicago—(UP)—Inflation has hit municipal traffic court fines. Drivers now pay $2 to $10 for a parking ticket which used to cost $1. Speeding offenders pay $10 for their first and second offenses. They used to pay $3. Fort Worth, Texas—(UP)—Most people end up wearing glasses because their eyes are best suited to a cave man's way of life and they don't live like cave men. a St. Louis ontometrist claims. Today's 'New Look,' Either Dr. A. M. Sheffington, of the Graduate Clinic Foundation for Research Optometry, goes back to prehistoric man to explain why spectacles adorn so many noses. "Frehistorie man was a hunter and he developed outdoor distance-seeing skills," Dr. Skefington tok a meeting of western optometrists here. "In those days, poor outdoor vision meant death." So the cave man developed eyes that could see sharply at great distances, picking out saber-toothed tigers, etc., on the landscape. Come civilization, and man moved indoors. Instead of sighting down his spear to kill his evening meal, he used a knife and saw a set of figures under a 60-watt bulb. "During the last few generations we have moved our outdoor visual skills indoors, and required them to ficial environment for long hours function at arm's length in an artie every day," Dr. Skiftington said. Texas cowboys are a good example, he said. You seldom see a cowboy wearing glasses. That's because he uses his eyes cave man style. Soon as he forsakes the range and starts doing close work, it is likely he will have to wear glasses, too. Stay In Bed And Drink Fruit Juices Is Best Cold Treatment, Iowa Doctor Says Optometrists at the convention nodded their bespectacled heads in agreement. Des Moines, Ia.—(UP)—When you have sniffles, don't plan on getting over them for at least a week. That's the advice of Dr. H. E. Ransom, director of the city health department. "Instead of just lasting three days as colds do in the average year, the '1948 cold is lasting at least a week." $ \textcircled{4} $ "instead of just listing" 1948 cold is lasting at least a week. has Robert I. Parker, medical director of the board of education, agreed. Dr. Ransom said the difference in this year's cold crop is that victims have been suffering from severe sore throats, aches and pains of the body, and in some cases, fever. The cold is hanging on longer this year because of the "severity" of the virus infection, he explained. Virus Blamed Dr. Ransom described the virus as an "influenza virus" and added that the only difference between the common cold and influenza is the question of virulence. He said there are two methods of attack of the present colds: I. In the respiratory system. 2. In the gastro-intestinal system, which includes the gall bladder and Dyche To Exhibit Chancellor's Horse other intestinal organs. Drs. Ransom and Parker listed five things for a person to do when he starts getting the sniffles: Quiet Advised The horse, whose scientific name is Mesohippus biardii, lived in North America about thirty million years ago. This particular specimen was collected by the chancellor in the oligocene beds located in the bad lands of South Dakota. It was unearthed in the summer of 1946. Another specimen which will be exhibited is the skull and jaws of an animal called a giant pig. The scientific name is Archaeotherium mortoni. It was a plant-eating mammal which lived in North America about thirty million years ago. This specimen was collected in the oligocene beds of the bad lands in northeastern Colorado. The exhibit will be accompanied by photographs showing the work as it progressed. 1. Go into isolation immediately and stay there until all evidence of the infection has disappeared. Professor Rodkey gained recognition as a member of the varsity track squad when he was a student of the University. 3. Don't allow any outsiders into the home. The skull of a small, three toed horse, which was unearthed by Chancellor Deane W. Malott, is part of the special exhibit planned for March at Dyche museum. 5. Be sure and call the family physician if a fever develops and continues for more than 24 hours. By letting a cold continue without taking care of it, a person is taking a chance of developing pneumonia, abscessed ears, kidney involvements, pleurisy and other complications, the doctor said. 4. Drink plenty of fruit juices and eat only light foods. Fred S. Rodkey, '17, professor of history at the University of Illinois, visited friends at the University and in Lawrence Tuesday. Another Group Opposes Language Members of the Y.W.C.A. campus affairs committee expressed opposition to the foreign language requirement Wednesday. The committee gave two reasons for their opposition: 1. A 12 hour requirement would overweight division 1, giving it 24 required hours as compared with only 20 hours required in other divisions. Founder Of Local Sig Ep 2. Very few professors offer actual cultural background of the country with languages courses. Advocates of the requirements have chosen only isolated examples where the culture of the country is studied. It is not the general practice. A Typewriter Which Prints Typing that resembles professional printing can be produced by the new electric typewriter owned by the stenographic bureau. Proportional spacing enables the operator to make both left and right margins even. With a basic 32 units to a horizontal inch, the machine takes a varying amount of units for each letter. For example, "m" requires 3 units of space, while "i" takes only one unit. In addition to being adjusted for taking different amounts of space for letters, the electrical typewriter has two space bars. One space bar moves the carriage two units, and the second bar moves it three units. Symbols on the keyboard which are not on a regular typewriter include the dagger, double dagger, equal sign, paragraph mark, and the exclamation mark which is on one key. Quotation marks may be made either spread or crowded, according to the stenographer's fancy. Up And Coming The parking committee asks students and faculty members to put the front of their cars in the stalls rather than back into the spaces. This makes it easier to check the permits. Observe Parking Rules, Committee Asks Students Wayne Gugler, clerk of the parking committee, said today that students parking in zone "Q" are being tickets for parking on the wrong side of the street. Miss Margaret J. Adams, manager of the Stenographic Bureau, stated that they received the machine about December 10, 1947. Making multilith plates to be used for large duplication jobs has been the chief use of the typewriter to date. Tau Kappa Epsilon party, chapter house, 9 to midnight. Friday Jolliffe dance, 1505 Ohio, 9 to midnight. Corbin open house, Corbin hall, 9 to midnight. Sigma Nu formal dance, Lawrence country club, 9 to midnight. Saturdav Tau Kappa Epsilon luncheon dance, chapter house, 12 to 23 p.m. Student chapter of American Institute of Chemical Engineering dinner dance, Kansas room, Union, 6:30 to midnight. Delta Upsilon formal dance, Eldridge Crystal room, 9 p.m. to midnight. Such A 'Nice Old Fellow' Rapid City, S. D.,—(UP)—The $10 check which the "nice old fellow" cashed at a Rapid City bar bounced. It was signed: "Youar Stung." GALES American Custom Chocolates, $1.75 STOWIT'S Rexall STORE Win At Bridge Vartan A. Culaian and Merlin J. Huxtable won high score in a bridge tournament Wednesday in the Union. Their score will be mailed in to the intercollegiate bridge committee to compete with scores from 163 other colleges and universities. The 16 highest ranking teams will be invited to a "face-to-face" final round to be played in Chicago, April 23. Expenses will be paid by the intercollegiate bridge tournament committee. Gulaian and Huxtable won by 11.0 to 10.0 over James E. Feiz and Ernest R. Schlachter. Other contestants were Fredrick M. Dancke and James W. Walker, and Harry E. Zoller and Charles D. Williams. Charme Beauty Salon formerly Iva's Beauty Shop phone 533 Nettie L. Wolfe, Owner RISK'S HELP-YOURSELF LAUNDRY All types of beauty work by canvable operators. Mid-winter special price on permanents machine and machineless. Maytag Machines Line Space Reasonable Rates Weekdays 9-6 Saturdays 9-3 1900 III.—Phone 623 Johansen Johansen 'OUTLINES' your shoe wardrobe with PIPED PROFILES Available in Cherry Red and Jade Green Bow Piped with White Kidskin Bags to match. 5.95 to $20.00 plus tax. Yes, Johansen Bags to match. 5.95 to $20.00 plus tax. LS knows how to define a pretty 'shoe...borders a bow with colorful contrast or 'gives a silhouette look to the shoe itself. Dramatic detail with the handling of a perfectionist...fortunate finds, all! EXCLUSIVE WITH US THE Walker SHOP 813 Mass. Phone 259 X-ray Fitting Music All Day Charge and layaway accounts invited wildcats Roll Over KU In 'Bloodless Massacre' Life was full of surprises last night at Manhattan. Suprise No. 1: Not a drop of Jayhawker blood was shed! The only "massacre" occurred on the basketball court as Jack Gardner's free-wheeling Wildcats shellacked the visitors from Lawrence, 48 to 29. Surprise No. 2: Hardly a "boo" was heard all evening in the jammed SPOTLIGHT on SPORTS By BOB DELLINGER Daily Kansan Sports Editor It looks as though the first Big Seven basketball champion will be the team which never won one, or even came close to it, when the Big Six was still alive. The Kansas State Wildcats really have it this year, with a well-rounded offense, a good defense, and capable reserves. If the impending loss of Clarence Brannum doesn't hurt their attack too much, we see the Aguies as 1948 champs. And Manhattan students really are backing their title contenders. At 1 p. m. Wednesday, lines began to form at the entrances to Nichols gymnasium, a field house in slightly worse condition than our own Robinson gym. By 3 p. m. lines were growing rapidly, and at 4, still three and a half hours before game time, the lines extended three or more blocks in five directions. Student Bob Parizo of Manhattan was first in line, as he started his six-hour vigil at the doors at 1 p.m. Sorority members put up sack lunches for those in line, and fraternity men served them. There were more bridge games in line than cards in a deck. *** All the ugly rumors circulated before the game were based on the usual foundation of rumors - air. The K. U. soudu received a tremendous hand when it made its first appearance on the court, and when Coach Phog/Allen walked in a few moments later, the gym rocked with cheers. Otto Schnellbacher received an ovation when he left the game on fouls with a few minutes remaining. The crowd was sportsmanlike to the utmost, even at the start when the Jayhawkers refused to let go of the ball and played the old-time delibereate freeze. Kansas took only three shots in the first half, making one at the 6-minute mark, one at the 12-minute mark, and missing one as the gun sounded. * * Five radio stations handled the game, KOZY-KCKN of Kansas City,KVGB of Great Bend,WIBW of Topeka, and KSAI of Salina. Larry Stanley, sports editor of KFH, Wichita, was in the stands, but left his microphone at home.A recording of the game was piped to the Aggie student union building as the game progressed. Thirty-five press representatives and three photographers completed the official staff, but flash cameras were numerous throughout the crowd, and bulbs kept flashing as the Wildcats drove in for baskets. One ardent camera fan devoted himself to taking pictures of the K-State cheerleaders. Overweight Causes Sore Feet In Army Fort Lewis, Wash.—(UP)—Overweight soldiers at this army base are going in for the "new look" by subscribing to a diet consisting principally of lettuce, salads and leafy vegetables. The army explained the mass reducing followed discovery that of the 25 men who reported on sick call with sore feet, each was about 50 pounds overweight. Army officials said the reducing plan was guaranteed to take off from four to six pounds a week. renzy-filled Nichols field house; nearly all of the 3,000 Aggie students cheered the Kansas team and Phog Allen as though they were cousins of Milton Eisenhower. They cheered each Kansas starter as he was announced on the loud speaker, and they gave 15 special cheers for Otto Schnellbacher when he left the game on fouls. Surprise no. 3; Dr. F, C. Allen's strategy in the first half of the ball game, which amazed Kansas followers as well as Aggies. With the surprise insertion of Gib Stramel into the starting lineup for Jack Eskridge, Phog had his cagers playing an exaggerated version of Oklahoma Aggie basketball that bewildered the Wildcats for the first six minutes of the ball game, and built a 3 to 0 lead K-S Tightens Guard But then things went haywire, Gardner tightened his defense and this forced the Jayhawkers to make mistakes that Kansas State quickly turned into scores. Still the Kansas strategy continued to slow the game. After nine minutes the score stood at 5 to 3, Wildcats, and after 12 minutes it read 7 to 3 as Shannon hit. The home club clung to that lead until halftime, when the score favored them by 14 to 9. Harmon Goes Wild But in the second half came the explosion. Rick Harmon, rangy Wildeat forward, potted a free shot and shook his guard for two easy setups in the first two minutes to give the Purple a 19 to 9 advantage. The Kansas offense quickened its efforts somewhat at that point, which left them vulnerable to the vaunted Kansas State fast break. Hal Howey, Harmon, and "Dud" Branum split the cords successively to add to some occasional free throws and hike the lead to 29 to 12 after eight minutes had clicked off in the last half. Kansas State tossed in an amazing 14 out of 15 free throws in the last half, and seldom missed from the field as they passed and criss-crossed a pattern under the Kansas basket that resembled the workings of a Swiss watch. Game Is Clean. The tenor of sportsmanship at Manhattan was reflected on the court as well as in the stands. Only 17 fouls were called on the Wildcats and 21 on the Jayhawkers. Not a single player-feud marred the contest as the ten athletes and two officials conducted their chores with business-like precision. Jerry Waugh's sparkling play was the most cheering sight for the few from Mt. Oread. The slim quarterback cooled Hal Howey to one field goal for the evening while pacing the impotent Kansas attack himself with two beauties from far out and five free tosses. Fitchburg, Mass. — (UP) — For a while the faithful customers of barber Joseph Di Santo could be identified by their shaggy hair. Men Go 'Long Hair' But Not Over Music Not that Di Sando is a poor barber. He just got tired of snow and cold weather and went off to Florida, leaving a sign in his one-man shop: "Save Haircuts for Me "I always come back." Fuel Oil 'Delivery' Costly Winthron, Mass.—(UP) “Two“deliverymen” arrived at Dr. Wallace Haley's home in a tank truck, and ran a robe line into the cellar. After they had departed, the doctor discovered they had siphoned off 150 gallons of his precious fuel oil. Times, In Emporia Ray Evans, all-American Jay-bawker halfback, sat through a triple feature at Emporia Tuesday, and was a star in each production. Evans made the trip to show the K. U.-Georgia Tech Orange Bowl movies. At noon the Rotarians viewed the films and in the afternoon Evans commented on the pictures before a student audience. Last to see the performance, according to an account in the Emporia Gazette, was the Kiwanis club at its night meeting. Kansas lost all three times. Daytime noise on the average busy American street is loud enough to impair a person's hearing by 25 to 33 per cent, according to Encyclopaedia Britannica. Bob Karnes, Hal Moore, Hal Hinchee, and Bob Morris, composed the team which gave Kansas the cross country title. The jackets will be similar to those worn by K: U's championship football team. Members of the Jayhawker cross country team, winners of the Big Six championship this season, will be awarded varsity letters, jackets, and gold track shoes, Coach Bill Easton said today. Easton also announced today that Clifford Abel of Perry; Dwayne Crowl of Bethel, and Dave Bresidental of Kansas City, Mo., will receive freshman numerals. These men qualified by running the local two-mile cross-country course in 11:15. Two-Mile Champs Will Get Jackets EYE Call K. U. 251 With Your News WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES EYE Large Selection of Distinctive Frames Finest Juices at Low Prices! It's Krogers For Lawrence Optical Co. Better Values To Cut The Cost Of Living BLENDED JUICE 37c Keeps Delicious 2-46 oz. cons Kroger Delicious, 2.46 oz. cans ORANGE IUCE 32c Kroger Delicious, 2.46 oz. cans ORANGE JUICE Treesweet 46 or. can GRAPEFRUIT JUICE GRAPEFRUIT JUICE Krogers, Sugar Added, 2 46 oz. cans Krogers, Sugar Added, 2 46 oz. cans TOMATO WICE 23c PINEAPPLE JUICE Libbys, 46 oz. can TOMATO JUICE Krogers, 46 oz. can BLENDED JUICE Kroger Quality, 3 No. 2 cans Spotlight Hot-Dated, 3 lb. bag COFFEE $1.15 FRESH BREAD Wonder or Butternut Loaf 14c Sirloin Steak lb. 65c Kroger Cut CRISCO $1.18 Pure vegetable, 3 lb. jar. PIE CHRIES 25c Krogers, No. 2 can SAUSAGE 57c Rodeo Link, Ib. Tomato Paste 11c Conadina, 6 oz. can Delrich Oleo 42c E Z Pak, ib. FILLETS lb. 39c Rose Fish WHITING 29c Pan Ready, 2 Ibs. SHRIMP lb. 89c Vein-X ROAST lb. 49c Chuck SEEDLESS GRAPEFRUIT 8 lb. bag 29c JONATHAN APPLES Bu. $2.19 TOMATOES Ripe-Firm lb. 29c Seed Potatoes ORDER NOW! kroger IAYHAWKER NOW, Thru Tuesday Shows 2:30-7-9 Mickey IN A NEW ROCK'EM, SOCK'EM TYPE OF ROLE! Mickey ROONEY as KILLER McCOY with Brian DONLEVY Ann BLYTH James DUNN Added: World News GRANADA Now, Ends Saturday CURSED in a strange house of hate where no love had lived for 100 years! BEWITCHED in the eyes of an ancient woman . . . whose deathless witch forbade all love YET ... SEE with Robert CUMMINGS Susan HAYWARD Added: World News & Color Cartoon "THE LOST MOMENT" VARSITY -Hit No.1 ___ NOW, Ends Saturday "DICK TRACY MEETS GRUESOME" (Boris KARLOFF) Hit No.2-- Allan LANE "BANDITS OF DARK CANYON" PATEE TONITE, Ends Saturday Greatest of all Novels on the screen Henry FONDA "Grapes of Wrath" SUNDAY T SUNDAY One Week "DESTRY RIDES AGAIN" "WHEN THE DALTONS RODE" of yee field at 4% KM Or yeah. H poin New Loy in imp hop Stit two H aga 2:00 and Ka mo the hit Okla E nar out ever spri Hut bra Mo H on ma Mo im low mee 717 Cornhuskers Are Favored To Take Indoor Track Dual Kansas track forces will pick up a distance reinforcement in Bob Morris for their indoor track meet with Nebraska at Lincoln Saturday, but Cornhuskers still will be favored by a 25-point margin. It will be the final dual meet for both squads before they enter the Big Seven conference indoor trials Feb. 28 in Kansas City. Morris, who has missed both previous meets because of the flu, will strengthen the Jayhawkers where they already boast plenty of power, in the two-mile. He finished 16th last November as Kansas swept the conference two-mile title. He will join Bob Karnes and Hal Moore in the two-mile and could help the Jayhawkers to a slam in that race. Karnes, defending indoor and outdoor two-mile king, hasn't been pressed in either event in two meets, coasting home easily against Missouri and Oklahoma. Moore finished second in both races against the Tigers while picking up a second and third against O.U. Karnes should easily shatter his meet record of 10:06.7 hung up last year on the same track. Only other favored Jayhawker will be Bob Crowley in the board jump and Tom Scofield in the high jump. Unless the Huskers' Harry Meginnis gets back into action, Crowley should win with ease. Meginnis, league outdoor champion, is out because of a pulled muscle. Meanwhile the Huskers have picked up only two places in four meets in this event. Sophomore Bob Bunten is another Kansas point getter here. Scoffield may get his toughest test of the indoor season against N.U.'s "Vante Kinder, who cleared 6' 3½" against Kansas State Tuesday. Scoffield had to go only 6' 1¾" to win at Norman, but skipped over 6' 4½" in the opener against Missouri. K.U.'s Delvin Norris and N.U.'s Orville Glass have bested 6'2" this year. Kansas also hopes to bring home points in the 440 and 880. Although Nebraska's Bill Moorhouse and Loyal Hurlburt have been turning in better times, the Jayhawkers are improving each week and have hopes that either Bill Binter, John Stites or Dick Wagstaff will take two of the top three spots. Hurlburt, shifted to the 880 against Kansas State, turned in a 2:00.5 performance in his first effort and may remain in that race against Kansas. Jim Martin, Omaha sophomore clipped off 1:59.6 in winning the Wildcat dual. K.U.'s Dick Shea hit 2:00.9 in finishing second against Oklahoma. Except for hurdler Frank Stannard, the Jayhawkers face a bleak outlook in the remaining five events. The Scarlet boasts two good sprinters in football halfback Dick Hutton and Alan Thomson, and a brace of top hurdlers in Bill Mooney and Bob Berkshire. Hutton nicked one-tenth of a second, off the conference 60-yard dash mark of :63.3 against State while Mooney, recast from sprints to hurdles, was equalling the 60-yard low stick mark of :65.9 in the same meet. Varsity Box Score KANSAS STATE (48) | | fg ft mpf pt tp | | :--- | :--- | | Howey, f | 1 0 0 3 .2 | | Harmon, f | 4 5 0 2 13 | | Brannum, c | 3 2 1 2 8 | | Dean, g | 2 2 0 1 6 | | Shannon, g | 4 2 1 2 10 | | Krone | 1 2 2 1 4 | | Clark | 0 2 0 2 2 | | Langton | 0 3 2 3 3 | | Magoney | 0 0 0 1 0 | | Weatherby | 0 0 0 0 0 | | Thurston | 0 0 0 0 0 | | Bell | 0 0 0 0 0 | | Patrick | 0 0 0 0 0 | | Thornton | 0 0 0 0 0 | | 15 18 | 6 17 48 | KANSAS (29) Schnellbacher, f 2 2 2 5 6 Stramel, f 1 1 1 3 3 Waugh, c 2 5 0 3 9 Houchin, g 1 1 0 2 3 Sapp, g 0 0 0 1 0 Enns 0 3 1 3 3 England 0 0 0 1 0 Eskridge 1 3 0 1 5 Barr 0 0 0 1 0 Penny 0 0 0 0 0 Mabry 0 0 0 1 0 7 15 4 21 20 Officials: Ogden and Ellis. Halftime score: Kansas State 14, Kansas 9. Officials: Ogden and Ellis. California produces 90 per cent of the United States apricot crop. Lose First In 2 Years The Sig Alph's dropped their first game in two years as the Phi Delt's trounced them 40 to 12 to head the "seven intramural games last night. The Phi Delt's could make no mistakes as they flooded the nets with a deluge of buckets. Holding the previously unbeaten Alph's to only two free throws in the first half, the Phi Delt's, were paced by Quiring with 14 points. Aces High Still Unheated The undefeated Aces High quintet rolled on with a 39 to 21 victory from Spooner Thayer. Clark got 11 and DeLuna, 10 for the Aces. Sanchez starred for the losers with eight points. The Wheelin' Dealer handed the L.M.O.C. five an 18 to 13 defeat to gain their second triumph of the year. Davis led the winners with six points while Berger was high for the losers with five. Tom's Boys captured a tight 24 to 23 contest from the Bounders in picking up their first victory. Dork marked up eight counters for the winners while Bowbridge took the game's high scoring honors with 12 points for the Bounders. Airscrews Soar On Duggins collected nine points and Armstrong eight to pace the Airscrews to a 26 to 21 triumph over the Kappa Psi's. Greenhaw kept the losers in the ball game with seven points. In two “B” games Delta Chi whipped Phi Kappa, 31 to 13, and Sigma Nu topped the Nu Sig's, 27 to 22. Call KU 376 with your Want Ads. WESTINGHOUSE 168 A beautiful piece of furniture to make your home more beautiful plus these features Rainbowtone f. m. & a.m.-Record Changer COLLECTOR'S EDITION Storage space for 350 records Oliver Service Company Authorized Dealer Call 253 Mass 723 GOLFING Professional Laundering will avoid that It's embarrassing to be caught short on your Shirt! Call 432 INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners 740 Vermont TMCA Cage Squad Deleais RC team The University Y. M. C. A. basketball team defeated the Lincoln Junior college varsity squad for the second time this year in a fast 48 to 45 contest. The game was played Feb. 12 at the junior college gymnasium in Kansas City, and was part of the regular schedule of Lincoln's varsity squad. Hardy Scheuerman and Bob Payne $ \textcircled{4} $ Hardy Scheuerman and Bob Payne of the Y. M. C. A. shared scoring honors for the game with 14 points each. Wenbougeran of the local squad, scored 12. White, with 11 points, was high for Lincoln. Basketball Results Villanova 68, Seton Hall 60 LaSalle 55, Penn 43 Colgate 59, Syracuse 56 Dartmouth 76, Yale 68 Princeton 59, Columbia 54 (ot) Navy 40, Penn State 36 Connecticut 50, Army 49 Bethany 39, Baker 32 Georgia 65, Georgia Tech 58 North Carolina State 70, Duke 37 New Mexico 50, Texas Tech 43 IWW Will Meet A D Pi In Finals Read the Want Ads daily. I. W. W, handed Kappa Alpha Theta a 43 to 26 trouncing Wednesday night to enter the finals of the women's intramural basketball tournament. They will meet Alpha Delta Pi for the title Feb. 24. The I. W. w. team was deadly from the field, hitting 45 per cent of their shots in both halts. Hoffman, tall I. W. W. forward, laying in 11 field goals and three free throws for 25 points. BILL'S GRILL QUICK COURTEOUS SERVICE 1109 Mass. Across from Phone 2054 the Courthouse QUICK COURTEOUS SERVICE Fellas, Get Your Dates Now HOB NAIL HOP March 13 CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE BATTERIES ACME TIR CITIES SERVICE "But, Dear, if the car will run on the battery why does this man put in gasolene?" CITIES SERVICE Because it's the gasolene that puts the pep and go into the engine, lady. And for real pep we suggest Koolmotor Gasolene. You see, Koolmotor is a balanced gasolene, blending high-octane, anti-knock elements with power-full components to give your car flashing pickup, speed and power. Make this test yourself. Drive into a Cities Service Station for a tankful of Koolmotor. Step on the starter, and let 'er go. Watch that quick "get-away" and feel that surging power on the hills and straightaways. Try Koolmotor Gasoline today—at Cities Service. CITIES SERVICE CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. CITIES SERVICE Phone 4 CITIES SERVICE 8th & N. Hampshire This Is America Calling There are a lot of people in Europe and alsewhere who have peculiar ideas about Americans. Some of them believe we are a dollar mad, tough talking, gum chewing nation of businessmen. Our women are generally believed to be enthroned on pedestals and surrounded by electrical appliances. The only conversational exchange we are ever suposed to engage in is talk of stocks and bonds in a club locker room. We bolt our food, pamper our children, sneer at culture, and so it goes. One of the chief sources of these misconceptions is Hollywood. Our film capital distributes American motion pictures all over the world. In many places that's the only "Americana" the people ever hear or get to know about. That's like reading Dick Tracy to find out the latest in scientific crime detection. Hollywood Killers The average Englishman, for example, must have a tough time figuring us out. Britain just recently experienced its first police slaying in six years. Burt Lancaster, the Hollywood actor, could easily account for five times that many in one American film. The English evidently have some qualms about doings in the local constabulary. To judge by our films, Britishers might well believe we haven't. This and other odd conclusions about Americans which have been spread abroad by American films need to be counteracted. Fortunately there is an agency of our government that can do a lot to correct these Hollywood-sired ideas. That agency is the Voice of America. Propaganda Arm The Voice of America is our propaganda arm in Europe. By radio it reaches into almost every country abroad. It has suffered considerably in the past from a niggardly congress, but it now seems to be pretty well on its feet. When the Voice of America first began to beam its broadcasts to Europe, it attempted to show Europeans just what we are like on our side of the ocean. It went about the job by playing "Turkey In The Straw" as representative American music. Americans were portrayed as a bunch of cracker-barrel philosophers who believe in all the virtues and sit around exchanging homilies all day. Luckily for Americans this approach didn't last long. Comprehensive Broadcasts The broadcasts now try to give a comprehensive view of what Americans are like. No attempt is made to conceal or suppress the truth about what we are doing and thinking. It is hoped that the Voice of 'America will continue to try and enlighten Europeans about American customs and modes of living. Too often agencies of this kind devote most of their time to political broadcasts in an attempt to do a little international ax - grinding. Someone has to let the world know we aren't a nation of "cop-killers." The Voice of America could do it. Everybody in radio is worried about Bob Hope's falling Hooper rating except Bob Hope. He probably figures that if radio kicks him out, he can always get a good job out at the Crosby stables. After all he's given them a lot of free plugs the past 10 years. India's Population While trouble in India seems to center on the Hindu-Moslem conflict, many Americans see the burden of over-population as a major problem of the governments of Pakistan and India. How almost three times as many people as there are Americans can live in an arga half the size of the U. S. is beyond the imagination of the average Midwesterner. It can best be explained by saying that the Indians don't "live." They merely exist. Population Predictions Even more provoking are the statisticians' predictions that the population of India will reach 700 million by the year 2000,barring a major disaster. Why does the population continue to increase when the country can't support its present number? Logic can give no answer. History and statistics can. Even in the U.S. birth rates are highest in rural areas, particularly in lower-income areas such as the Ozark and Southern Appalachian mountains. It is generally agreed that farmers all over the world have larger families than urbanites. India is almost entirely an agricultural nation. Hindu Religion Hindu Religion But that one fact doesn't explain India's phenomenal rise in population. To see this one must look to the Hindu religion. The Hindu believes in life after death, but his time in heaven depends upon the welfare of his descendants. He believes that he may stay in heaven only as long as his descendants live. That means he must plant the roots of his family tree before he dies. One son might seem enough to the average American. But in India the average human being lives only 30 years. Two sons give the Indian a slim chance for heavenly peace, and he's gambling with anything less than five or six. Indian leaders recognize the need for some birth control. However, they realize to enforce such control would directly oppose the Hindu religion. Such a plan seems Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Editorial Assn., Inland Daily Press Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York City. Daily Hansan Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Editor-in-Chief William C. von Maurer Managing Editor Alan J. Stewart Assst. Man. Editor Cooper Kramer Assst. Man. Editor Lesa Lauer City Editor Gene Vignery Asst. City Editor James Robinson Telegraph Editor Wallace W. Abbey Telegram Editor William Thorne Asst. Tel. Editor William Barger Sports Editor Robert E. Dellinger Asst. Sports Editor Paul Zeh Sports Editor James Jones Women's Sports Editor Ana Mary Murpry Feature Editor Patrick Editor Hal Nelson Society Editor Dorothy James Business Manager Bettie Bacon Robert Sanger Circulation Manager Otto Man Classified Adv. Man. Paul Warner Inst. Class, Adm. Don David Clydon Nest Promotion, Mt. Man. Wister Shreve The Kansas Press Association 19 MEMBER 48 National Editorial Association A FREESPRESS—YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW UNITED STATES OF AMERICA doomed to failure. Without an alternative plan India faces a population increase that will lower her standard of living to the bottom of the Ganges.—Paul Conrad. In the 20's it was bootlegging. During the war it was hoarding and black-marketing. Nowadays if you want to cast aspersions on the good name of a person high in the public's esteem, you simply accuse him of commodity speculation. A New York court has ruled that it is against the law to call a man a Communist. The court decision seems trifle unjust until one realizes that in some Southern states an indiscreet use of the word Republican sometimes is enough to cause a riot. Call KU 376 with your Want Ads. Parker 51 Fountain Pens Super Chrome Ink STOWIT'S Rexall STORE BRICKS IS NOW OPEN SUNDAYS SERVING THE BEST CHICKEN DINNERS IN THE WEST - U.S. CHOICE STEAKS - CHICKEN DINNERS - BAKED HAM with all the trimmings. CAMPUS EATING HOUSE BRICKS THE LEADING W. E. BRICK MURPHY, Prop. Exhibits from 28 high schools entered in the high school art conference are on display on the second floor of Frank Strong hall. Each school has submitted 10 entries of various phases of visual art. Display Art Exhibits will be judged on a basis of design, color, and workmanship. The purpose of the conference is to help art students overcome their faults. Judges for the conference are: Robert Cook, professor of art, University of Wichita and Miss Julie Keeler, high school art teacher from Des Moines, Iowa, and Miss Mary Margaret Warner, curator of Thayer Museum of Art. Schools represented are: Pratt and Senior high and Junior High schools, Augusta High school, Winfield Junior and Senior High schools, Garden City High school, Parsons Junior High school, Atchison Junior and Senior High schools, Olathe School for the Deaf, Concordia Junior and Senior High schools, Hays High school, El dorado Junior and Senior High schools, Chanute High school, Hutchinson High school, Mission Hills High school, Northwestern and Central Junior High schools, Kansas City, Kan.: Crane, Holliday, Boswell, Curtis and Roosevelt Junior High school, Topeka Palestine's proverbial milk has curled and her bees don't make honey anymore. They act more like hornets these days. ALL ALL SERVICE ALL HAVANA SERVICE SERVICE ALL ALL 2-800 UNION CAB CO. Books for Your Mid-Winter Reading are for sale and for rent here. Come in and see them. The Book Nook 1021 Mass. Tel. 666 Sunday Supper Buffet Style 5:30 - 7:30 The Castle Tea Room 13th Mass. Phone 149 "Always ready to serve" Daily Specials GEMMELL'S 717 Mass. Home Made Pies Phone 2072 Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan. BLOODING IN THE CAR NO JOB IS TOO TOUGH When the trouble lies deep in your auto motor, you can depend on our experienced FORD mechanics to get to the bottom of it. Drive in today for a cold weather check up. Morgan - Mack 609 Mass. Phone 277 THURSDAY, FEB. 19, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Not Gold Nor Furs, But Biting Flies Draws This Student To Icy Alaska Not gold nor furs, but biting flies will draw Edward Marks, graduate student. to Alaska after March 15. Marks, who expects to complete work for a master's degree in entomology, will go to Alaska to study the life history and the habitat of the territory's biting flies. Five other entomologists will go with him. They the United States department of agriculture. They want to learn how and where the biting flies live, Marks said. Later control groups will use the information to discover methods of killing off the flies. Marks and an entomologist from the University of Illinois will be stationed near Fairbanks. They will get information on flies in swamp and river areas, and will recommend ways of ridding Alaska of the insects. The 23-year-old veteran will return to the states in September to teach biology at the National College for Christian Workers in Kansas City, Mo. Fire and snow queens from Minnesota, the Dakotas and Wisconsin annually take part of the St. Paul winter carnival. Daily Kansan Classified Ads Phone KU 376 Classified Advertising Rates Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid by phone during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Business office, Journalism bldg, not later than 6 p.m. the day before publication is desired. Policeman Robbed While He Sleeps Detroit—(UP) — Patrolman Jack O'Kelley, who fell asleep in a squad car and was robbed of his pistol and flashlight, has been suspended for 60 days without pay by a skeptical police trial board. One Three Five day days five 25 words or less 35c 65c 90c additional words 1c 2c 3c Patrolman O'Kelley, however, testified that he was cold sober Feb. 7 when he was relieved of the tools of his trade by a thief who also drove the prowl car several blocks away from where it was parked. Board members expressed disbelief that anyone—especially a policeman—could sleep through such proceedings. For Sale Two fellow policeman told the board that during the war Patrolman O'Kelley often slept eight hours a day in a moving tank. 1932 4-DOOR Nash, 43,500 actual miles, good shape throughout. Good transportation. Some make a bid. Bigham 1134 Miss.拍照 BEAUTIFUL五-diamond ring. Call 684. LAW BOOKS: Excellent condition; also cases, bargains. See Wilson, 71; Mass. Wanted KODAK BANTAM, f. 4.5 camera and new $20. @ 2 EUTUNG, after 6 p.m. @ 2 EUTUNG, after 6 p.m. VETERANS! We will buy, trade or sell for you any Army or Navy gear in good condition that you may wish to procure. Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. Phone 669 HTFD S PARTMENT: furnished or unfurnished student, veteran, no children, 2 year occupancy. Call J. E. Greenhaw, 3020 after 6 p.m. FENCING FOIL; Spanish style handle preferred Fail Ann Mchner at 1245M. ONE K.U. student to share nice 2-room suite. 937 Ohio. Ph. 2521M. 23 FOR A BOY: one vacancy in double room. next to shower; twin beds. 833 ROOM FOR 2 boys, $3 each. Will rent as single for $4. Call 2618W or see at 912 Alabama after 5:00. Two blocks below stadium. 25 VACANCY: For one student in large double room. Modern home, 1½ blocks from campus; ½ block from city bus line, 1725 Indiana. Phone 2631W. 23 ONE DOUBLE room for two college mem location, reasonable rates. 1323 Kp Pk-300. BOOM FOR two bows or married couple. Cooking facilities. Ph. 1437W, 1731W VERY attractive room for two boys, twin beds, new campus. 133 Kv. Mrs. Oley, Bessie. ROOM for two boys or married couple. Private bath and entrance. Close to Umi- niya Hospital. Lost BROWN leather bilffold. Keep money, leave bilffold and other contents at Daily Kansas office or mail to F. L. Davis. 1924W. Campus. 23 GREY PENCIL to Parker 51 set. Lost Monday between Fowler Shops and Union Bldg. I. H. Hoover engraved on Call. Call 2183W. 19 ICK AND GOLD Eversharp pen and paper roll card aliquot 3129 O. C. Klin- n. in written on leather EVERSHAIR pen and pencil set. Gold topped tablet. Evening. Reward 2012, 2019, McGinling. BLACK AND SILVER Parker "51" four- pen list. Lean in or near Green half wall. This name is also written on lesson written on it. Finder please leave at Daily Kmana office. 19 Found ECOGNOMICS book in Fusser theater. Rosenstein's Kansan face upon payment of this ad. $23 Transportation RIDERS WANTED: Driving to Parsons via Ioka, Chanute, Erie, every Friday at 4:00 p.m. Call 3312 after 7:00 p.m. Walter Cox. 20 **DATHEMATICS Tutor:** Lucy T. Dougherty at 309 Maine. (By bus, 3 blocks west of Mississippi, or by path down the fill west of the stadium). Phone 3084M Miscellaneous ESTABLISHED part-time business in Lawrence. Will average $30 daily gross. No selling. Ideal for Professor, student, semi-retired person, anyone wanting to aid to income. Sources of standard nickel candy bar and candy bar inventory will be established candy bar candy store. Lew Phillips, G316 Oak St., K.C.M. Mo. MARCELLA'S Beauty shop moved to 342 Indiana St. Beautiful, soft, natural "Radio Beach" day and night appointments. Old and new patrons are appointed. Phone 520. 25 DANCE every Saturday night at odd Fel- low. Informal Jong Leng浪 orchestra. RIES EXPERIENCED baby sitter--mother; 35d an hour plus transportation; after midnight 50c an hour. Ph. 1879M, 1213 Ohio. 21 IS MY COAT for you? Your's is not likely to please contact Daipu Kansan for exchange. SUBSCRIBE to the Kansas City Star, call downtainers at Round Corner Drug Store. ALTERNATIONS and general sewing Reasonable press. Ph. 1968M, 110 Tcm press. Hand Movements Tell This Story Illustrating the importance of hand movements in speaking, E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, recently told a class, "I saw a girl walking down the street." His hands made the well-known, hour-glass figure. Then in a flatter tone, he added, "I saw another girl walking down the street." His hands dropped in straight lines. The class was impressed by the professor's choice of words. Freak Catfish Live In Texas Wells La Jolla, Calif. - (UP) - An eyeless albina catfish living 1,250 feet underground has been discovered in Texas' deep artesian wells. Two of the odd fish were pumped from wells near San Antonio and found to be "clearly members of the North American catfish family." They were completely devoid of external eyes and skin pigment, and measured about $3 \frac{1}{2}$ inches in length. Dr. Carl L. Hubbs of the University of California, who studied the strange fish, said their ancestors must have become trapped in the underground water system hundreds of years ago. Through the centuries they lost their eyes and skin pigment. 'Artists With Ideas Always Needed' Art students can readily get jobs after graduation, Scott Lilley, freelance artists, told the University Art club Tuesday. There are always openings in the fields of window decoration and fashion illustration for people with new ideas, he said "A fashion artist must learn the basic ideas of structure and elaborate on them as each new fashion trend makes its appearance," he explained. "The best way to do this is to practice constantly and get everything possible from instruction." Launderette Service Call KU 376 with your Want Ads 9 lbs. of wash, 25c 21 Bendix Washers 813 Vt. Phone 3368 Rip Brown's 5 BOPS SKYLINE — Wed-Fri-Sat Lawrence Laundry & Dry Cleaners Look Sharp! Feel Sharp! Be Smooth! MADISON ST. HOLLYWOOD If you want to keep that neat, presentable appearance— always — Let us keep your clothes looking sharp too! Expert and Guaranteed cleaning service. Pick-up & Delivery—Ph. 383 LAWRENCE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 1001 N.H. 20% discount cash and carry 12,000 'John Smiths' Give These Girls Of The VA Their Biggest Headache Washington—(UP)—Estyleene Rued is one of scores of government girls suffering from indexitis, an affliction that keeps her head buzzing with names—about 25 million of them. That's the number of names in the block-long master index file of the Veterans administration where clerks try to identify the millions of veterans who correspond monthly with the V. A. central office The name, "John Smith," gives them their biggest headache. If "John Smith" forgets to include his address or maybe gives the wrong one, she starts fingering "400 John Smiths" in the V. A. filgs. She soon reduces it to 800, the number of "John Smiths" who have no middle name or initial. Eustleye's next move is to see if the postmark is legible. If it is from Frank, Ky., and there's one "John Smith" her problem is solved. Maybe the letter was mailed from a city substation. Maybe "John Smith's" residence can be pinned down to some portion of the city. Or maybe he can be located through one of the other Smiths in town. If frequently takes several days to to break down the right "John Smith". Estyleane and her fellow-workers also have to worry about the 149.,000 Johnsonns, 121.000 Browns and 109,000 Joneses in the V.A. files. She also has 102 Eisenhowers on file, by the way. Members of the Society for the Advancement of Management will visit the Wilson Packing company, Kansas City, Mo., today. SAM Will Visit KC Plant The field trip is to acquaint the members with the forms of management used in the packing industry. Members will leave from the rear of Marvin hall at 12:10 p. m. both days. On KFKU Today 2:30 Music. 2:45 W. D. Paden Reviews. 9:30 Women of Kansas; Esther Clark Hill. Friday CHEF SEA FOOD A Specialty DUCK'S TAVERN 824 Vermont Who Is House? 9:30 Roundup of Editorial Opinion. 2:30 Music by Radio—Mildred Seaman. 9:45 KU Sports Parade — Mike Stuart. STERLING VALUES Made of selected hardwood. Maple finish, drop side. Size $24.95 28 x 52 Storkline Crib Nationally Advertised "Kantwet" Mattresses. Available in either innerspring or felted. $14.95 Other Baby Mattresses. $5.95 and up $5.95 and up Cricket Chair Maple frame, turned stock. Your choice of either beige, rose, or blue floral pattern. $11.95 Reg. Hi-chair $7.95 3-way chair $19.95 Hi-Chair folds down to table and chair. Has removable cushion, con-verting it into table and chair. Upholstered with red and blue leatherette. HIGHCHAIR Folds flat, suitable for trailers and small apartments. Sturdy Hi-Chairs Unfinished $2.98 Collapsible 10 Drum Table $12.95 Walnut finish, Duncan Phyfe style: Single Dr. $1 Down; Charge Balance Sterling Furniture 928 Mass. FREE DELIVERY Co. Phone 1192 PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, FEB. 19, 1948 Coming Weeks To Be Crucial, Otto Warns "Events of the next three weeks will be crucial ones for relations between the United States and Russia," warned Archduke Otto of Austria. In a discussion sponsored by the International Relations club and the Union Activities coffees and forums committee Wednesday, the archduke drew a parallel between today's situations and those of 1937 and 1939, when Hitler 'was in power. To cope with this situation, the United States could either appoint a genuine Korean government in south Korea, or better yet, hasten the authorization of an established political power chosen by the Koreans, which would be aided with Western arms. Otto said the campaigns in Greece are similar to those of 1941. "Hitler then sent Mussolini into Greece to test her strength," he said. "Stalin is trying the same tactics. Prisoners of war in Spain and Yugoslavia are offered a choice between fighting with the Greek guerillas and life imprisonment." Explaining his statement that the next few weeks should be watched carefully, Otto pointed to the formation of a communistic people's republic in the Russian zone of Korea. If not oppressed, Russia will try the same move in eastern Germany, he said. Russia To Close Factories Two Plans For Korea Another similarity between today's situation and the 1937-1939 period is the definite shift toward anti-Semitism, he added. Persecution of Jews in Russia is most likely just a diversion for the war-weary Russian people, Otto said. Russia plans to solve her manpower problem by shutting down all but the important factories in eastern Europe. Otto said. This would provide a labor pool from which the Russians could draw about $2^{1/3}$ million workers a year. "Russia no longer has enough workers within her own country because every young man is in the army. Farmers cannot be removed from their fields or food production will decline. New Books At Library Watson library recently received a selection of new books. Grouped according to their content, they are: Follett's son's town, by it is lilith, in the Kandan Kain- City and the Pendergast legend kings Psychology: The Reach of the Mind of an Autistic Child of nephathy is given consideration. Music: "The Columbia Book of Musical Masterworks," by Goddard Lieberson, contains material useful for program notes. "In Search of Beauty in Music," by Carl Seashore, is a scientific approach to musical esthetics. History: "The First Europe," by Cecil D. Burns. Mr. Burns studies the establishment of medieval Christendom. Design: "Discovering Design," by Marion Downer. Unusual designs are attractively portrayed. "American Interior Design," by Meyric R. Labor: "The Guarantee of Annual Wages," by A. D. H. Kaplan. The problems of labor and management are considered. Art: "Treasury of American Drawings," by Charles Slatkin and Regina Shoolman. Biology: "What Is Life," by John B. S. Haldane. German Club To Meet Today Selection from Mark Twain's "The Awful German Language" will highlight the program of the German club meeting at 4:30 p. m. to-day. Members will meet in 402 Fraser. Preceding the program, the members will sing German songs and play German games. 30 High Schools Here For Festival Thirty high schools are expected to take part in the annual speech and drama festival to be held March 12 and 13. The two-day program will include ten competitions. They are one-act plays, radio dramas, original orations, after -dinner speeches, humorous and dramatic readings, extemporaneous speaking, standard orations, informative speeches and prose readings. 49 Engineers Given Diplomas Degrees awarded to 49 engineering students at the end of the fall term were announced today by T. DeWitt Carr, dean of the School of Engineering. Students will receive diplomas after the approval of the board of regents and the chancellor. Graduates received the following degrees: Bachelor of science in aeronautical engineering—Lewis Carroll, Charles W. Dreyer, Jose J. Portugal, Lewis J. Walton. Bachelor of science in chemical engineering—Ralph S. Grant, James D. Waugh, Forrest A. Wilson. Bachelor of science in civil engineering—William H. Applegate, Pearce R. Butterfield, Thomas R. Hensley, J. Theodore V. Hickon, Harry R. Holzle, Donald L. Jarret, Harvey D. Johnson. Bachelor of science in electrical engineering — Henry L. Black, Laurel D. L. Fry, Anthony J. Granosky, Max H. Johnson, Bruno F. Loewen, Clyde A. McKale, James M. Miller, James H. Millington, Norton B. Rixey, Ralph W. Smith, Jr., Ted Tyler. Bachelor of science in engineering physics-Richard H. Finney John M. Hunt, Jack L. Westland. Bachelor of science in mechanical engineering — Altus E. Bradley. William F. Burgess, Jr., Frederick M. Daneke, N. Taghistrom, John L. Hayne, Robert W. Hoke, Jr., Wayne R. Johnson, Edward S. Keller, Kenneth R. Lewis, Roger W. Muir, Earl W. Pickerill, Robert E. Sherrer, John R. Thiele, Robert L. Wehe, George B. Westerhaus. Bachelor of science in metallur- gal engineering Anthony L. Lorenz Herbert J. Hill Jr, J.Clemmen Walter Josiah S. Turner, Gordon E. White Bachelor of science in petroleum engineering-Paul E. Schauer, Jr. Jane Davis, special student, was elected president of the Russian club, Wednesday. Other officers elected were Harry J. Chistoffers, graduate chemist, vice-president and Daniel M. Kirkhuff, College junior, secretary-treasurer. Russian Club Elects Jane Davis Kostka and his family were seized by Nazis during the German invasion of Poland. They were loaded on boxcars and sent to Siberia with two million other deportees. When they were released in June, 1941, Kostka said he knew of only 160,000 being similarly released. The state farm had a school which taught mostly mechanical subjects, because the Communist doctrine in history not poet or philosophers, he said. Edmund Kostka, Polish graduate student, spoke of his confinement in 1940-41 on a state farm in Siberia. International Club To Organize Today The executive committee of the International club will meet at 7:30 am, today in Henley house. Kostka will continue his talk at the next meeting of the club. Members of the committee are Marilyn Rust, chairman; Aldo Alliotti, and Samuel Duran. Advisors are Mrs. Christine Alford, Y.W.C.A. secretary, Ned Lingue, Y.M.C.A. secretary, and Willis Tompkins, assistant dean of men. Says US Troops Might Be Sent To Help Greeks Louisville, Ky., Feb. 19- (UP)—Loy W. Henderson, Secretary of State George C. Marshall's top expert on Greece, came as close last night as any American official thus far to warning that the United States will, if necessary, consider sending its troops to wipe out the Communist guerrilla movement in Greece. Henderson said that Greece, which he called "the cradle of democracy," and Turkey stand today as the two "firm obstacles" preventing international Communism from sweeping into the Mediterranean. He warned Soviet Russia, in the most significant American official stand on Mediterranean affairs since the Truman doctrine last year, that the United States "will not stand dly by" and permit Greece to fall victim to this on rushing movement. Speaks in Kentucky Henderson, a veteran career diplomat who is Marshall's director of the state department's office of Near Eastern affairs, spoke to the Kentucky Women's Action committee forum just two days after President Taruman warned that the things were not going well in Greece. Marshall had not seen Henderson's speech in advance. Neither, of course, could commit the United States to such last resort action as use of troops. It would take congressional action. But Henderson's speech is bound to get the maximum interpretation, especially in Greece. Greek officials are almost certain to interpret it as a promise that if things got bad enough, the United States will seriously consider full military intervention. Possible Greek Interpretation Veloz and Yolanda incorporated most of the big time acts that were at one time in vaudeville in their "Dansion of 1948," which attracted a near-capacity crowd to Hoch auditorium Wednesday night. Several senators privately expressed displeasure at Henderson's remarks and their implications. One prominent senator described it as "irresponsible" talk and said the issue would be fully aired when hearings start on more Greek military aid. Other congressmen thought it was time to re-examine Greek policy. The singing of Patricia Lynn, sobrano, was well received. Robert Garretson and William Teaford, duo pianists, pleased the audience with breezy interpretations of "Rhapsoy in blue," "Rito," "Powerhouse," and an excerpt from Rachmaninoffs "Second Concerto." Crowd Likes Dance Troupe They ran the gamut from the charm of the "Anniversary Song," through an assortment of Latin American dances, to the satirical comedy of "Darktown Strutters Ball" and a "Jitterbug Minuet," set to Paderewski's muste. The culmination of their performance was the transcendent version of the Argentine "Tango." The stars shared the spotlight with several top notch entertainers. Cardini, the magician, did amazing things with cards, balls, and cigarettes. John Molinari stopped the show with a glittering accordion turn. Amelia Gilmore offered a different type of dancing from that of the stars. From the hurricane-like applause it was evident that the audience thoroughly enjoyed the performances. L. S. De Atley, '33, has recently been elected chairman of the Technical Societies council for the Kannada Department of the American Chemical society. Alumnus of '33 To Post Mr. De Atley is a laboratory director for the Thompson-Hayward Chemical company. Quill Magazine A Sellout, No More Will Be Printed All of the 225 copies of Trend, a Quill club publication, were sold Monday. Only about 25 copies, which had been distributed to individuals to sell, were left. Janice Oehrle, Quill club president, said Monday night that there would not be another printing of this issue of the magazine because of the high cost of publication. Democrats Hold Annual Dinners Washington, Feb. 19 — (UP) President Truman tops the Jefferson-Jackson anniversary bill tonight at two $100-or-more-a-plate dinners here to raise funds for his presidential election campaign. It is a political occasion and a political speech is expected of the president. His remarks will be broadcast into the South where there are threats of rebellion against his government, and Henry A. Wallace is trying to raise a third party army to defeat him. 3.000 Democrats To Assemble Nearly 3,000 Democrats will assemble here for two dinners similar to those on a smaller scale in many other cities. Mr. Truman will dine with about half of the Washington governors and proceed then to the Hotel Mayflower o deliver the principal address of he at evening 10 p. m., E. S. T. One hundred bucks was the minimum for Washington Jefferson-Jackson dinners. Party officials explained there actually was no charge to those who will assemble here tonight. But all who gave $100 or more to the party for the occasion had been invited. On that basis the gross take here would be a minimum of $290,000, there being 2,000 places set at the two hotels for tonight. Headquarters Scotches Reports Democratic headquarters scopted reports that a dozen or more disgruntled Southern Democrats had canceled their reservations for the annual event here. Headquarters also had no information of cancellation of any dinners throughout the country. Gov. J. Strom Thurmond of South Carolina previously canceled reservations for himself and his wife, saying he had a change of plans. "There may be one or two more," a Democratic headquarters spokesman said. He said there was nothing to reports that Southern cancellations had come in great numbers. Business Fraternity Hears KC Merchant Rothschild spoke at a meeting of the business fraternity in the Kansas room of the Union building. He is a graduate of Yale university and president and treasurer of five retail stores in greater Kansas City and one in Oklahoma City. He is also a trustee of the Midwest Research institute and treasurer of Menorah hospital in Kansas City, Mo. Louis S. Rothschild, Kansas City merchant, told members of Alpha Kappa Psi Wednesday night that they were fortunate to get their education and that they must turn part of its value back to society. Bill Keith Brackman, business senior, was presented the Alpha Kappa Psi scholarship medallion by Paul Malone, acting dean of the School of Business. The award is made annually to the business senior achieving the highest scholastic average for the first three years of college work. Mr. Rothschild answered questions of members on personnel and merchandizing problems. A cooperative program between the University Y. M. C. A. and Lawrence community activities will be discussed by the Y. M. C. A. advisory board at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Plymouth Congregational church YMCA Will Hold Meeting Mr. Harper Gelezen, executive secretary of the Y. M. C. A. branch of the western-central area, will be guest speaker. AWS Sponsors Eight Speakers At Conference Eight guest speakers have been selected to speak at "Blueprinting Tomorrow," a cultural conference to be sponsored by the Associated Women Students Feb. 24 to 26. Dr. Elin Jorgensen of the department of music education of the University, will discuss music. Ethel Mitchell of the department of physical education, DePawu university, will lead the discussion on recreation. Mrs. Porter Brown, of Salina, will talk on religion. Mrs. John Guice, Kansas City, Mo., will talk on art. Dr. Geraldine Hammond, Wichita university, will discuss literature. Dorothy Luber of Washburn university, will talk on world citizenship. Mrs. William C. Manninger, of Topeka, will talk on the home. Mrs. P. A. Petitt, of Paola, director of youth conversation and Kansas Federation of Women's clubs, will discuss the community. All University women interest in the subjects to be discussed are invited to attend. The schedule of times and places will be announced in the University Daily Kansan. A general session for all University women will be at 8 pm. Feb. 25 in Frank Strong auditorium. A panel discussion on women's education will be presented by Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, Mrs. Menninger, and Dr. Hammond. "Blueprinting Tomorrow" is replacing the Careers conference, sponsored last year by the United Womens council, Women's Executive council, and the Y.W.C.A. Prof. Kollmorgen pointed out that early growth of vegetation is likely to be injured by later freezes. A continuous, or nearly continuous, covering of snow, incident to a cold winter, not only delays the blossoming of fruit trees until after killing frosts are probable, but also prevents alternate thawing and freezing so ruinous to wheat and other winter grains. Matt Betton and his orchestra, billed as "America's most popular college dance band" will come from Kansas State college for the dance. Betton's band was started 10 years ago. In 1940 college students from 100 colleges ranked it among the top of popular bands at that time. Betton received offers to appear in leading New York and east coast night spots but decided to stay in college. "Pray for cold weather!" This is the advice that Walter Kollmorgen, professor of geography, gives to the too-ardent enthusiast of the present unseasonal weather. Cold Weather Again, Please The old saw, "of all the months of the year, curse a fair February," suggested by Prof. Kollmorgen, may prove well founded this year. "The band that fits every dance step" will provide music for the Sophomore Leap Year Hop. Feb. 28 Tickets are $1.75 a couple. They are available at the business office or from representatives in each man's organized house. Betton To Play For Soph Hop Art Group Will Exhibit Work Delta Phi Delta, art fraternity, will exhibit members' work in Frank Strong hall Friday and Saturday for the high school students attending the arts and crafts festival. Members will serve as guides at the exhibition and will wear identification tags. 1234567890 19. 1948 University Daily Kansan STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS been printing conference associated 16. his is orgen, so the present niver- Feb. m. A edu- Miss women, mond. s re- reference, Nited execu- departe the Uni- Ethel f phy- versity, creea- Salina, John ll talk ed art rule ofounced an. Wichita tature. uuni- itizen- ager, of Mrs. torator of Kansas will ance the d. 28. pulvar bular from cereases from the stimine u r in coast y in They office each that likely es. A nous, cold assem- kily al and and will rank foriding s at anti- months ary," may Truman,Marshall Hit At 'Defiance' By UN Members Washington, Feb. 20 — (UP) President Truman and Secretary of State George C. Marshall jointly proclaimed their concern today about the open defiance of United Nations decisions by some member nations. Neither the president nor Marshall, in their letters of transmittal with the 359-page report, named the offending nations. But they are; The "disturbing character" of such defiance was stated in the president's annual report to congress on the United Nations and the U. S. role therein. The Arab states—They are accused by a special UN commission of trying to alter "by force" the UN decision to partition Palestine. Russia — She has boycotted the Greek and Korean commissions, the "little assembly", and the trusteeship council. Great Britain—The government has announced its refusal to play any role in putting into effect any plan for Palestine unless it is acceptable to both Jews and Arabs. Argentina—She refused to withdraw her ambassador from Franco Spain. Mr. Truman said the UN's decisions and recommendations were met "neither by evasion nor by meaningless compromises", but were "straightforward expressions of the judgement held by the overwhelming majority." 'Meteors Not So Unusual The widely publicized flight of a meteor over the Norton area of Kansas Wednesday night aroused little interest *from N. W. Storer, professor of astronomy. "Falling meteors are common occurrences. Nearly 20 million strike the earth each year," he said. "This was probably an unusually large one, perhaps the size of a typewriter. Most of those which are reported are no larger than the head of a pin." Professor Storer expressed surprise that the meteor was detected Wednesday, since most meteors cannot be seen before they reach an altitude of 75 miles, and are generally burnt out before they have descended to within 40 miles of the earth. "It must alve been rather low in the sky if seen from that distance," the professor said. "On the other hand, there might have been several meteors falling that night. This possibility might account for the discrepancies in reports, which gave the time of fall as between 4 and 5 p. m. Dr. Melvin H. Knisely, associate professor of anatomy at the University of Chicago, will speak on "Sludge in Blood" at 11 a.m. tomorrow. Knisely To Speak On Blood Kansas—Partly cloudy today and tonight. Intermittent light snow extreme northeast this morning. Increasing cloudiness tomorrow. Light intermittent rain west and south, spreading over rest of state by night. Warmer west this afternoon and throughout state tonight and tomorrow. High today lower 40's west and central to upper 30's east. Low night 28 to 35. WEATHER The lecture is open to the public and will be in 103 Haworth hall. Students To Take Entrance Exams Make-up tests for new students who failed to take entrance examinations Jan. 31 will be given tomorrow and Feb. 28 at 2 p. m. in Lindley hall. Students who missed the English and mathematics tests on Jan. 31 will take the tests tomorrow. Psychological and reading tests will be given Feb. 28. Any new student who fails to take the examinations at the stated times must pay a fee later, Glenn Cole, guidance bureau counselor, said. Musical Vespers To Be Sunday The 96th all-musical vespers, presented by the School of Fine Arts, will close the Kansas Arts and Crafts festival at 4 p. m. Sunday in Hoch auditorium. The University string quartet and the symphony orchestra will present numbers by Charles Sanford Skilton, nationally-known composer, who formerly was a member of the faculty of the School of Fine Arts. All major musical organizations will be featured in the program. More than 400 persons will take part. The program follows: II Guarnieri Overseas; Carlo Gomez III Rolf Kaiser; Concert Band Hussel S. L. Wiley, director "Turn Ye to Me" Scotik folk song by Dauqe, Dr. Daqu Tenor solo: DuMont keena "Hallelujah, Amen (from "Judas Mac "Hallelujah. Amen (from "Judas Mac cabus")... Handel "Steal Away"... Negro spiritual University Men's Glee club Joseph Wilkins, director Roger Butts at the Piano Roger Butts at the Piano Adagio from B minor Quartet Charles Sanford Skilton String Quartet String Quartet Waldemar Gellch-1st violin Waedemar Getten-1st violin W. Thomas Marocco-2nd violin Vincent Bleecker-viola Paulson Rudolph sollo "The Valley of Dream" ... Fletcher "The Sweet Nightingale" Gretcheninof soprano obbligate Joan Bennett, Terry Colton, Lois Lee Richardson University Women's Glee club Irene Peabody, director Twila Wagner at the piano "Go. Song of Mine" (8 parts) ... Elga "Selection" ... C. Laurence controllo solo-Mary Mary Beyers "Religion is a Fortune" ... arr. by Bryan Two Indian Dances Charles Sanford Skillon University A cappella choir Anna Carlson Rites Will Be Tomorrow Deer Dance University Symphony orchestra Russell L. Wiley, director Concordia, Kan., Feb. 20-(UP)—Funeral services will be held for Mrs. Anna Carlson, 81-year-old mother of the Kansas governor tomorrow afternoon in the Concordia Baptist church with which she was so long associated. University A capella chori D. M. Sworthhout, director Burial will be near her late husband, Carl E. Carlson, in the family plot in West Brainch cemetery, not far from the two-story white frame family home southwest of Concordia. Mrs. Carlson, Swedish born, but a Kansan for 65 years, died in her sleep early Thursday, after a gradual weakening since she contracted a severe cold more than two weeks ago. Former Russian Prime Minister To Talk Monday Alexander Kerensky, former prime minister of the Russian republic, will speak at 4 p. m. Feb. 23 in Fraser hall. His topic will be the development of democracy in Russia. Mr. Kerensky was a member of the fourth imperial Russian duma (parliament) from 1912 to 1917. He was leader of the Labor party. In February, 1917, he became minister of justice, and late minister of war and vice-president. In August, 1917, he became prime minister of the Russian republic after Czar Nicholas II abdicated. As a young lawyer Mr. Kerensky defended political criminals without charge. He went to Siberia on one occasion and investigated the problems of mine workers. Improvements in their working conditions were made as a result of his findings. When the Bolsheviks under Lenin overthrew the Kerensky government in 1918, he lived underground. He later edited democratic newspapers in Prague, Berlin, and Paris. Mr. Kerensky's father was supervisor of schools in the district of Simibrsk when Lenin was a student in one of the schools. The elder Kerensky had commented on Lenin's excellence as a student not knowing of the part Lenin would later play in his son's life. Mr. Kerensky is a visiting professor at the University of Kansas City this month. He will leave for New York sometime during the end of March. To Award Shop Contract A contract for construction of a new engineering shops building will be awarded today by the state board of regents, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to the chancellor said. Mr. Nichols said that bids received were "well within appropriations" and that construction, would probably begin when the ground begins to thaw. Site for the new building will be behind Marvin hall. The old building will be occupied by the William Allen White School of Journalism after Fowler shop is renovated and all equipment removed. Mr. Nichols said that it would probably be two years before the School of Journalism could use he building. Acacia, national social fraternity, has established a pledge colony in preparation for reactivation of the K. U. chapter which was discontinued during the war. Tom Armstrong is president of the pledge colony. According to Charles W. Jarrett, national traveling secretary, the chapter will probably be organized by the end of this semester if housing arrangements can be made. Acacia Organizes New Pledge Colony Acacia has 24 chapters in major universities, and has been chartered on this campus since 1904. Two alumni of the original K. U. chapter are national officers. Lloyd Ruppenthal, McPherson, is national president, and Herschel Washington, Kansas City, Mo., is national editor. Reads To German Club Wendell V. Showalter, education junior, read selections from Mark Twain's "The Awful German Language" to the German club Thursday afternoon. Members sang German songs. J. V. Sikes Is New KU Head Coach Georgian Is A Surprise Selection; To Pick Assistants; Salary Not Named Jules V. Sikes, end coach at the University of Georgia, today was named the new head football coach at Kansas. E. C. Quigley, K.U. athletic director, notified him by telephone at 11 a.m. today, and made the announcement to the press a few minutes later. pointment was approved by Chancellor Deane W. I Gibson Play On Tonight Curtain call for "A Cry of Players" will be at 8 p.m. tonight in Fraser theater. ☆ ☆ The play will be presented tonight and tomorrow for visitors to the Kansas Arts and Crafts festival. It will be shown Feb. 23, 25, and 26 to University students. Tom Shay, College junior, plays the lead of William Shakespeare. Three other students, Tom Rea, Loren Kennedy, and Herk Harvey, have supporting roles in the pre-Broadway production. Bernard C. Tom M. Shay, College junior from Kansas City, Kan., is playing William Shakespeare in the pre-Broadway production of "A Cry of Players" by Will Gibson. The first presentation is at 8 tonight in Fraser theater. Police Pick Up Gaming Machines A clean up of gambling machines was started last night in Douglas county by Lawrence police and the county sheriff. Devices said to be gambling machines have been picked up at six places in Douglas county: Skylane club, the Dine-A-Mite, Ray's cafe, Johnny's Grill, the Cottage, and Brick's cafe. Robert B. Oyler, county attorney, said the owners were charged with maintaining and permitting persons to play gambling devices and with maintaining a common nuisance. The defendants are Roy G. Borgan, Richard J. Brown, Kenneth W. Cates, John Emick, W. E. Murphy, and Edward D. Paxton. They were taken before Mrs. Mary Ellen Simmons, clerk of the district court Thursday. y Chancellor Deane W. Malott and the Kansas athletic board early this morning, and the appointment was confirmed at today's meeting of the state board of regents. Mr. Sikes succeeds George Sauer, who resigned Jan. 31 to accept the head coaching position at the U.S. Naval academy, after leading the Jayhawkers to two conference cochampionships in his two years here. Salary Not Revealed Mr. Quigley did not reveal the length of Sikes' contract nor the salary terms. Sikes will have full power to name two assistants, as Sauer took his top two men with him to Annapolis. The new coach is expected to arrive here next week to meet Kansas players, other members of the athletic department and the faculty and to map plans for spring practice, which will open around March 8. Sikes was selected from a field of 65 men. He is an exponent of the "T" formation. In his playing days, he served under Dana X. Bible at Texas A. and M. in 1925-26-27. Sauer also played under Bible. "We consider ourselves fortunate to be able to obtain the services of a coach with the background, experience and personality of Sikes," Quigley said. He was chosen from a field of coaches and fans and we feel that he will give us our program second to none in our area." Sikes Is 43. Married Sikes is 43 years old and is married. He played high school football at Leonard, Texas, then moved on to Texas A. & M. where he lettered in football, basketball and baseball. He played on Southwest conference championship teams in 1925 and 1927. As a senior, he was all-conference end and played as a member of the West team in the San Francisco East-West game in 1928. He coached one year at Brenham, Texas, then at Burleson college at Greenville, Texas, before moving to Fast Texas State for four years as a line coach. He returned to Texas A. & M. in 1936 as freshman football coach and head basketball coach for two years. He was assistant coach for ends and backs in 1937, and then moved to Georgia, where his fine ended became a trade mark of Georgia teams. He was head coach at St. Mary's Calif., Naval Pre-Flight school during the war. Chancellor Deane W. Malott, commenting on the appointment made the following statement: "We are all very happy over the selection of Mr. Sikes. President Harmon W. Caldwell of the University of Georgia, with whom I talked before Mr. Quigley approached Mr. Sikes, spoke highly of his personal friendship, of his new career and of his interests in the future." Extension To Teach Elements Of Reading Dr. F, O. Russell, professor of education, will conduct a University Extension class in Elements of Reading. The class, which will start tomorrow morning in room 103 of Lawrence High school, will be held Saturday mornings and one night each week until June. The night meeting will be chosen by the class. Three hours credit in education will be given when the course is finished. The fee is $15. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY,FEBRUARY 20,1948 Child's Books Art Exhibited Original drawings and paintings for children's books are being shown at Spooner-Thayer Art museum until March 5. The exhibit was prepared by the Museum of Modern Art in New York. The exhibit consists of subjects interested to children, and is limited to books published within recent years. Many of the books, such as Susanne Suba's "The Gentle Giraffe" and "The Elegant Elephant" are about talking animals. Another book, Elizabeth Old's "The Big Fire," has illustrations of old horse-drawn fire engines and of modern fire-fighting equipment. University Daily Kansan Some of the books are by contemporary artists not identified solely with illustrations for children's books. Among them are Jean Charlotte, who has illustrated with color lithographs "A Child's Goodnight Book" for younger children; and the Brazilian painter, Candido Portinari, who is represented by the gaily-colored "Maria Rosa." Call KU 370 with your Want Ads University Daily Kansun Malt subscription; $3 a semester, $4.59 a year, (in) University postage) Published in Lawrence, Kan. every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Unimagined examination period. Entered as second course 17, 18th at the Post Office at Lawrence. Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. Lady Ghost Still Haunting Boston Fort Boston—(UP)—A modern touch has been added to the legend of the ghostly "Lady in Black" who reputedly haunts Ft. Warren in Boston harbor. Capt. Charles Norris, retired commander of the fort, placed little belief in the "ghost" of the southern girl who was hanged as a spy after trying to free her husband, a Confederate prisoner, during the Civil war. However, he did admit a "strange experience" one night. He reported a light, cold touch on his shoulder while he was reading in his quarters. He dozed off, only to be awakened by the telephone. Norris picked up the phone, but there was no answer. He signalled the operator who said there had been a call, but "your wife took it." Mrs. Norris, however, was in Boston at the time Read the Want Ads daily. 12 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 ALARM CLOCKS as low as $1.98 WESTERN AUTO 944 Mass. Saturday Is The Last Day RIDICULOUS SALE OF LEFT-OVERS Short lines from all over the store at huge savings. The Palace 843 Massachusetts LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS 12 East Eighth Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed...65c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed...69c CASH AND CARRY ONLY TESOTO APPROVED SERVICE LEXMOUTH FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. GALLAGHER MONTHS WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames 目 Lawrence Optical Co. Snow Can't Stop US Mail Ware, Mass.—(UP) —To deliver mail to the snowbound roadside boxes of rural residents, Edward L. Miner, letter carrier, uses a long pole with a home-made clip gadget that enables him to open the boxes. YM Meet To Study Campus Problems The Y. M. C. A. will be host to cabinet members of the Kansas State Y. M. C. A. during a retreat at the University April 3. The retreat is the second annual meeting of the two universities. K.U. members were guests of K-State in Manhattan last year. The meeting is to discuss campus problems. Robert Chesky, College sophomore, was elected to attend the west central area council meeting in Omaha Feb. 28. He will represent the Rocky Mountain area. Bowsher Becomes Smithsonian Aide Dr. L. D. Laudon, chairman of the geology department, announced recently the resignation of Arthur L. Bowsher, instructor in geology. M. Bowsher will become associate curator in the Smithsonian museum in Washington, D. C. DE He formerly taught Engineering Geology II and was director of the Geological museum. William McBee, Jr., has been appointed to direct the museum, and John Naff has been appointed to instruct Engineering Geology II. Both are assistant instructors in geology. DE LISO debs debs De LISO debs Royal College Shop 837-39 Mass. ever smart on the constantly changing fashion scene Black and Yellow Calf $15.95 Designed by PALTER DE LISO DE LISO debs the con Black and Yellow Calf Designed by Designed by PALTER LISO 1920-1970 10 1948 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1948 "UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN; LAWRENCE, KANSAS "PHOTO TAPES Socially Speaking- Social Wheel Is Spinning With Dances And Dinners Sigma Nu Elects Nu chapter of Sigma Nu elected officers Monday. They are: Bud Hinkle, commander; Kenny Smith, lieutenant commander; Dean Banker, house manager; Stanley Englund, recorder; Jack Beeman, treasurer; Curtis Collins, assistant treasurer; John Burnett, marshall; Robert Foster, sentinel; William Warren, chaplain; Gene Balloun, historian; Loyd Russine, social chairman; Melvin Clingan, rush chairman; and William Malone, pledge trainer. D. G. Valentine Party The annual Valentine party was held at the Delta Gamma chapter house Friday. Guests included Cooper Rollow, William Reebl, Wallace McKee, Lee Sander, Robert Foerschler, William Haggard, Dayton Molzen, James Scott, James Fishback, Hal Hunter, Jack Veatch and Michael Alt. Merlin Phillips, Paul Brownlee Robert Mullen, Robert Andrews William Richardson, Ralph Brock Robert Ready, James Moddelmog, George Newton, Mark Moore, William Dodson, Fred Apt, Jack Comstock, Syd Bennett, Herbert Foster John Kennedy and Arthur Johnson Clayers were Mr. and Mrs. C Chaperons were Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Cotton, Dean and Mrs. George B. Smith, and Mrs. W. S. Shaw. 串 串 串 Dinner Guests Dinner guests at the Delta Tau Delta chapter house Monday were Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Bates, Kansas City; Mr. and Mrs. G. E. Wilson, Topeka; Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Moore, Mr. and Mrs. George Docking, Mrs. Paul Smart, and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Biery, Lawrence. Miller Hall AOPi Hour Dance Miller hall will hold an hour dance from 7 to 8 p.m. today. Alpha Omicron Pi pledge class entertained the Alpha Tau Omega pledge class with an hour dance Feb. 13. Theta Elects Briar Manor held open house from 7 to 8 Thursday. Kappa Alpha Theta recently elected officers. They are Mary Jane Merriman, president; Virginia Daugherty, vice-president; Mary Sue Weimer, rush captain; Kathleen McBride, corresponding secretary; Betsy McCune, treasurer; Betty Sauber, social chairman; Patsy Tomlinson, house manager; Virginia Tolle, scholarship chairman; Sally Tremblay, song leader, and Marilyn Smith, intramural manager. Phi Alpha Delta Phi Alpha Delta, law fraternity, will entertain, a group of rushes with a party today at Holloway's 19th and Massachusetts streets. Briar Manor Guests Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Youngberg were dinner guests at Briar Manor Wednesday. AICE Dinner Dance The student chapter of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers will hold its annual dinner-dance in the Kansas room of the Union at 6:30 p. m. tomorrow. The informal party will include an internmission entertainment. Tickets are $1.50 stag and $2.75 a couple. Ricker Hall Dance * * At the Ricker hall "Bad Luck" dance given Feb. 13 guests included Frank Hursh, Jack Breedhurst, Gerald Peters, Gordon Sond逊, Killer Worwag, George Osborne, Ralph Comer, Charles Babck, Kenneth Valley, and Peter Moore. Celebrations were Mrs Irwin Young. Chaperones were Mrs. Irvin Young-berg and Mrs. W. M. Harlan. Law Fraternity Stag Pi Alpha Delta, law fraternity, is having a rush-stag party in Galloway hall at 7:30 p. m. today. Invited guests are: Joseph Bailey, B. A. Gilmore W. W. W. Wheeler, D. E. Underwood J. D. Waugh, E. F. Russell, E. E. Brahmer, C. R. Hodgson, Kenneth Harmon, Leo F. Henrichs, R. G. Lowe, G. A. Lowe, C. W. Sharrer, D. E. Richter, E. L. Lackey, T. Nye, H. H. Sinning, B. H. McClellan, E. J. Rice, W. D. Geeding, B. B. Beeson, L. H. Pennington, Harry Truehart, J. E. Parmiter, Stunley A. Morantz, and K. W. Masoner. 南 南 南 ATO Entertains Alpha Tau Omega entertained its Kansas City Mother's club with a luncheon and tea Wednesday. Guests included Mrs. R. V. Millikan, Mrs. Ray Pringle, Mrs. Helen C. Roediger, Mrs. Clyde V. McCaskriek, Mrs. John C. Hastie, Mrs. W.B. White, Mrs. S. E. Sime, Mrs. Treva Brown, Mrs. C. W. Harding, Mrs' C. E. Cory, Mrs. August Ehmke, Mrs. George Nesser, Mrs. Guy Brown, Mrs. Layle Childers, and Mrs. Earl Laird. Corbin hall will have an open house dance today from 9 p.m. to midnight. Open House Sigma Nu Pledges Sigma Nu announces the pledging of Clyde Walthall, Coffeville, transfer pledge from Beta Kappa chapter at Kansas State; Harry Morey, Perth Amboy, N. J.; Robert Berry, Kansas City; Earl Kopke, Coldwater; Herb Dieterich, Maryville; and Dean Gilchrist, Russell. Letter Mailed 26 Years Ago Returned By Post Office Randolph. Vt.—(UP) — Nearly 20 years after his father mailed it, a letter has been received from the postal department's dead-letter office by Harrison H. Hayward, Jr. The letter, containing a statement for $3 for professional services, was addressed by his father, Dr. Harrison H. Hayward, since deceased, to a patient. Join Our Rental Library The new books you have been wanting to read are here. THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Tel-666 15c for 5 Days Weddings And Engagements The pinning of Diana L. Smith, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Guido E. Smith, Colby, to William D. Stanton, Lawrence, was announced Monday at the Sigma Kappa house. Smith-Stanton Corsages of white carnations were worn by Pat Watson, who made the announcement, and Rita Horning, who passed the chocolates. Miss Smith wore a corsage of white carnations and pink rosebuds. Mrs. Younkman, housemother, wore a corsage of carnations. Miss Smith is a College sophomore. Mr. Stanton, Business senior, is a member of Sigma Nu. Wise-Stuckey Miss Wise and Mr. Stuckey are both University graduates. ☆ ☆ The engagement of June Wise, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Wise, Lawrence, to Robert Stuckey, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. Stuckey, Lawrence, was announced by Mrs. F. H. Klinkenberg, housemother of Alpha Omicron Pi. NOW!! a new shipment of- COLONY CLUB SWEATERS Your favorite sweaters in long or short sleeve slip-ans Your choice of lime blue, red, country cream and yellow. only $4.50 Harzfelds Sunday Night 9:15 p.m. ROLLER HOCKEY GAME Pirates vs. our seating space, limits us to ticket sales Get yours early. Lee Dyer ROLLERDROME Phone 2042 or 2356 737 N. H. Bughouse Square Misses Woman Cop Who Kept Tough Guys In Line Chicago, -(UP)—Some of the kindness and quiet dignity has gone out of Bughouse square. The "lady cop" has passed along and her beat, which she called a "hotbox," is patrolled by a male policeman. The debaters, drunks, dope peddlers and addicts, derelicts from cheap hotels and frowzy pickups don't exactly take to men cops. They miss kindly, bright-eyed Mrs. Marie C. Hagan, 74, who before she died, for 23 years kept peace in the mecca of soapbox orators and rebels. Bughouse square is sandwiched between Chicago's Gold Coast and the dingier near north side. From Mrs. Hagan retired from the beat a couple of years ago but she kept close watch over her friends there and seldom missed a day dropping in "for a visit." the break of day until nearly midnight and all day Sundays and holidays, the benches and walks are lined with debaters who argue until they are hoarse on almost any subject. After Mrs. Hagan's last visit, somebody asked her if she wasn't frightened at the tempo and topics of the arguing — religion, Russia, communism and capitalism. She laughed at that one. They were talking about the same thing 20 years ago. They talk a lot but they don't solve anything—and they don't hurt anybody." Call KU 376 with your Want Ads. An estimated 10,000 desert plants are growing on 306 acres set aside for the Desert Botanical garden east of Phoenix, Ariz. Exciting! Daring! Revealina Nite-Life No Straps No Wires A Formfit CREATION --- For the new strap-less gowns...wide cut necklines... sheer blouses, this is a new "glamor lift." Not until Formfit could tell us "Here is the strap-less bra that really stays up" could we give you the last word on this question. Now here it is—the honest Formfit answer to your prayer! Nite-Life automatically hugs you as it lifts, corrects, molds...thanks to its exclusive Formfit design and elastic control. Black, White and Nude, $4.00. Sizes 32 to 36 $4.00 Corsets, Second floor Weaver SHAWNEEY DABBY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1948 Spotlight On Sports Brannum Eligibility Case Must Be Reopened Friday By BOB DELLINGER Daily Kansan Sports Editor An open letter to W. W. Davis, University faculty representative to the Missouri Valley Intercollegiate Athletic association, and to other members of the faculty governing board; Dear Mr. Davis: The Big Seven faculty governing board will hold its regular meet- Friday and Saturday. At $ ^{\circled{2}} $ The Big Seven faculty govern ing next Friday and Saturday. At this meeting, you members of this board will be faced with several problems requiring immediate action, among them the case of Clarence Brannum. Brannum has played the entire season a regular center for the Kansas State college basketball team. He has played in spite of the fact that two separate, clearly-stated conference rules prove his ineligibility beyond all doubt. In fact, his non-existent eligibility was confirmed by a telephone poll—also in opposition to the conference statutes—of you members of the faculty board. And worst of all, Mr. Davis, you, representing the school where his ineligibility first was exposed, voted against the rules and for Brannum's continued play. You claim not to have known all the facts when the vote was taken. Kansas State officials have done the utmost to cloud the issue, to hide facts from those concerned, and to throw the burden of "conspiracy" on those who wish to carry out the rules. The spotlight has been thrown on Kansas Coach F. C. Allen as "attacking the rights of Bramum," and for hogging publicity. Surely you can see, Mr. Davis, that the issue is not Allen but Bramum. You may also rest assured that Kansas State will continue its smoke screen efforts at the conference meeting. You, having fallen down on the job once before, must reinstate yourself in the trust of the students by seeing that justice is done. It is your job, Mr. Davis, so don't let us down. Just in case you still haven't seen the true facts in the case, let us quote a couple of rules. Article II. section 3. subsection c. states "No person having participated as a member of any college athletic team during any semester in college who does not continue in attendance the full semester of his participation shall be permitted to play in any intercollegiate contest thereafter until the expiration of one calendar year from the time he withdrew from school." Have you read this one, Mr Davis? Article II, section 2, subsection b. which states "During the two semesters immediately previous to participation the student must complete 24 semester credit hours." Clarence Brannum, whether enrolled officially or not, played against Kansas and Nebraska after the start of the spring semester of 1947, on Feb. 20 and Feb. 27. Before March 4, he withdrew from school, and on that date appeared in the lineup of the Kansas City Smokies. One rule broken. He did not return to school until the fall semester of 1947, and consequently is playing with only 14 hours credit in the two preceding semesters and summer school. Another rule broken. When you compare the facts with the rules, it would seem that the rules were written just for this case. And don't forget that you faculty men wrote those rules. In the face of the evidence, Brannum can not be eligible in any way, and even Kansas State students admit it. Make sure that he isn't before you leave that meeting, Mr. Davis. You can't take the games away from Kansas State, because the board pulled a bener and sanctioned his play, but you can take Brannum away from Kansas State athletics, and for the full calendar year from the date of the meeting. A parting word of caution, Mr Davis, intelligent men don't make the same mistake twice—don't let your actions cast any doubts. Confer On Baldwin Water Supply Dr. V, C. Fishel, of the U. S. Geological Survey, and Dr. J. M. Jewett of the state Geological Survey, were in Baldwin Wednesday conferring with city officials about the Baldwin water supply. Dr. Alvin Leonard, also of the U. S. Geological Survey, accompanied Dr. Fishel and Dr. Jewett to Pittsburgh to meet with officials at the Jayhawk Ordnance works. Dr. Jewett will remain there a few days to work in the southern Kansas geological office. NOTHING COULD BE FINER THAN OUR Careful Laundering of Shirts The staggering Kansas Jayhawkers will travel to Norman Saturday to face the Oklahoma Sooners as Missouri' meets Kansas State at Manhattan and Iowa State visits Nebraska in a full Big Seven cage card this weekend. The Sooners will be out for revenge against the Jayhawkers, having lost their initial conference try at Lawrence in a 39 to 38 thriller. The men of Bruce Drake are also smarting from a loss to Colorado last Monday which dropped them to fourth place in the conference scramble. KU Travels To Norman Saturday Your shirts come back bright as new and airy fresh. Neatly pressed, with special attention to collars and cuffs. Let us help you look and feel sure. Pick-up & Delivery—Ph. 383 Tigers Meet Wildcats The game at Norman cannot be overlooked in the glare of the Tiger-Wildcat clash at Manhattan for the Big Seven lead, because every team among the first five is still very much in the running for the bunting. The Kansas -Oklahoma scrap will be a battle between rebuilt but improving ball clubs, each of which is held together largely by the return of one lone regular from last year's powerhouses—Otto Schnellbacher for Kansas and Paul Courty for Oklahoma. Courty A Threat LAWRENCE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS 1001 N. H. 20% discount cash and carry Courty is the trigger-armed forward who currently leads the individual scoring race, and is a candidate for all-American honors. The Sooner senior is noted for his brilliant rebounding, passing, and defensive work as well as his basket-shooting talent. Nearly every man on the Jav- Basketball Results Buffalo 56, Oberm 53 C.C.N.Y. 51, Caniuris 39 Buffalo Tch. 67, Carnegie Tech 55 William & Mary 61, Am. Inter. 36 Trinity 65, Coast Guard 46 Wake Forest 66, Clemson 59 Alabama 55, Miss State 47 Maryland 60, Richmond 53 Duke 57, Virginia 48 Evansville 66, Cape Giraardeau 52 Bradley 57, Centenary 38 Washburn 47, St. Benedicts 46 N.M. 48, W. Texas State 47 Arizona 53, Hardin-Simmons 34 Okla. City U. 43, E. Texas Bapt. 36 San Francisco 51, Santa Clara 43 Montana State 54, Gonzaga 48 hawker squad has had a sizzling night. Hal England was "on" against Notre Dame and Oklahoma; Guy Mabry hit six goals at San Francisco; Charlie Penny amassed 12 goals in the Oregon series; Gene Barr topped the team against Nevada; and all of the present starters have had their turn at high-score. Coaches Are Veterans Allen and Drake are the oldest coaches in the league in point of service. Phog, dean of them all, has coached Jayhawkers for 30 years while Drake has been at Oklahoma for 10 years. Both coaches have turned in great rebuilding jobs this year, working largely with inexperienced men. Probable Starters KANSAS Seb'beh r' (6-3) f. County (6-3) Eskr'er k (6-4½) f. Day (6-1½) Waugh (6-0) c. Waters (6-5) Sapp (6-1) g. Pryor (5-10¹) Houchin (6-4) g. Merchant (6-0) Read the Daily Kansan daily. The New SPREADAWAY stub collar SHIRTS by New Era THE NATIONAL SCHOOL OF HOSPITALITY gives you comfortable wear everywhere. Here is something new and stub collar fits well, stays put, A real buy for your money! different in men's shirts! The spreadaway $3.95 Gibbs Clothing Company Company 811 Mass. St. IAYHAWKER Shows 2:30-7-9 NOW through Tuesday Introducing A NEW Mickey Rooney AS A LITTLE GUY WITH BIG IDEAS HAND IN KEENAL LEFT HOOK! KILLER MICKEY ROONEY BRIAN DONLEVY ANN BLYTH James Dunn - Sam Levine McCOY WEDNESDAY — one week at our regular low prices! Captain from Castile TYRONE POWER in Technicolor GRANADA Now, Ends Saturday Robert CUMMINGS Susan HAYWARD "THE LOST MOMENT" Owl Show Sat. 11:45 p.m. SUNDAY—4 Days Their Dream of Love . . . Becomes a nightmare of MIS- TRUST! TRUST! Errol FLYNN Ida LUPINO Eleanor PARKER Gig YOUNG in Escape ME NEVER in Escape ME NEVER Added: — World News Veda Ann Borg Leif Erjackson Douglas Dumbrille co-feature STUART ERWIN "Heading for Heaven" Heaven" SUNDAY—3 DAYS "JUNGLE THRILLER" Blonde SAVAGE NOW, Ends Saturday "Dick Tracy Meets Gruesome" 2nd Feature "Bandits of Dark Canyon" PATEE ENDS TONIGHT HENRY FONDA "Grapes of Wrath" VARSITY SUNDAY—ONE WEEK MARLENE DIETRICH 'Destroy Rides Again 2nd hit RANDOLPH SCOTT KAY FRANCIS "When the Daltons Rode" 1948 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE 1478 Pi KA Runs Up 47 To Win; Nubbins Remain Undefeated Margins of victory ranged from 3 to 33 points as 13 intramural teams squared off last night. The Pi K. A.'s ran up the evening's high score as they downed the Delta Tau's, 47 to 14. Clinger counted 17 points and Crawford 11 for the hot Pi K. A.'s Harris led the Delta with six points. The Nubbins remained undefeated The Nubbins remained undefeated, as they slipped past the N.R.O.T.C. 30 to 26. The Nubbins' star, Roland Ellerts, ed scoring 15 points. He scored eight second honors for the winners. Bowl-ly tallied 10 times to the Navy. The Sigma Nu's pulled a mild upset as they downed the A.T.O.'s, 30 to 27. Bell was the big man in the Nu's attack with 17 points while Tongier was high for the losers with six points. Vets Win Easily Arnold, with 11 counters, led the A.V.C. to a decisive 38 to 23 win over the Lambda Chi's. Gilliam tallied nine points for the red hot veterans. Battenfeld outclassed the Wheelin' Dealer, 30 to 19, sparked by the 10-point barrage of Arnspiger. Woodman of the Dealers also scored 10. Battenfield led 14 to 9 at the half and was never headed during the second half. The Airscrews, paced by Duggins with 13 points, outdistanced the Fightin' Five, 34 to 25. Armstrong of the winners and Havel for the Fightin' Five each tallied eight points to keep the game moving at a fast pace. Gamma Delta dropped a tight 32 26 contest to Kappa Eta Kappa, who were paced by the sharp- shooting of Heinrich with 11 points. The Gamma Delta's were led by Hager with nine markers. Heinrich Paces KEK Oread hall, taking advantage of a 9 to 4 halftime lead, went on to beat the Married Men, 20 to 17. Cooper was high for the winners with seven points while Tomberlin led the losers with six points. Delta Upsilon trailed 15 to 13 at the half but came back fast in the second period to take a 27 to 23 verdict from Alpha Kappa Lambda. Bill Woods hooked in 12 points for top scoring honors while Canfield led the losers with eight counters. Rapacz Not Happy With Pro Contract Norman, Okla., Feb. 20—(UP)—John Rapacz, the University of Oklahoma football center, said today he received a $1,000 bonus for signing with the professional Cleveland Browns, but he admitted "I have been a big sucker." "Rather than have the same thing happen to some other kids—I want everybody to know what happened to me." Rapacz, the Kalamazoo, Mich. star who signed with Cleveland while he still had a year of eligibility at Oklahoma, said in a lengthy statement: It was Rapacz's case that Wednesday prompted Dr. George L. Cross, Oklahoma president, to criticize "those who tamper with athletes before their college eligibility is up." Rapacz insisted he "will always want" to complete his college career, and stated that Cleveland told him his contract was only a promise to play after finishing school. Since that time, however, he has been traded to the Chicago Rockets, for whom he has said he will not play. "I if I had wanted to play pro ball next fall, I would have signed with the Los Angeles Rams," he said. "The Rame offered me $7,000 for one year and a cash bonus of $3,000, while I am getting only $6,000 from the Browns plus $1,000 bonus. Beck Outlines Club Schedule A full schedule for the International Relations club for the spring semester has been outlined by Kenneth Beck, president. Officers of the club will attend a conference of International Relations clubs in Warensburg, Mo. April 1, 2 and 3. Prospects for attending an Intercollegiate United Nations meeting at the University of Chicago were also discussed. Call KU 376 with your Want Ads. Frosh Enter Track Meet Coach "Bill" Easton's freshman track squad members will get the first opportunity of their college careers to display their ability on the cinders Friday, Feb. 20, when they challenge not one, but six other freshman track squads to a "postal track meet." Four of the six, Colorado, Oklahoma, Missouri, and Nebraska are from the Big Seven and the remain- arg from the Big Nine. Ohio State, arg from the Big Nine. A "postal track meet" is held in this way: The Kansas freshmen hold a track meet among themselves on their home track, and each of the other squad does the same. The first three to place in each event are recorded along with the time or distance in which they completed their particular event, and the results are then mailed to the other competing schools. The results are compared, the points are totaled as in a regular meet, and the winner is announced. Each school competes against the other as if it were a dual meet. This method of competition serves a dual purpose in that it gives the otherwise untested fresh a chance to get into action, and it also gives coach_Easton a line on his varsity track material for the coming year. Kansas Teams Aim For NAIB Playoff Emporia, Kan., Feb. 20-(UP) Two Kansas conference teams and a pair of central conference quintets appeared likely today to play off for the district 10 invitation to enter the N. A. I. B. tournament in Kansas City. Iowans To Swim Here Coach Gus Fish of Emporia State Teachers' college, district 10 chairman, said the playoff system was chosen because Kansas had failed to produce a single superior basketball team. Iowa State swimmers, unbeaten in conference competition since 1941. will meet the Jayhawker team in a dual met in Robinson gym at 3 p. m. today. Likely contenders from the Kansas conference were Ottawa U., and Kansas Wesleyan, now battling for the loop crown. Kansas State and Kansas University, both of the Big Seven, declined entry in the N. A. I. B. Wichita university of the Missouri Valley passed the playoff because of a schedule conflict. In the central circuit, the selection appeared narrowed to Washburn, St. Benedict's and Emporia Teachers. The Kansas crew, with a record of two victories and two losses, are not expected to be able to match the speed of the tough Iowa team. Kansas holds two decisions over the Wildcats of Kansas State, with losses to Oklahoma and Nebraska. The Cyclones will be without the services of Jack Winslow, conference diving champion, who is out with a broken hand. Saturday, the Iowa State tankmen will move on to Kansas State for a dual meet with the Wildcats, last team to beat the Iowans in conference competition. Although space is limited, Coach Mikols said that as many spectators as possible would be accommodated at the meet this afternoon. Entries: 300-yard medley relay. (K) Medearis, Jervis, Olander. (I-S) Wyant, Nielsen, Smith. 220-yard free style, (K) Ritchie, Friesen, (I-S) Watts, Scarborough. 220-yard breast stroke. (K) Jervis. (I-S) Howes, Johnson. 50-yard free style. (K) Banks, Roy. (I-S) Kullman, Dickerson. 440-yard free style, (K) Ritchie. Friesen. (I-S) Waltts, Alt. Diving. (K) O'Neill, Grates, (I-S) Schaffler. 400-yard relay. (K) Roy, Harrington, Connell, Olander. (I-S) Scarborough, Dickerson, Smith, Kullman. 100-yard free style. (K) Roy, Olander. (I-S) Kullman, Smith or Scarborough. 150-yard back stroke. (K) Mahoney, Medearis. (I-S) Thompson, Jezek. Three KU Men To Guidance Meet Three members of the guidance bureau left Wednesday to attend the third annual meeting of the Big Seven directors of vocational guidance at Norman, Okla. Dr. A. H. Turney, member of the Big Seven, has invited E. G. Kennedy, counselor and specialist in occupational information, and William C. Cottle, counselor and supervisor of laboratory practice in counseling, to attend the meeting as his guests. The meeting will continue through tomorrow and Saturday. Parker 51 Fountain Pens Super Chrome Ink STOWIT'S Rexall STORE Why We Claim Superiority? Because We Have— 1. Thousands of satisfied customers BUSINESS IS GOOD 2. Extensive mechanical facilities 4. Efficient, dependable service 5. Friendly, reliable advice 3. An expert staff of mechanics at CHANNEL-SANDERS STUDEBAKER As Others Sing The 'Holdout Blues' Pitt's Pirates Can Lean Back And Grin New York, Feb. 20—(UP)—Only one major league player out of six still was dissatisfied with salary terms for 1948, it was revealed today in a United Press survey of holdouts which found an unofficial total of 105 still demanding higher wages, 63 in the American League and 42 in the National. Every team but the Pittsburgh Pirates in the National league had at least one "problem child" in the business of negotiations. The Pirates announced early in the week that all their players had been signed in almost record time, but elsewhere there were plenty of difficulties. Browns Have Cellar Trouble The St. Louis Brownies, who acquired a number of new players in off-season transactions, apparently haven't been able to fit them into the general economy of a last place club, since they led the list with 23 players still not on the dotted line. In the National league, the situation was exactly in reverse, with the first place Brooklyn Dodgers leading the way, 14 of their 1947 pennant winners still not being willing to admit they had been paid enough for their services. In the American the World Champion Yankees were next to the Brown with nine players still unsigned while the Philadelphia Athletics and Washington Senators had eight each, the Detroit Tigers seven, the Cleveland Indians six, the Boston Red Sox three and the Chicago White Sox stating "no hold- Champs Have Trouble. Too outs" but indicating that there were several still not under contract. The National league total of unsigned players by clubs found the Dodgers at 14 only two ahead of the Philadelphia Phillies at 12. Next in line were the Giants with six, while the St. Louis Cardinals admitted to three as did the Cincinnati Reds. Only two known holdouts were discovered in the Boston Brave and Chicago Cub ranks while the Pirates had a clean slate. Cell K. U. 251 With Your News CHEF SIZZLING STEAKS with FRENCH FRIED ONIONS Duck's Tavern 824 VERMONT RIGHT for CAMPUS wear— White Button Down Oxford Shirt For Spring you can't beat the ARROW or AIRMAN button down oxford cloth shirt. White or Colors — All Sizes They're In NOW At—— Priced $3.95 and $4.00 CARLS GOOD CLOTHES JOHN H. EMICK NOVELTY CO., Local Distributor "Musical Fun For Everyone" LET This Sign Lead You To Top Entertainment! WURLITZER PHONOGRAPH MUSIC - You can always hear the latest hits of the big bands on our Wurlitzer phonographs. - For convenient relaxation and musical enjoyment look for the place with the Wurlitzer music. Our machines are located in cafes, restaurants, drug stores and entertainment spots throughout Lawrence. AND— $ \textcircled{1} $ If you are looking for those hard-to-get favorite bands—we have a large collection of USED RECORDS. SO— - Come in and browse around. John H. Emick Novelty Co. 1014 Mass. PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS The Editorial Page Nationalism - Good Or Bad? In recent decades a great deal of the world's intellectual energy has been spent in examining what has come to be called the menace of nationalism. The idealists have decided that nationalism must go, if the world is to live in peace and international unity. It is jealously guarded sovereignty, embodied in the idea of nationalism, they say, that has prevented the states of the world from coming from behind their boundries to achieve a unity that will spell peace. However, it is possible that nationalism is not the villain it has been made out to be. Feudal Perils In feudal Europe it was not safe for the individual to travel from one small hamlet to another to trade or visit for fear of the scavengers of some petty lord in the region in which he wished to travel. Feudal lords were constantly pitted against each other in struggles that were minor but the source of much chaos and disturbance to the society of that day. Each lord was sovereign unto himself, and it was not until sovereignty passed to a more powerful lord, the king, and later to the state itself, that it was safe for men to travel and to trade with each other and to enjoy a greater peace and security than they had ever known. It was nationalism that spelled defeat for the totalitarian dictators in the last war. Because of her national sentiments England was able to withstand the German horde at her very coasts, Russia was able to batter and pursue the Nazis at Stalignerd, and little Greece was able to make fools of the Italian dictator's legions. Post-War Nationalism In the post-war world it is nationalism that has enable Czechoslovakia to rise from the ashes of villages like Lidice, Belgium to enjoy one of the enviable spots in Europe's economy, and France to shake off the grip of international communism. Rather than being the destroyer of the world, nationalism seems first to have jeopardized it and then to have saved it from complete disaster. World peace may be achieved through nationalism rather than without it. The way to any higher sovereignty, such as the United Nations, over the group of individuals with common interests has been evolutionary in its development. Time is an important factor. Nationalism may not yet have run its historical course. The Kuomintang China's political strife stems from its one party government, the Kuomintang. Originally a radical and revolutionary group, it has become conservative and even reactionary with the years of its growing power The Kuomintang was founded by Sun Yat-sen, China's great republic leader. When the empire came to an end in 1912, the Kuomingtang led the fight for a republican government. In 1917, Sun Yat-sen came to power. From then until his death in 1926, Sun tried to unify his country and throw off foreign domination. But he was not able to accomplish his goals. There were too many parties and war lords contending for power. Sun Yat-Sen's Will Shortly before his death, Sun wrote in his will that to achieve a Chinese republic, the country must free itself from foreign domination, create a central government, and raise the standard of living of the masses. All of this was to be accomplished under a dictatorship with a single party, the Kuomintang. The party members seized upon this as the solution to their troubles and the way to maintain power. Under the leadership of Chiang Kaishek, the party drove out the war lords and outlawed their political groups. They justified the dictatorship on the grounds that the people were not ready for democratic government, and that they were holding the country in trust for the people until the time came when they were ready to govern themselves. Methods Not Legal As a whole the Kuomingtang was sincere in its efforts to bring about a democratic government. They realized that the methods they were using were not legal, but they believed that the situation demanded strong measures. The parliament continued to function, but it was dominated by the Kuomintang and became a mere advisory body. The Japanese war tended to strengthen the dictatorship. Under pressure from the United States, national elections were held in 1947. But the Kuomintang nullified this show of democratic government by refusing to recognize the Communist party. The few minor parties they did recognize were no match for the Kuomintang organization. Years of power had given them the inside to all government offices-John S. Smith. Dear Editor Language Plea Dear Editor. I have heard able and sincere representatives of the committee on language requirements discuss both he majority and minority reports, and I feel that the matter merits further investigation. I would not deny that language instruction has its proper place in the curriculum. I do not wish to challenge the claims made by the majority report concerning the value of language instruction, although I believe some of those claims are subject to serious question. I would rather consider the logic behind requiring languages for all students. What are the announced goals of the proposed 12-hour minimum requirement? One is the acquisition of a linguistic tool. To my knowledge it has never been demonstrated that twelve hours of any language are sufficient to give a student a linguistic tool, even the DOES ANYBODY KNOW WHO HOUSE IS? University Daily Hansan Member of the Kansas Press Assm, Na- Assm, and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Ad- scription Service, 240 Madison Ave. Wewk, WV 66135 Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Editor-in-Chief .. William C. von Mauer Managing Editor .. Alan J. Stewart Asst. Man. Editor .. Cooper Rollow Asst. Man. Editor .. Lois Lauer City Editor .. Gov. Wagner Asst. Man. Editor .. James Robinson Telegraph Editor .. Wallace W. Abbey Asst. Tel. Editor .. Clarke Thomas Asst. Tel. Editor .. William Barger Sports Editor .. Robert E. Wallinger Asst. Sports Editor .. John Jones Telegraph Editor .. James Jones Women's Sports Editor .. Anna Mary Murphy Feature Editor .. John Wheeler Soccer Editor .. Mel Keller Business Manager .. Betty Bacon Advertising Manager .. Robert Alderson Circulation Manager .. Otto Meyer Classified Adv. Man .. Paul Warner Asst. Class. Adv. Mgr .. David Adler Promotional Manager .. Wister Shrewsy THE KANSA VOLUNTEER KANSAS 19 MEMBER 48 The Kansas Press Association 19 MEMBER 48 National Editorial Association FREE PRESS - YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW superior student. To justify the requirement, we must turn to the other announced goals: viz., an increased understanding of the culture of a foreign country, and improved ability to think logically, improvement in English grammar, a broader outlook. Even assuming that such values can be obtained from the study of a foreign language, can we go so far as to assume that they can be obtained only by such a means? And yet, when we require a given course of study don't we in effect say to the student, "You need what we have to offer, and you can't get it any place else; therefore, you will take our course." Furthermore, are we justified in assuming that the average college student is incapable of making his own decisions, of choosing his own course of study wisely, when aided by capable and well-informed counselors, all of whom are members of the College faculty? THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA When you instructors vote on this issue next week, remember that your vote may influence the educational pattern of the entire state, that the issue is more basic than the value of language instruction in itself. Arthur R. Partridge Graduate Student What with Petrillo's recording ban and Wallace's third party getting to be old stuff, the radio comedians may soon be faced with the necessity of digging up some new jokes. Rip Brown's 5 BOPS SKYLINE — Wed-Fri-Sat Charme Beauty Salon formerly Iva's Beauty Shop phone 533 phone 533 All types of beauty work by capable operators. Mid-winter special price on permanents machine and machineless. Nettie L. Wolfe, Owner Civil Liberties On Feb. 2 President Truman sent a message to congress asking that certain civil rights proposals be enacted. The president had been talking about civil rights for some months, but now he was asking that they become something more than sweet talk. He was asking that racial equality and protection from persecution become national law. In the two weeks since the president submitted his program, Southern political leaders have sounded off right and left. Their main gripe is that the president is playing politics for the Negro vote and that he will cost Southern Democrats their "white supremacy." They accuse President Truman of selling out the Democrats and flirting with minorities. In return for the president's civil rights ideas Southern Democrats threaten to bold the party. What The President Asks What the president's civil rights program asks for is nothing new as far as moves for racial equality go. The same thing has been tried before by both Democrats and Republicans. But the South regards the Negro situation as strictly its own problem, and, so far, any attempt to interfere has been unsuccessful. President Truman's program is easy to understand. He asks that lynching be regarded as a federal offense, that there be no poll tax to hamper voters, and that the Fair Employment Practice committee be backed by a national law with some teeth in it. Lynching has been on the decline for the past 50 years. In the peak year of 1892 there were 213 lynchings. In 1920 there were 53. In 1940 there were five, and in the past year there was one lynching. Whatever else this decrease in lynchings shows, it surely proves that society has shown its disgust for acts of mob violence. Poll Tax A Burden As for the poll tax, which is required of both white and Negro voters, there are seven states which GALES American Custom Chocolates, $1.75 STOWIT'S Rexall STORE FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1948 One Push He Didn't Expect When He Asked For Help Muncic, Ind.—(UP)—Thayer R. Small's good neighbor policy resulted in an auto accident. When his neighbor, John H. Darnell couldn't get his car started, Smail helped out by giving it a push down the alley with his auto. The two men drove around the block in opposite directions and collided at an intersection a few minutes later. Neither was hurt. require that a tax be paid in order to vote. The tax is small enough, ranging from $1 to the $2 charge required in Mississippi. But this extra burden has kept many prospective voters away from the poll. The Fair Employment Practice committee was established during the war by President Roosevelt. At the time of its origin it caused some concern among Southern legislators. The FEPC never caught on, however, since it was an executive order and Southern legislators could limit its effectiveness. The FEPC is primarily intended to see that whites and Negroes are given equal job opportunities by both employers and unions. Under President Truman's proposal the FEPC would become a law instead of an executive order. We're going to be hearing a lot about it from now on—John F. Wheeler. Call K. U. 251 With Your News. "Always ready to serve" Whether it's a snack or A FULL-COURSE MEAL, you'll enjoy eating GEMMELL'S CAFE 717 Mass. Ph.2071 FOR TAXI SERVICE CALL FOR TAXI SERVICE 2-800 UNION CAB CO. A New Service for our Classified Advertisers We will now take your want ads by telephone. Call KU 376 (Hours 10-12 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. except Sat.) Let our 9,000 (plus) readers know what you want to BUY, RENT, or SELL. University Daily Kansas Call KU 376 with your Want Ads FRI O yar $4,8 the gre dor for ly 1 Ges, and all fou estl was won be the ] added, two more cells to the left. 20, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS ect lp PAGE SEVEN layer R. policy. When Darnell l Smah sh down the two lock in dided at es later. n order n order enough, charge but this my pro- tee polls. Practice during velt. At legisla- light on, executive s could FEPC see that n equal employ- cident would execu- bear hear- on.— News. FE 2071 FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1940 Oil Digging Ain't Worth It Washington—(UP)—Thinking about digging a little hole in the back yard in search of a quart of oil or so? Well, don't do it, mister. You'll spoil the petunia bed for one thing. Your chances of success are about as slim as picking the winner, among the three-year-olds, yet uniform of the 1955 Kentucky derby. Take a lesson from the navy. They've been digging like mad in Alaska since 1946 and haven't found enough oil to wet main street in Farmer City, Ill. Not only that, the navy has spent $4,800,000 in Operation Petro up there, and is coming back to congress for more dough. Commodore W. G. Greenman appeared before a house sub-committee recently to talk about the matter. Greenman adjusted his eye glasses, got a little pink around the ears and said his samples didn't contain all the oil he and his lads had found. But darn neear all. Digging for oil, he said, was a gamble in any man's oil field. And doing same in Alaska is twice as tough. After finding oil there, he said, you'd have to worry about getting it back to the United States. Commodore Greenman said, honestly, he didn't think the navy was wasting its time. Nobody in the world, he said, knows when oil will be discovered in Alaska, although the scientists up there know that Official Bulletin Feb. 20. 1948 K. U. Entomology club regular meeting time changed to 4 p.m Tuesday. Regular meetings held every two weeks. Tau Beta Pi meeting, 7.30 p.m. Tuesday, Recreation room, Union Mr. J. Surface to speak. Refreshments. Coffee and Forums, 4 p. m. T. Tuesday, Pine room, Union. A. L. Pritchard to speak on "Economic Consequences of the War." Unitarian Liberal club, 7:30 p. m. Sunday, Pine room, Union. Tom Rehorn to speak on "German Fascism, American Style." The proficiency examination in English composition will be given Saturday, April 10, instead of March 6. Time and place to be announced later. A. I. Ch. E. dinner dance, 6:30 p. m. tomorrow, Kansas room, Union. Intermission program. $2.75 per couple. Pre-medical students who did not take medical aptitude test Feb. 2 and wish to enter medical school in September should arrange at Guidance Bureau office for special examination. Morning devotions each day, 8:30- 8:50 a. m. during Lent at Danforth chapel. All new undergraduate students who failed to take entrance tests given at morning session Jan. 31 should report to Lindley hall auditorium before 2 p.m. tomorrow for make-up. Tryouts for men's and women's chorus for "Campus Daze," student musical will be held 9-11 a. m. and 3-5 p. m. Monday, Pine room, Union. Students interested in tryout for solo part of "Campus Daze" call Jess Stewart, 552 or Jim McCaig, 664 by Wednesday. Inter - Varsity Christian Fellowship Bible Study group, 7:30 tonight instead of 7, 715 New York. UHS Dance Team To Perform Today The University High school square dance team will perform at 3 p.m. today at the Arts and Crafts festival in the Community building. The team members are Claudia Anderson, Myrna Cooper, Caroline Crosier, Patricia Dixon, John Evers. Don Fletchall, Charles Murphy, and Merle Powers. Call KU 376 with your Want Ads. there is some underground. A bored young committee reporter had a little trouble getting it all down. The committee was having trouble finding 3M of the old office office building. It was too warm in there. It is heated by coal, not oil. Young Democrats To Give Dance The University Young Democrats club will hold a dance tonight at the Jayhawk hotel in Topeka as part of the Washington day celebration by Kansas Democrats. Ray Briman, Topeka lawyer, reported Wednesday on plans for the banquet and announced his candidacy for president of the Washington Day club. Mr. Briman was Democratic candidate for state attorney general in 1946. Gael Sullivan, executive director of the Democratic national committee, will be the chief speaker at the banquet tomorrow night. The Young Democrat have also drawn up a constitution for a proposed state intercollegiate council of Young Democrats clubs. Two Psychologists Check Clinic Here The clinical division of the psychology department has two noted visitors. They are Dr. Carl R. Rogers, president of the American Psychology association, and Dr. David Shakow, professor of psychiatry and head of the division of neural psychiatry at the University of Illinois School of Medicine. The two men are here to study the University psychology clinic program as a first step in certification of clinical graduate training. Dr. Rogers and Dr. Shakow are making a tour of universities throughout the country to examine their clinical equipment. The University psychology clinic is now in the process of enlarging the amount of space on hand to train graduate students. Included in the remodeled rooms will be one way mirrors to watch the children being tested. Two boys have been nominated for the Summerfield scholarship from the University High school, Karl D. Edwards, principal said Thursday. Two UHS Students Win Scholarships The boys are Merle Powell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louie S. Powell; and John Evers, son of Mr. and Mrs. John H. Evers. Daily Kansan Classified Advertising Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid promptly. Ads must be cared for (except Saturday) or brought to the University office. Journalism bibg not later than 4 a.m. the day before publication is desired. Phone KU 376 Classified Advertising Rates One Three Five day days days 25 words or less 35c 65c 90c additional words 1c 2c 3c For Sale 1932 4-DOOR Nash, 43,500 actual miles, good shape throughout. Good transportation. To see to appreciate. Give me make a bid. Brown, 1134 Miss., phone 3382 . 23 KODAK BANTAM, f. 4.5 camera and leather carrying case. Nearly new. See at 2E Sunnyside, after 6 p.m. . 20 i-FOOT RED ARROW house trailer in a certain cordial building and curtains. Good condition. Lavern Mausof, 2047 La. . 26 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. 869 HFTFD 869 Wanted ENGINEERING student wnits one fellow to share double room. $12.50 per month. 1300 Tenn. Phone 1387M. 24 APARTMENT: furnished or unfurnished. Student, veteran, no children, 2 year occupancy. Call J. E. Greenhaw, 3020 after 6am. ONE K U. student to share two 2-room suite. 937 Ohio. Ph. 2521M. 23 For Rent FOR A BOY: One vacancy in double room, twin beds. 8tw. Missouri. 1971W. 82 ROOM FOR 2 boys, $3 each. Will rent as single for $4. Call 2661W or see at 912 Alabama after 5:00. Two blocks below stadium. 25 VACANCY: For one student in large double room. Modern home, 1½ block from campus, % block from bus line. Residents only. Room for two ROOM FOR (two boys or married couple Near University. Cooking facilities. Ph 100-1200. ONE DOUBLE room for two college men information, reasonable rates. 1323 K. Phot. 3067. VERY attractive room for two boys, twins and a girl, campus. 1317 Kt. Mrs. Oleo Phi. 2234W. Miscellaneous MATHEMATICS Tutor: Lucy T. Dougherty at 90 Maine. (By bus, 3 blocks west of Mississippi, or by path down the Hill west of the stadium). Phone 3804M. ESTABLISHED part-time business in Lawrence. Will average $30 daily gross. No selling, Ideal for Professor, student, semi-retired person, anyone wanting to add to income. Sources of standard nickel candy bar and candy bar inventory have been established candy bar company, established Lew Phillips, 6316 Oak St., K.C. Mo. MARCELLA'S Beauty shop moved to 342 Indiana St. Beautiful, soft, natural "Rabbit" a specialty. Day and night appointment new patrons are precalled. Phone 520. 25 DANCE every Saturday night at Odd Fel- ter. Informal Joe Langwire orchestra. ries Launderette Service 9 lbs. of wash, 25c 21 Bendix Washers Plaza 226 1109 Mass. Phone 2054 813 Vt. Phone 3368 BILL'S GRILL OUICK COURTEOUS SERVICE Across from the Courthouse Opposite the Court House CALL 646 - Dependable Service for 1111 Mass. Quality Cleaning - Prompt Pickup—Delivery -20% DISCOUNT FOR CASH AND CARRY— ACME Dry Cleaners EXPERIENCED BABY sitter—mother; 35e night plus transport and nursery. P.O. Box 1879M, 212 Ocho Rios, Mexico. ALTERATIONS and general sewing. Ph. 1960M, 110 Tennis. Mrs. Baird Gorrill. Found ECONOMICS book in Fraser theater, ECONOMICS book in Kenyon 23 upon payment of this ad. Transportation RIDERS WANTED* Driving to Parsons via Iola, Chanute, Erie, every Friday at 4:00 p.m. Call 3312 after 7:00 p.m. Walter Cox. 20 Lost I WILL trade your topcoat and key case for my topcoat which you took Wed. noon at Union. Scott Workman, 1121 Ohio. Phone 11. 24 RISK'S HELP-YOURSELF LAUNDRY Maytag Machines Line Space Reasonable Rates Weekdays 9-6 Saturdays 9-3 GREEN BILLFOLD at Vice-Versa dance. Finder please return to lost and found dept. or call Marion Kysar, Phone 365. Reward. 24 BROWN leather bilffold. Keep money. leave bilffold and other contents at Dally Kansan office or mail to F. L. Davis, 1245W. Campus. 23 BLACK AND GOLD Ewasharp pen and pen paper. Call 3129. O. C. King, written on brown. 1900 III.—Phone 623 COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals Short Orders Malts Sandwiches Air Conditioned Open 5:30—12 p.m. The making of women's and children's wear requires VISION FOR THE FUTURE Creative versatility is a keystone of success in a field in which styling and production techniques must be re-marshalled four times a year to meet the seasonal demands for spring, summer, fall and winter apparel. KNOWLEDGE FROM THE PAST A thorough background of artistic and technological understanding is demanded by the need to anticipate in advance the needs of the market, prior to the presentation of new lines to the public. Introducing The Women's and Children's Wear Industry to THE AMERICAN COLLEGIATE PUBLIC A series sponsored by "Women's Wear Daily," a Fairchild Publication, 8 East 13th St., New York 3, N.Y. PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 20, 1949 Greek Prince Will Speak Here Tuesday Prince Peter is the son of Prince George of Greece and the nephew of the late King Constantine. Princess Irene, a Russian commoner born in St. Petersburg, left Russia as a young woman for Switzerland and later became a French citizen. This is her second visit to the United States and her husband's first. The 39-year-old prince served as liaison officer with Gen. Maitland Wilson, British commander in Greece, during the war. When the Germans marched on Athens, Prince Peter and General Wilson escaped to Crete where the prince served as liaison officer with General Freyberg of New Zealand. Aldo Aliotti, engineering senior, started the program with a talk about "Reality and Unreality." Aliotti explained the necessity for placing a greater emphasis on the spiritual rather than the material things of life. Four speakers were featured on the program of the Forensic league which met Thursday in the Union recreation room. Forensic Has 4 Speakers "How to Create a Stage Character" was the subject of a speech by Bermice Brady, College sophomore, in which she demonstrated the difficulties of building a stage characterization. Curtis Nystrom, College sophomore, closed the program with an appeal to "Know Thyself." He emphasized the need for young people to set a series of goals toward which they can direct their lives. Robert Davis, College sophomore, explained the current civil rights system of the federal and state governments. He appealed for a more determined and sincere recognition of the citizens' constitutional rights. Dan Palmquist, education senior, was chairman for the program and Hal Friesen, business junior, presided at the short business meeting. A driving course for teachers will be given at the University June 21 to 24. Teachers To Have Driving Course Many schools have added this course, said Hobart Hanson, director of the Lawrence extension center, since various motor car associations and manufacturers are giving dual control cars to high schools for driver training. Enrollment will be limited to 40 high school teachers from Missouri and Kansas. Graduate Returns From Teaching In Afghanistan John Robert Fluker, 42, who has been teaching in Afghanistan the past four years, visited friends on the campus Tuesday. Fluker, who was graduated from the School of Business, will study at Columbia university for a doctor of philosophy degree. While attending the University, he was a Summerfield scholar and won a letter in football. Weslevans Will Skate Wesley Foundation is having a roller skating party tonight from 9:45 to midnight at the Rollerdrome skating rink. Members who have not bought tickets may get them at the rink tonight. By Bibler Little Man On Campus DISSECTING LAB Washington, Feb. 19 — (UP) — C.I.O. President Philip Murray pleaded innocent today to government charges that he violated the Taft-Hartley act's ban on political activity by labor unions. Murray Says 'Not Guilty' Murray's pleas set the stage for a test of the constitutionality of the act's prohibition. His attorneys promptly asked Federal Judge Alexander Holtzoff to dismiss the indictment on the grounds that it is unconstitutional. Holtzoff set next Friday for oral arguments on the dismissal motion and scheduled March 22 for the start of Murray's trial. Murray spoke a firm, quiet "not guilty" when arraigned before Holtzoff. He entered the not guilty plea for both himself and the C.I.O. The government charges he and the C.I.O. illegally campaigned in support of Democratic Rep. Edward A. Garmatz in a special Maryland election last summer. Must Take 12 Hours To Get Pay Raise Veterans will not receive increased G.I. bill benefits if they are carrying less than 12 hours, Dr. E. R. Elbel, director veterans bureau, said today. Any architecture student who wants to subscribe to the architecture magazine, the Architectural Forum, may do so through the University book store at a special subscription rate of $3. Each subscriber must present his activity book at the time of purchase. Subsistence will be paid to veterans carrying less than the required credit hours in proportion to the hours of load, and based upon the $65 or $90 allowances. Helen V. Patch, College junior, was elected vice-president of the Mathematics club Thursday to succeed Lois M. Linck. junior. For example, a veteran carrying a nine-hour load will receive three-fourths of $65 or $90 depending on whether he is single or married. The club heard President Joseph A. Hull explain that complex harmonic motion can be represented by an infinite sum of sine and cosine wave components. Prof. George M. Beal of the Architecture department said that the regular subscription price of the magazine is $6. Architects May Subscribe To Magazine At Lower Rate Mathematics Club Elects Helen Patch Vice-President To Present Voice Recital Elaine Rodgers, fine arts senior, is giving her senior voice recital at 8 p.m. Feb. 23 in Frank Strong auditorium. She is a mezzo-soprano studying under Prof. Joseph Wilkins. Miss Rodgers attended Kansas City university for two years. She spent one summer at the National Music camp. Interlochen, Mich. Miss Rodgers studied voice nine years with Miss Evaline Hartley of Kansas City university. She won a, district contest of the Cincinnati Summer Light opera auditions in 1947 and a scholarship given by the Kansas City Musical club. She played the roles of Napcy in "Martha" and Ruth in "The Pirates of Penzance," both presented by the Kansas City University Light Opera association. She was a guest soloist with the Kansas City Civic orchestra under De Rubertis. Miss Rodgers is a charter member of the University chapter of Sigma Alpha Iota, national women's musical sorority, and is editor of the chapter. "Higher education could not develop unless one race borrowed culture from another," Carlyle S. Smith, assistant professor of sociology, told the Sociology club Thursday night. "No culture is independent of invention." Professor Smith said in his talk on "Values of Anthropology through Sociology." Culture Borrowed Sociology Club Told Senior class announcements may be ordered at the business office beginning Feb. 23. Three types will be available: Charles Little, College sophomore, was unanimously elected treasurer, replacing Milton Coughenous, who mounted at the end of the fall semester. "There is one freedom which has been be said, "That is freedom of culture." Seniors May Order Announcements 1. Leather booklets containing the names of all graduates, and four etchings of campus buildings. These will be 60 cents each. 3. Dutch folders, containing only the announcement of the graduation date, at 15 cents each. 2. Cardboard booklets of the same format, at 40 cents each. Personal cards may be ordered at the same time. All orders should be in by March 15. Deans Paul B. Lawson of the College, George B. Smith of the School of Education; and D. M. Swartbout of the School of Fine Arts have agreed to excuse students from classes for the A.W.S. conference, "Blueprinting Tomorow," if no examinations or prearranged laboratory experiments are scheduled. A record of attendance will be kept at all meetings. This record will be available to all faculty members. Absences Allowed For AWS Meeting Food Costs Down Half Of Increase New York, Feb. 20- (UP) Falling prices in the last week increased out almost half of the increased food costs of the last year for a typical American family. The price average of 45 basic food items was 6.3 per cent higher today than it was a year ago. The price of the same 45 items last week was 13 per cent higher. A spokesman for the A. & P. food stores said that although the prices might vary on individual items, the overall cost would be approximately the same for New England and the metropolitan areas of the West Coast. Prices in the Midlands and South would be only fractionally less. The United Press selected 45 basic food items that might be found in the weekly market basket of a typical American family of two adults and three children. The prices were cross-checked with chain stores, the New York city department of markets and shopping baskets. The total cost of the 45 items in New York today was $27.67. Not all the items would be found on an individual table in one week, but offer a choice for a balanced diet. The same items last week cost $29.41. A year ago they cost $26.03. Dr. L. R. Lind, chairman of the department of Greek and Latin, has made the first English translation of the "Epitome of Andreas Vessallus." He read the introduction to his translation to members of Phi Alpha Theta. Thursday. The book, to be published next year, is dedicated to Dr. Logan Clendening, late professor of the School of Medicine. Dr. Clendening wrote the preface to the book immediately before his death. Prof Translates Old Medical Book The "Epitome" is an index and guide to the parts of the body. It was written in June of 1543 and was immediately translated into German, but has never been obtainable in English. Vesalius also wrote, "On The Structure of Human Anatomy," which has not yet been translated. His works revolutionized the pre-Renaissance conception of the anatomy. The Yale Medical library is sponsoring the publication of Dr. Lind's book. It will be printed by Mae-Millan company. A dinner-dance will be given by the American Institute of Chemical Engineers at 6:30 p. m. tomorrow, in the Kansas room of the Union. Chemical Engineers Give Dinner Dance Tomorrow John Ferris will be toastmaster. Charles Becker, Riley Dixon, and Dalton Eash will do a burlesque of a chemical engineering staff meet- Ronald Reed, Eugene Sallee, and Carl Von Wadden will sing in trio. Charerones are Prof. and Mrs. J. O. Maloney, Prof. and Mrs. Fred Kurata, and Prof. S. A. Miller. Jacobson Shows Paintings Arvid Jacobson, assistant professor of design, is showing 16 water colors throughout the state in a traveling one-man exhibit. The exhibit is sponsored by the Kansas Federation of Art and has been presented in McPherson, Hays, Atchison, and Salina. Non-Communist Czech Ministers Leave Cabinet Prague, Feb. 20—(UP)—Ministers representing three parties in the cabinet of Communist Premier Klement Gottwald submitted their resignations to President Edward Benes tonight. Basically the issue is whether the Communists will lead Czechoslovakia into the realm of the eastern style workers state. It was brought into the open earlier this week when the communists refused to cooperate any longer with the other parties in the coalition which for 30 months, has run the country under a kind of political truce. The communists demanded a new "above party" coalition of workers and peasants to take over under the leadership of Gottwald. Few here doubted that they would set out to revamp the Czechoslovak parliamentary democracy into something more like the Eastern European farms if they succeed. The members of the National Socialist, Slovak Democratic, and Catholic Peoples parties turned in their resignations as a move-in the battle within the coalition cabinet against the Communists for control of the state police forces. President Benes did not accept the resignations immediately, and some possibility was seen that he might reject them. The cabinet boycott was prompted by the issue which broke up a cabinet session last Tuesday, officials said. That was the refusal of the communist ministry of interior to carry out a government order to halt communist promotions in the police force. The position of the Social Democrats in the non-communist group was not entirely clear. Efforts were being made to persuade them to join the three rightist parties in the proposed resignations. The social democrats were reported reliably to have rejected a communist proposal to form a two-party government. To Honor Stevens On 87th Birthday The unveiling of a portrait of William Chase Stevens, professor emeritus of botany, will highlight a celebration in his honor tomorrow on his 87th birthday. The portrait will be presented by the Linnaean club. It was purchased by subscriptions from Professor Stevens's friends, former students, and the club. The portrait was painted by Mrs. Bernice Lopes, Kansas artists, and will be presented to the botany department. Dr. N. P. Sherwood, head of the bacteriology department, will speak. During his undergraduate days he was a student of Professor Stevens. Professor Stevens has been a member of the botany department for 59 years. He was graduated from the University in 1885 and began teaching here in 1889. In 1937 Professor Stevens retired to an emeritus status and since that time has compiled a study of wild flowers of Kansas which will soon be published by the University press. The Linnaean club consists of persons interested in flowers. European Culture Shown At Museum Refuse To Cooperate Cause Of Boycott A series of reproductions based on the pictorial essay, "The Age of Enlightenment," which appeared in Life magazine, will be on display in the south gallery of Spooner-Thayer museum until March 1. The display is the fifth in a series of Life articles on the history of Western culture. The series covers the social, economic, and political aspects from the age of Louis XV to the coronation of Napoleon in 1804. The portraits include some of the great thinkers of the period and the court life in France. Tr Fo N I tha stru hou nex A que ma hou 20, 1948 University No.94 Daily kansan STUDENT NEWSPAPER Monday, February 23, 1948 Lawrence, Kansas ministers the cab- llement esigna- nes to- accept the and some e might ompted a cabi- s is said ommu- rry out ommu- rce force Demo- group is were to join teo.pro l dem to have osal to at. Soal D Cath- in their battle against of the ens lay other the hoslosov- eastern oerought k when operate parties in months, kind of a new workers under the w here out to parlia- something european rait of professor highlight tomor based by: s pur- n Pro- er stu- portrait Lopes, e pre- ment. of the speak. says he stevens. seen a artment educated and been in 1937 to an at time flowers e publishes. based Age of red in clay in Thayer series of ists of s. 1. eco- on the thesis of its in- cers of life in Truman Asks For 10 Million New Houses Washington, Feb. 23—(UP)—President Truman today outlined a vast housing program calling for 10 million new houses in the next 10 years, resumption of public housing, and extension of rent controls until April 30, 1949. In a message to congress, he urged that it provide funds to permit construction of 100,000 low-rent public housing units each year for the next five years. Mr. Truman also set forth a program to reduce building costs and to aid cities in slum clearance and rebuilding run-down areas. He warned that "the critical housing shortage is contributing to the upward pressure on the selling price and rental price of housing." Need More Building Need More Building "While we need rent control until this shortage can be overcome, the basic problem is to increase housing production to eliminate the shortage." Mr. Truman said. Mr. Truman also renewed his request for powers to allocate scarce materials as a means of spurring housing construction. Besides recommending extension of rent controls, he said it is "essential that congress provide vitally needed enforcement authority which is now lacking." He said this is needed to protect tenants against illegal rent increases and eviction. A Five-Point Program The president said too much of the housing built last year was "priced beyond the means of those who needed it most." To remedy this he asked congress to: 1. Continue and strengthen rent control. 2. Stimulate a higher volume home building on a sustained basis, with special emphasis on rental housing, and the proper safeguards against possible inflationary effects. 3. Reduce building costs. 4. Assist communities in providing low-rent housing for families in the lowest income groups. 5. Aid cities in rebuilding and modernizing run-down areas. The construction of almost one million housing units in 1947 was an "excellent accomplishment." Mr. Truman said, but much of it was too high-priced. He said that "amost no housing was built for low-income families." Juniors in chemistry, engineering, mathematics, metallurgy or physics may apply for three months summer work in Washington, D.C., Dean J. H. Nelson, chairman of the committee on aids and awards, said today. US Needs Summer Help Appointees will receive $200 a month from the national bureau of standards, the naval ordnance laboratory, or the naval research laboratory. Juniors receiving appointments and successfully completing the three months probationary period will be eligible for automatic permanent appointments at higher pay after graduation. Seniors may take the examinations and begin permanent work immediately. Applications must be made by March 9. Examinations will be given at the University sometime in April. Dean Nelson has application blanks and examination samples. Peter Of Greece To Talk Tomorrow Prince Peter, third in line of succession to the Greek throne, will speak at 4 p.m. tomorrow in Fraser theater. His subject will be "Greece and the Trend of World Events." Prince Peter is the son of Prince George of Greece and nephew of the late King Constantine. The couple is making a goodwill tour of the United States in support of the Marshall plan with the approval of the state department and the Greek government. K-Club Installs 70 Letter-Men Seventy men were installed in the reorganized K-club and the design of a membership identification pin was revealed at the K-club installation banquet in the Kansas room of the Union Feb. 19. The pin design was selected in an open contests. Joseph Kott, senior in architectural engineering, won the $10 first prize. The $5 second prize went to Marian Osmond, College junior. The pin chosen has eight corners to represent the eight major sports. Prof. W. W. Davis, Big Seven representative for the University, urged that the club secure a permanent office. He also suggested that the K-club keep accurate and permanent records of the achievements of University athletes. Prof. E. R. Elbel acted as master of ceremonies and the Rev. Theo H. Aszman, pastor of the First Presbyterian church, gave the invocation. Special guests were E. R. Elbel and Millard Easton, faculty advisors for the K-club; Carroll Clark, Karl Klooz, G. W. Smith, and E. L. Treece, all of the University athletic board; Forcet C. Allen, varsity basketball coach; E. L. Falkenstein, business manager of the athletic department; Mike Ghetto, assistant football coach; Donald Henry, physical education instructor; Walter Mikols, varsity swimming coach; Harry Horrow, sports editor of the Lawrence Journal-World; Don Pierce, sports publicity director; Henry Shenk, professor of physical education; and E. C. Quigley, director of athletics. The letter-men who were installed were Eugene Barr, Richard Bertuzzi, William Binter, Duke Burt, Charles Carson, Wesley Channel, and Millard P. Collins. Charles Conroy, Robert Crowley, Kenneth Danneberg, Louis De Luna, John Dickerson, Harold England, Jack Eskridge, Jack Fink, Howard Fischer, Herbert Foster, Clarence "Bud" French, Donald Frisby, Joseph Gilman, Louis Goering, George Gorman, Forrest Griffith, Louis Hammer, John Hawley, and Bruce Hocken. Dick Monroe, Robert Morris, Lewis Musick, Delvin Norris, Sirren Kenko, Richard Richards, Leroy Robinson, Warren Riegle, treasurer, Wallace Rose, David Schmidt, Otto Schnellbacher, president, Thomas Scotfield, Thomas Scott, Neale Shaw, Richard Shea, Homer Sherwood, Eugene Sherwood, Marvin Small, Bryan Sperry, Kenneth Sperry, Frank Stannard, John Stites, Clifford Wade, Dexter Welton, chairman of the organization committee, and Norbert Zimmer. Donald Herd, Robert L. Hill, Carl Hirl William Hamdon, Donald M. Johnson, Hugh Johnson, Robert Karnes, Robert Kline, Dorwin F. Lamink, Edwin Lee, Lynn Leigh, vice-president, Guy Mabry, Robert Malott, Dunne McCarter, Clifford McDonald, Charles Moffett, Robert D. Moore, Harold Moore, secretary. Kansas — Cloudy and windy. Warmer south and east today and tonight. Tomorrow rain extreme east. High today in 40's, low tonight 35 to 40. WEATHER Mrs. Roosevelt Urges UN Army For Palestine Lake Success, N. Y., Feb. 23- (UP) -Four prominent Americans, including Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, in American delegate to the United Nations, urged the U.N. security council today to form an international army for Palestine without delay. The four Americans, acting on the eve of the fateful Security council debate of the Palestine partition program, also called for the lifting of the United States embarg on arms ships to Holy land Jews and the consideration of political and economic sanctions against the Arabs. The appeal, issued through the American association for the United Nations, was signed by Mrs. Roosevelt, former Governor Herbert H Lehman of New York, former Undersecretary of State Summer Welles, and Sen. Elbert Thomas, D. Utah. Because Of Fermenting Situation Their action coincided with these other developments in the fermenting Palestine situation: 1. The Jewish agency, official spokesman for Palestine Jews, formally charged Great Britain with strengthening the Arabs' fight against partition and encouraging full-scale war in Palestine. 2. British Colonial Secretary Arthur Creech Jones, London's chief trouble shooter in the Palestine issue, angrily denied charges of impartiality to one side or the other. He defended British policy in Palestine in a radio speech delivered yesterday at Chicago. 3. Warren R. Austin, chief American delegate to the United Nations, went to Washington to receive from Secretary of State George C. Marshall the first instructions on the United States position in the impending debate of the Palestine problem. Austin will unveil America's position—or part of it—soon after the Security council convenes tomorrow to consider the U. N. Palestine commission request for a U. N. army to enforce partition. To Fix Blame For Blast Intensive investigations were underway in Jerusalem today to determine responsibility for an earthquake blast in the Jewish center of Jerusalem early Sunday which killed 42 persons and injured 97. Enraged Jewish fighters, blaming the blast on the British, killed 10 Britons in a wave of retaliation. Two of the Britons were shot to death while they lay injured on hospital beds. The blast, the revenge killings and other scattered deaths brought the Sunday toll in the Holy land to 56 killed and 116 wounded. It was the largest single day's casualty list since the King David hotel bombing in July, 1946. Thousands of Jewish rescue workers labored throughout the night to reach victims still trapped in the debris. The slide-rule class will meet at 7 p.m. today in 426 Lindley hall, and the Thursday group will meet in 9 Frank Strong hall. New Schedule For Slide-Rule Class Class schedules showing the material to be covered are posted in Lindley hall. Because of the Kansas State- Kansas basketball game March 1, the meeting scheduled for that evening will be postponed until March 2. The March 2 class and all succeeding ones will meet in 101 Snow hall. The course will he completed April 1. It is sponsored by Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity. Fourth Humanities Lecture Tomorrow Prof. Walter R. Agard, chairman of the department of classics at the University of Wisconsin and Rhodes scholar, will lecture at 8 p.m. tomorrow, Fraser theater on "Three Themes in Classical Literature." His lecture will be the fourth in the humanities series. Prof. Agard has lectured and written books on ancient Greek literature, art and architecture; modern American architecture; and the classics in modern education. Traffic Fines May Be Raised Traffic fines for driving the wrong way on one-way streets may be increased from $1 to $5. C. A. Bliesman, chief of the Lawrence police department, said the department believes the violations are intentional. More than 10 tickets are issued every day for such violations. "I do not want to seem too critical of the violators because improvement has been made in freeing traffic and reducing the number of possible accidents on Tennessee street," he said. "However, by now anyone who can read should be aware that they are driving on a one-way street." Regulations Necessary To relieve the hazards of crowded driving conditions, regulations for either one-way traffic, or parking on only one side of the street were necessary, he explained. Fines also may be given for parking in the wrong direction on one-way streets, he said. Cars would not be parked thus if they had not been driven the wrong way, he explained. Most of the violations occur at the intersection of 14th and Massachusetts streets. J. A. Messer, city patrolman, said that he writes an average of 8 to 10 tickets each day for traffic laws violated there. New Traffic Lanes Westbound traffic on 14th street was opened from Massachusetts to Kentucky to avert congestion in the Liberty Memorial High school safety zone. Downhill traffic on 14th recently was extended to Kentucky to simplify the route to Sunflower. Streets regulated to one-way traffic are Tennessee, south to north from 19th to 11th; Kentucky, north to south from 11th to 19th; 14th, from Massachusetts to Kentucky; and North Park street, east to west from Massachusetts to Vermont. 96th Vespers End Festival The 96th All-Musical vespers closed the Kansas Arts and Crafts festival Sunday afternoon in Hoch auditorium. More than 400 persons representing the major musical organizations in the School of Fine Arts took part. The program was semi-classical. Charles Sanford Skilton was the Kansas composer honored. The University Symphony orchestra, directed by Russell L. Wiley, associate professor, played two of Mr. Skilton's Indian dances and the string quartet played his "Adagio from B Minor Quartet." Mr. Skilton came to the University as professor of organ in 1903 and was a member of the faculty of the School of Fine Arts until he died in 1941. DuMont Reed's tenor solo in "Turn Ye to Me," a Scotch folk song, highlighted the performance of the Men's Glee club, and Mary Jane Bers carried solo honors for the a Cappella choir. Medical School Deanship Goes To Dr. Murphy Dr. H. R. Wahl, who has held the post since 1924, will continue as head of the department of pathology. Dr. Franklin D. Murphy has been named dean of the University School of Medicine, Chancellor Deane W. Malott announced today. The appointment is effective July 1. The change is being made at the request of Dean Wahl, Chancellor Malott said. During his 24 years as dean, Dr. Wahl has been able to devote but little time to his specialty, pathology. "It is with real regret." Chancellor Malott said, "that we are accepting Dean Wahl's retirement from the deanship, but Dean Wahl and I are delighted that Dr. Murphy will take over administration of the school. We look forward to the school's development under his young and aggressive leadership." Son of School's Founder Dr. Murphy, now a member of the medical faculty, is a son of the late Dr. Franklin E. Murphy, one of the founders of the school. The new dean will begin at once to spend more of his time at the University of Kansas Medical center before officially assuming his new post in mid-summer. Dr. Murphy will also be associate professor of medicine. He will not engage in practice. The new dean received an A. B. degree from the University of Kansas in 1936 and the following year held a German exchange fellowship and studied physiology at Goettingen university. He received an M.D. degree from the University of Pennsylvania in 1941, served his internship at the university hospital there, held a residency in 1942-43, and was a fellow on the staff of the Pennsylvania school in 1943-44. Officer in Army From 1944 to 1946 he was an officer in the army medical corps, working with a tropical diseases research unit in Memphis. He was also cardiologist at two of the army's general hospitals. Dr. Murphy is a member of Nu Sigma Nu, professional medical fraternity, and Alpha Omega Alpha honorary medical fraternity. As an undergraduate at the University, he was a member of Beta Theta Pi, social fraternity, and Sigma Xi, honorary research society. He is also a member of the American College of Physicians, the American Heart association, and the American Federation of Clinical Research. Club To Tour Kansas City The International club will tour Kansas City March 6. The Nelson art gallery, the Kansas City Star plant, and various industrial plants will be visited. The All Student Council has appropriated $150 to the club for trips such as these to points of interest in Kansas. A dinner open to all students will be given later this semester. It will be planned around the theme of some foreign country and traditional foods will be served. Dinner committee members appointed are Samuel Duran, Kenneth Johnson, Humberto Trujillo, Joe Portuguez, David Sommerville, Luis Alexander, A. Marcelo Mettewie, and Isabel Moya. A secretarial committee to plan details for the trip and dinner was appointed. Members are Erenne Kuhn, Kenneth Johnson, Dorothy Park, and David Sommerville. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1948 Official Bulletin Feb. 23, 1948 Physical Therapy club, 7:30 to night, projection room, Fraser. Two films. Bounders fraternity, 7:30 tonight. Memorial Union. Coffee and Forums, 4 p.m. to tomorrow, Pine room, Union. A. L. Pritchard to speak on "Economic Consequences of the War." Students interested in trying out for solo part of "Campus Daze" call Jess Stewart, 552 or Jim McCaig, 664 by Wednesday. by Wednesday. Morning devotions each day, 8:30- 8:50 a.m. during Lent at Danforth chapel. Consequences Tau Beta Pi, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, recreation room, Union Mr. J. surface, speaker. Refreshments. Fencing club, 7.30 p.m. tomorrow, 110. Rahimian. S. A.M., 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Union ballroom. John W. Harris, Dist. Mgr., Proctor & Gamble, speaker. KUJ. Entomology club regular meeting time changed to 4 p.m. tomorrow ___ A. S.T.E. $ p.m. tomorrow, Fowler shops. Engineering exhibition plans will be presented. Movie. Refreshments. Y.M.C.A. cabinet, 5 p.m. tomorrow, Pine room, Union Jewish Student Union, 5 p.m. tomorrow. Myers hall. Archery club practice, 5 to 7 p.m. tomorrow and 4 to 6 p.m. Wednesday. Robinson annex. Proficiency examination in English composition will be given Saturday, April 10, instead of March 6. Time and place to be announced later. University. Women's club group meetings Thursday. Pidi Kappa Sigma, 7 tonight, Pine room. Institute of Aeronautical Sciences, 7:30 p. m. Wednesday, quonset hut, rear Marvin hall. Jerry Davidson of C. A. A., speaker. Slide rule course, 7 tonight, 426 Lindley. Second section, 7 p. m. Thursday, 9 Frank Strong. I. S. A. Conucil, 7:15 tonight, 228 Frank Strong. Important that all members attend. Ten delegates will represent the University Y. M. C. A. during Religious Emphasis week at Park College, Portville, Mo. 10 Go To Perk College Religious Emphasis Program The delegates are Lorna E. Green and Mary W. Lees, College seniors; Olive Michner, Jay V. Grimm and John M. Wetmore, College juniors; Harrison E. Madden and John L. Eberhardt, College sophomores; and Elmer R. Rusco and Harry P. Lees, College freshman. D. Ned Linearag, executive secretary of the University Y. M. C. A., will accompany the students. Geological Survey, Man Attends Engineers' Meeting Earl K. Nixon of the state Geological Survey is attending the meeting of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers in New York. Mr. Nixon said that he will observe trends in the use of economic raw materials. He also hopes to get ideas for the Geological Survey. His duties are concerned with the economic geology of Kansas. Zoology Club To Hear Talk On Gene Action Mechanism Dr. Ernest W. Caspari will speak on "Mechanisms of Gene Action" at zoology seminar 4 p. m. today at 101 Snow hall. Dr. Caspari is from the department of genetics at Carnegie Institute of Washington. Members of the biological department are invited. University Daily Kansan Mail subscription: $3 a semester. $4.50 a year, (in lawen add $1.00 a semester) ostage). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and weekends for examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. APO To Arrange Visitation Day Five members of Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity, were appointed Thursday to arrange a program for Scout Visitation day to be held at the University April 17. Members of the committee are William LaCombe, chairman; William Allen Stewart, Donald Yockey, Orilton Shumate, and Austin Pickering. Donald Wilkie, who arranged the event last year, will advise the committee. Clarence Atkins, president, reported that Rockhurst college had requested information on the lost and found department. Atkins attended a banquet honoring Dean Arno Nowotny, national president, in Kansas City Feb. 13. A meeting of the executive committee will be held at 6 p.m. tomorrow in the lost and found office in the Union. Jam-proof windows that raise and lower by fingertip control, electrically, are among motordom's 1943 features. A Our Modern Vaults Are SAFE Moth-Proof Dirt-Proof Fire-Proof Theft-Proof Fully Insured INDEPENDENT Laundry and Dry Cleaners Call 432 740 Verm. DU PONT Digest For Students of Science and Engineering Research simplifies print making with development of "Varigam" Paper Chemists and physicists make important contributions tion of the spectrum and is also sensitive to light in the green region, with low contrast. The action of "Varigam" depends on the ability of certain dyes to extend the sensitivity of silver halide emulsions beyond the blue and blue-green regions. This effect was well known to scientists. But "Varigam" has an added feature — it gives high contrast in the blue por- To eliminate this expensive, unwieldy situation, scientists developed "Varigam" variable contrast photographic paper. With "Varigam," the whole procedure of getting different degrees of contrast is reversed. Instead of using several grades of paper, the photographer uses only one. He gets variation in contrast by use of filters that control the wave lengths of light reaching the paper, thereby getting finer degrees of contrast than are otherwise possible. Photographic film that has been overexposed or overdeveloped usually means a "hard" or "contrasty" negative—too much silver is deposited on the highlights in comparison with that in the shadows. The opposite effect, a "soft" or "thin" negative, results from under-exposure or underdevelopment. At one time photographers had to stock four or five grades of enlarging paper to correct for these conditions and get the right degree of contrast. "Variaam" the work of many men The first job was one for the physical chemists. Silver halide emulsions, normally sensitive to blue light, had to be made to give maximum contrast when exposed to light in this region. It was known that certain dyes would extend the sensitivity of the emulsion over as far as the infra-red. But they were not practical for photographic paper, being affected by the red safety light used in the darkroom. Research by chemists showed that certain dyes such as 1:1'-diethylthiopseoicyanine iodide extended the light sensitivity only to the green region. And, most important, they produced low contrast when used in lower-than-normal concentrations. When such a dye was combined with high-contrast silver halide emulsion, the result was an emulsion that gave high-contrast prints when exposed to blue light, and low-contrast prints when exposed to green light. Physicists Develop Filters Physicists made this contrast control a reality by preparing sharp-cutting filters that allow the user to control his printing light selectively. These filters, which are attached to the lens of the enlarger, range from blue for high contrast to yellow, which cuts out the blue almost entirely and gives low contrast. In between are eight grades of filters with intermediate degrees of blue and yellow light transmission. All of the filters are made in such a way that neither light nor printing time needs to be varied as filters are changed, except the last two on the blue end. These require approximately twice the time of the others. In "Varigam," made by Du Pont, chemical science has given the photographer new economy and convenience in printing, and a degree of contrast control more precise than is possible with any combination of commercial papers. Questions College Men ask about working with Du Pont What types of training are needed? The majority of openings for college graduates at Du Pont are in technical work and are usually in chemical, physical, or biological research; chemical, mechanical, civil, electrical, or industrial engineering; medical science; time in other fields, including architecture, ceramics, metallurgy, mining, petroleum and textile engineering, geology, mathematics, accounting, law, economics and journalism. Write for booklet, "The Du Pont Company and the College Graduates C Nemoura Building, Wilmington 83, Delaware." DUPONT REG. U. S. PAT. OFF. BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVING ...THROUGH CHEMISTRY Move facts about Du Pont - Listen to "Cavalcade of America," Mondays, 7 P.M. to CST on NBC T. normal print (center) can be obtained from either a "soft" negative (left) or a "hard" negative (right), using "Varigam" variable contrast paper. Sig 23,1948 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1948 PAGE THREE UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS Socially Speaking Faculty Women's Party "Farm Frolic" is the theme of the Faculty Women's club party to be held Friday at 7:30 p. m. at the club house. Square dancing and games will be the entertainment. Piano duets will be played by Marian Jersild and Katherine Mulky. Elin K. Jorgensen is general chairman of the party and will lead the singing and dancing. Other committee chairmen are: Mrs. Edith Kern, games; Joanne Johnson, decorations; and Margaret Pihlbad, refreshments. Phi Chi Theta Pledges Ten women have been pledged by Phi Chi Theta, business women's sorority. \* \* \* Those pledged were Corel Dunkley, Marcelle Gass, Frances Hadley, Mary Jane Lair, Doris Margreiter, Delma Nichols, Martha Oatman, Lois Parken, Letha Pearson, and Peggy Shinn. Phi Kaps Elect Recently elected officers of Phi Kappa are Edward Oaly, president; Bernard Domann, vice-president; Feliz Spies, recording secretary; Thomas Conroy, corresponding secretary; Ralph Collins, treasurer; Dulhane, steward; Al Riedel, sergeant-at-arms; Steve Herrera, historian; Jack Brooks, editor; and William Case, Kenneth Dieker, and William Conroy, interfraternity council representatives. Miller Hall Elects Miller hall recently elected the following officers: Joyce Rohrer, activities chairman; Rita Swearingen, scholarship chairman; Mary Helen Ryder, member of the social committee. Sigma Kappa Elects Recently elected officers of Sigma Kappa are; Pat Behler, president; Gerry Ott, vice-president; Kay Hessling, recording secretary; Carol Dunn, corresponding secretary; Jane Wilcox, social chairman; Billie Nave, activities chairman; Charlotte Reams, song leader; and Barbara Burnham, intramural chairman. Swarthout Visitors Mr. and Mrs. William A. Rider and baby daughter, Victoria, left Kansas City recently by plane for their home in Westbury, Long Island, after several weeks visit with Mrs. Rider's parents, Dean and Mrs. W. M. Swarthout, Lawrence. Tau Kappa Epsilon The pledge class of Tau Kappa Epsilon entertained the pledges of Delta Gamma with a luncheon and dance Saturday afternoon at the Teke house. New Jay Janes The Jay Janes chose four new members at a rush tea recently. They are Mary Lynn Trouseland, Delta Delta Delta; Rachel Cooper and Nancy German, Alpha Delta Pi; and Ruth Keller, Jolliffe. The pledging will be held at 5 p. m. Wednesday in Watkins hall. Read the Daily Kansan daily. GALES American Custom Chocolates, $1.75 STOWIT'S Rexall STORE GALES All this week 39c SALE Values up to $1.50 Come in and look around. Rowland's Mariners Plan To Aid El Guacio A project to aid the people of El Guacio, a farm community in Puerto Rico, was adopted by members of the Mariners club Feb. 20. The project is to be sponsored by the Presbyterian board of foreign missions. The women of El Gaucio will make hand made scarfs, hand towels, and other cloth products, which they will forward to the Matiners club. The members of the club will then offer these articles for sale at the University and in Lawrence. The money that is collected by the club from the sale of the cloth goods will be used to buy milk goats that will-be sent to the Puerto Rican community to help combat a shortage of milk in that country. Movies of Palestine were also shown at the meeting to acquaint members with living conditions throughout the world. University Women To Meet Thursday The members of the University Women's club will meet Thursday in neighborhood groups. Group 1 with Mrs. C. M. Baker at 2:30 p.m.; group 2 with Mrs. Guy Keeler at 7:30 p.m.; group 3 with Mrs. C. F. Nelson, 7:45 p.m.; group 4 with Mrs. John Patton, 8 p.m.; group 5 with Mrs. J. O. Maloney, 8 p. m.; group 6 with Mrs. J. A. Burzle, 8 p. m.; group 7 with Mrs. John Alfrey, 2:30 p.m.; group 8 with Mrs. Albert Palmerlee, at 8 p.m.; group 9 with Mrs. John Nelson at 7:30 p.m.; group 10 with Mrs. E. G. Nelson at 7:30 p.m.; group 11 with Mrs. Worthie Horr at 2:30 p.m.; and group 12 with Miss May Gardner at 7:30 p.m. Home Economics Club To Have Washington Party Home Economics club members will have a George Washington Day party at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the apartment of Doris Uehling, faculty advisor. A short business meeting will be held before the party. Refreshments will be served. Sigma Kappa Pledges Sigma Kappa announces the pledging of Margaret Marie Moyer, Lawrence. Weddings And Engagements Rummer-Burnham The engagement of Janet Rummer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James E. Rummer, to Robert W. Burnham, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Burnham, Wichita, was announced Sunday at Watkins hall by Miss Julia A. Willard, housemother. Before the announcement Beverly Stember, accompanied by Donna Lou Holm, sang "Because." Guests attending were: Mr. and Mrs. Burnham,Mr. and Mrs.Rummer, and Mr. and Mrs.Dale Rummer. Miss Rummer wore a corsage of Talisman roses. Her attendants, Gloria Neely and Mrs. Dale Rummer, received corsages of jonquils and pearls, the couple wore carnation corsages, and Miss Willard wore a gardenia. Miss Rummer is a College sophomore. Mr. Burnham is a senior in aeronautical engineering at Wichita university. Extension Awards Diplomas To 89 Lawrence Women University Extension announces the awarding of diplomas to 89 women of the Lawrence area for completion of work in the course, "The Pre-School Child." Mrs. Louella Foster conducted the course which covered all phases of care for the pre-school child. BUY, SELL, RENT thru our CLASSIFIEDS PHONE YOUR WANT ADS to the DAILY KANSAN (Hours 10-12 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. except Sat.) Phone KU 376 "Always ready to serve" Daily Specials- Home Made Pies GEMMELL'S CAFE Phone 2072 POPULAR RECORDS AT BELL KING SIZE PAPA—Julia Lee NOW IS THE HOUR-Charlie Spivak 717 Mass. AND THE ANGELS SING—Benny Goodman ON THE RECORD-A Phil Harris Album For The Finest In Music BELL MUSIC COMPANY 925 Mass. Phone 375 Why Not Fool Old Man Winter? Look Charming And Attractive Regardless of the Weather It's easy to do when you keep your Winter Clothes looking bright and new by sending them to us regularly for a thorough Dry Cleaning and Pressing. BRING YOUR CLEANING TO Phone 75 New York Cleaners Merchants of GOOD APPEARANCE 926 Mass. Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan. Get Your Tickets Today For The LEAP-YEAR HOP With Matt Betton & His Orchestra "America's Most Popular College Band" Saturday, Feb. 28 $1.75 A Couple Union Ballroom Tickets on Sale - Rotunda of Frank Strong, Union Bldg., and at Dance PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1948 Jayhawkers Out Of Race As K-State Clings To Top By PAUL ZEH Assistant Sports Editor The Kansas Jayhawkers were eliminated from the Big Seven title chase Saturday when they dropped their fifth conference tilt in a row to Oklahoma, 50 to 46. The Kansas State Wildcats extended their league lead with a 55 to 53 victory over Missouri. In the tight conference race the one game out of the cellar. Oklahoma, Missouri, and Iowa State are the only teams left with an outside chance of overhauling the torrid boys from Manhattan. Sooners Are Only Threat he Jayhawkers are tied for fifth only Courty answered his team's alarm after the Okies had trailed at the half and battled uphill for eight minutes of the second stanza by sinking a free toss to give the Sooners a 33 to 21 lead. Then Pistol Paul looped in almost a point a minute, cornered most of the rebounds, and footed it all over the court menacing the Jayhawkers. When Courty's fervor died down the Sooners had a 46 to 40 lead, and they kept that margin in the closing minutes. Waugh's Flay Is Brilliant Oklahoma's improving Sooners locomoted as the lone threat to Wildeat supremacy this year as they overpowered the Jayhawkers at Norman, thanks to fireman forward, Paul Court, one of the greatest competitors in Sooner court history. The only player on the court to match Courty's all-around brilliance was Jerry Waugh, Kansas' first-year quarterback. Waugh tallied 12 points and, like Courty, plagued the oposition all evening. Claude Houchin was the leading Kansas scorer, however, as he dunked 13 on six from the field and a free throw. Houchin's rebounding work was also a highlight of the game. At Manhattan, the Wildcats and Tigers put on the show of the year for title-crazed Aggie fans, with the 'Cats winning out in the last second on Clarence Branum's despair heave, the game ending 55 to 53. The Bengals put in a strong bid to move ahead of the Staters in the conference scramble, leading at the half, 19 to 15, and fighting the Wildcats down to the wire. Rick Harman hit 17 points and Brannum sank 13, while Red Haynes and Thornton Jenkins paced the Missouri team with nine markers apiece. Howey Is Banished Hal Howey was banished from the game, an act which brought wild protest from both the fans and the Aggie coach, Jack Gardner, adding to the excitement of the evening. Nebraska turned back the Iowa State Cyclones on their home court, 62 to 57, in the third weekend basketball thriller. The contest was rough and fast, with 53 fouls being called as four players pouled out. Paul Courty Heads Scoring Leaders Player, Team G Pts. Aver. Courty, (O) 8 102 12.75 Jenkins, (M) 9 97 10.78 Harman, (K-S) 8 86 10.75 SCHNELLBCR, (-) 8 84 10.50 Waters, (M) 8 84 10.50 Pippin, (M) 9 94 10.44 Shannon, (K-S) 8 78 9.75 Merchant, (O) 8 72 9.00 WAUGH, (K) 8 70 8.75 Ray Whede, (IS) 9 73 8.11 Launderette Service 9 lbs. of wash, 25c 21 Bendix Washers 813 Vt. Phone 3368 Intramural Results 813 Vt. Phone 3368 DESOTO SERVICE PYROUTH BULLY GALLAGHER MOTORS FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. Burt GALLAGHER MOTORS Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. Y. M.C.A. 67, Sigma Kappa Phi 15 Deuces Wild 40, Alpha Chi Sigma 24 DESOTO PROVISO SERVICE PEYMOUTH Navy Officers 26, Wesley 15 Friends and Demons 27, L.M.O.C. 2 N.R.O.T.C. 59, Armanav 19 Law School 29, McNewn A.C. 15 Last Chance 33, 939 Club 26 Sigma Chi 24, Lambda Chi 18 Dog House 30, D.U. 29 Phi Kappa 24, Pi K.A. 21 Phi Delts 30, Phi Psi 18 Spooner Thayer 33, Oread Hall 32 A.V.C. 37, Y.M.C.A. 26 Beta 35, Delta Chi 27 Phi Gam 27, Sig Eps 17 Triangle 25, A.K. Psi 19 Epacos 33, Battenfeld 31 9:30 Symphonic Favorites, Dan Barry, narrator. 2:30 Art by Radio, Maud Ellsworth. On KFKU 9.30 Poetry for Pleasure, Prof. A. C. Edwards. Wednesday Wednesday Tuesday 2:30 Music. 2:45 Doorway to Knowledge, Todd Douglas. 6:20 K. H. Reinbury. The Bus- (Adv.) Thursday 9:30 K. U. Brambusters. Thursday 2:30 The Flying Carpet. 2:45 W. D. Paden Reviews. 9:30 Women of Kansas, Music from "Sunny". By Bibler Wrecking Service 24 Hour RAPID TRANSPORT CO., LTD. F. Blyke "Say, Reginald, did you happen to notice a potted plant left on your bus about three or four months ago?" Phone 77 SHIP WINTER "SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS" You Don't Have To Wait For SERVICE AT WINTERS WINTER CHEVROLET 738 N. H. St. JAYHAWKER Shows 2:30-7-9 ENDS Tuesday Mickey ROONEY "KILLER McCOY" Wednesday, One Week! At our Regular low prices An Empire to conquer heartstoview! TYRONE POWER in captain from castile in technicolor JEAN PETERS MESAR ROMERO JOHN SUTTON LEE J. COBB GRANADA NOW ENDS WED. He was the kind of liar— you almost believed . . . nearly forgave . . . COMPLETELY LOVED! Errol FLYNN Ida LUPINO Eleanor PARKER in "ESCAPE ME NEVER" VARSITY SUNDAY—3 DAYS "JUNGLE THRILLER" Blonde SAVAGE Veda Ann Berg Leif Ericsson Douglas Dumbrilla Blonde SAVAGE co-feature STUART ERWIN "Heading for Heaven" PATEE NOW, Ends Saturday 2 Super Westerns! Hit No.1 HISTORY GAME DIETRICH STEWART Accentual DESTRY RIDES AGAIN Hit No. 2 WHENTHE DALTONS RODE Universal Picture 23, 1948 MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23. 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Huskers Win Track Meet From Kansas, 68 To 36 The University of Nebraska indoor track squad defeated Kansas 68 to 36 in a conference dual meet at Lincoln Saturday. Don Cooper, Nebraska pole vaulter, really soared into the air to the height of 14 feet, $ \frac{3}{4} $ inch, bettering the old mark of 13 feet, $ \frac{4}{4} $ inch set by Cosgrove of the Huskers in 1936. Nebraska cracked the mile relay record with a time of 3:30.5, one-tenth second faster than last year. Four new meet records were set, two of them by Kansans, Bob Karnes, Jayhawker distance star, sped around the oval in 9:54.5 for the two-mile run to crack his record of 10:06.3 set last year. Tom Scofield, Kansas high jumper, cleared the box at 6 feet. 4 7/8 inches to better Monte Kinder's 1947 record by ¼ inch. Karnes was the only double winner of the meet. Scfield and Bob Crowley took the only other Kansas firsts. Nebraska swept the field in the hurdle races, 60-yard dash, and the pole vault. 69 + yard dash — Hutton (N), Cooper (N) Thompson (N); 86.3 The summaries: Mile run—Karnes (K), Moore (K), Schüler (N), 4:23.7. 446-Yard dash--Hurlburt (N), Binter, (K), Volkertsen (N). 50.7 60-yard high hurdles-Berkshire (N), Jones (N), Magsamen (N), 07.7 High jump—Scoifell (K), 6 feet 4 $ \frac{7}{8} $ inches; Kinder (N), 6-4; Norris, (K). 6-0. Pole vault—Cooper (N), 14 feet $ \frac{3}{4} $ inch; Myers (N), 12-0 $ \% $; McConnell (N), 11-1. Broad jump—Crowley (K), 22 feet, $10 \frac{1}{2}$ inches; McConnell (N), 21-$\frac{5}{4}$ Norris (K). 20-7. Shot put— Piderit (N), 49 feet 9 inches: McConnell (N), 44-5; Lee (K) (31), 43-0½. Two - mile run — Karnes (K), Moore (K), Morrison (N): 9:54.5 880-ward run—Martin (N), Studt (K), Shea (K) 2:00.2 60-yard low hurdles—Moomey (N), Thompson (N), Magsamen (N). 60. Mile relay—Nebraska (Vollertsen, Brandorff, Moorhouse, Hurlburt). 3:30.5 Iowa State swimmers took first in every event to swamp the University of Kansas tankmen, 61 to 22, in a dual meet here Friday afternoon. I-State Whips KU In Swimming Meet Setting two new pool records, the conference champions also coped four seconds in the seven individual swimming and diving contests. Ernest Friesen, Ernest Crates, and Stan Jervis each picked up a second for the Jayhawkers. 300-yard medley relay-Iowa State (Wyant, Nielsen, Smith); Kansas (Medearis, Jervis, Olander). Roger Watts of the Cyclones swam the 220-yard free style in 211.8 and set new pool records in those events the 440-yard free style in 4,49.5 to 220-yard free style—Watts (I) Friesen (K), Ritchie (K), Scarborough (I). 2:11.8. 50-yard free style-Kullman (I) Dickerson (I), Roy (K), Banks (K) :25.0. Diving-Shifler (I), Crates (K) O'Neill (K). 100-yard free style—Kullman (I), Searborough (I), Olander (K), Roy (K). 56.7. 150-yard backstroke — Thompson (I), Jezek (I), Medearis (K), Mahoney (K). 1:40.4. 200-yard breaststroke — Johnson (I), Jervis (K). 2,31.8. 440-yard free style—Watts (I), Alt( I4), Ritchie (K), Friesen (K); I4.95.1 400-yard free style relay—Iowa State (Searborough, Dickerson, Smith, Kullman), Kansas (Connell, Harrington, Olander, Roy). 3:49.2. The first American newspaper was the Boston News-Letter, established by John Campbell in April, 1704. Eye EYE WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames Lawrence Optical Co. Kansas Signs Two Coaches Max Kissell and Russ Sehon, a pair of Kansas seniors, were named to coaching spots on the Jayhawker staff by Athletic Director E. C. Quigley here Monday. Kissell, who earned letters on the championship cage clubs of 1942 and 1943, was moved into the freshman basketball coaching post succeeding Howard Engleman while Sehon, a second baseman owned by the Pittsburgh Pirates, was installed as head baseball coach to supplant the resigned Vic Bradford. Engleman, who coached the varsity half of last season and one game this year, was released to take up law practice in Salina. Bradford is expected to be named backfield coach at the United States Naval academy. A senior in the school of business, Kissell will graduate in June. His wife is the former Marcile Peterson of Wellington. They have a boy, Pete, two years old. Max served in the navy air corps from June, 1943 until July 1946. Sehon was assistant coach to Bradford last spring here, working chiefly with infielders. He broke into baseball in 1936 playing in Lawrence through 1938. In 1946 he played with Selma of the Southeastern league. He is a senior in Physical education. Sehon said he planned on opening baseball drills March 1. KU-OU Box Score Call KU 376 with your Want Ads. KANSAS (46) fg ft ftm pf tp Schnellbe'r, f 1 5 2 5 7 Eskridge, f 3 2 3 3 8 Waugh, g 5 2 0 2 12 Enus, g 1 0 0 5 2 Houchin, g 6 1 0 3 13 Dewell 0 0 0 1 0 Stramel 0 0 0 0 0 England 0 0 1 1 0 Mabry 0 0 1 0 Sapp 2 0 0 0 4 TOTALS 18 10 6 21 46 OKLAHOMA (50) fg ft tfm pf tfp Courty, f 5 4 1 1 14 Jones, f 2 4 1 1 8 Waters, c 4 1 0 5 9 Merchant, g 3 3 2 2 9 Pryor, g 2 0 0 2 4 Day 0 0 1 0 4 Leake 1 0 0 0 2 Lynn 2 0 0 3 4 Gilstrap 0 0 0 0 0 Hughes 0 0 0 0 0 Jacobs 0 0 0 0 0 TOTALS 19 12 5 15 50 TOTALS 19 12 That's What The Man Said Philadelphia—(UP)—The income tax collector pocketed a check for $1,000, but he didn't know exactly what to do about it. The check was from a clergyman. He said he got it from a man who got it fom another man who wanted to pay his tax without reporting his income. IT'S SO GOOD IT'S SO GOOD OUR TASTY, SATISFYING ICE CREAM. EAT IT OFTEN Lawrence Sanitary Dairy Products Washing - Lubricating - Batteries - Tires FRANZ CONOCO SERVICE 9th and N.H. S DIAMONDS FINE COLOR BRILLIANT DISTINCTIVE $50.00 to $500.00 Gustafson THE COLLEGE JEWELER 809 Mass. DENTTINE JOHN MATKOW "Dentyne Chewing Cum!" HORSE "Too good to miss—that's the way I react to Dentyne Chewing Gum's grand flavor! And let me point out another fine thing about Dentyne — it helps keep your teeth white." Dentyne Gum—Made Only By Adams Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers. DEPARTMENT OF SPEECH AND DRAMA presents THE TOPEKA CIVIC THEATER in A Pre-Broadway Premiere of A CRY OF PLAYERS A New Play by Will Gibson FRASER THEATER Tonight, Wednesday, Thursday CURTAIN 8:15 P.M. ACTIVITY TICKETS ADMIT Make Reservations Now TICKET OFFICE, GREEN HALL Open Daily 9-12 a.m., 1-4 p.m. CALL K.U.-412 PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1948 The Editorial Page A Word To The Worriers My roommate passed me this morning without even saying "hello." I saw him coming 10 feet away and called "Hi, Chuck" as he passed—but he never did look up. He merely plowed ahead, staring at the sidewalk, his brow wrinkled, as though he were disturbed with the way his feet were falling in front of him. When I mentioned the incident this evening, Chuck recalled that he had been on the way to a chem quiz with formulas hanging out of his ears. "Man, man, those chum quizzes just about wreck me," he confessed. No, Chuck. Quizzes don't "wreck" you. It's the worry before the quizzes with which you try to "wreck" yourself. After all, what is so enervating about a quiz? You have to think like blazes on an hour, but you also have to think your way through an hour lecture, and you don't get butterflies in your stomach before every class. You concentrated plenty hard during your three-hour bridge game last Sunday, and you zealously read Reader's Digest for two hours every day. You weren't "wrecked" by those mental calisthenics, so why should an hour quiz turn you into a psycho case? Quizzes Aren't Tough The trouble with you, Chuck, is that you take the business of learning too seriously. You don't know how to relax. You fret at dinner, in the shower, at basketball games, even on dates. You began to grieve about that chem quiz a week ago, and you're already worrying about the next one. Get Some Sleep My "prof" in psychology once said some wise words about studying thoughts to clear the way for new dent must shut out all other and remembering. He said a stu-knowledge. "Concentrate while you're learning," he said, "and then relax so the new thoughts can sink in. "The best way to cram for a quiz," he suggested, "is to file your thoughts away early the night before and get plenty of sleep. Do that and you'll find answers cropping out like blades of spring grass the next day." When you worry you are unable to concentrate. Your mind is busy thinking about consequences, bothering about a lot of "if's" and "supposing's." Worriers have two obstacles to a carefree life: the professors who think up assignments and themselves. The professor alone doesn't "wreck" you, because if he did he'd "wreck" all of his students, too. But the professor and you together might do the job—Paul Zeh. Kansas City and St. Louis, Mo. are two of the largest railroad centers in the U.S. DOES ANYBODY KNOW WHO HOUSE IS? Dear Editor Dear Editor, To The Faculty Dear Letter, As individuals associated with this University and as an interested organized group, we strongly urge all College faculty members: (1) To attend the College faculty meeting on language requirements, Tuesday, Feb. 24. (3) As you vote on the propositions of increasing or otherwise changing these requirements, to consider yourselves, not only as members of a professional group, but as representatives of the students who attend your classes. (2) To consider judiciously all arguments bearing on the problem of the future of language requirements at K. U., together with the probable effects of courses of action which you may choose; and, University of Kansas faculty and students of 1948 have a real and vital interest in this matter; but your decisions will have an even greater significance to those who attend this school in years to come. Phi Delta Kappa, Kappa chapter, Professional education fraternity. Kappa chapter, (Editor's note: A letter from Fred A. Henderson, senior in the School of Education, has also been received on the subject of the proposed language requirement. Henderson Daily Hansan University Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Advertiser, and the Associated College Press. Represented the National Advertiser Service, 420 Madison Ave., New York, NY 10026. Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Editor-in-Chief .. William C. von Maurer Managing Editor .. Alan J. Stewart Asst. Man. Editor .. Cooper Rollow Asst. Man. Editor .. Lauren Loomis City Editor .. Gene Vignery City Editor .. James Robinson Telegraph Manager .. Wallace W. Abbey Telegraph Tel. Editor .. Clausen Sauer Asst. Telegraph Editor .. William Borges Telegraph Editor .. Robert E. Dellinger Business Manager .. Betty Bacon Advertising Manager .. Robert Alderson Circulation Manager .. Otto Meyer Classified Adv. Man .. Patricia Reilly Classified Adv. Man .. Don Waldron National Advt. Mgr .. David Clymer Promotion Manager .. Wister Shreve Parker 51 Fountain Pens Super Chrome Ink opposes increased requirements because he believes that learning a foreign language is only of value when it meets the needs of the individual concerned and that really progressive institutions are trying to develop more practical curricula for their students. BILL'S GRILL STOWIT'S Rexall STORE 1109 Mass. Phone 2054 CALL FOR TAXI SERVICE CALL QUICK COURTEOUS SERVICE 2-800 UNION CAB CO. ONLY ONE Across from the Courthouse Thing To Remember! Ready your car with the spring service maintenance SPECIALS 1 5000 Mile Check $8.35 10,000 Mile Check $10.00 . MORGAN-MACK SERVICE-FORD-SALES Graduate's Books To Guide Engineers Ernest B. Black, '06, Kansas City, Mo, has given the University engineering library a special collection of 15 volumes. Mr. Black is a consulting engineer. The books present a guidance program for engineering students. Their aim is advising rather than instructing, and the books outline professional pitfalls to be avoided. Blame It On The Weather Muskogee, Okla. — (UP) — Police blamed the weather for a burglary at the I. B. Pate home here. Two overcars were taken. The theft occurred during an extreme cold spell. Read the Want Ads daily. Professor Of Architecture Has Two Articles Published Robert E. Johnson, assistant professor of architecture, had two articles published recently. "True Arts as a Means for Personality Integration" appeared in the January issue of the School Review of the University of Illinois press. The other article appeared in the January issue of the magazine Arts and Architecture. The title was "The Relation of Sculpture to Architectural Time—Space Design." Kappa Psi To Give Party LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS 12 East Eighth Alpha Kappa Psi, business fraternity, will hold a rush party at 7:30 p. m. Thursday at the Lawrence country club. The group will not hold a meeting Tuesday. Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed...65c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed...69c CASH AND CARRY ONLY COMPLETE LINE OF ARROW PRODUCTS at the Palace ARROW TANTORIZED ARROW GORDON OXFORDS BACK IN CAMPUS STYLE PICTURE! N. Y., Imm, 1948... Cluett, Peabody & Co., Inc. makers of Arrow products, announce the return of their fine Gordon oxford cloth shirts for college men. TUXEDO 1. FENWAY—Arrow's new oxford shirt with a button-down collar which comes in white, stripes, and solid colors. 2. DOVER-The classic of the button-downs with a medium point roll collar. 100% 3. SUSSEX—Smartest of the wide-spread stay collars. 4. DOUBLER The shirt that doubles for dress and sports. A regular length collar. 5. BROCKLY—Another fine oxford in medium point collars. See your Arrow dealer now and place your order for your favorite style in Gordon oxford. CINEMAS ARROW SHIRTS and TIES UNDERWEAR • HANDKERCHIEFS • SPORTS SHIRTS A complete line of ARROW PRODUCTS at CARLS GOOD CLOTHES MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS PAGE SEVEN - - - - - Classified Ads Phone KU 376 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be received during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University press office, journalism bldg, not later than 4 p.m. the day before publication is desired. Classified Advertising Rates For Sale One Three Five day days flv 25 words or less 35c 65c 90c additional words 1c 2c 3c TWO % LENGTH laboratory coats size 38, one surgeon's gown size 38. Also misc. hematostats and hypodermic syringes. 7 Lau- Q, Sunflower, Kansas. RADIO AND record player combination, automatic record changer, plays 10 inch or 12 inch records, table model, excel- celed record player less than year old. . . . . NEW NORGE "5000" oil heater; 38pc. hand painted china set; vanity table; cabinet set; air-conditioned hot plate; all-seat room and droom bedrooms. Call 1679-3. 1932 4-DOOR Nash, 45,500 actual miles, good shape throughout. Good transportation. To see appreciate. Come make me a bid. Brown, 1134 Mice, phone 3838. 23 18-FOOT RED ARROW house trailer, inlaid linoleum, venetian blinds and curtains. Good condition. Lavern Mausolf, 2047 La. VETERANI! We will buy, trade or sell for you any Army or Navy gear in good condition that you may wish to purchase. Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. Phone: 669 HFTP Wanted ENGINEERING student wants one fel- low of 300 hours per month. 1300 Tenn. Phone: 188724. APARTMENT: furnished or unfurnished Student, veteran, no children, 2 year occupancy. Call J. E. Greenhaw, 3020 after 6 p.m. ONE K.U. student to share nice 2-room suite. 637 Ohio. Ph. 2521M. 23 For Rent ROOM FOR 2 boys, $3 each. Will rent as single for $4. Call 2661W or see at 912 Alabama after 5:00. Two blocks below stadium. 25 FOR A B BOY: one vacancy in double room; twin beds, 82 Missouri; Ph. 1271W VACANCY: For one student in large double room. Modern home. 1½ blocks from campus. ¼ block from city bus station. Room for two boys or married couple. Near University. Cooking facilities. Ph. 1547W, 1331 Tenn. 23 VERY attractive room for two boys, twin campus, 1357 Kz. Mr. Olge Ph2. 2244W. Miscellaneous FREE OFFER: Photo copies of discharge papers, marriage certificates for credit or school entrance, 3 for price of 2. Round Corner Drug. 805 Mass. MATHEMATICS Tutor: Lucy T. Dougherty at 90 Maline, (Bay) bus, 3 blocks west of Mississippi, or by path down the Hill west of the stadium). Phone 3084M. MARCELLA'S Beauty shop moved to 342 Indiana St. Beautiful, soft, natural "Radio speciality. Day and night appointments. New patrons are appreciated. Phone 520. 25 DANCE every Saturday night at Odd Fel- low Informal. Joice Langworthy orchestra. ESTABLISHED part-time business in Lawrence. Will average $30 daily gross. No selling. Ideal for Professor, student, semi-retired person, anyone wanting to add to income. Sources of standard inventory are an orange candy bar inventory go with this established coin candy machine business. Lew Phish. C318 St. K., Co. Mo. Found ECONOMICS book in *Fraser* theater, published by the Kwanan of 23 face upon payment of this ad. Transportation RIDERS WANTED Eudora to Lawrence for every day. Ph. Ed. N. J. Heinrich. ONE RED Shafere lifetime find. Pender call call Bill Schell at 552 or 1269-M. Lost PARKER PENCIL, black barrel, silver top. Lost Wednesday. Personal value. Reward. Charles Minges, ph. 1870-W. 25 I WILL trade your topcoat and key case my topcoat which you took Wed. November. Scott Workman, 119 Ohio. Phone 11. GREEN BILLFOLD at Vice-Versa dance Finder please return to lost and found dept. or call Marian Kysar, Phone 365. Reward. 24 BROWN leather bilffold. Keep money, leave bilffold and other contents at Daily Kansan office or mail to F. L. Davis. 1245W, Campus. 23 BLACK AND GOLD EVERSAP pen and BRACKET and ballpad $199. O. C. King jr., written on leather Minnesota's state income taxpayers had a combined yearly income of almost a million dollars in 1946. Campus Police May Be Able To Arrest Traffic Violators After today the campus police may be able to do something to traffic law violators. C. A. Bliesner, Lawrence police chief, said that the police committee has asked the city council to make the University officers members of the city police department with regular authority. The council is expected to approve the plan today, Chief Bliesner added. Campus officers will then have the authority to enforce city regulations as well as University orders. Traffic Officer Robert Corwin warns that if given the authority, he will "nail a few of the worst offenders." He added that he has his eye on a few, including one student who has been warned five times not to park in front of the fire hydrant at the Chi Omega sorority house. Traffic officers will be instructed not to give warning tickets to students. They have had enough time to learn the city laws which apply to the campus and the traffic regulations of the University, Mr. Corwin said. Mr. Corwin said that he intends to stop such illegal practices as U-turns at the one-way drive west of Frank Strong hall. It was such a turn which caused an accident Feb. 16, he said. Call KU 376 with your Want Ads. If Fare To Sunflower Is Raised, Students Say They'll Hitch-Hike If the fare between Lawrence and Sunflower is raised from 15 to 30 cents, many students living at Sunflower will probably hikethike. At least, that's what six Sunflower students interviewed by the Uni- versity Daily Kansan believe. The Santa Fe Trail Transportation company, which operates the buses, has applied to the state corporation$\textcircled{4}$ has applied to the state corpora commission to cancel the special commuter rate of 30 cents a round trip. The company wants 30 cents for one way, or double the commuter rate. The commission will hold a hearing in Topeka March 8. One of the students interviewed, Wayne Harrington, engineering senior, said, "I'll have to quit riding if they raise the fare. I need that extra money to buy groceries." James Burton, College junior, said, "I don't know how I'll get to school, but I'll quit riding the bus. I'll hitch-hike unless I can find a ride with someone." Three engineering students, Gerald J. Griffin, freshman, and William R. McDonald and George J. Moore, sophomores, said that it the bus fare is raised, the students who drive classmates to the University for a fee would probably raise their rates. The state of New Mexico boasts over 10,000 miles of highways, and enjoys a large tourist travel. Get together Let's Get together PHILIP MORRIS is so much better to smoke! Let's Get together PHILIP MORRIS is so much better to smoke! "It’s always fair weather when good fellows get together"... with PHILIP MORRIS! 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 ALWAYS BETTER—BETTER ALL WAYS STYLADISHER OVER 50 YEARS PHILIP MORRIS & CO. LTD. INC. Fisher Shipping ENGLISH BLEND MADE IN U.S.A. BY PHILIP MORRIS L. CO., LTD. N.E.W. YORK. Opperman CALL FOR PHILIP MORRIS ALWAYS BETTER-BETTER ALL WAYS PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS MONDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1948 KerenskySmiles,EyesTwinkle, In Accented Interview Alexander Kerensky, former prime minister of the Russian republic, strode into the second floor lobby of the Brookside hotel in Kansas City. Mo. Saturday morning. The former prime minister, whose gray hair is closely cropped, extended his hand and firmly clasped hands in Russian fashion (in the U.S. men do not shake hands with wo- men) and answered in kind to a greeting in Russian, bowing slightly. Mr. Kerensky will speak at 4 p.m. today in Fraser theater on the de- velopment of democratic ideas in Russia. . . Russia. The interview was arranged by Mrs. Rachael Soloveitchik, instructor in Russian. Mr. Kerensky is a visiting professor at the University of Kansas City this month. He will leave for New York at the end of the month. After introductions were made, Mr. Kerensky asked his interviewer in Russian how much Russian she knew, Her answer was "little," but the choice of the Russian word was wrong and the former Russian leader corrected it with an understanding smile, and his eyes twinkled through the thick lenses of his glasses. Russians ignore With a decided Russian accent, he declared that a planned economic regime can be either democratic or antidemocratic. The Labor party in England is democratic, he said. Shows Wide Knowledge The man who became prime minister at the age of 36, in a deep voice discussed Chinese art, educational systems here and abroad, the difference between socialism in England and communism in Russia and the effectiveness of the Marshall plan. Russians Ignore Personality "The first essential aim of the British is the development of human freedom but the Russians negate the autonomy of human personality. glasses. Mr. Kerensky wore a gray suit and shirt and a gray tie with a small red stripe. "In 1905. Lenin, hirself, wrote a pamphlet "Two Tactics" which pointed out that socialism without political democracy would become totalitarianism. Lenin said that socialism without freedom is reactionary. Of the reconstruction of German military might, Mr. Kerensky said, "It is impossible to rebuild the military might of Germany for many decades, unless some other country (one of the allies) would bring this about." ernment based on his time. From time to time, Mr. Kerensky ran his hand through his short hair Impossible to Rebuild Germany "Later in 1917, Lenin betrayed his own belief and now the Stalin regime has a general reactionary government based on slavery." He added that Europe cannot exist without the building up of German industrial power. "The Marshall plan will accomplish its purpose and will keep communism from spreading into Europe unless 'it is too little or too late'," Mr. Keren-sky said. "Stalin was probably pleased. It is very like friends who live in the same house, one is happy over the other's success." Mr. Kerensky said that Henry A. Wallace's recent political victory in New York was unexpected to everyone. Wallace Victory Pleases Stalin Of Mr. Wallace's chances in the November election, he estimated Wallace would probably receive "a million votes only." "Wallace is some sort of an admirer of the totalitarian regime in Russia. I don't see how you can continue to have liberal ideas with a totalitarian regime. It is a psychological enigma to me." "The veterans are a much more interesting type of student. They are more interested in political and social affairs than the students before the war." Asked whether the European system of education produced more mature adults, Mr. Kerensky said that he thought it depended upon the individual rather than on a system. He said that he thought a college or a university in a city the size of Kansas City was the best for the student and the teacher. It gave more peace and quiet to both. The cast of nearly 100 actors and musicians from the Topeka Civic theater and four University students succeeded in giving an excellent performance in the pre-Broadway production of a "A Cry of Players" by Will Gibson. The play centers about the wild, mispassed days of Will Shakespeare's youth in Stratford before he leaves his home and family to follow a group of actors to London. Shakespeare rebels against the conventions of his day to lead a free, independent life of his own. M. G. MALAGA The play will be presented at 8 tonight, Wednesday, and Thursday for University students. Activity ticket coupons may be exchanged in the basement of Green hall. ALEXANDER KERENSKY Tom Shay, College junior, does well in his role of Will Shakespeare. Herk Harvey as Sir Thomas Lucy does a realistic job as an arrogant landowner and justice of the peace. Audience Likes 'Cry Of Players' Miss Margaret Webster, New York producer and director who attended the play Friday, said that it was "extremely interesting and the performance was remarkably good." Miss Webster and Miss Carly Wharton will produce the play on Broadway. Tom Rea, as Roche, the former schoolmaster and constant friend of Shakespeare, adapts himself well to the elderly role which he plays. Loren Kennedy plays the role of Kemp, leader of the players who come to Straford. He, too, is excellent. Four Schools Name Graduates Mrs. White was recognized at the opening of the Kansas Arts and Crafts festival Feb. 18 by Mayor Parsons. Mrs. William Allen White, widow of the founder of the William Allen White School of Journalism, visited Lawrence Feb. 18 to 21. The play is somewhat long, requiring more than three hours. She and her nephew, Lacy Haynes, and his wife, dined at the Alpha Omicron Pi house where Mrs. Fannie Klinkenberg is housemother. Mrs. Klinkenberg is the mother-in-law of William Allen White Jr. Mrs. W. A. White Visits Art Festival The Schools of Fine Arts, Law, Education, and Business have announced the names of mid-term graduates. The graduates and their degrees follow: Mrs. White also attended a pageant at Haskell institute Feb. 20 as a guest of D. Gagliardo, professor of economics. Bachelor of Fine Arts; Billle Jean Rotermund. Bachelor of Music Education: John Edward Conrick. Bachelor of Science in Occupational Therapy; Virginia Louise Coffin, Florence Kathryn Hope, Mary Jeanne Johnson, Joris Anne Kildenst, Nancy Lue Stephan. Bachelor of Science in Business; Heard Raymond Ambler, Frank Clyde Anderson, Jr. Homer Brandt Anderson, Kenneth Ralph Anderson, Paul G. Anderson, Max C. Appleby, Glen Bier, Marshall Marshall Bingham, Lloyd Eugene Brown, Jack Eldon Buckner, Howard M. Burch, Jackson Page Burke, William Woodard Burt, Robert Neal Burkert, Harold L. Caler. Bachelor of Laws: Burnett Booz, Granville McCutcheon Bush, Bill Ray Cole, Howard George Engleman, Robert Clare Foulston, J. Cecla Harvey Frey, T. Gr Gaston, Milo Louis Harris, Robert Craig Hester, Robert Sharp Hill, David William Kester, Charles Daniel Knapp, Stanley LaVere Lind, Walter Lewis McVey, Jr., Clemens Roscoe Mong, Jr., Alert Poznik, Kenneth Ray, John Q. Royce, Charles Ernst Russell, Thomas Finis Seed, Robert Fry Stadler, William Donnan Stephenson. Bachelor of Music Education: Charles Albert Byers, Melvin Leon Zack. Bachelor of Science in Education: Bettie Louise Baatt, Norma May Dymond, Charles Edward Graber, Walter Perry Herrman, William LeRoy Hessenflow, John Melvin Richard, Robert George Soarling, Donald Francis Strohmeyer, Elaine Margaret Walker. Melville William Cave, Albert Lindley Chase, Maxey Daniel Chase, J. Hobart Brian Cheyne, Wendell Ralph Clark, Jack W. Coleman, Robert Edward Combs, Patricia Lu Coolidge, Cecil Eugene Cooper, Jr., Robert Mackey Davison, Byron De Haan, Howard Henry Dolch, Jr., Warren Robert Dougherty, Robert Balda Dreizler, John F. Esping. Ray Richard Evans, John Carl Fehlandt, Jr., Van Eugene Fiser, Richard W. Fisher, James McMillan Forbes, Norman E. Fuller, Detroy Robert Giles, Jr. Charles Clyde Goodand, Clarence Crayton Gould, Curvin Haskell Greene, Ralph P. Crier, Charles Moran Gudger, Billy Benton Gwin, Edwin Alfred Ham, Marlon Clark Haynes. Bachelor of Art Education: Janet Curry Lowe. Ralph Cecil Hedges, Dean Franklin Hixon, Alfred Gore Hoh, William David Holford, Allin Nosher Jackson, Carl James, Herbert William Jessup, James Alexander Jones, James Francis Kalingerer, Wallace Richard Keene, James Roy Kelso, Claude Maynard Knief, Joe Clinton Kraft, Louis F. Lafferty, Cleo Rein Landon. Henry Franklin Libby, Jr., Joseph Milton Lindsey, Herman Lindsey, James Franklin McBride, Lawrence R. McDaniel, Roger Donald McKellips, William Jesse Miller, Jr., Walter R. Morrow, Omer Stephen Muchmore, Jr., Morse Eugene Murray, Irwin Ripn闯 Nosterg, Earl E O'Connor, Everett Manual O'Connor, Ralph Thomas O'Nell, Robert Allen Page. Rex Van Dorn Shaw, Robert Paul shirley, Deloris Ruth Sutton, George Emil Tiffany, Jr., Robert Dean Ulrich. O. Edgar Uttor, II. Paul F. VanDyke. Nell A. Vestal, William W. Wallace, William Drew Warren, Wallace R. Whitney, Harry Everett Williford Jr., Willard Jemmeth Wright, Armond D. Wullschleger, Raymond Armond Zimmerman. Paul Francis Pellette, Marc Errebo Pickrell, Sanford Porte, John Paul Quinlan, John Lafayette Rader, E. Albert Rice, Dwight Marvin Rickabaugh, Muir E. Rickenbaugh, Merri Francis Rider, Billy L. Robertson, William Henry Sands, Donald Eugene Sawyer, William Gordon Scherer, Charles William Schuler, Warren Rork Seever. Swarthout To Conduct At Iowa Festival Tomorrow Dean D. M. Swarthout, School of Fine Arts, will leave tomorrow to conduct a mass choral group in Creston, Iowa. The Creston Choral festival presents chosen groups from high schools in that area. Dean Swarthowill will drill the groups Wednesday and Thursday and will present them in a concert Thursday. Student Voices Needed For Show Tryouts for "Campus Daze," an all-student musical, will be held this week. Students interested in solo parts, should call Jesse E. Stewart or Jamec M. McCaig by Wednesday. There will be four solo parts. Fifty voices are needed for the chorus. Tryouts for these places will be held from 9 to 11 a. m. and from 3 to 5 p. m. today in the Pine room of the Union. Rhearsals will begin the latter part of the week. The play will be produced by Jack Moorhead, College freshman, and will be presented May 6. 23 Rate Honors In Law School Twenty-three Law school students have been placed on the dean's honor roll for the fall semester. Dean F. J.Moreau announced Eight of the honor men are second-year students, and six are first-year. Five are third-year students who will receive their degrees in June, and four were graduated in January and have been admitted to the bar. Third-year honor students who will receive their degrees in June are James H. Bernard, Robert L. Briley, Weymouth G. Lowe, William B. McElhenny, and Charles Sciangula. To be eligible for the honor, the 23 had to average above "B" in their grades, Dean Moreau said. Among the honor men is Paul Watson, a first-year student permanently crippled by arthritis. Watson attends classes in a wheelchair. Honor students who have been graduated are Howard G. Engleman, Charles D. Knapp, John Q. Royce, and William D. Stephenson. Second-year honor students are William C. Cavert, Albert P. Early, Leo F. Henrichs, Karl W. Masoner, William P. Meek, Bernard E. Nordling, Franklin P. Snyder, and Roger G. Tilbury. In addition to Watson, first-year honor students are Ronald D. Albright, Joseph E. Hensley, William A. Kelly, Joseph D. Lysaught, and Maxine W. Wood. Thaver Forfeits $85 Bond Perry A. Thayer, engineering sophomore, forfeited an $85 bond in police court this morning. Thayer put up the bond Feb. 2 when he was charged with driving under influence of alcohol and with leaving the scene of an accident. Beauty Queen Also Has Brains Beauty as well as brains, personified by Carolyn Campbell, Kansas City, Mo., topped the School of Education honor roll for the fall semester. Miss Campbell, who was the 1947 homecoming queen and the 1946 K. U. relays queen, had an all "A" grade-point average of 3, Dean George B. Smith said. She is a senior in art education. Thirty-six names appeared on the list which represented the upper 10 per cent in the school. Averages ranged from Miss Campbell's perfect 3 to 2.3, the highest minimum in many years. Twelve were veterans. Twenty of the honor students are women, and 16 men. Others on the honor roll are Betty Barkis, Dan Palmquist, Jewel Wishler, George R. Cole, Robert Unkefer, Frank Stalzer, Donna Mueller, John Haesler, Amnetta Stout, Lorita Higginbottom, Joann Coulth. Charles Byers, Melvin Zack, Rosalis Bishop, Edward Pope, Jeanne Clara Smith, Mary Katherine Paige, Emma Pearl Bachus, Grant M. Clothier, Jeanne Cooper, Winona Yovonne Klotz, Betty Pinkney, Harold Ehrlich, Ronald Lively, Richard Riley, Harry Spencer, Bernelda Larson, John Richard, Anita Bedell, Beverly Stember, Esther McKinney, Dorothea Hodgson, Robert Saavedra, Jerome Tajchman, and Marilyn Lee. KU To Keep Briar Manor The University will keep its lease on Briar manor under a decision given by Judge Hugh Means. John Riling, an attorney for the University, said that the University lease would continue without change. A suit for injunction to set aside the lease was taken under advisement by Judge Means Feb. 16. Briar manor is leased to the University for use as a women's residence hall. The suit was brought by members of the Lawrence Women's club, owner of the building, who expressed dissatisfaction with the present arrangement and sought use of full facilities of the building for club activities. A. B. Mitchell, former attorney general for Kansas, worked with Mr. Rilling in preparing the case for the University. --- We will now take your want ads by telephone. (Hours 10-12 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. except Sat.) Call KU 376 Let our 9,000 (plus) readers know what you want to BUY, RENT, or SELL. A New Service for our Classified Advertisers Ru Bes Ke University Daily Kansan "The allies he wendern the F how lay. Call KU 376 with your Want, Ads Mr sor a this fouri iam a le Febr of w ust, Russ II al Th victi 1917 new shev ocra aims gove ual Si histo been said pres cess The press for hoo c relin foug gua arm ama aba wei 948 University Daily Kansan Tuesday, February 24, 1948 Lawrence, Kansas STUDENT NEWS PAPER Mr. the "The Russian people are the best allies the United States can enlist in the world's fight for freedom," Alexander Kerensky, former premier of the Russian republic, told an overflow crowd in Fraser theater, Monday. Russians Are Best US Allies,' Kerensky Says Freedom has never been a possession of the Russian people, he reminded, but they love freedom as much as we do. He predicts the fall of Russia's present Communistic-totalitarian system through the efforts of his people. The speaker was one of several lecturers appearing on the University Lecture series. He spoke of the development of democratic ideas in Russia. Mr. Kerensky is a visiting professor at the University of Kansas City this month. He was a member of the fourth imperial Russian duma (parliament) from 1912 to 1917. He was a leader of the Labor party. In February, 1917, he became minister of war and vice-president. In August, 1917, he became premier of the Russian republic after Czar Nicholas II abducted. The Russian people were the first victims of totalitarian dictatorship in 1917 with the overthrow of the newly formed republic, by the Bolsheviks, he said. Lenin, using democratic tactics to obtain totalitarian aims, succeeded in undermining the government, and effecting its eventual overthrow. The Russian revolution was an expression of the desire of the people for freedom, he said, but they were hoodwinked by the Communists into relinquishing everything they had fought to gain. fought. Since the beginning of Russian history, the Russian people have been ruled by czars and dictators, he said. They have fought against oppression but have never been successful. Under the despicable reign of Nicholas I, the people started an armed demonstration against the imperial guard in St. Petersburg, but superior arms and a lack of organization among the rebels forced them to abandon their cause. The leaders were caught and hanged. During the 19th century, the people of Russia strove for freedom, the speaker said, asserting themselves in sporadic uprisings until World War I, when they were able to organize and overthrow the confused and war-weakened imperialistic state. (Mr. Kerensky, himself, directed the mutineers to claim control of the government offices. The outstanding leader of the revolution, he was appointed premier of the new government.) As an example of present unrest, he stated that when the Allies marched into Germany at the close of World War II, more than half the Russian prisoners liberated did not want to return to Russia. Mr. Kerensky also pointed out the magnificent contributions made by the Russian people in music, literature and art as representative of the "freedom loving soul of the Russian." The Russian people are fighting for two things—social democracy and political democracy. They know that social democracy without political democracy is not freedom, Mr. Kerensky emphasized. Sophomore Gets Operation Vernon W. Roberts, Jr., College sophomore, received an appendectomy yesterday at Watkins hospital. His condition is stated as being good. Peter Of Greece Will Speak Today Prince Peter, third in line of succession to the Greek throne, will speak at 4 p.m. today in Fraser theater. His subject will be "Greece and the Trend of World Events." Accompanied by his wife, Princess Irene, the royal couple will drive to the University from Kansas City this afternoon. Prince Peter is the son of Prince George of Greece and nephew of the late King Constantine. The couple is making a good will tour of the United States in support of the Marshall plan with the approval of the state department and the Greek government. Food Prices Levelling Off Chicago, Feb. 24- (UP) -The food price decline showed signs of levelling off today. ing on today. A spot check of grocery stores across the nation showed that prices of several basic foods stayed the same last week. Others dropped only slightly. Many grocers said the end of the price break seemed to be near. The price drop last week was much less marked than it was the week before, they said. they said. However, some foods—particularly meat—continued the downward trend which went into its sharpest slide after the big break on the commodity markets Feb. 4. Butter appeared to have continued downwards in some cities but milk was up at many points, sometimes in the same cities which reported a decrease in butter prices. Flour prices generally remained the same this week as for last after registering a decided drop during the previous seven-day period. Many grocerymen claimed the "popular belief" that prices had dropped actually was untrue. They said the decreased in some items were offset by increases in others. Dean Lawson Is'Fair After Heart Attack The condition of Dean Paul B. Lawson, 59, remains unchanged today following a heart attack late Sunday. Attending physicians call his condition fair. They said his attack was due to coronary occlusion. clusion: Nothing definite will be known until physicians have run numerous tests, but the dean is resting as comfortably as could be expected, Mrs. Lawson said. Dean Lawson was stricken at home and was taken to Watkins Memorial hospital immediately. At no time did he lose consciousness. He had not complained before of any pain; the attack came without warning. Mrs. Lawson said. Dean Lawson came to the University in 1915 as a graduate student from John Fletcher's college. He received his master of science degree in 1917 and his doctor of philosophy degree in 1919. His teaching career began in 1916 as an assistant instructor of entomology at the University. He became dean of the College in 1934. came dean of the Each Sunday Dean Lawson teaches, a Sunday school class and preaches at the West Side Presbyterian church. This has been a practice for the past 22 years. He conducted his regular services Sunday morning. Gilbert Ulmer, assistant dean of the College, will be acting dean while Dr. Lawson is in the hospital. WEATHER Kansas—Cloudy, light rain extreme east. Rain or snow central and intermittent light snow extreme west today. Somewhat colder west today. Cloudy and little colder tonight, with light rain southeast. Tomorrow partly cloudy to cloudy. Colder southeast. High today low 30 west to near 40 east. Low tonight 15-20 northwest to near 32 south-east. Little Man On Campus By Bible UNION CAFETERIA "Save 'Clavical bone; Return to anatomy room 207." "Says, 'Clavical bone: Return to anatomy room 207.'" Absences Allowed For Conference Students who want to attend the A. W. S. conference, "Blueprinting Tomorrow," will be excused from classes if no examinations or laboratory experiments are scheduled, Deans Paul B. Lawson of the College; George B. Smith of the School of Education; and D. W. Swarthout of the School of Fine Arts said today. A record of attendance will be kept at meetings, and this record will be available to faculty members. Friend Funeral Is Tomorrow Funeral services for Carl E. Friend, 78, Lawrence lumberman and political figure, will be at 2 p.m. tomorrow in the Lawrence Congregational church. Mr. Friend died at his home after suffering a heart attack Monday. Chancellor Deane W. Malott said of Mr. Friend: MR. FRIEND. "The University of Kansas lost a loyal and devoted supporter in the death of C. E. Friend. He personally gave generously of his time and advice. "As a member of the Kansas senate, as lieutenant governor, and as a trustee and member of the executive committee of the Kansas University Endowment association, he was ever watchful of ways to aid the development of the University, ever mindful of the citizen's responsibility to his great public institutions, and ever wise in his understanding of the motives and ways of his fellowmen. We shall miss him greatly." Mr. Friend was lieutenant governor of Kansas from 1939 to 1943 and was state senator from 1932 to 1936. At the time of his death, he was again seeking election to the office of state senator. He had also served as a member of the Kansas board of regents and had served on the board of the University of Kansas Endowment association. He is survived by his wife, Nora, two sons, Paul H. and Russell D., and a daughter, Mrs. Helen Lindsay, wife of Ad Lindsay, former University of Kansas football coach. Debate Squad HasFullWeek Debate trips to Ottawa university and Emporia State Teachers' college are scheduled for the debate squad this week. Robert Bennett, College sophomore, and Edward Stollenwerck, junior, will debate at Emporia tomorrow. The debate will be a non-decision exhibition before Emporia students. Bennett and Stollenwerck also will debate at the Emporia Lions club. Hal Friesen and Keith Wilson, College juniors, Kenneth Beasley, senior, and Stollenwerck will go to Ottawa Saturday for a tournament. Several schools from Missouri and Kansas will compete. Both debates will be on "Resolved: that a federal world government should be established." W. T. Wilkoff will go to Emporia and Richard Schieferbusch will go to Ottawa. Both are speech instructors. Faculty May Decide On Language Issue College faculty members will continue a discussion of the reports of the foreign language requirements committee at 5 p. m. today in Frank Strong auditorium. The issues to be decided on are whether or not to accept the committee's recommendation to increase the foreign language requirement to twelve hours. A AWS Culture Conference Begins Today "Blueprinting Tomorrow" a threeday culture conference sponsored by the Associated Women students will begin today. The program for the conference is as follows; Guest speakers representing the fields of home, community, world citizenship, music, education, recreation, religion, literature and art, will attend. 10 a.m. 5:30 p.m. Dinner ... Kansas room, Union "The Myth of the Good Life, Dr. John Ise Dr. John Ise TOMORROW 10 a.m. You and Your Home...Fraser theater Mrs. William C. Menninger, Topeka 11 a.m. 19. I am You and Your Community...Fraser theater Mrs. P. A. Petitt, Paola pun. Luncheon ...English room, Union 2. nath. You As A World Citizen - Fraser theater Dorothy Luber, Topeka You and Music ... Pine room, Union Dr. Elin Jorgensen, Lawrence You and Recreation ... English room, Ethel Mitchell, Greencastle, Ind. Tea ... Corbin hall 8 in. Mrs. William C. Mehninger Dr. Geraldine Hammond, department of General Session ... Frank Strong Aud. Panel Discussion ... Women's Education Liss Margaret Habein, dew of women Mrs. William C. Menninger Dr. Geraldine Hammond, department English, Wichita U. Hilda James and Joan Joseph, College Junction THURSDAY 9 a.m. You and Religion ... Pine room, Union Mrs. Porter Brown, Salina You and Music...English room, Union Dr. Elin Jorgensen You and Literature... Pine room, Union Dr. Geraldine Hammond, Wichita You and Art ... East room, Union Mrs. John Guice, G.C., Mo. 19. A.M. You and Religion ... Pine room, Union Mrs. Porter Brown You and Recreation ... East room, Union Ethel Mitchell 12:15 p.m. Luncheon ... English room, Union 2 p.m. You and Art ... Pine room, Union Mrs. John Guice You and Literature ... Myers hall Dr. Geraldine Hammond 2:30 p.m. Group conferences with guest speakers, East room, Union English room, Union 5 p.m. Group conferences with guest speakers East room. Union English room. Union Kansas room. Union Students Are Needed For Overseas Work Mrs. Lou Williamson, representative of the Friends Service unit, is at the University today to consult with students interested in relief work in Mexico, Finland and the French and British zones of occupied Germany. She is a representative of the American Friends Service committee, which received the Nobel prize this year for outstanding work in human relations. The American Friends Service committee is sponsoring a summer program so that college students can volunteer for work in camps or seminars. Last summer students in Mexico, Europe and the U. S. took part in these projects. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 196 Dutch' Likes Boiler Rooms But Better, Three Hobbies When L. L. "Dutch" Von Gass-beek does something, he does it in a big way—even when it comes to hobbies. "Dutch" is one of the operating engineers of the University power plant and when he talks, he seems to bubble over with enthusiasm. He says that he is happy working around a steam boiler and this has led to a checkered career. "Dutch spent four years in the navy, two as a fireman and two as a gunner's mate on the U.S.S. Mississippi. "Dutch" joined the University power plant staff in 1937 as a fireman in the boiler room. Three years later he was promoted to an operating engineer. Pethaps the most unusual of his hobbies is the raising of chinchillas. "Dutch" says the hobby actually belongs to his son, Arlen, yet "Dutch" can talk about chinchillas for hours and still not run out of information. The two men started this hobby six months ago, investing about $350 in a male and female chinchilla. There were additions to the family—another male and female—and now the second pair is expecting. "Dutch" says the chinchilla resembles the rabbit in more ways than one. Not only are the two animals very similar in appearance, but multiplication tables are needed to keep track of their birth rates. Chinchillas are easy to take care of, requiring only that the temperature be kept below 85 degrees. They will eat almost any kind of vegetable. They can be fed at a cost of $2 a year, have no odor, carry no known disease, and are excellent pets. "As a matter of fact you can keep them right in your own living room," said "Dutch." The little animals sell for $75 to $1000. After a large number of pelts have been accumulated, they may sell for $75 to $175. A ranch of 600 animals will not about $10,000 a year, he added. But chinchillas weren't enough; "Dutch" also raises miniature Rhode Island Red chickens. He has been doing this for seven years and does not remember the number of medals he has won. This year he won six trophies, five were first place awards. "Dutch" heartily believes in bobbies. "A man should find a book to read or should do constructive work with his hands, something entirely divorced from his regular job." During the war, "Dutch" worked with Fred Kahn, assistant county treasurer, making hunting knives for servicemen. The two men made a total of 425 hand-tooled hunting knives, which they sent to men in the armed forces over the world, free of charge. To Help Recruit For Foundries Kenneth E. Rose, professor of mining and metallurgical engineering, has been appointed vice-chairman of the recruiting of engineers committee of the American Foundrymen's association. The duties of this committee are to get professional engineers for the foundrieis of America and to stimulate interest in colleges and among graduate engineers for foundation work. Professor Rose is also a member of the program and papers committee of the educational division of the association. This committee will arrange the program for the educational division at the international meeting in Philadelphia May 3 to 7. OK, So It's 2 Letters Less Albuquerque, N.M.-(UP)-Felix Benjamin Przeweski filed a petition in district court asking permission to shorten his name. He asked that his name be changed to Felix Benjamin Prebeski. Official Bulletin Feb. 24,1948 Archery club practice today and tomorrow cancelled. Will resume next week. Home Economics club, 7:30-8:30 tonight, 1221 Oread, Apartment B O. T. club, 7:30 tonight, 332 Frank Strong. Miss Warner to speak on experiences in Warm Springs, Ga. All P.T.'s invited. Student court will not meet tonight. Those scheduled to appear stand by until further notice. Tau Sigma regular meeting, 7:15 tonight Robinson gym. Fencing club, 7:30 tonight, 110 Robinson. Bacteriology club, 7:30 tonight, 501 Snow. Benjamin Williamson, speaker. Refreshments. Students interested in trying out for solo part of "Campus Daze" call Jess Stewart, 552 or Jim McCraig, 664 by Wednesday. Coffee and Forums, 4 today, Pine room, Union blvd. A. L. Pritchard to speak on "Economic Consequences of the War." Morning devotions each day, 8:30- 8:50 a.m. during Lent at Danforth Chanel. Tau Beta Pi, 7:30 tonight. Recreation room, Union. J. Surface, speaker. K. U. Entomology club, 4 today. S. A.M., 7:30 tonight, Union ballroom. John W. Harris, Dist. Mgr., Proctor & Gamble, speaker. A. S.T.E., 8 tonight, Fowler shops. Engineering exhibition plans to be presented. Movie. Refreshments. Y. M.C.A. cabinet, 5 today, Pine room, Union. Student Council, 7:15 tonight, Pine room, Union. Jewish Student Union, 5 today. Myers hall. K.U. Dames Bridge, 7:30 p.m. tom- brist, 1st floor Memorial Union. Institute of Aeronautical Sciences, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Quonset rear Marvin hall. Jerry Davidson of C.A.A., speaker. Chemistry colloquium, 4 p.m. tomorrow, 305 Bailey. Prof. Karl Dittner, U of Colo, "Anti-Vitamins and Anti-Amin-OAcids." General Semantics club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, room III.11. Frank Strong. University Women's club group meetings Thursday. Pre-Nursing club, 4 p.m. Thursday, Fraser dining room. All students in pre-nursing invited. El Ateneo will sponsor film on Colombia, given by Mr. and Mrs. Judson, 4 p.m. Thursday, Fraser theater. Dinner to follow. Those interested in attending latter sign and pay in 117 F.S. Snow, Zoology club, 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 26 Snow E. L. Cockrum, assistant curator, Museum of Natural History, to speak on "Summer Collecting in Wyoming." Kodachrome movies. Refreshments. Geology club, 7.30 p.m. Thursday, 425 Lindley. Edwin Galbreath to show colored films and slides and lecture on "Ecology of Marine In- vertebrates." Panel discussion on universal military training, First Baptist church, 5:30 p.m. Sunday. Sponsored by Baptist Youth Fellowship and Y.M.-Y.W.C.A. Negro Students Association, 7:15 p.m. Thursday, Myers hall auditorium. Second section slide rule course. 7 p.m. Thursday, 9 Frank Strong. Undergraduate Physics club, 5 p.m. tomorrow, 210 Blake, Dr. Max Dresden to speak on "Philosophical Implications of Physics." Committees for the Junior Prom April 10 were announced today by class president Lu Anne Powell They are: Decide On Prom Committees Secretarial committee, Kathleen L. Broe, chairman, Peggy Graber, Shirley Mae Liem, and Catherine L. Spalding. Decorations committee: Patricia Ann Kelly, chairman, Craig William Hampton, Dorothy Jean James, Claude E. Mason, Thomas Frank McCoy, Marjorie Ann McCullough, and Bernard L. Sherman. Chaperones committee: Dorothy J. Scroggy, chairman, A. Donald Blakeslee, and M. Robert Cox. Entertainment committee; Myron K. Rake, chairman, W. E. Curtis, Jay Vaughn Grimm, and Helen E. Ward. Social committee; Richard R. Champ, chairman, George B. Harvey, Robert B. Krueger, and Mary Lou Redmond. Service committee: Ralph H. Moeberly and James D. Peterson, cochairmen, Donald G. Duncan, Evan M. Loyd, and Phil J. Smith. Refreshments committee: Anita Bedell and Hortense Bedell. Publicity committee: Hilda James and Jean Rankin, co-chairmen; Mila Williams, co-ordination chairman; Clarence O. Jenkins, and Rosemary Rospaw. Read the Want Ads daily. Springfield, III.—(UP)—A hitherto unpublished letter telling how Abraham Lincoln found time to review the case of a captured Confederate soldier so he might spend Christmas with his family has been discovered here. Letter Reveals Lincoln's Kindness In Allowing Rebel Prisoner Xmas Leave The letter which was written by T. M. Coombs while a prisoner at Fort Delaware reads: Coombs was mistaken when he thought Lincoln would pay little attention to his request. "Letters sent to official Washington probably will meet with little attention. You persons in Washington are always engaged in business of more importance than the release of a prisoner whom you do not even know. However, I am pleading with you to allow me to take the oath of allegiance and be discharged so that I can spend Christmas with my wife and three children." "I have already informed the secretary of war that I desire to take the oath of allegiance and that I am satisfied every officer and soldier in the Confederate army will be compelled to do likewise. I think if Jeff Davis and company succeed in establishing a despotism on the ruins of the cotton states (which I am far from Believing) nothing could induce me to remain under his dominion. On the reverse side in Lincoln' handwriting is the notation: "Le this man take the oath on Decem ber 8, 1863, and thereupon be di charged. A Lincoln. Nov. 23, 1863, King Size Beanstalks Feed 10 People 10 Years Del-Mir, Cal. — (UP) — Mose Kauffman, local farmer, says he now is growing beanstalks that reach 180 pounds of beans to the acre. Kauffman, a native of Russia came to the United States in 190 and to California in 1926. He went to Palestine 44 years ago to study the new agricultural development of the Jewish colonies and was impressed by the new bean plan there. He brought the seeds back to this country and has developed them so that one plant will feed 10 person from 10 to 12 years. He gets two crops a year from plantings on hi Del Mar farm. University Daily Kansan Call K. U. 251 With Your News a Mall subscription; $3 a semester, $4.50 year, in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan. every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, Uni- fessional days. Mail at Lawrence, Entered as second class matter Sept. 12 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. FOR FOLKS WITH ONLY TWO HANDS This energetic little fellow is man's most versatile servant. In homes, farms, stores and industries he performs $ \alpha $ multitude of tasks to lift the burdens of mankind. Tirelessly, efficiently he is on the job day and night, ready to do your bidding at the flip of $ \alpha $ switch. Best of all, he works for pennies! If you are one of those unfortunate people with only two hands—then you're not using Reddy Killowatt to full advantage. So if you have only two hands, don't worry. Just call on Reddy Killowatt. THE KANSAS ELECTRIC POWER COMPANY Dinn Dir Hay Brum Ann FOR MIDWEEK FUN AND DANCING Pi K Pi Benn mono The ship, Teke Come To Student Union Activities WED., FEB. 25 7:30—9:00 p.m. Harlan Livingood and his Orchestra "SHORT SPIN" UNION BALLROOM 25c per person O Mrs. iam Dav gia - Entertainment by: Alpha Delta Pi, Kappa Alpha Theta, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Delta Chi A cereing: la.: Will Law ard Heh Coffina Mo. Shaw Will ATC H Ker Inde Kar Stan Kar Cof hon RY24,194 UESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THRE eave in Lincoln instation: "Le on Decem be dis v. 26, 1863. (2) — Mose says he now reach 1 produce 8,00 acre. Years of Russia in 1900 26. He wen go to study development and was in bean plan our News nsan back to the need them so 10 person gets two wings on his ester, $4.50 a o semester prence, Kan. e University sundays, Mondays sundays Sept. 17 t Lawrence 1879. Formal Dances Are Highlight of Weekend Social Calendar Dinner guests of Delta Chi Sunday were: Corrine Carter, Eva Zumbrunen, Helen Harkrader, Carol Ann Hastings, and Patty Kelly. Dinner Guests Pi Kappa Alpha Teke Party Pi Kappa Alpha elected James Bennett, engineering sophomore, as honor initiate of the fall pledge class. The selection was based on scholarship, activities, and sports. Harrisit Harlow, Jo Anne Hepworth, Ruth Henry, Barbara Hays, Kayma Hotchkiss, Lila Hyten, Agnes Husband, Nancy Jackson, Carrie Jacobson, Arleye Johnson, Nancy Johnson, Barbara Karges, Betty Martin, Marion McCullough. Other guests included: Mr. and Mrs.O.J.Bryan,Mr.and Mrs.William Nichols,Robert Thayer,James Davidson,Emilie Trickett,and Georgia Pepercorn. "Basin Street" party, the second of a series of three Teke Mardi Gras parties, was held Friday at the Tau Kappa Epsilon chapter house. Charles O'Connor's swing琴 played. Guests present were; Celeste Beasley, Rosalie Bishop, Bernice Brady, cathleen Brode, Nancy Cameron, Virginia Coppeed, Betty Crawford, Dolores Defries, Alice Degner, Eileen Deutschman, Pat Foncannon, Kathleen Graff. Elizabeth Anne McCleary, Norma Mendenhall, Charlotte Metcalfe, Shirley Ousley, Joan Schindling, Laise Springer, Marjorie Scidmore, Utty Jane Sims, Veda Nicholas, Nancy Smith, Dorothy Stevenson, Joanne Varnum, Louise Warner, and Pat Young. ATO Initiates The chaperones were: Mrs. W. S. Shaw, Mrs. J. A. Hooke, Miss Julia Willard, and Mrs. H. P. Ramage. Alpha Tau Omega held initiation ceremonies Sunday for the following: Arthur Smith, Bartlesville, Okla.; Max Teare, St. Joseph, Mo.; William Wilhelm, Independence; Lawrence Nieman, Newton; Richard Millikan, Kansas City; Donald Helm, Kansas City; Glen Tonger, Coffeeville; William Edwards, Salina; James Childers, Independene; Mo. Hubert Johnson, Harper; Charles Kendall, Concordia; Bryce Ehmeke, Independence, Mo.; David Nesser, Kansas City; Thomas Milligan, Stanberry, Mo.; Robert Schaefer, Kansas City, Mo.; and Joe Leevy, Coffeville. Arthur Smith was the honor initiate. Guests at the initiation dinner included: Dr. and Mrs. R. J. Milligan, Stanberry, Mo; Mr. and Mrs. T. V. Teare and Dr. and Mrs. S. E. Senor, K. Joseph, Mo; Mrs. Paul S. Kendall and Miss Marilyn Kendall, Concordia; Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Edwards, Salina; Mr. and Mrs. A. Layle Childers and Miss Retta Desmond, Independence, Mo. Mr. and Mrs. August Ehmke, Independence, Mo.; Mr. Stanley Nieman, Kansas City; Mr. and Mrs. R V Millikan, Kansas City; Mr. and Mrs. George Nesser, Kansas City; Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Helm, Kansas City; Mr. Albert Rice, Kansas City; and Dr. and Mrs. Cecil G. Lalicker, Lawrence. Gwendolynne Jones won two pairs of nylon hose at a dinner-dance given by the American Institute of Chemical Engineers Feb. 21 in the Kansas room of the Union. She guessed correctly the time an alarm clock would ring during the evening. Chemical Engineers Charles Becker, Riley Dixon, and Dalton Eash did a skit. Judson Goodrich played a group of popular songs on the piano, and Ronald Reed, Eugene Sallee, and Carl Von Wadden sang in trio. John Ferris was toastmaster. Sig En Dinner Guests Chaperones were Prof. and Mrs. J. O. Maloney, Prof. and Mrs. Fred Kurata and Prof. S. A. Miller. O Sigma Phi Epsilon entertained with a buffet dinner Saturday afternoon. Guests included Mary Virginia Stout, Inez Hall, Ruth Routon, Sarah Strickland, Jean Gillie, Charlotte Reams, Arlene Johnson, Margaret Love, Ruth Clayton, and Suzie Curtis, a student at William Woods College. Delta Chi announces the pledging of Dave Fisher, Mt. Vernon, Iowa. Delta Chi Pledges Kappa Sig Dance Guests were: Mary Lind, Darlene Lygrisse, Grace Gwinner, Irene Cebula, Mary Jean Stewart, Betty Compton, Barbara Hume, Lila Hyten, Betty Hirleman, Billie Jane Alexander, Imogene Frack, Betty Greenwood, Martha Schenken. Kappa Sigma held its annual Black and White dinner-dance at the chapter house Saturday. Charlotte Metcalfe, Martha Gragg, Valerie Stagg, Doreen Wallace, Barbara Hays, Barbara Howard, Donna Harrison, Maxine Bunt, Barbara O'Neal, Janet Downs, Peggy Philblad, Betty Byam, Marcia Hail, Nancy Watson, Jickie Seaman, Margaret Dickinson. Nancy Bardnard, Helen Inso, Mary Kay Kottman, Marilyn Miller, Barbara Hohnson, Martha Lou Duncan, Betty Hamman, Mary Lou Martin, Merle Anders, Mary Lynn Hegarty, Annalou Pope, Mary Lou Stanley, Bernice Brady, Peggy Wolfe. Nanette Hyer, Martha Holman, Areta Hemphill, Katherine Hoag, Marcia Godding, Rita Hartwell, Ann Clifford, Patrice Kennedy, Marilyn Glover, Margaret Hanna. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Finney, Mr. and Mrs. Larry Finney, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Ward, Mr. and Tom Scott, Jr., Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Inman, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Zimmerman, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Held, Mr. and Mrs. Rex Shaw, and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Rankin. Kay O'Connor, Betty DeArmond, Joan Bushey, Irene Olson, Betty Ann Rolfs, Carol Winton, Elizabeth Ann Sifres, Naida Craig, Cleta Van is, Carolyn Camean, Barbara Rich- Marter, Mary Jo Myers, Anne Daus, Carolyn Carmean, Barbara Richard, Florence Robinson. Patricia Harrell, Virginia Gard, Marilyn Jones, Wilea Graham, Joyce Diat, Dorothy Hudson, Mary Lou Newman, Marcille Parker, Georgiann Dutton, Joan Tinnal, Evelyn Barncord, Billie Carter. Chaperones were Mrs. Arthur Little, Mrs. Dean Alt, Mrs. C. A. Thomas, and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Inman. D U Formal Dance Delta Upsilon held a formal dance Feb. 21 in honor of visiting delegates who were here to attend the DU fifth provincial conference. Guests were: Eileen Horner, Mary Jean Peet, Ruth Walters, Mary Sudermann, Sara Webb, Joan Schindling, Kay Collins, Joan Sanders, Mary Lynn Trousdale, Harriet Harlow, Margaret Lutz. * * Joanne Hudson, Mary Margaree Moore, Sally Shephard, Joan Anderson, Diane Ferguson, Marilyn Swenson, Connie Markley, Louise Wells, Carol Buhler, Barbara Montaldo, Betty Fordemwalt, Lee Apt, Emily Stewart, Jo Stout. Norma Jean Guthrie, Ann Cowger, Louise Lambert, Gene Atkinson, Betty Armstrong, Patty Brubaker, Barbara Pack, Mary Sue Wymer, Patty Claryd, Mrs. Bailey Chaney, Mrs. Al Steinhauser, Mrs. Albert T- ler, Mrs. Alvin Voigt, Mrs. Charles Roberts. Carolyn Campbell, Peggy Sue Cloyd, Norma Mendenhal, Joan Vickers, Beth Holmlund, Doris Danielson, Barbara Creel, Alice Schoonover, Betty Hayward, Ann Prebble, Pat Barron, Mary Lou Peckenschneider, Kay Swenson, Pat Perkins. Ann Warner, Mary Bell Shephard, Marie Schumacher, Mary Lou Radar, Georgia Haun, Jeanne Kahn, Betty Schrier, Mary Ann Gear, Betsy McCune, Barbara Brown, Claudia Anderson, Josephine Stucky. Carolyn Coleman, Sally Stepper, Cathy Culley, Patricia Cook, Deleores Collins, Margaret Granger, Betty Webb, Jean Rose, Jackie Logan, Sue Jones, Joan Bigham, Glenda Lehrring, Bernadine Read, Juliette Williams. Brian Munro and Dick Hooker, Manitoba University; Jim Muleahy and Albert Jones, Chicago, Charles Roberts and Gordon Johnson, Nebraska; Jim Hardenbergh, Edward Lucas and Dallas Nelson, Missouri; John Morledge and John Phillips, Clerks in the correspondence study section of University Extension really appreciate the latest in filing inventions, a circular file. The office has two Cardineers which were obtained a year ago. Card Filing Is Fun For These Clerks The file is shaped like a wheel and stands vertically about three feet high. Arranged around the wheel are sections for the cards. When a clerk wants to look at a certain card or file a group of cards, she turns the wheel until she finds the section she wants. The remainder of the cards fall back on or down, and the spot is permanently marked until the clerk wants a new card. Modern Choir Rehearses Tonight The modern choir will hold a rehearsal and reorganization meeting at 8:30 p.m. today in 131 Frank Strong hall. The choir of approximately 40 voices will take part in "College Daze," all-student musical to be held May 6. The choir was organized in 1936 by Robertson and Donald Wood. '39, as an all-male chorus to sing in the jazz band concert presented at the University that year. Girls' voices were added gradually until 1942 when the choir became inactive. Jesse Stewart, College junior, will direct the choir with Ross Robertson, instructor of economics, as advisor. Haworth White, College senior, reorganized the choir in November, 1947, but the spring show is the first opportunity they have had for public appearance. De Paul Men Want Brains Plus Beauty Chicago, Ill.—(UP)—De Paul university men demanded brains as well as beauty in a contest to pick their dance queen, "Miss I. Q." The 55 entries in the contest represent the nine colleges of the university, and, as well as curves, complexions, and comeliness, all have intelligence quotients from 120 to 135 "She has to be able to cook and be interested in making a home, too," said Jack Berry, a member of the judging board. 'Oh Is That Sex?' Editor Exclaims Norman, Okla.—“Some of those gags must have had a double meaning I didn't catch,” editor Tony Hillerman commented after the board of regents charged his campus humor magazine with “over vulgar sexiness.” University of Oklahoma regents took interest in the magazine because of lampooning of the Oklahoma Daily, student newspaper, and also because of several jokes and cartoons. Milwaukee—(UP)—Television is going to have its drawbacks, bobbysoxers at Marquette university agree. Television May Hamper Night-Blooming Co-Eds "If you told your mother you were going to be in the library studying tonight, you had better not sit there. The television cameras are pointed right in your direction and she'll probably see you." One sweet thing was heard to say to another during a basketball game: Beloit. Wis., (UP)—James Drager took a puff on a cigaret and laid it in an ashtray. The next thing he knew he had been shot in the arm. The cigaret set off a bullet that was lying in the ashtray. Cigaret Fires Bullet Oklahoma; Don Frank and Ed Barrels, Iowa. Phillip Mayer, and Mach Heysinger, Iowa State; Wes Jung, John Conway and Mark Jung, Northwestern; Norman Osterdeg and Warren Carlson, Minnesota; Rick Wing, Wisconsin; and Robert Stauder and Daniel Stovkey. Illinois. Chaperones were Mrs. Charles Wentworth, Mrs. O. L. Horner, Mrs. J. A. Willard, Mrs. R. G. Roche; and Mrs. J. A. Hooke. Three Pieces Of Cake Meant Voodoo, But Sign Of Cross Overpowered It New Orleans—(UP)—A New Orleans housewife who found three pieces of cake under her doorstep didn't even look back. She went straight to St. Louis cemetery No. 2 and scratched a sign of the cross on the tomb of Marie Laveau. It was the only thing to do, she said. Her neighbors and certain police- men agreed. $ \textcircled{a} $ The cake meant voodo. The cake was gris-gris, or a manifestation of the kind of hocus-pocus bought by shaves from Africa. Police figured at once that since the housewife was a landlady, one of her tenants was trying to voodoo her because she had filed an eviction notice. Marie Lavenau practiced voodoo in the 1830s. But she was still a power in her tomb today, still able to overcome the power of a bona-fide gris-gris. A genuine gris-gris can be almost anything. It can be a hideous monster made from candle grease and match sticks, or pennies in a circle. But whatever form it takes, it bodes nothing but ill will for its victim, usually death. Voodoo does not always deal with death, however. Big, handsome, banana-colored Marie Laveau reportedly used it to round up a houseful of husbands. Harrisburg, Fa.—(UP) The young reporter stepped into the office and asked if there was anything doing, "Nothing, son," said the chief of police, "except there's a building on fire across the street." Nothing But A Fire, Son GALES GALES American Custom Chocolates, $1.75 STOWIT'S Rexall STORE West Coast School Bars Discrimination Seattle—(UP)The University of Washington will bar new social or fraternal organizations from the campus if their constitutions contain racial or religious membership restrictions. Prof. Albert F. Miller, chairman of the faculty committee on student groups, said old groups on the campus with such restrictions in their constitutions will be "encouraged to remove them." Miller said the code was adopted when it was discovered a dental honorary fraternity seeking university recognition carried racial and religious restrictions in its constitution. Charme Beauty Salon formerly Iva's Beauty shop phone 533 To condition your hair for that new permanent try a Eugene Hair Creme Treatment. Nettie L. Wolfe, Owner Stripes that are stoppers... Perhaps you won't stop traffic in these new "Stopper Stripes" by Van Heusen. But you will stop more than your share of admiring glances. These smart new patterns are exclusive with Van Heusen—you'll find them on no other shirts! All of them boost new low-setting "Comfort Contour!" collar styling and other fine details of Van Heusen's magic sewmanship. All Sanforized—a new shirt free if your Van Heusen shrinks out of size! $3.95 and $4.95. PHILLIPS-JONES CORP., NEW YORK 1, N.Y. Q You're the man most likely to succeed in Van Heusen Shirts TIES • SPORT SHIRTS • PAJAMAS Youll Find Van Heusen Styles At The Palace --- 45 PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1948 A Kansan Scores 22 Points As Buffs Trounce Tigers A Kansan who migrated to Colorado-gave Missouri a brilliant lesson on throwing basketballs through hoops here last night and therein lies the reason for the change as shown in the Big Seven conference basketball team standings today. Carl Besemann, a Newton, Kan., product who towers 6 feet 5 inches. Friday afternoon this column carried an open letter to W. W. Davis, Kansas representative to the faculty governing board of the Big Seven conference, demanding the reopening of the Clarence Brannum eligibility case and quoting conference rules as proof of his ineligibility. First, Brannum clearly is ineligible—on two counts—according to the conference rules. These rules were written by the faculty committee, and it was the same faculty committee which chose to ignore these rules in voting him eligible. SPOTLIGHT SPORTS Here is the reason for all the fuss over a case which supposedly was dead and buried after a telephone poll of representatives Jan. 17 declared him eligible. By BOB DELLINGER Daily Kansan Sports Editor It's not a case of the rules being new, because they appear in a 1937 rules manual as well as in the issue of September, 1947. If the reason is unfamiliar with the rules, then it also is a case of inefficiency on the part of the representatives whose job it is to know and apply the rules. Second, the telephone poll by which Brannum's "eligibility" was confirmed also is illegal. The rules call for a three-man eligibility committee, chosen by the representatives, to have complete authority on such questions, and to make the final decision. Any conference school which has lost a game to Kansas State this season has a legitimate complaint. Kansas has perhaps less basis than others, because of Brannum's ineffectiveness in all departments against the Jayhawkers, but Missouri—whom the 'Cats defeated on Brannum's two late goals—certainly has a strong basis for protest. The best remedy, since Brannan should have been barred from play for the past calendar year, is to bar him for a full year starting now. Does that seem hard on the player? You forget that his play may win Kansas State a championship to which it has no right. It is too late to wipe out the blot on the conference record without the drastic step of forfeiting all Kansas State games, but it can be part—and only partly—cradicated by immediate and decisive action by the board this week. If Kansas State does win the championship, it will leave an all-time black mark on the first year record of the new conference. It certainly will be a step in the wrong direction for the new league if the first title is won in opposition to the conference statutes. The faculty board has made a bad blunder. If it allows it to stand uncorrected, the board will be committing one even worse. It has one chance to save face. It's up to you, faculty representatives—is something going to be done, or do we throw away the rule book for good and play it to suit ourselves? Topcka, Kan., Feb. 24—(UP) Washburn whipped Wichita 42 to 40 Monday night in Whiting Field house, a non-conference prep for the Ichabas' final Kansas league game Friday. Washburn Beats Wichita 42-40 On Topeka Court The home town team slipped into the lead after $5^{1/2}$ minutes and stayed there, with Wichita's Shockers, behind nine points near the finish, staged a fine rally that brought them within a field goal of tying the game. played "Yankee Doodle" on the backboards for the amazingly rejuvenated Buffs of Colorado and Missouri's highly - favored Tigers were upset, 56 to 48 last night at Boulder. The loss was the fifth in 10 starts for Missouri and the triumph was the third in a row for Colorado, which began by dropping its first six contests in a row. The conference title is now all but mathematically beyond the reach of the slumping Bengals. Besemann, cheered on by a roaring overflow crowd of 8,000 persons, sizzled with a 22-point performance that highlighted Colorado's greatest display of basketball this season. K-S. Oklahoma Lead And so it's Kansas State out in front with Oklahoma the only remaining major threat as the Big Seven teams move down the home stretch. Tonight Kansas State goes after se seventh victory in nine starts Bia 7 Standinas | | W L. Pct. | Pts. Ops. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Kansas State | 6 | 2.750 436 361 | | Oklahoma | 5 | 3.625 423 368 | | Iowa State | 5 | 3.656 417 446 | | Missouri | 5 | 5.500 491 493 | | KANSAS | 3 | 3.575 375 381 | | Nebraska | 3 | 3.575 423 480 | | Colorado | 6 | 3.333 412 448 | when it engages dangerous Iowa State at Ames. Oklahoma, taking a rest from conference competition, will be plenty busy against the powerful Oklahoma Aggies at Norman. The remaining schedule this week sends Colorado against Nebraska at Lincoln tomorrow, Kansas State against Nebraska in Manhattan Friday, and Oklahoma against Iowa State at Ames Saturday. Buffs Take Lead Early In dropping the Tigers to four place in the team standings, the Buffs forged to a wide early lead, commanding a 25 to 13 edge with only three minutes to go in the opening half. Then Missouri rallied. At the intermission, Colorado's lead had been whittled to 26 to 25. The Tigers seemed on their way. In the second half Missouri was in front, 27 to 26. But Colorado bounced back, as Besemann' and Bob Rolander went into action. The latter shot five times, hit five field goals, and then told his mates to carry on as he was forced out of the game on fouls. His mates did carry on, Bessemann rolling up 13 of his 22 counters in the final half as the Tigers' closing bids for victory repeatedly were thrown back. Jenkins, second high scorer in the conference, led the losers with 17 points while Pippin baged 11. Rolander and Walseth of Colorado also collected 11 each. Colorado 56, Missouri 48 N. Y. U. 59, St. Johns 54 Long Island 65, Springfield 60 Duquesne 44, Geneva 41 Yale 65, Princeton 53 Michigan 64, Purdue 35 Ohio State 60, Indiana 45 Wisconsin 59, Northwestheim 54 Augsburg 63, Concordia 54 Bradley 66, Oklahoma City 37 Wash. (St. Louis) 50, Drake 39 Loras 53, Texas Wesleyan 43 Louisville 71, Hanover 54 Washburn 42, Wichita 40 Maryland 63, Clemson 61 Richmond 69, Wash. & Lee 57 Virginia St. 64, N. Carolina Col. 38 Marshall 75, Ky. Wesleyan 50 Mississippi 56, Millsap 44 Texas State 50, Wiley 43 Oklahoma A & M 77, Ecuador 30 Regis 49, New Mexico 44 Southwestern 70, Tulsa 50 Washington 51, Idaho 33 Central Wash. 57, Hawaii 41 Denver 71, Utah State 54. Besemann Opens Up Basketball Results Sikes Interview Over WHB Today Comments by J. V. Sikes, newly appointed K.U. football coach, about his job at Kansas, may be heard on the Dick Smith program over WHB at 5:15 p.m. today. Norman, Okla. Feb. 24-(UP)—The University of Oklahoma and the Aggies of Oklahoma A. & M. looked with opposite feelings today at the O. U. jinx on opponents on it's home basketball court. The interview with Sikes was recorded in Athens, Ga. WHR, a Kansas City station, is located at 880 on the dial. Aggies Face Sooner Jinx Facing the Aggies tonight in their second match of the season, the Sooners hoped for at least a gentle assist from the "hex" that has brought them 11 straight victories in the fieldhouse here. Campus speculation was heavy today as to the condition of Paul Merchant, crackerjack O. U. guard who went out of last week's game with Kansas complaining of a groin injury. Without Merchant, coach Bruce Drake's quintet would be seriously shackled by lack of experience in the starting lineum. The Cowboys, on the other hand, knocked on wood and kept in mind their 45-20 rout of the Sooners at Stillwater a few weeks ago. In that meeting, O. U. was all but helpless. Could the home boards, the Aggies wondered, overcome a 15-point difference? A sell-out crowd of 6,500 fans is expected to be on hand for the feud, which is transplanted at regular intervals from the gridiron to the court, to the baseball diamond—and then back again. The answer to this and other questions will be unfold here at 8.30 tonight. In the overall series of basketball encounters between the two teams, Oklahoma has a 20-game edge. The Sooners have won 50 games and lost 30 to the Aggies since they started fighting it out on the court back in 1908. Rhode Island Snow Storms The troopers are required to visit isolated families after storms to see if they need assistance. As many live in backwoods section it often is impossible to reach them without winter equipment. Providence, R. L.—(UP)—After every major snowstorm, the Rhode Island state police equips some of its troopers with snowshoes, skis and tobogans so they can carry out their duties. Ichs May Share Title Emporia, Kan., Feb. 24—(UP)—Emporia State's Hornets have a chance today to keep part of the Kansas Central conference basketball title which they won outright last year. There was a remote possibility of the Emporians keeping sole possession of the championship. The situation shaped up like this: Washburn's Ichabods of Topeka lead the conference and have but one more game to play-against cellar-dwelling Southwestern at Winfield Friday. Emporia, which like Washburn, has lost two games, has two remaining clashes in running out the season this week at St. Benedict's Wednesday and at home against Hays State Friday night. Emporia has to win both games to have a look-in on the title. If that happened and Washburn unexpectedly stumbled, the Hornets would have it all. No other central conference team has a mathematical chance for the championship, after Hays' drubbing. Lichtenheld. Tucker Down, Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh, Kan., Feb. 24—(UP)—Emporia State registered another central conference court triumph here last night, leading all the way in a 63-49 conquest of Pittsburg State. Dennis Shogren turned in a 16-point scoring performance to lead the Hornets to victory. Emporia led at the half, 34-16. Duke Mitchell was high scorer for the losers with 13 points. Winfield, Kan., Feb. 24 - (UP)—Southwestern's high-scoring Builders easily defeated Tulsa university in a non-conference basketball game here last night, 70-50, thus gaining revenge for an early season loss to the Hurricane. Ahead at the half, 30-18, Southwestern was paced by Dan Kahler who basketed 14 points. Sidener and Ryser each collected 13 for the Builders. Builders Drub Tulsa | | W | L | Pct. | | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | | Washburn | 7 | 2 | .778 | | Emporia State | 5 | 2 | .714 | | St. Benedict's | 5 | 4 | .556 | | Hays State | 4 | 4 | .500 | | Pittsburg | 3 | 5 | .375 | | Southwestern | 1 | 8 | .111 | Baseball Call Issued Russ Sehon, new baseball coach, has issued a call for all varsity baseball candidates to report to the Varsity baseball room in the stadium at 3:15 p. m. Thursday. Sehon stated that practice would start about March 1. Listen for the... KU FOOD SERVICE CALL! It means a study-time snack for all. Each night-Sunday thru Thursday. - Sandwiches Apples Doughnuts - Potato Chips Milk KU "Food Of Superior Quality" FOOD SERVICE Phone 3406 "Cash for Skill" Tonight AYHAWKER Shows 2:30-7-9 NO MATINEE TODAY! ENDS TONITE! MICKEY ROONEY KILLER M-COY ANN LINN Wednesday, One Week ADVENTURE UNPARALLELED! TYRONE POWER in Captain from Castile and introducing JEAN PETERS COLOR BY... TECHNICOLOR GRANADA NOW, Ends Wednesday Errol FLYNN Ida LUPINO Eleanor PARKER "ESCAPE ME NEVER" THURSDAY, 3 Days Rousing, Roaving Thrills from the daring days of Early California. "PIRATES OF MONTEREY" (In Technicolor) VARSITY Ends TONIGHT "BLONDE SAVAGE" Co-Feature "HEADING FOR HEAVEN" Wednesday, 4 Days EXOTIC INTRIGUE! The Woman from Tangier with ADELE JEGENS STEPHEN DUNNE Also "Back In the Sado" Also "Back In the Saddle" PATEE NOW, thru Saturday Greatest Western Program Ever on the Screen! Hit No. 1 Marlene DIETRICH Jimmie STEWART "DESTRY RIDES AGAIN" Hit No.2 Randolph SCOTT Kay FRANCIS "WHEN THE DALTON'S RODE" TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE night ER 9 DAY! K-COY Week LED! OWER n DA sday ER" ays hrills ws of NY" Y E" N" 's dle" ay gram Y" E" N" dle" ay gram Big Seven Track Records Will Fall At League Meet Kansas City, Mo., Feb. 24—(UP)—Judging from dual meet performances in the Big Seven, the indoor track records of the conference will be in serious danger Saturday night in the annual clash on the boards of the Municipal auditorium. Dual meet records have been kicked wholesale out of fieldhouse windows in the indoor campaign now Track Gets New Surface The University of Kansas outdoor cinder track is being rebuilt, and will be ready for use when the outdoor activities swing into action about March 1, track coach Bill Easton said today. Five railroad cars of graded and washed cinders have been placed on the track. The new cinders will raise the level of the track to facilitate drainage, and also will improve the base of the track. When the cinders have been evenly distributed over the surface; the track will be dragged, rolled, and leveled, providing the K.U. runners with a first class running surface. This is the first reconstruction work that has been undertaken on the K.U. track in fifteen years, according to coach Easton. Further improvements upon the track will soon be underway, he added. Powell Announces New Track Event A tentatively scheduled pentathalon will climax the intramural track meet to be held the first two weeks in April, according to Don Powell, intramural director. The pentathalon is an event that includes two track and three field contests for each competitor. Three members from each team are allowed to enter. The winner is chosen on a basis of points determined by comparing the individual's mark with the record in that event. No intramural point value has been placed on the pentathalon. Powell said. "The purpose of the pentathalon is to determine the top intramural trackman for the year, and some coaches will be kept of the results." Powell said. The regular track meet will be run off first so that a team can better judge which of its members would make the best record in the pentathalon, Powell concluded. Cleveland Trades Rights To Chappuis Cleveland, Feb. 24-(UP)—All-America football conference drafts rights to Michigan halfback Bob Chappuis have been transferred from Cleveland Browns to either Chicago, Baltimore, or Brooklyn, it was learned reliably today. The champion Brown's announced last night that they had traded away their rights to Chappuis "with a view to strengthen the overall league structure," but declined to identify the other team involved. Tokuye-(UP)—A 60-year-old rat eating hermit says he has interviewed 2,124 women but still can't make up his mind whom to marry. Tokyo Rat-Eater Searches For Wife In return for the draft rights, the Browns said they would receive players to be announced later. Ichiro Akimoto, the would-be bridegroom, has been flooded with leap-year applicants since he advertised for a bride in local newspapers. He said he preferred a high-school graduate, under 30, by profession a midwife, seamstress or nurse. She had to be willing to work after marriage. Mr. Akimoto admits he eats rats. When he can't get rats, he would just as soon eat a mouse, he said. "However, the newspapers are in error when they say I eat them raw." Mr. Akimoto said. "I prefer them grilled." reaching its climactic weekend with the finest aggregation of track and field talent slated to compete here. Missouri is the defending champion and coach Tom Botts will bring another powerful squad to the annual carnival. The Golden Tigers won their 11th straight dual meet Saturday night, their fourth of the current indoor season. Anything Can Happen However, in a seven-squad meet with so much power scattered through the ranks of every team, anything can happen Saturday night. The Tigers, because of all-around power through the events, should be hard to unseat. The Tigers have the best array of hurdles in the nation, if Botts is able to use them all. Record-setting Bob Blakley has been out of service but may be ready. His teammate, Madill Gartiser, stepped the high sticks in a 7.4 against Nebraska, a tenth of a second under Blakeley's mark. Saturday night he did 6.9 in the lows against K-State. Nebraska's Boomey has done the low hurdles in 6.9. They'll have to hustle to win in the field Saturday night, though. 60-Yard Mark In Danger Hutton of Nebraska is doing the 69-yard dash in 62.1, one-tenth under the indoor mark. Missouri's Harry Guth did a 62.6 Saturday night, Gartiser is traveling the distance in 63. They'll be pushed by Laddie Harp and Lynn Gilstrap of Oklahoma, Ken Danneberg of Kansas, McClay of Kansas State and Don Campbell of Colorado. In the half-mile, there are eight men who have been doing the distance in less than two minutes. Bob Schuster and Dick Ault of Missouri have been close to the 49.3 record mark in the 440. With plenty of sharp competition in his event, that mark may go Saturday. Big Ed Quirk of Missouri holds the record of 52 feet 1 inch in the shotput and Ed may get that ball out to 54 in the Saturday night carnival. He's aiming at bettering 56 feet before the Olympic trials in the early summer. Rollin Prather of Kansas State and Piderit of Nebraska have been gunning past 50 feet. Bob Karnes of Kansas looks like a sure winner in the mile and two mile runs, while Don Cooper of Nebraska, following in the foot-steps of a long line of great vaulters at the Cornhusker school, may top the 13 feet $10\frac{1}{2}$ inch record. He cleared 14 feet, $ \frac{4}{8} $ inch Saturday against Kansas. Karnes Is Prime Favorite In the broad jump, among an out-standing crop of men, is Jack McEwen of Colorado, last year's Kansas Relays' decathlon champion. In the mile relay, M.U.'s great quartet is heavily favored. It's been handing the baton under the meet record. Saturday night they sped it in 3:23 and a fraction, nearly two seconds better. And, with the field so loaded with talent, it may be the relay points which decide the champion. Jamestown, N. Y.-(UP)—One Jamestown resident isn't taking any chances on the fuel shortage. Edgar W. Hanson just won't be exposed to the crisp cold that permeates Chautauqua county at this time of the year. The high jump mark is 6 feet 5 inches, set last year by Lambeth of Oklahoma. This year Tom Scotfield of Kansas will be ready and he has skinned over at better than 6 feet 7 inches. The field of timber toppers in the event includes Monte Kinder of Nebraska, James Howard of Missouri, Delvin Norris of Kansas, Lambeth and Bill Carroll of Oklahoma. Appearing before City Judge Allen E. Bargan, Hanson asked that he be sent to the county jail at Mayville. The wish was granted and he was sentenced to serve four months. He'd Rather Go To Jail Than Risk Fuel Shortage 18 GIB STRAMEL, 6-foot 2-inch forward on the Jayhawker basketball squad, is a push shot artist of the first order. In 1946 he scored 80 points in six games as a regular on a Kansas team which was unbeaten in conference play. A former all-state center from Hays, he developed eye trouble during the 1947 season but is returning to top form. NYU Wins No.18; Irish Seen As Biggest Hurdle To Unbeaten Year New York, Feb. 24-(UP)—Notre Dame's crack basketball team today ooed as the biggest obstacle between the Violets of New York university and the "miracle" of an unbeaten season. The Irish will meet N. Y. U. in Madison Square Garden on March 1 in one of the four games still remaining on the Violet schedule. Notre Dame boasts a record of 11 won and four lost, with the most impressive performance an upset of mighty Kentucky. N. Y. U. marked up its 18th straight victory of the season last night by topping St. John's, a traditional local rival, 59 to 54. It was a see-saw game in which the Violets rushed to a 10 to 1 lead in the first four minutes only to have St. John's fight back to tie the score at 40 to 40 and going ahead twice before succumbing. Adolph Schayes, six-foot, six-inch pivot man, was vital to the Violets with his rebounding and his team-high total of 19 points, a sum matched by Dick McGuire, St. John's flashy playmaker. Schaves High For Violets Other fees left for the Violets are Rutgers, Fordham, and City College of New York. Lasalle college of Philadelphia kept in the running for a tourney bid by beating St. Francis of Brooklyn, 59 to 50, for their 18th win in 20 games. Michigan took a full game lead in the Big Nine by beating Purdue 46 to 35, while second-place Iowa was idle. The Wolverines led all the way, holding a 28-20 edge at the half, had to hold off a Boilermaker rally in the late stages. Andy Butchko of Purdue, however, was the individual with the most defensive job plus game-high total of 16 points. A. and M. Wins Again The Oklahoma Aggies, considered certain for a tournament, gained their 23rd victory in 25 starts by trouncing the University of Ecuador, 77 to 30. In other games last night, Yale defeated Princeton, 65 to 53; Ohio State drubbed Indiana, 60 to 45; Wisconsin stopped Northwest, 59 to 54; Bradley bounced back from a loss to Notre Dame to thrash Oklahoma City, 66 to 37; Marshall ripped Kentucky Wesleyan, 75 to 50; Colorado beat Missouri, 56 to 48; Washington trimmed Idaho, 51 to 33; and Denver blasted Utah State, 71 to 54. Parker 51 Fountain Pens Super Chrome Ink STOWIT'S Rexall STORE Spanish Club To Hear Judson The Spanish club, "Fl Ateneo," will present "Neighbor Colombia," a colored film, and a lecture at 4 p.m. Thursday in Fraser theater. Dr. Lyman Judson, chief of visual education section of Pan-American union of Washington, D.C., and Ellen Judson will lecture on their experiences in South America while they were producing the film. Dr. Judson served as a liaison officer in the navy. He was one of three members on a joint board of review for navy training films. A banquet honoring Dr. and Mrs. Judson will be held in the East room of the Union following the lecture. "Neighbor Colombia" is the story of the development of Colombia. Dr. and Ellen Judson have recently returned from an 11 month study of Colombia. Since 1939 the Judsons have produced "Judson Color Jaunts" and the "Neighbor Nation" series. A lecture trip across 15 states is planned by the Judsons while on leave from the Pan American union. Prison Inmates To Have Hair-Raising Experience Lorton, Va., Feb. 23—(UP)—Inmates of Lorton reformatory formed a "long hair" club today by necessity. Anthony Barreka, 29, the prison barber, escaped last night. CALL FOR TAXI SERVICE CALL CALL FOR TAXI SERVICE CALL 2-800 UNION CAB CO. QUICK COURTEOUS SERVICE BILL'S GRILL 1109 Mass. Phone 2054 Across from the Courthouse Eye WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames Lawrence Optical Co. Schaum's Outline of Theory and Problems of Physics and Chemistry Including many problems completely solved in detail with explanations. STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1948 The Great Drouth U.S. DOLLARS WORLD TRADE HERBLOCK Our Conscience Is Our Guide The Editorial Page For the past few months American citizens and newspapers have been squirming like sheepish boys caught tying tin cans to a tomcat's tail. A wee small voice that has been whispering to us for a long, long time has finally come right out and shouted at us. That voice is our social conscience. The man who is making all the noise is Henry A. Wallace. The cause of the disturbance is Mr. Wallace's attacks on racial discrimination and political neglect of America's minorities. In the past the subject has been treated like an illegitimate child at a family reunion. Everyone knew the little beggar was there, but it was much easier to pat him on the head and send him out to the kitchen than to have him standing around making everyone uncomfortable. What Mr. Wallace has done is to drag him out and announce, "Look who's here." The problem of minorities has become more and more acute in America for the past 30 years. After World War I a great rush of liberalism broke over Europe and spread to America. Social equality and the brotherhood of man were preached by every Utopian-bent socialist. The public could not help listen. It was developing a social conscience. Advent of World War I The 20 odd years of peace after World War I were interrupted by World War II, and racial discrimination presented itself as a contributing factor in our choice between war and peace. The Nazi atrocities against the Jews and other so-called inferior races made the human race blush for its kind, and our social conscience hurt more sharply than ever. Maybe Mr. Wallace has forced the issue into the limelight as a political expedient. What is important is that our sensitive national conscience is going to keep it there until something is done about it. Some New Jersey women are going to be compelled to sit down to do their drinking, a township ordinance states. Nothing is said about their conduct when they get up. Among such issues as those of Palestine, Russia, and the commodity price drops, the problem of James C. Petrillo's ban on the photograph recording industry might seem of minor importance. Yet, many jobs involved, and an industry that earned $243,750,000 the past year is not one to be considered laughingly. Petrillo's Tune Actually Petrillo slapped a triple ban on the entertainment world which included the use of recorded music in both television and frequency modulation radio, but it was the swat at "canned music" and the persons who manufacture it that caused the greatest furor. Protection For Musicians There are many direct underlying causes for the move by Petrillo, but they all simmer down to "protection for the live talent musician." Petrillo is out to do "something for the boys," in other words, union musicians. He says that the "dise jockey is making money without having to make an investment." He sets up a good show with records that don't cost him a cent. After that the "between-platter-patter" comes easily from the continuity writer. In that way, Petrillo says, the jockey gets a good show and the musicians who made the recordings are left out in the rain. The chubby labor leader's moves seem sincere. He wants to help the small-time musician who is lucky to get a "tavern job" twice a week. And, although they are against his latest move to destroy them, the big boys of the music industry respect and, in many cases, admire Petrillo. On the other hand, recording companies are struggling to have the ban lifted, but not too soon. If the lid popped off tomorrow they would lose—and hard! Before Jan. 1, when Petrillo's order took effect, these companies had artists working day and night, making records to "beat the ban." Many of these records aren't too shiny, either commercially or musically, and the firms that made them know it. If the ban were lifted now, they would be left with a lot of unsalable merchandise, records that could not compare to those musicians might cut if the pressure were off. Cautious Companies The latest international incident involves a small group of desolate islands at the end of the earth—the Falkland Island dependencies. The British have long considered these islands their property. But now both Chile and Argentina have put in claims and backed them up with action and a show of force. Falkland Islands The reason for this sudden interest in these islands is not known. The British say uranium may be the bait. The Argentinians and Chileans say they are merely renewing long-standing claims. Their position is that they don't "recognize the existence of colonies or possessions of European nations." A look at the history of these islands reveals that in spite of their apparent insignificance, they have been the center of many controversies. They were "discovered" and claimed by nationals of no less than 10 countries. A British sea captain named Davis was the first to view the islands in 1592. Center of Controversies It wasn't until the 18th century that any attempt at actual settlement was made. Then both Spain and Great Britain established settlements on different islands, supposedly in ignorance of the other's move. The diplomatic war which followed almost ended in a naval war. The dispute was settle in 1771 when Spain yielded the islands to Britain by convention. Claim By Buenos Aires As the islands had not actually been colonized by Great Britain, the Republic of Buenos Aires withdrew, and the British flag was hoisted at Port Louis in 1833. Since that time the Falklands have been a British crown colony. When you ask yourself why these In the meantime, recording firms are getting ready in case the ban overstays its welcome. Some of them have set up branches in Mexico, out of range of Petrillo's jurisdiction, and are turning out recordings of a better quality. Naturally the firms will hold these until they've disposed of all the discs they cut before Jan. 1. Petricko has a legitimate beef when he says that his boys are getting cut out of a lot of cash that it rightfully theirs. But then, recording companies are just as right when they point out how recordings have aided in the advance of music, and how music has been brought down to a level where even the commonest man can enjoy it. What the matter needs is a lot of arbitration.—Bill Mayer. Children at Sunnyside need playground equipment, a group of Sunnyside mothers have decided. They will meet March 2 to discuss specific requirements. Sunnyside Mothers Study Children's Recreation Need The mothers expect to form a committee to ask University officials for their cooperation and assistance, and invite the director of the University nursery school. Irvin Youngberg, director of dormitories, said today that efforts are being made to bring play-ground equipment to children at Sunnyside, and that he will be glad to listen to suggestions from the committee as to specific needs. islands have been so sought after, a look at a geography certainly doesn't throw any light on the situation. The islands lie about 250 miles east of the nearest point on the South American mainland (Chile). There are 100 islands covering a total area of 6,500 square miles. Only two, East and West Falkland, are of any considerable size. Until the recent British mention of uranium, there were no known valuable minerals. There are a number of bays and inlets which form well-protected harbors. But that's about the sum total of the geographic assets. In 1771 Dr. Samuel Johnson in speaking of the British acquisition of the islands, concluded that their only value would be their geographical position in time of war. They controlled the then important route around Cape Horn or through the Straits of Magellan. The wise old doctor made a prediction at that time which has certainly been borne out. He said, "Conduct which betrays designs of future hostility, if it does not excite violence, will always generate malignity." There's no denying that the Falklands are world sore spots today.Anna Mary Murphy. Dr. Johnson Call KU 376 with your Want Ads RE 5070 APPROVED SERVICE PLYMOUTH at You Are Always Welcome SNAPPY LUNCH Hot Chili for Sandwiches Soup Malts 1010 Massachusetts Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. Bradley GALLAGHER MOTORS FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL DEAL LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS 12 East Eighth Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed...65c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed...69c CASH AND CARRY ONLY CASH AND CARRY ONLY University Daily Hansan Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assm. Na- ward Press Assm. and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Ad- miss. Association 420 Madison Ave. New York City. Editor-In-Chief .. William C. von Maurer Managing Editor .. Alan J. Stewart Asst Man. Editor .. Cooper Rollow Asst Man. Editor .. Ian Ranah City Editor .. Gene Vignery Asst City Editor .. James Robinson telegraph Editor .. Wendy Bebey Telegram Editor .. Clarke Tucker Asst. Tel. Editor .. William Barger Sports Editor .. Robert E. Dellinger Asst. Sports Editor .. Paul Zeh Editor Editors .. James Jones Women's Sports Editor Anna Mary Murphy Feature Editor John Winn Picture Editor Hail Nelson Society Editor Dorothy James Business Manager Betty Bacon Advertising Manager Robert Anderson Classified Adv. Man. Daniel Classified Adv. Man. David National Advt. Mgr. David Clymer Promotion Manager Wister Shreve Read the Daily Kansan daily. Rip Brown's 5 BOPS SKYLINE Fri-Sat Launderette Service 9 lbs. of wash, 25c 21 Bendix Washers 813 Vt. Phone 3368 As perfectly matched as the happy bride and bridegroom this diamond engagement ring and harmonizing man's and woman's wedding bands. In 14 kt. gold smartly designed for the modern "tailored" effect. From our assortment of triple ensembles. 3 rings to join 2 hearts ROBERTS Jewelry Gifts 833 Mass. Ph. 827 TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 24, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Botany Expert, 87, To Continue Work As Long As He 'Can Wiggle' "I will do botanical work as long as I am able to wiggle." This comment was made by Prof. W. C. Stevens, retired chairman of the botany department, on his 87th birthday, Feb. 16. The occasion was more than just a birthday celebration. Friends of the elderly educator had gathered for a second reason. Professor Stevens' portrait was presented to the botany department by the Lymanacen club. "When I entered the University as a student in 1881 there were only three buildings on the Hill," Professor Stevens said. "They were the old North College building where Corbin hall is today, and incomplete Fraser hall, and a small wooden observatory in front of Fraser about where the Pioneer status is today." Footwork was common because few students owned horses Professor Stevens said. They walked on field trips and to and from picnics, which pere top social gatherings of the time. The University had only a few departments and about 400 students. Professor Stevens recalled that even after he began teaching, the faculty was so small that the whole group often went on picnics in one express wagon. Professor Stevens has written three books, "Introduction to Botany" and "Plant Anatomy" were the first two. He has just finished the third, a book on Kansas wild flowers. Union Picks Two Students To Announce Broadcasts Ervin E. Grant, College senior, ano Steve Mills, freshman, have been selected as program announcers for the Union broadcast. Grant was with a radio guild while attending the University of Minnesota in 1944. Mills announced short programs on five Denver stations while attending the summer session at Denver university last year. The Union still needs students who have had experience in radio announcing. Forecasts For Schools For those who are wondering what the school of tomorrow will be like, Cloy S. Hobson, assistant professor of education, may have an answer. Professor Hobson has recently returned from a meeting of the association for Supervision and Curriculum Development held in Cincinnati. It was sponsored by the National Education association. Professor Hobson's discussion group, one of 15 at the meeting, concluded that the curriculum of tomorrow's schools shouldn't have a formal pattern but should fit the needs of the children, both individually and as a group. This does not rule out the need for a framework, but puts much less emphasis on it than there has been in the past. "The world is making progress." Professor Hobson said. "It is the duty of education to take some responsibility for the direction of the change." ThisIf raids Police Station, Gets Typewriter And Soap Mexico City, —(UP)—Red-faced police are searching for the thief who made off with a typewriter, soap, mops and brooms from police headquarters. One officer, not on duty at the time of the crime, quipped, "headquarters was really cleaned out." Freshman medical students saw normal and pathological blood conditions pictured in movies of living animals Feb. 21. Freshman Medical Students See Blood Condition Movies Dr. Melvin H. Knisely, associate professor of anatomy at the University of Chicago, used the movies as a supplement to his lecture on "Sludge in Blood." He helped develop the newly discovered way of finding out circulation reactions to shock and injury by taking enlarged technicolor movies of normal animals and then comparing their circulation with that of abnormal ones. Gold Per Capita Small In USA Johannesburg —(UP) — Although South Africans have been known to deploy the enormous gold hoard which the United States holds at Fort Knox and elsewhere, the fact is that this little nation also has a fair supply of the precious metal. In fact, South Africa has more gold-per capita of its European population-than America can boast per capita. During the past six months, the South African Reserve bank has consistently reported gold reserves of $197,000,000 or better. This works out £78 (about $312 in U.S. currency) for each of the 2,500,000 European inhabitants of South Africa. Toward the middle of this month, the golden stockpile of the United States amounted to $22,708,-000,000 or $157 per capita. Extension Class Started A University Extension class in interior decorating has been opened in Mission, Kan. The class is sponsored by the Mission Chamber of Commerce and is conducted by Mrs. Velma Riller. It is the largest class to be started in the Kansas City area with 271 women attending. The class will continue for six weeks. Daily Kansan Classified Ads Phone KU 376 Classified Advertising Rates One day Three days Five days 25 words or less 35c 65c 90c additional words 1c 2c 3c For Sale SLIDE RULE: Deitzen. Log-Log, Duple- nishment and new, at cost. Ph. 2377 C. Geisow. MEN'S GRAY pin-stripped suit, size 32, two men's blue sport coats, size 38; one Emmerson floor model radio. See at 736 Maine. 26 1931 MODEL A FORD: Perfect condition. See after 6 p. m. w. 946 II. 46. COMBINATION TABLE model radio wi- th WebSite automatic changer, 1541 Ky. Northwest enhance. Evenings. 28 RADIO AND record tables automatic record changer, plays 10 inch or 12 inch records, table model, excellent condition, less than year old. 345 Illinois. $35.00 . 25 NEW NORGE "5000" oil heater; 38pcb hand painted china set, vanity table, mirror; two burner hot plate; also living-room and bedroom drapes. Call 1679-3. 27 18-FOOT RED ARROW house trailer, inlaid linoleum, venetian blinds and curtains. Good condition. Lavern Mausoft. 2047 La. 26 VETERANS! We will buy, trade or sell for you any Army or Navy gear in good condition that you may wish to purchase. Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. Phone: 669 HTFD Transportation RIDERS WANTED: Leaving every Friday evening for Emporia, Newton and Wichita. Returning every Sunday evening. Call 3170, Harry Shultz. 26 EAST FOR Easter? Two students looking for ride to and from East coast vacation. EAST vacation. Will share expenses and driving. Call 201-823-5919 asw for Joe or Ed. RIDERS WANTED: Eudora to Law- yers every day. Ph. Ed. 21, J. N. Hearn. Wanted APARTMENT WANTED: Student, veteran, no children. Desire two or three occupancy, preferably furnished. Occupancy required by three years. Call J. A. Ross, Ph. 1810 W. ENGINEERING student wants one fel- mement 1300 Tenn. Phone 1837M. 24 month, 1300 Tenn. Phone 1837M. 24 Miscellaneous FREE OFFER: Photo copies of discharge papers, marriage certificates for military credit or school entrance. 3 for 2. Round Corner Drug, 80 Mass. MATHEMATICS Tutor: Lucy T. Dougherty at 909 Maine. (By bus, 3 blocks west of Mississippi, or by path down the Hill west of the stadium). Phone 3084M. MARCELLA'S Beauty shop moved to 342 Indiana St. Beautiful, soft, natural "Rock Waves" a specialty. Day and night app-licated. New patrons are pre-printed. Phone 520. DANCE every Saturday night at Odd Fellow church. Informal. Joe Langworthy obscures Lost LOG-DUPLEX slide-rule: permanent loss of which will necessitate my taking on a basic math. Finder please contact Charlie Cencr, Ph. 1906 28—No questions, reward. BROWN CLOTH coin purse at the Union building Wed. noon. Please return keys and activity book to lost and found. Lessie Poston. 24 ONE RED Shaffer lifetime finder. Pindere call please B Bill Schell at 552 or 1269-M. PARKER FENCIL, black barrel, silver top. Lost Wednesday. Personal value. Reward. Charles Minges, ph. 1870-W. 25 I WILL trade your topcoat and key case I will trade the topcoat which you took Wnoon at Dublin. Scott Workman, 1121 Ohio. Phone 11. GREEN BILLFOLD at Vice-Versa dance. Finder please return to lost and found dept. or call Marian Kysar, Phone 365. Reward. 24 For Rent LARGE, CLEAN one-room apartment for rent to employed couple with small child whom I can care for during daytime. 506 W. 6th. Ph 1344-W 26 VACANCY: for two men together. close to the Hill. 1228 Louisiana. 26 HAVE ROOM for a woman student; double room, $20 a month. Ph. 3248W ROOM FOR 2 boys. $3 each. Will rent as single for $4. Call 2661W or see at $12 Alabama after 5:00. Two blocks below stadium. 25 VERY attractive room for two boys, twin campus. 1137 Ky. Mrs. Olc. Ph. 2234W. Call K. U. 251 With Your News THE FRENCH QUARTET Record Success Story! RCA Victor's rising star of the keyboard —Larry Green—scores another hit . . . "GONNA GET A GIRL" CAMEL is the cigarette for me! WITHIN the past few months, Larry Green has climbed right up with the top bands of the land! If you ask Larry how he did it, he'll light up a Camel and say: "Experience is the best teacher in the band business—and in cigarettes. I know from experience that sweet music suits my band, just as I learned from experience that Camels suit my 'T-Zone' to a 'T!" Try Camels! Discover for yourself why, with smokers who have tried and compared, Camels are the "choice of experience!" And here's another great record— MEL the rette me! Larry Green CAMEL TURKISH & DOMESTIC BLEND CIGARETTES More people are smoking CAMELS than ever before! R. J. Reynolds Tabaceo Company Winston-Salem, North Carolina UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE EIGHT TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1948 US Dodges Issue Of Armed Force For Palestine Lake Success, Feb. 24—(UF)—The United States today dodged an early showdown on a U.N. army for Palestine but asked the security council to authorize Big Five consultations on the possibility of using armed force to keep the peace in the Holy land. Mr. Austin said that if a majority of the 11-nation council finds a threat to peace exists, "the United States would be ready to consult under the U.N. charter with a view to such action as may be necessary to maintain international peace." Did Not Commit Us American delegate Warren R. Austin proposed to the security council formation of a Big Five committee to determine whether the growing violence in the Holy Land constitutes a threat to world peace. The long-awaited statement of American policy laid before the security council a three-point program which, it appeared, would sidetrack immediate action on the formal appeal of the U.N. Palestine commission for a full-fledged U.N. army to enforce Holy land partition. While it implied American support for the use of force if the necessary majority of seven security council members decree it, the statement did not commit the United States to do more than "consult" with other members of the U.N. Just before Mr. Austin spoke chairman Karel Lissicky of the Palestine commission warned the council that partition cannot be carried out unless the security council forms an international force by May 15, when Great Britain ends its responsibility for Palestine. Mr. Austin's Plan 1. Assume responsibility for keeping peace in Palestine, as requested in the original U.N. general assembly's partition program. Mr. Austin proposed that the council: 2. Establish a security council committee of "the five permanent members"—the Big Five powers—to "look at once into the question of possible threats to international peace arising in connection with the Palestine situation." 3. Call on all governments and peoples, particularly the Arab states, to "take all possible action to prevent or reduce the disorders now occurring in Palestine." Great Britain promptly served notice it would refuse "either individually or in association with others" to contribute to carrying out the U.N.'s Palestine partition program by force. To Speak For River Control F. A. Russell, professor of engineering drawing, and 10 delegates for the Kansas river flood control program will leave today for Washington D. C. They will testify for the program before the board of engineers for rivers and harbors. The delegates represent Douglas, Jefferson, Johnson, and Leavenworth counties. The program "provides for flood control and stream regulation of the Kaw river, adequate water supply, efficient sewage disposal, and power for industry," said George Hedrick, secretary of the Lawrence Chamber of Commerce. Reservoirs are to be constructed at Perry, Milford, and Turtle creeks. Appropriations are expected to run into millions of dollars, he added. If the program is passed, flood protection will be built at Bonner Springs, Junction City, Kansas City, Lawrence, Manhattan, and Topeka. Professor Russell, chairman of the Lawrence water works commission, said that "numbers count and that we will be there to argue against those who oppose it." Quakers Interview Relief Workers Myra Lou Williamson, representative of the American Friends Service committee, will be on the campus today to interview students interested in summer work on the Friends' relief and rehabilitation projects. The American Friends Service committee was awarded the Nobel peace prize for its relief work over the world. Miss Williamson wants students for work in Europe and the United States. Appointments may be arranged through the Y.M. or Y.W. office. Bids Approved For New Shops The buildings will be located south of electrical engineering laboratories and will replace Fowler shops. The William Allen White School of Journalism will move into Fowler shops upon completion of the new building. The board of regents approved bids for the new engineering building Friday. Excavation will begin March 15. Basil Green, general contractor, has announced. Green bid $202,850 for the general construction. Other bids were plumbing, Claude Williams, Kansas City, $33,175; and electrical, A. Tucer, Topeka, $21,531.96. The appropriation for the building was set at 290,000. 1948 Grads To Get Jobs If you are going to be graduated from college in 1948, you have a good chance to get a decent job. The Northwestern National Life Insurance company has statistics to prove it, based on a survey of employers and 34 major universities and technical schools. "Demand for 1947-48 winter graduates so far is equal to or above that of a year ago, with a sharp increase in calls for sales personnel, and continued heavy demand for engineers and accountants," the survey finds. Corporation scouts are already beginning to arrange for interviews with June graduates. Most schools expect to place all their available graduates without much delay. "At the same time employers are raising their standards, and are no longer eager to take on anyone with just a passing grade. It is the upper third of the class which has the best opportunity," the report said. Salaries have almost doubled since 1939 for college graduates, and are $10 to $25 above last year. The engineering graduates' salary ranges from $240 to $275, and that of graduates in non-technical fields is from $200 to $235 a month according to the survey. "Some placement officials feel that in the technical field, the supply of engineering graduates is at last about to catch up with demand, with a number of schools graduating their first full-sized engineering classes since before the war this June," the survey said. Nearly all placement officials feel that the general demand for college-trained personnel will continue throughout this year. Final tryouts for work on various KFKU dramatic programs will be at 3 p.m. tomorrow in the recording room of Green hall, Miss Mary Jane Dean, producer, said today. Results will be posted Friday morning. Sophomores, junior, and seniors will receive $ \frac{1}{2} $ hour credit for work on the programs. The report said that most students graduating this year are veterans, older than the prewar graduate, and one third of them are married. Most of them want jobs offering security and little traveling. Tryouts for KFKU Are Tomorrow At 3 Campus Police Now Members Of City Force The campus police are now regular members of the police department, Chief of Police C. A. Bliesner said this morning. Acting upon the recommendation of Mayor Parsons, the city council voted last night to appoint the six campus policemen to the city force. The newly appointed officers began their duties this morning. A summary of the city regulations to be strictly enforced by the campus police includes the following rules which apply to drivers and to pedestrians. Section 4. "It shall be unlawful for any person to refuse or fail to comply with any lawful order, signal or directions of a police officer." All regulations come under chapter 16, of the city ordinances. Condensation of section 15. "Drivers must yield the right of way to pedestrians at any crosswalk in the middle of the block, or at the end of a block unless the crosswalk is regulated by a traffic officer. In all other cases the driver has the right of way." Condensation of section 16. "Drivers shall yield the right of way to any pedestrians crossing, or who have started to cross on a go signal. In all other cases the pedestrians shall yield the right of way to vehicles. This does not mean that a car turning to the right or left has the right of way over a pedestrian. All cars making a turn at any intersection must give way to pedestrians." Condensation of section 25. "Drivers may not stop in the following places: within an intersection; on a crosswalk; inside or within 20 feet of a safety zone; within 25 feet of an intersection; within 30 feet of traffic signs on the side of the road; within 10 feet of a fire hydrant (on either side); in front of a private driveway or sidewalk." Condensation of section 71. "Any person involved in an accident of any description must stop at once. He shall not leave the scene until a proper report and assistance has been given." Additional violations which Robert Corwin, campus policeman, has noted on the campus include Uturns, which are permitted only at the ends of the campus: disregarding the signals of the traffic officer at the intersection of Jayhawker drive and Mississippi, and reckless driving. Tickets will be given for these infractions. Members of the executive committee, board of trustees, and student leaders of the Memorial Drive association will meet in the English room of the Union at 6:30 tonight to hear the report of the new campaign director, Jack Taylor. Traffic officers have been instructed to give tickets to any pedestrian or driver violating any city or University regulation. No warning tickets will be given. Memorial Group Will Meet Tonight Members of the executive committee who will attend are Hugo T Wedell, president, Topeka; Carl V Rice, vice-president, Kansas City Kan.; Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the department; Holmes, treasurer, Lawrence; Edward W, Tanner, Kansas City, Mo. and J, Wayne McCov, Topeka. Board of trustee members attending tonight's meeting are Dr. Forrest C. Allen, varsity basketball coach; J. W. Murray, managing editor of the Lawrence Journal-World. C. C. Stewart, president of the University Endowment association; and R. B. Stevens, former president of the alumni association. Patrick H. Thiessen, chairman, and Robert Malott, vice-chairman of the student drive committee, and Kenneth Postlethwaite, publicity director of the Memorial Drive association, will also attend. Flight Engineer To Speak To IAE Col. Jerry Davidson, flight test engineer, will address the Institute of Aeronautical Engineering on compulsory military training at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the quonset hut behind Marvin hall. Col. Davidson is attached to the air reserve unit at Fairfax field in Kansas City, Kan. He tested the new Cessna 170' aircraft being experimented on to insure greater safety for passengers in commercial planes. Lawrence was saved from a blackout Monday night by the alertness of the dispatcher at the Kansas Electric Power company, C. F. Hough, manager said today. A $75,000 fire and explosion at the Tecumseh plant of the Kansas Power and Light company disrupted electric power service to 215 Northeast Kansas towns Monday night. Fire, Explosion Cause Blackout The dispatcher was able to switch over to the auxiliary power of the Kansas Gas and Electric company, who has headquarters at Wichita, with the lights flickering only twice. The break darkened all towns in the company's network at least momentarily. Some were able to cut in supplementary lines quickly, company officials said. At Topeka, service was restored to hospitals within 30 minutes, but the rest of the city was without power for 55 minutes. The fire was thought to be caused by a short which burned out a 25,000-kilowatt oil circuit breaker, and a steam boiler exploded as a result. 'US Fascism Is Growing' "Fascism is here—in embryo—and growing like the dickens." Tom Rehorn, member of the Kansas City Progressive Citizens of America, told the Unitarian Liberal club Sunday night. The former minister denounced American capitalism, stating that "the capitalists of this country made Hitler possible." He compared the growth of fascism in the United States to the rise of the Nazi regime. He criticized the churnes for inactivity in the field of politics, "I am a churner," he said, adding that preachers are controlled by the industrialists among the laymen. He cited several examples from his own experience. He accused the F. B. I. and the attorney-general's office of "using Gestapo methods," and said the two offices are "tools in the hands of totalitarian industrialists." He said that the F. B. I. has more than two million persons listed as "undesirable Americans." In answer to a question he said that the two major political parties are slowly adopting the same policy in major issues where the capitalists are concerned. "President Truman does not intend to do anything about the report he received from the committee on civil rights," he said. Mr. Rehorn is a firm believer in the third party, and is a stamach supporter of presidential candidate Henry Wallace. Rodgers' Voice Pleases In Recital Elaine Rodgers gave her senior voice recital Monday night with a graciousness and enthusiasm that delighted her audience. Her enunciation and tones were clear and vibrant. She sang with feeling and enjoyment. Miss Rodgers is a mezzo-soprane from Joseph F. Willk , the professor of ypls. Maxine Dunkleberg, fine arts junior, provided an excellent accompaniment. Reds Make Coup Seize Offices In Slovakia Prague, Feb. 24. —(UP)—Premier Klement Gottwald tightened the Communist grip on Czechoslovakia today, striking hard at opposition parties in a series of moves which included the seizure of the offices of two Peoples party publications. Twenty armed soldiers and policemen occupied the Social Democratic party headquarters. Officers searched the party offices. Plainclothes guards wearing broad red lapel ribbons took part in the seizure similar to that of the National Socialist headquarters yesterday. Univers Hold Strike Rumors swept through Prague that Gottwald would complete his coup today, and that he had gone to see president Eduard Benes to present a new cabinet. The rumors, which were indicative of the tension here, were disproved by official assurance that Gottwald had not seen Benes shortly after noon. Call Mass Meeting. Communist-directed trade unions carried out a one-hour token strike in support of Gottwald's program. Crowds assembled for mass meetings heard speakers lambast the "Western imperialists" and praise the Communist program. The Communists called a 'mass meeting at 6 p.m., (11 a.m. Lawrence time) at which some sources expected Premier Klement Gottwald to announce a new all-leftist cabinet. Unions Hold Strike The Slovak Democratic party was staggered by Communist moves which appeared to put Slovakia, the eastern part of the country, in the hands of the Communists. Slovak officials in Prague said Communists have ousted the Slovak Democratic mayor of Bratislava, capital of Slovakia, and replaced him with a Communist, Dr. Anton Basla. Resign In Protest The Slovak Democratic party is one of the three parties whose ministers resigned from the government last week in protest against Communist efforts to create a police state in Czechoslovakia. Their resignations have not been accepted by Benes, who continued to defy Gottwald last night by reiterating his insistence that any new government contain all parliamentary parties. Bell To Honor T.P.Hunter A bell for the memorial carillon is the goal of a drive for funds in memory of Thomas Pitt "T.P." Hunter, who was killed on Guam while serving as a lieutenant in the Marine Corps. Mr. Hunter was a basketball letterman in '40, '41, and '42. Last year, he was elected posthumously captain of the 1946 cage team. Mr. Hunter also earned a letter in baseball in 1942. After graduation he enlisted in the marine corps, and was killed by a sniper's bullet on the opening day of the invasion of Guam in July, 1944. Dr. Forrest C. Allen, honorary chairman of the drive, said that after Mr. Hunter's death contributions totaling about $400 were sent to him for some sort of memorial to honor Mr. Hunter. Dr. Allen called together a group of the athlete's friends to form a committee to raise money for a bell inscribed with his name in the memorial carillon. Members of the committee are Robert Malott, chairman, Otto Schnellbacher, John Baldwin, and Dinner Clinger. Malott said that the type_of bell the committee wants to buy will cost $2,000, and the goal of the campaign will be to raise that amount Dr. Allen is sending letters to all former teammates of Mr. Hunter explaining the purpose of the drive. Contributions to the campaign should be sent to the War Memorial association in care of the T. P. Hunter fund. 45th W La ert A the vaca distr O point the com tion and cil Pai ior, Roge were each A. M. poin C includ smol D. I Brow audi and Hele oper D. C enda Thay B. F The ame to o Jayh The by C Ja was entive. Smis On finan $25 ing take of th of $3 uate com brief the dese that the Vars 48 $ \bigcirc_{r} $ University Daily Kansan Wednesday, Feb. 25, 1948 Lawrence, Kansas Council Appoints Court Justices Committees Two petitions, each naming a man to fill the vacancy left when Robert L. Wehe resigned, were presented to the All Student Council Tuesday night. Ralph H. Moberley, College junior, was named in the petition of the Independents, and Samuel R. McCamant, engineering junior and president of the Triangle, engineering fraternity, was named in the other. This vacancy exists in district 3, which is normally filled by the engineers. A third petition was presented by the Fachacamac party to fill the vacancy left when Bill R. Cole of district 4 was graduated. No action was taken on the peti- dons. Other business included the appointment of associate justices for the student court, announcement of committee head and members, action regarding parking regulations, and the swearing in of a new council member. Appoint Justices Patrick H. Thiessen, College junior, Robert C. Casad, sophomore and Roger G. Tilbury, second year law, were appointed to terms of one year each on the student court. Edward A. Metcalf, second year law, was appointed for two years. Committees appointed included elections, Shirley Wellborn; smoking, Louise Warner and James D. Petersen; public relations, Ruth Brown, chairman, and Lee H. Reiff; auditing, Philip C. Hill, chairman, and Theodore M. Utschen; social Helen E. Heath, Miss Brown; union operating, Lorraine Ross, Benjamin D. Craig; freshman week, Reiff; calendar, Utzen; parking, Robert K. Thayer, chairman; Forums, Robert B. Riss, chairman. The council voted unanimously to amend the parking regulations so as to open all zones except those on Jayhawk drive to unrestricted use. The amendment must be approved by Chancellor Deane W. Malott. James D. Petersen, College junior, was sworn in as the new Independent Student association representative. He succeeds Betty van der Smissen. New Member Sworn In An amendment was passed providing for associate justices of the student court to be appointed by the president, aided by the faculty advisory committee, and subject to two-thirds approval by the Council. An amendment to prevent Council members from holding any other office was voted down. On the recommendation of the finance committee, it was voted that $25 be contributed to the homecoming association. Action was also taken to prohibit future publication of the Eagle until an existing deficit of $30.52 is paid. Dr. J. H. Nelson, dean of the Graduate school and chairman of the committee on aids and awards spoke briefly on the $500 scholarship which the Council awards each year to a deserving foreign student. He asked that two members be appointed to aid the committee in making the award. Varsity Dances Have Deficit It was announced that a deficit of $115.58 had resulted from the six varsity dances during the current academic year. When the social committee pointed out that the varsity dance, scheduled for March 12, was one day before the Hobbin Hop, the Council voted to postpone its dance. Utschen, reported that University officials had promised a gravel walk by June 1 from Oread hall to Mississippi street. 3 In Tournament At Des Moines David R. Cowley, Oliver D. Leighton, and Frank Bayless will represent the K.U. table tennis club in the Central Western Open tournament in Des Moines Saturday. The tournament is of the straight elimination type. It is sponsored by the Des Moines table tennis association. Matches will be held at the Y.M.C.A. Saturday night and Sunday afternoon and night. AOPi House Robbed Tuesday Articles valued at $160 were stolen from the Alpha Omicron Pi house about 6:30 p. m. Tuesday. the burglary was discovered when Edith Rae Williamson, College freshman, and Dorothy Quirk, engineering freshman, returned from classes at 6:15 p. m. and saw a man run from the front door of the house. They said he was about 5 feet, 9 inches tall, wore an army field jacket, and carried a canvas bag. Apparently only three rooms, all on the second floor, were entered. Jo Ann Spalding, house president, reported the missing articles to the police. Missing are a portable radio, two cameras, a pen and pencil set, two fountain pens, a combination cigarette lighter and case, with the initials B. J. B., a cigarette lighter, with initials M. A. G., a bilfold, containing $2 and identification papers, and some loose change from desks. It had been the policy of the house to lock the door while the women were at dinner, Miss Spalding said, but it was left unlatched last night because a number of members were attending the A. W. S. dinner at the Union. SAM Hears Sales Talk Salesmen are selected and trainee carefully for Proctor and Gamble. John Harris, district manager of the company, told members of the Society for Advancement of Management Tuesday. Speaking on "Sales Management," Mr. Harris said that "colleges and universities are good places to find prospective salesmen. In fact, 25 per cent of the sales department in the Kansas City district are University of Kansas graduates. James H. Hatch will speak to business students and the Delta Sigma Pi business fraternity at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the recreation room of the Union. Executives are needed in the sales field and a number of these men have to be in training to keep the company going, Mr. Harris said. Selection of these men is based on intelligence, poise, imagination, parental background, aggressiveness, character and initiative, he added. Business Students To Hear Speaker Mr. Hatch, vice-president and production manager of the Union Wire and Rope company, will speak on the subject, "Do Present Labor Controls Balance Management Controls?" He is also a member of the city planning board of Kansas City, Mo. "The sales type is the very background of the business," Mr. Harris said. "Many of them refuse to accept responsibility because they like smaller community life which is offered to men out on the road." Ancient Greeks Have Lesson, Agard Says "The philosophers of ancient Greece still have much sound advice to give to the world," Walter A. Agard, professor of classics at the University of Wisconsin, declared in the fourth humanities lecture Tuesday in Fraser theater. "Theories of the Greeks are useful in pointing out man's inborn rights and its blindness to civil rights, and finally destruction," he said. The Greeks emphasized the building of reason rather than the overcoming of theological sin, Professor Agard said. Reason must be strengthened in this psychological age which has put men's emotions in the forefront, he added. Reveals Danger "Can the United States be wealthy and strong without becoming proud, blind, domineering, doomed?" he asked. "Greek history reveals such a danger." He said that a lack of international cooperation was the chief factor leading to the downfall of free ancient Greek cities. "The same problem is the most urgent and critical issue facing the United States today." he added, the world can profit from Greek failure to achieve political cooperation among its free states. Professor Agard believes that downfall of the free states and sub- "The failure that led to the sequent conquest is the same failure that confronts us if international cooperation cannot be achieved among world powers today," he said. Professor Agard commented on the language requirement issue at the University. "No other country in the world feels that a native language is the only one to learn." he said. "In order to understand the peoples of the world, learning their languages is essential." Hamilton To Give Recital Robert Jerald Hamilton, fine arts senior, will give his senior organ recital at 8 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium. Hamilton studied at the American Conservatory of Music in Chicago two summers under Frank Van Dusen and Leo Sowerby. His advanced study has been under Laurel E. Anderson, professor of organ and theory. He is a member of Phi Mu Alpha, professional music fraternity. The program follows: Dialogue ... Clerambault Noel sur les Flutes ... d'Aquin Choral Prelude, "Von Gott will" Hamilton is organist for the Trinity Episcopal church in Lawrence. Ich nicht lassen" ... Buxehude Prelude and Furge on "Von Himmel Hoch”...Pachelbel Toccata, Adagio and Fugue Choral Scherzo Final in C Major . . . . . New Editor Chosen By Dean Stockton Miss Esther Wilson, assistant professor of English, has been appointed editor of correspondence study lesson assignments, Frank T. Stockton, dean of University Extension, announced today. Miss Wilson will edit instructions, lesson assignments, and examinations to improve their clarity for the student. Lawson Improved Hospital Reports The condition of Dean Paul B. Lawson is somewhat improved today, attending physicians report. Dean Lawson was stricken with a heart attack late Sunday afternoon. He is now resting comfortably at Watkins hospital. Corwin Warns About Parking Traffic Officer Robert Corwin today warned students about parking on the wrong side of the street in the crowded areas around the campus. Mr. Corwin said that on West Campus road, Michigan, Oread, 13th, and Jayhawker drive, parking on the right side of the street will be "strictly enforced." Most of the 26 traffic and parking violation tickets given Tuesday, the first day of the new authority held by the campus police, were given to students. Mr. Corwin said. Most of the violations occurred in the area west of the campus. Mr. Corwin said that he is awaiting further clarification of the city ordinance before giving tickets for jaywalking at the intersection of Jayhawker drive and Mississippi street. However he said that he will probably post two men at the corner tomorrow to give tickets. The city fine for any parking violation is $1, with traffic offenses running higher. New Course In Shop Work This semester, for the first time in the history of the University, a course in precision measurement is being offered by the department of shop practice. The purpose of the course is to acquaint prospective engineers with the degree of accuracy and the inspection methods required in industry. It consists of two sections of 16 men each. Each section meets once a week for a three hour laboratory period, for which one hour's credit is given. Both sections are taught by Howard Rust, instructor in shop practice. It is a technical elective for mechanical engineers but it is offered to other engineers also. Union 'Short Spin' Tomorrow Night The first "Short Spin" dance of this semester will be held from 7:30 to 9 p. m. today in the Union ballroom. Special entertainment will be given by four organized houses for each "Short Spin" in contrast to the policy of last semester, when a single fraternity and sorority furnished the program. Alpha Delta Pi, Kappa Alpha Theta, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, and Delta Chi will present special acts. Harlan Livinggood and his orchestra will play for the dance. Admission is 25 cents a person. As soon as the weather will permit, dancing on the outside pavilion of the Union will be a feature of the "Short Spins." WEATHER Kansas—Cloudy and a little colder east today with occasional rain or drizzle southeast. High today 35 to 42. Mostly fair tonight and tomorrow. Warmer tomorrow. Low tonight near 20 west to near 30 east. ... College Faculty Votes 10-Hour Language Rule College faculty members Tuesday voted to keep the foreign language requirement at 10 hours. Would you like to spend seven weeks in New York City as a photographer for the Science Illustrated magazine? The faculty adopted the proposal of the foreign language committee (majority report) by a vote of 77 to 44, but amended the proposal in two places to read: "The College foreign language requirement shall consist of an attainment in high school or college equivalent to not less than that of 10 semester hours in one foreign language. Each high school year of language study shall be regarded as the equivalent of a three-hour course. Placement and the evaluation of proper proficiency in the high school units shall be determined by placement tests at the University." Must Be One Language The words "or a combination of two foreign languages" were stricken from the first sentence of the proposal. The College language requirement was changed from twelve semester hours to ten. Students now enrolled in the University will not be affected by the new ruling, but those enrolling in or after the fall of 1948 will be forced to meet the requirements. Although a student having two years of a foreign language in high school will not receive the full ten hours credit under the new ruling, he can fulfil the requirement by scoring a high grade on the placement tests, said J. Neale Carman, member of the foreign language committee. Second Semester Required However, Professor Carman added, most new students who have had two years of college will be required to enroll in a second semester foreign language course even though they pass the placement test "A student must make an exceedingly good grade on the test and satisfy us that he has the knowledge of at least ten semester hours of a college foreign language before he can satisfy the language requirement." Win Photo Prize; Go To New York This is the grand prize Kappa Alpha Mu, honorary photo-journalism fraternity, is offering in its third annual 50-print collegiate photography exhibition. First-place awards will be made for the best pictures in news, pictorial feature, fashion, sports, and industrial classes. Entries will be accepted until April 30. Last year 218 photographers from 67 different schools entered the contest. Entry blanks and contest rules may be obtained by writing to W. J. Bell, 18 Walter Williams hall, University of Missouri, Columbia, Mo. Engineers May Consult With Aviation Corporation The North American Aviation corporation will have a representative at the University Friday to consult with engineering students who will be graduated in June. The company is interested in aeronautical, electrical, and mechanical engineers. Arrangements for appointments may be made in the office of the dean of the School of Engineering. 3 4. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1948 Official Bulletin Feb. 25, 1948 Campus Missionary fellowship (SVM) 4 p.m. today, Myers hall, upstairs. Students interested in trying out for solo part of "Campus Daze," call Jess Stewart, 552 or Jim McCaig, 664, today. Undergraduate Physics club, 1 today, 210 Blake, Max Dresden to speak on "Philosophical Implications of Physics." Archery club practice for today cancelled. Will resume next week. Institute of Aeronautical Sciences, 7:30 tonight, Quosset, rear Marvin hall. Jerry Davidson of C.A.A., speaker. ___ Morning devotions each day, 8:30- 8:50 a.m. during Lent at Danforth chapel. K.U. Dames bridge, 7:30 tonight, 1st (floor, Union. Jay James pledging service 5 to day, Watkins hall. Wear uniforms. Engineering council, 5.15 p.m. tomorrow, 210 Marvin. Ku Ku meeting, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, 200 Frank Strong. Christian Science organization, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow,丹福尔 chapel. Le Cercle Francais, jeudi a sept heures et demie, 113 Frank Strong. Madame Kern fea une causerie. Pre-Nursing club, 4'p.m. tomorrow, Frian dining room. University Women's club group meetings tomorrow. ___ El Ateneo will sponsor film on sociation, 7:13 p.m. tomorrow, Myers Judson, 4 p.m. tomorrow, Fraser theater. Dinner to follow. Those interested in attending latter sign and pay in 117 Frank Strong. Meeting of Negro Students' association, 7.15 p.m. tomorrow, Myers hall, auditorium. Geology club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, 426 Lindley. Edwin Galbreath to show color films and slides and lecture on "Ecology of Marine Invertebrates." All geology majors. Refreshments. Snow Zoology club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, 206 Snow. E. L. Cockrum to speak on "Summer Collecting in Wyoming." Camera club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, 426 Lindley. Dr. Laudon to show slides. Public invited. Slide rule rule, second section, 7 p.m. tomorrow, 9 Frank Strong. Young Republician club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, 106 Green. Four-No Bridge club, duplicate bridge session, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, west wing, Union ballroom. Alpha Phi Omega, open meeting, 7 p.m. tomorrow, Kansas room, Union. All former scouts welcome. A. I.E.E., 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, 101 Snow, Mr. Boardman of K.E.P. to speak on "Electrical Safety." Panel discussion on universal military training, First Baptist church, 5:30 p.m. Sunday, sponsored by Baptist Youth Fellowship and Y.M.-Y.W.C.A. Deutscher Verein wird sich Donnerstag um 4:30 in 402 Fraser versammeln. Herr Sigmund Hagen, der aus Norwegen kommt, wird über seine Heimat sprechen. All committees, Student Union Activities, 7 p.m. March 3, Fraser hall, following rooms: secretarial, 205; service, 206; entertainment, 209; announcements, 210; decorations, 213; publicity, 206; library, 307; public liaison, 308; coffees and forums, 309; clubs and organizations, 310; intramurals, 311; posters, 310; social, 312. All new undergraduate students who failed to take entrance tests given at afternoon session on Jan. 31, should report to Lindley hall auditorium before 2 p.m. Saturday for make-up. Proficiency examination in English composition will be given Saturday, April 10, instead of March 6. Time and place to be announced later. Travel Aid To Students The travel bureau, sponsored by Union Activities, has started its services again. Reservations and accommodations for rail, plane, and bus transportation are arranged for students. A file of students traveling by auto to various destinations is kept, as well as another file of students wanting rides. The bureau is next to the men's game room in the Union and assistants are on duty from 11 a. m. to 1 p. m. and from 3 to 5 p. m. each Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Full details concerning transportation schedules are now available. Des Moines, Iowa — (UP) — The governor of Iowa and Lady Astor came out even in complimentary exchanges recently. trouble. Robert D. Blue said that "Some of the best breeds of cattle in the world are developed in Scotland." "With the Easter holiday not too far off, we hope to help as many students as possible with transportation problems." Robert Hughes, chairman of the bureau, said. Lady Astor, ex-member of the British house of commons, said, "Iowa has the best farms in the world." The Best Is None Too Good Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the Sundays. Units year except holidays. Untilidays and examination periods Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence. Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. Call K. U. 251 With Your News University Daily Kansan YM-YW Sponsor Student Forums The Y. M. C. A. and Y. W. C. A. will sponsor four weekly forums in March featuring speakers on "Student Leadership in Campus and Community Life." Bill's Grill Sandwiches - Malts Across from the Courthouse E. C. Buehler, professor of speech, will talk on parliamentary procedure in formal meetings on March 3. James R. Surface, graduate student and assistant instructor in political science, will discuss human relations on March 10. The third and fourth speakers have not yet been chosen. The United States is the world's leading producer of manufactured goods. - Steaks 1109 Mass. Phone 2054 Child Gets Lunch As Passengers Wait WH Seattle—(UP)—A Seattle trans- operator is a candidate for the nation's most thoughtful driver. Passengers, delayed five minutes, said they believed it the right thing to do. A 6 year old school child left the bus, forgetting her lunch. At the end of the line the driver noticed the package with the owner's name on it. On the return trip he stopped the bus at the school street. He ran a block, gave the lunch box to the school principal and returned to his coach. Call KU 376 with your Want Ads. New Light Weight PURITAN SWEATERS Soft wool pullovers in both bright colors and fancy patterns. They're in all sizes. $6.95 to $10 The Palace 843 Massachusetts The Sophomores Give K.U. Matt Betton & Orchestra THE BOYAN SAXOPHONE ORCHER - Over 100 colleges from Coast to Coast, poll by Billboard Magazine, ranked Matt Betton as the most popular college band in the country. Featuring Carl Anderson, Vocalist The Band That Fits Every Dance Step THE LEAP YEAR HOP - An All Student Dance - Tickets on Sale - Rotunda of Frank Strong, Union Bldg., and at Dance Tr H: F 1948 WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25; 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE e na- left the at the noticed name oopped he ran to the ed to minutes thing t Ads. Gamma Phi Beta Socially Speaking Gamma Phi Beta announces the appointment of the following officers: Elizabeth Evans, song leader; Gloria Horn, assistant librarian; Patricia McClure, and Ann Allen, assistant social chairmen. - * * Triangle Initiates Harman Co-op Elects Triangle fraternity announces the initiation of the following: Lawrence E. Hyde, James A. Deveney, Richard W. Hartzler, Kansas City, Mo; Elgin E. Thelen, William M. Joyce, Kansas City; Arthur B. Francis, Gary W. Robbins, Leavenworth; Charles D. Cain, Raytown, Mo.; and Kenneth W. Philo, Humansville, Mo. Recently elected officers of Harman Co-op are: Betty Jean Ratylaff, president; Doris Jean Meinecke, vice-president; Maxine McVicker, secretary; Diane Johnson, treasurer; Wilma Rose and Patricia Turpin, purchasing agents; Eleanor Anderson and Alita York, social chairman; Ruth Bertsch, song leader; Barbara Chapin, alumni secretary; Alita York, reporter. F. T. Club Elects The Physical Therapy club announces the election of the following officers: Betty Wickersham, president; Patti Norcross, vice-president; Connie Cultra, secretary; and Ed Norris, treasurer. Harman Co-op Guests Weekend guests at Harman Co-op were: Eleanor Turpin, Kansas City, Mo.; Marian Rose, Kansas City, Mo.; Jane Foster, Manhattan Mrs. Jo Ellen Waits, Nickerson; and Mrs. Helen Smith, Odessa, Texas. Kappa Sig Guests Dinner guests at the Kappa Sigma house Sunday were Nancy Barnard, Shirley Gibbs, Martha Gragg, Patricia Ann Harrell, Martha Holman, Mary Jo Myers, Martha Sue Schenken, and Mary Jean Stewart. Templin Hall Elects Templin hall announces the election of the following officers: Virginia Scheuber, president; Rosemary Alderman, vice-president; Clara Jane Lutz, secretary; Joan Deeds, treasurer; Betty Hanson and Eleanor Bradford, social chairman; Betty Fordemwalt, house manager; Grace Vaniman, keeper of the archives; Ruth Dudley, song leader; Joan Grey, intramural manager; Lorita Higginbottom, scholarship chairman; Da Turpin, inter-dorm representative; Aileen Beal, new student counselor. SAE Tea Dance Sigma Alpha Epsilon entertained with a tea dance Feb. 21 at the chapter house. The guests included Ruth Walters, Carolyn Carmean, Dorothy Hudson, Joan Bigham, Marianne Gear, Mary Wilkins, Marion Nearing, Janet Malott, Rosemary Robison, Dorothy Feldamp, Beverly Braeckeveldt, Barbara Olson, Patricia Foncannon, Marianne Rogers, Joy Godbehere, Nina Green, Ann Allen. Edith Malott, Agnes Husband, Patricia Patten, Mary Riddle, Mary Jane Horton, Peggy Miller, Betty Bradford, Virginia Daniels, Barbara Felt, Mary Margaret Moore, Nanée Bell, Louise Warner, Guinevere Goerz, Kathleen Larson. Margaret Doll, Gloria Watson, Rita Hartwell, Virginia Daugherty, Mary Valentine, Jo Gray, Marcia Godding, Sally Steppe, Jane Keith, Shirley Kyle, Sydney Ashton, Judy Reese, and Betty Dunne. Mrs. Esther Reed, housemother, was the chaperone. Phi Kappa Sigma The Kansas colony of Phi Kappa Sigma, national social fraternity, announces the pledging of John B. Gosman, Kansas City, Mo.; Jerrold G. Norris, Council Grove; William A. Hutchings, Kansas City, Mo.; George J. Mastio, Independence, Mo.; Joseph R. Wells, Stambaugh, Mich.; Arnold J. Mitchell, Philadelphia; and Harlan D. Frazier, Girard. Youngsters Learn Social Life In University Nursery School The University school at 1100 Missouri street holds the youngest part of the student body. It is under the direction of the home economics department. Established during World War II under the Lanham bill to care for children of working mothers, the nursery was given to the home economics department for use as a laboratory at the end of the war. "The children learn social and emotional development through contacts with each other in play. No attempt is made to teach any academic work." Mrs. Robert Foster, director of the nursery school, explained. "The children learn social and emotional development through contacts with each other in play. No attempt is made to teach any academic work." Mrs. Robert Foster, director of the nursery school, explained. The children's ages range from $2^{\frac{1}{3}}$ to five years. School begins at 10:45 a.m. with inspection by the nurse, Mrs. Lois Smith, who isolates any child not feeling well. Free play until 11:30 a.m. is followed by a story hour. Eat All They Want "At lunch time table manners are taught. The children may eat all the food they want, because we feel normal appetites take care of their needs." Mrs. Foster continued. nooks, picture books, blocks, dolls modeling clay, and many other toys. All furniture is child-size and the entire house is decorated accordingly. The school day ends at 4 p. m. and each child takes home a "report card" which gives the amount of food eaten and length of nap taken. Home Ec Classes Help Eaen afternoon the children take a nap. At 2:30 p.m. they eat again. This is called "snack time" and each youngster also receives a tablespoon of cod-liver oil. Conferences with the children's parents are held every three months. A parents' meeting is given each month in Fraser hall. The nursery is equipped with outdoor play equipment, paints, story Alumni Association Receives $100 From Field Estate Mrs. Foster, a proud grandmother herself, took charge of the nursery school last year. Assisting her are two full-time employees, Mrs. Laurel Hodgden and Mrs. Marina Cassidia. Students from the Child Development II class work two hours a week and Child Development III students spend one day a week working in the nursery. The Alumni association received a $100 cheek recently from the estate of the late Mrs. Henrietta Dickson Field, a student in 1881. Mrs. Field stated in her will that the money was to be used by the association in any way they chose, according to Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the Alumni association. Mrs. Field died last year. Businessman To Speak On Labor, Management Checks James H. Hatch will speak to Delta Sigma Pi, business fraternity, at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow, in the recreation room of the Union. Mr. Hatch is the vice-president and production manager of the Union Wire Rope corporation of Kansas City, Mo. His topic will be "Do Present Labor Controls Balance Management Controls?" At the beginning of the 19th century 14 to 19 hours of work a day were common for women and children as well as men. GALES American Custom Chocolates, $1.75 STOWIT'S Rexall STORE IN CASE YOU HAVEN'T GUESSED, (Many of you remember him from Palace Clothing THIS IS HOUSE Jay Janes Pledge 10 Women Today The Jay James will pledge ten new members at 5 p. m. today in Watkins hall. S. A. T. House is now manager of The Walker Shop, 813 Massachusetts, where exclusive brands and distinctive campus styles of shoes and related accessory lines are offered. He is anxious to serve old and new friends alike and invites each and everyone of you to stop in, if only to exchange pleasantries. He can give you a "fit" but you will like it. The new pledges are Zola Parke and Phyllis Debus, Corbin hall; Patricia Tomlinmison, Kappa Alpha Theta; Merle Collins, Monchonsia hall; Mildred Crandall and Ruth Keller, Jolliffe hall; Eason Bradford, Templin hall; Mary Lynn Trousdale, Delta Delta Delta; and Rachel Cooper and Nancy German, Alpha Delta Pt. Hens And Cows Don't Know About Fair Labor Practices Railroad workers achieved the eight-hour day in 1916, by an act of congress making it effective on railroads engaged in interstate commerce. Kansas City, Mo., - (UP) - The five-day, 40-hour week has new hit the farm. "Twenty-five years ago, hens laid an average of 80 eggs a year," a speaker told an agricultural forum audience here recently. "Today the hen averages 140 eggs a year." Call KU 376 with your Want Ads. Better feeds, feeding practices, farm sanitation and farm management have brought about the improvement, he said. Similarly, G. L. James, president of the Midwest Feed Manufacturers' association, said a dairy cow, averaging 180 pounds of butterfat a year 25 years ago, today yields up to 235 pounds annually. LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed...65c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed...69c CASH AND CARRY ONLY Crime Wave At All Time High!! $500.00 Household Theft Policy covering $100.00 Holdup away from premises now available for but $7.50 per year. Charlton Phone 689 Insurance Agency Across from Postoffice New Artemis $ ^{*} $ grows Daisy daisies on a pretty petticoat Romantic as a sigh... the figure-flattering petticoat takes on a new tone. Artemis scatters daisies on Daisy White... Bur-Mil rayon crepe. 26-28-30 3. 98 New ballerina length gown 7.50 LINGERIE, MAIN FLOOR Weaver 1. PAGE FOUR *INIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1948 Wildcats Dump Cyclones; Oklahoma Trips Cowboys The Kansas State Wildeats gained momentum in their chase toward the school's first conference basketball flag last night when they virtually eliminated a third consecutive challenger to their lead by dumping Iowa State, 54 to 48, on the Cyclone court. At the same time Oklahoma, their lone remaining challenger pulled a stunning upset at Norman by tripping the powerful Oklahoma Aggies, 37 The Wildcats of Jack Gardner now sit in the driver's seat in the Big Seven after having brushed off Kansas, Missouri, and the Cyclones in successive league games at a time when each of these teams still had their eyes on the lead. Now only Oklahoma remains in a threatening position to Wildcat supremacy. The 'Cats and Sooners meet in their last game of the season on March 8 at Norman. Tied At Half Iowa State was no push-over for the K-Staters. The Cyclones had a tied score at half-time, 28 to 28, and took a second-half lead which they held for 12 minutes, before the Purple moved ahead. Dud Brannum's seven field goals paced the Kansas State attack, although he was helped help by Rick Harmon and Howard Shannon. Harmon tailed 11 and Shannon 10. The Cyclone offensive was largely built around Ray Wehde, whose 15 points took high honors for the contest. Oklahoma's Sooners answered the Wildcat victory with their own display of power when they out-finesse Hank Iba's Iggies Cowboys, 37 to 28, the biggest margin of victory over the Stillwater quintet this season, and the Aggie's third setback in 26 games. Bennett Is Shackled A. L. Bennett, A. and M.'s All-American forward, drew a goose-egg for the night as Sooner guard Paul Merchant turned in one of the season's smoothest defensive jobs. Merchant also shared in the scoring with seven points as Bill Waters and Ken Pryor divided scoring honors with nine counters each. Oklahoma A. and M., boasting the second best free-throwing percentage in the nation, missed 10 of their 18 attempts from the charity line, while the Sooners missed only eight of 21 attempts. Bradley and J. L. Parks did most of the scoring for the Cowpokes. To Watch Hockey Bets Detroit, Feb. 24-(UP)—Clarence Campbell, president of the National Hockey league, was expected here today to launch a sweeping investigation into a possible betting scandal involving players from the Boston Bruins and the New York Rangers. Placed at Campbell's use was evidence collected by Police Commissioner Harry S. Toy, which Toy said indicated a possible tie-up between some N. H. L. players and a Detroit gambler arrested Friday as a parole violator. No further action in the matter was expected from Toy, who said that his evidence would not sustain criminal conviction in Detroit. The commissioner said, however, that he would turn over all the information at his disposal to league authorities. Toy made public his information reluctantly at the insistence of hockey officials after it had been revealed in newspaper stories. He said it was discovered accidentally during an investigation into the actions of James Tamer, a 36-year-old bank robber. The commissioner revealed that Tamer, whom he described as a gambling operator, had been arrested Friday as a parole violator and returned to the Jackson, Mich., state penitentiary. "Our information is that a hockey player, purporting to be a Boston Bruins player, had called Tamer telling him "we have a couple of players out of the game in Chicago and it is doubtful if we will win," Toy said. "On the basis of this call, our information was that a second call was made by Tamer to a Ranger player in New York advocating a bet." K4 Guy “Spider” Mabry. lanky Jayhawker forward-center, has been used by Coach Phog Allen in trouble-shooting roles this season. Mabry's last-minute goal against Oklahoma here sent the game into overtime, and he is a scoring threat whenever he is in the lineup. Holy Cross Takes 17th New York, Feb. 25—(UP) Already named to defend their N.C.-A.A. basketball championship next month at Madison Square garden, the Holy Cross Crusaders today looked stronger with each succeeding game as they ran their latest victory streak to 13 straight. Holy Cross led all the way as it accounted for its 17th victory against three losses. Loyola used its superior height to move within four points of the crusaders midway through the second half, but forward Bob Cousy, suffering from a mild cold, jumped off the Holy Cross bench and inside of six minutes put the champions back into the van with 12 fast points. Selected Tuesday as the tournament's New England representative for the second straight year, the Worcester, Mass., collegians showed their elation by thumping strong Loyola University of Chicago 62 to 46, at the Boston arena. A capacity crowd of 7,045 also watched Pennsylvania down hapless Harvard. 64 to 54, in the second game of a doubleheader. Penn, still battling to reach Columbia at the top of the Ivy league, sailed past the Crimson after opening a 40 to 27 lead early in the second half. Trailing 27 to 16 at the half, the visiting Spartans knotted the count at 31-31 eight minutes after the intermission, then held off a valiant Irish rally in the final seconds. Notre Dame's Paul Gordon topped the scoring with 16 points. Adolph Rupp's classy Kentucky Wildcats, beaten by Temple in a recent game at Philadelphia, gained sweet revenge on their home court as they plastered the owls, 58 to 38. Notre Dame, winner of 38 straight home games until St. Louis university defeated them two weeks ago, lost another thriller on the South Bend hardwood Tuesday night to Michigan State, 54 to 50. River Falls Center Scores 72 Points Winona, Minn., Feb. 25—(UP)—Nate De Long, sophomore center on the basketball team of the River Falls, Wis., Teachers college, scored 72 points against the Winona State teachers last night. The 6-foot 6-inch center broke his own scoring record of 56 points, set last season at the Knights of Columbus Kansas City Invitational tournament. River Falls won the game 96 to 48. De Long scored 33 points in the first half with 11 field goals and 11 free throws, and picked up 39 in the second half with 14 baskets and 11 more charity tosses. He has averaged 29.25 points this season and has scored 385 points. Applications are now being accepted for positions on the 1948-49 Y.W.C.A. cabinet, Mrs. Christine Alford, secretary, announced today. Any girl active in WY may obtain an application blank at Henley house. The light from the sun reaches our earth in 499 seconds. Apply For YW Cabinet Norman, Okla., Feb. 24-(UP)—Football Coach Bud Wilkinson of the University of Oklahoma denied today that he had hired Walter Driskill, former gridiron aid here, as an assistant coach to replace Dutch Fehring. Wilkinson Denies Signing Assistant Fehring resigned last week to become assistant at U. C. L. A. "We are considering a number of applicants, including Driskell," Wilkinson said. Driskill is now assistant to Jim Tatum at the University of Maryland. He accompanied Tatum when the latter left O. U. a year ago. He denied reports late last week that he had applied for the O. U. post. "These reports that the job has already been filled are premature," Wilkinson said. WAA To Sponsor Dance The Women's Athletic association is sponsoring a square dance at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in Robinson gymnasium. Members and their guests should wear blue jeans and plaid shirts. RISK'S HELP-YOURSELF LAUNDRY Maytag Machines Line Space Reasonable Rates Weekdays 9-6 Saturdays 9-3 1900 III. Phone 623 ATTENTION: Intramural ORDER Jerseys, Balls and all other softball team equipment NOW OFFICIAL American League Ball William D. Kline Co. KING OF THE HILL Wholesale Prices for teams. Racket Restringing Top, Medium, and Low grade GUT and NYLON. BENEDETTE Ober's YOURDOWNOURTHS First With What Men Want Most JAYHAWKER Shows 2:30-7-9 Regular NOW One Prices Week ALEXANDRA MORRIS Ca TYRONE POWER in Captain from Castile and introducing JEAN PETERS COLOR BY... TECHNICOLOR GRANADA ENDS TONITE "ESCAPE ME NEVER" GRANADA THURSDAY, 3 Days Dashing Adventure! Smashing Action! "PIRATES OF MONTEREY" (In Technicolor!) starring Marie MONTEZ Rod CAMERON Phillip Reed Gale Sondergaard VARSITY NOW, Ends Saturday Adele JERGENS ★ Stephen DUNNE The Woman from Tangier 图 CO-FEATURE GENE AUTRY Smiley BURNETTE ★ Mary LEE IN "BACK IN THE SADDLE" PATEE Now-Thru Saturday 2 Great Westerns Marlene Dietrich James Stewart "Destry Rides Again" Kay Francis Randolph Scott "When the Daltons Rode" Starts SUNDAY "TOBACCO ROAD" Charley Grapewin Marjorie Rambeau WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE R One Week A R" s h! """ N Y y NE * E """ day s oh m s " Track Captain Tom Scofield Will Aim At Indoor Crown Tom Soofield, K. U.'s outstanding high jumper and track captain, will be the target of many cyes when he starts to swing over the high jump bar at the "Big Seven" indoor track meet Saturday. Scofield not only will be trying to lift the Jayhawker point totals this season, but will be shooting for top national ranking, and a possible berth on the American Olympic team. ◆ Although Tom's performance in the meet Saturday will have no bearing on the chances for an Olympic berth, it will give some idea as to his possibilities as a contender for the national title. The best mark hung up by the blond haired jumper in his 5 year career at K. U. is 6 feet 7 5-8 inches. If he can equal or excell this mark by the close of this year's competition he will be among the top jumpers in the country. In three indoor meets this year Scoffold has racked up three first places and has broken two meet records. He broke the Missouri field house record with a leap of 6 feet $4 \frac{1}{2}$ inches, and he topped the Nebraska indoor mark when he jumped 6 feet 4.7-8 inches. "I believe most high jump records are too low," Tom stated, but added, "I also believe it will be some time before any jumper clears 7 feet." Besides being the Big Six outdoor high jump king for four straight years Tom is the National A. A. U. junior champion. In 1946 he won the high jump in both the Texas and Kansas Relays. Scoffield's present plans include finishing school this spring and also include Caroline Merritt, from OK on whom he plans to marry this summer. Pep Defends Title By TKO Miami, Fla. Feb. 25—(UP)—Little Willie Pep, who a year ago wondered if he would be crippled for life, stood out today as one of the greatest all-around champions in featherweight boxing history. In the rain-drenched Miami Orange Bowl last night Nep demonstrated explosively that he combines deadly punching with his superb boxing skill, as he scored a technical knockout in the tenth round over skinny Humberto Sierra of Cuba. Making his second defense of the undisputed 126-bound championship, the hatchet-faced Italian from Hartford, Conn., floored Sierra four times and battered him into such helplessness that Referee Jack Dempsey stopped the bout at 22 seconds of the 10th round. It had been scheduled for 15 sessions. Although the unexpectedly small crowd less than 10,000 took almost as thorough a bath physically as Promoter Clarence "Kay" Kantrowitz took financially, the rain did not dampen their enthusiasm for Pep's punching prowess. The champion, who a year ago last month suffered nearly fatal injuries in a New Jersey airplane crash, displayed remarkable accuracy and power last night against the fastest and cleverest contender in the feather devise. Before the accident that caused leg and spinal injuries, Pep had been noted more for his speed and elusiveness than for his punch. Promoter Kantrowitz has not yet announced the official attendance and gate, but the gross gate was estimated to be less than $7,000. On that basis Kantrowitz of Hartford would have lost money, for his promotional expenses were believed to approximate $93,000. Pep received a guarantee of $32- 500 and Sierra was to receive 15 percent of the net gate. Basketball Results Penn 64, Harvard 54 Holy Cross 62, Loyola (Chi) 46 Kansas State 58, Iowa State 48 Michigan State 54, Notre Dame 50 Mo. Valley 80, Rockhourst 65 Kansas Wesleyan 69, Bethel 56 Kentucky 58, Temple 38 Duke 49, Wake Forest 48 Tulane 73, Mississippi 46 Texas Tech 46, West Texas 38 Oklahoma 37, Oklahoma A & M 28 Idaho 43, Washington 41 KANSAS TOM SCOFIELD Class Teams Are Chosen The 1948 women's basketball squads have been chosen. Two eight player teams have been selected for each class on the basis of performance in the women's intramural tournament. The first intra-class games was played Wednesday night in Robinson annex. Freshman II: N. Bell, M. Heller, P. Watson, M. Carter, V. Krehbiel (capt), P. Lander, B. Ratzlaff, and C. Prochaska. Members of the teams are: Freshman I: L. Ross (capt.) M. Smith, N. Moore, B. Pepper, A. Hill, G. Fleshman, E. M. Randell, and M. VanHouten. Sophomore I: S. Hoffman (capt). V. Loveless, R. Cooper, J. Bolas, B. McCune, J. Stuckey, H. Pillier, M. McKelvy. . Junior I.. G. McGee (capt) D. Mueller, B. van der Smissen, B. Connell, V. Joseph, J. Joseph, H. Connor, E. McCleary, and E. Lemon. Sophomore II: N. Mason (capt), M. B. Shepherd, S. Liem, P. Fang- man, D. Wood, G. Gwinner, P. Baker, and V. Coppedge. Junior II. V. Harris, M. H. Shepard, P. Bentley, H. Bedell, A Schnitzler, C. Hamma (capt.), J Strowig, and B. Landis. Senior II: L, Mai, F. Chubb, N, Jack, E. Churchill (capt.), B. Larsen, R. Brown, P. Leigh, and D. Van Biber. Senior I: M. Gunsolly, J. Anderson, J. Cooper, A. Stout, M. Kaff (capt), J. Fox, B. Wickersham, C. Marklev. Miss Margaret Anderson, associate professor of speech, will talk before eight groups of elementary school teachers in Cowley county today, tomorrow, and Friday. Her topic is "Speech Education in the Elementary Schools." Anderson To Visit Schools IWWWins IM Title In a hard-fought battle for the women's intramural basketball championship, I. W. W. defeated Alba Delta Pi. 40 to 34. Tuesday night, Both teams went into the finals undefected. The I.W.W team led at half-time 21 to 16 and maintained a lead throughout the second half. Parker 51 Fountain Pens Super Chrome Ink STOWIT'S Rexall STORE The Alpha Delt's suffered at the end of the third quarter when Joan Anderson, high scorer, fouled out. Anderson scored 16 points before she left the game. Second high for the losers was Pat Bentley who scored 23 points. Markley and Bacon ADPI guards, were outstanding in defense. The winning team was sparked by Loveless and Hoffman, each scoring 14 points. The defensive team of Kaff and Fox functioned smoothly to aid I. W. W. In a preliminary game, Locksley hall, led by van der Smissen, who scored 16 points, won out over Theta Phi Alpha, 39 to 22 Mai, of Locksley, hit the basket for 15 points. Fangman, Theta Phi, was high for the losers with eight points. Division standings: Division I Team W L Kappa Alpha Theta 5 1 Foster hall 1 3 Corbin hall 3 1 Sigma Kappa 2 2 Alpha Omicron Pi 0 4 Division II DIVISION II Kappa Kappa Gamma Templin hall Gamma Phi Beta Miller hall Pi Beta Phi Division III Delta Gamma Hawks Ricker hall Chi Omega Campus house Division IV I. W. W. Jolliffe hall Sleepy Hollow Lodgeley hall Watkins hall Theta Alpha Division V Alpha Delta Pi Harmon Co-op Delta Delta Delta Alpha Chi Omega Monchonsia Man, 80, Attends School Lectures Cincinnati, O. — (UP) — Although graduated nearly 60 years ago from the University of Cincinnati, Thomas J. Creaghead, Covington, Ky., still attends university lectures. Campus authorities reported that Creaghead, 80, has renewed his membership in the university's 27th annual business and professional men's group, weekly current affairs forum. Creahead, who received his degree from the university in 1889, is the retired head of the Creahead Engineering Co., Cincinnati. WANTED DESK SALESMAN --them the navy was wonderful if you didn't have to bother with the rules. The navy charged him with desertion. Looking for one live-wire student to sell our student desks to rooming houses, fraternities, individuals in Lawrence. List your qualifications in a letter and enclose a letter of reference from a faculty member. Send to 0 FREEDMAN Artcraft Engineering Corp. Charlevoix, Mich. Jimmie Never Had It So Good As At TI; Wonder How He'll Like Portsmouth? San Francisco—(UP) The navy has put James Leroy Tefer in dry-dock while it investigates his story of being A.W.O.L. two years without leaving the Treasure island naval base. Telfer said he went A. W. O. L. because of dissatisfaction over a forthcoming assignment on the aircraft carrier Lexington. He changed his name to James Leroy Johnson, but kept his rank of Watertender 3/c. Telfer, 23, of Wichita, was listed as A.W.O.L. since Feb. 12, 1946, but he never really "went over the hill." He just changed his name and joined the baseball and bowling teams. He said he had no trouble at all living on the island. He played baseball and bowled and also managed a Waves - softball team. The only place he didn't dare go were to his regular mess hall and his old barracks. He slept in abandoned barracks. His only mistake was confiding his secret recently to friends. He told Because of its large iron industry Birmingham, Ala., is called the "Pittsburgh of the South" Rip Brown's 5 BOPS SKYLINE Fri-Sat . Buddys GALLAGHER MOTORS Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL SANDWICHES SNEAK OUT FOR A SNACK You'll find the gang at Zim's Snack Shop East of Postoffice A New Service for our Classified Advertisers We will now take your want ads by telephone. Call KU 376 (Hours 10-12 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. except Sat.) Let our 9,000 (plus) readers know what you want to BUY, RENT, or SELL. University Daily Kansan Call KU 376 with your Want Ads PAGE SIX UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1949 Patience MARSHALL The Editorial Page Only 80 Will Be Admitted When registration lines start forming next fall only 80 lucky students will be permitted to register for the freshman class of the School of Medicine according to O. O. Stoland, professor of physiology. When all the applications are in from hopeful men and women all over the state, they will probably total 200. This means that 120 of these applicants are going to have to turn elsewhere for their pre-medical education. Besides the heartache and frustration these denials of admission will cause, there is an acute shortage of physicians in the state that must be considered. There are large areas of Kansas where no doctor can be found within any reasonable radius. Those physicians who are available are so busy taking care of their old patients that they have little time for the new babies who are being born and the new families who are moving into their communities. Eighty new doctors, no matter how young and eager, are hardly adequate to fill the gap each year. Problem of Funds and Facilities The whole problem is one of funds and facilities. The University does not have the facilities to take care of more than 80 students in each new class. The only way that new facilities can be obtained is for the state legislature to provide them. In view of the need for physicians in this state, this is a situation to which the legislators in Topeka might turn their attentions in the interests of all Kansans. However, even if facilities were enlarged and more students were provided for, there is no assurance that the graduates will ever practice in Kansas. All graduates accepted by the School of Medicine must be residents of Kansas. Selections are made on the basis of the quality of the applicants' grades. After the student has been admitted to the University and has been graduated, he is, of course, free to practice wherever he chooses. Student Subsidies One way to assure that the graduate practices in the state from whose university he receives his diploma is to subsidize his education. The subsidy is given the student with the understanding that he practice in the state a certain number of years after hanging up his shingle. This plan permits many Daily Hansan University Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assm., National Edition, and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Ad- ministration. 420 Madison Ave., New York City. Editor-in-Chief William C. von Maurer Managing Editor Alan J. Stewart Asst. Man. Editor Cooper Rollow Asst. Man. Editor Lois Lauer City Editor George W. Warren Asst. City Editor James Robinson Telegraph Editor Wallace W. Abbey Asst. Tel. Editor Clarke Thomas Asst. Tel. Editor William Barger Sports Editor Robert T. Dellinger Asst. Sports Editor Paul Zeh Asst. Sports Editor James Jones Women's Sports Editor Anna Mary Murphy Feature Editor John Wheeler Figure Editor Hal Nelson Society Editor Dorothy James Business Manager Betty Bacon Advertising Manager Robert Alderson Circulation Manager Otto Meyer Classified Adv. Man. Mgm. Classified Adv. Mgm. Don Walden National Advt. Mgr. David Clymer Promotion Manager Wister Shreve Tourist courts in Kansas are big business, according to a pamphlet released recently by the bureau of business research. Our Tourist Camps Are Big Business "Tourist Courts and Cabin Camps in Kansas," by Stillman P. Vincent, is 23rd in the Kansas studies in business series to be published. The booklet includes information about the influence of traffic flows on tourist trade, court layouts and equipment, and financing. The Kansas Press Association KANSAS 19 MEMBER 48 NATIONAL Editorial Association A FREE PRESS--YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW MEMBER Kraasas has 144 courts with a total of 1,557 rental units which took in $360,000 in 1940, the study shows. All but 12 of the 105 counties have licensed courts or cabin camps with Wichita, Topeka, and Garden City named as leading tourist court centers. KANSAS 19 MEMBER 48 The deputation committee, headed by Robert Cheskey, College sophomore, held evening services at the Evangelical church of the Rev. William Sireb in Stull. In observance of George Washington's birthday Sunday the Y. M. C. A. sent two committees to hold special religious services in nearby towns. YM Gives Special Religious Services Commenting on business trends, Mr. Vincent said "More money may be invested to construct tourist courts than hotels in a few years. More motels may mean fewer hotels or great shifts in operating policy. The worship committee, under Albert V. Grimes, education junior, conducted worship services for patients in Winter General hospital in Topeka. The first U.S. eight hour labor law enacted was in 1892, when congress provided for it on all District of Columbia publits works. Labor day in the United States was first celebrated by the Knights of Labor in 1882. It was made a legal holiday by congress in 1894. students who could not otherwise afford an expensive medical degree a chance to fulfill their ambitions. It is also a guarantee to the state that its fledgling physicians will stick around for a while and relieve the shortage of doctors in its farm communities and cities. A prescription compounded of similar ingredients might be filled to help remedy one of Kansas' ills. Eye WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames Eye Lawrence Optical Co. Regularly $8.75 REDUCED TO ONLY $5.00 Launderette Service Call K. U. 251 With Your News STUDENT UNION BOOK STORE 19 hrs. of Wash, 250 21 Bondi Warehouse PARKER VACUMATIC PEN With a Lifetime Guarantee 9 lbs.of wash,25c 21 Bendix Washers 813 Vt. Phone 3368 NOW as ALWAYS- CARL'S lead the way SPRING TIES Yes CARL'S have some NEW ties that you must see---- $1.50-$2.00-$2.50 Come on in—We're Glad to Show You—— CARLS GOOD CLOTHES HOB NAIL HOP GOT YOUR DATES YET? MARCH 13 by Ward's Flowers Bubbles PRO SHOP ALL BALLS 97¢ $ 86.20 SET!! "Could I take one on eighteen holes' approval?" There's a gal who wants to be sure of what she's getting! And when it comes to values in the floral line . . . you can't do better than Ward's! Whatever party-planning you're doing, be sure to include floral decorations, distinctively designed by us. See our sparkling display of fresh cut-flowers today! 910 MASS WARD FLOWERS FLOWERFONE 820 IT'S TONIGHT! FOR FUN AND DANCING! Student Union Activities "SHORT SPIN" 7:30----9:00 p.m. UNION BALLROOM HARLAN LIVINGOOD & ORCHESTRA 25s Per Person Special Entertainment by: Alpha Delta Pi, Delta Chi, Kappa Alpha Theta, Sigma Alpha Epsilon. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25. 1948 PAGE SEVEN 58 g! do g, by Civil Service Lists Exam An examination for positions as patent examiner has been announced by the civil service commission. The salary is $3,397 a year, and the jobs are in Washington, D. C., and in nearby Virginia and Maryland. To qualify for the positions, applicants must have completed a full course of study in engineering or technology, or a curriculum which included 24 semester hours in physics. Four years of experience in an appropriate field of engineering, technology, or physics, or a time-equivalent of education and experience, may be substituted for the educational requirement. Applicants must also have had one year of professional experience in patent law, in a pertinent field of engineering, technology, or physics. A master's degree in the foregoing fields may be substituted for this requirement. No written tests will be given. Information and application forms may be obtained from most first and second-class post offices, from civil service regional offices, or from the United States civil service commission, Washington, D. C. The closing date for patent examiner applications is Aug. 31. However, persons interested in being considered for positions to be filled immediately should file their applications with the commission's Washington office not later than March 9. Graduates Of '23 To Hold Reunion The 25th anniversary reunion on the class of '23, famous for its many members who have achieved national prominence, will be held during the University commencement in June. C. G. Hesse, Lawrence businessman, has been named chairman. Class president Joe Bloomer, now an oil operator at Claflin, made the appointment. Some '23 graduates are Ben Hibbs, editor of the Saturday Evening Post; Doris Fleseson, Washington political columnist; Dr. Leona Baumgartner, director of the children's health program in New York City; Paul Endacott, vice-president of the Phillips Petroleum company, Bartlesville, Okla.; Waldo Bowman, editor of Engineering News-Record; Dr. William Angell of the Cleveland, Ohio, clinic; Ray Pierson, Burlington lawyer and former state commander of the American Legion, and Senator Marc Boss of Columbus. Painting Professor Wins Art Prize Karl Mattern, associate professor of painting, has received a purchase prize from the Wichita Art association for his oil painting, "The Old Pear Tree." This is the second purchase made by the Wichita organization from a University teacher, and is the eighth of Mattern's paintings to be bought by a museum. The Mattern painting was selec ted at a recent exhibition of 12 Kansas painters at the association's galleries. Read the Daily Kansan daily. BUY, SELL, RENT thru our CLASSIFIEDS PHONE YOUR WANT ADS to the DAILY KANSAN TODAY (Hours 10-12 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. except Sat.) Phone KU 376 Daily Kansan Classified Advertising Phone KU 376 Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be received by the business office during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Business Office. Journalism bldg. not later than 8 p.m. the day before publication is desired. Classified Advertising Rates 25 words or less additional words One Three Five day days days 35c 65c 90c 1c 2c 3c For Sale 1941 PONTIAC 4-door. Good motor and tire. Call at 1312 OR phone 3148-2 1939 MASTER Delux Chev, Sedan, Good condition. Looks like new one. See Red at 1101 Tenn, after 6 p. m., or on Saturday or Sunday. 27 ALMOST NEW Admiral Radio-Phonogram combination. Table model. Automatic record changer. See Red at 10 11 Tenn. after 6 p. m. or on Saturday. 27 MODEL A TUDOR: Good condition to get you there and back. See at 353 Comp. SEVEN-FOOT NORGE refrigerator, good condition. See at 185 Maine. MEN'S GRAY pin-stripped suit, size 38; two men's blue sport coat, size 38; one Emerson floor model radio. See at 736 Maine. 26 SLIDE RULE: Deitzen, Log-Log. Duplice renew, at cost. Fh. 2377 Cairn Griswolf. 1931 MODEL A FORD: Perfect condition. See after 6 p. m. 946. Ill. 26. Instructor: Jacques M. Chambers, with Webster automatic changer, 1541 Ky. Northwest entrance. Evenings. 26 RADIO AND record player combination, automatic record changer, plays 10 inch records, table model, excellent condition, less than year old. 35 Illinois. $35.00. NEW NORGE "0000" oil heater; 28pc. hand painted china set; vanity table; table set; two burner hot plate; also living- room and bedroom drapes. Cal 1679-7. 27 18-FOOT RED ARROW house trailer, inlaid linoleum, venetian blinds and curtains. Good condition. Lavern Mausof. 2047 La. 26 For Rent 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. 669 HTTP ROOMS FOR 4 boys, 2 large double rooms next to room. Call 186 or see between 1 to 5 daily. Mrs. R. B. Pierson, 2201 Louisiana. 27 VACANCY: Single bed. Also board Phone 2180W. APTS. FOR BOYS: for two to four and five to six boys. Shower and tub on same floor with aps; single beds and cooking facilities in each apt. $15 a month for each boy. Also 1 single room. All on W. 14th St. Phone 3331 or 2099. 27 LARGE, CLEAN one-room apartment for rent to employed couple with small child whom I can care for during daytime. 506 W. 6th. Ph 1344-W. 26 VACANCY: for two men together. close to the Hill. 1228 Louisiana. 26 ROOM FOR 2 boys, $3 each. Will rent as single for $4. Call 26161W or see at 912 Alabama after 5:00. Two blocks below stadium. 25 HAVE ROOM for the woman student; hours per month. Ph. 32481 Mrs. Wilson. 1229 Ohio VERY attractive room for two boys, twin women at our campus. 1137 Ky. Mrs. Olep. Ph. 223. Miscellaneous A CAPPELLA choir and women's glee club. Sunday program recorded on the campus. Hear program anytime at Peterson's 6 East 8th in First Natal' Bank Bldg. 27. UPHOLSTERY, slip-covers. drapes. Let us take care of all these needs for you. All upholstery, slip cover. drape material for sale. Our work guaranteed the best. Active years in business in Indiana. Counter Upholster. 837 Vermont. 3-24. Ph. 143 FREE OFFER: Photo copies of discharge papers, marriage certificates for primary credit or school entrance, 3 for 2. Round Corner Drug, 801 Mass. MATHEMATICS Tutor: Luc T. Dougherty at 509 Maine. (By Busy, 3 blocks west of Mississippi, or by path down the Hill west of the stadium). Phone 30841-2525. MARCELLA'S Beauty shop moved to 342 Indiana St. Beautiful, soft, natural "Radio" a specialty. Day and night appointment. New patrons are preacicipiated. Phone 520. 25 DANCE every Saturday night at Odd Fellows, Informal. Joe Langwurth arch瑟理. Transportation WANTED: week end transportation (ride) to Tulsa. Will be glad to leave anytime after 11:00 Friday. Call Elden C. Tefft 2514; J. RIDERS WANTED: Leaving every Friday evening for Emporia, Newton and Wichita. Returning every Sunday evening. Call 3170. Harry Shultz. 26 EAST FOR Easter? Two students looking for ride to and from East coast (Philadelphia) for Easter vacation. Will they drive or driving. Call 2041 for Joe, or Ed. RIDERS WANTED: Eudora to Law- rence. J. W. Nearby, Ph. Ed. 21, J. L. Nearby, Ph. Ed. Lost BROWN BILLFOLD on 2nd floor of 3241 and please call 3242 and ask for Kone Cole. LOG-DUPLUX slide-rule; permanent loss of which will necessitate my taking three semesters of basic math. Finder Phenoc, Pher 1906—No questions, reward PARKER PENCL, black barrel, silver Reward. Charles Minges, ph. 1870-W., 25 Reward. Charles Minges, ph. 1870-W., 25 ONE RED Shafer lifetime pn. Finder please call Bill Schell at S52 or 1289-M. ONLY ONE Thing To Remember! ONE Ready your car with the spring service maintenance SPECIALS 5000 Mile Check $8.35 10,000 Mile Check $10.00 Wanted APARTMENT WANTED: Student, veteran, no children. Desire two or three room apartment, preferably furnished. Call J. A., Ross Ph. 1810 W. three years B. Call J. A., Ross Ph. 1810 W. Scholarship Tests To Be March 15 About 260 seniors from Kansas high schools are expected to take the examination. The final test will be given in Lawrence April 9 and 10. The preliminary Summerfield scholarship test for high school seniors will be given March 15 at Colby, Concordia, Dodge City, Lawrence, Parsons, and Wichita. The Summerfield scholarship allotments are made on a percentage basis which depends upon the amount of financial aid needed. They are maintained for a period of eight years or what is equivalent to eight semesters providing a "satisfactory" grade average is maintained. SERVICE-FORD-SALES MORGAN-MACK SOFT-WATER THE COLLISION WAY DOES your housemother or landlady know about the many economies and benefits made possible by Soft Water? You can help her as well as yourself by asking her to phone us for more information about soft water. You will enjoy using soft water for bathing, drinking, shampooing and for many other reasons. . . She will welcome soft water for the many economies it makes possible for her. CULLIGAN SOFT WATER SERVICE Phone 680 7021/2 R.I. Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers. STERLING FURNITURE VALUES THAT ACTUALLY SAVE YOU MONEY 100 $20.00 down 7 Piece Sofa Bed Group $99.50 $7.50 monthlv Above includes Maple Sofa which converts easily into bed for two. Bedding compartment below. Choice of heavy grade tapestry, red, blue, green, rose, and lime. Also maple cricket chair (choice of 3 colors), maple coffee table, 2 matching end tables, 2 table lamps. Bed-Spring & Mattresses . $33.85 Above includes All Metal Bed, Coil $6.80 down, Bed Spring and Mattress complete. $5.00 monthly Unfinished Chests . $10.95 5 Piece Chrome Dinette . 49.95 2 Piece Living Room Suite . 99.50 3 Piece Bedroom Suites . 69.95 Easy Terms Free Delivery to Surfers Sterling Furniture Co. Lawrence 928 Mass. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE EIGHT WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 1948 UN Telegrams Don't Stop War Prince Says "Telegrams can't stop fighting," Prince Peter of Greece said Tuesday in referring to the action of the council set up in Greece for reporting illegal activities to the United Nations. "Guerilla warfare goes on because the national Greek army cannot get to the Communist bases in the mountains." The five-mile frontier zone gives the Communists a resting place when returning to Albania and Yugoslavia, he added. so they didn't need to "Because there were no natural frontiers, they were wide-open to attack and had a deep feeling of insecurity. This feeling of insecurity led them into protective bands and the idea of the individual existing only for the state was established." Berna and Faghman. The situation today is a repetition of an age-old struggle between East and West, he said. "We Greeks consider ourselves originators of the culture which you call 'the American way of life,' " he said. The individualistic culture of the West developed in Greece because the country is "so cut up by high mountains, deep valleys and the Aegean seacoast." The situation in East Asia is very different, Peter said. These people were "far from the sea and isolated, so they didn't progress as much. The present government of Greece is a coalition of the Liberal and Populist parties, and was elected in 1945. ed in 1943. "Every provision was made for a fair election," the prince said. The minority Communists, about 9.3 per cent of the population, are fighting this government, he added. Couple Holds Demo Offices John W. Wood, Jr., and his wife, Maxine, both first year law students, have been elected temporary vice-chairman and secretary respectively of the Kansas Young Democrats Inter-Collegiate council, at the organizational meeting held in connection with the recent Washington day celebration in Topeka. Permanent officers are to be elected at the first meeting, March 7, on the Washburn campus. The constitution, as formulated by the K. U. Young Democrats, was adopted, except that a provision was made to elect officers at their annual meetings rather than by limiting each school to the votes of its two official delegates. Those from K. U. attending the meeting were Robert L. Bock, Richard B. Collins, George H. Caldwell, Mr. and Mrs. William A. Guilfoyle, Albert L. Grimes, Philip C. Hill, James R. Hunsucker, Richard K. Hollingsworth, Hubert P. Johnson, Samuel J. Lance, Ralph W. McClung, George L. Peterson, Mr and Mrs. Tom Page, George L. Peterson, Ernest J. Rice, Richard P. Tomlinson, Jr., and Mr. and Mrs. Wood. Harlan Livinggood's orchestra, with Donald E. Price as vocalist, will play for the junior class dance April 10, Lu Anne Powell, president, announced today. Livingood To Play At Junior Dance Committees for entertainment, decorations and refreshments will meet soon to decide the order of events at the dance. J. Q. Jones Leaves Hospital Jaceh O. Jones, professor of ap- Watkins hospital Feb. 20. Professor plied mechanics, was dismissed from Jones received a fracture of the back when he fell from a ladder in his home Jan. 30. Four Ohio Companies Ask For University Graduates Paul E. Williams, personnel consultant representing four companies, will be at the University Friday to confer with June graduates. Arrangements for interviews can be made at the office of the dean of the School of Engineering. The corporations are Youngstown Sheet and Tube company; General Fireproofing company; De Vibils; Timken Roller Bearing company. All are in Ohio. They are interested in majors in mechanical, metallurgical and chemical engineering, and also in business majors. ROTC Picks Student Officers Sixty-seven student officers have been chosen to lead the drills of the R.O.T.C. battalion, Col. John Alfrey, professor of military science, announced today. The officers for this semester were chosen for outstanding scholarship and above - average proficiency in military tactics, he said. Ira D. Jordan. College senior, is the commanding officer of the battalion, with the rank of major. Students with the rank of captain are Robert A. Franklin, business junior, and Anderson W. Chandler, senior. First instructors are Cleo H. Adj First lieutenants are Cleo H. Adkinson, David M. Andrews, Theodore L. Brewer, Albert W. Brown, Jack J.ack A. Campbell, Edwin K. Crowley, Jr., John K. Higdon, James A. Street, and Robert A. Stroud. A. Brett Second lieutenants are Thomas J. Alexander, Theodore C. Bernard, George E. Hutton, Jr., Ralph H. Moberley, Jr., Joseph M. Stryker, and Edwin N. York. Sergeants are Clemeth A. Abercombie, Dean C. Batt, Alfred L. Burgert, Eugene Bribach, Dale B. Burgett, Thomas E. Franklin, Richard N. Getty, John R. Gurtner, Jr., J. Glenn Hahn, Rex Hay, Charles N. Howard, Richard H. Lamb, Walter J. Michaelis, Robert E. Morris, James E. McBride, Harold D. Nelson, Robert P. O'Dwyer, Charles W. Sherra, Joseph R. Simmons, Jr., Charles W. Spieth, Robert A. Rudkin, Richard A. Wegner, Evan K. Wilson, Robert B. York. Corporals are James Baska, Richard C. Beach, James G. Bowman, Roland M. Brunelle, Herbert F. Bueholtz, John Fencyk, Jr., Larry L. Funk, Fred S. Jones, Frank W. Korber, Hugh A. Niedert, Brian O'Brien, Jr., Robert M. Riegle, Edwin M. Stryker; Rot Twist, Jr., Kenneth B. Tyson, Marshall R. Warner, and Marvin S. Wray. Prof. Ben Williamson, University sanitation engineer, told Bacteriology club members Tuesday that the garbage disposal methods used by many Kansas towns are "unsanitary and a menace to the public health of the community. 'Garbage Disposal A Health Menace' "Our method of dumping garbage in open spaces is no improvement over that of our grandfathers," he said. Professor Williamson, who is director of the water laboratory of the Kansas State board of health, warned that garbage should be buried in trenches to prevent breeding spots for vermin and insects. Explains Poison Act To Entomology Club The law requires manufacturers of agricultural chemicals to register the contents of these products with the state board of health, said Mr. Guntert, a member of the board. Robert Gunter, '47, explained the Kansas economic potion act at a meeting of the Entomology club Tuesday. Three new members gave talks on their interests in the entomology field. They were Elmer L. Bortz, College junior; Arthur L. Duell, senior; and David T. Dally, freshman. Czech President Accepts Cabinet Of Communists Prague, Feb. 25—(UP)—President Eduard Benes, bowing to a Communist ultimatum, today accepted Premier Klement Gottwald's hand-picked cabinet, thereby legalizing the police state established yesterday. day. The Communists had threatened to cripple Czechoslovak economy with a general strike unless the government they already had seized were turned over to them formally. President Benes' office announced his acceptance in a brief communiqué which also said he had accepted the resignations of 12 non-Community cabinet ministers who brought the political crisis to a head by walking out of the government last week. last week. The Communists heaped enormous pressure on President Benes to make him *put the "official" stamn on their capture of Czechoslovakia. Their coup was in the mop-up stage, and they were rushing to consolidate it formally. 'Emblem Of Life Is The Zipper' "The zipper is the emblem of modern life." Dr. John Ise told University women at the opening speech of the A. W. S. conference Tuesday. "Whether it can do its job or not, it must do it fast." "We live scatterbrained, superficial lives. Nothing goes very deep. We are too busy to get anything out of anything. There is too much and too poor of nearly everything. The greatest need tday is for leisure. sur "Love is the only thing in the world that doesn't do anyone any harm. Love is the only thing that has no diminishing utility." "Emulation of the man who can get ahead may be the cause of unhappiness in modern life. Consider the savage, who, looking at his row of shrunken heads or scalp, considered himself a satisfie man. Modern man's achievements are accumulations of stocks and bonds in a strong box. Women display their achievements with a mink coat." Dr. Ise condemned social snobbery as one of the worst effects of emulation. "The best definition of a real gentleman is one who would introduce his shabby parents or shabby relatives to his swell friends with gracious pleasure and no blushes." "Letters that the other language departments cannot handle are sent to us," said J. A. Burzle, associate professor of German. "We have been able to translate all of them so far." Foreign Letters Are Translated A foreign letter translation service has been set up in the German department. Persons from all over the state send foreign letters to the University. Usually the letters have been received in return for relief packages. During the past year, the department of German has translated, or found somebody who could translate, letters from Poland, Hungary, Belgium, Finland, Germany, Czechoslovakia, and Lithuania. "No definite system has been set up for translation." Professor Burzle said, "Natives of the countries or students and faculty who have adequate language training translate them." Acacia To Have Smoker Members of the pledge colony of Acacia fraternity will hold a smoker in the East room of the Union at 8 tonight for new pledges. The American Society of Tool Engineers decided, Tuesday, to demonstrate modern welding methods for the engineering exhibition April 16 and 17. ASTE Will Demonstrate Welding For Exhibition A regular production and assembly line will be used in the demonstration. Several molds will also be cast Charles R. Wilderson, sophomore was elected publicity chairman. A committee was appointed to nominate a new secretary and vice-chairman. Seven Negroes were refused service in tests of four Lawrence restaurants Tuesday as the Committee on Racial Equality continued its campaign to eliminate segregation in cafes near the campus. 4 Cafes Refuse Negroes Service The campaign will continue with more test cases until agreement is reached with cafe managers, C.O. R.E. chairman Robert Stewart stated today. The four restaurants affected by the action are the Cottage, Jayhawk, Rock Chalk, and Brick's cafes. "As a result of Negroes being refused service in the four Hill cafes, C.O.R.E. will seek to negotiate with the managers in an attempt to end this discrimination," Stewart said. The test cases Tuesday were made by Negroes who entered the cafes and asked for service. In each case they were told, "we cannot serve you," and left without further discussion, the C.O.R.E. chairman said. Managers of the four restaurants have not indicated if they will be willing to negotiate with C.O.R.E. on the question of segregation. Carl J. Clifton, owner of the Jay-hawk cave, said today, "I made my stand clear a year ago and my opinion will never change. I can't say about the other managers, but I don't believe in mixed service." The four managers will be asked to meet with a committee of C.O. R.E. members tomorrow to discuss the campaign and attempt to reach an agreement, Stewart said. Prices 8 to 10 per cent higher than those of last year were forecast Tuesday by L. J. Pritchard, associate professor of finance. He spoke to Coffee and Forums members in the Pine room of the Union. "Irespective of what prices do immediately, the long term trend is upward," he asserted. 'High Prices Stay, Pritchard Says He explained that the type of inflation in the United States is caused by the increased demand and the decreased supply. France, Italy, and China are stricken with hyper-inflation. This type of inflation, he said, is caused by "loss of faith in currency, and the loss of faith in currency is caused by loss of faith in one's country." Five Appointed To Publish Paper 五 members of the Home Economics club were appointed Tuesday to publish the April Newsletter, a bulletin issued monthly by college home economics clubs in Kansas. Members are Patricia Harris, chairman, Jean Clarkson. Pat Jones, Judy Tihen, and Joyce Walker. An election will be held March 3 and 4 to replace Marilyn McClure who resigned. All home economics seniors can vote at the home economics office. Members voted to give $10 to the international scholarship fund and $$ to the permanent home economics building fund of Washington, D.C. Kansas City business and home economies women will present an exhibit on vocations in home economics and business in March at the University. New Campaign Begins For Memorial Funds A fresh campaign to raise enough money by June 7 to start work on the World War II Memorial was launched Tuesday at a meeting in the Union. At present the memorial fund totals $166,000. The announced goal is $350,000 to start construction of a campanile and driveway. Fifteen special memorial bells have been reserved in the proposed carillon and negotiations are under way for six more. Mr. Ellsworth said, 45 I L D B A The new campaign will be directed by Jack Taylor, veteran campaign director, Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the Memorial association announced. The first major activity of the new campaign will be a conference of county and city campaign leaders at the University March 13. At that time all committees will be given specific plans of action by the campaign director. palln director. The student committee will hold a special convocation March 4 for new students to explain the memorial campaign. Sororities, fraternities, and other student organizations will be invited to assist in the drive. Mr. Ellsworth said. A plan to give the title of "Bellringer" to any students who obtains nine other "Bellringers" has been suggested by Mr. Taylor. Anonymous gifts of $100 will be obtained in the student's name by the general committee. Executive committee members attending Tuesday's meeting were Hugo T. Wedell, president; Carl V. Rice, vice-president; C. B. Holmes, treasurer; Edward W. Tanner; F. C. Allen, C. C. Stewart, J. W. Murray, and R. B. Stevens, trustees; Kenneth Postlethwaite, publicity chairman, Pat Thiessen, chairman of student committee; Bob Malott, vice-chairman of student committee; Mr. Ellsworth; and Mr. Taylor. The editorship in Kan-Do, monthly publication of the I. S. A. is still open, Alice Wismer, president of the organization, said. Applicants for the position should contact her for an interview concerning capabilities. March 3 Mid-Week Cancelled By ISA The Independent Students association executive council voted Monday to cancel the scheduled midweek dance March 3. The Boston Symphony orchestra is to present a program the same night. Jim Petersen, newly elected All-Student Council representative, took the oath of office and will undertake his duties at the next meeting of the A. S. C. A committee was appointed to devise a plan for increasing the membership of I. S. A. Members are: Maxine Holsinger, chairman, David Wilkie, Betty Brooker, and Alice Wismer. Four delegates will be sent to the national conference of the Independent Students association at Iowa State college in Ames May 7 and 8. Gymnastic Team To Perform Mar.1 The University gymnastic team will demonstrate its skill on the mats and parallel bars Monday between halves of the Kansas State Jayhawker game, Henry Shenk, head of the physical education department, said today. Walter Mikols, coach for the gymnasts, has named five men to perform. They are Bill Brimer, Bob Bell, Bob Wilson, Bill Heffelman, and Bill Beck. Norwegian To Speak Sigmund Hagen, graduate student from Norway, will speak on "Education in Norway" at the German club meeting, 4:30 p. m. tomorrow in 402 Fraser. University Daily Kansan Thursday, Feb. 26, 1948 Thursday, Feb. 26, 1948 Lawrence. Kansas Lawrence, Kansas Denounce Coup By Czech Reds As 'Dictatorship' Washington, Feb. 5—(UP)—The United States, Great Britain and France today denounced the Communist coup in Czechoslovakia as establishment of "a disguised dictatorship." The three-power statement charged that events in Czechoslovakia jeopardized "the very existence of the principles of liberty." The communique was issued here, in London, and in Paris. The three-power statement was worked out after consultations taken on the initiative of the United States in the past 24 hours. In London a British foreign office spokesman hinted broadly today that Great Britain might not recognize the new leftist government of Czechoslovakia. Benes, Gava In. President Eduard Benes bowed to Communist demands under duress to avoid bloodshed, a high official in Prague said today. He added that the president might resign or flee the country to make his position clear. The official saw President Benes yesterday as the Communist coup was being completed. He gave a picture of the president giving in to irresistible pressure because he saw no other course, and still determined to dissipate any impression that he consented freely to the communist solution of the crisis. Reported Seriously Ill President Benes was reported seriously ill. The official who saw him said the strain of incessant work and dispute for three days had broken down his reserve strength and health. Communist Premier Klement Gottwald launched a sweeping purge of public offices and industry today to consolidate his hold on the country. He also ordered two days of nation-wide demonstrations to celebrate his lightning coup that put Communists in complete control. 'Hop' Tickets Now On Sale Booths have been set up in the first floor lobby of the Union and Frank Strong hall to sell tickets to the Sophomore Leap Year Hop Saturday. Correction The Hop will be in the Union ballroom. Matt Betton's band from Kansas State college will play. A novelty combo with Constance Deane as soloist, will be featured at intermission. Robert F. Beine will be master of ceremonies. Tickets are $1.75 a couple. They are also available at the business office and will be sold at the dance. The seventh paragraph of the story headlined "College Faculty Votes 10-hour Language Rule" on page 1, column 5 of Wednesday's University Daily Kansan should have read: "However, Professor Carman added, most new students who have had two years of HIGH SCHOOL will be required to enroll in a second semester foreign language course even though they pass the placement test." In Wednesday's story the word "college" was used instead of "high school." Chaperones will be Mrs. Wealthy Babcock and Miss Florence Black, mathematics professors and Mrs. Helene Farrell, English instructor. Science Majors To Get Interviews Three personnel consultants from the Phillips Petroleum company will be at the University March 1 and 2 to interview seniors majoring in chemistry, physics, geology, and chemical, mechanical, electrical, civil, petroleum, and architectural engineering. Arrangements for interviews can be made at the office of the dean of the School of Engineering. GOP Pushes Truman Bill Washington, Feb. 25—(UP)—Republicans today pushed an antlynching bill toward house approval in a move certain to widen the breach between warring Democratic factions. The house judiciary committee met in closed session to consider the measure which was approved by a subcommittee yesterday. Mr. Truman recommended action on such a bill in his recent civil rights message to congress and thereby provoked angry opposition from Southern Democrats. Judiciary Chairman Earl C, Michener (R. Mich.) said the committee might not get around to voting on the measure today but definitely would act within the next few days. meanwhile Gov. William Tuck of Virginia took a direct swing at President Truman and his civil rights sembly to remove the names of program by asking the general ascandidates for president and vicepresident from the ballot and hand Virginia's voting power to a party convention. The governor's recommendation was the strongest action yet taken in a southland rumbling with threats of open rebellion against the party it has backed solidly since reconstruction days. It would threaten Mr. Truman with loss of Virginia's electoral vote unless he backed down on his civil rights proposals. There was no question however but that the Republican-controlled house committee would approve the bill—and with considerable help from administration Democrats. When the subcommittee okayed it yesterday, two Northern Democrats joined two Republicans in voting affirmatively. The School of Fine Arts will resume its student recitals at 3 p. m. today in Frank Strong auditorium. The program will include piano, voice and violin selections. Fine Arts Recital Today Op. 79, No. 1 ... Branms Piano: Charles Smith Piano. Charles shines. "La Villanelle" . Dell' Acqua Dolce. The program follows: "Physics by R miner." CORE Talks To Managers Of Hill Cafes "Concerto for Violin" ..Brahms Violin: Dale Bryan Prelude from "Pour le Plano". _Debussy_ Prelude in D major. Op. 79, No.1 The Committee on Racial Equality began negotiations today with managers of the four Hill restaurants in an attempt to eliminate segregation in cafes near the campus. Mr. Murphy, manager of Brick's cafe, offered to negotiate with the R.E. Group. A committee composed of Robert Stewart, chairman, and two Negro members, Floyd Thuston and Wesley Elliott, interviewed Carl J. Clifton and W. E. Murphy, managers of the Jayhawk and Brick's cafes respectively. Stewart then said that building a restaurant for Negroes would only perpetuate segregation. "Rejoice Greatly" (Messiah) ... Handel Voice: Harriet Harlow Stewart told Mr. Clifton that "the only place on the Hill where the 300 Negroes attending the University can eat is the Union cafeteria and fountain." "If your customers agreed to allow Negroes to eat at your place, would you change your mind about segregation?" Thuston asked. Mr. Clifton also, soid that agitation which Ei.把 agitation against Ei.把 agitation is doing more the cause than for it. Sегregation would work if left alone." Concerto in A major (last "However, opinions change," he added. "I might change my mind if my customers should agree to it." "There's no reason why the Negroes can't get their own place," Cliffon replied. Mr. Clifton answered that the majority of people with whom he had talked had objected to mixing the two races. "I don't care to have any discussion with C. O. R. E. at all. I don't want C. O. R. E. to come in an represent the Negroes." Mr. Murphy said. "Let the Negroes get their own organization." movement) ... Mozart Piano: Pauli Wagner WEATHER Jan Chilapuso at second piano C. O. R. E. members will continue negotiations with managers of the Cottage and Rock Chalk cafes this afternoon, Stewart said. Kansas—Cloudy, a little warmer cast today. Partly cloudy, not much change in temperature tonight and tomorrow. High today in 50's. Low tonight 35 to 44. Piano; Twila Wagner Wallace Club To Meet Tonight A Henry Wallace-for-President club will be organized at 7 p. m. today in the Pine room of the Union. Temporary officers will be elected. Action to list Henry Wallace, the new third party presidential candidate for President, on the 1948 Kansas ballot will be discussed. George Lurie, a political science graduate from Topeka, will speak on "Henry Wallace and the Issues of the 1948 Campaign." The meeting will be open to the public. India To Abolish Caste System New Delhi, Feb. 26—(UP)—The newborn dominion of India pledged itself today to wipe out the tradition of the untouchable caste and raise 60 million Hindus to the level where they may look upon and mingle with the rest of the country's population. Actions by other Hindus forcing untouchables to observe the penalties of their low estate to accept the trade of their father, marry within the caste, and pay highest respect to the higher caste—will be punished by law. A draft of the proposed constitution for Hindu India, unveiled by the constituent assembly, promises to free the untouchables from the stigma which has condemned them and their children to doing the same menial work of their forefathers. The constitution, which needs only the final approval of the assembly, proclaims India a "sovereign independent republic." It commits the government to rescue India's 330 million people from poverty but leaves undecided the question of India's continued membership in the British Commonwealth. India's size and complexity forced the makers of India's constitution to give up the idea of a centralized government and follow the Ameri- sample of a union of states. wers not specified for the government will be reserved by state and provincial governments. By Bibler Little Man On Campus ETHICS CRIME ALL TRUE MURDER GOTHED CASE OF THE LUCKY LAD GIRLS THE GROUND BEAUTIFUL "Hey, Mac, wanna hear sumpin' that'll hand you a laugh?" --- Three Events Set Pace For Conference Five guest speakers, a tea, and a panel discussion high-lighted the Wednesday events in the "Blue-printing Tomorrow" cultural conference sponsored by the Associated Women Students. Talks on the home, community world citizenship, music, recreation, and women's education were given by the guest speakers. Mrs. William C. Meninger, Topeka, spoke on "You and Your Home." She compared building a life to furnishing a home. "Neither can be done without effort or by just writing a check. If this were so we would get nothing out of it," she said. "We are constantly faced with reality. We must take decisions in terms of the other people in the situation. We must adapt ourselves to the world but be deliberate in getting satisfaction in our lives and finding satisfaction in what we are doing." You As A World Citizen Mrs. Petitt pointed out the three A's of community service-attitude, action, and achievement. Mrs. P. A. Petitt, Paola, discussed "You and Your Community." "You must take an active part in your community if you expect it to be as you want it," she said. Miss Dorothy Luber, Topeka, speaking on "You As A World Citizen," declared that "the pattern of history is not squeezed out of time. History is made by small groups of people, by people who want to be citive. A well-organized minority can move the world." Miss Luber pointed out that 'to be effective you must act through the source of power. Join an organization, a political party. Act now where you are for the time running short. Dr. Elin Jorgensen, Lawrence, discussed "You and Music." "There is art in daily living," she said. "Motion pictures, radio programs, and all types of music and song are forms of art. The future development of music rests with you. Begin in the family that you will someday establish." Miss Ethel Mitchell Greencastle, Ind., talked on "You and Recreation." She compared recreation and life. "You And Recreation" "There are rules to every sport," she said. "The question is whether or not you find enough satisfaction in an activity to obey the rules. Life follows the same principle; the type of recreation you enjoy is not important. The activities in themselves must be satisfying. One need not look for material gain." A tea was held Wednesday at Corbin hall. Mrs. W. C. Jackson, Mrs. A. G. McKay, Mrs. Ralph Baldwin, and Miss Martha Peterson poured. The days events ended with a panel discussion on "Women's Education." Those participating in the panel discussion were Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, Mrs. Menninger, and Dr. Geraldine Hammond of the University of Wichita, and Hilda James and Joan Joseph, College juniors. 'Phvsics Needs Philosophy' "It is too bad that physics attracts men, people who are not philosophically inclined." M a x Dresden, assistant professor of physics, said at a meeting of the Physics club Wednesday. Professor Dresden added that philosophy has considerable influence on the advancement of physics. "Without this, we become mechanical in our work," he said. PAGE TWO UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS KU Physicist Helps Build Atom Bomb Yet Agrees It Is A Necessary Evil Now One of the physicists who helped to make the atom bomb at Los Alamos, N.M., was L: Worth Seagondollar, assistant professor in the department of physics. When asked his idea about the atom bomb, he said it is a necessary evil. "We knew that the United States would have to learn the secret first. That is why everyone worked so hard on the project." In March 1944, Professor Seagandollar accepted a government research job, of which he was told nothing. He was sent to Los Alamos and was assigned experiments with uranium 235 and plutonium. He said he was fortunate in meeting some of the world's greatest physicists, among them, Dr. Niels Bohr (Nobel prize, 1913) and Dr. Enrico Fermi (Nobel prize, 1934). "When the first bomb was tested at Alamogordo air base, we were stationed 9 miles away." Professor Seagondollar added. "But when it exploded we certainly started digging in." Professor Seagondollar was graduated at Emporia State college in 1941, and then went to the University of Wisconsin to complete his master's degree. 1. Professor Seagondollar came to the University in 1947. Jewish Students To Have Skating Party In March A roller skating party will be held March 4 by the Jewish Student union. Postcards with the time and place for meeting will be mailed to members. A special meeting to discuss Palestine will be held at 7 p.m. March 1 in Myers hall. THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 20, 1948 Bridge Club Offers Weekly Tournaments James Edward Spreitzer, engineering sophomore, was elected president of the Four No bridge club. Other officers elected were Ernest Raymond Schlacher, College junior, vice-president; William Howard Edmunds, sophomore, treasurer; and Mrs. Dee Bergstrom, secretary. The Four No club plans to join the national bridge club so the first and second place winners at each tournament here can earn master points in the national club. Bridge tournaments will be held at 7:30 p. m. every Thursday in the Union ballroom. Membership is open to all students in the University. The club plans to have 15 tables for each tournament. Results of the tournaments can be posted within 15 minutes after play is over, on the new recapitulation sheets the club purchased. University Daily Kansan Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Postmaster permission periods Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. Graycefully Yours By Doris Dodson As seen in Mademoiselle, Blossom Time...exclusive DORIS DODSON print with the fresh beauty of an orchard in bloom. Pink/green; blue/rose; yellow/gray. Whirlaway grayon crepe; 9-15. $16.98 The Grayce Shop 841 Mass. St. Vets' Allowances Tax Exempt In '47 All subsistance allowances received during the past year are exempt in filing 1947 income tax returns, E. R. Elbel, director of the veteran's bureau, said today. Mr. Elibel also stated that all pensions and allowances paid veterans under Public Law 16 are tax-exempt and should not be included in the return. Mustering-out payments received during 1947 should be excluded as well. In the case of enlisted men still in regular service and attending the University, all pay received from the government is exempt from taxation. Officers on a regular status, studying at the University, are tax exempt up to $1600 per year. Read the Daily Kansan daily. Mr. Elbel advised all veterans with questions concerning their individual returns to contact the Internal Revenue department representative, located in the Lawrence Post Office building. Tax forms may also be obtained at any bank or post office. Diseases Discussed By Dr. Karl Dittmer Experimental work in combating diseases such as tuberculosis and those caused by viruses was explained by Dr. Karl Dittmer of the University of Colorado chemistry department in an address to the chemistry colloquium Wednesday. Dr. Dittmer discussed the work which is being carried on by his department in studying the relationship between structures of anti-vitamins and anti-amino acids. E. Lendell Cockrum, assistant curator at the Dyce museum, will speak on "Summer Collecting in Wyoming" at a zoology club meeting at 7:30 p. m. today in 206 Snow hall. Zoology Club To Hear Story Of Wyoming Survev Motion pictures will be shown to illustrate how the collection of vertebrate animals was obtained for a biological survey of Wyoming. The present farm population of the United States is nearly 20 per cent of the total population. Washing - Lubricating - Batteries - Tires FRANZ CONOCO SERVICE 9th and N.H. Phone 867 BILL'S GRILL QUICK COURTEOUS SERVICE 1109 Mass. Phone 2054 Across from the Courthouse Mighty Compatible PRECISION TEAMWORK TO STRETCH YOUR WARDROBE. GIBBS SLACKS AND JACKETS ARE DESIGNED TO GIVE YOU ALL THE COMFORT AND EASE OF ACTION YOU WANT COMBINED WITH SMART STYLING THAT COMMANDS ATTENTION. IN SLACKS... YOULL FIND A WIDE SELECTION OF GABARDINES, FLANNELS AND WORSTEDS IN NEW SHADES FOR SPRING. CHEVIOT AND FLANNEL ARE THE FABRICS FEATURED IN GIBBS SPORT COAT GROUP. SLACKS New Arrivals for Smart Spring Wear, ...THESE SLACKS AND JACKETS! $7^95 $14^95 A man bowing his bow. A JACKETS! $19_{Up} 50\text{g}$ New Sport Coats in Two and Three Button Models Gibbs CLOTHING CO. 811 Mass. St. THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE 1948 tant will in reet- now to ver- or a of per Parties, Dinners, Pledgings Revolve The KU Social Wheel Tri Chi Guest Benjamin O. Weaver, state representative from Mullinville recently spoke to Tri Chi fraternity. AOPi Initiates Alpha Omicron Pi announces the initiation of the following: Jewell Arlene Johnson, Kansas City; Mary Joann Barr, Leavenworth; Beatrice Marie Senor, St. Joseph, Mo.; Betty Jbo Bloomer, Claflin; Patricia Ann Young, Kansas City; Martha Ann Willis, Kansas City, Mo.; Shirley Jean Hobbs, Leavenworth; Dorothy Margaret Bready, Cincinnati, Ohio; Margaret Josephine Townsend, humboldt; Phyllis Sibbett Gilpin, Omaha, Neb.; Dorothy Jean Quirk, Kansas City. The honor initiate was Arlene Johnson. The initiation was held Sunday. Sigma Nu Party Sigma Nu fraternity entertained with its annual Hi Rickity formal dance Saturday at the Lawrence Country Club. The dance was given in honor of its nineteen newly initiated members. The intermission program included the presentation of the new members by Dean Banker, and the pinning of the White Star on each man by his guest. The guests included Pat Foncannon, Jeanne Bowers, Patricia Waith, Lois Lofter, Mary Powers, Marilyn Brown, Donnie Jones, Betty Simms, Kay Graff, Jeanne Hillyer, Carol Harris, Mary Flo Spillman, Jean Dressler, Shirley Rice, Virginia Walsh, Diane Smith, Marilyn Franklin, Joan Joseph, Peggy Ann Schnackenberg, Betty Hilts, Margaret Lowe, Stella Gabrielson, Patricia Brown. Eleanor Pack, Jody Armacost, Eilean O'Connor, Glendine Smith, Kathryn Kubic, Beverley Robertson, Joan Vermillion, Betty Bacon, Martha Ringler, Sue Crabb, Anne Ashley, Lucille Murray, Margaret Harness, Patricia Norcross, Virginia Coppedge, Gloria Hill, Shirley Sudendorf, Willadeen Cleveland, Marybelle Pollock, Bynan Retta Jo Landis, Virginia Gargiss, Nancee Bell. Dolores Warren, Barbara Cleaves, Jeanne Peterson, Patricia Zackman, Kathleen McKelvy, Georgia Ginther, Ann Hogue Ann Spears, Barbara Wuerth, Jane Belt, Rosemary Robison, Shirley Garst, Ruth Granger, Jane Keith, Barbara Esterle, Margaret Wilson, Mildred Marks, Mary Kay Paige, Nancy Hulings, Nadine Stafford, Helen Kersey, Baldwin; Joanne Smith, Helen Wilkes, Georgianna Stayton, Margo McBride, Irene Murphy, and Louise Miller all of Kansas City. Joanne Perry, Barbara Zimmerman, Ann Galloway, Jane Denmeyer, Mary Jo Parmenter, and Mahreen Ramsey, all of Wichita; Jacqueline Lewis, Russell; Patricia Wentworth, Manhattan; Mary Ann Middlebrook, Hiawata; Rolla Lou Blood, Janet Johnson, and Joan Larson all of Salina; Lorraine Smith, and Bonnie Barrett of Topeka; Patricia Horner, Kansas City; Mary Alice Martin, Lawrence. Mr. and Mrs. Lee Seldon, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Hulen, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Berry, Mr. and Mrs. William Spicer, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Kelsey, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Deay, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Minich, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Perry, James Gerlach, Gibson Hart, William McPhee, Robert Dougherty, Maurice Beardmore, Omer Muchmore, Paul Klein, and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Shephard, and Jesse McNeish. Mrs. Karl Perkins, Mrs. W. S. Shaw, Mrs. Onita Miller, and Mrs. R. H. Wilson were chaperones. Weddings And Engagements The engagement of Adeline D. Tonn, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Otto Tonn, Haven, to Paul E. Pfortmiller, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gus Pfortmiller, Natoma, was announced Sunday at Hopkins hall by Miss Idabelle Bradley, housemother. Tonn-Pfortmiller The announcement was made at an after-dinner coffee. Maxine Magers poured and Myra Petrousky passed chocolates. Miss Tonn is a sophomore in the School of Fine Arts. Mr. Pfortmiller is a College sophomore. Murphy-Savory Mr. and Mrs. John C. Murphy, 823 Missouri, announce the engagement of their daughter, Mary Florence, to David S. Savory, son of Mr. and Mrs. John C. Savory, Atchison ☆ ☆ Miss Murphy is a freshman in the School of Fine Arts, and Mr. Savory is a business junior. The wedding will take place Sept. 3. Deering-Rix ☆ ☆ The marriage of Marjorie Deering, a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. Deering, Wichita, to John N. Rix, son of Mr. and Mrs. John W. Rix, also of Wichita, took place at the First Baptist church, Wichita, on Feb 21 Mrs. Rix was graduated from Michita University in January. Mr Rix is a business junior at the University. Chi Omega Officers The Lambda chapter of Chi Omega announces the election of officers; president, Jane Ferrill; vicepresident, Marilyn Barnum; secretary, Patricia Barron; treasurer, Ethel Pearson; social chairman, Rosemary Robison and Betty Webb; house counselor, Heaven Hepa; pledge trainer, Nancy Messenger; rush captain, Mary Helen Baker. House manager, Carol Helmers; personnel, Althea Thess, intramurals; Aimee Guinotte; activities, Jo Ann Jacobs; house maintenance, Mary Bovaird; alumnae file keeper, Isobel Martin; chapter correspondent, Mary Jane Horton; scrapbook, Mary Lou Martin; vocations and calendar, Mary Margaret Huse; house decorations, Betty Brewer; and social service, Valerie Stagg. Call K. U. 251 With Your News Parker 51 Fountain Pens Super Chrome Ink STOWIT'S Rexall STORE EAT SANDWICHES WINTER CROOK A new book of verse by WILL GIBSON author of 'A Cry of Players' 1st. ed.$2.75 THE BOOK NOOK 1021 Mass. Phone 666 a Hamburgers Specialty at Zim's Snack Shop East of Post Office Mrs. Marjorie Reeve was installed as president of the K. U. Dames at a bridge party last night. KU Dames Install Officers Mrs. Reeve was elected recently to replace Mrs. Camile Gudger, who resigned because she was leaving Lawrence. Mrs. Fanny Hammer, treasurer, gave a treasurer's report following the installation. Mrs. Natalie Carlson received the bridge prize for high score and Mrs. Wilda Kracht was given the door prize. To Honor Wesley Cabinet Old and new cabinet members will be honored at an "Election Party" by the Wesley foundation at 7:30 p. m. tomorrow in Ecke hall. Rip Brown's 5 BOPS SKYLINE — Fri-Sat Get Your Most Important Accessary (YOUR HAIR) re-styled for your Easter "NEW LOOK" PHONE 430 BAND BOX Beauty Shop 1144 IND. APPOINTMENTS FROM 8 to 6 Wilma Norma Jessie Muffet Mary Muffet LIMITEDS see them in February MADEMOISELLE Soap's White Fabric "LOOK WITHIN MESSERIN LAB" A Sprightly beauties, wardrobe mainstays for spring... all of Crown Soap 'n' Water gabardine, unconditionally washable. Exclusively Ours, of course. Adelane's 4. PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1948 Pi KA Surprises Sig Alph In First Round Of Playoffs "The Pi K. A.'s, Beta's, Phi Delt's, and Kappa Sig's marched to the semi-finals of the fraternity "A" team playoffs with first-round victories last night, while the Sig Alph, Phi Delt, and Beta "B" squads turned in first round wins in the "B" team playoffs. ading all the way, the Pi K. A.'s turned in the evening's most amazing play as they upset the strong Sig Alph's, 21 to 19, despite a last quarter rally by the losers. Oldham, who starred for the Pi Kap's during the regular season play, dashed in 11 points to spark the winners to their first playoff. The Pi KA.K.'s led Thompson four points until the closing minutes when the losers rally fell short. Thompson led the Sig Alph's with nine points. Beta Stalls to Win Stalling effectively the final two minutes of the game, the Beta's outlasted the Phi Psi's, 17 to 16. Superb defensive play by both clubs kept the score low and the game tight all the way. With two I-M Schedule Today. Robinson 5 p. m. Aces Hi vs. N. R. O. T. C 6 p. m. Deuces Wild vs. ElDorado 7 p. m. Law School vs. Gamma Delta Deta- 8 p.m. Last Chance vs. Army. P p.m. y. M. C. M. S. DIX. N. Spooner-Thayer vs. Battenfeld. Today, Annex 5 p. m. Kappa Sig vs. Phil Pfl. 6 p. m. Jokers vs. Friends and Peepers 8 p. m. Beta vs. Pi K A. 10 p. m. Rollin Pin Five vs. Nubbins. and a half minutes to go pivot man Ralph Moon, who scored seven points to lead the winners, dropped in a charity toss to break a 16 to 16 deadlock. Kappa Sigs Are Smooth The Phi Delt's handed the A.V.C. a sound 32 to 20 thrashing to make themselves a strong title contender. Leading 14 to 10 at the half, the Phi Delt's poured on the steam to win going away from the veterans. Quiring led scorers with nine markers for the winners. The Sig Ep's hit a stone wall in the Kappa Sig aggregation as they dropped a decisive 35 to 25 decision. Beal with 10 and Philblad with nine were the big guns in the Sig attack that racked up a 16 to 11 halftime lead. Flashy little Lyle Woodring of the Sig Ep's tied for top scoring honors with 10 points. The Kappa Sig's worked smoothly to set up plays for scores that spelled the difference. In "B" team playoffs, the strong Sig Alph's came through true to form with a 25 to 16 trouncing of Sigma Nu. Dulaney collected seven and Moddlemog six, to lead the Sig Alpha's to victory. Seaman and Smith both got five for the Nu's. Favorites Win The Beta "P" took an easy 31 to 20 verdict from the Phi Gam's with tall Ralph Simmons swishing nine points and LaRue seven for the Beta's. Gardener counted seven to pace the losing Phi Gam's. The Phi Delt "B" team passed the scoring around as they walked over the Delt Chi's, 35 to 21. Tanner got eight and Hogan and Harris each seven as the winners took advantage of effective team play to squech the Delta Chi's. Graham dunked seven for the Delta Chi's to lead the loser's scoring. Short Scores 27 To Pace Wesleyan Salina, Kan., Feb. 25-(UP)-Paced by John Short, who scored 27 points, Kansas Wesleyan rallied in the last half to down Bethel college 69 to 16, in a Conference basketball game here last night. Bethel led, 29 to 27, at half-time. Short and company took over after the first three minutes of the second half to go out in front and Wesleyan was never headed. A foolproof device to prevent unauthorized use of radio-telephone equipment in vehicles has been developed. $21,000 Bid To Ray Evans Pittsburgh. Feb. 25—(UP)—The Pittsburgh Steelers of the National Football league reportedly hiked their signing price from $16,000 to $21,000 today in their attempt to land Ray Evans, star Kansas halfback. Evans, however, remained non-committal at his home in Kansas City, Kan., although a Steeler spokesman admitted last night that coach Jock Sutherland had telephoned Evans four days ago. "We haven't given up on getting Evans and hope he will be in our backfield next year," the spokesman said. Ray Evans wasn't talking today, but he was pondering a reported £21.00 offer. That's pretty nice pondering, followers of the All-American from Kansas agree, but whether it's nice enough is something else again. Evans, originally offered $16,000 by the Steelers, had "no comment" on the new offer today and spokesmen for the Pittsburgh team would neither deny nor confirm the $21,-000 bid for the halfback's services. They did comment, though, that "we think Evans is a great player." Evans has indicated a lack of desire to play professional football and it is generally understood he has a business offer that appears most attractive to him. If he doesn't accept the business offer now, it may not be open in another year and so Evans is pondering. But, as friends put it today, "$21.000 . . . that's nice pondering." 12 Outdoor Meets For Track Squad The University of Kansas track and field team will participate in 12 outdoor meets over a three-month period beginning early in April, athletic director E. C. Quigley has announced the schedule; April 3—Texas Relays at Austin. April 10-Kansas vs. Nebraska at Lincoln. April 17—Kansas Relays at Lawrence April 23-24-Drake Relays at Des Moines, Ia. May 1—Kansas vs. Kansas State at Monhattan May 8—Kansas vs. Oklahoma at Lawrence. May 15--Kansas vs. Missouri at Lawrence. June 12—Missouri Valley A. A. U. meet (site to be announced). May 21-22-Big Seven meet at Lincoln. June 5-Big Seven - Southwest Conference meet (site to be announced). June 19—National Collegiate a Minneapolis. July 2-3-National A. A. U. at Milwaukee. Huskers Humble Cellar Dwellers Taking the lead after the first eight minutes, the Cornhuskers of Nebraska defeated the Colorado Buffs, last night, 58 to 33, to take undisputed possession of fifth place in the scrambled Big Seven conference race. July 9-10—Olympic finals at Evanston. II. Basketball Results Colorado led the way by scoring three points before the Cornhuskers could connect, but with the score tied at 10 all the men from Lincoln pulled away and were never fronted. The half ended 24 to 22. Buff center Carr Besemann paced scorers on both teams with 13 points. Nebraska's Bob Cerv scored 12 and Rolander of Colorado 11. DePaul 47, St. Josephs 33 Mublenberg 99, Lehigh 50 Loyola (Baltimore) 77, Johns Hopkins 41 Manhattan 63, Fordham 56 Bucknell 63, Gettysburg 58 Georgetown 64, Villanova 46 Colby 58, Maine 57 Syracuse 58, Cornell 52 Lafayette 65, Rutgers 52 Vermont 65, Middlebury 45 Columbia 44 Navy 48, Virginia 41 Colgate 44, Army 44 Notre Dame 72, Marquette 55 Nebraska 58, Colorado 53 Creighton 49, Omaha 37 Morehead 60, Kansas Wesleyan 52 Emporia Techs 57, St. Benedicts 45 Lawrence 55, Chicago 35 Springfield (Mo.) 74, Mo. Mines 51 Florida 77, Naval Air Station 59 Georgia Tech 50, Auburn 43 Texas 32, Baylor 29 Arizona 93, Texas Mines 50 Pacific Lutheran 65, Hawaii 54. Massachusetts ranks first in the manufacture of textile goods and boots and shoes. The freshmen first and second teams, sophomore firsts, and senior seconds were victorious in the interclass basketball games Wednesday night. Women's All-Stars Begin Class Games The freshman first team defeated the junior first team, 28 to 19, after trailing 11 to 12 at the half. Ross, freshman, was high scorer with 16 points. Mueller, Van der Smissen and McGee each contributed 6 points to the junior's total. The freshman second team won put over the junior seconds 28 to 23. Bell led the frosh with 13 points, Daniels Dunley, juniors, each scored 11 points. Sparked by Loveless, with 20 points, the sophomore first defeated the senior first team, 37 to 30. Gunsolly scored 11 points for the seniors. In the closest game of the night, the senior seconds were victorious over the sophomore seconds, 15 to 13. Mai was high for the winners with 8 points. Bolas scored 8 points for the sophomores. LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS 12 East Eighth Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed...65c Ladies' Plain Dresses, Cl. and Pressed..69c CASH AND CARRY ONLY Why walk on Nails? Here's free-from-irritation nailless co... U-Turn flexibility to give you that barefoot feel from the moment you put them on. You'll walk smartly, too, in distinctive styles. THE SHOE OF TOMORROW Allen Edmonds Titan $17.95 TITAN This style has it—ruggedness, eye appeal, comfort and long wear, made of soft Briar tan Tweed grain leather with hand stained finish. Full double sole waterproofed. . combination rubber and leather custom heel. exclusive with us THE 813 Massachusetts Walker SHOP Phone 259 NOW thru Tuesday At Regular Prices! The Fabulous Aztec treasure lay before their swords! An Empire to conquer... hearts to win! TYRONE POWER in Captain from Castile in Technicolor JEAN PETERS RESAR ROMERO: JOHN SUTTON, LEE J. COBB News—2:30, 7:00, 9:40 Feature—2:45, 7:15, 9:55 GRANADA NOW Ends Saturday The Outcast Coast! Adventure Rules It's Early California Land of Peril, Plunder, and Pleasure! Filmed in Beautiful Technicolor "PIRATES OF MONTEREY" Starring Marie MONTEZ Rod CAMERON Philip Reed VARSITY "THE WOMAN FROM TANGIER" NOW, Ends Saturday Hit No. 2 Gene Autry Hit No. 1 "BACK IN THE SADDLE AGAIN" SUNDAY----3 Days JOHN HODIAK SYLVIA SIDNEY Stanger PATEE NOW, ends Saturday Hit No.1 Hit No.1 Marlene DIETRICH Marlene DIETRICH James STEWART 'Destry Rides Again' Hit No. 2 Kay FRANCIS Randolph SCOTT "When the Daltons Rode" SUNDAY, 3 Days The great film of its time! ROAD" "TOBACCO Marjorie RAMBEAU Charley GRAPEWIN F D THURSDAY. FEBRUARY 26, 1948 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE SPOTLIGHT ON SPORTS By BOB DELLINGER Daily Kansan Sports Editor The M. V. I. A. A. faculty governing board will hold its regular meeting in Kansas City tomorrow and Saturday. During the past week, this column has shown why the Clarence Brannum eligibility case, which the board fumbled once, should be reopened. There is nothing more to be said on the matter. Brannum clearly is ineligible on two counts, and it is up to the faculty board to decide whether or not the error is to be corrected. Copies of the evidence as presented in this column have been mailed to the members of this governing board for firsthand study. One parting bit of evidence—two prominent Kansas City lawyers and two more here in Lawrence when consulted on the Brannum case and presented with the printed conference rules, unanimously agreed that Brannum can not possibly be eligible. - * * Word comes from Geroge Pepper-dine college of Los Angeles that the Waves will be an entry in the Kansas Relays April 17, and they are expected to have their best track and field squad in history. Coach Eddie Weems' teams have won the college division of the Drake Relays 10 times, and taken second twice in the 12 times that the western school has entered the western school has entered the event. Among the group of excellent quarter-milers at Pepperdine is Sam Travis, 1945 Big Six 440 champ. Travis ran for Oklahoma while he was in V-12 service, and was clocked in a time of 47.5 in the quarter last year at Drake. - * * There are two likely double winners in the first Big Seven track meet in Kansas City Saturday night. One of them is Bob Karnes of Kansas, who is undefeated through the fall and winter season in the mile and two-mile distances. Karnes has run away from all competition this year, and promises to do so again Saturday night. So far in the indoor season, the only man to come close to Karnes after the first three-fourths of the two-mile distance is teammate Hall Moore. There is a strong possibility that Karnes will crack the conference mile record of 4:19.7 on the boards, if conditions are right. He has consistently run close to that time this season, and has cracked four dual meet marks. Best news of it all is that Karnes is a sophomore and bids fair to step into the shoes of the incomparable Glenn Cunningham before the end of his running career. Frosh Trackmen Defeat 3 Schools The Jayhawker freshman track team has defeated Oklahoma, Ohio State, and Colorado freshmen in results of a 7-school "postal meet" received so far. The Missouri Tigers out pointed the Kansas men, 55 1/6 to 43 1/6. Results from Wisconsin university and Iowa State have not been received. The Kansas freshman beat Oklahoma 67 to 38, Colorado 65 to 38, and trounced Ohio State 77 to 27. Outstanding among the K.U. freshmen were Emil Schutzel in the 440 and 60-yard dashes and the mile relay; Pat Bowers in the 440, 880, and the mile; and Floyd Greenwood in the high and low hurdles, the high jump, and the broad jump. In a "postal meet," the freshmen of one school hold a meet among themselves on their home track, and each of the other competing schools do the same. Results of the first three places in each event are recorded and mailed to the other schools. The results are compared, the points are totaled as in a regular meet. eaude Hough W KANSAS GUARD TWO SECONDS? THAS! EASY! "HOOCH" USES HIS 6'4" OF HEIGHT TO A GOOD ADVANTAGE UNDER THE BACKBOARDS. ALWAYS DRAWS THE ASSIGNMENT OF GUARDING THE OPPONENT'S GIANT. HIS 47' DESPERATION HEAVE WITH 2 SEC. TO GO GAVE THE JANIAHWKERS A 39 TO 38 VICTORY OVER THE OKLA SOONERS HAILS FROM MUNGE. 22 YEARS OLD, 185 POUNDS — SINGLE! Special U. Daily Kansan "Sportrait" by Bibler. Easton Sees Tiger Victory "The Missouri Tigers will win the Big Seven indoor track meet Saturday in Kansas City's Municipal auditorium." coach Bill Easton predicted today. The energetic Kansas track mentor went on to list the remaining Big Seven teams in the probable order of their finish. Nebraska and Kansas will fight it out for the runner-up spot while Colorado, Oklahoma, Kansas State, and Iowa State will finish in that order, he said. The dark horse of the meet will be Colorado because as yet the Buff's strength is untested. They will be strong in the pole vault and the dashs. Coach Easton said that his Jayhawkers could expect points from Tom Scfield and Delvin Norris in the high jump; Bob Karnes and Hal Moore in the mile and two-mile; Bob Crowley in the broad jump; and Dick Shea and Winton Studt in the half-mile. Call KU 376 with your Want Ads. Charme Beauty Salon formerly Iva's Beauty shop To condition your hair for that new permanent try a Eugene Hair Creme Treatment. phone 533 Nettie L. Wolfe, Owner --for Read the Want Ads daily. Launderette Service 9 lbs. of wash, 25c 21 Bendix Washers 813 Vt. Phone 3368 GALES NOTHING COULD BE FINER THAN OUR GALES American Custom Chocolates, $1.75 STOWIT'S Rexall STORE Careful Laundering of Shirts 100% COTTON MADE IN USA Your shirts come back bright as new and airy fresh. Neatly pressed, with special attention to collars and cuffs. Let us help you look and feel sure. LAWRENCE LAUNDRY AND DRY CLEANERS Pick up & Delivery—Ph. 383 1001 N. H. Blacksmith Shop Corner, Mich.,— (UP)—Blacksmith Shop Corner has asked county officials for permission to change its name to Eastmont. Reason: No blacksmith shop left. No Chestnut Tree, Either? CALL FOR TAXI SERVICE CALL CALL FOR TAXI SERVICE CALL 2-800 UNION CAB CO. You Are Always Welcome at SNAPPY LUNCH Hot Chili Sandwiches Soup Malts 1010 Massachusetts DE SOTO APPROVED SERVICE RLYMOUTH Bauer GALLAGHER MOTORS FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan. It's Kroger For Better Values To Cut the Cost of Living! Loaf Cheese 89c Windsor Club, 2 lb. box Salad Dressina 59c Krafts Miracle Whip, qt. Tuna Fish 40c Fancy Light Meat, can Cigarettes $1.69 Cigarettes All Popular Brands, Ctn. Pas, ___ No. 2 can 10c Standard Pack Tomatoes ___ No. 2 can 12c Sugar ___ 10 lb bag 93c C. F. H. Cane Green Beans No. 2 can 10c SPECIAL VALUE! Ketchup 14 oz. bottle 22c Heinz Spicy Flavor Chili Sauce 12½ oz. 32c Heinz btl. HEINZ VARIETY SALE 57 Heinz Macaroni in Cheese Sauce --can 19c Baby Food ---- 4 cans 29c Baby Food ___ 4 cans 29 c Heinz-Strained, 80c, 83c Vegetarian Soup 2 Heinz cans Chicken Noodle Soup 33c Heinz, 2 cans Beef Noodle Soup ----33c Heinz, 2 cans Vegetable Soup ----27c Heinz, 2 cans Cider Vinegar ----qt. 21c Heinz Stewing Chickens 39c Country Dressed, lb. 28c Pork Loin Roast lb 38c Cut from young choice Porkers, 7 rib end, Ib Wilson's Certified H A M Shank Portion Ib. 42c Cod Fillets -- lb. 39c Whiting --- 2 lbs. 29c Pan Dressed Cat Fish ___ lb. 57c Med. Size Oranges Texas Seedless, 8 lb. bag Iceberg Lettuce -- lb. 10c Pascal Celery ----lb. 14c Grapefruit - 8 lb. bag 29c 96 Size 49c Apples ___ bu. $2.29 Delicious Jonathan Place Orders Early For SEED POTATOES ONION SETS Tomatoes --- lb. ctn. 29c Cabbage --- 3 lbs. 10c Potatoes --- 10 lb. bag 55c Bed Trumph Red Triumph kroger UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1948 PAGE SIX The Editorial Page Trouble In Korea The Interim Committee of the General Assembly of the United Nations sent a commission to Korea in an attempt to carry out its order to hold free elections and establish a stable government. The Soviets have refused to allow the commission to enter its occupation zone and to participate in any United Nations settlement of the problem. Soviet Refusals Sabotage and disorders have heightened the political disturbances in Korea the past week. A closer study of the scene will reveal the reasons for these troubles. An agreement was reached at Yalta to divide "temporary" occupation duties in Korea between the United States and Russia. The U. S. was to occupy South Korea which contains two-thirds of Korea's 30 million people. Russia's zone was designated as North Korea. The General Assembly of the United Nations voted overwhelmingly to hold election in both occupation zones and to establish a stable government before withdrawing occupation troops. Evidently the instigators of these outbreaks of violence hope to force the United Nations commission to give up and withdraw. The interim committee will soon meet to decide whether to bow to Russia's veto and withdraw from South Korea or to go ahead alone with the elections and formation of a government. Danger of Civil War Many observers say that to abandon Korea now would lead to inevitable civil war. If the U. S. stays, the people of South Korea will at least have a chance to develop their country along democratic lines. But if the area is vacated and subsequently merged with the north, all hope will be lost. North Korea already has a going government with an army of between 100,-000 and 200,000 men. Its government is backed by Communists who would quickly subject all of South Korea to the same rule that North Korea has now, if the occupation troops were withdrawn and the U. N. given up. Let us hope that the outbreaks convince both the commission and the interim committee that the best hope for a peaceful settlement of the Korean situation still lies in the United Nations—Charles Moffett. The dollar bill—that which takes up room in your purse, but can't fill much space in your cupboard. University Daily Hansan Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS. Member of the Kansas Press Assm. Na- tional Assn., and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Ad- vertising Service, 420 Madison Ave., Buffalo, NY. Editor-in-Chief .. William C. von Maurer Managing Editor .. Alan J. Stewart Asst. Man. Editor .. Cooper Rollow Asst. Man. Editor .. Laura Lauten City Editor .. Gene Vignery Asst. City Editor .. James Robinson Telegraph Editor .. Wallace W. Abbey Telegraph Editor .. Charles Asst. Tel. Editor .. William Barger Sports Editor .. Robert E. Dellinger Asst. Sports Editor .. Paul Zeh Asst. Sports Editor .. James Jones Women's Sports Editor Feature Editor ... Anna Mary Murphy Feature Editor ... John Wheeler Picture Editor Helen Holmes Society Editor ... Dorothy James Business Manager ... Bettie Bacon Manager ... Rober Anderson Circulation Manager ... Ota Koto Classified Ad. Man.. Claire Pawner Class Ad. Manager ... Jessica Clymer Nest Ad. Manager ... David Clymer Promotion Manager ... Wister Shreve On KFKU 2:30 Music by Radio, Mildred Seaman. 9:30 Roundup of Editorial Opinion. Today Chemistry Faculty Publishes Articles Four articles by faculty members of the chemistry department have appeared recently in chemical journals. The January issue of "The Journal of the American Chemistry Society" contains three of these articles. They are by Henry A. Hoffman and Calvin A. VanderWerf; Stephen Stephanou, Calvin A. VanderWerf, and Harry H. Sisler; and William H. Schecter, Harry H. Sisler, and Jacob Kleinberg. An article in the February issue of "The Journal of Physical and Colloid Chemistry" is by Arthur W. Davidson, W. J. Argersinger, and Carl Michaelis. Inter-fraternity council members from 15 midwestern states will attend the Inter-Fraternity council's central regional conference at the University of Oklahoma Friday and Saturday. OU To Sponsor Fraternity Meet Joe McCoskrie, Alpha Tau Omega, and Ralph Kiene, Phi Delta Sigma will represent the University Inter-Fraternity council. The conference is to discuss various problems of the council throughout the Middle West. Fraternity management, pledge training, and rushing problems will be discussed. The Young Republicans club will hold a business meeting at 7:30 p.m. today in 106 Green hall. A report on the recent convention of Young Republicans at Wichita will be given by members who attended. Republicans Meet Today COURT HOUSE LUNCH Meals Short Orders Malts Sandwiches Air Conditioned Open 5:30—12 p.m. Air Conditioned BLOUSES Would you like a touch of distinction added to your spring wardrobe? Then Johnson's suggests the quiet elegance of an EVERGLADE blouse. Perhaps you have seen these lovely blouses in Vogue magazine. . . . Then you know how ornamented hand-detail can add simple dignity to the tailored lines of any suit. But like all EVERGLADE blouses, the wide selection at Johnson's is within reach of even the modest purse. Classically designed in soft rayon and lace trim georgette. 122 Women Enter Ping-Pong JOHNSON'S Sunflower Class Hears Talk One-hundred twenty-two women are entered in the women's table tennis doubles tournament. The first round is to be played off by Saturday. Phone 771 Dean Frank T. Stockton of University Extension spoke on geopolitics Tuesday before the international relations class at Sunflower. 835 Mass. CARL'S have a new shipment of WHITE AIRMAN SHIRTS A fine tailored white Springmaid broadcloth shirt-with a neat short collar. Sizes 14 to $16 \frac{1}{2} - $3.50 We're Glad to Show You- CARL'S SEALY INNERSPRING MATTRESSES $29.50 $39.50 $49.50 A fine mattress will give you more rest at a small cost. SUPERIOR MATTRESS A number of closeouts in one-of-a-kind. Some were up to $34.50—Now $24.50 FRANK'S FURNITURE CO. Phone 834 834 Mass. It's Here The Dance of The Year! THE LEAP-YEAR HOP An All Student Dance THE CLARinetist MARTIN WESTON With Matt Betton Saturday, Feb. 28 And His Orchestra "America's most popular college dance band" $1.75 A Couple Union Ballroom Tickets on sale-Rotunda of Frank Strong, Union building and at dance. THU P 25 wo additi RADI autom or 12 condi $55.00 HI-ST line. evenin Hamp g941 tires. after 1939 cond 1939 urday SEVE good MODI get cy ALMO graphmatic twelve Tenn. SLID plex 2377 1981 dition. ASOM N. N.Y. NEW hand mirror burned bedrood 18-FO tails. 204L WETE for yo- ment of L69 1948 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1948 oomen table Th ff by UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Daily Kansan Classified Ads Phone KU 376 Classified Advertising Rates One day 35c 1e 25 words or less additional words RADIO AND record player combinations automatic record changer, plays 10 inch records, table model, excellent condition, less than year old, 345 $5.00. For Sale 1941 PONTIAC 4-door. Good motor and Call at 1312 Ohio or Phone 3148-5 765-2500. HI-STYLE swing skirt with dipping hemline. Too long for present owner. Calf evenings or Friday mornings at 820 New Hampshire, Mrs. C. A. Harkness. 1 1939 MASTER Delux Chev, Sedan. Good condition. Looks like now one. See Red at 1101 Tenn. after 6 p. m., or on Saturday or Sunday. 27 SEVEN-FOOT NORGE refrigerator, in good condition. See at 1805 Maine. 2 MODEL A TUDOR: Good condition to get you there and back. See at 935 Com- ALMOST New Admiral Radio-Phonograph combination. Table model. Automatic record changer, 2 ten inch or 10 tape. Temp. 75°F. Tenp. after 6 p., m. or on Saturday, 27 SLIDE RULE: Deftzen, Log-Log, Dupl- put, add new, at cost, Ph. 2877 Carl Griswold. 1931 MODEL A FORD: Perfect condition. See after 6:00 p.m. 946 Ili. 16 SOMBINATION TABLE model radio th Webster automatic changer. 1541 MEN'S GRAY pin-stripped suit, size 32, two men's blue sport coats, size 38; one Emerson floor model radio. See at 736 Maine. 26 Ky. Northwest entrance. Evenings. 26 NEW NORGE "5000" oil heat; 38pc. hand painted china set; vanity table, mirror, stool; one breakfast set; two- burner hot plate; also living-room and bedroom drapes. Call 1673-9. 27 18-FOOT RED ARROW house trailer, inlaid linoleum, venetian blinds and curtains. Good condition. Lavern Mausof, 2047 La. 26 VETERAN! We will buy, trade or sell for you who Any军或 Navy gear in good condition that you may wish to store. Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. Phone: 669 HTFD For Rent WILL HAVE ROOM for one male student. 1416 March. March 1. Replacing student room. SLEEPING ROOM for boy. Close to the campus, 1142 Indiana. Phone: 1810W ROOMS FOR boy boys double double to to VACANCY: Single bed. Also board. Phone. 2180W. 27 APT5. FOR BOYS: for two to four and five to six boys. Shower and tub on same floor with apts; single beds and cooking facilities in each apt. $15 a month for each boy. Also 1 single room. All on W. 14th St. Phone 3331 or 2099. 27 LARGE, CLEAN one-room apartment for rent to employed couple with small child whom I can care for during daytime. 506 W. 6th. Ph 1344-W 20 VACANCY: for two men together. close to the Hill. 1228 Louisiana. 26 HAVE ROOM for one woman student from our school. Ph. 324W8 Mrs. Wilson, 1229 Ohio VERY attractive room for two boys, twin beds, near campus. 1137 Kry. Mrs. Oley. Ph. 2234W. tt Miscellaneous TYPING: Reasonable rates on typing of Prompt, Prompt, accurate service. P 124L2. A CAPPELLA chair and women's glove club. Sunday program recorded on Soundmirror magnetic ribbon recorder. Hear program anytime at Peterson's 6 UPHOLSTERY, slip-covers. drapes. Let us take care of all these needs for you. All upholstery, slip cover, drape material for sale. Our work guaranteed the best. Active years in business in Kentucky. Crown Upholstership. 837 Vermont. Ph. 143 FREE OFFER: Photo copies of discharge papers, marriage certificates for military credit or school entrance. 3 for pile of 2. Round Corner Drug. 5 for pile of 2. Round Corner Drug. 5 DANCE every Saturday night at odd Fel- orchestra. Informal. Joe Lang唐 orchestra. rites WANTED: week end transportation (ride) to Tulsa. Will be glad to leave anytime after 11:00 Friday. Call Elden C. Tefft 2514-J. 27 Transportation RIDERS WANTED: Leaving every Friday evening for Emporia, Newton and Wichita. Returning every Sunday evening. Call 3170. Harry Shultz. 26 EAST FOR Easter? Two students looking for ride to and from East coast airports for Easter vacation. Share expenses and driving. Call 2041, asw for Joe or Ed. Lost BROWN BILLFOLD: Containing identification, activity book and misc.collection. Please contact Wilma Duncan after 9:00 p.m. Phone 2295. 26 9:50 p.m. Phone 228.5 BROWN BILLFOLD on 2nd floor of Union bldg. If found please call 3244 and ask for Ione Cole. 27 LOG-DUPLEX slide-rule: permanent loss of which will necessitate my taking the math. Finder please contact Charles Spence. Ph 1960-23 —No questions, reward. MALE STUDENT or instructor to share clean, well lighted and heated double-room. Bedding furnished. Can make breakfast in room. 1223 Vermont. 3 APARTMENT WANTED: Student, veteran, no children. Desire two or three rooms and furnishings. Occupancy will be two to 10. Call J. A. Ross, Ph. 1810 W. 26 The mines of Ohio produce large quantities and varieties of minerals, including oil, coal, natural gas, salt, potash and pyrite. Clearance Drastic Reduction on RADIOS FRIDAY THURSDAY Motorola Delco - Federal Minerva SATURDAY National Union Now Were 32. 00 to 35.00 28. 95 $37.75 $28.95 19. 95 BEAMAN'S RADIO SHOP 24. 95 4 Faculty Members To Attend Meeting Phone 140 Four faculty members will attend the national convention of the American Association of University Professors to be held in St. Louis tomorrow and Saturday. 1200 New York They are J. O. Maloney, professor of chemical engineering; W. D. Paden, associate professor of English; Tom Page, instructor in political science, and E. O. Stene, associate professor of political science. The A.A.U.P. is the professional organization of college and university teachers. EYE WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES The Eye Symbol Large Selection of Distinctive Frames Lawrence Optical Co. Sunday Supper Buffet Style 5:30 - 7:30 The Castle Tea Room 13th Mass. Phone 149 RAY'S CAFE has really a fine variety of foods ready - for you at any - time of day or night—any day ● of the week. - Had some - ● of Uncle - chicken? - Ed's fried - $1.00 - 4 MILES NORTH-EAST - of Lawrence on U.S. 40. Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers. JON FOR THE HEIGHT OF THE PARTY SEASON Platforms 110 by "Siren" Black Calf White Suede "Royal Duchess" Red Calf Kelly Green Calf Black Patent HOLLYWOOD INSPIRED Jolène SHOES ADVERTISING TO LIFE $8.95 Gleeful, young platform shoes . . . styled for YOU in Hollywood by JOLENE. Smart Spring patterns . . truly different designs at easy- THE on-your-pulse prices. 813 Massachusetts Walker SHOP X-RAY FITTINGS Phone 259 PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 26, 1948 Official Bulletin Feb. 26, 1948 W.A.A. Fun Fest, 7:30 tonight, Robinson gym, A. W.S. Senate, 4 today, office of dean of women. ___ Sachem Circle, Omicron Delta Kappa, 9 tonight, 220 Frank Strong. Mortar Board, 8 tonight, office of dean of women. ___ Forensic League, 7:30 tonight. Little Theater, Green hall. Call Joan Rettig, 3140 if unable to attend. Organizational meeting, Wallace for President club, 7 tonight, Pine room. Union. George Lurie, Topeka attorney, speaker. Quack club, 7:30 tonight, Rob- inson gym. ___ Morning devotions each day, 8:30-8:50 a.m. during Lent at Danforth chapel. chapel. Engineering council, 5:15 tonight, 210 Marvin. Christian Science organization 7:30 tonight, Danforth Chapel. Ku Ku's, 7:30 tonight, 200 Frank Strong. Le Cercle Francais, jeudi a sept heures et demie, 113 Frank Strong hall. Madame Kern fera une causerie. Pre-Nursing club, 4 today, Fraser dining room. El Ateneo will sponsor film on Colombia, given by Mr. and Mrs. Judson, 4 today, Fraser theater. Dinner to follow. Those interested in attending latter sign and pay in 117 Frank Strong. Snow Zoology club, 7:30 tonight, 206 Snow. E. L. Cockrum to speak on "Summer Collecting in Wyoming." Color movies. Refreshments. 426 ming. College club. 7:30 tonight, 423 Ladgeley. Edinburgh to show color films and slides and lecture on "Ecology of Marine Invertebrates." N. S.A. (Negro Students' Association) 7.15 tonight, Myers hall auditorium. Camera club, 7:30 tonight, 426 Lindley. Dr. Laudon will show slides. Slide rule course, second section 7 tonight,9 Frank Strong. Young Republican club, 7:30 to night, 106 Green hall. Four-No Bridge club, duplicate bridge session. 7:30 tonight, west wing, Union ballroom. A.I.E.E., 7:30 tonight, 101 Snow. Mr. Boardman of K.E.P., speaker. Deutscher Verein wird sich Donnerstag um 4:30 in 402 Fraser versammeln. Herr Sigmund Hagen wird über seine Heimat sprechen. All new undergraduate students who failed to take entrance tests given at afternoon session Jan. 31, report to Lindley hall auditorium before 2 p.m. Saturday for make-up. Alpha Phi Omega, open meeting, 7 tonight, Kansas room, Union. Official notice of four vacancies in All-Student Council due to resignation of Bob Wehe, Dist. III; Art Rupnethal, Dist. III; Bill Cole, Dist. IV; and Duane Postlethwaite, Dist. II. DIST. 17 Registrants for Law School admissions test report to Frank Strong auditorium before 8:45 a.m. Saturday. Ph.D. German reading examination 9 a.m. Saturday, 306 Fraser Final registration date Friday, Graduate office. Book About 'Rockies Published For West "Writing in the Rocky Mountains," a critical analysis of novels and poetry, was published recently by Ray B. West, associate professor of English. Mr. West devotes a section of the book to pointing out difficulties that confront an author when he attempts to write about the Rocky Mountains. He cites and criticizes four works of fiction coming from the Rocky Mountain area. They are Vardis Fisher's "Children of God," Maurine Whipple's "The Giant Joshua," Walter Van Tilburg Clark's "The Ox-Bow Incident," and Wallace Stegner's "The Big Rock Candy Mountain." Square Dance club, instruction for beginners. 7 p.m. Mar. 2, Kansas room, Union. Everyone welcome. Panel discussion, universal military training, First Baptist church, 5:30 p.m. Sunday, sponsored by Baptist Youth Fellowship and Y.M.-Y.W.C.A. Phi Sigma, noon Monday, 301 Snow, Dr. Arthur Shanahan; "Induced Changes in Morphology Caused by Penicillin." Y.W.C.A. all-membership meeting, 4 p.m. Mar. 2. Kansas room, Union. To vote on changes in constitution and elect two members to nominating committee. Refreshments. All committees, Student Union activities, 7 p.m. Mar., 3 Fraser hall, following rooms: secretarial, 205; service, 206; entertainment, 209; announcements, 210; decorations, 213; publicity, 306; library, 307; public liaison, 308; coffees and forums, 309; clubs and organizations, 310; intramurals, 311; posters, 305; social, 312. Hamilton Recital Given Wednesday Although he is an undergraduate, Hamilton displayed the dexterity of an experienced performer. The program was well-planned and included a varied selection of music adaptable to organ presentation. Robert Jerald Hamilton, fine arts senior, presented his senior organ recital in Hoch auditorium Wednesday. It was the only organ recital scheduled this semester. Five KU Students Lecture To Toperka Speech Class Five University students appeared before a public speaking class in Topeka High school Tuesday. Students and their topics were Kenneth Beasley, "How to Organize a Talk?" Joe Beeler, Jr., "Gaining Confidence": William Conboy, "Words," Newell Jenkins, "What Do Listeners Like?" The program, "Voice and Speech in Business and Industry," was part of a short course on speaking offered by University Extension. Jean Moore spoke on the Missouri Valley forensic league. Orville Roberts, Jr., graduate student. was in charge. AMERICAN TELEPHONE & RAPH CO. BELL SYSTEM AND ASSOCIATED COMPANIES There 's a good reason why WESTERN ELECTRIC is in this family circle As the supply member of the family, Western Electric makes telephone equipment, buys all kinds of supplies, keeps these things in stock at 29 distributing houses for delivery to the telephone companies, and installs central office equipment. Western Electric is a member of the Bell System family circle for exactly the same reason that your local Bell Telephone company is a member—to assure the close teamwork that is essential for efficient, economical, nation-wide telephone service for you. This unified service of supply results in many economies to the Bell Telephone companies and, in turn, to you who use the telephone. Since 1882, Western Electric has been a member of the Bell Telephone family—helping to make your service the world's best at the lowest possible cost. Western Electric Western Electric A UNIT OF THE BELL SYSTEM SINCE 1882 NICE SYSTEM Dr. Chester S. Keefer of Boston will fill the 15th annual Porter lectureship at the University School of Medicine, Dean H. R. Wahl announced today. Dr. Keefer is Wade professor of medicine at Boston university. He is a specialist in the use of penicillin and other so-called "wonder drugs." Promoter Of Racial Unity The Rev. A. J. Musty, executive secretary of the Fellowship of Reconciliation, will be the guest speaker at a dinner meeting of the Y. M. C. A. cabinet and the freshman cabinet at 6 p. m. March 9 in the Union. the union. The Rev. Mr. Musty, who is former director of the Labor Temple in New York, has been active in the promotion of racial unity throughout the United States. JUST GOT A MOTOR TUNE UP AT CHANNEL-SANDERS 622 Mass. Phone 616 JUST GOT A MOTOR TUNE UP AT CHANNEL-SANDERS 622 Mass. Phone 616 they're RED... they're PLATFORM'D... they're so SPRING '48! $8.45 Jacqueline as seen in Vogue In vivid red calfskin... they're just what you want to brighten your dark or neutral-tone dresses and suits! Sandal style also with medium-high heel. F $8.45 Jacqueline as seen in Vogue Haynes and Keene 819 Massachusetts 1948 utivye Re University Daily Kansan 45th Year No.98 February 27,1948 for- able in in theough- STUDENT NEWSPAPER Friday, February 27, 1948 Lawrence, Kansas 'Red Aggression Greater Menace Than Hitler' Washington, Feb. 27.-(UP)—Secretary of Commerce W. Averell Harriman has warned congress that Russian aggression is "a greater menace than Hitler." Mr. Harriman's statement was made public by the house appropriations committee today as it voted $503,429,263 to run the state, commerce and justice departments and the federal courts during the fiscal year starting July 1. Mr. Harriman, former ambassador to Moscow, said at committee hearings that unless communism is stopped in western Europe, "we will face a situation that we cannot deal with, and the balance of power, which now is predominately in our favor, will be against us." "Unfortunately, there are aggressive forces in the world coming from the Soviet union which are just as destructive in their effect on the world and our own way of life as Hitler was, and I think are a greater menace than Hitler was," Mr. Harriman said. Mr. Marshall said the United States is "basically friendly" to the Russian people. But he said Soviet officials are "very slow to agree, rather difficult in negotiation, and I would say generally suspicious of our motives." He said he believed the United States can deal with these forces now. But if this country turns its back on Europe, he said, it soon will face "an unmanageable situation." Wallace Bids In Minnesota Minneapolis, Feb. 27—(UP)—Henry A. Wallace makes his first direct appeal today to the farmers and laborers of Minnesota for support of his third party candidacy for president. Mr. Wallace will spend three days in Minnesota making speeches and conferring with farm and labor groups. Mr. Wallace still has a chance to win the endorsement of the coalition of Democrats and the once-powerful Farmer-Labor party in Minnesota. Former Gov. Elmer Benson is national chairman of the Wallace party and he may be able to swing the coalition to Wallace despite a major set-back last week. If Mr. Wallace succeeded in winning the support of the party, President Truman would be forced to as an Independent in Minnesota. Union Annex To Stay Cool The anti-Wallace faction of the Democrat-Farmer-Labor group, led by Mayor Hubert Humphrey of Minneapolis, minimizes the possibility that Mr. Benson can swing the party to Mr. Wallace at the state convention. Students attending the summer session this year will have at least one cool spot for lounging. The new annex of the Union will be air conditioned, according to Miss Hermina Zipple, director of the Union. Air conditioning units have arrived. One of them was broken but will be replaced. WEATHER Kansas—Showers today and tonight, except occasional thunderstorms east. Tomorrow partly cloudy and colder. High today 55 to 65. Library Has Staff Of 100 Students Studying is a big business, according to Ray Janeway, assistant director of Watson library. To handle the hundreds of books which daily change hands across library counters, nearly 100 students, plus the permanent staff, are employed. Personnel turnover is about 25 per cent each semester. There is always a backlog of applications for jobs. Availability of the student during the hours needed and previous experience are considered in hiring students, Janeway added. Business Good In Police Court The Lawrence police court has been doing a roaring business since the campus police have been appointed regular officers of the city force. six students appeared in the court this morning and a total of 20 students and faculty have been in court during the past two sessions. The list of students and faculty given tickets for parking and traffic violations are: Dean W. Cox, College junior; Martha Fritz, College senior; Glenn E. Stallard, business junior; R. D. Adcock, law; A. W. Chandler, business senior; Robert M. Idol, College sophmore; Jesse E. Stewart, College junior; Vincent Di Carlo, engineering sophomore; Harold D. Nelson, College junior. Guidance Bureau To Give Law Exams Frances Tee, instructor in speech, Robert E. McKee, engineering soph- omore; Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of education; J. O. Jones, professor of applied mechanics; Eloda G. Morrison, education freshman; Fred Mitchelson, law; George D. Clay, college sophomore; Edward M. Stryker, engineering junior; Murray R. Arrowsmith, engineering senior; George E. Wolfe, graduate, and Edsel L. Crawford, College junior. The Guidance bureau will give a national law school admission examination at 8:45 a. m. tomorrow in Frank Strong auditorium. Five University students will take the examination along with five other students from colleges in Kansas. The University is the examination center. Hugh W. Gibson, College senior, was elected student chairman of the Campus Missionary fellowship Wednesday. Helen M. Stringham, fine arts junior, was elected secretary. The test will be given again May 8. Students who want to take the exam must register in advance with the college entrance examination board, Princeton, N. J. Students wishing further information should see Glenn Cole, of the Guidance bureau, Franklin Strong annex B. The University does not require the examination for entrance into the law school, Dean F. J. Moreau said today. Harrison E. Madden, College sophomore, has been acting chairman since the group was organized at the Christian Frontiers conference held at the University during the Christmas vacation. Gibson To Head Missionary Group 1. Strengthening the missionary ideas of the members. 2. Presenting the concept of missionary work to other groups. Objectives of the group are: 5. Adming missionary work here and abroad. Benes Installs Czech Cabinet Prague, Feb. 27—(UP)—President Eduard Benes administered the oath of allegiance to Communist Premier Klement Gottwald's hand-picked cabinet of 15 ministers today, giving a semblance of legality to the lightning Communist coup. President Benes said he accepted Premier Gottwald's cabinet to avoid "general chaos" in his country. He said he found this decision "very difficult" and had arrived at it only after long and serious consideration. Later an official spokesman charged foreign correspondents here with misusing facilities and filing untrue or distorted news stories abroad during the crisis. "I have seen that any other solution would deepen the crisis and lead to a sharp division of the nation." President Benes said in accepting the new Communist government. The spokesman said that "proper measures, according to the circumstances" will be taken against correspondents who continue to do that. The sole judges of distortion in dispatches will be the foreign and information ministries, he said GOP Would Arm China Washington, Feb. 27-(UP)—Two leading Republican senators today called for an arms-for-China "rider" on the new 275 billion dollar Greece-Turkey military aid bill. Robert A. Taft of Ohio and Styles Bridges of New Hampshire said in separate interviews that congress should send more American planes and ammunition to the anti-communist forces of Chiang Kai-Shek. They suggested that the administration's request for a second installation on the Near East "quarantine communism" program be used to accomplish this end. Secretary of State George C. Marshall asked congress yesterday for an additional 275 billion dollars to meet "critical" Greek guerrilla on slaughters and Soviet pressure on Turkey. Senator Taft maintained that "the situation in China and Greece is largely identical." Although he voted for the original Greece-Turkey program "with reluctance," he called for vigorous American military aid to anti-communist forces in China. Petition blanks may be obtained from any A. W. S. house representative or from the office of the dean of women. Petitions must be turned in by March 2 either to the office of the dean of women, Joan Anderson, or Betty van der Smissen. Applications for Associated Women Students senate seats are now available for interested women students. AWS Senate Taking Applicants Senate positions open are president, vice-president, secretary, treasurer, and two All Student Council representatives' seats. The president must have served previously in the senate. The vice-president must have served one semester in the A.W.S. house of representatives. The vice-president will become the house president. The secretary must be a sophomore during her term of office. The defeated presidential candidate will become chairman of the president's council. The defeated vice-presidential candidate will be election committee chairman. The second high candidate in each office will also be in the senate. Legion Of Honor Awarded Graduate The French Legion of Honor was awarded to Lt. Gen. Ennis C. Whitehead '20, Kansas City, commander of the United States Far East air forces recently. He was among nine officers who received the decoration. Gen. Whitehead was born at Westphalia, Kan. Gen. Zinovi Peckhoff, French ambassador, presented the awards "in recognition of their deeds of heroism" in the war. Wallace Club Elects Officers The Jayhawkers-for-Wallace club will be a student organization but will co-operate with out-of-town groups, the club decided at its first meeting Thursday night. The following temporary officers were elected: Frank Stannard, chairman; Charles W. Sherrer, vicechairman; L. Dewey Radcliff, secretary, and Sherwood Reber, treasurer. George Lurie, graduate student in political science, told the group that Wallace-supporting clubs are not being organized merely to scare the Republican and Democratic parties. "If Wallace is put on the 1948 Kansas ballot, he will receive several thousand votes," Lurie said. "If he is elected, American will return to the progressive path where she belongs." Bill Price, secretary-treasurer of the Topeka Wallace-for-President club, outlined the progress of similar organizations throughout the country. He said that "Kansas was slow in getting started, but the results are amazing." Russell H. Barrett, instructor in political science, will speak on "Must We Fight Russia?" at a rally in Topeka March 5. An informal state conference will be held in the capital city March 6 to organize a petition program to list Wallace's name on the presidential ballet. Disabled Veterans Training Extended Reduced-time training privileges have been extended to all disabled veterans qualifying for training under the vocational rehabilitation act. Public Law 16 Formerly privileges were given only to veterans with arrested pulmonary tuberculosis and those whose disabilities prevented them from taking full time training. 10 qualify, a veteran must first obtain approval from a V. A. medical consultant. He is then required to take credit hours equal in number to the maximum set by the consultant. The load will be increased gradually until a full time program is reached. The course will be considered as full time training if the employ- tory of the veteran is restored, and if the program is completed in sched- ulated time. If the veteran is not able to increase his schedule after three months, he will be placed under former reduced-time requirements. Beta Theta Pi To Celebrate its 75th Year At KU Beta Theta Pi, national social fraternity, will celebrate its 75th year at the University tomorrow and Sunday. The chapter, the first national fraternity established here, has initiated 832 members during the 75 years. Chancellor Deane W. Malott and Franklin D. Murphy, dean-elect of the School of Medicine are alumni of the local chapter. William Conboy, College junior is president. CORE, Cafes Issue Statements In Race Dispute The dispute between the Committee on Racial Equality and Lawrence cafe managers over the question of racial discrimination in four restaurants near the University campus continued today with statements being issued by both sides. "According to my lease I am not allowed to serve food, drinks, or give service to any person of African descent." Merle A. Cline, co-manager of the Cottage cafe, told the committee. Managers of the Rock Chalk and Cottage cafes were interviewed Thursday by Robert Stewart, C.O. R.E. chairman, and two Negro members, Floyd Thuston and Wesley Elliott. The manager presented his lease in support of his statement. "If the owner of your building would agree would you also agree to change the clause?" Stewart asked Mr. Cline. The manager replied that it "is very unlikely the owner will change the clause. I know him pretty well." Rock Chalk Opposed Ivan D. Rowe, manager of the Rock Chalk, told C.O.R.E. that his position was the same as always. Stewart then asked the manager how this could be accomplished . how this could be accomplished "That's not my problem," Mr. Roen- louz said. "No reason to confine your efforts to near-the-campus establishments." "Mixing groups doesn't seem to work in this type of business," he said. "It just isn't being done in Lawrence or, so far as I know, in this section of the country." Mr. Rowe said that until it becomes a general practice to serve both races together, "no few cafes could afford to try it." "Discrimination against Negroes as practiced by the cafes at K.U. is a flagrant denial of the principles of our democracy, and it is a gross injustice to the Negro students. In a telephone conversation with the University Daily Kansan Thursday, Carl J. Clifton, manager of the Jayhawk cafe said that he was not backing down on his stand. Stewart issued the following statement in defense of C.O.R.E.s campaign: W. E. Murphy, manager of Brick's cafe, told a University Daily Kansan reporter today. "I'll have no negotiations with C.O.R.E. If I had some way of identifying the members of C.O.R.E. I would not give service to any of them." Injustice To Negroes "C.O.R.E. has no grudge against the owners as individuals and does not wish to interfere with their rights except when their practices conflict with the basic American concepts of Christianity, democracy, and fair play." At a meeting Thursday night the Negro Students association resolved to support C.O.R.E.'s campaign. The resolution passed by the members states: "We announce that whatever service the Negro Students association and its officers can do shall be fully dedicated to this struggle. We furthermore urge all Negroes to devote themselves in practice as well in principle to the effort to expand the areas of non-discrimination." AFL Labor Leaders To Hear Professors About 100 representatives of A. F, of L unions throughout the state are expected to attend the leaders institute of the Kansas State Federation of Labor to be held at the University March 13 and 14, Frank T. Stockton, dean of University Extension, said today. 42 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1948 PAGE TWO 4 KU Officials Return Today Four University officials will return today from a naval education conference in Pensacola, Fla. E. B. Stouffer, dean of the University; L. C. Woodruff, dean of men; Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to the chancellor, and Captain J. V. Peterson, professor of naval science, have been attending a meeting for educators concerning a new naval aviation flight training program. Captain Peterson joined the others after a naval conference in Alameda, Calif. The four will return together. Professor Kester Honored Frederick E. Kester, professor emeritus of physics, has been made an emeritus life member of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. prot. Kester taught at the University from 1909 to 1944, when he retired. Tom Page of the bureau of government research is the son-in-law of Prof. Kester. University Daily Kansan Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawnence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawnence, Kan., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. Mail to Lawnence, Kan., periods Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879. IT'S A 6 MINUTE DRIVE TO THE TEE PEE and (Sizzling) Steak Dinners COCOO (Southern Style) Barbecued Ribs Teepee - Sandwiches—Drinks - Dancing every nite - Open daily except Monday - Sunday's, 4 p.m.—11 p.m THE TEE PEE Phone 2013 Hiway 40 20% DISCOUNT FOR CASH & CARRY CLEANING ME untry ners Be well-dressed always... Frequent pressing and dry cleaning will preserve the life and appearance of your clothes. ACME Bachelor Laundry and Dry Cleaners 1111 Mass. Phone 646 Morgan-Mack 609 Mass. Service----Ford----Sales — AND ANOTHER STEP FORWARD Now, a new Electrical Service Department and a new Motor Tune-Up Department!!! It's service that you'll know is finer-for cars of any make!!! BRING YOUR FORD HOME TO YOUR FORD DEALER For something fine----see Ford for '49 CENTURY FIVE 10 Reference Book Sale 10c:25c 3 for 25c 5 for $1 Save needless hours of waiting at the library many of the books you need are here at this sale. Come in and browse around. Rowlands SUPERIOR GREAT WAR OF 1812-1845 At our main store - 1401 Ohio Read The University Daily Kansan -- Patronize Its Advertisers STANDING IN LINE— is getting to be almost a habit. You did it when you enrolled. You do it at the theatre and you often do it here. BUT— anywhere, where people are willing to stand in line to be waited on, is a good place to do business. JOIN THE LINE OF SATISFIED CUSTOMERS who are constantly finding this a pleasant and profitable place to do business. THE LAWRENCE NATIONAL BANK 647 Mass. Member FDIC FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE THREE 1948 Up And Coming Today Today Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship party, Myers hall, 7:30 to 10:15 p.m. Sigma Alpha Epsilon costume party, Community building, 8:30 to 11:30 p.m. Sophomore Hop, Ballroom of the Union, 9 to midnight. Sigma Chi tea dance, chapter house, 2 to 4:00 p.m. Saturday Henley Co-op dinner-dance, 1236 Oread, 6 to midnight. Sunday Alpha Omicron Pi supper, chapter house. Two University debate teams will travel to Indiana university and Nebraska university today to participate in debate contests. Debate Teams To Travel Today Those going to Indiana will be Robert Bennett, College sophomore; Ralph Eacock, College junior; Ben Foster, College senior; and Herbert Coles, business senior. The debaters will compete against schools from the Great Lakes and mid-western regions on "Resolved, that a federal world government should be established." At the Nebraska tournament the University will be represented by Fred Craw, Lee Reiff, Kent Shearer, and Steve Mills, all College freshmen. The same question will be used at Nebraska against competition from Missouri, Iowa, Nebraska, and Kansas. E. C. Buehler, professor of speech and director of debate, will accompany the team to Nebraska and Orville Roberts, instructor of speech, will go to Indiana. Glee Club To Sing In Kansas City The Men's Glee club will present a concert at church services in Grand avenue temple, Kansas City, Mo. at 7.30 p.m. Sunday. The glee club is directed by Joseph F. Wilkins. Roger Butts, fine arts freshman, will accompany. Approximately 60 members will make the trip by special bus. Rehearsal will be held Sunday afternoon in Kansas City. The church will be hosts to the group at dinner. The program will include folk songs, negro spirituals, and religious numbers. The church choir will join the glee club in the "Pilgrim Chorus" from "Tannhauser." Clarence Hooper, education junior, John Mowers, business junior, and DuMont Reed, education senior will be soloists. The University has been invited to send delegates to Republican and Democratic mock- political conventions to be held April 1, 2, 3, at Lindenwood college, St. Charles, Mo. KU Delegates To Mock Conventions According to the invitation received by the department of political science, the conventions will be addressed by political leaders of national importance. Republicans and Democrats will meet to hear the speakers, but will draft dates in separate sessions. Any student interested in attending the conventions or desirin, more information concerning, them, should contact Prof. E. O. Stene, 204 Frank Strong. Fountain pens with the names of the owners engraved on them will be awarded to all persons who worked at the student book store during the rush at the beginning of the semester. Fountain Pen Bonus For Bookstore Workers L. E. Wooley, manager of the book store, said that the pens are a bonus "for long hours of hard work put in by the employees." They may select they type of pen they want. Call KU 376 with your Want Ads. Official Bulletin Feb. 27, 1948 Official notice of five vacancies in All-Student Council because of resignation of Shirley Wellborn, Dist. II; Bob Wehe, Dist. III; Art Ruppeenthal, Dist. III; Bill Cole, Dist. IV; and Duane Postlethwaite, Dist. II. K. U. chapter, Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship party, 7:30 tonight Myers hall, upstairs. Bible Study group cancelled for tonight only. Ph.D. German reading examination, 9 am, tomorrow, 306 Fraser. Final registration today, Graduate office. All new undergraduate students who failed to take entrance tests given at afternoon session Jan. 31, report to Lindley Hall auditorium before 2 p. m. tomorrow for makeup. Registrants for Law School Admission Test report to Frank Strong auditorium before 8:45 a.m. tomorrow. Baptist Youth Fellowship and Y.M.-Y.W.C.A. to sponsor panel discussion on universal military training at First Baptist church, 5:30 p.m. Sunday. Kansan Board, 4 p.m. Monday, 107. Journalism. Registered Nurses' club, 7:30 p. m. Monday, Community bldg. Film on rehabilitation. Election. All R.N.'s. I.S.A. Council, 4 p.m. Monday, Pine room, Union. Note change in time and place. Phi Sigma, noon Monday, 301 Snow, Dr. Arthur Shanahan: "Induced Changes in Morphology Caused by Penicillin." Special Palestine meeting, 7 p.m. Monday, Myers hall. For Jewish students and others. ___ Anyone interested in office of editor of Kan-Do, monthly paper of I.S.A., apply at I.S.A. desk, 228 Frank Strong. Call Alice Wismer for additional information. Chemistry club, 4 p.m. Tuesday. 305 Bailey, Dr. Argersinger: "Radio- chemistry and Atomic Energy." Refreshments. Y. W. C. A. all-membership meeting, 4 p.m. Tuesday, Kansas room, Union. To vote on changes in constitution and elect two members to nominating committee. Refreshments. CARL'S have a NEW shipment of SPRING SLACKS - Bedford Cords Bedford Cords • Shepherd Checks • Flannels • Glen Plaids • Gabardines • Coverts Court To Hear Traffic Violators Featuring the California Waistband with a hand-needled side seam $13.95 to $15.95 See Them Now At— Lawrence police court will meet at 4:30 p. m. every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, Traffic Officer Robert Corwin said today. All persons receiving red tickets on the campus will be required to appear in court on one of the these days. The regulation begins March 1. CARL'S GOOD CLOTHES Extension Adds Three Courses Courses in welding, machine shop, and life insurance salesmanship have been added to the University Extension program. About 35 men applied for the welding classes but Prof. Paul G. Hausman, instructor of the course, was able to enroll only 16. Enrollment for the Machine 2 class has not been completed. Both courses will be held from 7:30 to 9:30 p. m. on Mondays and Fridays for 10 weeks. Instruction in life insurance sales- manship will begin in Wichita March 6. Classes are to be held Saturday mornings for four weeks. The Kansas low pressure-gas service school, being held under the auspices of University Extension, will end today. More than 150 persons attended. Home Economists Will Meet The annual meeting of the Kansas State Association of Home Economics will be held at the University Mar. 18 to 20. Between 400 and 500 persons are expected to attend, said Prof. Edna A. Hill, chairman of the department of home economics. Square Dance club, instruction for beginners, 7 p.m. Tuesday, Kansas room, Union. Everyone welcome. All committees, Student Union Activities, 7 p. m. Wednesday, Fraser hall, following rooms: secretarial, 205; service, 206; entertainment, 209; publicity, 306; library, 307; public announcements, 210; decorations, 213; liaison, 308; coffee and forums, 309; clubs and organizations, 310; intramurals, 311; poster, 305; social, 312. THE GOLD RUSH IS ON! Gleaming gold sandals for glittering formalis. Treat yourself to a festive whirl with "Flippy No. 4", a dream of a gold kid Sandal by Johansen $18.95 ... $18.95 Flippv No. 4 Job (a' or dance lightly and brightly in "First Nighter" by John Schroeder, simply smart and smartly simple in gold or silver . . $5.95 S sin and sim or silver . $5.> First Nighter by First Nighter by John Schroeder EXCLUSIVE WITH US THE Walker SHOP 813 Massachusetts Phone 259 COLLECTIONS OF VINYL RECORDS BY JOHN W. MILLER AND CASEY S. MILLER A COLLECTION OF VINYL RECORDS BY JOHN W. MILLER AND CASEY S. MILLER RECORDS DO YOU HAVE A RECORD LIBRARY? No matter how small your budget a comprehensive record library can be acquired at a minimum cost with a maximum of enjoyment. If in doubt as to building your collection—visit our record department and let us suggest libraries to you at various cost levels. WRIGHT'S The Most Complete Record Department in Eastern Kansas 1.1.1 PAGE FOUR UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 27, 1948 Schnellbacher Will Play In East-West Star Game Otto Schnellbacher, three-time all-Big Six forward, will become the second Kansas basketball player in history to play in the annual New York Herald-Tribune's East-West all-star game. Dr. F. C. Allen, Kansas coach, received a telegram Thursday afternoon from Everett Morris of the Herald-Tribune asking for Schnellbacher's Kansas, beaten in all three of its indoor dual meets this winter, nevertheless hopes to use its small band of top performers for a first division finish in the first Big Seven indoor track and field meet in Kansas City tomorrow. Track Title Is At Stake Missouri is heavily favored to take its second successive indoor championship, but Bill Easton's Kansans, anchored by distance aces Bob Karnes and Hal Moore, high-jumper Tom Scofield, and broad jump Bob Crowley will make a stout bid for second or third. They took third in Conference Records services in the game. 60-yard dash Walters (M) : 06.2 440-yard dash Lydy (O) : 49.3 880-yard run Lyda (O) : 15.65 Mile run Ginn (N) : 41.97 Two-mile run Smethers (O) : 9.369 High hurdles Blakeley (M) : 07.5 Low hurdles Shy (M) : 06.9 Gartiser (M) : 06.9 Mile relay Iowa State : 3:26.9 Shot put Quirk (M) : 52' 1" High jump Lambeth (O) : 6' 5" Pole vault Hunt (N) : 13' 10''" Broad pump Pedersen (I-S) 24' 1/8" Karnes Is Unbeaten both the indoor and outdoor meets last season. Rework. Unheaten Karnes, who has won six straight races through the indoor season, will be favored in both the mile and two mile. His best time in the mile is 4:23.7 and if he is pushed, he might eclipse the 4:19.7 record up by Nebraska's Bobby Ginn last year. He is defending champion in the two mile and should repeat without much trouble. Moore has trailed Karnes home second in five of their six dual meet starts this season, and should pull home second or third in both events against the conference field Saturday. Crowley In Tough Field Scocfield is another potential record smasher. The two-time red and blue all-American climbed over 6'4½" in the season's opener against Missouri and hit it 6'4 7-8" lst Saturday winning his specialty against Nebraska. Delvin Norris will help the Jayhawker cause. Crowley, 1947 Texas Relays champion, will face a tough broad jump field. Crowley, Hobo Gilstrap of Oklahoma, Bob Teel of Missouri, and Bob Memery of Colorado already have smudged 23 feet. The following men will leave at 7:45 tonight for the trip to Kansas City for the meet: High jump—Delvin Norris, Tom Scofield, Bill Richardson; broad jump—Bob Crowley, Howard Nearing, Bob Bunten; pole vault—Darell Norris; shot put—Ed Lee, Leroy Robinson; mile and 2 miles-Bob Karnes, Hal Moore; 880-Dick Shea, Winton Studt; 440-Dick Wagstaff, Bill Bintzer, John Sitites, Bob Daneberg; hurdles—Conrad Follansbee; 60 yard dash-Bob Daneberg. Call K. U. 251 With Your News "Would like every much to have Otto Schnellbacher represent Kansas in the East - West College All-Star game at Madison Square garden March 25, reporting Mar. 20," the delegat I teach SCHNELLBACHER S ch nell bachers' acceptance was wired to Morris late Thursday. "It is a well-deserved tribute to Otto Schnellbacher," Dr. Allen said. "He has been one of the finest athletes at Kansas in years. He is a gentleman and a great competitor." The only other Kansas player ever to participate in the East-West game was Charlie "The Hawk" Black, who played in the 1946 and 1947 games. Black was all-conference forward in 1942, 1943, 1946, and 1947, and was named to the first-team all-American selections in 1946. Both Black and Schnellbacher played with the all-victorious teams (conference play) of 1943 and 1946. Wilkinson Refuses Yale Grid Job Norman, Okla., Feb. 27—(UP) —University of Oklahoma Football Coach Bud Wilkinson insisted today he had not talked to any "officials" about the head coaching job at Yale, but added that he would refuse any offer. It was reliably reported that Wilkinson was approached by a member of the Yale alumni board who told him he could have the Yale job if he wants it. Dr. George L. Cross, O. U. president, confirmed this report backhandedly when he said, "It is my understanding that Bud has been offered a contract by Yale. I am glad he has decided to remain at Oklahoma." The former University of Minnesota star already has been seriously considered this year by Harvard and Navy, but decided to remain here. He has been head coach at O. U. only one year. His team won a co-team championship in SWC winning seven games, losing two and tying one. the matter of an assistant coach is still up in the air. Walt Driskill, assistant at the University of Maryland, conferred with Wilkinson Thursday and was regarded as the No.1 candidate to succeed Dutch Febring, who is going to U. C. L. A., but it was believed no decision would be made this week. The Yale position has been vacant since Howie Ocell left to take the head coaching job at the University of Washington. Oxford, Mass.—(UP)—Charles B. Pettes of Oxford has a Swiss music box with a spring so powerful that it will play for one hour on a single winding. Mighty Powerful Spring The city of Evansville, Ind., is the largest hardwood center in the United States, while the city of Gary is called the "Steel City." MILK BOTTLE SMOOTH TASTE GOOD HEALTH tell you why. LAWRENCE tell you why. MILK SANITARY is your best buy! New York, Feb. 27—(UP)—Having surcovered completed to Joc Louis' ultimatum, Jersey Joe Walcott was scheduled to sign today for their return heavy weight championship fight on June 23. Walcott Gives Up; To Fight In June Walcott surrendered completely and ceremoniously at Camden, N. J., Thursday night. He promised to sign today at 20th Century headquarters. Before Louis sailed for England on Feb. 19, he warned the 34-year-old challenger to sign within two weeks or lose his second chance at the title. Louis had signed shortly after their memorable first fight on Dec. 5. The contract, provides that Jersey Joe receive 20 per cent of proceeds from the net gate, radio and television, and $22\frac{1}{2}$ per cent of profits from movies. Louis will get 40 per cent of all proceeds. Long Island 40, Seton Hall 38 Brown 70, Rhode Island St. 60 Princeton 71, Harvard 55 Holy Cross 67, Dartmouth 56 Tufts 65, Boston University 51 C. C. N. Y. 75, Browlyn College 55 Ottawa 78, College of Emporia 60 Elmhurst 36, Concordia 54 Loyola of Chicago 42, Siena 41 Lake Forest 44, Carroll 30 Mt. Union 64, Muskingum 54 Mercer 87, Newberry 43 Murray 67, Centre 34 Richmond 64, Maryland 62 Texas Tech 61, Hardin Simmons 41. Basketball Results Read the Daily Kansan daily. THE CHATEAU IS THE PLACE TO GO GALES American Custom Chocolates, $1.75 STOWIT'S Rexall STORE CHATEAU DRIVE-IN MA11 AT 184T DROP OUT FOR LUNCH One of our Delicious Sandwiches and a Malt or Milk Shake. STEAK DINNERS DAILY___5 to 7:30 Curb Service After 4 CITIES SERVICE PROF. MARKO MAGICIAN J. B. GUTTERSEN "What did I tell you, Professor - doesn't CITIES that Cisco Solvent really clean her out?" CITIES SERVICE Most people don't let their engines get in the same condition that the Professor did . . . but all engines collect deposits of sludge, grit or dirt in the oil lines, around the screen and other vital parts. Patented Cisco Solvent, unlike mere "flushing oils," dissolves sludge . . . washes out grit and dirt . . . leaves the oiling system clean, ready for fresh, new oil. We suggest you get our patented Cisco Solvent treatment before every oil change for smoother, longer engine performance. Remember, Cisco Solvent is a Cities Service exclusive. Try it today! CITIES SERVICE FRITZ CO. Phone 4 CITIES SERVICE 8th & N. Hampshire AYHAWKER NOW thru Tuesday At Regular Prices! The Fabulous Aztec treasure lay before their swords! An Empire to conquer... hearts to win! TYRONE POWER in Captain From Castile in Technicolor JEAN PETERS RESAR ROMERO: JOHN SUTTON, LEE J. COBB News—2:30,7:00,9:40 Feature—2:45, 7:15, 9:55 GRANADA NOW Ends Saturday Adventure Thrills "PIRATES OF MONTEREY" (in Technicolor) Marie MONTEZ Rod CAMERON SUNDAY, ONE WEEK ... every moment a magic moment! James STEWART Jane WYMAN SUNDAY, One Week Owl Show Sat. 11:45 p.m. "MAGIC TOWN" NOW, Ends Saturday Plus VARSITY "Woman from Tangier" Plus "Back In the Saddle Again" SUNDAY, 3 Days BROODING MENACE! JOHN HODIAK SYLVIA SIDNEY in LOVE FROM A Stranger Plus: Musical News Cartoon PATEE NOW, Ends Saturday Marlene DIETRICH James STEWART 'Destry Rides Again' 2nd Hit Randolph SCOTT Randolph SCOTT Kay FRANCIS "When the Daltons Rode" Sunday, 3 Days Charley GRAPEWIN "TOBACCO ROAD" H B Ka fer rig bu eac lin sin nig wh fer wh pla lar on up lig he ing na pu the de FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE FIVE Phi Delt, Beta To'A' Finals; Independent Playoffs Begin Phi Delta Theta and Beta Theta Pi nosed their way to the finals of the "A" team playoffs last night with close semi-final victories. The Phi Delt's stopped Kappa Sig, 34 to 29, and the Beta's eked out a 29 to 27 overtime decision over the Pi K. A.'s. Walt Quiring hit for 14 points as the Phi Delt quintet worked smoothly in their offensive maneuvers. However, the Kappa Sig pivot man, Lee Sauder, stole the show as he piled up 15 points for scoring honors and kept the winners worried with his effective hook shots. Beta and Pi K. A, tangled in a thriller that ended in a 26 to 26 tie as Clinger sank a pair of free throws for the Pi Kap's with the Beta's leading by two points on Winter's goal with 30 seconds left. 7 Independent Games In the overtime the Beta'siced the contest on two charity tosses by Ralph Moon and one by Winter, while Clinger was sinking one for the Pi Kap's. The Fiends and Demons worked to a 26 to 18 decision over the Jokers in the opener of the Independent league playoffs. The winners led most of the game as Clangston hit consistently for 10 points and Nicholas helped him with eight. Crane paced the losers with seven tallies. The high scoring Y.M.C.A. outfit outclassed the Dix Club 44 to 24 to move into the second round of the playoffs. Hardy Scheuerman had 11 points and Clark 10 to pace the dangerous "Y" five to their win. Ashlock sparked the losers with 11 points and Norris counted 10 to help the losing cause. Last Chance eliminated the Army by a decisive 28 to 15 win that saw the losers outclassed from the first of the game. Branum totaled eight and Darling seven for the Last Chancers while Bowden led the Army with five points. The Deuces Wild pulled a mild upset as they dropped the EIDorado A.C., 27 to 24. Martin paced the winners, who led at the half 12 to 6, with 12 points while Rinehart EIDorado ace, counted 11 points for the losers. Aces High out trumped Navy, 35 to 29, in a fast game. DeLuna starred for the Aces with 10 points, but gave up scoring honors to Van Gundy of the Navy with 12 counters. Aces High Sinks Navy The Law School had to go all out to take a 35 to 33 contest from the Gamma Delta squad that wouldn't give up. Bock and Nordling accounted for all but 11 of the winners' points as they hit 12 apiece. L. B. Hammer's 10 tallies led the losers. Spooner Thayer, sparked by the sharp-shooting of Sanchez, scored a neat 33 to 20 victory over the Batterfeld quintet in a fast game. Sanchez tallied 12 opins on six buckets from all over the court. However he shared scoring honors with his teammate, Gilkinson with 12 markers also. In the only "B" team game scheduled, the Phi Psil's hammered the Kappa Sigs 31 to 23. Mullens and Apitz with 11 and seven points respectively led the Psil's to victory while Parker could shake loose for only seven points for the losers. Hornets Hit Top By 57-45 Victory Atchison, Feb. 27—(UP)—T h e Kansas Central intercollegiate conference basketball race is going right down to the wire with Wash-burn and Emporia State elbowing each other to try to cross the finish line first. The two teams are tied with just a single game apiece to go. Tomorrow night Emporia is host to Hays a team which tripped the conference defending champion two weeks ago while Washburn goes to Winfield to play Southwestern—the league cellar-dweller and loser to Washburn once this season. The hornets of Emporia caught up with Washburn last night, besting the Ravens of St. Benedict's here 57 to 45. With 2,500 fans watching, the invading Emortians led narrowly at the half 25-23, then pulled away in the final period as their shooting accuracy became deadly. Hall Of Fame Adds 2 Stars New York, Feb. 27—(UF)—Herb Pennock and Harold "Pie" Traynor, stars from baseball's famed golden era, were named today to the Hall of Fame at Cooperstown, N. Y., but for Pennock the glory came a little too late. Their selection was by baseball writers of 10 or more years service, and for Pennock, who died while attending a National league meeting here on Jan. 30, it was a memorial. Pennock, the stylist left-handed pitching star of the New York Yankees, received 94 out of a possible 121 ballots while Traynor, who served with distinction first as a third baseman and later as manager of the Pittsburgh Pirates, got 93. NYU Can Cinch Bid New York, Feb. 27—(UF)—New York university, the only major undefeated basketball team in the nation, could nail down a bid to the National Invitation tournament with a win over Rutgers tonight—but whether the Violets would accept the invitation was open for question. The team which has won 18 straight and faces four more games before the end of it's schedule may choose to hold out for a possible N. C. A. a bid. The N. C. A. A. is considered the favored tournament this year because it will produce two representatives for the Olympic tourney and the Invitational only one. The choice would be one of either holding the bird in the hand, or shooting for the two in the bush. In passing up the Invitational, N. Y. U. could be left in the cold if the N. C. A. A. committee picks Columbia, which has a 16-1 record to date. The invitational yesterday announced three of the teams which will participate-St. Louis University (19-2), runner-up in the Missouri Valley conference; Texas (18-4), the no. 2 team in the Southwest conference; and Western Kentucky (24-1) an independent. CHASE WASHDAY BLUES Take advantage of our modern facilities Maytag Machines Reasonable Rates Week days 9-6 Line Space Saturdays 9-3 RISK'S HELP-YOURSELF LAUNDRY 1900 III. Phone 627 JOHN H. EMICK NOVELTY CO., Local Distributor "Musical Fun For Everyone" LET This Sign Lead You To Top Entertainment! WURLITZER PHONOGRAPH MUSIC - You can always hear the latest hits of the big bands on our Wurlitzer phonographs. - For convenient relaxation and musical enjoyment look for the place with the Wurlitzer music. Our machines are located in cafes, restaurants, drug stores and entertainment spots throughout Lawrence. - If you are looking for those hard-to-get favorite bands—we have a large collection of USED RECORDS. AND— - Come in and browse around. John H. Emick Novelty Co. 1014 Mass. so— Parker 51 Fountain Pens Super Chrome Ink STOWIT'S Rexall STORE Read the Want Ads daily. Rip Brown's 5 BOPS SKYLINE Fri-Sat DE SOTO APPROVED BY SERVICE PLYMOUTH Radcliffe GALLAGHER MOTORS Phone 1000 632-34 Mass. St. FINE SERVICE GREAT CARS SQUARE DEAL Style 4301 Bristol Last . . A Ver, Popular Wing-Tip Style. We Like this Basic Thinking... Nunn-Bush believes a truly fine product is possible only when an organization is earnestly on its toes. So Nunn-Bush puts drive and determination into an all-out effort to make no less than the world's finest shoes for men. One of the fruits of that objective is Ankle Fashioning . . . the Nunn-Bush added comfort and extra style mileage feature. Nunn-Bush Ankle Fashioned Oxfords Because satisfying customers is the purpose of our business, you can be certain Nunn-Bush shoes are an important factor in the service of our store. We know they bring customers back to us repeatedly, not only for more Nunn-Bush shoes but for all the well-known quality lines we sell. Royal College Shop 837-39 Mass. UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SIX FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1948 The Editorial Page Travel Broadens Our Chances These young people will be in Europe this summer living in camps and studying in seminars sponsored by various international youth organizations. They'll be riding their "bikes" all along the picturesque roads and highways of Europe, Part of their work will be to pitch in and help rebuild some of the shattered universities and youth hostes on that benighted continent. At other times, they'll be studying with French and English students or arguing with Czech and Danish ones. They'll be swapping ideas and forming new opinions. They'll lose a lot of prejudices. They'll come back with a wealth of understanding. Peace, like the weather, seems to be one of those things we are always discussing but which nobody does anything about. Yet there are some of us who are doing more than just leaning over the conference tables of the world and arguing that it would be a fine idea to stop killing each other. These persons are mostly young students with a zest for travel, a knack with bicycles, and a belief that they can personally do something about building a better world. Students In Europe Perhaps the only way we can achieve the understanding that it necessary for world peace is to take advantage of every opportunity to bring various nationalities more closely together. What better place to start than with the youth of the world? Too often the barriers raised by platform speakers, stacks of reports, and complicated devices to speed language translations are too great to be surmounted by the most earnest diplomats. However, these white-haired men of the round tables could do a lot to smooth the way for a greater intermingling of the peoples they represent. Agreements to liberalize and speed the exchange of students and professors from one country to another should be quickly adopted. Our government could lead the way in devising a plan to make travel for students cheaper and easier to obtain. Unfortunately only a few boatloads of American students are able to make trips abroad each summer. These students are tomorrow's leaders. By working and studying with students abroad, they'll be more able to cope with the world's problems when they gather around the international discussion tables. They should be given a chance to make the trip. University Daily Hansan Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS Member of the Kansas Press Assm. Na- tional Adm. and the Associated Collegiate Assm., and the Associated College Press. Represented by the National Ad- m. Service. 420 Madison Ave. New York, NY Editor-in-Chief .. William C. von Maurer Managing Editor .. Alan J. Stewart Asst. Man. Editor .. Cooper Rollow Asst. Man. Editor .. Lance Bauer Asst. Man. Editor .. Gene Vignery Asst. City Editor .. James Robinson Telegraph Editor .. Wallace W. Abbey Asst. Tel. Editor .. Clarke Thomas Asst. Tel. Editor .. William Barger Asst. Tel. Editor .. Robert E. Barron Asst. Sports Editor .. Paul Zeh Asst. Sports Editor .. James Jones Business Manager .. Betty Bacon Advertising Manager ... Robert Alderson Circulation Manager .. Otto Meyer Classified Adv. Man. .. Richard R. Don Waldron National Advt. Mgr. .. David Clymer Promotion Manager .. Wister Shreve Eyes During the war there was a cliche going the rounds that went something like this: Morale is a lot of little things. When those little things were all added up, the result was a winning combination of team work, co-operation, and self-restraint that made working with each other a pleasant task. Sportsmanship The conscientious voter thinks the 1948 presidential election will be like dunking for apples as you can never put your finger on what you'll come up with. Good sportsmanship is also a lot of little things. One of them is the courtesy that causes us to hold back a long, howling "boo" when our team seems to be getting the worst of a referee's decision. Another is the self-control we show at a basketball game when we remain silent just as the opponent gets ready for a free throw. Another is the respect we show when we remain at our seats at the end of the game for the playing of the alma mater instead of streaking for the nearest exit. All added up, these things determine a university's reputation for good conduct and clean sportsmanship. Unfortunately, some of the student spectators at the University basketball games seem to have forgotten a few of these points. A good time to start remembering them will be next Monday night, when the Jayhawker basketball team meets the Kansas State Wildcats in Hoch auditorium. When K. U. last met Kansas State in Manhattan, the students there put on a show of sportsmanship that won them a lot of praise all over the state. If we can remember a few little things, we'll all be feeling pretty good after Monday night's game — win or lose. HOW GOOD A SPORTS FAN are You? - How do hot dogs affect the pay of baseball players? - Who'll grab Jack Kramer's amateur tennis crown? - Who is the superman who threatens U. S. Olympic track laurels? - What does a "king-size" doorway have to do with basketball scores? - Who won the bitter battle for our top college football star? - Name the "Big 4" threatening golfer Bobby Locke! Brush up on all the answers. Read Bill Fay's new, lively sports feature exclusively in Collier's every week. Keep ahead of the headlines with the brilliant young maker of scoops. Happy cramming with NOW EVERY WEEK IN Bill Fay Got your copy each Friday at your college book store or newsstand. Ten cents. Collier's Launderette Service 9 lbs. of wash, 25c 21 Bendix Washers 813 Vt. Phone 3368 WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames Lawrence Optical Co. BILL'S GRILL DUICK COURTEOUS SERVICE 1109 Mass. Across from Phone 2054 the Courthouse Clearance Drastic Reduction on RADIOS Clearance THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY Delco Motorola Minerva - Federal - National Union Were Now $37.75 $28.95 32.00 to 35.00 24.95 28.95 19.95 BEAMAN'S RADIO SHOP 1200 New York Phone 140 Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan. SHIP WINTER "SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS" You Don't Have To Wait For SERVICE AT WINTERS WINTER CHEVROLET Phone 77 24 Hour Wrecking Service 738 N.H. St. FRIDAV. FEBRUARY 27, 1947 UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS PAGE SEVEN Daily Kansan Classified Advertising Phone KU 376 For Sale "SS INDIAN motorcycle: Good condition seated immediately. Dan Ward, 1243 Ohio 1836 CHEVROLET coach. Excellent con- trol. 40 miles. 2.5 liter gas. 11 Eight inch, between 3 and 5 feet. ONE PORTABLE (plug-in) Silvertone radio. $30.00. 1031 Miss. Ph. 3251W. 1936 PACKARD 5-passenger coupe. Excellent condition. Real bargain for cash. Call Ron Hill. Ph. 3410. 805 Ohio. 2 BEAUTIFUL Maternity Wardrobe, size 14. Lovely, two-piece wool suit. $10. Azure crepe afternoon suit. $16. Smoke crepe afternoon suit. $18. White satin suit. $2. Comp girdle. 650%. West satin 3rd. $4. RADIO AND record player combination, automatic record changer, plays 10 inch or 12 inch records, table model, excellent condition, less than year old, 345. I $55.00. HI-STYLE swing skirt with dipping hemline. Too long for present wear. Call evenings or Friday mornings at 820 New Hampshire, Mrs. C. A. Harkness, 1 1941 PONTIAC 4-door. Good motor and nfter at 1312 Ohio or phone 3148-2 nfer 1839 MASTER Delux Chev, Sedan. Good condition. Looks like now one. See Red at 1101 Tenn. after 6 p. m., or on Saturday or Sunday. 27 SEVEN-FOOT NORGE refrigerator, in good condition. See at 1805 Maine. 2 MODEL A TUDOR: Good condition and get you there and back. See at 935 Comm. 27 ALMOST NEW Admiral Radio-Phonograph combination. Table model. Automatic two inch channels. Two twelve inch channels. See Red at 1101 Tenn. after 6 p. m. or on Saturday, 27 SLIDE RULE: Deitzen, Log-Log, Dupli- se, add new, at cost. Php 2377 Carl Griswold. NEW NORGE "5000" oil heater; 38pc hand painted china set; vanity table; two-burner hot plate and two-living-room bed drapes. Call 1679. J 27 Miscellaneous VETERANI! We will buy, trade or sell for you any Army or Navy gear in good condition that you may wish to dispose Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. HTFD 669 TYFING: Don't put off having term papers, classnotes, thesis, and reports typed until semester's end. Have them done now; reasonable rates for quality work by teacher-typist who has typed KW students for 15 years. Phone 287 209 (in 647) TYPING: Reasonable rates on typing of 1948L. Prompt, accurate service. P 39 1948L. A CAPPELLA choir and women's glee club. Sunday program recorded on Soundmirror magnetic ribbon recorder. Soundmirror applied at East 8th in First Nat'l Bank Bldg. 27 UPHOLSTERY, slip-covers, drapes. Use us take care of all these needs, for you. All upholstery, slip cover, drape material for sale, wear, guarantee the best five years business warranty. Counter Upholster. 37 Vermont. Ph. 143 FREE OFFER: Photo copies of discharge papers, marriage certificates for military credit or school entrance. 3 for 2. Round Corner Drug, 80% Mass. ACE every Saturday night at Odd Fellows. Informal Joe Langwerth orchestra For Rent SLEEPING ROOM for boy. Close to the campus, 1142 J dhamea. Phone 1818W. WILL HAVE room for one male student, March 1. Replacing student plaiding. ROOMS FOR 4 boys, 2 large double rooms next to bath. Call 168 or see between 1 to 5 daily. Mrs. R. B. Pierson. 2201 Louisiana. 27 VACANCY: Single bed. Also board. Phone 2180W. 27 And a poke **PO HOR** to show you and five flats of boys. Show you and tub on same floor with apts; single beds and cooking facilities *m* in the same room. Also on same floor. Also a single room. On all W on 14th St. Phone 3331 or 2099. 27 RENT thru our CLASSIFIEDS BUY, SELL, PHONE YOUR WANT ADS to the to the DAILY KANSAN TODAY (Hours 10-12 a.m. and 1-3 p.m. except Sat.) Phone KU 376 VERY attractive room for two boys, twin boys in campus. 137 Ky. Mrs. Olef Phi. 2254W. HAVE ROOM for one woman student; Mrs. HAYEON for one woman student. Ph. 32481 Mr. Wilson, 1229 Ohio Transportation WANTED: week end transportation (ride) to Tulsa. Will be glad to leave anytime after 11:00 Friday. Call Elden C. Tefft 2514J-1. 27 Lost EAST FOR Easter? Two students looking for ride to and from East coast Philadelphia for Easter vacation. Welcome to campus and driving. Call 0401. awy for Joe or Ed. GREEN: Advanced French composition book last Tuesday. Probably in 111 Frank Strong. Please call Billie Kent, phone 900. 2 BROWN BILLEFOLD on 2nd floor of 3244 and please call 3244 an invoice for Kone. Wanted TYPING: Done neatly and accurately. Theses accepted. Rates reasonable. Call 1966W or come to Apt. 2, 1101 Tenn. 4 MALE STUDENT or instructor to share clean, heat and heated double- bedding furniture. Male breakfast in room, 1232 Vermont. WEST 7th CAFE—— 1 Block S'East of Jayhawk Plunge YOU'VE BEEN LOOKING for OUR Sunday evening meal !!! 55c Dinners Short Orders TOMORROW NIGHT Quality Cleaning at Reasonable Prices 12 East Eighth LINDLEY'S KANSAS CLEANERS Men's Suits, Cleaned and Pressed----65c Ladies' Plain Dresses, CI. and Pressed__69c (1) CORDUROY JACKETS Lapel Styles and Cardigans CASH AND CARRY ONLY by Block of California Regular, $25.95 Cardigans, $24.95 The Palace 843 Massachusetts Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers. TOMORROW NIGHT The Sophomore Class Presents THE LEAP YEAR HOP AN ALL STUDENT DANCE America's most popular college dance band. M. SHELLER Favors for the girls and a gigantic intermission program. Matt Betton & his Orchestra Saturday, Feb. 28 Union Ballroom $1.75 A Couple Tickets on sale-Rotunda of Frank Strong, Union bldg. and at dance TOMORROW NIGHT TOMORROW NIGHT PAGE EIGHT UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1948 Guest Speakers Meet Students Talk Culture "Blueprinting Tomorrow" a cultural conference sponsored by Associated Women Students. ended Thursday with personal conferences between guest speakers and students. Dr. Geraldine Hammond, Wichita, deplored the fact that "so many students in literature courses claim they once liked literature but had it spoiled by prolonged study." "Arguments about the Christian faith are fronts, excuses for not doing what we should," she said. Mr. Porter Brown, Salina, said that a Christian can have no quarrel between science and religion. She told students that science is religion because science is the revelation of natural law. Mrs. John Guice, Kansas City, Mo., said "A knowledge of art is of value in decorating and arranging homes. Art helps you enjoy yourself and your surroundings." Miss Ethel Mitchell talked about community recreation programs. She said that a new field in community recreation has opened. Federal and state hospitals are hiring staffs of professional recreational workers. Group conferences with speakers were arranged for every woman interested. Beine Is MC Of Soph Hop Robert F. Biene, College sophomore, will be master of ceremonies at the Sophomore Leap Year Hop at 9 p. m. tomorrow in the Union ballroom. Matt Betton's band from Kansas State college will play, with Carl Anderson as vocalist. ... Intermission entertainment will be provided by the "Intermissionaries," a novelty group with Constance Dean as soloist. Other members of the group are Robert J. Cooper, J. Rex. Watkins, William C. Richardson, Roland W. Kamprath, Robert Felts and Robert M. Duboc The Hop is a dress affair Men are requested to wear ties and jackets, girls should wear hose and heels. Also on the program will be a skit given by Dorothy D. Wood and Margaret Sue Cloyd. Tickets are on sale in booths in center of Frank Strong hall and in the Union building for $1.75 a couple. They will also be sold at the dance. Committee chairmen are Gene Allen, decorations; William H. Rochl, publicity; Phillip J. Carlson, program; and Paul Dillon, finance. Entrance Exams At 2 Tomorrow New students who failed to take the entrance examinations Jan. 31 may make up the tests at 2 p.m. tomorrow in Lindley hall auditorium. Students who do not take the tests tomorrow must pay a fee to take them later, according to Glenn Cole, guidance bureau counselor. Bacon, Lane Get St. Louis Trip Betty Bacon and Frank D. Lane, advertising seniors in the William Allen White School of Journalism, will spend a week in St. Louis with all expenses paid by the Advertising club of St. Louis. They won the "Week in St. Louis" award started two years ago by the St. Louis club to encourage higher standards in the college field of advertising. The winners were chosen by the University journalism faculty "on the basis of achievement and promise in the study of advertising," said Elmer F. Beth, acting director of the journalism school. Miss Bacon and Lane will go to St. Louis March 14 and join award winners from the Universities of Illinois, Iowa, Missouri, St. Louis and Washington. The Kansas winners will be accompanied by one or two of their advertising professors. On March 16 the 12 outstanding students will be guests at a lunchcon to be given by the Advertising club. They will take part in forums and round table discussions and consult with top executives of St. Louis newspapers, radio stations, advertising agencies, department stores, and printing companies. Last year the two university winners, Anne Scott and Melvin Adams, took part in a television broadcast from KSD-TV, the only television station between Chicago and the West coast. Mrs. Jeen Lysaught To Teach Design Mrs. Jeen Lysaught, former freelance artist, has joined the faculty of the design department of the School of Fine Arts. She received her bachelor of arts degree from Marymount college, Tarrytown. N. Y. She studied two years at the Pratt Art institute in Brooklyn and three summers at the Grand Central Art school in New York. She was art director in summer camps for two years, and also for McFaden Publishing company in New York. Before coming to the University she was a free-lance artist for fashion illustrations. Her special field has been illustrating children's books. bell music co. TIME LILY Handel's "Messiah" A Complete Recording On RCA Victor Records For The Finest In Music BELL MUSIC COMPANY 925 Mass. Phone 375 The Cincinnati Symphony orchestra will be presented as the fourth attraction on the University concert series in Hoch auditorium March 3. The orchestra will be conducted by its newly-appointed director, Thor Johnson. YM. YW To Sponsor Forums Symphony Here March 3 Before he joined the Cincinnati orchestra he was conductor of the Juilliard orchestra in New York City. Mr Johnson was graduated from the University of North Carolina and received his master's degree in music from the University of Michigan. He has studied in Europe under Felix Weingarten, Bruno Walter and Nicolail Malko at Salzburg, and Herman Abenbroth at Leipzig. During his army service he conducted the American University Symphony orchestra at Shrivenham, England. Forums on basic principles of leadership and their application to campus and community life will be sponsored during March by the Y.M. and Y.W.C.A., Fred Henderson, chairman of the personal relations committee, said today. The KuKu club will cooperate with the Jay Janes and K-Club to promote sportsmanship at the Kansas-Kansas State basketball game. To Discourage Booing At KU-K-State Game game. Wilbur E. Friesen, cheerleader, also told the KuKu's Thursday that the University will try to give K-State as good a reception as KU, received at Manhattan. "Booing and other unsportsman like activities will be discouraged," he added. Rain Floods Wichita Area 'International Club Needs Americans' "One American student for every foreign student is the goal of the International club," Marilyn Rust, president, explained recently. "The International club is not an exclusive organization of foreign students. It was organized with the idea that American students could make foreign students feel at home at the University. At meetings foreign students usually have to make the American students welcome" she continued. Witchita, Feb. 27—(UP)—A rain of cloudburst proportions early today flooded thousands of acres of land in northwest Sedgwick county. Reports from Mount Hope and Haven indicated they were isolated by surface water. Train service through the area was interrupted. More than two feet of water stood on the Missouri Pacific tracks near Haven. A passenger train from Geneseo to Wichita was stranded in the flood, and efforts to remove passengers by bus failed. Persons living in the area of the torrential rain estimated between 8 and 12 inches of rain had fallen. The storm began Thursday night and continued until after midnight. Warnings of probable overflow were issued for a 30-mile stretch of the Big Blue river in north-central Kansas, from the Nebraska line down to Blue Rapids. At Barnston, Neb., the stream was at the 17-foot level—just one foot below flood stage—and was reported rising. Spring Is Coming Soon! Outfit Yourself With These Bargains NOW NEW!!! - Genuine Air Corps Sun Glasses...$4.95 - Santan Housers Air Corps Brief Cases $5.95 - Suntan Trousers $2.98 and up Atlantic Rifle Co. $5.95 - Air Corps Brief Cases - Complete Line of Raincoats... $2.49 and up - Complete Line of Raincoats...$2.49 and up - Genuine Navy T-Shirts ...79c Athletic Socks FIRST QUALITY ● Tennis Shoes ...$2.95 and up - Athletic Socks - Shower Clos ALL THESE AND MANY OTHER VALUES AT LAWRENCE SURPLUS 740 and 911 Mass. Phone 588 or 669 The Most Interesting Stores In Town ENTER WRIGHT'S "PRINT OF THE WEEK" CONTEST The best picture developed here during each week beginning March 1,1948,will receive: - $3.00 in Photo Merchandise - Free Double Weight Enlargement (Films must be developed and printed at Wright's) it's Wrights' for - FINER - PHOTO - FINISHING 450 N L V S M F C