University Daily Kansan
Monday, May 3, 1948
Lawrence. Kansas
STUDENT NEWS PAPER
Friday To Be Holiday For Business School
The annual Business school day Friday will feature guest speakers, an election, the traditional faculty-student baseball game and a picnic. This announcement was made by Curyin H. Greene, president of the Business School association.
Business school day has been an annual event since the founding of the school in 1924. Frank T. Stockton was the dean of the school when it was founded with 12 instructors and 51 students. Today, there are 50 instructors and approximately 800 students. Dean Stockton remained with the Business school until July 1, 1947, when he became dean of University Extension. Leonard H. Axe is dean of the Business school at present.
With the growth of the Business school, there has also been a growth in the number of organizations connected with it. There is Beta Gamma Sigma, honorary business fraternity, Alpha Kappa Psi and Delta Sigma Pi, professional fraternities. Phi Chi Theta, professional sorority, the Society for Advancement of Management, and Future Business Leaders of America.
Ernest R. Esch, personnel director of the City National bank, Kansas City, Mo., will speak on personnel problems. He is also president of the Personnel Research forum of Kansas City. He will speak at 10 a.m. in Fraser theater.
Arsh R. Maulsby, the second speaker at 10 a.m., is sales manager of the Socony Vacuum Oil company. He is a graduate of Cornell university and has had 28 years experience in sales work. He will speak in 6 Frank Strong annex E.
F. S. Nicklas, Kansas City branch manager of the International Business Machines corporation, will speak on the problems of machine accounting. Mr. Nicklas is a graduate of the University of Nebraska and was at one time in charge of the training department for I.B.M He will speak at 11 a.m. in Fraser auditorium.
R. Hugh Uhlmann, who will also speak at 11 a.m., is president of the Midland Flour Milling company and is a director of the Kansas City Board of Trade. He will speak in Frank Strong auditorium on the subject of market operations.
Voting will take place from 8 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., to elect officers for the Business School association. Two slates of candidates have been nominated, one by the Commerce party and one by Delta Sigma Pi, professional business fraternity.
The nominees of the Commerce party are: Richard Yaple, president; Ajas Klaer, vice-president; Meri- tion, and Park Pennington, treasurer.
Delta Sigma Pi has nominated Charles M. Wardin for president. The other nominees are Walter C. Emery, vice-president; Everett D. Land, treasurer; and Richard W. Wahl, secretary.
The faculty-student baseball game will be played on one of the intramural fields at 2 p. m. Exact location will be announced later. Joe R. Small, economics instructor, is the manager of the faculty team.
Following the baseball game, there will be a picnic and dance at Potter lake.
WEATHER
Kansas--Partly cloudy today, tonight and tomorrow with scattered showers and thunderstorms today west and central and throughout most of the state tonight and in southeast quarter of state tomorrow morning. Little change in temperature. Except slightly warmer today. High today in 70's, low tonight 45-55.
Quill Club Contest Closes May 13.
Anyone interested in creative writing should enter the Quill club membership contest which closes May 13.
Manuscripts may be either short stories or poetry. Those persons considered by club members to have the best entries will be pledged this month. The Quill club discusses and criticizes manuscripts submitted by members at its meetings.
Three copies of each manuscript for the contest must be turned in to Prof. Ray B. West, 211 Fraser.
'College Daze Leads Chosen
Norma Jean Guthrie and Ann Hogue, fine arts sophomores; Dargan Montgomery, College sophomore, and Dean Frazier, junior, have been chosen for the singing leads of "College Daze," the all-school musical revue about university life to be presented May 12.
Charles T. Freshwater, fine arts sophomore, will portray "Joe College," a comedy character. Catherine F. Jarbose, College sophonore, will be "Josephine College."
The large cast includes singers, dancers, comedians, a ballet troupe, fencing choruses and a professional orchestra.
Stage sets and costumes have been designed by Craig W. Hampton, fine arts junior, who will appear in the dance sequences.
Betty Rae Thomas, fine arts junior, has planned the original dance routines and is a principal in the ballet dances.
A variety of specialties will range from a "Rock Chalk" opening to a fast-moving South American rhumba-samba dance spectacle. Original music and songs have been w ritten for the show, and James C. McCraig, fine arts freshman, has arranged special orchestrations. Bill P. Ogg, College junior, is stage director, and Frank H. Rotman, College senior, is in charge of publicity.
Admission will be 75 cents.
If You Want Entertainment, Attend The Summer Session
The University summer session, June 14 to August 7, will find the campus almost as busy as during the winter months. Extra-curricular activities will include a recreation program, concerts, lectures, movies, and dances.
deducted for the summer. The Midwestern music and art camp will be on the campus from June 21 to August 1.
In addition to regular classes there are nine workshops already sched-
Regular enrollment is expected to fall below the 1947 record of 3,459, according to summer session director, Dean George B. Smith. Classes on the junior and senior level will be expanded, however, to care for the veterans who make up most of those two classes now.
All undergraduate students enrolling in the University for the first time will be required to be present for the orientation program. The first meeting on the schedule will be 9 a.m. June 9 in Hoch auditorium. Registration for the session will be held June 10, 11 and 12, with first classes in all departments scheduled to begin June 14. Final examinations will be given during the last one or two class sessions, August 5, 6 or 7.
Little Man On Campus
Union Annex To Open
Miss Hermina Zipple, director of the Union cafeteria, announced that the main cafeteria, the new unit, and the fountain will be open during the summer session. She also said that the three sections of the Union would be air-conditioned. The ballroom will be used for serving the various workshops and conferences.
Henry Shenk, director of physical education, said that the intramural program will feature softball, horse shoes, tennis, golf, and any other sports in which the students show a sufficient interest. The playground in Fowler grove for students and children will be set up and managed again this year by Reginald R. Strait, associate professor of physical education.
By Biblen
Movies In Fowler Grove
Movies will be shown in Fowler grove every Friday night during summer school, and every Wednesday night there will be a street dance in front of Bailey Chemical laboratories. The swimming pool in Robinson gymnasium will be open in the afternoons, and at night.
B.Byker
"It's taken seven years for that theme to be an 'A' paper."
Dance To Open Union Annex
The Union will sponsor a dance Wednesday from 7:30 to 9 p.m. on the new Union "roof garden," Miss Hermina Zipple announced today.
The dance will christen the new addition to the Union, the enlargement to the fountain. The roof deck on which the dance is being held has a floor of red tile, which will be waxed for the dance. The roof is 30 feet wide and 60 feet long, with space for approximately 200 couples.
The roof deck will be decorated with potted palms and colored lights. Hanlan Livinggood and his orchestra—the music—which will begin at 7 p.m.
Ann Hogue, fine arts sophomore,
and Ann Cowger, fine arts freshman,
will sing at intermission. Punch will be served.
Tickets for the dance will be sold at the hostess desks in the Union, at the business office in Frank Strong hall, and at the gate the night of the dance. Their cost will be 70 cents a couple.
Miss Zipple said that if it rained the opening will be postponed.
Dean Smith said there are three lectures scheduled, and he hopes to get other speakers from the various workshops. On June 17 Frank Rising, '24, an authority on labor relations, will open the lecture series. John Lee, an English professor and a member of the civil aeronautics board, will speak July 8. The former chancellor of Austria, Kurt von Schushingg, will lecture July 22.
During the music camp, there will be outdoor band concerts, indoor band and orchestra symphony concerts, faculty concerts, and senior and advanced student recitals. The summer school all-musical vespers will feature the 150-voice a cappella choir under the direction of D.M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts. Thor Johnson, nationally known conductor, will direct one of the band concerts while he is here at the music camp. Percy Grainger, internationally-known composer and pianist, will give a recital during the week he is working with music camp students.
The nine workshops to be held here are: childhood education, June 7 to 16; school administrators, June 8 to 12; family life education, June 14 to 25; physical education (advanced football), June 14 to 26; Red Cross safety training, July 12 to 16; driver education and training, June 21 to 25; writers, June 21 to July 2; social workers, July 12 to 23; and physical education (advanced basketball), July 12 to 23.
The music camp will have an enrollment of approximately 150 high school students. It will be under the direction of Russell L. Wiley, associate professor of band. Karl Mattern, associate professor of drawing and painting will instruct the 25 high school juniors and seniors enrolled in the first art camp ever held on the campus.
In addition to the campus and workshops, the University will sponsor a bank management clinic, Sunflower Girls' State, a court reporters' conference, and four courses in social work. Special short courses are offered in life insurance marketing and fire casualty and marine insurance.
Art Camp Is New Feature
Wind Hits City Damages Cars. Cuts Off Lights
The tail end of a tornado which struck southeastern Kansas moved into Lawrence about 7 p.m. May 1.
A gale-like wind, driving rain and hail, and swirling bits of debris filled the air forcing many motorists to stop and wait for safer driving conditions.
The twister ripped through a 20-mile area in northeastern Oklahoma into southeastern Kansas, killing six. The storm continued its path of destruction through Missouri, Illinois, Ohio, Kentucky, and West Virginia.
A large tree on the edge of the Pi Kappa Alpha lot was blown over and damaged a car owned by Bill P. Ogg, College junior, and one belonging to Joseph O. Schmitz, engineering sophomore. A car owned by Keith Prosch, pharmacy sophomore, was damaged at 1713 Alabama street when a large limb fell across the hood.
By Crystal Chittenden
Lights were out in different sections of Lawrence at various times during the night. Power crews worked all night to restore service throughout Lawrence.
Electric Service Fails
About 15 trees were blown down throughout the city, police reported. One accident was reported by state police. A bus ran off the highway north of Lawrence during one of the severe periods of the storm.
Two persons were killed and five were reported injured when the twister struck the small town of Shaw, Kan., near Chanute. Archie Kinne was killed when the "black funnel" picked his house up and deposited it on the other side of U.S. highway 59. He was found on top of his kitchen floor near the remains of the house.
re Than 40 Farms Leveled
Reporters for the Chanute Tribune estimated damage to be over $500,000 in the area. They said they had seen damaged or destroyed buildings on more than 60 farms. More than 40 Oklahoma and Kansas farm homes were leveled.
The United Press reported that an eyewitness said he saw a group of houses on a mountainside in West Virginia, blown clear across a valley where they were smashed against another mountain.
Handel's "Messiah" given in commemoration of 25 years of musical service at K.U. by the director, Dean D. M. Swarthout, was presented Sunday in Hoch auditorium. It could have been called Swarthout's "day" because the chorus, orchestra, soloists, and organist all co-operated to make the program a success and to bring credit to the School of Fine Arts.
'Messiah' Is Success
The soloists Ruth Russell, Minerva Davis, E. M. Brock, and Charles Sager, former University students who have continued their voice study since graduation, handled their parts with professional skill. Jerald Hamilton, fine arts senior, added to the effectiveness of the chorus numbers with his organ accompaniment.
Several numbers of the "Messiah" that are often omitted were included in Sunday's performance. Although the chorus of 275 voices seemed to hang upon the tip of Swarthout's baton, it reached the height of choral singing in "Surely He Hath Borne Our Griefs." and "All We Like Sheep Have Gone Astra."
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 3, 1948
Official Bulletin
May 3,1948
General Sematics club final meeting of semester, 7:30 tonight, 111 Frank Strong. Members requested to return all reading material.
Phi Chi medical fraternity meeting tonight. Election of next year's officers.
Students planning to take Western Civilization examination 2 p.m. May 15, must sign up at registrar's office this week. Admittance card received at Registrar's office must be presented at time of examination. Examining place also assigned there.
Tau Sigma today, musical comedy,
4:30-5:30 p.m.; primitive, 7-8 p.m.
Balinese, 8-9 p.m. (without idols);
Robinson gym.
F.B.L.A., 5 p.m. tomorrow, Pine
room, Union. Election of officers.
Sigma Tau initiation banquet, 6:45 p.m. tomorrow, Castle Tea room, B. J. George, speaker.
Regular meeting of new A.S.C. 7:15 p.m. tomorrow, Pine room Union.
United World Federalists, 4 p.m. tomorrow, Pine room, Union. All interested.
Jewish Student union, 5 p.m tomorrow. Mvers hall.
All organizations interested in helping with plans for new student orientation program next fall should send representatives to a meeting 4 p.m. tomorrow, 217 Frank Strong.
Tau Sigma meeting, 7:15 tomorrow,
Bring leotard money. Waltz group.
7:45. Robinson gym.
All home economics majors who plan to enroll next semester meet in 110 Fraser at 4 p.m. Wednesday. Check next year schedules with Miss Anderson, Miss Lohr, or Miss Hill before meeting.
K.U. Dames, 8 p.m. Wednesday,
37 Frank Strong. Election of officers.
American Society of Tool Engineers, 8:15 p.m. Wednesday, Lindley auditorium. Speaker, J. Y. Riedel of Bethlehem Steel corp.
"Applications and Heat Treatment of Tool Steel."
Tickets for A.V.C. picnic may be purchased at business office. Deadline, Thursday noon; $1.25 each. Picnic to be in Clinton park, 6:15 p.m. Friday.
Tau Sigma dress rehearsal, 7-10 p.m. Thursday, Fraser theater.
University Daily Kansam
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year. (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University holidays and examination periods. Inbound Mail: 1971, 1710, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
Union Check Stand Handles Everything, Soup To Nuts
One of the handiest and most taken-for-granted places on the campus, according to data gathered by a University Daily Kansan reporter, is the check stand at the Union.
Articles ranging from bottles of milk to radios have been checked for safekeeping. Bottles of medicine, fruit, cameras, tennis rackets, overshoes, suit cases, lunches, cleaning, and $\textcircled{+}$ even illac boughs have been cared | not
Books, however, take up most of the checkers' time. During the winter months coats are checked as often as books.
The check stand is operated each week day by shifts of three workers. Checking begins at 8 a.m. and ends at 10 p.m., unless there is a special social event making necessary to stay open later. On Saturday the stand is operated from 4 p.m. to midnight. There are no checkers present at the stand on Sunday except for special occasions.
Two - hundred-twenty-four coats can be accommodated at the stand. For every coat rack there is a shelf space about the size of a notebook for other belongings of the person.
About four or five stubs are lost or forgotten each day. To reclaim
Devotion each morning, 8:30-8:50. Danforth chapel, sponsored by Student Religious council. All are welcome.
University Women's club tea, 3 p.m. Thursday, Myers hall. Annual business meeting, election of officers.
I. S.A. meeting, 7:15 tonight, 228 Frank Strong. House representatives not required.
lost articles, the owner must describe them.
Because of a system devised by Mrs. Joan Metheny, Mrs. Mary C. Callicott, and Joyce J. Mamigianon, check stand operators, bulky articles can be assigned to lower shelves, while hats and smaller items are checked on upper shelves.
The checkers work under the direction of M. Grace Byrn, a hostess at the Union. According to Mrs. Byrn, the check stand had not been in regular operation until six years ago. Previous to this time students worked in the stand during their free periods.
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Curb Service After 4 p.m.
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Gun Goes As Cop Sleeps
Tokyo—(UP)—Police headquarters was humiliated to report that the pistol of Patrolman Akaboshi had been stolen near closely-guarded Sugamo prison. Headquarters said apologetically that Akaboshi had been asleep in a police box at the time.
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MONDAY, MAY 3, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Socially Speaking
Exchange Dinner
***
Miller hall and Battenfeld hall held exchange dinners Wednesday night. An hour dance at Miller hall followed the dinners.
Delt Barn Dance
Members of Delta Tau Delta entertained with a barn dance held at Holcomb's Grove April 23.
Guests were Betty Crawford, Joan Schindling, Lola Branit, Helen Dietzel, Shirley Grigsby, Rebecca Davidson, Bonnie Gimblet, Glenda Luehring, Eunice Carlson, Nanette Hery, Kathleen Larson, Carol Harris, Gloria Horn, Barbara Bibr, Betry Prebale, Marilyn Gibson, Kathleen Burwell, Betty Martin, Mary Margaret Moore, Patricia Perkins, Bonnie Cunningham, Marie Touhey, Judith Tihme.
Mary Mid Chubb, Cathleen Collins, Inez Hall, Isobel Faurot, Margaret Logan, Ethel Pearson, Mary Schreck, Martha Duncan, Patricia Brubaker, Joan Manuel, Lucy Reardon, Marnie Brown, Nancy Watson, Denise Owen, Josephine Skelton, Mildred Roach, Delores Wills, Rayma Hotchkiss, Connie Jarbose, Sammy Petee, Patricia Link, Allis Ann Sellers, Nancy Ludlow, Patricia Pugh, Patricia Landis, Beverly Butlers, Joan Putney, Glenna Wallace, Lola O'Leary, Jackie Starriet, Joan Buckman, and Joan Ogg.
Chaperons were Mrs. Nelle Hopkins, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Conard, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Wilson, and Prof. and Mrs. Joseph Biery.
**
Kappa Sig Smoker
The pledge class of Phi Delta Theta was the guest of the Kappa Sigma pledge class at a smoker recently.
Weddings And Engagements
Hayden-Hadley
Mr. and Mrs. Will H. Hayden, Lawrence, announce the engagement of their daughter, Della, to Stephen D. Hadley, son of Mr. and Mrs. S. A. Hadley, Kansas City, Mo. They will be married June 13 in Danforth chapel.
chaper Miss Hayden is a College sophomore, and Mr. Hadley is a engineering senior.
☆ ☆
Hoag-Burns
Hoag Burr
Pi Beta Phi announces the pinning of Katharine Hoag, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. D. D. Hoag, Wichita, to Jack Burns, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Burns, Wichita.
5. H. Burns, Vauxhall
The announcement was made by Peggy Jean Baker at dinner, after which chocolates were passed.
Miss Hoag is a College sophomore. Mr. Burns is a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity.
Humphrey-Wootten
Mr. and Mrs. Orlando O. Humphrey, Beverly, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Mary Alice, to George E. Wootten, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold E. Wootten, Wilmington, Del. The wedding will be June 5 in Danforth chapel.
Miss Humphrey is an education senior, Mr. Wootten is a College senior.
Nelkin-Hirsekorn
Mrs. Helen Nelkin, Kansas City, Mo., announces the pinning of her daughter, Helen, to Fred Hirsekorn, Kansas City, Mo. Friends were entertained at the Muehlebach hotel where Mr. Hirsekorn presented Miss Nelkin with an orchid corsage.
☆ ☆
Mr. Hirsekorn, an engineering junior, is a member of B'nai J'hudah social fraternity.
I
Bet The Cargo Was Handy
Memphis—(UP)—Mrs. R. M. Bonturant wondered why some 50 beer trucks were parked in a residential area—not a tavern within several miles. She called the brewery and got the answer. The drivers had dropped in at the home of E. E. Dettwiller, the brewery's sales manager, to wish him a "happy birthday."3
Corbin's May Faculty Fete To Feature Booths, Games, And A Fortune Teller
Booths, games, and a fortune teller are the attractions when "come to the fair" time rolls around once a year for Corbin hall faculty guests.
These festivities are part of the traditional Corbin May fete, or spring faculty party. This year it will be held at 6 p.m. May 10, if the weatherman holds back the rain.
Mrs. Charles Brook, former Gn bin housemother, started the idea in 1937. It began as a dinner to be held in May for about 75 to 100 faculty guests. She had miniature maypoles on the tables, but now they have changed into one of life size, and girls of the hall wind the maypole.
Robin Hood and Maid Marian preside over the English county fair which is now an outdoor picnic on Corbin hill. Robin Hood and Maid Marian are the president and vice-president of the hall.
Such fair songs as "Country Gardens" and "Gone to the Fair" are sung by a quartet. Games of chance and decorated booths offer winners the usual carnival prizes. A colorful figure on a hobby horse is the supposed jester or unofficial greeter of guests.
Corbin girls wear peasant or early English costumes for the occasion.
IVCF Will Hold Devotions May 3-7
The Inter-varsity Christian fellowship, an inter-denominational campus group, will be in charge of Morning Devotions from 8:30 to 8:50 in Danforth chapel for the week beginning today.
Morning devotional services in the chapel are being sponsored by the Student Religious council. The council plans to give each church group an opportunity to conduct the services for one week.
Rose Lee's
LUNCH
7 a.m.-10 p.m. Weekdays
7 a.m.-12 p.m., Fri. Sat. Sun.
Chicken Dinners
Chicken Dinners
1305 W. 7th
Parking Space Sundoy
BEGINNING TODAY All types of pens and pencils repaired.
All types of pens and pencils repaired.
DOCTOR PEN
Buddy Rogers Gives Help To VFW In Poppy Sale
STUDENT Union Book Store
Charles "Buddy" Rogers, motion picture star and former University student, will appear to support the 1948 sale of "Buddy" poppies by the Veterans of Foreign Wars in a three minute film trailer.
A veteran of World War II, Rogers served four years with the naval air corps. He spent two years with the navy ferry command and as a test pilot. He left the service with the rank of lieutenant commander.
Russell Stover Candies Always Fresh
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 3, 1948
Jayhawks Tame'Cats For Second Dual Win
The University of Kansas track team tamed the Kansas State Wildcats 70 to 61 in a dual meet at Manhattan Saturday afternoon, to remain undefeated in Big Seven outdoor competition.
It was a nip and tuck battle all the way and the outcome of the meet was not decided until the final event, the mile relay, which the Jayhawkers
won going away. The relay team, composed of John Stites, Dick Wag-staff, Bill Binter, and Dick Shea, was too much for the Cat's quartet of quarter milers as they measured the distance in 3:22.
Big Rollin Prather, the Wildcat's star weight man, set a new record in the discus, sailing the platter 152 feet $2\frac{1}{4}$ inches. This toss bettered the existing meet record by nearly seven feet. The old record of 145 feet 7 inches was set in 1940 by Kansas State's Dick Peters. Prather also won the shot put with a heave of 51 feet $3\frac{1}{2}$ inches.
KU Runners Dominate
Kansas was strongest in the running events, winning five of the seven first places. John Stites breezed through the 440-yard dash in the fast time of 49.5. This is the best quarter turned in by a Jayhawk runner this year, Bill Binter followed Stites to the wire in the 440.
Dick Shea, the black haired Kansas half mile, ran the 890 yard run in 1:56.4 and finished well out in the final Winton Studt who placed second.
High point honors for the meet went to Rod McClay, Wildcat spinner and pole vaulter. McClay racked up 14 points for the Cat's cause. He won both the 100 and 220 yard dash, and tied Jayhawker Herman Wilson for first in the pole vault. Mile Is A Thriller
One of the best races of the afternoon was the mile run. Leasure of K-State lead throughout the first lap and then Bob Karnes stepped into the lead. At the three quarters mark Bob Karnes and Hal Moore became engaged in a dramatic race for the number one position. Moore passed Karnes at the final curve and sprinted ahead to win in the fast time of 4:21.
Karnes later came back strong to help the two-mile run. His time was 3:67.4.
Earl Elliot, K-State hurdler, tied the meet record in the highs by stepping the barriers in 14.9. The record is shared by two other K-Staters, Ed Marden and Dick Hotchkiss.
KU-K-S Results
100-yard dash: McClay, K-S.
Schloesser, K.U.; Wagstaff, K.U.
(:10).
440-yard dash: Stites, K.U.; Bier-
440-km. K.U.; Thomas, K.-S. (49.5).
*
220-yard dash: McClay, K.S.
Wagstaff¹⁰, K.U.; Stites, K.S.
Fleming¹⁰, K.U.; KU, K.B.
880-yard dash: Shea, K.U.; Studt
K.U.; Hildebrand, K.-S. (U564).
120-yard high hurdles; Elliott
K-S; (138-tm. times, record)
220-yard low hurdles: Schloesser, K.U.; Shannon, K.-S.; Kiser, K.-S. (:24.3).
Mile: Moore, K.U.: Karnes, K.U:
Leasure, K.-S. (4:21).
Two-mile: Karnes, K.U.; Vanhav-
erbeke, K.-S.; Moore, K.U. (9.57.6)
High Jump: Scoffield, K.U.; Shannon and Danielson; tied for second (167 inches).
Broad Jump: Shannon, K.-S.; Kisser, K.S.; Crowley, K.U. (23 feet % inches).
Pole Vault: Wilson, K.U. and McClay, K-S, tied for first; Johnson, K.U. (11 feet 3 inches).
Discus: Prather, K-S.; Robison, K.U.; Payne, K-S. (152 feet 2% inches, new meet record).
Shot Put: Prather, K-S.; Robison, K.U.; Harmon, K-S. (51 feet $ 3 \frac{1}{2} $ inches).
Javelin: Henoch, K.U.; Williams, K-S.; Robison, K.U. (186 feet 87/8 inches)
Mile Relay: K.U. (Stites, Wagstaff Binter, Shea).
Was It Banned In Boston?
Salem, Ore.—(UP)—One of the 50 books given to the Marion county jail library by the Salem Lions club was rejected by Sheriff Denver Young as "to suggestive." Its title is "Saws, Knives and Files." The book was published by a Fitchburg, Mass., steel firm.
Call K.U. 376 with your Want Ads
A new American discus record was set Saturday by Fortune Gordien, Minnesota's great discus champ, in a dual meet against Illinois, when he tossed the latter 175 feet % inch.
Gordien Betters US Discus Mark
Gordien's toss bettered the previous mark of 174 feet $8 \frac{1}{4}$ inches, which was set by Archie Harris of Indiana in 1941.
Kiner's Hitting And Fielding Keep Pittsburgh In First
New York, May 3- (UP)—Before there is any dancing in the streets of Pittsburgh the patient Pirate fans want to be sure that there is no repetition of the sad story of the 1947 season.
As the Pirates strut in first place today they're hoping that they'll stay there. But they can't help but remember that in the early stages of the
last campaign the Bugs also moved up front, but toppled to a tie for dead last with the Phillies by September.
Credit for yesterday's rousing 6 to 4 triumph over Ewell Black-well belonged almost wholly to their slugging star, Ralph Kiner, who crashed out two homers against the Cincinnati ace right hand, then wound up proceedings with a miraculous catch in left field that started a game-ending double play. Snider Has Bid Day
Duke Snider of the Dodgers also had a profitable day at the plate, hitting two homers, a triple and a single, and driving in four runs in 9 to 6 victory at Philadelphia. Later Brooklyn bats were silenced by Ken Heintzelman in a four-hit, 2 to 0 second game triumph.
The Giants cashed in on one big inning in which Johnny Mize hit a two-run homer, Willard Marshall smashed a triple and Walker Cooper got a double, putting over four runs on five hits to beat the Braves at New York. 5 to 1.
The Cubs rebounded against the Cardinals at St. Louis, ending a four-game losing streak with a 19-hit, 13 to 4 triumph in which they maltreated five redbird throwers. Peanuts Lowrey led the attack with four hits while Bill Nicholson hit his third homer.
Homer. Triple For Ted
Ted Williams went to town against the Yankees at Boston, hitting a three-run homer and a two-run triple in a 7 to 1 triumph.
Pitcher Freddy Hutchinson, helped the Tigers along the comeback trail by holding the Indians
Giants Lead Homer Derby
The Giants needed 13 games to pile up their total but, after a hectic weekend, the Indians are just one behind with 15—in five less games. The Yankees, who once counted the homer their personal apple, are only two back in two less games than the 13 played by the Giants.
New York, May 3—(UP)—The New York Giants are right up at the top of baseball's hit parade today with 16 home runs, but over in the American league the Cleveland Indians and New York Yankees seem to be muscling into the act.
Cincinnati holds the place position in the National league with 12 and much of that can be attributed to rangy Hank Sauer, the rookie flychaser, who heads the majors at the moment with a total of six. Walker Cooper is runner-up for the Giants with four.
Blues, Toledo Split In Last Place Fight
The Kansas City Blues and the Toledo Mudhens got nowhere Sunday in their battle to get out of the American Association cellar. Both had to settle for a tie for last place by splitting a doubleheader at Blues Stadium.
Totedo won the first game, 5-4, in ten innings. Reifer Jim Arnold was tagged with the loss. The Blues salvaged the nightcap, 2-1, on Johnny Mackinson's four-hit mound job. The Blues' record now stands at 8 victories and 13 losses.
Today's Pitchers
(Won and lost records in parentheses)
Philadelphia (Federal League)
Philadelphia (Federal League) at Washington (Hudson 1)-night.
Chicago (Schmitz 0-2) at St. Louis (Brazle 1-1)
National League
New York (Koslo 1-0) at Cincinnati (Nander Meer 1-1)-night.
to three hits in a 4 to 2 triumph at Cleveland.
The Athletics took over second place in the American League with a 4 to 3 triumph over the Senators at Washington as Joe Coleman pitched himself out of numerous jams. He gave up 10 hits and walked three, but bore down when the Nats got in a scoring mood. The second game was called because of rain in the second inning with Philadelphia leading, 3 to 1.
The St. Louis at Chicago doubleheader in the American league was rain out.
Scores 17 Under On Muddy Course
Landover, Md. May 3—(UP)—If there was such a thing as a form chart on professional golfers, today's issue would carry the notation "outstanding mudder" next to the name of "Skip" Alexander.
It was ability to play below par golf on a below water level course that enriched the Mid Pines, N. C., veteran by $2,200 for his victory in the open tournament. He completed his game Georges layout Sunday with a final round 68 for a 72-hole score of 271, 17 under par.
Bobby Locke got $1,600 for second place after opening a huge lead with a 13-under-par total on the first 36 holes.
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—ENDS TUESDAY—
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MONDAY, MAY 3, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
948
Golf, Tennis Squads Take Three, Tie One
Jayhawker golf and tennis teams showed a record of three victories and one tie today after weekend matches with Nebraska and Tulsa on home territory.
The netmen trounced Nebraska 7 to 0 on Friday for their first Big Sven conference triumph of the year, and on Saturday held a strong
Tulaa team to a 3 to 3 tie. Kansas linksmns squeezed out a $ \frac{9}{12} $ to $ \frac{8}{12} $ victory over Nebraska and scored decisively over Tulsa, 12 to 6. The golf team's conference record is now one victory and one defeat.
Tennis coach Jim Seaver was forced to juggle his lineup Friday after Hal Miller, number two singles, was declared ineligible for further competition. Seaver said Miller was ineligible because he was carrying insufficient semester hours. Towies Is No. 2.
Seaver moved Glenn Tongier into the number two spot and Dick Cray, who made a rapid recovery from a chest injury, was pressed into service in the number four position.
The Cornhuskers, who lost their third straight match, were unable to win a set from the Jayhawkers. Dick Richards started Kansas off by defeating previously unbeaten Bob Berger in a first set before being ered in the first set by Slezak's strong service, but won the second easily.
Richards teamed up with Cray for the first time in the doubles and the two outlasted Slezak and Cady, 9-7, 7-5. Dave Cowley and Maeferran defeated Magee and Ostergard, 6-2, 6-3.
Tongier defeated Jack Cady, 6-2,
6-1; Hervery Macferran defeated Bob Baumann, 6-4, 6-0; Cray defeated Jerry Magee, 6-1, 6-3; Charlie Carson defeated Woody Ostergard, 6-3,
6-4.
Doubles Teams Win
Carson and Macferran pulled the Tulsa match out of the fire for the Jayhawkers by defeating Roy Keeling and Lou Lunquist in a marathon doubles match, 12-10, 13-11 to gain a 3 to 3 tie. Tulsa had just taken an edge when Burfard Monett and Roy Traband defeated Richards and Cray, 6-0, 6-4.
In singles matches, Richards defeated Monett, 6-4, 6-3; Traband defeated MacFerran, 6-1, 6-0; Keeling defeated Cray, 6-4, 6-3; and Carson defeated Lunquist, 6-3, 6-2. Meeker, Delonky Star
Bob Meeker and Hal DeLongy paced the golf team to twin victories. In the Nebraska match, which was a battle right down to the wire, Meeker fired a brilliant one-over par 69 to score an important 3 to 0 victory over Don Stroh. Meeker might have broken par if he hadn't missed two short putts. DeLongy fired a 72, second best card turned in.
Against Tulsa, considered one of the strongest teams in the southwest, DeLongy came to the fore and duplicated Meeker's 69.
In the Tulsa match the scores of all eight men averaged 73, five over par. The results: Kayses-Nebraska
Don Spomer (N) defeated Dick Ashley, 3 to 0; Del Ryder (N) defeated Murray Regier, $2_{1/2}$ to $1/2$; Hal DeLongy defeated John Bumstead (N), $2_{1/2}$ to $1/2$; Bob Meeker defeated Don Stroh (N) 3 to 0; Spomer-Ryder defeated Ashley-Regier, $2_{1/2}$ to $1/2$; DeLongy-Meeker defeated Stroh-Bumstead, 3 to 0.
Kansas-Tulsa
Bob LaFortune (T) defeated Meeker, 2½ to ½; DeLongy defeated Fred Daniel (T), 3 to 0; Dick Ashley defeated Ted Cardwell (T), 3 to 0; Regier tied Rex Frates (T), 1½ to 1½; Meeker-DeLongy defeated Daniel-LaFortune, 2 to 1; Ashley-Regier defeated Frates-Cardwell, 2 to 1.
Beal Awarded Pharmacy Medal
The Lehn and Fink gold medal for excellence in pharmacy has been awarded to Jack L. Beal, pharmacy senior, Dean J. Allen Reese of the School of Pharmacy announced recently.
The medal is the top honor a pharmacy student can achieve. Scholarship, initiative, and University and pharmaceutical activities are the basis upon which the faculty makes the selection, Dean Reese said.
| | G | AB | R | H Pct. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| John Fencyk, c | 4 | 6 | 0 | 3.500 |
| Guy Mabry, p-ph | 4 | 6 | 0 | 2.333 |
| Lou Delaun, lba | 6 | 25 | 5 | 7.280 |
| Red Hogan, cf | 6 | 22 | 7 | 6.273 |
| Harold May, 3b | 6 | 26 | 4 | 7.269 |
| Scott Kelly, 2b | 6 | 24 | 4 | 6.250 |
| Bud French, ss | 6 | 26 | 5 | 6.230 |
| Dick Bertuzzi, 1f | 5 | 22 | 4 | 4.182 |
| Jack Fink, c | 5 | 15 | 0 | 2.133 |
| Neil Shaw, of-3b | 5 | 15 | 2 | 2.133 |
| Dick Gilman, p | 3 | 9 | 0 | 1.111 |
Celler-Dwelling Jayhawkers Travel To Lincoln For Two
Batting Averages
Russ Sehon's hard-luck baseball forces, now resting in the Big Seven cellar with one win and five defeats, will tackle Nebraska at Lincoln today and tomorrow in the second consecutive series on the road.
"The players seem to be trying too hard and are tense instead of relaxed," Sehon believes. He said that experience will tend to do away with many of the miscues.
Sehon is enthusiastic about the mound staff, and especially Dick Gilman, the strong-armed right hander. He believes that Gilman may be the best pitcher in the league before the season is over.
Hammer and Ralph Freed tossed an impressive seven-hitter against the Wildcats last week but dropped the decision, 4 to 2. Spider Mabry has also looked good, and may have gone the route against the Sooners with good fielding support, Sheon believes.
In eight games 30 errors have been chalked up to the Jayhawkers, or an average of almost four per game. Against Oklahma here, 12 bobbles handed the Sooners a 12 to 5 win. 'Plavers Are Tense'
Although he has yet to win a game, the Merriam athlete has permitted only two earned runs in three complete games. He has struck out 39, and allowed 17 hits in 272/3 innings against Big Seven opponents. Against Oklahoma, lefty Lou Hammer pitched to one batter in the tenth to get credit for only Kansas victory, after Gilman had labored 9 2-3 frames.
Pitching Is Steady
Gilman will probably hurl today against Nebraska, with Hammer a likely bet for tomorrow. Another prospect who may get a chance soon is Dick Fletcher. small right hander
The losing habit can be traced to a rash of errors that have directly robbed the Jayhawkers of three games, Sehon believes. The pitching has been good, the hitting usually ade- quate, but the defense has leaked consistently.
who has tossed well in intra-squad appearances.
Two port-side swatters have broken into the lineup recently with encouraging results. They are Paul Gilkison, a lead right fielder, who has boosted the base hit department and played errorless bell. Show Fills In
The other is Neil Shaw, who started the season in the outfield but was summoned to replace Hal May in the Kansas State series when the latter injured his leg. Shaw has filled in capably, and will probably be plenty of actions this season. May is slated to return to his hot corner spot today.
The Cornhuskers will be without the services of their hard-hitting outfielder, Bob Cerv, who sprained a wrist against Iowa last week. Two weeks ago they lost their top swatter when Fritz Hedgewood suffered a broken leg in practice.
Add 103 New British Peers
London—(UP) — Since 1939, 103 new peers have boosted the number of British lords to 926. Debrett reports. Newcomers pay $420 each for their coats of arms. Baronets number 1,530, including 11 Americans. Debrett is Britain's official directory of the nobility.
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Derby Star May Win Triple Crown
Louisville, Ky., May 3—(UP)—The derby dolts and the derby demons heartily agreed today that Citation, winner of Saturday's Kentucky classic, will win the triple crown as he pleases, and then posed this enticing question: Is Calumet's comet destined to overhaul Stymie as the greatest money winner of all time?
There were many who told you yes in the wake of Saturday's derby. They pointed to the overwhelming superiority of the bay coll over the current crop of three-year-olds, to the $332,930 he has earned to date, and the 15 victories he has scored in 17 races.
Griffith Named Olympic Mentor
Ames, Ia., May 3—(UP)—Olympic wrestling coach Art Griffith of Oklahoma A & M ordered two weeks training today for the country's 16 best amateur grapplers to prepare the squad for the London games in July.
Griffith was given the coaching job Sunday after three days of eliminations here among 175 starters yielded the U.S. Olympic wrestling team. There were eight weight divisions.
The team will be managed by Cliff Keen, of the University of Michigan.
Complete Line Men's and Ladies Toiletries Stowits REXALL Store
Inflation money from cities in Germany is on display this week in the show case of the German department in Fraser hall. The money which was issued in 1929, was collected by Marvin Gene Gregory, College junior, when he was with the occupation forces in Germany.
German Inflation Money Is On Display In Fraser
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 3, 1948
The Editorial Page
Final Round
Chancellor Malott Scores KO
Chancellor Deane W. Malott scored the final punch at the recent Student-Faculty conference. At the end of the discussion, he ably summarized the conference for the benefit of those present in the light of the University's attitude about each of the problems discussed.
in on the program, regret was expressed that the of v
During the first topic on the pi University is losing a number of good professors this year, and it was wondered if something could be done about this. Chancellor Malott corrected this impression by stating that "the University is losing only a small percentage of its teachers, and, although we regret to lose them, we are glad to know that we have men who are so good that someone else wants them." He also added that some new blood each year gives a stimulating effect to the faculty of this school.
The concern over the lack of student-faculty relations was answered when the Chancellor said, "The reason there isn't more is because the students aren't seeking it.
"The staff is here because it wants to have contact with young people," he added. Had there been time, some rebuttal would probably have evolved from this statement.
The question was raised as to student representation on committees which invoke disciplinary action. The Chancellor stated, "If the All Student Council would be willing to co-operate with the faculty, I would guarantee that students would be represented in every disciplinary action. This would make possible a strong student-faculty discipline committee."
Chancellor Malott remarked that many committee meetings are held without the student representative bothering to be present. This reflects the general student attitude and indicates that students are not willing to accept the responsibility which the University is willing to offer.
The suggestion that rooms be provided for "bull sessions" in the various buildings and departments was met with understandings and sympathy by the Chancellor; however, he pointed out that with 60 departments, the needed 60 extra rooms were not available under the present crowded conditions. "We will get something worked out," he added.
Changing to the problems presented by the curriculum, Chancellor
University Daily Hansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assm. Na-
Assm. and the Associated Collegeg
Press. Represented by the National Ad-
Assm. 420 Madison Ave. New York City.
Editor-In-Chief ... David H. Clymer
Managing Editor ... Cooper Rollow
Editors ... Clarence M. Geny
Asst. Man. Editor ... Gene Vignery
City Editor ... John Stauffer
Asst. City Editor ... James Beatty
City Editor ... Richard Berthelot
Telegraph Editor ... James Robinson
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Hal Nelson
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Bill Marsh
Tel. Editor ... Paul Zeb
Sports Editor ... James Jones
Women's Sports Ed. Anna Mary Murphy
Feature Editor .. Robert Johnson
Feature Editor ... Patricia Bentley
Society Editor ... Patricia Bentley
Malott commented in regard to the teacher shortage criticism, "You alone give yourself an education—not the教师." This statement was also made in connection with the lack of training and experience found in some instructors.
"Western Civilization is K.U.'s contribution to one of the great problems of the world today, "the Chancellor stated. He gave no indication that the University is about to change this requirement.
Business Manager .. Bill Alderson
Adv. Manager .. Paul Warner
DVP. Warden .. Don Warden
Asst. Cm. Mgr .. Bill Binter
Class. Adv. Mgr .. Ruth Clayton
Asst. Class. Mgr .. Eleanor Mgr
Asst. Class. Adv. Mgr .. Carol Buther
Nat. Adv. Mgr .. Paul Sokolek
Nat. Adv. Mgr .. Paul Sokolek
Promotion Mgr .. Elsevier
Promotion Mgr .. Don James
Promotion Mgr .. Don Tennant
The cheating problem, the Chancellor said is "too much of an attitude of shrugging our shoulders at what the other fellow does. It is up to the students to take the cheater aside and tell him that K.U. students don't do that."
The Chancellor closed by saying that college is an experience in living which will leave the fewest possible scars and bring the greatest benefit.
He also pointed out that the student-faculty conference is a long range development and that students should not expect to see changes taking place over night.
Such was the final evaluation by the Chancellor. Everyone present derived a better insight into the
UMT Essential
Dear Editor
Dear Editor:
The United States has two alternatives which it may take in world affairs. First, prepare for war now with Universal Military Training or second, wait to see if the peace we fought so hard for will prevail. The second will be impossible if the slightest suspicion of war exists within the next 25 years.
There will undoubtedly be another war within this length of time. With U.M.T., we shall be able to prepare for it before it comes.
The communists in Europe are gaining ground with a battle of words and undercover activity. The time will come when they think they are strong enough to further expand. We must be able to defend ourselves and our neighbors and stop aggression.
I am not a veteran, but I would be willing to interrupt my education if congress did pass such a bill. Most parents object to U.M.T. because they hate to see their children go into the service, but they don't realize that if we don't secure the future now with U.M.T. they will eventually have to go to war.
Robert Case Engineering freshman
problems which face this large institution. Let's keep looking for solutions to these problems by having a similar conference next fall.
Each of Minnesota's 3,887 doctors must serve 727 patients.
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French Department Host To Foreign Students
The department of Romance languages held a luncheon recently in honor of two foreign exchange students and several persons of French origin. Advanced French students were also guests.
Attending the luncheon were Dr. Minnie M. Miller, head of the modern language department at Kansas State Teacher's college at Emporia; Jean Leblon, exchange student from Belgium at Emporia; Jean Delord, University exchange student from Montauka, France, and Jean Ciron, now a Lawrence resident.
Miss Mattie E. Crumrine, assistant professor of Romance languages, was in charge.
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MONDAY, MAY 3, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
Phone KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be sent in person at the library 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 a.m. the day before publication is desired.
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For Sale
RECORD PLAYER; two-burner hot plate; and fencing mask and foil. Cheap, cheap, cheep, cheep, cheep, Phil. Lakefront Lakefront phone 2065. 3 NEW PORTABLE typewriter at wholesale, carrying case for 10 and 12-inch records; used carpet sweeper; practically new Crossey convertible auto. Art Ruppe. 1930 CHERVELROT, very clean, new tires. 314 W. 14th. 5 SIAMESE KITTENS for sale. Prost stud. Amodos blood lines. Service by ap-Lawrence, Kansas. O'Bryan. 1332 Tenn. 4 WANTED to ship: Nice RCA radio-victrola $35.00. also a bicycle $15.00. Come to see them. 115 South Park. 4 DAY BED, practically new; easy chair. 3 VETERANSA! We will buy, trade or sell you for any Army or Navy gear in good condition that may wish to dispose of Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. Phone
Lost
GOLD "NORMA" four color pencil. Reed. J. Scott. Phone 831. 4
WOMAN'S 17-jewel Marvin wrist watch,
gold case and band at Holcomb grove.
Reward offered. Please call Hoyt Baker,
1106. 3
SILVER EVAN'S cigarette lighter near University tennis court. Sentimental value. Also black Shaffer fountain pen. Also Frank Flerp, 2738R at Kansas on campus.
A WHITE WOOL McGregor jacket in 101
Snow, approximately 20 inches. Ribbons,
Tabs, Tub Bottoms, 3211
GLASSES; brown case. Clear, colorless plastic frame. Call Phyllis Rust at 1315. 3 MAN'S BLACK raincoat, probably in late turn in Kanman office or call 1196.
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Akron, Ohio—(UP)—The rubber-band business is snapping back to pre-war level. According to B. F. Goodrich, about 23 quattroilion, 800 trillion bands of assorted sizes will be turned out this year. (A quattroilion is a million billions.) That represents about 1,750 tons of raw rubber, for on the average a pound of rubber yields 6,800 bands.
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TAILOR-MADE suits. $36.50 to $65.00. Expert alteration and tailoring. George Eberhart & Son, Tailor Shop. $811½ Mass.
THEISIS typing wanted by teacher-typist with fifteen years experience in KU typing. Will also do long term reports. Work guaranteed. Phone 2908 or 547. 3
NEW vacuum cleaners for rent. Attachments included. $1.50 per day. Al Brooks Sweeper Co., 8311$^2$ Mass. Ph. 1104 between 9 and 12 a.m.
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To Teach Classes In Football, Basketball
BILL'S GRILL
Persons not enrolled regularly in the summer session may take either or both of these courses through University Extension. A dormitory will be provided at $1 a day for such students. Enrollment fee is $5 for each credit hour in both courses.
J. V. Sikes, football coach, and Dr. F. C. "Phog" Allen, basketball coach, will teach special football and basketball classes in the University summer session. The football class is a two-hour course and will run from June 14 through June 26. The basketball course is for three hours credit and will be from June 28 to July 17.
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY. MAY 3, 1948
Draft Bill OK'd By House Group; Veterans Exempt
Washington, May 3—(UP)—The house armed services committee today voted 28 to 5 to draft men 19 through 25 for two years of military duty. Veterans generally would be exempt.
Enough men would be called to boost the army, navy, and air force from their present strength of 1,384,500 to 2,005,882 by 1950.
1,384,500 to 2,020,800. The draft would be increased to 592,000 men—enough to support 70 groups. The draft would get under way automatically 90 days after approval by congress and signed by the president.
He urged rallies. The committee's okay gives the measure a good boost toward passage. But it does not assure that it will become law. It must pass the house and senate and be signed by the president before it can become effective. However, the house Republican leadership hinted today it will give the bill a green light.
The committee acted after defense Secretary James Forrestal called the draft bill an "excellent" measure. He urged fast approval.
Rep. Leslie Arends (R-III.), house majority whip and a member of the armed services committee, announced that he will support the draft in the house. He warned, however, he will change his mind if any effort is made to couple the bill with universal military training.
Here are the main features of the draft bill:
1. Registration: All men 18 through
30.
2. Induction: Men 19 through 25.
3. How long: Two years.
4. When: Draft starts automatically 90 days after bill's enactment.
5. Exempt: Veterans who served more than a year in World War II; those who served 90 days or more, provided they join an organized reserve unit; conscientious objectors, ministers, and ministerial students.
The final examination for Western Civilization will be given at 2 p.m. May 15. The place of the examination will be assigned at the time of registration.
Western Civ Exam May 15
All students who plan to take the examination are expected to register at the registrar's office beginning today through Friday. They will be given a card which will admit them to the examination.
Any student may take the examination except first semester freshmen. All students who entered in September 1945 or after are required to take the examination before the end of their sophomore year. It is a requirement for graduation from the College.
The annual Young American Artist program at 8:20 p.m. today in Fraser theater will present Evelyn Swarthowr, concert pianist, in a program featuring novelties from Samuel Barber, Aaron Copland, and Robert Palmer. There is no admission charged.
Swarthout To Play In Recital Today
Miss Swarthout, daughter of Dean D. M. Swarthout, graduated from the University in 1832. She continued her study both in the United States and Europe. In London she was a pupil of Tobias Matthey and won the three-year Geoffrey Reynolds scholarship. In America she won the Kate Kinley Memorial scholarship. She has appeared five times as soloist with the National Symphony orchestra in Washington, D.C.
Miss Swarthout will present for the first time at the University "Sonata in D Minor" (Bach)
25 Tickets Left For Engineers
Twenty-five tickets are still available for the annual engineering students banquet. T. De Witt Carr, dean of the School of Engineering, said today. Students can buy tickets in the rotunda of Marvin hall.
The banquet will be held at 6:30 p.m. today in the Kansas room of the Union.
William H. Milton, Jr., commercial vice-president of the General Electric company, will speak on "Engineering Futures."
The annual Kansan Board dinner will be given at 6:30 p.m. Friday in the Kansas room of the Union. Recognition awards will be presented to outstanding students in the William Allen White School of Journalism.
Top Journalists Will Be Honored
Gideon Seymour, executive editor of the Minneapolis Star and Tribune, will be the guest speaker at the banquet. His topic will be "Kilroy Was Here."
Mr. Seymour is a member of the American Society of Newspaper Editors and Sigma Delta Chi. In 1923, as an associated Press sports-writer, he immortalized Red Grange as "The Galloping Ghost."
He visited the campus in November when he was a member of the visitation committee which inspected the William Allen White School of Journalism for possible accreditation as a professional school. Some 0 schools were inspected; announcement of results will be made in June.
He won the Sigma Delta Chi award last year for distinguished editorial writing. He was graduated from Drake university in 1923, and has been executive editor of the Star and Tribune since 1944.
An award for the outstanding journalism senior man will be given by Sigma Delta Chi, journalism fraternity. The best senior man and woman in news, editorial, and advertising will be cited.
Awards will be given for the best news story, feature story, headline, editorial, and retail advertisement.
Sigma Delta Chi will also give certificates to senior journalists in the upper 10 per cent of the class.
The Henry Schott memorial prize will be given to the junior man who was a member of the Knights.
Charles Roos, reporter on the Denver Post, won last year's award or outstanding senior man, and the outstanding man award given by Sigma Delta Chi. He was also joked as the best senior man in the news and editorial department.
william T. Smith, Jr., College senior, won the Henry Schott memorial prize last year.
APO Has Kite Contest
More than $75 in prizes were awarded to the 25 winners. Home-made kites of all sizes, ranging from one box kite 3 inches high to a French war kite 9 feet high, were entered. Chinese demonstration kites made by Scout troop 58 were flown and a special weather kite 6 feet high was made by Shigley with Alpha Phi Omega streamers attached to it.
Alpha Phi Omega, secuing service fraternity, under the direction of farold Shigley, contest committee chairman, sponsored their all scout kite flying contest Saturday.
The largest, smallest, and the most unusual kites were awarded first prizes and were made by Bernard Spence and Buster Carney of Scout troop 58 and Max Daniel of Scout troop 59.
Lawrence businessmen donated a portable radio and two cameras with flash equipment as first place prizes.
Return From Field Trip
Faculty members and students of the petroleum engineering department returned May 1 from a field trip to the Otis oil field near Great Bend.
Student UN Disagree On 2 Major Issues
Delegates to the student United Nations mock conference failed to agree on the Palestine issue or German peace settlement May 1. For the third straight year the Russian delegation walked out when their motives were questioned by member nations.
Saying that many college men and women of the Midwest lack interest in world affairs. Carl Slough, assistant professor of law, in the opening address complimented the audience and student delegates for their enthusiasm. He added that world peace would be maintained only through understanding among peoples of all nations. The mock conference is a step in the right direction.
Argument on Palestine centered around partition and trusteeship. After much preliminary debating between Russian, French, and Jewish delegations on one side, and the United States, Canada, and the Latin Americas on the other, the Canadian proposal for trusteeship was defeated.
Argument on the German peace settlement was clouded in a maze of crippling amendments proposed by the Eastern bloc against the Western bloc. During debate on the issue the Mexican delegate, Hal M. Friesen, business junior, attacked Russia's motives in the Communist's advocacy of German payment of reparations. The Red delegation, led by a Russian army officer in full dress uniform, stalked out of the conference, and their satellites followed.
Russia Backs Poland
Russia backed the Polish proposal that Germany be forced to pay 10 billion dollars in reparations to Russia, and that a trusteeship be established to govern Germany so that payment could be implemented. Britain, favored making Germany a federated state, except for the Canada, the United States, and Great Rhineland, which would be internationalized. When the Russians and their satellites walked out, a quorum could not be obtained to vote on any of the German resolutions.
Lee H. Reiff, College freshman, the United States delegate-in-chief, said that partition met with violent Arab reaction, and a trusteeship should be provided so that moderate elements of both sides could work out a solution. He added that Russia is always willing to send troops anywhere because as soon as they do their philosophy of government soon follows.
During the Palestine debate Russia accused the United States of letting their economic interests in Middle Eastern oil mean more than peace in Palestine. Russia advocated that partition should be enforced by an international police force, and added that they were willing to use their troops for that duty. US.Asks.For.Trusteeship
Jewish representatives, who had no vote, requested that Jewish troops be supplied with weapons for their self protection. Ira Gissen, College junior, who represented the Zionists maintained that the U.N. had already decided to partition Palestine, so the Jewish people there were members of a separate nation. This nation was being attacked, he said, and so had rights to protect itself.
During the German peace debate, the Western powers maintained that the well being of Europe depends upon a stable economy in Germany, Robert D. Judy, College senior representing Canada, said that excessive reparations demanded by Russia would make it impossible to reconstruct Germany as an economically strong nation.
Canada Opposes Reparations
The Eastern powers said that if Germany is made economically strong the country will again be a threat to peace. Russia should receive reparations to help repay the damages suffered at Germany's hands in World War II, Ralph C. Eacock, College junior and Russian delegate, said.
Maybe They Want Job 'Cause No One Ever Shouts At The Drug Store Clerk
Drug store and hospital jobs are preferred by the three women who are graduating this spring from the School of Pharmacy.
Frankie Sue Freeman said, "I'm getting married June 16 and intend to loaf all summer, but next winter I am going to try to get a job in the pharmacy department of some hospital or a professional prescription shop. I would prefer a job in a hos- pital though."
Edith Marie Schrieber likes small Kansas towns.
"Right now I'm just trying to decide which town that has offered me a job I like best. The job definitely will be in a drug store because I
like them,"she said.
Pollyanna Ensign is also undecided about her employment, but says that she is sure it will be retail work, "leaning toward the drug store type."
FUN
- Clubs and balls provided.
Open nightly at 7:30; 2 p.m. on Sat. and Sunday.
FOR ALL
- Dirt, rubber mat and automatic tees.
- Bill McGarry—Professional.
Lessons by appointment.
GOLF
1 Mile East of Haskell on 10 YOU DRIVE 'EM WE'LL SHAG 'EM!
Jayhawk Golf Driving Range
J. Paul Sheedy* Switched to Wildroot Cream-Oil Because He Flunked The Finger Nail Test
THIS IS no 'yoke', son. If people have been calling you egg-head because your hair looks soft-boiled, here's eggs-actly what to do. Get busy with popular Wildroot Cream-Oil hair tonic. It groomes your hair neatly and naturally without that gooey look. Relieves annoying dryness and removes loose, ugly dandruff. Helps you pass the Fingernail Test! Wildroot Cream-Oil is non-alcoholic . . . contains soothing Lanolin. Get a tube or bottle of Wildroot Cream-Oil at any drug or toilet goods counter today. Always ask your barber for a professional application. (Better be hard-boiled with your roommate -- keep eggging him to get some Wildroot Cream-Oil of his own. It's tops for keeping your sunny side up!)
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University Daily Kansan
45th Year No. 141
Tuesday, May 4, 1948
Lawrence Kansas
STUDENT NEWSPAPER
Lawrence, Kansas
Summer Rooms For Couples A Problem
Single students will have no housing problem for the summer session, Irvin Youngberg, director of dormitories, said today. He cautioned that married couples will find it more difficult to get living quarters.
Single students who will attend summer school and want to stay in dormitories can make arrangements with Mrs. Ruth Nash, housing director, in 220 Frank Strong hall. All University dormitories will house students and persons attending institutes or taking short courses.
"We do need housing for married students." Youngberg said. "Composition of the summer session student body is gradually shifting back to the pre-war pattern. A large portion will be married school teachers and the percentage of single students is expected to decrease as compared to last year."
Temporary tenants in Sunnyside pay $34 a month rent, and, in addition, a furniture charge of $6 has been authorized. Youngberg said that 12 Sunnyside units have been sublet for this summer already.
"We'll need more city apartments and, houses for the summer," he said.
Mr. Youngberg is an agent for subletting.
New Degree In Geology
A new degree of bachelor of science in geological engineering can now be awarded by the University. Chancellor Deane W. Malot announced today. Authorization was given by the state board of regents.
A geological option in petroleum engineering had been offered, but this degree did not accurately indicate the graduate's qualifications. The new degree makes 12 major courses offered by the School of Engineering.
T. DeWitt Carr, dean of the School of Engineering, announced that the new geological curriculum being prepared would contain more basic engineering and -would give more time for humanistic studios.
Dr. Robert M. Dreyer, chairman of the geology department, will direct the geological engineering studies and will become a member of the School of Engineering faculty.
Debate Team Wins Third
Kenneth E. Beasley, College senior, and Edward Stolenwerck, sophomore, University debate team members, won third place Friday in the National Invitational Debate tournament at West Point, N.Y.
The University debate team, with three other universities in the semifinals—Florida, Texas State, and Purdue—lost the opportunity to win a $1.500 silver cup. The defeat gave the Kansas team a record of 17 lost and 108 won.
Beasley and Stollenwerck were undefeated in the Missouri Valley tournament. Stollenwerck won second place in the Missouri Valley extemporaneous tournament and Beasley was a finalist in the Lorraine Buehler oratorical contest.
The University debate team was defeated by Florida university in the semi-finals on the question: "Resolved, that a federal world government should be established." Kansas argued the affirmative in the 34-university tournament.
Weidner To Play For Senior Dance
Del Weidner's orchestra from Topeka will play for the Senior Cakewalk, to be held 9 p.m. to midnight, Saturday, in the Union ballroom.
The Cakewalk will be for seniors and their dates only. Admission will be by receipt for senior dues or a note from the registrar stating that the person is a senior. The dance is semi-formal.
12 To Attend NISA Meeting
Twelve representatives of the Independent Students association will attend the 1948 national I.S.A. conference at Iowa State university Friday and Saturday.
The University I.S.A. will bid for the 1949 N.I.S.A. conference, according to Alice M. Wismer, I.S.A. president. The last national conference held here was in 1937.
Sixty-eight universities will send representatives to the Iowa N.I.S.A. George Denny, moderator for "America's Town Meeting of the Air," will be one of the principal speakers. A day recognized as National Independent's day will be decided upon at the conference.
Betty van der Smissen, College junior, will be nominated to the executive council of the N.I.S.A.
I. S.A. representatives and faculty members attending the conference are L.C. Woodruff, dean of men; and Mrs. Woodruff; Wilson O'Connell, Maxine L. Holsinger, Miss van der Smissen, Lew V. Coats, Jack Pringle.
Robert L. Clore, James D. Petersen, Eugene F. Cooper, Robert C. Hamilton, and Miss Wisner.
WEATHER
Kansas—Fair and warmer today.
Partly coldy tonight and tomorrow with few widely scattered light showers northwest half of state tonight. And in southeast half tomorrow. Somewhat cooler tomorrow. High today 70-75.
Labor Picture Appears Dark Across Nation
Bv UNITED PRESS
The nation's labor picture darkened considerably today as federal mediators virtually gave up hope of averting a rail strike and the C.I.O. United Auto Workers demanded a 30-cent hourly wage increase for Ford employees.
Frank P. Douglass, chairman of the national railway mediation board, scheduled final meetings between the carriers and representatives of three railway operating unions. But he expressed little hope that a settlement could be reached
"It looks very much like there might be a national railway strike May 11," he said.
The unions, representing 150,000 engineers, firemen, and switchmen, said they would leave their jobs on that date unless the railroads grant their demands for changes in the working rules and a 30 per cent wage increase.
In other labor developments:
1. Officials of the C.I.O. United Packinghouse Workers said Wilson and Company's threat to fire striking workers had not affected the nationwide meat strike.
2. C.I.O. President Philip Murray accused the steel industry of making "paltry" cuts in steel prices in "mere shadow boxing for public exhibition."
3. Soft coal operators moved to block any new wage demands by John L. Lewis and his United Mine Workers. The operators announced they had spent 5 million dollars for supplies, repairs, and new equipment during 1947. The statement was seen as paving the way to refuse demands for wage increases when the miners' contract comes up for renewal June 30.
4. In the only optimistic note on the labor scene, the Communications Workers of America (Ind.), announced they will extend their contracts with the telephone industry for "short periods of time" to forestall a nationwide telephone strike.
Little Man On Campus
By Bibler
"Let's play 'College'—I'll give the examinations!"
Summer Kansan Applications Due
The deadline for applications for editor and business manager of the Summer Session Kansan is Saturday.
Applications should be submitted to. Elmer F. Beth, acting director of the School of Journalism.
The letter should give in detail the applicant's training and experience. Interviews will be arranged for the applicants selected. The Summer Session Kansan will
The Summer Session Kansan will be published on Tuesdays and Fridays.
Political Eyes Turn To Ohio
Rv UNITED PRESS
The primary battle between Harold E. Stassen and Senator Robert A.Taft for 23 of Ohio's 53 delegates to the G.O.P. national convention brought out a near record vote today.
Florida, Alabama, and Indiana also held primary elections, but the spotlight was on the Ohio fight, where Mr. Stassen was battling Senator Taft on the senator's home ground;
Both candidates expressed confidence in the outcome of today's crucial test. Mr. Taft predicted he would shut out the former governor of Minnesota. But Mr. Stassen said he expected to win at least 12 of the 23 delegates he has entered in the election.
Both presidential aspirants have stumped the state from end to end in bitter campaigns during the past month. Observers expected approximately 1,200,000 persons to vote in Ohio, 650,000 of them on the Republican ballot.
According to political experts, Senator Taft had to make a good showing today to retain a chance for the presidential nomination. He has been defeated by Mr. Stassen in Nebraska and Pennsylvania.
General Sees KU Campus
Sir John is an exchange lecturer sponsored by the Kermit Roosevelt fund provided to help promote better relations between American and British military forces. Sir John spent three days visiting the Command and General Staff college at Ft. Leavenworth.
A 52-year wait to see an American university was fulfilled May 7 for Lt. Gen. Sir John Harding of the British General staff, when he drove from Ft. Leavenworth to make a shotgun tour of the University.
Lady Harding commented during the tour on the number of women at the University. In England there are very few women attending schools of higher education, she said.
Emotions May Save World. Chapple Savs
Personal emotions can be made into universal emotions which we hope will save the world, said Stanley Chapple, English conductor and lecturer, who spoke at an All-University convocation in Hoch auditorium today.
Mr. Chapple, who spoke on "The Place of Fine Arts in Everyday Living," was introduced by Chancellor
☆ ☆
S. W. C. M. L.
STANLEY CHAPPLE
Deane W. Malott. He appeared in connection with Music Week.
"A universal emotion is an intensification of human feeling by great creative artists into something so fine that everyone can understand it, but cannot express it himself," the lecturer explained.
Unfortunately most of the music today is written to appeal to the personal emotions, he said. The reason is that music, with the advent of the radio, was thrust upon the people too suddenly for them to have had an opportunity to understand its significance.
"Music today has become the tool of exploitation because no one showed the musically illiterate its value. Therefore, it is assuming an inferior position to literature, sculptor, and painting.
The University Symphony orchestra, directed by Russell L. Wiley, played the overture "Russlan and Ludmilla," by Glinka. Prof. and Mrs. Joseph Wilkins sang a duet from the first act of "Rigoletto," by Verdi.
"We can gain an understanding of music, as well as the other arts, through education and participation. This understanding is needed in order for a person to be discriminating."
Wallace Is Heckled At Missouri U When He Attempts To Speak There
Columbia, Mo., May 4—(UP)—Henry A. Wallace today denounced a crowd of hecklers who delayed for 15 minutes a speech he delivered on the courthouse lawn here Monday before an estimated 3,000 persons.
A group of about 100 Missouri university students was responsible for the disturbance.
"A small minority is keeping the presidential candidate from being heard" he said. "I don't want that sort of thing about a great university to go out over the United States."
When the heckling stopped, Mr. Wallace took advantage of his nearness to Fulton, Mo., where Winston Churchill spoke in 1946 to Missouri's school of journalism. He attacked the administration's foreign policy, which he said began with Mr.
Churchill's Fulton speech, and derided the "lassitude of the American press."
Referring to Senator Glen Taylor's arrest for disorderly conduct when he tried to enter a door marked "For Negroes Only" in Birmingham, Ala., Mr. Wallace said he was "glad that Mr. Taylor has scratched beneath the surface to see how deep our democracy really is."
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 4, 1948
Monster Takes Bride In Reign Of Terror Over Students
If you don't believe that the "female is deadlier than the male" just wait until you get back a test paper graded by "Flunkensteina," the new mechanical wizard at the guidance bureau.
Flunkenstein has come to help out Flunkenstein who came to the guidance bureau last year to do the paper work for harried professors. The newcomer not only grades those fill- $ \textcircled{4} $
in-with-a-graphite-pencil exams,
but she tells the professors whether
the questions are good or bad. If
a certain percentage of the class
missed a question, then it wasn't a
good question.
The new machine has been obtained more for the features it offers the professors than for flunking
students. It will score a heavier load of papers than the other machine and will analyze the test at the same time. It will be possible to tell with percentage of the students missed every item and will enable instructors to tell whether questions are good or bad.
Official Bulletin
May 4, 1948
*Scarab, 7:15 tonight, 205 Maryin*
Seaarb, 7:15 tonight, 206 Marvin.
Archery club practice, 5-7 p.m. today,
and 4-6 p.m. tomorrow.
Students planning to take Western Civilization examination, 2 p.m. Saturday, May 15, must sign at Registrar's office this week. Admittance card received at Registrar's office must be present at time of examination. Examining place also assigned there.
F.B.U.A., 5 p.m. today, Pine room,
Memorial Memorial, Election of officers,
Sigma Tau initiation banquet, 6:45 p.m. today, Castle Tea room, B. J. George, speaker.
Regular meeting of new A.S.C.
7:15 tonight, Pine room.
United World Federalists, 4 p.m. today, Pine room, Union. All interested.
Jewish Student Union, 5 p.m. today, Myers hall.
All organizations interested in helping with plans for new student orientation program next fall should send representatives to meeting, 4 p.m. today, 217 Frank Strong.
Tau Sigma meeting, 7:15 tonight
Bring footed money, Waltz group,
7:45. Wednesday, 7-7:30 p.m., Gavotte and Jig; 7:30-8:30, Spanish;
8:30 Music Comedy, all in Robininson gym. Thursday, dress rehearsal,
7-10 p.m. (Fraser.)
American Society of Tool Engineers, 8:15 p.m. tomorrow, Lindley auditorium. Speaker, J. Y Riedel of Bethlehem Steel Corporation. "Applications and Heat Treatment of Tool Steel."
K.U. Dames, 8 p.m., tomorrow, 37
Frank Strong. Election of officers,
All Home Economics majors who plan to enroll next semester meet in 110 Fraser, 4 p.m. tomorrow. Check next year schedules with Miss Anderson, Miss Lohr, or Miss Hill before Wednesday's meeting.
Physical Therapy club, 7 p.m. to
morrow, PT room, Watkins Memo-
rial Hospital, Dr Rose, speaker.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7 p.m. tomorrow, 113 Frank Strong.
Everyone interested in learning square dancing, 7 p.m. tomorrow. Recreation room, Union.
Negro Students' association, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, 205 Fraser.
Jerry Voorhis, former member of House Un-American Activities committee to talk on "Activities of the Un-American Activities Committee" at 11 a.m. totomowr in Frank Strong auditorium. Sponsored by Y.M.C.A.
Russian club, 4 p.m. tomorrow, 402 Fraser, Mrs. Sosloveitch, "The Revolution of 1905 and 1917 in Russia."
K-Club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, 203 Robinson gym. Nominations for next year's officers.
Campus Christian Missionary Fellowship, 4 p.m. tomorrow, Myers hall.
Sigma Delta Chi, 4 p.m. tomorrow,
107 Journalism.
Notice of appeal on all parking tickets received on or before April 30 must be filed with parking office by Thursday. Last regular court
session, May 11. Special court session, May 18, to hear appeals on tickets received in May.
University Women's Club tea, 5 p.m. Thursday, Myers hall, Annual business meeting, election of officers
Sunflower Boys' State alumni 7:30 p.m. Thursday, East room, Union. Bob Hedges, speaker. Election of officers.
Classical club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, 206 Fraser. Professor Seaver, speaker.
Tickets for A.V.C. picnic may be purchased at Business office. Deadline, Thursday noon, $1.25 each. Picnic to be in Clinton Park, 6:15 Friday.
K-Club is sponsoring intra-squad football game, 8:30 p.m. Friday, Haskell Stadium. Students 50c plus activity books. Others. 1.00. Tickets at Athletic office.
All Baptist students interested in attending annual picnic at Lone Star Lake, Sunday, notify Martha Oatman, Watkins hall, Departure time, 3 p.m. from 1124 Mississippi. Cars and drivers needed.
All new cabinet members of Baptist student group, Roger Williams Foundation, Theta Epsilon, or College S.S. class, meet at 1124 Mississippi, 7 p.m. May 10.
Pi Tau Sigma initiation banquet, May 13. Make reservations Engineering library by Saturday.
I'm
"all gussied up"
in my mer
Marjorie
Montgomery
Eastern Star Aid Open To Women
Application for the 1948-49 Eastern Star scholarships can be made at the office of the committee on aids and awards in 227 Frank Strong hall, Dean J. H. Nelson, chairman of the committee, announced today.
Harzfeld's
The cash grant scholarship is open to any College woman senior who has a good record, and who is either a member of the Order of the Eastern Star, or whose father or mother are members of Masonic organizations.
On KFKU
Today:
2:30 "Fine Arts in the Life of theAverage Man." Stanley Chapple, English Conductor andLecturer, and Dean D. M.Swarthout, University School ofFine Arts.
9:30 K.U. Contemporary Music
String Quartet; W. Thomas
Marrocco, 1st violin; Myron
McNown, 2nd violin; Vincent
Bleecker, viola; and Maurice
Pollom, cello.
2:45 K.U. Band.
2. 30 Program by Sigma Alpha Iota Music Women's Professional sorority.
2:45 Doorway to Knowledge, Todd Douglas.
Tomorrow:
2:30 Flying Carpet—Robert Calderwood "Beowulf and Grendel."
9:30 K.U. Brainbusters.
Thursday:
2:45 Music
Music
9:30 Evelyn Swarthout, Young American Concert Pianist.
Friday
2:30 Music by Radio, Mildred Seaman.
Night Watchmen Cover KU Through Wee Small Hours
9:30 Roundup of Editorial Opinion.
University Daily Kansan
Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $450 a year, (in Lawrence addend $10 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University holidays and Sundays. University holiday benefits. Entered as second class matter, September 7, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
If you think you climb a lot of stairs you should have the job of night watchman.
David Park, one of the seven men who check the campus at night, must cover an average of eight buildings from top to bottom two or three time each night.
Mr. Park said that he seldom gets involved in any "cops and robber" chases on the Hill, but is more concerned with routine duties.
In 1943, the year after he took the position as night watchman, Mr. Park had his most exciting evening at work. He encountered a prowler in the Union. After a chase the man escaped and was never found by the police.
Mr. Park said that encounters with prowlers are very rare on his job. The duties of the watchman are to check for fire hazards, unlocked doors, open windows and lights left burning.
"In the summertime we must watch for fans that have been left on. They become overheated and a fire hazard if left on all night," said Mr. Park.
The campus is divided into three sections when a full crew of watchmen is available, with two watchmen to each section and one man working the "swing shift." Mr. Park works from 4:30 p. m. to 1 a. m. Another man completes the night on his route.
Each man gets a night off every week and the man working the swing shift fills in these night, never working the same shift twice.
Attend the Topeka Drive-in Theater 25th and California First Show . . . . 8 p.m.
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TUESDAY, MAY 4, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
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Nine-Year-Old Inspiration Leads Violinist To Fame
Because nine years ago she heard and loved the violin music played by Fritz Kreisler, Sally Trembly, fine arts sophomore, is today the winner of a scholarship to the Curtis Institute of Music in Philadelphia.
Was 9 Years Old
Miss Trembly won the scholarship in April. She was one of two winners from 152 violin contestants. The scholarship is good for as long as she can qualify for it. ◆
Miss Trembly said she heard Mr. Kreisler at the music hall in Kansas City, Mo. when she was 9 years old. "I loved his music so well that I cried. Dad decided that I should start playing some instrument as a hobby. He suggested the violin," she explained.
Miss Trembly was sincere in her love for music and the violin. No one ever had to force her to practice. She says that she practiced more then than she does now.
Miss Tremble began her violin study under Wort Morse of Kansas City, Mo. In 1939 she moved with her family to Lawrence where she studied under Karl Kursteiner, associate professor of violin at the University. She later studied under Olga Eitner.
Attended Southwest High
The violinist moved back to Kansas City, Mo., in 1943 and attended Southwest high school. She studied violin under Harold Bernhardt.
After attending Kansas City, Mo. junior college for one semester, Miss Trembley entered the University for the spring semester of 1947. She continued her study under her present instructor, Thomas Marrocco, associate professor of violin.
The violinist has stated that her main ambition is to do the best she can with her new opportunity and see how far she can go toward becoming a concert violinist.
AMVETS Picnic
Socially Speaking
Approximately 200 persons attended the annual Sunflower A.M.V.E.T.S. May day picnic at Gardner Lake Sunday, Dancing, softball games, and frog fishing high lighted the event.
John Wheeler, post historian, announced that a women's auxiliary will be formed shortly. A charter has been received from national auxiliary headquarters. This will be the first such organization in the state.
Sigma Nu Entertains
Sigma Nu fraternity entertained the members of Phi Gamma Delta and their dates with a barbecue at the chapter house May 1.
Guests were Joe Puckett, Gloria Hill, George Jopee Spears, Doris Wolfe, Donnalene Jones, Mary Jane Merriman, Marian Rippeneteau, Jane Clark, Mary Katherman, Harriet Waddell, Karen Kow, Shirley Sudendorf, Gloria Wasson, Barbara Pack, Charlotte Billy, Sally Stepper, Jeanne Hillyer, Mary Bovaird, Diane Stryker, Lee Pringle, Edith Elam, Virginia Joseph, Mary Ashley, Laurie Birmingham, Mary Ann McClure, Kathleen Larson, Aimee Guinotte, Dorothey Feldkamp, Iva Belle Flora, Martha Duncan, Joan Vermillion, Margaret Harness.
Mary Belle Pollock, Helen Kersey, Betty Jo Laird, Ethel Pearson, Shirley Kyle, Elaine Elvig* Margaret Wolfe, Virginia Copedge, Joan Vickers, Jeanne Shaefer, Patty Riggs, Barbara Nash, Ann Warner, Joan Joseph, Betty Bacon, Janet Downs, Ruth Walters, Agnes Husband, Patricia Brubaker, Mary Douglas, Kathleen Culley, Helen Kittle, Mary Lou Martin, Carolyn Carter, Norma Kennedy, Marilyn Spruill, Marcille Parker, Jeanne Rankin, Mary Mid Chubb, Vina Lee Godding, Carolyn Coleman, Norma Jean Guthrie, Diana Sherwood, Georgina Stayton.
Lois Ann Fuller, Mary Varner,
Margaret Miller, Nancy Welker,
Genevieve Grant, Suzanne Beringer,
Carolyn Carmean, Betty Ann Hilts,
Joan Woodward, Eleanor Pack,
Stella Gabrielson, Anne Heider,
Groceries Lost In One Easy Ride
Denver — (UP) — Mrs. Geraldine Hart, 22, is willing to waive kid-naping charges if only she can have her groceries back.
While she was hurrying home with the evening's meal in paper sacks, a car braked to the curb beside her. A beefy arm propelled her into the car. At a street light the driver took a good look.
"You're not Betty!" he exclaimed. Then the frightened woman found herself out of the car again—without the groceries.
Frances Hall, Arlene Hill, Jeanne Chamber, Patricia Cook, Nancy Moore, Helen Piller, Barbara Nesch, Eileen Maloney, Betty Dominick, Norma Mendhenall, Mary Jo White, Celeste Beesley, Betty Compton, Rita Hartwell, Virginia Harris, Peggy Ann Schnackenberg, Georgia Ginther, Dorothy Stephenson, Mildred Marks, Dorothy Miller, Patricia Zachman, Letitia Laming, Mary Kay Paige, and Mr. and Mrs. William Spicer.
Chaperons were Mrs. C. A. Thomas, Mrs. Ralph Baldwin, Mrs. T. H. Stuart, and Mrs. R. H. Wilson.
Theta Spring Formal
Kappa Alpha Theta held its spring formal at the chapter house April 30. The theme of the party was "Neptune's Paradise."
Guests were James Coffman, Hervey Macferran, Forrest Griffith, Fred Woods, Warren Bowman, Amos McCune, James Padon, Donald Wells, Robert Idol, William Harrison, James Williams, Dorman O'Leary, George Byers, Clifford McDonald, Jack Gore. Richard Herold.
Dean Michelson, Richard Williams, John O'Leary, Robert Bunten, Warren Riegle, Herbert Dietier, Ronald Roberts, John Braden, Robert Felts, Moulton Green, Jr., Ray Frisby, Patrick Thiessen, Donald Decker, Max Bell, William Feagans, Arthur Hamilton, Robert Orr, Neal Post, Hubert Hall, Peter Purdy, Gene Campbell.
Robert Hughes, Tony Beck, Jesse Stewart, William Johnson, Shipman Winter, Robert Piller, Robert Anderson, John McClielland, AJA Kiaser, Charles Wagstaff, Lynwood Smith. Gene Russell, and Richard Royer.
A "House of Fantasy" theme was used at the annual spring dinner dance held by Jolliffe hall May 1.
Chaperons were Mrs. Karl W. Perkins, Mrs. C. H. Sautter, Mrs. Onita Miller, and Mrs. T. Wayne Harris,
Guests were Harold Sandy, Alan Probst, Herschel Betts, Joseph Mc-
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HENRY L. STIMSON
On Active Service In Peace and War $5.00
Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, was in Topeka Monday afternoon interviewing applicants from Topeka High school for scholarships at Watkins and Miller halls for the fall term.
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Clure, Eldon Weaver, Glenn Farnsworth, James Burford, Charles Middleton, Richard Hollingsworth, James Drewelow, John Sells, Clem Abercrombie, John Goodard, Frank Lawer, Robert Hairfield, Robert Miller, Robert Teel, James Nelson, Wayne Miller, Charles Lyne, Wilwood, Ernest Chaney, Glen Hildeliam Lyon, Albert Grimes, Robert Rood, Ernest Chaney, Glen Hildebrand, and Russell Tavlor.
The selections are made according to the number of vacancies in each hall. These trips are made each spring.
Chaperons were Mrs. Elizabeth Kite, Mrs. Mary Younkman, and Mr. and Mrs. William Wilkoff.
DU Spring Formal
Delta Upsilon held its annual spring formal dinner-dance May 1 at the chapter house.
Margaret Gowans, Patty Reedy, Glendale Jones, Gretchen Freeberg, Jean Young, Virginia Gard, Marie Schumacher, Bonnie Clark, Kathleen Graff, Georgia Haun, Betty Sahrier, Joan Baker, Connie Drake, Patricia Purnell, Mrs. Al Steinhauer, and Mrs. John Light.
Guests were Lee Apt, Mary Jean Peet, Beverly Emerson, Shirley Stewart, Connie Markley, Joan Schindling, Jo Sanders, Jo Mullins, Jo Anderson, Betsy Thomas, Dottie*Lou Thomas, Sus Ashby, Marilyn Barnum, Mary Stout, Carolyn Campbell, Shirley Doree, Doreen Wallace.
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Sara Webb, Barbara Montalo, Maary Ann Sawyer, Betty Fordemwalt, Mignon Morton, Jane Eippin Isabel Faurot, Margaret Lutz, Marilyn Swenson, Nancy Cole, Mary Margaret Moore, Sally Sheepard, Irene Cebula, Jeanne Aldridge, Virginia Schueber, Peggy Tosree, Peggy Sue Cloyd.
Barbara Creel, Schoonover, Doris Danidean, Dot Wood, Ruth Henry, Bette Holmund, Macki McCartney, Jo Simpson, Elaine Gilchrist, Collette Porter, Carol Buhlher, Bette Jo Jones, Ann Learned, Jeannine Kahn, Carolyn Salome, Jo Happy, Alice Fawkes, Judy Buckle, Ann Galloway.
Chaperones were Mrs. James A. Hooke, Delta Upsilon housemother, Mrs. Andrew G. McKay, Mrs. Nelle Hopkins, and Mrs. Frederick A. Benson.
WOLFSON'S 743 Mass.
Alpha Kappa Lambda fraternity announces the recent pledging of Johnnie L. Radcliff, Cedar Vale; Loren B. Corliss, Rogers, Ark.; and George H. Muret, Winfield.
AKL Pledges
Holland Tulips Grew; So Did The Festival
Holland, Mich. - (UP) - Towns people here are preparing for their 21st tulip festival.
When a high-school botany teacher suggested in 1927 that they plant one kind of flower, they chose the tulip because 85 per cent of them were Dutch descent.
The next year, the town council appropriated money to import 100,- 000 tulip bulbs from the Netherlands, and more have been added yearly ever since.
On May 19 and 20, when thousands of visitors are expected to watch the festivities, people will turn out in Dutch costumes and wooden shoes to wash their streets and play traditional Dutch games.
It's On Record Now; Women Get By Easy
In its official journal, the association said women are hard to prosecute for slayings, compared with men.
Chicago—(UP)—Take it from the Illinois Police association, women get away with murder.
"Occasionally," a woman goes to jail for a killing, the article said. "But not too often. The electric chair seems destined to be used only by male customers. Illinois juries don't favor it for women."
The association said Illinois court records showed that most attempts end in acquittals or short terms at insane asylums.
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You'll Have To Show Me!
Memphis, Tenn.—(UP)—Marilyn Reeves, school girl, tells how a batter in her team made a home run on an infall hit along first base.
"The first baseman got so excited she picked up the brick we were using for base and threw it to second base trying for a double play," Marilyn explained.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 4, 1948
KU Nine In Lincoln Today; Monday's Tilt Rained Out
The Jayhawker baseball nine left at 8 a.m. today for Lincoln, Neb., where they will play the Huskers in a Big Sevea tilt. The game is scheduled for 3 p.m. Rain forced cancellation of their first game which was to have been Monday.
Hal May, smooth fielding third sacker, will be back in the lineup after
in the second Oklahoma game. With a .304 batting average May is expected to provide more punch at the plate.
French To Lead Off
Coach Sehon will change Bud French to the leadoff spot in the batting order, and will have Paul Gilkison, slugging right fielder batting in the cleanup spot in an attempt to squeeze more runs out of the slumping Jayhawkers. Gilkison, who appeared to be a little jittery in his first game, has gotten over his nervousness and is banging the horsehide at a goodly clip and should prove effective in the cleanup spot
The Jayhawkers, with a one and five record in conference play, will be trying to break into the winning circle after dropping three straight; one to the Sooners and both ends of a twin bill to the Kansas State Wildcats at Manhattan.
Gilman Will Start
Sehon has named Dick Gilman as his starting pitcher. Gilman has been the hard luck pitcher of the Kansas mound staff to date. He toiled 9 2-3 innings in the first Sooner game but was lifted for Lou Hammer after walking two men in succession.
Hammer got credit for the victory when he pitched three balls and forced the batter to pop to third to retire the side. Gilman will be after his first win. The probable Jay-hawker lineup:
Bud French, ss
Lou De Luna, 1b
Bill Hogan, cf
Paul Gikison, rf
Hal May, 3b
Scott Kelly, 2b
Dick Bertuzzi, lf
Jack Fink, c
Dick Gilman, p
1948 Squad In Grid Fray
Friday night will see the 1948 Jayhawk football contingent in full scale maneuvers at Haskell Stadium as a climax to five weeks of spring practice.
Playing under game conditions, the 66-man squad has been split into two camps, the Reds and the Whites for the battle. Head coach for the Reds will be Norman Cooper while Cliff Kimsey will lead the Whites.
Commenting on the probable outcome of the game, head coach Sikes said he doubted if either team would score. "We've tried to divide the squad into as evenly matched teams as possible," he explained.
The Reds boast such veterans standouts as Don Fambrough, Dick Monroe, Dick Tomilinson, Ed Lee, Forrest Griffith, Frank Pattee, Bill Hogan, and Cliff McDonald. The Whites lineup include Marvin Small, Gene Sherwood, Hugh Johnson, Tom Scott, and Howard Fischer.
Questioned about weak spots on this year's crew, Sikes expressed doubt about the tackles and ends. These positions have been a sore spot since the loss of tackles Don Ettinger, Terry Monroe, and Steve Renko and all-conference Otto Schnellbacher. Sikes added that Dave Schmidt would be back in the fall to bolster the ends.
Tickets, which are priced at 50 cents for students, are being sold by K-Men and will be sold at the game. Adult tickets, at $1, are on sale at the Eldridge, and Round Corner drug store, Obers, and the Stadium barber shop.
Guy's Try For Record Fails
Desert Beach, Cal. May 4—(UP)—Bandleader Gum Lombardo today temporarily gave up trying to break the American speed boat record.
He took three cracks at it yesterday and missed each time by seven miles an hour or more.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
Baltimore, Md. May 4—(UP)—Officials of Pimlico race track were getting nowhere today in their efforts to line up competition for Calumet Farm's Citation in the $100,000 Preamble.
Citation's Gonna Be Lonesome This Year
Citation was the only announced starter for the May 15th classic.
Baseball Scene Is Puzzling As East-West Series Begin
New York, May 4—(UP)—Baseball's own big quiz show took shape today as major league teams squared off in east-west warfare for the first time with plenty of ticklish questions to be answered.
Every club has contributions for the question box. First off folks want to know, when will last year's champs, the Yankees and Dodgers, settle down to a winning stride? ◊
Yankee manager Bucky. Harris wants to know if he will get any dependable pitching except from Allie Reynolds, a three-game winner and only man on the staff to pitch a complete game. Harris also wonders if relief ace Joe Page can keep up his incredible pace. Page showed both weariness and temperament when he threw home run balls to Red Sox sluggers Ted Williams and Vern Stephens, then followed with a bean ball at Bobby Doerr.
With Brooklyn, manager Leo Durocher's big problem is keeping his young kids happy. There is definite dissension and there couldn't help but be a little with every position on the club except catcher and shortstop open. When anyone breaks into the lineup, he makes a terrific try to outdo his predecessor. The result is too much pressing, inconsistent, erratic play, definitely not championship baseball.
Buc Hurlers A Question
Next big question is whether those early season surprise outfits, Cleveland and Pittsburgh can keep up their pace. Will the Indians keep getting the home run punch that has netted 15 in eight games? And will Pirate manager Bill Meyer still get great pitching out of his oldsters when the double headers pile up?
At Philadelphia fans wonder if Connie Mack's fine young pitching staff continue to carry the load for a team that has averaged but four runs per game? If so, count the A's in as a first division outfit.
Will the Red Sox, other than Ted Williams, start hitting? They have the lowest team average in the majors, 219. Moreover boss Joe McCarthy has gotten no help from Dave Ferris, Ellis Kinder, and Tex Hughson, who were supposed to be big winners. Hugston reportedly is through. Kinder hasn't thrown a ball yet, and Ferriss was knocked out in his only start.
The Browns, above their level in third place, are wondering how long they can get 400 hitting out of Al Zarilla, Bob Dillinger, and Chuck Stevens. Without it, manager Zack Taylor hasn't much else but ambition and hustle from kids generally not of major league caliber.
Ott's Pitching Is Sound
In the National, manager Mel Ott has reason to wonder if he will keep getting the good pitching that has come so unexpectedly, because if he does, with the Giant hitting that never lets up, the Polo Grounds may be the scene of the World Series.
Manager Billy Southworth of Boston already is out to answer one burning question—when will the outfield begin to hit? He benched Jim Russell and Jeff Heath for Danny Litwhiler and Mike McCormick, who will join the .393 clubber, Tommy Holmes, the top battler. The rest of the club looks solid—perhaps brilliant—with the excellent pitching spearheading it. Johnny Sain and Warren Spahn again look like 20-game winners and Bill Ooiselle and Charley Barrett also have shown up well.
With the Cardinals it is a question of when will somebody besides Stan Musial start hitting. He is the only regular above 300. The Reds, Phils, and Bubs, are all getting good performances from rookies in key positions.
The Giants got another superlative pitching job last night when Dave Koslo limited the Reds to four
Koslo Blanks Reds
singles in a 5 to 0 triumph at Cincinnati. Koslo, who has only one previous victory against the Reds and five defeats, broke his jinx by outpitching Johnny Vander Meer. It was a scoreless duel until the fifth when the Giants got three runs on singles by Jack Lohrke, Whitey Lockman and Bobby Thomson and a walk to Bill Rigney.
The Cardinals topped the cubs at St. Louis, 3 to 1, on a seven-hit pitching job by Jim Hearn. Two runs in the seventh on singles by Del Rice, Hearn and Red Schoondienst, along with an error by Bill Nicholson, gave the Cards their margin.
The Philadelphia at Washington night game was rained out and no other major league games were scheduled.
The cost of fire destruction during the first six months of 1947 exceeded 369 million dollars.
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TUESDAY, MAY 4, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Mud, Rain Fail To Halt I-M Softball Activity
Muddy diamonds and occasional drizzles failed to stop play in intramural softball competition Monday as Alpha Chi Sigma, Sig Eps, Beta, Edgehill Roaders, Co-ops, and Smith hall chalked up victories.
Despite the bad play conditions several of the teams displayed good softball form in disposing of their opponents. The Co-ops and Smith hall had trouble squeezing out the Law® social and the Gathering, respectively. |
An explosive fourth inning and a two-run homer in the sixth made the difference in a pitching duel for the Alpha Chi Sigma's in a 7 to 0 victory, over the Delta Sigma Phi. Alpha hurler Dale Clark, who faced only 27 men in the shutout, tossed a two-hit tilt and set down seven men via the strikeout while giving up only five passes.
Excellent fielding by both teams aided the pitchers in their tough battle. Both moundsmen permitted only eight hits and the only errors were chalked up against the Delt's in the big fourth.
ward Graham led the hitters with his hard hit homer to deep left field with one man aboard. Andy Bertuzzi smashed out a long triple; John Patton, who batted two for three, and Oliver Edwards slammed out doubles for the victors. A double by Wayne Neelson and a single by Jack Gilmore accounted for the Delt's lone safeties.
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The Co-ops hit hard to edge the Law school 10 to 7, although both crews bagged 13 hits. The victors raced it to the lead in the last of the first and the hard fighting Lawyers were never able to overtake them.
Ernest McRae, who was on the mound for the Lawyers, wiffed six of the Co-ops and issued four free passes while Bishop Hopkins was busy fanning four and delivering only one base on balls.
Homers were plentiful as Morrison, Phillips, and Baker tagged three for the Co-ops. For the lawyers, McRae blasted out a four-bagger in the fourth and Jim Hunsuager laid out two doubles in three trips.
Co-ops
210 120 1-7 13 4
403 120 x 10 12 3
Co-ops 102 136 140 147
A six-run sixth stanza paved the way as the Smith hall nine came from behind to cap the Gushers 8 to 7. The Gushers were unable to blow off the lid as a late seventh inning rally was stopped after three runs had crossed the plate.
Norbert Zimmer and first baseman Armstrong pounded out round-trippers for the Gushers in the bottom of the seventh. The Gushers collected 10 hits and five walks off Smith hall hurler Norman Yakle while Smith hall was garnering 13 hits and a single pass.
Smith hall 000 066 2-8 13 10
Gushers 010 111 3-7 12 0
The smooth working Edgehill Roaders, smarting over their last defeat, took revenge on the Wesley nine as they hammered out 19 hits behind perfect fielding to trounce Wesley 15 to 0 in a five-inning rout.
Robert Fountain started the parade across the plate in the first, riding home on a single by Ray Irwin and a double by Bill Bovard. Eight runs crossed home in the third as the Roaders clouted 10 safeties, including two triples, a double, seven singles, and a homer. Irwin was the batting champ for the victors with a triple, a double, and a single in four times at bat.
Hurler Clyde Burnside held Wesley to four hits while fanning three and delivering no free tickets. Long, Wesley pitcher, gave up 19 hits and two walks, and was unable to rack up any strike outs.
128 40-15 19 0
000 00-0 4 5
Edgehill
Wesley
The Sig Ep's coasted to their third straight win behind the three-hit pitching of Bob McNieve as they romped over the Delta Chi's 11 to 0. The winners started their victory march in the first as they pushed across three runs, then continued to score in every frame.
Don Wright slapped out a homer in the third and twirler McNieve repeated the performance in the fourth. Wright and McNieve grabbed the honors as each batted two for four and scored twice.
Sig Ep 341 21-11 19 4
Delta Chi 000 00-0 3 6
The Beta's remained at the top of
their division by defeating the Phi Kappa's 11 to 3 as Bill Conboy sent 11 men to the showers nursing strikeouts.
The Beta's, who tallied their runs on eight hits, started their scoring spree in the second stanza as they crossed the plate three times. Bill Jones scored first after receiving a pass and then stealing three bases.
Highlighted by Harry Hunter's homer, it was the sixth stanza that put the game on ice for the winners as they shoved across six tallies. William Hart clouted a two-run homer in the sixth for the Phi Kap's to capture the batting honors for his crew.
In addition to his 11 strike outs, Conboy limited the Phi Kappa's to five hits and passed only two men. Opposing pitcher Kenneth Diecker issued eight hits and gave up an equal number of walks.
Phi Kappa 000 002 1-3 5-4
Beta 030 026 x-11 8-2
Phi Kappa 000 002 1-3 5-4
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Blues 'Frozen' Out In Monday's Game
The Kansas City Blues were "frozen out" of their game with the Columbus Redbirds Monday night as the game was postponed because of cold weather. The Blues will meet the Birds today, with Minneapolis playing Toledo, league-leading Indianapolis meeting invades St. Paul, and Louisville faces Milwaukee.
The Brewers' long-ball hitting gave them an 11 to 2 victory over Louisville in the only game played. Carden Gillenwater hit a homer in the second with two on for Milwaukee, and teammate Johnny Logan duplicated the feat in the Brewers' eight-run sixth inning. One of Louisville's four hits off Norman Roy was a homer by Walt Dropo.
Of all urban traffic fatalities, last year 8,200 happened at night, according to the national safety council.
Umpires Needed For I-M Softball
"We could use six more umpires every night." Jack Greer, assistant intramural manager said today.
The lack of umpires has forced the intramural office to place only one man on a game, which is not adequate, Greer said. He explained that one man cannot call balls and strikes, watch the bases, and still call all decisions accurately.
The intramural office pays all officials for the games they work.
Big Three Has IM Edge
Beta, Phi Delt, and Phi Gam, the big three in intramural standings, are setting a blistering pace in spring sport competition. The three teams have won a total of 28 games while losing only two in minor sport competition.
The Phi Delt's are undefeated in all four of the minor spring sports—tennis, golf, handball, and horseshoes. Beta has lost one horseshoe match and the Phi Gams have dropped a lone golf match.
Contestants arrange the matches. Each team or contestant plays one match each week. The schedule is posted on the intramural bulletin board in Robinson gym. Results must be turned in during the week in which the match is scheduled.
Horseshoe and handball matches are played on courts behind Robinson gym. Handball is played on the court in Robinson annex. Tennis contests are played on the University courts and golf matches are scheduled at the sand greens south of Lawrence.
Division leaders:
Horseshoes — division one, Ph
Gam; division two, Phi Delt, and
Oread hall; division three, Sigma
Nu; division four, Sigma Chi and
Delt.
Handball--division one, Phi Gam and Kappa Sig; division two, Beta and Phi Psi; division three, Phi Delt and Sig Alph; division four, Dix club.
Tennis -division one, Beta and Phi Delt; division two, Sig Alph; division three, Sigma Chi and A.T.O.; division four, Phi Gam.
**Golf**–division one, Phi Delt; division two, Beta; division three Sigma Nu; division four, Oread hall and Silent Men.
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Jockey Is Charged With Using 'Needle'
New York. May 4—(UP)—Earl Sande today faced the first blot of his otherwise spotless racing career —a federal charge of using dope to stimulate one of his horses.
★ Harlan Livingood 7 to 9 p.m. and his orchestra 35c per person
The Handy-Andy who rode three Kentucky Derby winners during his two decades on the turf as a jockey, trainer, and owner was charged in Brooklyn federal court with "possession of narcotic drugs used for the stimulation of race horses."
Schnellbacher Calls K-Club Meeting For Tomorrow
The case revolved around Big Stage, a Sande-owned horse which won the third race at Jamaica on April 21. The racing commission said a routine saliva test revealed traces of 'an opium derivate' in Big Stage's mouth.
Monday Sande was arrested by federal narcotics agents in an unprecedented move and hailed before U. S. Commissioner Edward E. Fay. He waived examination and awaited action by a federal grand jury. If tried and convicted, Sande could get from two to five years behind bars.
The arrest marked the first time that a horse-doping has been made a criminal case in New York.
Otto Schnellbacher has called a meeting of K-Club members in Robinson gym at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Drama School!
HOLLYWOOD
BOWL Academy
Theater Arts
Summer Classes
Start June 23
- Superb Faculty
- Play Technique
- Stage Rehearsals
For full particulars, write
HOLLYWOOD BOWL
THEATER ASSN.
—Producers of the Pilgrimage Play, 2580 N. Highland, Ave., Hollywood, Calif.
SEE K.U.'s "48" football squad in action. A complete game played under game conditions-
NIGHT FOOTBALL GAME
between two evenly picked squads, chosen from the Varsity.
General Admission $1.00
HASKELL STADIUM FRIDAY 8 P.M. SPONSORED BY THE "K" CLUB
Remember Mother On May 9
I'll take it. You're welcome!
FOR Mother
On "Her Day," we suggest a box of our homemade candy which is packed by hand in attractive boxes.
Each box has a wide assortment of candies.
WE WILL MAIL ANY CANDY ORDER FOR YOU.
Frosty Malts
Ice Cream
Carmel Corn
Dixie's Carmel Corn Co.
842 Mass. Phone 133
12
PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 4, 1948
The Editorial Page
Lawrence Unpreparedness
The canker worms took Lawrence without a battle. The feeble efforts that were made to drive them out came after the elm trees had lost their leaves, and students and citizens had fought webs and worms for a week. The city administration has expressed regret that it did not have the facilities to combat the little creepers. It was able to improvise a few
spray guns, admittedly inadequate, and began spraying April 30, after the elm worms had their fill.
Through the farsightedness of their city governments, Ottawa and Emporia began spraying all their parkings, alleys, and parks on April 16. Commercial crews followed, covering privately owned trees, riding the town of canker worms in swale swhs. In Ottawa, a crew worked 16 hours a day, covering most of the main streets by the 29th. Emporia sent out two crews, and plans to D.D.T. the alleys for fly control soon.
Once again the city of Lawrence gives University students grounds for believing that only one thing matters to Lawrence citizens—business.
The city is widening its streets off Massachusetts to make trade a little more convenient. No one questions the necessity of this work. But students remark that Lawrence citizens don't seem a bit concerned about the washboards around the campus that are named after states and called "streets."
Summer session students kid about about taking shoe horns to the Lawrence swimming pool, to squeeze into the oversized bath tub. Almost every other Kansas town the size of Lawrence has a municipal pool large enough to accommodate the swimming population.
A city can't do everything at once, and students realize that. But they feel that directly and indirectly they pay taxes in Lawrence, and wonder if possibly something could be done—even if it's just preventing another onslaught of bugs next year.—Paul Conrad.
A recipe experts says there are 120 ways to serve potatoes. Too bad the hotels and restaurants can't discover the other 119.
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-
missance Force. 420 Madison Ave.
New York City.
Editor-In-Chief...David H. Clymer
Managing Editor...Cooper Rollow
Assst. Man. Editor...Clark Thomas
Assst. Man. Editor...Gene Viney
City Editor...John Stauffer
Assst. City Editor...James Beatty
Assst. City Editor...Richard Barton
Telegraph Editor...Jamie Holmes
Assst. Tel. Editor...Hal Neison
Sports Editor...Bil Mayer
Sports Editor...Paul Zeh
Sports Editor...James Jones
Women's Sports Ed. Anna Mary Murphy
Feature Editor...Robert Newman
Feature Editor...Jacqueline
Society Editor...Patricia Bentley
Business Manager .. Bill Alderson
Adv. Manager .. Paul Warner
Admin. Manager .. Don Walker
Asst. Ctr. Mgr .. Bill Bitter
Class. Adv. Mgr .. Ruth Clayton
Assist. Class. Mgr. Elizabeth Burger
Assist. Class. Adv. Mgr. Celia Burger
Nat. Adv. Mgr. Paul Solekle
Nat. Adv. Mgr. Eleonor Bradford
Promotion Mgr. John
Asst. Promotion Mgr. Don Tennant
The Kansas Press Association
19 MEMBER
48 NATIONAL Editorial Association
A FREE PRESS - YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW
KANSAS
Security Loan
19
MEMBER
48
In financing a war a government may choose among policies which are non-inflationary, inflationary, or anti-inflationary. Selling securities to commercial banks, for example, while it is the easiest course, is inflationary, since it creates purchasing power. Taxing and spending the proceeds directly for prosecution of the war effort would be classed as non-inflationary, for the taxes and the spending offset each other. But if a government sells its bonds to individuals with savings to invest, then uses the funds so raised to extinguish part or all of the bandheld government debt, it is pursuing a definite anti-inflationary policy which makes up the bulk of the money supply, but immobilizes the potential purchasing power represented by the savings so invested.
In the treasury's security loan drive, which has just been formally launched by President Truman, the government is pursuing the wise course of adapting the last-named technique to a peacetime inflationary situation. This is the first public bond-selling campaign since the Victory Loan effort. The treasury has two major goals—to increase the sales of savings bonds from the $1,-228,982,000 reached in the first quarter this year to double that figure in the second quarter, and to improve the rate of payroll savings, now running at $90,000,000 a month, by a similar amount.
These are good objectives that deserve the support and co-operation of every citizen. While the anti-inflationary program on other fronts lags because of differences over methods between the administration and Congress, this is one time-tested method that can be invoked by the administration without waiting for Congress to act.
Dear Editor
The following letter refers to a letter published in the April 27 issue of the Daily Kansan entitled "Let's Pitch In." Miss Shreve was urging support for the present Memorial drive.—Editor.
You Build It
Dear Editor:
My dear Miss Shreve, with your closing sentence, I am in full agreement. "They died for you—now you strive for them." That is a fine idea, and we should do the most that we can for them. But here is where the two of us must part ways in our thought as to what should be done.
They did die for you, and if you are really interested in seeing that something is-done for them, would it not be much more worthy to use that collected money for some purpose that might help their children or their brothers' or sisters' children through the next generation without dying in another holocaust?
That is the reason, Miss Shreve, that voices have been raised against the carillon tower. There is no service done to those who have died in war when that war is set up as a thing of glory and honor. Dying for God and country is a fine thing, but let's use our resources to prevent the next one, rather than use our resources to glorify the last one.
I'll join the crowd, Miss Shreve. If you want a clanging pile of rock, you build it! I'll spend my time and money trying to prevent the necessity for another.
Ralph H. Moberley College junior
K. U. selects so many queens that there is a movement afoot to give a cup to the girl who goes through four years of college and never gets elected queen of anything.
It gives everyone the opportunity to do something about inflation, and at the same time contribute directly "to the strengthening of the economy" and "the winning of the peace."—Charles Moffet, Jr.
KISSES
$100
DENTYNE
Shellhouse
"I'll take Dentyne Chewing Gum!"
"He's got something there! When it comes to girls you can love 'em and leave 'em, but once you've tasted that swell flavor of Dentyne Chewing Gum, you're solid sold for life, Brother! Dentyne helps keep teeth white, too!"
Dentyne Gum — Made Only By Adams
Wichita—(UP) -Floyd Stuck, chief deputy city marshal, has received his medal. Twenty-eight years after being sent to Germany in the army of occupation, he was sent a medal complete with ribbon and lapel button.
At Last, He's A Hero
You Are Always Welcome at SNAPPY LUNCH
for
Hot Chili Sandwiches
Soup
Malts
TWO MEN TELEPHONING.
Everyone's talking about DRAKE'S BAKES
TRY SOME AND YOU'LL KNOW WHY
DRAKE'S
907 Mass. Ph. 61
FRANK'S HAVE DOZENS OF LAWN CHAIRS
in all colors; either spring steel or tubular steel — also glider chairs.
Our stock is complete. Just received several dozen Monday.
SPECIAL: All steel lawn chair—this $4.95 week only —
FRANK'S FURNITURE COMPANY 834 Mass. Phone 834
Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan.
GOLF
Jayhawk Golf Driving Range
NOW!
Open Afternoons
Due to your requests we are now opening at 4:30 in the afternoons on week days.
- Dirt, rubber mat and automatic tees.
- Clubs and balls provided.
- Bill McGarry — Professional.
Lessons by appointment
- Watch our automatic pick-up.
- Plenty of parking space.
YOU DRIVE 'EM— WE'LL SHAG 'EM!
1 Mile East of Haskell on 10
L
61
TUESDAY, MAY 4, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Students Slap And Scratch As Cankerworms Invade KU
The person who gets "so mad he could squeeze worms" has ample opportunity now that the cankernworm has invaded Lawrence.
According to H. B. Hungerford, $ ^{4} $
The cankerworm is the little black wiggler who spins a web from trees and drops down the neck of pedestrians. He ranges in size from less than a quarter of an inch to one inch and attacks only elm trees.
professor of entomology, the cankerworm invasion is the worst in years, but is not expected to be serious enough to kill elm trees this season. The trees which have been chewed bare will leaf out later this summer.
One student has made a game of collecting cankerworms from the curtains and walls of his room. Wash day has been complicated for the housewife as hundreds of the crawlers cover fresh sheets and white shirts.
Lawrence residents report that steps and sidewalks are slick from squashed worms. People with fireplaces complain that the hearths are full of worms which have dropped down the chimney. In some sections of the city, pedestrians can walk only a few feet before running into
countless cobwebs formed by the leaf eaters.
"the prospect for next year is not cheerful," Professor Hungerford reported. "It depends on how many precautions are taken to control them now and next winter and whether the few parasites that attack the cankerworm get busy."
C. G. Bayles, superintendent of building and grounds, said that the University has been spraying trees on the campus for two weeks. Most of the spraying is done on Sundays and at night to avoid showering students.
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
So, if you see someone bobbing and ducking his way down the street, don't be alarmed. He is only dodging the pesky cankerworms.
Phone KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be received in a timely manner and is filled in during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office, Journalism Daily Kansan Business office, the day before publication is desired.
Classified Advertising Rates
25 words or less additional words
For Sale
ATTENTION Shutterbugs—must sell my Albert Contact Printer—like new—prints up to 5 x 7. $15 Bob Ferber, 945 Indiana, 1351-W. 6
1928 MASTER Buick. Excellent motor.
Lets of miles still in her. Name, "Beu-
lah." 129 W. South Park. Phone 1171-R.
10
WILL SOMEONE please take my 1938,
74 Harley Davidson motorcycle off my
hands before I kill myself! Good condi-
tion. New equipment and excellent expe-
cial type swivel chairs for
sale-Student Union Book Store. 10
AN IDEAL "Mother's Day" gift-parker '51 set. Student Union Book Store. 10
ROOFS for rent during the summer.
Will rent single or double to
rent students. Close to campus. 1012 Alabama
St.
RECORD PLAYER; two-burner hot plate, and fence mask and fold. Cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, Phil Billou. 1332 Louisiana, phone 3009. 5
NEW PORTABLE typewriter at wholesale, carryING case, 12-inch 12-inch sweeper, practically new Crosley convertible auto. Art Rupenthal, Phone 2236J. 7
1839 CHEVROLET, very clean, new tires.
M.W. 14th. 5
STIAMESE KITTENS for sale. Proven stud, Amados blood lines. Service by appointment. Mrs. O'Bryon, 1332 Tenn., Laurence, Kansas.
WANTED to sell: Nice RCA radio-victim
hospital. 115 South Park. 15.00. Come to see
heath, 115 South Park.
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 HTFD
Business Service
TYPING—thesis and paper. Quick, cheap, and accurate. Phone 2369-J. J 10 TYPING: Reasonable rate, prompt service. 1028 Vermont. Phone 1168R. 7
TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Telephone 418 or bring to 1219 Com. Request a reasonable rate. Call 32560J, 1900 Kentucky.
TENNIS RACKETS restrung or repaired.
Welhausen, J21, I1E 10th. Tel. 2445J.
Mannheim, J21, I1E 10th. Tel. 2445J.
TAILOR-MADE suits, $65.10 to $65.00.
Expert alteration and tanning, George
Eberhart & Son, Tailor Shop, $31½ Mass.
TYPING done: Term papers, reports, special attention given thesis. Accurate work at reasonable prices. Call 1996-W. Apartment 2. 1101 Tennessee. rtes
NEW vacuum cleaners for rent. Attachments included. $1.50 per day. Al Brooks Sweeper Co., 831½ Mass. Ph. 1104 between 9 and 12 a.m.
Wanted
OUPULE WANTS to contract for a furnished apartment beginning with this room.
in term. Cincinnati Zoo. Soo?
APARTMENT OR large with private entrance for next fall. Will make now. Write to Charles Black. 1132 Ohio. 4
ENGINEERING student for lettering with some drawing ability to finish cartoons and to do lettering. Will not take much time. Good pay. Phone 1251L2. 5
Transportation
Li 0680, K.C., Mo.
LEAVING every Friday at 4:00 p.m.
Calling returning Sunday evening.
Please come red for tween 7:00-9:00 p.m. Harry Schultz, 3170
from K.C. daily. Riders wanted. Call
Ll 01680. K.C. Mo. 6
Miscellaneous
Lost
DANCE every Saturday night at odd Fel-
door. Informal. Joe Langang
orchestra. rites
GOLD "NORMA" four color paint. Reward. J. Scott. Phone 831. 4 PAIR WHITE plastic rimmed glasses, inc.
Brown. Union. Call Mrs. Houser. 20. Roward.
BLACK and silver Parker "S1" fountain
pen. Phone 731. Reward.
Exportation of horses from Virginia was prohibited in 1657.
---
fine
watch
repair
Constable Behind Own Bars
Electronically Checked
Authorized Dealer
REGISTERED · INSURED
Harmony
DIAMOND RINGS
Samples
Montrose, Pa.—(UP)—Constable O. Mott Fessenben did such a good job of locking up prisoners in the county jail that he locked himself in, too. He stayed there several hours until his shouts attracted a passerby who summoned police.
914 $ _{1/2} $ Mass. Ph.368
WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES
Large Selection of Distinctive Frames Lawrence Optical Co.
EYE
"No OTHER CIGARETTE CAN TAKE CHESTERFIELD'S PLACE WITH ME. THEY SATISFY."
Ray Willand
CURRENTLY STARRING IN "THE BIG CLOCK"
A PARAMOUNT PICTURE
Chesterfield
CIGARETTES
WHY... I smoke Chesterfield
( FROM A SERIES OF STATEMENTS BY PROMINENT TOBACCO FARMERS )
Liggett & Myers buy top quality cigarette tobacco and pay top prices for it . . . nobody will average paying more than they do year in and year out.
I've been smoking Chesterfields ever since I've been smoking. I just like them . . . they have real tobacco flavor.
William P. Wiseman FARMER-DANVILLE, VA.
Fred
ABC HESTERFIELD ALWAYS BUY ALWAYS MILDER BETTER TASTING COOLER SMOKING
Copyright 1948, LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO Co.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE EIGHT
TUESDAY, MAY 4, 1948
124 Cadets Will Attend Summer Camp
Approximately 124 University cadets will attend summer camp. Col. John Alfrey, professor of military science, announced recently. He also released the names of those cadets who will be commissioned lieutenants May 27, or when they finish summer camp.
All cadets will have 40 hours of instruction a week. They will be paid 75 dollars a month, have their own mess, and get all their needs furnished by the government, including fare to and from camp.
The air R.O.T.C. will send 90 cadets to Lowry field, Denver, for six weeks of training. The artillery will send eight and infantry will send 16 to Fort Riley for six weeks. Both camps begin June 21 and end August 1.
75 Dollars A Month
Air corps cadets being commissioned are Jack A. Campbell, Anderson W. Chandler, David J. Foley, John R. Gurtner, J. J. Glenn Hahn, John K. Higdon, George H. Hutton, Ira I. D. D Jordan, Donald W. McDaniel, Ralph H. Moberly, Jr., James A. Street, Robert E. Stroud, Richard A. Wegner, Edwin N. York, and Leeland A. YoYrk.
"Instruction will be of a practical nature to supplement the theory which they have had here," Colonel Alfrey said.
Receiving their commissions on May 27 are Thomas J. Alexander, David M. Andrews, Wallace D. Benton, Theodore C. Bernard, Albert W. Brown, Jr., Alfred L. Burgent, Rex Hay, Robert A. Rudkin, John F. Rynerson, Neale D. Shaw, and Joseph R. Simmons, Jr. All are in the artillery.
To be commissioned at the end of camp are Bruce E. Coffin and Charles W. Sherrer of the artillery, and Edwin K. Crowley and Joseph M. Stryker of the infantry.
Air Corps Cadets
michael A. Wegner and John K. Higdon have finished their R.O.T.C. training at the University. They will go to Randolph field, Texas, to begin their flight training.
English Reporter Talks To Class
Talk of war is more prevalent in the United States than in England, Joan Skipsey told members of a feature writing class April 30.
Miss Skipsey came to the United States four weeks ago, and is now working as a reporter for the Topeka State Journal. She has worked with several English papers and was with the ministry of information during the war.
"The British are just as concerned about war as you, but they are more aware of conditions in Europe." Skies are skies and they are doubtful of their ability to fight."
Comparing journalistic notes, Miss Kipsisey found editorial practices similar in the United States and Great Britain. She thinks the United States newsroom superior because of closer contact between reporters and editors but finds the foreign coverage poorer in the Midwest.
Women's Club Will Elect Officers
The annual business meeting and election of officers for the University Women's club will be held at a tea at 3 p.m. Thursday at Myers hall.
Officers in charge of the tea are Mrs. E. C. Quigley, chairman; Mrs. Elmer F. Beth, hostess chairman; Mrs. E. L. Falkenstein, food and serving; Mrs. C. G. Bayles, decoration; and Mrs. George W. Stratton, tea table.
The University Y.W.C.A. baby-sitting service will be available to care for the children of women who wish to attend the meeting. Those wishing the service should call Christine Alford, 1518, or Henley house today.
Ex-Congressman Here Tomorrow
Jerry Voorhis, former Congressman from California and executive secretary of the Co-operative League of the United States, will speak at the University tomorrow. Mr. Voorhis will speak in Frank Strong auditorium at 11 a.m. on the day of his speech. He will mittee, of which he was a member. He will be the guest at a luncheon sponsored by University Co-op's at 12:15 p.m. at the Hearth. Mr. Voorhis will speak informally on the co-operative movement in the United States at the luncheon. Tickets will cost 85 cents.
Recital Given By Swarthout
By CRYSTAL CHITTENDEN
Evelyn Swarthout, daughter or Dean and Mrs. D. M. Swarthout, presented the old master composers Bach and Schumann in her piano concert Monday in Fraser theater. Miss Swarthout also gave American composers a break by playing several selections by Barber, Copland, and Robert Palmer. She proved adept at playing either classical or modern music and made the change with facility.
Her interpretations of the modern selections showed a sense of balance and meaning that is so often lacking in the public performances of recent composers' works.
Miss Swarthout opened her program by playing Bach's "Sonato in D Minor," originally written for the violin but later transcribed for the piano by the composer. To Schumann's melodious and flowing "Etudes Symphoniques, Opus 13" she added an intangible quality that made it seem more dramatic than Schumann's works appear.
In her modern group she included "Toccata Ostinato" by Robert Palmer, a former member of the fine arts staff at the University.
"Story of Our Town" and "Conversation at the Soda Fountain" were written in 1940 by Aaron Copland as incidental music for the picture show "Our Town," and in 1944 were arranged for the piano. The first, descriptive and sentimental, possessed a rondo effect in its recurring melody. The second gave the impression of someone going "nowhere" but having a good time on the way.
The prize is given annually to the senior who made the best record in the school during his junior year.
Cavitt Wins Prize In Medical School
Robert F Cavitt is the winner of the $100 A. Morris Ginsberg prize in the School of Medicine, announced today by Dean H. R. Wahl.
Cavitt is president of the senior medical class and was recently elected to Alpha Omega Alpha, national honorary medical fraternity. After graduation in June he will take an internship at the University of Indiana Medical center in Indianapolis.
Civil Engineers Take Two Day Tour
Cavitt is married and has one child. His home is in Wichita.
Approximately 60 civil engineering seniors are making a two day visit to Kansas City, Kan., and Bonner Springs for the annual civil engineering inspection trip for seniors.
The engineers visited the Kansas City Structural Steel plant and the Central avenue viaduct construction job in Kansas City, and a building job at Liberty Bend, Mo., Monday. Today they will visit the Lone Star Cement corp. in Bonner Springs.
G. W. Bradshaw and W. C. McNown, professors of civil engineering, are traveling with the group to explain various steps of construction. The trip is required for seniors.
British Prepare To Keep Peace In Holy Land
Jerusalem, May 4—(UP)—An additional 2,000 British reinforcements took up positions in Jaffa today to help enforce a British truce that has brought comparative calm to the major cities of the Holy Land for the first time in months.
Conferences that may bring permanent peace to the Holy City of Jerusalem were scheduled to be held in Amman today among members of a United Nations truce commission and two top Arab leaders.
The commission has been entrusted by the United Nations with finding a truce formula for the Holy City. Members did not disclose the purpose of their visit, but it was presumed they would sound out the Arab leaders on a truce plan.
The commission announced it will visit the Trans-Jordan capital to confer with King Abdullah and Abdul Rahman Azzan Pasha, secretary-general of the Arab league.
Unofficial reports said the British warned Arabs at Ramallah, 10 miles north of Jerusalem, that they will be attacked by rocket-firing planes if they continue to shell Jerusalem.
Jerusalem continued unusually quiet under the British threat to blast anyone who resumed hostilities.
Attention All Veterans
Veterans changing schools for the coming summer or fall sessions must first obtain form 1905, an application for a supplemental certificate, from the Veterans' bureau, Frank Strong, Annex C. The regional V.A. office will then send in the approved certificate, E. R. Elbel, director of the veterans bureau, said today.
If the institution the veteran plans to attend is in another regional area, the veteran must secure the supplemental certificate from his own regional office. Then he must file a request to transfer his records to the new regional office.
Veterans may make a complete change from institutional to on-the-job-training. If the veteran has not met his scholastic requirements he may have to convince the V.A. that he is qualified to study under the on-the-job-training program, Dr. Elbel added.
The veteran may be given a test by the V.A. if he has failed to meet his scholastic requirements to determine if he should continue training. If his grades are average or better he should have no trouble changing to schools that the V.A. approves, Dr. Elbel added.
A free trip to the Democratic National Convention in Philadelphia will be awarded to one student from each state who leads in gaining members for the Young Democrats organization. Deadline for the contest is May 31.
Dr. Elbel warned veterans who plan to change schools that a delay in receiving subsistence might result from the transfer of records.
Roy G. Baker, president of the Young Democrats clubs of America made the announcement. He stated that the youth delegation would have seats on the convention floor and that a special program of entertainment is being planned for the winners.
Young Democrats Offer Free Trip
Speeding, Contempt Draw Court Fines
Tony Hoffman was fined $25 in police court April 30 for traveling at a rate of 64 miles an hour in North Lawrence. a 30-mile zone.
Wilbur G. Stover, jr., was fined $2 for failure to obey a traffic officer's signal and $3 for contempt of court.
Sunnyside Roofs Ripped By Storm
The tar paper roofing was ripped from three buildings at Sunnyside by the storm that struck Lawrence May 1.
Irvin Youngberg, housing director, estimated the damage at $400. He said clothing, furniture and other personal property was soaked by the rain.
Pot Simmers In KC Strike
Kansas City, May 4- (UP)—A federal judge was expected to lay down a set of rules for police and striker behavior in a civil liberties decision in the meat strike today.
The C.I.O. United Packinghouse Workers union is seeking to have Kansas City police restrained from interfering further with its members, following the clash between police and strikers April 23.
Federal Judge Arthur J. Mellott said, however, he would substitute a set of behavior rules for the tempestraining order sought by the union.
The union is also asking an injunction against Detective Capt. Eli Dahlin, who led the police in an outbreak of violence which wrecked a union hall, and Mayor Clark E. Tucker. In addition, union members allegedly injured by police clubs have asked $200,000 damages under the Kansas Mob law.
The judge said the rules would not prejudice either the union or the city in the injunction suit set for Mav 12.
Judge Mellott ordered Captain Dahlin and other police officials to hear the reading of the rules.
At the Armour and Company plant, the number 'of pickets was reduced today as a result of a temporary restraining order issued late Monday by District Judge Willard M. Benton.
Give Papers On Chemistry
Four papers by chemistry department members were presented recently at the 18th annual meeting of the Kansas Academy of Science held at the Kansas State Teachers college at Pittsburg.
The papers presented "A New Method for the Study of Isohermal Ternary Systems" by Max Anderson, assistant instructor in chemistry, and Robert Taft, professor of chemistry; "Complex Ion Properties from Solubility Data" by W. J. Argersinger, assistant professor of chemistry, and C. A. Reynolds, assistant professor of chemistry.
"Bromation of Phenol in Various Solvents" by S. H. Johnson, assistant instructor in chemistry, and R. Q. Brewster, chairman of the department; and "A New Method for the Determination of Caffeine in Coffee" by J. P. Thompson, former graduate student, and Henry Werner, associate professor of chemistry.
The Kansas Academy of Science was founded in 1868. The 1948 meeting included the affiliated Kansas Entomological society in cooperation with the Kansas chapter of the American Association of University Professors.
Sigma Alpha lota To Sing On KFKU
Sigma Alpha Iota, national music sorority, will present four chorus numbers on K.F.K.U. at 2:30 p.m. tomorrow.
The program is a part of the music week festival. Numbers included will be "Mist of the Night" by Jeanne Boyd; "The Nightingale" and "Frog Went A-Courting"; two folk-songs arranged by Howard Brockway; and "Spring Gaiety" by Marjorie Lawrence. All the songs are by American composers.
Fine Arts Day Brings Speakers, Soloists To KU
FACE
Music week observances today will center around special programs for Fine Arts day. Chancellor Deane W. Malott will be toastmaster at the fine arts banquet at 6:30 p.m. in the Kansas room.
The banquet this year is in honor of D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts, who is celebrating his 25th year at the University. Stanley Chapple, British conductor and lecturer, and Lawrence Sickman of the Nelson Art gallery in Kansas City, Mo., will speak.
A special musical program will include solos by Lorraine Mai, soprano, and Sally Trembly, violinist. The drawing and painting department will present an honorary award, Archie, to the outstanding sophomore in the department.
Frederick Kagel, first tenor of the Metropolitan opera, will appear in a complimentary concert at 8:20 p.m. Thursday in Hoch auditorium. This concert is offered by Dean Swarthout in recognition of his 25 years as manager of the University Concert series and in appreciation of the support the series has received from the community. No seats will be reserved and no tickets are required.
This will be Mr. Javel's first appearance in Lawrence. He began his musical career in a church choir, and his first real job was at the New York Ravoli theater singing prologues before each picture. A friend later sent him to Italy for study, where he made his debut in "La Boheme." He fulfilled engagements in Holland and Italy, and it was upon his return to Rome that he met Joseph and Marie Wilkins, members of the fine arts faculty.
Career Began In Church
While he was in Rome, Gatti-Casazà, general manager of the Metropolitan opera, heard him and this heartfelt performance. Special Musical Programs
The Lawrence public schools will present a concert at 8 p.m. Friday in Hoch auditorium. The program will feature "A Ballad for Americans" by the Liberty Memorial High school chorus and orchestra. The grade school orchestra, directed by Jack Stephenson, and the chorus, directed by Jean Morehead, will present special numbers. The concert is open to the public.
Special musical programs will be presented Thursday at noon at the Kiwanis club, at 2:30 p.m. at the Lawrence Music club, and at 6:30 p.m. at the co-operative club.
The principle of the nation-wide plan is the feeling that the present nationalistic policy can not avert war and that a limited world government is necessary. The Federalists purpose that this world government be set up through the United Nations.
The group was initiated on the campus last week when a large number of students and faculty turned out to take part in the organization.
The newly-formed United World Federalists will hold an organizational meeting at 4 p.m. today in the Pine room of the Union, announced Lee Reiff, president.
Music week will close with the annual Pi Kappa Lambda banquet and initiation at 6:30 p.m. in the Union.
UWF Will Hold Meeting Today
The meeting is open to all interested students and faculty, Reiff said.
AIChE To Have Picnic
The American Institute of Chemical Engineers will have a picnic at Lake Shawnee, Topeka, from 11 a. m. to 4 p.m. Saturday.
The juniors will play the seniors in softball and volleyball. This will be the last big social meeting of the chapter.
6
Lawrence, Kansas
Freedom Train Committee Plans Eventful Week
The Freedom Train committee planned events for Re-dedication week when the train will be in Lawrence at a meeting Tuesday.
The schedule for Re-dedication week is May 27, school day; May 28, labor-management day; May 29, historical exhibits; May 30, church day; May 31, veterans day; June 1, organizations day; and June 2, assrival of the Freedom Train.
Depot Will Provide Walks
Riley Burcham, chairman of the finance committee, suggested that pamphlets be sold to raise the $1825, the quota set for Lawrence by the American Heritage foundation. This was not approved, and it was suggested that direct contributions be the source of money.
E. P. Addy said that the Santa Fe depot would provide gravel walks for the waiting line and any details that would help. The lines will be arranged so that there will be no conflict between the line entering and the line leaving the train. The entrance will be from New York street, he said.
Plans were proposed to include representative school children from Lawrence and 12 surrounding communities in the mayor's committee, which will inspect the train from 9 to 10 a.m. June 2. It will be open to the public from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m.
Suggest Fund-Raising Plans
Mr. Fox Case, regional director of the American Heritage foundation, explained that the money would be used to pay the marines' food costs, fuel for the train, cost of moving the train, and pamphlets for the various committees:
Miss Mildred Seaman, program director of KFKU, reported that the station will run 10 programs during re-dedication week. Four semidramatic performances will outline the history of the fight for liberty and the writing of the valuable documents. A woman's program will explain the role of women in the struggle for freedom. Two American music programs will be presented and the "Brainbusters" will dedicate their program to the freedom theme.
Fred S. Montgomery, director of the bureau of visual instruction, said there will be two free movies May 28 and 29 to acquaint persons with the background of the documents on the train.
Former Student Drowned May 1
Charles H. Douglass, a V-12 student of the University during the war, drowned with two others May 1 during a wind storm on the Lake of the Ozarks. Other victims were George Douglass, a brother, and Robert W. Schirtz of Kansas City, Mo.
Mr. Douglass was a member of Delta Tau Delta, socia fraternity. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Georgell Douglass of Kansas City, Mo.
Chancellor To Go To Chicago
Chancellor To Go To Chicago Chancellor Deane W. Malott will leave today to attend a conference of the National Association of State universities in Chicago.
WEATHER
Kansas—Partly cloudy, scattered thundershowers east and south today and extreme east and southeast tonight. Thursday generally fair. A little cooler west and northcentral today. Cooler tonight. Warmer Thursday. High today mid 60's northwest to 70 to 75 southeast. Low tonight 35 to 40 west and 40 to 50 east.
Belgian Cabinet Falls In Dispute
Brussels, May 5—(UP)—The coalition government of Premier Paul Henri Spaak, resigned today as a result of parliamentary opposition to its policy on state subsidies for church schools. The reagent, Prince Charles, at once began talks looking to the formation of a new government.
Premier Spaak defended his proposals to provide funds for church schools in parliament today. When opposing Socialists pressed for a vote he cried: "I no longer am supported by my group. I ask permission to leave the chamber."
UWF Organizes Four Committees
Four committees were organized at the second meeting of the United World Federalists Tuesday.
The committees are finance, William Braum, Bruce Wilder, George Gattman; publicity, John Rix, Raymond Shapley; political action, Harrison Madden, Evalyn Homichil, Sheila Wilder, James Masters and Ralph Eacock; and Education, Ronald Lively, Mark Handley, Jackson Gossett, Edward Pemberton, Hugh Gibson, Frederick Cross, and Mel Lieberstein.
Lee Reiff, chairman, said the three main points of the U.W.F. policy are:
1. Making use of the amendment processes of the United Nations to transform it into a world federal government.
2. Taking part in world constituent assemblies, whether of private individuals, parliamentary or other groups seeking to produce draft constitutions for consideration and adoption by the United Nations or by national governments in accordance with their respective constitutional processes.
3. Pursuing any other reasonable and lawful means to achieve world federation and world peace.
Student Undergoes Surgery
Jack R. Plank, engineering junior underwent surgery at Watkins hospital this morning.
His condition is reported as good.
Marshall Warns Against Revision Of UN Charter
Washington. May 5- (UP)—Secretary of State George C. Marshall today opposed proposals to eliminate the United Nations big power veto in matters of aggression.
Mr. Marshall said it is necessary to maintain the veto power "for our own protection."
Mr. Marshall set forth his views to the house foreign affairs committee which is considering various proposals for changes in the U.N. charter.
Rep. James P. Richards (D—S.C.) asked Mr. Marshall whether he thought it would be helpful if the veto power were restricted in matters of aggression.
He said it would be "tragic misfortune" for the United States to break off relations within the U.N. with Soviet Russia.
But as for actual threats to peace or breaches of peace, Mr. Marshall said, "We feel the veto should remain for our own protection in order not to have the manpower and material resources of the United States committed by a two-third vote to aggressive action."
The secretary replied that he felt it would be useful if the veto were eliminated on matters involving peaceful settlement of disputes.
Ellen J. Spurney, College junior, was elected president of Inter-Dorm council Tuesday.
Inter-Dorm Elects Five
Other officers elected are Hortense Bedell, vice-president; Roselyn Skonberg, secretary-treasure; education juniors; Doranne Snyder, social chairman, College sophomore; and Patricia Waits, A.W.S. representatives, fine arts sophomore.
Plans for play day were discarded because too few women were interested in attending.
A resolution to join Pan-Hellenic council in contributing to the University memorial was discussed but no decision was reached.
Weather Delays 'Twilight Twirl'
The "Twilight Twirl," a dance scheduled for tonight to mark the official opening of the new Union room garden has been postponed, LuAnne Powell announced today.
Bad weather was given as the reason for the postponement. No definite date has been set for the dance, but Miss Powell said it would probably be May 19, depending upon the weather.
Tickets will go on sale again before the dance.
GI Increases Due In May
Veterans who did not receive their increased subsistence for the month of April should receive full compensation with their May checks, E. R. Elbel, director of the veterans bureau, said today.
Delays were apparently caused by excessive paper work involved in stepping up the pay level, and the moving of the disbursement office in Kansas City. Mr. Elbel explained.
Dr. Elbel estimated that 25 per cent of the veterans did not receive the increased benefits May 1. Most of the single veterans however received the new amount of $75. Veterans with dependents, formerly in the $90 class, who now are entitled to $105 with one dependent and $120 with two or more received a mixture of the old and new rates.
Lack of birth certificates or documentary proof of dependents delayed some veterans in receiving higher pay checks. If this data is submitted to the V.A. before July 1 the veteran will receive the increased amount due since April 1.
Professor Beth Gives Talk On Retail Advertising
Thirty Lawrence businessmen and women heard a talk Tuesday about retail advertising at Liberty Memorial high school by Prof. Elmer F. Beth, acting chairman of the School of Journalism.
The meeting closed the adult education course which had been taught during the winter by Ernest Pontius, advertising manager of the Lawrence Journal-World. Professor Beth discussed practical uses that can be made of the findings in various surveys and analyses of readership and reader interest.
Speeches, Gifts Honor Swarthout
D. M. Swarthout's silver anniversary as dean of the School of Fine Arts was celebrated at the Fine Arts banquet Tuesday with speeches, awards, and solos.
Dean Swarthout received an engraved, leather-bound folio of pictures of fine arts staff members and letters of appreciation. Russell L. Wiley, director of the University band, made $ \textcircled{1} $ the presentation.
Miss Mildred Seaman, program director of station KFKU, presented the dean recordings of "The Messiah," performed recently by the Fine Arts school.
Stanley Chapple, English conductor and lecturer, and Laurence Sickman of the Nelson art gallery in Kansas City, gave talks, along with Dean Swarthout. Chancellor Deane W. Malotta was toastmaster. Student speakers were Carolyn Campbell and Charles Byers.
Dean Swarthout reminiscent on his Kansas career. He recalled being asked by Chancellor Lindley to become the dean of the School of Fine Arts in 1923.
The white-haired dean spoke slowly behind the dinner table decorated with silver grass. He recalled how he tried "to make music fit into the picture of college life."
"Archie," the "Oscar" of the Fine Arts school, and other awards were presented to students.
He added that his dreams for the
future include a new building for the school, and a Greek amphitheater for outdoor concerts and lectures.
Mr. Chapple described the duties of the artist to the community, and said that there is a future in teaching music at universities.
Recalls Early Days
"Most artists laugh at becoming instructors," he said. "Don't think that you are degrading yourself if you are going to teach.
"The great artists will be at the universities. After they are trained there they will be brought back to the college for people to hear and see. Our responsibility lies in bringing live art to the people who have never seen a live artist perform." Praises Students
Mr. Sickman praised the students as "the fountain head of the public we serve."
Carolyn Campbell, speaking as a representative of the art students, said that the "acme of artistic attainment is the application of the principles of fine arts to human life."
Charles Byers, representing the
music students, thanked Dean Swarthout for his "unselfish and devoted service to the school."
The "Archie' award for the most promising sophomore student was presented to James Lowell Cunningham by Raymond J. Eastwood, associate professor of painting and drawing.
Barbara Anne Pack, freshman, and Martha Louise Pennock, sophomore, received the awards from Delta Phi Delta, national honorary art fraternity.
Students receiving the awards of Pi Kappa Lambda, national honorary music fraternity, were Willard E. Straight, $5; Frank Erskine White, $10; and E. Maxine Dunkleberg, a key. White and Miss Dunkleberg also won last year.
Receive Awards
Sally Ann, Tremble, freshman,
played a violin solo, and Lorraine
Mai, senior, sang. They were
accompanied by Maxine Dunkleberg.
Jan Chiapusso, professor of piano, caused much merriment with his interpretation of a students efforts to play "Spring Song".
Dinner music was provided by Martha Lee Baxter, cello; Dale M Bryan, voilin, and R. Jerald Hamilton, piano.
Set Penalties For Obstructing Polling Places
The constitution as amended provides that students can be tried by the student court upon indictment by at least two poll workers. Penalties range from a minimum of a $5 fine, to a maximum of suspension from school for one semester.
Other business of the Council included the swearing in of four members, committee reports, and the announcement of committee chairmen and members appointed by Patrick H. Thiessen, president.
The All Student Council, in a meeting Tuesday, passed an amendment that will make it an offense for anyone to willfully obstruct the polling places during school elections.
The four members sworn in 'were Doris Jean Tihen, Elizabeth Sue Webster, Wilbur B. Noble, and Hugh Johnson.
Upon the recommendation of the finance committee, $20 was appropriated to pay the entry fee of a University ping-pong team in a national intercollegiate tournament at Norman, Okla. This bill carried by a vote of 9 to 11.
The Council granted a request of Alpha Phi Omega, scouting service fraternity, that they be permitted to conduct campus tours for new students at the opening of the fall semester.
Elections committee, Samuel R. McCamant, chairman; Miss Tihen, Anne Ellis, Alan K. Shearer, Bernard M. Nagle, Robert F. Bennett, Dorothy Scroggy, Shirley J. Ouseley.
The committee chairmen and members are the committee on committees, Miss Webster, chairman; C. Friesen, and Arnold J. Enlund.
Traditions committee, Friesen,
chairman; Anne Ellis and Johnson;
publications committee, William A.
Conboy, chairman; James R. Hunsucker,
and George A. Lowe; finance
committee, Bennett, chairman;
Sierear, Wilma L. Shore, Donald
Helm, and Theodore M. Utschen;
charter committee, James D. Petersen,
chairman; Noble, and Helen L. Piller.
Smoking committee, Miss Shore, chairman; Robert E. Morris, and Helm; social committee, Miss Webster, chairman; Miss Ousey, Petersen, Joan M. Bushey, Hunsucker, and Noble; auditing committee, Englund, chairman; McCamant, Miss Then, and Utschen; public relations, Ralph E. Kiene, chairman; Conboy, and Miss Piller; parking committee, Nagle, chairman; Englund and Noble; freshman week, Miss Ousey, chairman, and Miss Bushey.
Sixteen To Head Union Activities
Sixteen students have been selected for chairmen of Union Activities committees, Evans J. Francis, president, said today.
They are announcements, J. Steve Mills; sports and organizations, Marilyn L. Smith; social, James D. McBride; assistant social, Kathleen H. Brode; entertainment, Bryce A. Ehmke; public liaison, John H. Scrivner, Jr.; coffee and forums, Glenn E. Vanenhorst; assistant coffee and forums, Marilyn L. Sweet.
K-Union, Charles E. Hoffhaus; assistant K-Union, Fred N. Six; secretarial, Margaret Granger; decorations, Paul A. Coker, Jr.; special projects, Craig W. Hampton; publicity, Stanley M. Englund; and art. M. Joan Degenhard.
Joan M. Bushey was chosen as official hostess.
Selections were made from applications by 70 students.
Official duties of these chairmen will begin next semester.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, $194^{\circ}$
Official Bulletin
May 5,1948
Institute of Aeronautical Sciences,
7:30 tonight, Aeronautical quoset.
Election of officers and presentation
of technical report awards.
Episcopal College club Holy Communion 7 a.m. tomorrow, Danforth chapel.
International club Swedish Smorgaasbord dinner, 6 tonight, Castle Tea tea. Tickets from any foreign student or call 1315. Speaker, dancing, and entertainment.
Archery club practice, 4 to 6 p.m. today.
Students planning to take Western Civilization examination, 2 p.m. May 15, must sign at registrar's office this week. Admittance card received at registrar's office must be presented at time of examination. Examining place also assigned there.
American Society Tool Engineers, 8:15 tonight, Lindley auditorium, Speaker, J. Y. Riedel of Bethlehem Steel corporation, "Applications and Heat Treatment of Tool Steel."
Tau Sigma, 7-7:30 tonight, gavotte and jig; 7:30-8:30, Spanish; 8:30, musical comedy. Dress rehearsal 7 to 10 p.m. tomorrow, Fraser theater.
K. U. Dames, 8 tonight, 37 Frank Strong, Election of officers.
Devotions each morning, 8:30-8:50 Danforth chapel, sponsored by Student Religious council. All are welcome.
All home economics majors who plan to enroll next semester meet in 110 Fraser, 4 p.m. today. Check next year schedules with Miss Anderson, Miss Lohr, or Miss Hill before meeting.
Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship
7 tonight, 113 Frank Strong.
Physical Therapy club, 7 tonight P.T. room, Watkins Memorial' hospital. Dr. Rose, speaker.
Everyone interested in learning square dancing, 7 tonight, recreation room, Union.
Students interested in tiddy-
wink tournament may register in
University Daily Kansan
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year. (In Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the 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.
Russell Stover Candies Always Fresh
Stowits REXALL Store
Ready To Wear!
ROGER'S FASHION CLEANERS
That's how all your dresses will be when you send them to us in advance.
Call 498
Russian club. 4 p.m. today. 402 Fraser. Mrs. Soloveitchik, "The Revolutions of 1905 and 1917 in Russia."
Carter 4 p.h. toothed Negro Students 7:30 tonight, 25s Fraser.
recreation room. Union 4 p.m. today.
K-Club, 7:30 tonight, 203 Robinson. Nominations for next year's officers.
Sigma Delta Chi, 4 p.m. today, 107 Journalism.
Campus Christian Missionary fellowship 4.p.m. today, Myers hall.
Notice of appeal on all parking tickets received on or before April 30 must be filed with parking office by May 6. Last regular student court session, May 11. Special session, May 18, to hear appeals on tickets received in May.
Classical club, 7:30 tonight, 206 Fraser. Professor Seaver, speaker.
Tickets for A.V.C. picnic at Business office. Deadline tomorrow noon, $1.25 each. Picnic at Clinton park, 6:15 p.m. Friday.
Sociology club picnic. 5 to 7 p.m. tomorrow. Potter picnic grounds. Food provided.
Sunflower Boys' State alumni, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, East room, Union. Bob Hedges, speaker. Election.
University Women's club tea, 3 p. m. tomorrow, Myers hall. Annual business meeting, election of officers.
Four-No Bridge club, 7:30 p.m. to morrow, ballroom, Union. All interested.
Student Religious council, 4 p.m. tomorrow, Myers hall. Members and advisors requested to be present.
Deutscher Verein wird sich Donnedstag um 4:30 in 402 Fraser versammelm.
Tau Beta Pi election of officers, 7 p.m. tomorrow, hydraulics laboratory.
Christian Science organization,
7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Danforth chapel
Engineering council, 5 p.m. to-
morrow, 210 Marvin. All members.
Mortar Board, 9:30 p.m. tomorrow,
office of dean of women.
German club May party, 6:30 p.
m. Friday, home of Prof. and Mrs.
George Kreye.
K-Club sponsored intra-squad football game, 8:30 p.m. Friday, Haskell stadium. Students, 50 cents plus activity books. Tickets at athletic office.
Pi Tau Sigma initiation banquet. May 13. Reservations engineering library by Saturday.
All interested in attending Baptist student picnic, Lone Star lake, May 9, notify Martha Oatman, Watkins hall.
Any I.S.A. member interested in going to national I.S.A. convention contact Alice Wismer by 5 p.m. Thursday.
Men are wanted to fill state jobs as automobile mechanics, prison and reformary guards, and maintenance repairmen, the Kansas department of civil service announced today.
Guards, Mechanics Needed For Jobs
State and prison guards are needed to fill 15 vacancies with starting salaries of $136 a month. State highway commission mechanics will receive starting salaries of $157 a month. Maintenance repairmen will receive starting salaries of $143 and $182 a month.
Applications for the jobs will be accepted until May 22. Competitive examinations will be held in June. Information about the examinations can be obtained by writing the Kansas department of civil service, 801 Harrison, Topeka.
Elect Doris Long RN Club President
Doris Elaine Long, College sophomore, was recently elected president of the Registered Nurses club of Lawrence.
Other Unixiversity women elected were Helen Marie Sherbenon, College senior, secretary-treasurer; and Karen L. Cormack, freshman, program and publicity.
The district meeting of the clubs in the Kansas City area will be held at 8 p.m. May 11 in the Lawrence city hall.
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Socially Speaking-
Spring Social Pace At KU Continues In Full Swing
Delta Chi Picnic
Delta Chi held its annual spring picnic April 24.
Guests were Martham Brady Shirley Constantos, Ann Ang, Patricia Kelly, Eva Zum Brunnen, Carol Hastings, Bettie Compton, Corinne Carter, Arlene Williams, Warrance Kerby, Dorothy Armstrong, Patricia Rutledge, Olivia Gavryl, Emily Barry, Patricia Davidson, Zola Parke, Naida Craig, Barbara Burnham, Jane Lutz, Betty Preble, Mary Lou Collyer, Joan Bennett, Helen Harkrader, Phyllis Wilson, Kathryn Hessling, Shirley Varnum, Geraldine Cuddy, Virginia Fogelstrom Elizabeth Stenzel, Jeanne Welsh.
Joan Johnson, Wichita; Jeannie Talent, Bartleville, Okla.; Patricia Hutchings, Betty Howard, and Darlene Hinds, Kansas City, Kan.; Mary Allyce Kuh, Helen Durrin, and Betty Lou Robertson, Leavenworth; William Lyle, Louis Reeves, Morris Warren, and Jack Julian, Ulyses; Mr. and Mrs. Charles Grutzmacher, Onagra; Opf. and Mrs. Gerald Carney,Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lane,Mr. and Mrs. John Neal, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Love, and Mr. and Mrs. Otto Schnellbauer.
Chaperons were Mrs. Esther Reed
and Mrs. H. J. Overholser.
Sig Ep Formal
Sigma Phi Epsilon held its annual spring formal, the Golden Heart Ball. May 1 in the Union ballroom. During the intermission Donald E. Wind presented a gold cup to Ruth Routon who was selected as the Sig Ep Dream Girl of 1948.
Guests were Mary McNalley, Diane Donley, Barbare Clark, Diane Howell, Elizabeth Shears, Marcia Hail, Patricia Green, Miriam Wolf, Marilyn Hanrahan, Dolores Warren, Ruth Routon, Georgianne Dutton, Mary Sue Curtis, Mary Spillman, Dorothy Baldwin, Billie Staver, Carolyn Weiss, Peggy Godbey, Mary Selig, Marjorie Sheridan, Martha Ann Nichols, Shirley Brown, Isabel Martin, Sydney Letson, Virginia Gargis, Jacqueline Walker, Jean Peterson, Mary Rice, Mary Helen Farrell, Alice Jean Brandon, Courtney Cowgill, Barbara Gist, Jodi Fleming, Mary Lou Brewer, Patricia Glover, Beth Callen.
Donna Moore, Joyce Stchley, Ruth Clayton, Jane Ahibchald, Patricia Clippard, Jeanne Smith, Dena Ransdell, Twyla Talbert, Ann Redding, Mickey Jenkins, Mary Lou Zimmerman, Eleanor Carlson, Betty Lichtenstadter, Pat Young, Gwen Jones, Lolly Price, Joanne Alton, Joyce Salmon, Joy Griffith, Sarah Strictland, Dolores Travailant, Nancy Watson, Coke Cunningham, Mary Ann Cruse, June Schrom, Kay Joy Edwards, Ruth Williams, Phyllis Geissert, Patricia Williams, Virginia Jenso, Joe Ann Hurst, Joan Rodgers.
Jackie Campbell, Shirley Rice, Virginia Rose, Reea Rooney, Jane Klooz, Lydney Stevens, Folleen Dudley, Elda Lou Phillips, Ardye Wilson, Phyllis Gilpin, Charlotte Sagmoon, Margery Meyers, Claudia Baldwin, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Burt, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Hawver, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Reece, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ruppenthal, Mr. and Mrs. Donnell Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Harry
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Phi Gams Entertain
Phi Gamma Delta held its annual Parents' day Sunday at the chapter house. Songs and entertainment in the Jinx room followed the dinner.
- Carburetors
- Ignition
- Motor tune-up
Brake Repair our Specialty
B'nai J'hudah
Tea Dance
B'nai J'hudah social fraternity announces the initiation of Donald Oppenheimer, engineering sophomore.
McCammon-Burwell
Members of Delta Tau Delta were the guests of Delta Delta Delta May 1 at a tea dance at the chapter house.
Skating Party
Delta Delta Delta entertained Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity with a roller skating party May 1.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles McCammon, St. Joseph, M., recently announced the engagement of their daughter, Shirley Belle, to Robert Burwell.
Miss McCammon is a former student at Phillips university in Enid, Okla. Mr. Burwell, an engineering sophomore, is a member of Triangle fraternity.
Carlson-Rolfs
Mrs. Charles Wentworth, Delta Delta Delta housemother, announces the pinning and engagement of Eunice Carlson, daughter of Gov. and Mrs. Frank Carlson, Topela, to Edward Rolfs, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Rolfs, Junction City.
MAISS Carlson is a College senior.
Mr. Rolfs, a member of Delta Tau
Delta, is also a College senior.
Miss Carlson received a lei of orchids. Her, attendants, Shirley Grigsby and Bonnie Cunningham, and Mrs. Wentworth received corsages of pink carnations.
Denver—(UP) — Cats can learn tricks, 9-year-old Retha Lindquist contends.
Cats Can Learn,
Says Nine-Year-Old
Tough and Puff, two striped alley cats, are her pets. The felines are more at home in dolls' clothes than roaming the alleys.
They will spend half an hour at a time on their backs, legs stiff in the air, playing "dead." They like to pretend to eat with spoon and fork. They like to push each other around in a doll buggy.
Dietrich-Pryer
Miss Marjorie Dietrich, secretary to Dean F. J. Moreau of the School of Law, was married April 29 to Mr. Ray Pryer, Clinton, Mo. Mr. Pryer is county highway engineer of Henry county, Mo. Both Mr. and Mrs. Prer graduated from the University in 1925.
The couple were married in the Brown chapel of the Central Baptist Theological seminary, Kansas City, Kan. The Rev. Charles W. Thomas, student pastor of the First Baptist church of Lawrence, performed\the ceremony.
Riddle-McBride
Mrs. Esther Reed, Sigma Alpha Epsilon housemother, announced Sunday the phiming of Mary Riddle and James Douglas McBride, both of Kansas City, Mo.
Miss Riddle, a member of Chi Omega, was graduated from Kansas State college in 1947 and is now an instructor at Shawnee-Mission High school in Overland, Kan. Mr. McBride, a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon, is a business junior.
Miss Riddle was presented an orchid corsage. She was attended by Beverly Braeckveldt who wore a white carnation corsage. Mrs. Reed also received a white carnation corsage.
Phi Kappa Tau
Mr. Wilson hopes to have enough men to hold an initiation ceremony in three weeks. The rushees will travel to Nebraska Wesleyan university at Lincoln to be initiated.
George Wilson, field secretary of the national organization, is in Lawrence to organize Phi Kappa Tau, a new social fraternity at the University.
Mothers Face Problem In Multiplication
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Wilson, Kan.—(UP)—The Mothers' club of Wilson is in financial difficulty.
The club has 14 members. Last fall it voted to give each member who had a new baby a gift to cost $3. Five members are expecting. The treasury has a balance of only $6.56.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FOUR
WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 1948
Mack's A's Whip Tribe
New York, May 5—(UP)—At 85 a man doesn't get burned up very often, but just the same it appeared today that Connie Mack was out to show that young man, Lou Boudreau of the Indians, what not to say and when not to say it.
Boudreau, chortling a bit over Cleveland's early season successes in which the Tribe moved into first place with a string of triumphs over the Brownns, White Sox and Tigers, said that this season the Indians would try to fatten up on the so-called weaker clubs. Unfortunately, he included the Athletics in the weaker category and so Mack's bustling boys were ready and waiting for the Indians yesterday.
A's Win On Homer
Taking on the Indians for the first time this year, the A's won a bitterly fought game, 8 to 6, in the tenth yesterday when Eddie Jooスト broke it up with a two-run homer. Sam Chapman previously had brought the A's from behind with a three-run homer, and Eddie Robinson got one for Cleveland.
It was Philadelphia's fourth straight victory, credited to rookie Lou Brissie, who won his first game since opening day when he beat the Red Sox.
The Red Sox, moving slowly but apparently surely, achieved the respectability of a .500 percentage for the first time when they topped the Tigers 6 to 3 at Boston.
Frank Shea went the route for the Yankees for the first time, doling out but four hits in a 6 to 1 triumph over the Browns at New York.
Card Hits Timely
The St. Louis Cardinals showed more than a little life at the plate in handing Brooklyn a 5 to 4 lacing in a night game which marked the
Sande Is Barred From NY Tracks
New York, May 5.—(UP)—Earl Sande today was barred from New York race tracks for 60 days for the alleged doping of one of his horses.
The action by the Metropolitan Jockey club came on the heels of the famed ex-jockey's arrest Monday on a federal charge of possessing narcotics. Sande now is awaiting federal grand jury action on the narcotics charge.
Drop Opener To Nebraska
In the first of a two-game series with Nebraska, the Kansas Jayhawker baseball nine dropped a 10 to 1 high scoring fray. The second contest will be played today.
K. U. pitchers Dick Gilman, Jack Freed, and Guy Mabry gave up nine hits to the Huskers as Nebraska hurler Jack Sandstadt limited the Jawawkers to four.
The series was supposed to open Monday but rain forced postponement until Tuesday. The K.U. players will return to Lawrence tomorrow and begin preparation for their double-bill with the Missouri Tigers over the week end. The line score.
Tigers Beware
Kansas 000 010 000—1 4 2
Nebraska 200 210 50x—10 9 2
first meeting of the two teams this season. The Cards gave away two runs in the first inning but came back to score three in a big fifth and then tack on homers by Stan Musial and Enos Slaughter.
KU Shows Promise On Track
The Dodgers left 13 men on base, and therein may be the tale of their defeat, for they outfit the Cards 12 to 7. George Munger started for St. Louis and was yanked in favor of Al Brazle after he gave up six hits in three innings.
The times turned in by Kansas runners last week at Manhattan, where the Jayhawkers whipped the Kansas State Wildcats 70 to 61, may serve warning to the Missouri Tigers that the little bird from Kansas doesn't intend to fall easy prey to Tiger track teams very long.
Johnny Sites, Jayhawker quarter-miler, reeled off the 440 yards in
$ ^{+} $Shea In Fast Half
49. 5, which is the fastest time turned in by a Kansas runner this year. Stites nosed out teammate Bill Binter by six inches in hanging up that time.
Another outstanding performance of the meet was Dick Shea's half mile. Shea, a track senior, ran the half in 1:56.4, which was also the fastest half for a Kansas runner this season.
The other excellent time recorded during the Kansas visit to Aggie-ville was in the mile run, which turned into a duel between Hal Moore and Bob Karnes. Karnes led at the end of the third lap and it seemed that the black-haired distance star had the race sewed up. Moore Repeats In Mile
Coming into the final straightaway of the fourth lap Moore passed Karnes and went on to win. His time was 4:21, which was exceptionally good.
The race between Moore and Karnes was practically a repeat of the great finish Moore made to nose out Karnes in the Big Seven indoor meet at Kansas City in February. Moore's time of 4:18.6 broke the conference indoor record.
If the Crimson and Blue continue to post improved times such as these they may cause Tom Botts a few moments of worry when his Tigers visit the Jayhawkers in a dual meet at Lawrence on May 15
Attend the
Attend the Topeka Drive-in Theater 25th and California First Show . . . . . 8 p.m.
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WHAT ARE K.U.'s prospects for a good football team next year?
See for Yourself
Friday, May 7, 8 p.m.
Haskell Stadium
NIGHT
FOOTBALL
GAME
Two Evenly picked squads, chosen from the varsity will play a complete game—not a scrimmage—under game conditions.
Students 50c General Admission $1.50 "K" Club Members "Free Sponsored by the "K" Club.
TOWING SERVICE
Phone 12
HUNSINGER MOTOR CO.
GOLF
Jayhawk Golf Driving Range
1 Mile East of Haskell on 10
- New well-lighted range-open every afternoon at 4:30;2:30 on Sat. and Sunday-evenings from 7:30.
- Clubs and balls provided.
- You may use dirt, rubber-mat or one of the automatic tees. Select the kind you prefer.
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Moore, Riegle, Williams Are Mound Masters
A trio of sparkling pitching performances highlighted Tuesday's intramural softball play as Phi Gam, Dine-A-Mite, Sigma Nu, Aces Hi, Delta Upsilon, and the Wildcats hung up victories.
Delmar Vonadá's seventh-inning bingle robbed twirler Ralph Moore of a no-hit game as Dine-A-Mite romped over Y.M.C.A. 1 to 1. The losers
one run in the initial stanza. Moore walked three and struck out three.
John Kongs banged out a single, double, and a home run to pace the Dine-A-Mite batting assault. Oliver Leighton tripled for the winners.
Y.M.C.A. 100 000 0—1 1 7
D.A. Mite 232 303 x-13 14 0
Phi Gam combined three singles and a long fly in the last half of eighth inning to nip Kappa Sigma 2 to 1. The Phi Gam vicory put the Phi Gam's, Kappa Sig's, and D.U.'s in a three way tie for the division four lead. All three clubs have won three contests while losing one.
Warren Riegle, stopped the Kappa Sig's on three singles and drove in the first Phi Gam tally in the first inning.
The Kappa Sig's knotted the count in the top of the fifth as Tex Langford scored on Bud Wright's fly to center.
Kap Sig
Phi Gam
000 010 00—1 3 4
100 000 01—2 8 2
Aces Hi had little trouble with the Kappa Ei Ta Kappa's winning 16 to 5 in an abbreviated five-inning tilt. The losers are attempting to protest the game on a decision in the fourth inning.
Heading the Ace's hitting parade was first sacker Bob Clark who slapped out four hits, one a triple, in four trips. Harold Kaufman, Bill Parsons, and "Sinks" Galbraith collected three for four to aid the cause. Walt Heinrich paced the losers with a pair of 3-baggers. Calvin Remmers and Bill Hamilton each grabbed two for three to aid the Kappa Eta Kappa attack.
A dropped third strike brought about the argument. The batter reached first ahead of the catcher's peg but after Walt Heinrich, the next hitter, tripled the base umpire ruled that the first man should have been out.
KEK
204 433 2—16 18
100 200 2—5 7
Sigma Nu pulled in an 11 to 6 win from the Delt's in a game which was highlighted by 18 errors.
Skip Williams, S. Nu mound ace, limited the Delt's to five safe blows while his mated clubbed 13 hits, seven of them in the sixth inning. Williams showed occasional wildness as he issued seven walks.
Sigma Nu 040 025 11—13 7
Delt's 400 010 1—6 5 5
D. U. blasted out 19 hits to bombard Phi Kappa Sigma 16 to 3. The victors held complete mastery over the losers as they played top-notch ball throughout the contest. D.U. committed only one bobble.
Leading the hitting parade for the DU.'s was John Armel who clouted a pair of homers. Bob Gowans and Jerald Bales also slammed round-trippers.
D.U. 104 032 6—16 19 1
*PKS* 100 011 0 3 11 4
The Wildcats clubbed 15 hits and took advantage of eight free rides to score in every frame but the fourth in downing Dix club 18 to 10. Bill Miller collected four hits in five trips in sparking the Wildcat's.
Bill Olin and Eldon Fyre combined on the hill for the Wildcat's to fan 12 Dix batters. The Wildcats banged out 13 hits.
Wildeats Dix Club
342 141 3—18 15
211 312 0—10 10
Sooners Divide Two Against Iowa State
Norman, Okla., May 5—(UP)A timely hit by Elton Davis, University of Oklahoma pitcher, scored first baseman Paul Court in the seventh inning here yesterday to give the Sooners a 9 to 8 edge over Iowa State; and a split in the teams' two-game series.
The winners salted away an 8-run lead in the first inning, but Iowa State chipped it away until the score was 8-all going into the Sooners' half of the seventh.
KUTrims K-STwice
Kansas scored decisive golf and tennis victories over Kansas State Tuesday on home territory. The Jayhawker netmen blanked the Wildcats, 7 to 0, and the linksmen swamped the Wildcats on the fairways, $1\frac{1}{2}$ to $2\frac{1}{2}$.
The tennis team, which was recording its second Big Seven conference victory of the year, handed the Wildcats their third straight conference setback. Kansas State previously lost to Missouri and Oklahoma.
Richards Still Wins
Dick Richards extended his personal winning streak to three straight matches by defeating Louis Thompson, 6-3, 6-1. Glenn Tongier turned back Roy Sherrell, 6-2, 6-3 and Hervey Macferran walloped Marvin Dungan. 6-0, 6-3.
In the only singles match that was carried to three sets, Dick Cray edged out Richard Powers, 6-2, 7-9, 6-3. Charlie Carson defeated Jim Neumann, 6-3, 6-4.
The Jayhawkers completed their rout of the Wildcats by sweeping both doubles matches. Richards-Tongier trounced Sherrell-Dungan, 6-0, 6-2, and Macferran-Carson defeated Thompson - Neumann, 3-6, 6-1, 6-1.
Scott, playing in the front foursome, cupped Junior Lovell, $2\frac{1}{2}$ to $\frac{1}{2}$ and K.U.'s Hal DeLongy nipped Don Bishop, 2 to 1. In the best ball match, DeLongy-Scott bested Bishop-Lovell, 3 to 0.
Golf Coach Bill Winey inserted two squad newcomers in the lineup to rest two of his regulars for the Missouri match Thursday. Both Cal Markwell, who was playing his first collegiate match, and Glenn Scott, who was playing his second, scored impressive victories for the Jayhawkers.
Winey Uses Subs
DG Pitches Two-Hitter
In the back foursome, Markwell outshot Bob Batt, 2 to 1, and Courtland Smith, Kansas, dropped Mike Myers, 3 to 0. Smith-Markwell blanked Batt-Myers, 3 to 0.
A two-hit shutout by Jeanne Atkinson, Delta Gamma hurler, highlighted the women's softball games played Monday and Tuesday by Delta Gamma, Chi Omega, Jolife hall, Alpha Chi Omega, and Locksley posted victories.
Scott and Smith tied for medalist honors with four-over par 72's.
Goshen, Ind.—(UP)—Pete Vlassis, a native of Greece but a naturalized American citizen, wanted to say "thanks." He looked around town and soon had accumulated a list of 140 overseas veterans. He gave them a banquet.
Says 'Thanks' To Veterans
BILL'S GRILL
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Atkinson set the Hawks down in order in every inning except the second when Wilson and Meyers Hawk infielders, got singles, to enable here teammates to chalk up a 26 to 0 triumph. She also registered 11 strikeouts in the 5-inning affair. Scare Chi Omega's
Open Daily 6 a.m. 1:30 p.m.
Across from Court House
Chi Omega had a scare before downing Rickine by a 20 to 17 count. Moore, Steinert, and Gabrielson, contributed 4 hits each to Chi Omega's 30-hit total, while Walsten, Hazelton, and Amick, Rickine sluggers, were getting 4 hits each for the losers.
Gamma Phi Beta outhit Joliffe 19 to 11 but the wildness of Sarah Jane Heil, Gamma Phi pitcher, spelled their doom as she allowed 12 walks to let Joliffe mark up a 16 to 11 win. Schnitzler, Gamma Phi shortstop, got 4 for 4 to take game hitting honors.
Rose Lee's
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7 a.m.-10 p.m. Weekdays
7 a.m.-12 p.m., Fri. Sat. Sun.
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Parking Space Sunday
Last Inning Rally
Alpha Chi Omega came from behind in the last inning with a 5-run rally to defeat Alpha Omicron Pi by 7 to 6. Powell, Alpha Chi rightfelder, was the big gun for the winners, getting 3 hits and scoring the winning run. Shafer, Alpha Chi pitcher, allowed only 8 hits while her team-mates gathered 13 off Spaulding, A.O. Pi hurler.
The first four rounds of all minor spring sports must be completed by Monday, May 10, or they will be listed as forfeits, Don Powell, intramural director, said today.
Deadline Is Set For Minor Sports
These sports include golf, tennis, horseshoes, and handball. Participants must contact their opponents to decide on a time suitable to both, he added.
Locksley turned on the power to snow Watkins under 36 to 1. The final totals showed 28 hits for Locksley including 7 homeruns. Watkins got only 4 hits off van der Smissen, Locksley pitcher.
KC Sings Blues As Columbus Wins
For the 10th time in their last 11 games, the Kansas City Blues were on the short end of the score as they dropped a 6 to 3 decision to the Columbus Redbirds last night at Kansas City.
The Blues sent four pitchers to the mound in an attempt to stop the visitors, but the Redbirds capitalized on eight hits and three K.C. errors to win. The Blues knocked Columbus' Charley Stanceau off the mound in the eighth with all their runs, but Ira Hutchinson finished the game with no trouble.
The present league leader, Indianapolis, also was on the losing end—of a 4 to 2 game with St. Paul. The victory put the Saints and their twin-city mates, the Minneapolis Millers, in a second-place tie only two games back.
The Millers came up with an 11 to 5 victory over the Toledo Muhens, who currently are tied with Kansas City on the bottom rung. In the other game Milwaukee dropped Louisville for the second straight time, 6 to 4.
Today's contest pits Louisville against Milwaukee of the Brewers' home field, while tonight Columbus will be at Kansas City.
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WATCH REPAIR ELECTRONICALLY CHECKED.
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Read the Daily Kansan daily.
SLIDE - RULE CASES
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 1948
The Editorial Page
High Stakes
It is hard to imagine a gambler so desperate to win a very small prize that he would stake his own life, his family's, or some other person's.
Unfortunately, it is not at all hard to imagine a motorist doing the same thing on the highway. Reckless passing, the worst kind of gambling, causes 49,000 accidents a year in which someone is killed or injured. That is a lot too much gambling with life, and it does not include the thousands of chance-takers who have won the toss so far. Unless they mend their ways, and soon, they or their victims will be next year's statistics.
The psychology of improper passing seems to be a blind optimism on the part of the driver that nothing is coming around the curve or over the hill to catch him while he is on the wrong side of the road. The fact that he has no possible knowledge of whether or not the way is clear—no second sight, no X-ray eye, and no radar equipment to guide him—does not enter into his calculations at all. He is tired of poking along in line, it makes him feel superior to the other fellow to go whizzing past, and he feels pretty smug when he makes it safely. "Smart driving," he tells himself, "knew nothing was coming!"
What if he fails? Have you ever seen a bad accident? Do you remember the grinding of metal, the shattering glass, the screaming passengers, the blazing gas and oil, the blood on the highway?
Don't gamble with lives!
Dr. William C. Menninger of the Meningerian clinic has written a new book called "The Psychiatrist in a Troubled World." One wonders if the psychiatrists have any more troubles than the average citizen.
At the student-faculty conference a student who believed that freshmen at enrollment time should have plenty of help and advice admitted that she had been allowed to take 20 hours her first semester and had hardly recovered from it yet.
University Daily Hansan
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... David H. Clymer
Managing Editor... Cooper Rollow
Asst. Man. Editor... Clarence W. Bissell
Asst. Man. Editor... Gene Vigner
City Editor... John Stauffer
Asst. City Editor... James Beatty
Assist. Director... Ben Rendall
Telegraph Editor... James Robinson
Asst. Tel. Editor... Hal Nelson
Asst. Tel. Editor... Bill Koehler
Sports Editor... Paul Zeb
Sports Editors... James Jones
Women's Sports Ed. Anna Mary Murphy
Roberto Roberts
Picture Editor... James Mason
Society Editor... Patricia Bentley
Business Manager Bill Alderson
Adv. Manager Paul Warmer
Cir. Manager Don Wilder
Gir. Manager Bill Binter
Class. Adv. Mgr. Ruth Clayton
Class. Adv. Mgr. Elizabeth Burke
Asst. Class. Adv. Mgr. Galol Buther
Nat. Adv. Mgr. Solkoclipe
Asst. Nat. Adv. Mgr. Eleanor Cogan
Osp. Prom. James Dont Tennant
The Kansas Press Association
19 MEMBER
48
National Editorial Association
YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW
The Kan KANSAS
DANGEROUS
PASSING ON CURVE OR HILL
SAFE
PASSING ON CLEAR
STRAIGHTAWAY
Serious Doubt
Mr. Forrest A. Smith
We appreciate your fine, sympathetic understanding of the racial problem here on the hill, Mr. Smith. We think your attitude is most admirable. But somehow we can'quite comprehend how anyone can want "equal opportunity, equal education, and equal rights under the law" yet preach social segregation. We can't see how we can have one without the other. In other words, Mr. Smith, we don't know what you want.
Lawrence L. Kennedy
College junior
Albert G. Moffat
College senior
Dear Editor
Coal was discovered in Illinois by early explorers in 1673.
Dear Editor:
Many Thanks
On behalf of the faculty members and the boys and girls of the seventh grade class of Kensington school, Kansas City, Mo., we wish to express our appreciation of the cordial hospitality shown us by the department members who gave us such interesting demonstrations when we visited their buildings.
The boys and girls will long remember the lovely luncheon prepared by the cafeteria staff as well as the other courtesies extended to them.
Due to the careful planning of Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, and the Jay James, Mary Lynn Trousdale, and Hortense Bedell, our trip was made both profitable and enjoyable.
- Please accept this expression of thanks for a wonderful day on the K.U. campus.
Mary J. Burke, principal
Lenore Peery
Beatrice Jourdan
Still More Names
Dear Editor:
More names for the resolution which appeared in the April 21 issue of the daily Kansan:
More names for t. which appeared in the sue of the daily Kansan:
D. L. Chamberlain
H. Leon Bradlow
Aaron Feldstein
Thomas Bean
Robert R. Russell
August Sweenbjornsson
Albert Lindenstruth
Harvey S. Sadow
Harry J. Christoffers
Richard M. Wallace
Dick Ferm
Jack Ryan
Arthur F. Helin
Dorothea Chamberlain
John Tilghman
A recent high court decision adjudged that income derived from embezzlement is not taxable. This must have brought sunshine into the life of all those former bank clerks who are now residing at Leavenworth.
Eye
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Dr. Hall Talks To Phi Sigma
98
Rowlands
Specimen collecting on expeditions in Mexico and southern parts of the United States was the subject of a talk by Dr. E.R. Hall to Phi Sigma, biology society, Monday.
48
Dr. Hall, a professor of zoology, described specimens which have been collected for the Museum of Natural History.
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Duane Olson, 1104 Tenn., Gilbert
Beard, Haskell. Each receives 10 free
games.)
It's different, it's fun, and you'll learn in a minute if you haven't played before.
Come on out this afternoon and sharpen your skill on our 18 hole course. You'll enjoy the spring weather too.
OPEN
Weekdays
1:00-5:30 — 25c
7:00-12:00 — 35c
Sundays
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Morgan-Mack 609 Mass. Phone 277 Service-FORD-Sales
Mack
IT'S IMPORTANT To Know That EVERY 5000 MILES
YOUR CAR NEEDS THE FOLLOWING SERVICE!
- Fill and Adjust Shocks
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- This service should be given every car each 5,000 miles for maximum safety and economy.
- Pack Wheel Bearings
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 5. 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Phone KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be delivered 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.
Classified Advertising Rates
Classified Advertising Rates
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day days days
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additional words 1c 2c 3c
For Sale
3 ROOMS of furniture, excellent condition and mise, items for sale at Apt. 3A,
Sunyside, 1 to 7 p.m., daily except Saturday, Sunday after 10:30 a.m.
YOURS FOR only $665—1940 Ford Tudor radio, gasoline heater. Engine in excellent condition. See at 916 Teen, after 5:30 on Saturday and Sunday. 7
ATTENTION Shutterbugs—must sell my Albert Contact Printer--like new—prints up to 5 x 7. $15 Bob Ferber, 945 Indiana, 1351-W. 6
1928 MASTER BUILT. Excellent motor-
tor. On time. $1,750. "hail" 123 W. South Park. Phone 1171- R.
J.
RECORD PLAYER; two-burner hot plate; and masking mask and foil. Cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap. Phil Ellouo. 1323 Louisiana, phone 3009. 5
TWO USED executive type swivel chairs for sale - Student Union Book Store. 10 ROOMS for rent during the summer- Will rent single or double to men students. Close to campus. 1012 Alabama
1930 CHEVROLET, very clean, new tires
314 W. 14th.
NEW PORTABLE typewriter at wholesale, carrying case 10 and keyboard 20. Sweeter, practically new Crosley convertible auto. Art Rupenthal. Phone 2236J. 7
VETERANS! We will buy, trade or sell for you any Army or Navy gear in condition that you may wish to dispose of Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. 669 HTFD
Business Service
LET US help you with your Airline reservation. We have complete information and service. Phone 30, ticket office, Rose Hill Bank, TUTORING MATHEMATICS TOUCHTOWN MATHS. T. Dougherty. Phone 3084M. Please call for appointment. 7
*TYPING—thesis and term papers. Quick, cheap, and accurate. Phone 2369–J. 10 TYPEN—reasonable rate. Prompt serv. 1028 New York. Phone 714-555-2222. TNNIIS FACKETS restring or repaired.
Nylon. $3.50; cup. $4.50 to $10.00. E. L
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TYPING DONE; Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Telephone 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. 20 Attention needed: Tone papers, reports, special attention required. Work at reasonable prices. Call 1996-W. Apartment 2, 1901 Tennessee. rites
TAILOR-MADE suits $36.50 to $65.00. Eight-piece
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NEW vacuum cleaners for rent. Attachments included $1.50 per day. Al Brooks Sweeper Co., 831½ Mass. Ph. 1104 between 9 and 12 a.m.
Wanted
COUPLE WANTS to contract for a furnished apartments beginning with the Contract Number 610875. Call Betty Thatcher at (212) 349-1234.
ENGINEERING student for lettering with some drawing ability to finish cartoons and to do lettering. Will not take much time. Good pay. Phone 1251L2. 5
Transportation
HAVE ROOM for 4:00 to Salina for Mother's Day, Leaving 4:00 Friday. Contact 214, Lane O, Sunflower or leave name at Kansoo Office. 5
COMMUTING to K.U. Summer School from K.C., daily. Riders wanted. Call
LEAVING every Friday at 4:00 p.m. for Wichita returning Sunday evening. Please call only Wed. and Thurs. between 7:00-9:00 p.m. Harry Schultz, 3170
Miscellaneous
WILL PARTY who exchanged Parker "511" pen Monday please call for theirs Mine was a keepsake. Acme Bachelor Laundry & Dry Cleaners. 11
DANCE every Saturday night at Odel Fell-
hall. Informal. Joe Langwerte or-
ces
Lost
BLACK COCKER spaniel, answers to the name of "Frisky." Last seen on the campus Monday, wearing leather harness. Reward, Ph. 1967. 7
ONE MARSON and gold Parker "51" pen between Frank Strong and 1125 Miss. Thursday. Reward. Finder please call Herb Whitmore, 3283. 5
LOST: REWARD, black and white striped Shaefer pen, near Union, or on path through grove. Courtney Cowgill, 415. 7 PAIR WHITE plastic rimmed glasses, lost around Union. Call Mrs. Houser, 20. Reward.
BLACK and silver Parker "S1" fountain
paint on fountain
phone. Phone 731. Reward
Horses have the largest eyes of all land animals.
Remember Mother On May 9
CHOCOLATE BOXES
On "Her Day,"we suggest a box of our homemade candy which is packed by hand in attractive boxes.
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Each box has a wide assortment of candies.
WE WILL MAIL ANY CANDY ORDER FOR YOU.
Frosty Malts
Ice Cream
Carmel Corn
Dixie's Carmel Corn Co.
Phone 1330
Jewish Group To Plan Campus Visit
842 Mass.
A luncheon, a tour of the campus,
a picnic, and a dance are the
The Jewish Student union executive committee has planned a "Visit to the Campus" for Jewish high school students May 15. Through the co-operation of Kansas B'nai Brith lodges and Kansas City, Mo. organizations, boys and girls from the entire state and adjacent ci ties have been invited.
Mrs. Robert Hooper, graduate student, underwent surgery at Watkins hospital Monday. Attending physicians report her condition good today.
Mrs. Hooper Operated On
major events, Ira Gissen, vice president, announced.
The Jewish Student union will meet at 5 p.m. tomorrow in Myers hall to explain the program to the entire membership, and the participating committees will receive final instructions.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE EIGHT
WEDNESDAY, MAY 5, 1948
Taft Victory Stops Stassen In Ohio Primary
Washington, May 5—(UP)—Re-
turns from Ohio's Republican presi-
dential primary braked the Stassen
band wagon today, but disclosed a
labor front weakness in Sen. Robert
A. Taft's candidacy.
On the basis of incomplete returns, Harold E. Stassen apparently won nine Ohio district delegates to the Republican national convention. He was losing in 14 delegate contests with Senator Taft, including one state-wide test of G.O.P. sentiment. That test came on the choice of a delegate-at-large. The consensus had been that Mr. Stassen would win his delegate-at-large entry. His defeat there was a jarring blow.
If present standing are sustained in the final tabulation, the Ohio score will be: Taft 44; Stassen. 9.
Senator Taft called the primary result a defeat for Mr. Stassen with special emphasis on the at-large contest. The senator said he now had more first ballot convention votes that any other candidate for G.O.P. nomination. Mr. Stassen and Gov. Dewey of New York made similar claims. None of them supported by detailed break-down of committed convention delegations.
Senator Taft won 30 Ohio delegates without contest.
Mr. Stassen's Ohio votes in the Republican national convention will come from such industrial areas as Dayton, Toledo, Akron, Youngstown, and Cleveland. The rural areas went for Senator Taft and he was able to split others.
Senator Taft won a lopsided majority of Ohio's delegates but Mr. Stassen made it close in the popular vote. With a few hundred contested precincts still out, Taft delegates polled 341,261 votes to 323,044 for Stassen delegates—a modest bulge of 18,217 votes.
YWCA Celebrates 75th Anniversary
The University Y.W.C.A. will celebrate the national 75th anniversary of Y.W. work on college campuses with a diamond jubilee dinner today.
The University chapter is 62 years old. It was organized in 1886 with a membership of 12 girls and functioned primarily as a missionary society. There are now over 500 members and the missionary society has expanded to include groups on community service, race relations, orientation of new students, international groups and co-operatives.
The program will be a research report prepared by Mary Lees, Col-Am. It will be presented in CA. It will be presented in skit form by the girls living at Henley house.
Miss Virginia Douglass, fine art sophomore, is in charge of the dinner.
By Bibler
Little Man On Campus
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Hangovers Give You Worst Headaches, Doctor Insists
If a person with a bursting hangover could see the blood vessels in his head on that "morning after," he would know why it feels like part of the skull is missing and the brain exposed. This is the opinion of Dr. John J. Shea, Memphis, in his speech to the post-graduate assembly of eye, ear, nose and throat doctors at the University of Kansas Medical center in Kansas City.
The scientific reason for a hangover was explained by Dr. Shea as the unoxidized products of alcohol. It is much harder for the body to oxidize the "aged a day in the woods" type of whiskey than the properly made and aged whiskey.
However, Dr. Shea says this doesn't hold true in every case because persons differ in their capacity to oxidize alcohol.
"There are headaches from many physical causes." Dr. Shea said. Putting off a decision, ducking a responsibility, or maybe taking on too much responsibility are causes of headaches. Even a bad conscience may turn into one. Headaches from eye strain are not too important, and the so-called sinus headache is a fable, he said.
Other speakers at the session were Dr. Oscar V. Batson of Philadelphia, Dr. John S. Knight and Dr. Galen M. Tice.
All heads of "College Daze," student musical revue, will meet at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the Union Activities office.
'College Daze' Heads To Meet Tomorrow
3 Psychologists Present Papers
Three members of the psychology department presented papers recently in the psychology division of the Kansas Academy of Science meeting at Pittsburg.
Dr. Roger Barker, department chairman gave "Personality Development in Monozygotic Twins Differing in Physique from Adventitious Factors." Dr. Anthony Smith, assistant professor, gave a paper on "Menstruation and Industrial Efficiency." Dr. Herbert F. Wright, associate professor, spoke on "The Needs of Children and the Curriculum."
Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women, will speak at a luncheon in Topeka today.
Miss Peterson To Speak
At Topea Luncheon Today
She will talk on "The Place of the Fraternity on the University Campus" at the Topeka Alumnae Pan-Hellenic association luncheon.
Departments in the School of Engineering have nominated 28 candidates for engineering council membership. Elections will be Friday. Students will also vote for the council officers.
All graduate students expecting to receive their degrees at the June commencement should come to the graduate office in 227 Frank Strong hall for a brief conference this week, J. H. Nelson, dean of the Graduate school, announced today.
Engineers Seek Council Positions
The council has one representative from each class and one from each department in the school.
Aeronautical Science Group To Judge Technical Papers
The Institute of Aeronautical Science will award a $10 cash prize at 7:30 tonight in the aeronautical building behind Marvin hall to the member presenting the outstanding paper on technical aviation.
Theta Sigma Phi, national honorary women's journalism fraternity installed the following officers Tuesday; president, Lois Lauer; secretary, Anna Mary Murphy; and treasurer, Dorothy James.
Graduate Students Confer This Week
Civil engineer Glen C. Gray
Martin J. Ellis, Albert J. Alcott.
The Future Business Leaders of America held an election of officers Tuesday.
Future Business Leaders
Clubs On The Campus
Departmental nominations are:
Mechanical engineering: Francis Van Benthem, James V. Meredith Richard W. Hartzler.
Those elected were president, Meribah Barrett; vice-president, Marjorie Matzen; secretary, Betty Jane Booth; treasurer, Frank Martin; reporter, Margaret Townsend. Miss Loda Newcomb, instructor in secretarial training, is the advisor.
James E. Seaver, assistant professor of history, will speak on the mystery religions of the Romans at the Classical club at 7:30 p.m. today in 206 Fraser. The meeting is open to all who are interested.
The institute members also will elect a chairman and two committee to plan for the summer session and fall semester.
The American Veterans committee will hold a picnic at 6:15 p.m. Friday in Clinton park. Tickets are available at the business office, Strong Strong hall.
A picnic will be held May 19 for members and their dates. Tickets can be purchased from Leta Jean Ramsdell for 75 cents.
Electrical engineering: Charles A. Grimmeth, Theodore C. Bernard, Robert L. Lindsay.
Aeronautical engineering: Lawrence D. Smith, John C. Brizendine, Charles W. Spieth.
Theta Sigma Phi
Plans have been made for a trip tomorrow through the Reuter Organ factory at 600 New Hampshire.
Committee On Racial Equality
Engineering physics: Wayne T. Lewis, John M. McKinley, David B. Thompson.
American Veterans Committee
Chemical engineering: Robert D. Talty, Paul Chambers, Lawrence L. Gore, Carl Van Wadden.
The regular Wednesday meeting of the Committee on Racial Equality will be held instead at 7:30 tomorrow at 1614 Kentucky street.
Classical Club
Petroleum engineering: Delmas J Richards, Harold D. Raymond, Virgil W. Krutsinger.
Robert A. Coldsnow, College junior, is the new captain of Scabbard and Blade, honorary military science society. Other officers are Ralph Abercrombie, second lieutenant; and James A. Seelbrombe, first sergeant.
Mining and metallurgical: John R Sacks, Dorman S. O'Leary, Theodore H. Crane.
Architectural engineering: Harley L. Tracy, Paul N. Ericson, Edward G. Hartronft.
Scabbard And Blade
Must Register For Western Civ Test
Tentative plans were made to initiate new men into the society May 18.
The Sunflower Statesmen will elect officers at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow in the East room of the Union. Bob A. Hedges, managing director of the Boys' State corporation will discuss the group's objectives for the coming year.
Sunflower Statesmen
Students planning to take the Western Civilization examination at 2 p.m. May 15, must register their intention to do so at the registrar's office today through Friday, Hilden Gibson, director of Western Civilization has announced. The place of examination will be assigned at this time.
'Get Out, Live. Engineers Told At Banquet
"As engineers, you ought to take an active part in the life of the community," Mr. George said. "Why do the lawyers get the positions on the school boards and the city councils? Because they go after them."
"Get out and live," was the advice given by B. J. George, Kansas City industrial engineer, to the members of Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity at their initiation banquet Tuesday.
Mr. George argued for a strong professional group, urging that a national organization such as the American Bar association or the American Medical association be set up for the engineering profession.
These associations allow the members to make new friendships and contacts, to keep abreast of the profession, and to exchange ideas. But more than these, he said, the professional groups promote a sense of unity and co-operation among all engineers.
Dalton Eash, president of Sigma Tau, was toastmaster, and Oliver Edwards, engineering senior, welcomed the new members into the fraternity. John Fowler, engineering senior, was in charge of banquet arrangements.
Before the banquet, 46 men were initiated into Sigma Tau. The new members were selected from the top-ranking juniors and seniors in the School of Engineering. Names of the initiates will be announced at the Honors convocation, May 11.
KFKU To Feature Music Week Stars
45 L F
KFKU will present three musical programs in connection with Music week.
Evelyn Swarthout, concert pianist and featured young artist of Music week, will be heard in a half hour broadcast at 9:30 p.m. Thursday.
X
The chorus of Sigma Alpha Iota, national music sorority, will present a quarter hour of American music at 2:30 p.m. today.
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University Daily Kansan 45th Year No.143 Thursday, May 6, 1948
STUDENT NEWSPAPER
Lawrence, Kansas
Government May Seize Railroads If Unions Strike
Washington, May 6—(UP)A high official said today the government will seize the nation's railroads if their wage dispute is not settled before the May 11 strike deadline.
This official, who asked not to be quoted by name, said the government will do everything it can to settle the wage dispute without seizure. But he added:
"We just can't let a railroad strike happen. The government will take over and operate the railroads if this dispute is not settled before the strike deadline."
Meanwhile the White House today called members of the three strike-threatening railroad unions to a conference tomorrow.
a counterpart. The union chiefs will meet with John R. Steelman, assistant to President Truman. Mr. Steelman is in charge of last-ditch government efforts to mediate the dispute.
The three unions involved in the threatened strike are the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, the Brotherhood of Firemen and Enginemen and the Switchmen's union. They are asking a 30 per cent pay increase and about 20 changes in working rules for their 150,000 members.
The railroads have offered a 15½- cent hourly wage boost, the same figure recommended last march by a presidential fact-finding board which studied the dispute.
Justice department attorneys believe the government has clear authority to seize the railroads under on old World War I law. This law gives the chief executive power to take over the rail system "in time of war."
They said the law still holds because President Truman has not yet proclaimed the end of World War II.
It was not yet certain how the government would get the rail workers to stay on the job in case of seizure.
Three railroads—the Pennsylvania, the Southern Railway system and the Atlantic Coastline—have formally notified their employees they will be forced to shut down if the strike goes on as scheduled.
A dozen railroads already have advised shippers that in the next few days they will stop accepting perishable freight shipments.
Mr. Truman may talk about the government's plans and hopes on the strike threat at his 2 p.m. news conference.
Instructor Heads Science Academy
Ronald McGregor, assistant instructor of botany, was recently elected chairman of the botanical section of the Kansas Academy of Science.
Four papers were presented by members of the botany department at the Pittsburgh meeting. "Two New Species of Xanthophyceae and a New Record of Naegeliella flagellera" was presented by Rufus Thompson, assistant professor of botany. "First Year Invasion of Plants on an Exposed Lake, Bed" was given by Mr. McCregor. He also gave "Kansas Plants New to Kansas Herbaria III", which he had written in collaboration with Dr. W.H. Horr. "Soil Fungi of the Muscotah Marsh" was presented by Frank Emerson, assistant instructor of botany.
Other members of the department who attended were A. J. Mix, chairman of the department, and W. H. Horr, associate professor of botany. After the meeting the delegates from the University went on a three-day field trip.
WEATHER
Kansas—Generally fair today, tonight, and tomorrow. Warner northwest today and west tonight. Warming tomorrow, High today 65 to 70. Low tonight near 40 west, to middle 40's east.
Arabs To Invade Palestine Area After May 15
Jerusalem, May 6—(UP)—King Abdullah of Trans-Jordan has declared his intention of invading Palestine after the British leave whether or not the Arab league accepts an armistice.
He said he had recalled his foreign minister from a conference with other Arab leaders at Damascus because he was "tired of negotiations and propositions."
"I have decided to enter Palestine after May 15 with an Iraqi army even if the Arab league decides to accept armistice proposals," the Arab monarch said.
The Red Cross delegation late Wednesday night handed Arab and Jewish leaders a list of eight conditions under which the Red Cross would supervise the Holy City truce.
The four main conditions
1. Jews and Arabs would govern their respective sections of the city under civil authority.
2. Jerusalem must be completely demilitarized.
3. Red Cross convoys must be given completely free passage to any militarized area outside Jerusalem on entering or leaving the Holy City.
4. The Red Cross regime will end when Red Cross officials establish a breach of the truce by either side or when both sides give three days advance notice.
Famous Tenor Sings Tonight
FREDERICK JAGEL
Frederick Jagel, first tenor of the Metropolitan opera, will appear in a complimentary concert at 8:20 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium.
Mr. Jagel's program will include:
"Vanne, Si Superba, Va" from the opera "Giustino" (Haidel), "Wenn Du Mich Mit Den Augen Streifst Und Lachst", "Olf", "Ein Staendchen Euch Zu Bringen" (Wolf), "Der Tod, Das Ist Die Kuehle Nacht" (Brahms), "Sind Es Schmerzen, Sind Es Freuden" (Brahms).
“Apres Un Reve” (Faure), “Fleur Jetee” (Faure), C'Est Le Joli Printemps) (Poulenc), “Les Gars Qui Vont a La Fonte” (La Fonte), “Clair De Lune” (Debussy), “Ballade Des Femmes de Paris” (Debussy).
Little Man On Campus
"Lament of Ivan the Proud"
(Charles Griffes), "This Little Rose"
(William Roy), "Captain Kidd"
(Gene Bone and Howard Fenton),
and "My Heart the Bird of the Wilderness (ms)" (Paul Creston).
William Whitaker will be at the piano.
By Bibler
TOOTH WASH ANTISTE
"I think you're taking that bacteriology course a little too seriously!"
Students Blank Screen To Protest Movie Ads
Student protest against the showing of advertising on Lawrence theater screens reached a climax Wednesday when one student managed to cover the lens of the projector and blank out the screen at the Jayhawker theater.
For the past three weeks screen advertising has been accompanied by cloud handlamming and feet stomp-
1,500 Degrees To Be Awarded This Spring
A record class of 1,500 will receive degrees at the 76th annual commencement exercises of the University June 7, James K. Hitt, registrar, announced today.
The old record for degrees awarded on one commencement program was 1.186 set last June.
Actually 552 of the candidates for degrees completed their work last August or February. Another 326 graduates plan to complete requirements during the summer session. They will be eligible for the June exercises, but their names will not appear on the 1948 program.
appeal Gov. Frank Carlson will deliver a brief message to the seniors, Oscar Stauffer, Topeka, will speak for the state board of egcnt. Cincellor Deane W. Malott will give a short farewell message and Drew McLaughlin, Paola, chairman of the board of regents, will present the diplomas.
Speaker at the baccalaureate services, June 6, will be the Rev. Albert E. Haydoh, professor emeritus of comparative religion at the University of Chicago.
Graduates should obtain parent's tickets which admit them to commencement exercises, at the time of obtaining cap and gown. If the weather is unfavorable the commencement will be held in Hoch auditorium. Tickets will be the only means of admission.
means of the
Caps and gowns may be ok'd
from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Ju 5 or
from 3 to 5 p.m. June 6 at Frank
Strong annex A by presentation of
the receipt for senior dues.
'Foreign Students Are Ambassadors'
"Foreign students are like goodwill ambassadors representing their respective countries," L. C. Woodruff, dean of men, told the International club at a Swedish smorgasbord dinner-dance at the Castle Tea room Wednesday night.
Mr. Woodruff spoke on the relations of the faculty and the foreign students. Ernest Friesen, All Student Council member talked on the relations of the A.W.S. and the foreign students.
Marvin Martin, president of the International Relations club, talked on unifying the two international clubs into one body. No action was taken, however. Bruce Wilder spoke of relations between U.N.E.S.C.O. and foreign students.
New officers of the club were inaugurated.
NSA Elects Ford President,
5 Other Offices Filled
Arthur C. Ford, pharmacy freshman, was elected president of the Negro Students association Wednesday. He will take office immediately.
Other officers elected were Lewis D. Welton, vice-president, James Grayson, executive secretary, Mary C. Jones, treasurer, and Evelyn H. Harris, secretary. Floyd H. Thurston will be the N.S.A. representative to the All Student Council.
ing at all of the theaters.
The student who stopped the advertising Wednesday sat in the top row of the balcony, directly below the projection room. When the ads came on the screen he held a card in front of the camera.
The American Society of Tool Engineers heard J. Y. Reidel, metallurgist for the Bethlehem Steel company of Bethlehem, Pa., give an illustrated lecture on "Heat Treatment and Application of Tool Steels" in Lindley auditorium Wednesday.
Stanley E. Schwain, manager of the Commonwealth theaters, said he knew some of the leaders of the disturbance, but no action against them would be taken now. Mr. Schwain also said there was nothing he could do to cut out the advertising-
"I have leased advertising rights on my screen to the United Film company and they sell advertising to Lawrence merchants. Until the lease is up, there is nothing I can do."
He added that the 5-year contract allows six advertisements to be shown but he has managed to cut this down to four.
"They've got me over a barrel." Mr. Schwahn said. "The boy who had that card last night said they would continue to create disturbances until advertising was taken from the screen.
"The merchants who use this advertising are the same ones who do everything in their power to aid the University. Right now they are giving their time and money to put over the World War II Memorial drive and the students are cutting their throat."
Time taken up by advertising is not as long as the time required to run the production credits at the beginning of a feature, so it must not be the time element that students are complaining about, Mr. Schwahn said.
"I have been operating theaters in Lawrence for 19 years, always showing to student crowds, and this is the first time I have ever had any disturbance of this kind.
"Patrons who drive from out of town are disgusted at University students."
Metallurgist Talks To ASTE Group
In his talk Mr. Reidel classified the various tool steels, and described their composition and application, and the various methods of heat treatment. His slides showed how the various tool steels were applied, and showed examples of incorrect procedure in heat treatment and what resulted.
The Kansas City chapter of A. S.T.E. was a guest of the University chapter at the meeting.
Mrs. Soloveitchik Discusses Unrest In Soviet History
The three Soviet revolutions were narrated by Mrs. Rachael Soloveitchik, Russian instructor, at the Wednesday meeting of the Russian club in Fraser hall.
The discussion included short sketches of the Russo-Japanese war, Nicholas II, the Tsar's wife, and Rasputin and his murder.
Rasputin, a crude, drunken peasant, held a hypnotic influence on the royal family because of his success with "treating" the heir who had hemophilia.
The Germans aided Lenin to reenter Russia during World War I and gave Rusputin financial support.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY. MAY 6, 1948
Official Bulletin
May 6,1948
Quack club, 7:30 tonight, Robinson. Tryouts for full membership for pledges.
Delta Phi Delta, 5 p.m. today, projection room, Frank Strong.
Alpha Phi Omega, 7 tonight, Eng-
lish room, Union, Walter C. Buch-
holtz, "Scouting in Aruba."
Students planning to take Western Civilization examination, 2 p.m., Saturday May 15. must sign at registrar's office this week. Admittance card received at registrar's office must be presented at time of examination. Examining place also assigned there.
Tau Sigma dress rehearsal, 7-10 tonight. Fraser theater.
Notice of appeal on all parking tickets received on or before April 30 must be filed with parking office today. Last regular court session, May 11. Special session, May 18, to hear appeals on tickets received in May.
Student Religious council, 4 p.m today. Myers hall. Members and advisors requested to attend.
Four-No Bridge club, 7:39 tonight Union ballroom. All interested.
Sociology club picnic, 5-7 p.m. to day. Potter picnic grounds. Food provided.
Sunflower Boys' State alumni,
7:30 tonight, East room, Union, Bob
Hedges, speaker. Election of officers.
Deutscher Verein wird sich Donnerstag um 4:30 in 492 Fraser versammein. Dean Gregory wird Lichtbilder zeigen.
Tau Beta Pi, election of officers,
7 tonight, Hydraulics lab.
Christian Science organization, 7:30 (onight) Danforth chapel.
Mortar board meeting, 9:30 to night, office of dean of women.
Engineering council, 5 p.m. today.
210 Marvin, All members.
Any L.S.A. member interested in going to national L.S.A. convention contact Alice Wisner by 5 p.m. today.
German club May party, 6:30 pm tomorrow, home of Prof. and Mrs George Kreye.
K-Club to sponsor intra-squad football game, 8:00 p.m. tomorrow, Haskell stadium, Students, 50 cents with activity book. Adults, $1 and children, 50 cents. Tickets at athletic office.
Annual Baptist student picnic
May 9, Lone Star Lake. Notify Martha Oatman, Watkins hall, if planning to attend. Sixty cents a person. Departure time, 3 p.m. from 1124 Mississippi. Automobiles and drivers needed.
Math club annual picnic, 4 p.m.
May 12, Clinton Park. Sign in 205
Frank Strong by Monday. Sixty
cents a person. Election of officers
and program award. Everyone welcome.
Pi Sigma Alpha, initiation, May
10. Pine room, 5 p.m. Dinner in Kansas room at 6:30. Members desiring to attend contact Russell Barrett.
All new cabinet members of Baptist student group, Roger Williams foundation, Theta Epsilon, or College S.S. class, meet at 1124 Miss., 7 p.m. Monday.
Pi Tau Sigma initiation banquet. May 13. Make reservations at Engineering library by Saturday.
Phi Chi Theta, 7 tonight. - Pino
room, Union. Election of officers.
The first colonists in New England were a group of Englishmen who settled Popham, Me., 1607, 13 years before the Pilgrim colony at Plymouth, Mass.
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Sex Education Helps Real Living
New York-(UP)-Sex education for youths was urged by Mrs. Mabel Grier Lesher, educational consultant of the American Social Hygiene association, at a meeting of the national health council here.
"Any education program which fails to include sex character guidance for children for personal and family life, can hardly claim to be preparing children and youth for real living," she said.
Minnesota's per capita income in 1947 was $1,090.
Beer Magnate Couldn't Use An English-Speaking Phone
Milwaukee-(UP)-Old Milwaukee still recall the time in 1877 when the late Valentine Blatz, beem magnate, finally consented to have a telephone installed in his office.
When the phone rang a few minutes later, Blatz answered it and talked for a while. Then he turned to the telephone man.
University Daily Kansun
"Very interesting," he said. "But it really is no help to me. Most of my friends and business associates speak German. And this thing speaks English."
Call K.U. 376 with your Want Ads
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.53 a year. (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University mail is entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
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THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
a er.
ty.
hik.
7.
e.
Give Facts, Says Voorhis
The best defense against totalitarian threats is to give the people the real facts and then trust their judgment, Jerry Voorhis, ex-Congressman from California, told a University audience Wednesday.
Mr. Voorish spoke in Frank Strong auditorium on his experiences as a member of the Dies Un-American Activities committee. He served as a Congressman from 1936 to 1946.
"True facts can be given the people by agencies investigating undercover activities," Mr. Voorhis declared, referring to the idea of Congressional investigations. He charged that the danger in such investigations is that they are not limited to the exposing of actual Communists and Fascists.
"Too many accusations are made against people holding unpopular political or economic views," he explained. "People are confused by various accusations unless they are limited.
"It is to the interests of Communists and Fascists to show that democracy cannot solve these problems. It is our job to prove that we can."
"In the end the way for us to counteract undercover activity is to have America stand for the most rapid progress in solving economic and social problems of the people.
At a luncheon given in his honor by the University Co-operative league at the Hearth Mr. Voorhis declared that he believes campus Coops are now the most important Co-operatives.
"We need trained personnel and you are learning by experience at the universities," he said.
"If we are going to have peace we need more people who believe in th ideas of brotherhood and mutual aid," he declared.
Tau Sigma Has Guests
Sixteen University High school students, under the direction of Miss Joie L. Stapleton, associate professor of physical education, will be guest performers at the Tau Sigma dance recital May 13 in Fraser theater.
The group will give a square dance and minuet. Miss Ruth Hoover, associate professor of physical education, is assisting Miss Stapleton.
The students are Claudia Anderson, Lee Barlou, Myrna Cooper, Caroline Crosier, Judy Daniel, Pat Dixon, John Evers, Dean Fisher, Diane Fisher, Dan Flechall, Ethel Mae Hoek, Gaylene Kennedy, Bill Moomau, Charles Murphy, Bill Naff, and Myrl Powell.
and Myril Powe, performers will be H. Other guest performers will be H. Beverly, fine arts sophomore, dramatic soprano; Marjorie M. S. Shryock, graduate student, narrator; Harold A. Harvey, education senior, and Wade R. Stinson, College sophomore, dancers; and Harriet N. Graves, fine arts sophomore, and Wayne W. Ruppenthal, graduate students, pianists.
Allen Crafton, professor of speech,
and Don Dixon, assistant professor
of speech, honorary members of
Tau Sigma, are technical advisers.
Topeka Veterans Get Entertainment
Two University students entertained the veterans at Winter General hospital in Topeka Sunday.
Mrs. Connie Parhm, College freshman, and William N. Bragg, College sophomore, gave a program of popular and semi-classical music for open and closed wargs in the hospital. Mrs. Parhm sang, and Mr. Brass played the piano.
Their performance was part of a program sponsored by the entertainment division of the Red Cross. The program is directed by Mrs. R. N. Wolfson and Mrs. Kelvin Hoover.
Water For The Shaky Gent At The Second Table
Sterling, Ill., May 5—(UP)—Sterling coffee-lovers began a war of nerves today against a town's restaurant proprietors who raised prices to 10 cents a cup.
The customers filed into the cafes in groups to orier glasses of water and nothing more.
The Rains Came; Cankerworms Stay
Residents of Lawrence are undecided as to whether the recent hail, rain, and wind storm had any effect on the canker worms which have taken over the city.
Some reports claim that the pests were drowned or beaten to death by the storm while others said the worms seemed to thrive in the rainy weather.
weather. H. B. Hungerford, professor of entomology, said that the hard driving rain undoubtedly knocked some of the cankerworms from the trees and killed them, but there were others which probably recovered and crawled back up the trees. Meanwhile, tree spraying operations are continuing.
Two Pharmacists Attend Kappa Epsilon Convention
Marie Schreiber, pharmacy senior,
and Marilyn Lindberg, sophomore,
of the University chapter of Kappa
Epsilon, professional pharmacy
sorority, attended the national con-
vention at Columbus, Ohio, from
April 30 to May 2.
It was announced that the University chapter rated fourth scholastically among the chapters of Kappa Epsilon. ___
The Quaker meeting house built at York, Pa., in 1765 is used each Sunday for services.
John G. Blocker, professor of accounting, will teach in the summer session of the University of California. He will teach Cost Accounting and Corporation Finance in the School of Business Administration beginning June 21.
Blocker To Teach At California U
beginning some work Professor Blocker taught these subjects as a visiting professor at the University of California for the regular and summer sessions in 1940 and 1941. He expects to return to the University of Kansas in September.
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Give Her a Book For MOTHERS' DAY
The purpose of the machine is to make every form letter a personally typed one. The stenographer puts the date and head on the letter then addresses the envelope and puts in the enclosures as the autotypist types the letter.
The auto-typist works like the old-fashioned player piano. It uses a perforated paper roll for guidance of the typewriter, and compressed air for power.
James K. Hitt, registrar, said, "We feel that every letter received in our office deserves a personal reply.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
24
THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1948
He Can Already Fly, So Now He Wants To Be A Doctor
John H. Standfield is one student in the College who can show the aeronautical engineers what to do. A senior who will go into the School of Medicine next fall, Standfield is supervisor of $ ^{*} $the aeronautical engineering laboratories.
It is difficult to imagine Standfield as a prospective doctor, rather than
nineer. He has logged over
Instructed During The War
2,000 hours flying time, holds a civil aeronautics license as an aircraft mechanic, and another as a ground instructor in aerial navigation and engines.
During the war he was an instructor in PT-17's and 19-'s and AT-6's for army air force cadets taking primary training. He was also a member of the civil air patrol, and has had three years of college engineering courses.
Standfield has a ready explanation for those who ask him why he is not in the School of Engineering. He says that he is tired of flying.
His work with airplanes is now limited to time spent in the aeronautical engineering department, and in getting enough flying time to keep his license. The aeronautical department provides him with all the extra-curricular activity he can afford, he said.
Assembled Jet Plane
Example, during Christmas vacation Stanfield assembled a German jet plane sent here in pieces, from Wright field. While spectators were enjoying the same jet plane at the Engineering expoion April 16 and 17, Stanfield and students in the department of aeronautical engineering worked to keep it and other exhibits in operation.
Stanfield says that although medicine is dominant in his plans for the future, aeronautical mechanics still appeal to him. The laboratory offers him a number of engines with mechanical defects to be corrected, and new type engines give him a chance to get away from dissecting to assembling.
Those who question Stanfield's choice in majoring in medicine can look at his 2.4 grade average in chemistry and change the subject.
Stanfield lives in Lawrence and is a member of Alpha Phi Alpha, social fraternity.
Baptist Foundation Elects Officers
Bryan Sperry, College sophomore and Loren B. Corliss, College priorior, were elected president and vicepresident of the Roger William's foundation Sunday at the Baptist church.
Officers of the Baptist Youth fellowship, evening group of the Roger William's foundation, were also chosen. They are Wesley Hall, president; Dana Johnson, vice president; Virginia Slagle, secretary-treasurer; Dale W. Fields, publicity chairman; Helen Stringham, program chairman; R. L. Morgan, clean-up chairman; Nita Brewster, foods chairman; Bob Meacham, song leader; Pearl Leigh, and Bridge Gillisie, recreation committee; and Dale Theobald, membership chairman.
Officers of the morning group are Meacham, president; Martha Oatman, vice-president; and Betty Slegle, secretary-treasurer.
Fishel To Attend Omaha Conference
V. C. Fishel, engineer in charge of the federal Geological Survey, will attend the meeting of the Missouri basin federal inter-agency river basin in sub-competee on hydrologic data which will be held in Omaha next week.
Representatives of all federal organizations interested in the Missouri basin project are attending. Mr. Fishel will present data which he has collected concerning the Missouri basin dams being constructed in Kansas.
State and federal Geological surveys of Lawrence are among the organizations which are co-operating with the bureau of reclamation on the projects of which these are approximately nine in Kansas either finished, prepared, or in the process of being built.
The Missouri basin project is being constructed for the purpose of flood control, irrigation, prevention of soil erosion, and the preservation of wild life.
Forty-six men will be initiated into Sigma Tan, honorary engineering fraternity, at 5:45 p.m. May 10 at the Castle Tea room. The complete list of initiates will be announced at the Honors convocation, May 11.
Sigma Tau Frat To Initiate 46
A banquet will follow the initiation. B. J. George, industrial engineer for the Kansas City Power and Light company, Kansas City, Mo, will speak on "Professional Aspects of Engineering."
Dalton Eash, engineering senior and president of Sigma Tau, will be toastmaster at the banquet. The welcome to new members will be given by Oliver Edwards, engineering senior.
The honorary fraternity chapter was established at K.U. in 1915, and now includes 59 active members and 13 faculty members.
Fifteen men, five of them University students, are registered to take the law school admission test which will begin at 9 a.m. Saturday in 9 Frank Strong hall.
Guidance Bureau To Give Law Test
The testing service is being given by the guidance bureau, an agency or the college entrance examination board at Princeton, N.J. The guidance bureau is the only center in Kansas and western Missouri which is giving the test.
Results will be sent to the law school which the men plan to attend. The University School of Law does not require the test.
Three Kansas Towns Have Purer Water Since Their Wells Keep Out Minerals
A report by Charles C. Williams, "Contamination of Deep Water Wells in Southeastern Kansas," has been released by the state Geological Survey. It includes data on pumping tests made at the three cities and analyses of the water in their wells.
Three cities in Crawford county now have purer water since their municipal water wells have been repaired to keep out highly mineralized water. The cities are Arma, McCune, and Cherokee.
Also released by the Survey is a report on a rapid, inexpensive technique for use in the development of oil field brines.
The report also includes some of the problems which southeastern Kansas cities face with water from deep artesian wells. According to the publication, casings of wells drilled through rock formations bearing highly mineralized water should be cemented.
Most of the wells in Kansas oil fields yield, after two years, about as much salt water as oil. The disposal of this brine is an important phase in the Kansas oil industry. By the use of graphs estimates of the composition of the brines can be made.
The professors are; N. H. Sherwood, professor, Cora M. Downs, professor, E. L. Treece, associate professor, and Arthur Shanahan, assistant professor.
Four University bacteriology professors will attend the annual convention of the Society of American Bacteriologist in Minneapolis May 10-14.
Four University Professors To Bacteriologists Meeting
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
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1234567890
THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
There's Never A Dull Moment As Final Week Draws Near
Triangle Formal
Triangle fraternity held its spring formal May 1.
Guests were Carol Novak, Mary Alice Lobaugh, Pattie McClatchey, Dorothy James, Shirley Hobs, Esther Williams, Alice Reis, Patricia Lander, Eleanor Brown, Ethel Swart, Nancy Haffner, Jean Sullivan, Nancy McGraw, Joyce Ann Thompson, Virginia Williams, Kittle Neil Nite, June Heacock, Margery Kauffman, Barbara Lamoreaux, Marion Mills, Darleen Althaus, Barbara Parent, Carolyn Keith, Jacquelyn Logan, Kathryn Waltner, Donna Lewis.
Earlyle Hanna, Verda Anderson,
Kathleen Backus, Lois Cook, Orpha
Brantley, Shirley McCammon,
Carolyn Owlesy, Penny Boxmeger,
Mary Ann Smith, Virginia Stuecken,
Jeanette Stahl, Lorine Helm, Audrey
Clements, Anne Oantic, Stella
Budenosky, Harry Hollow, Irwin
Willer, William Bunch, Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Johnston, Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Bates, Prof. and Mrs. Robert
Lamberton, Mr. and Mrs. William
Andrews, Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Deffenbaugh.
Chaperons were Mrs. Charles Wentworth and Mrs. Mildred Scott.
ATO's Elect Officers
Alpha Tau Omega announces the election of Joseph McCoskrie, president; George Peterson, vice-president; Donald Helm, treasurer; Arthur Smith, scribe; Richard Sime, historian; Frank Palmer, house manager; James Brunson, freshman trainer; William Edwards, usher; Richard Collins, sentinel; and Thomas Milligan, corresponding secretary.
Phi Chi Election
The Phi Chi medical fraternity announces the election of James Coffman, presiding senior; Chester Moore, presiding junior; Richard Walters, secretary; Joseph Elliott, treasurer; Thomas Taylor, assistant treasurer; Dean Frazier, public chairman; Thomas Batty, judge advocate; George Priain, rush captain.
David Rau, social chairman; James Morgan, house steward; Robert Jongema, sergeant-at-arms; Marion Anderson and Theodore Richey, librarians; James Winblad, scholarship chairman; J. Sterling Baxter, song leader; and Prlain 'Rau, and Elton Schroder, senior council.
Miller Honors Mothers
Miller hall girls honored their mothers Sunday with a dessert instead of the traditional Mother's Day tea. Each girl presented her mother with a red carnation before going to the living room where cake and coffee were served.
The program included the singing of "A Mother's Day Prayer" and "That Wonderful Mother of Mine" by all the girls. Joyce Rohrer, fine arts sophomore, sang "If I Could Tell You," and the last number was the introduction of the newly-composed house song, "Memories Sweeter," sung by all the girls.
A smoker for the fathers was held in the council room during the dessert.
Mothers present were Mrs. C. H Fuller, Coffeyville; Mrs. Charles R. Sedgwick. Bonner Springs; Mrs. R. W. Bloxom, Pratt; Mrs. S. R. Scott, Topeka; Mrs. V. R. Swearingen, Leavenworth; Mrs. J. H. Siemers, Blue Rapids; Mrs. Glenn D. Newell, Ozawkie; Mrs. R. D. Bower, Stanley; Mrs. E. J. Masterson, Columbus; Mrs. L. Marks, Topeka; Mrs. Della Norman, Chapman; Mrs. W. M. Ryder, Kansas City, Mo.; Mrs. E. T. Waterman, Washington; Mrs. J. M. Clough, Lawrence; Mrs. C. B Scroggy, Wichita; Mrs. E. S. Johnson, Garnett; Mrs. D. C. Kent, Florence; Mrs. Ed Handke, Aatchison; Mrs. A. E. Wilkinson, Cherryvale; Mrs. W. G. Oehre, Overbrook; Mrs. W. E. Heller, Hunter; Mrs. Violet Esch, Cherryvale; Mrs. G. W. Benington, El Dorado; Mrs. C. V Stroup, Fontana; Mrs. Jesse G. Stanton, Wakeeny; Mrs. M. E. Rohrer, Abilene; Mrs. A. E. Prettyman, Plevna; Mrs. Paul Degenhart, Kansas City; and Mrs. Martha Landrey, Kansas City.
Other guests at the dessert were
Miss Elin Jorgensen, Miss Margaret Habein, Miss Martha Peterson, Mrs. Helen Davis, Kansas City, Kan.; Mrs. Harry Albertson and Mrs. Nelson Fierion, Columbus; Miss Sandra Kent, Florence; and Shirley Johnson, Garnett.
Guests at the smoker were M. E. Rauzle Abilene; Desmond Starmont, of Kansas State college; J. H. Siemers, Blue Rapids; A. E. Wilkinson, Cherryvale; and S. R. Scott, Topeka.
Parents' Dav Tea
Kansas Alpha of Phi Delta Theta fraternity was host for the annual Parents' day tea Sunday afternoon. The tea was in honor of Mrs. J. H. Kreamer who has served 20 years as chapter housemother. James Sanders, chapter president, told of Mrs. Kreamer's loyal and helpful service through the years and then unveiled an oil portrait of Mrs. Kreamer.
Refreshments were served, and the Phil Delt chorus sang. Assisting Mrs. Kreamer were Mrs. Andrew McKay, Mrs. Dean Alt, Mrs. Arthur Little, Mrs. B. A. Weber, and Miss Veta Lear.
Alpha Chi Formal
☆ ☆ ☆
Alpha Chi Omega held its annual spring formal May 1 in the Crystal room of the Hotel Eldridge.
Guests were George McCarthy, Robert Coshow, Lewin Wasser, William Brooks, Ruell Reddoch, Robert Elliott, Dale Marshall, Jim Townsend; Sandr. Wiedemann, Sam Pescock, Alan Furnish, Tom Gallagher, Jack Haynes, Larry Haden, Verne Stevenson, Ben Ramprath, Kenneth Hilyer, Jack Steinle, William Hogan, Robert Blincoe, Tom Steinle, Lee Vouge.
Richard Arnspier, Richard Haggard, James Lammons, William Degen, Jack Foster, James Bennett, Maurice Martin, Jack Parker, John Haddock, Jack Cousins, Edward Weltner, Gordon Wallers, Robert Beine, Sam McCammant, Albert Miller, George Winters, Leslie Phiblad, Tom Williams, Westminster college; Jack Merrryman, Kansas State college; Vie Kletz, and Bonnie Shaw, Coffeyville, and Jean Trantum, Kansas City, Kan.
the chaperons were Mrs. Waymian C. Jackson, Mrs. T. Harris, Mrs. W. S. Shaw, Mrs. K. W. Perkins, and Mrs. R. G. Rocke.
Phi Beta Pi
**
Phi Beta Pi medical fraternity announces the election of Donald Marchbanks, archon; Marion Summer, vice-archon; Richard Trueheart, secretary; Dale Smith, treasurer; Donald Dyche, historian; Charles Dreher, guide; William
Nashville, Tenn.—(UP)—Police Identification Officer B. S. Griffis stepped into $z$ police "lineup" just to help make a crowd while a holdup victim eyed suspects.
This Police Officer Is 'Criminal Type'
Kells, guardian; Tom Watkins, librarian; and Robert Brenner, chaplain.
The man who had been robbed studied the group, looked closely at Officer Griffis, and said, "he looks like the one."
Recently pledged to the fraternity are Robert Hudson, Kansas City, Kan; Eugene Dittemore, Highland; Joseph Ward, Topeka; Walter Cockley, Wichita; and Rex Stanley, Chanute.
Phi Delt Formal
Phi Delta Theta fraternity entertained May 1 with their annual spring formal at the chapter house. Dancing was in the dining room which was decorated with trellises of white spirea and flowers.
Chaperons were Mrs. Dean Alt,
Mrs. Arthur Little, Mrs. B. A. Weber,
and Mrs. J. H. Kreamer.
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36
PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1948
Kansas Drops Second Half Of Twin Bill With Huskers
Special To The Daily Kansan
Lincoln, Neb.-Turning six hits into five runs, the Nebraska Cornhuskers won their second victory, 5 to 2, in the final half of a double bill Wednesday. The Husker's capped Tuesday's contest 10 to 1.
The Kansans took the lead first when Bud French banged out a 360-foot homer over the centerfield fence in the first of the fourth. However,
Two New 'Sox' Finally Shine
He got it yesterday with one swing of the bat by Vern Stephens and three innings of relief pitching by Ellis Kinder. Stephens smashed an 11th inning home run that broke up the ball game in a 4 to 3 victory, the second straight over the Tigers at Boston, and Kindler held Detroit to one hit and no runs for his first victory in a Red Sox uniform.
New York, May 6—(UP)—Business man Tom Yawkey can't be blamed for wanting a little return on an investment that cost him nine players and something like $300,000. Today, after two weeks in which it looked like the Browns billed him, he counted his first dividend.
More than that, it was the first time he has even pitched a ball in competition. Like Jack Kramer, the other star pitcher who came to the Red Sox from St. Louis, he had been laid up with injuries, but now it looked as if he was ready to go. Stephens' First Hit
Stephens, batting a meek 244 with only 13 hits in 54 times at bat, had gone hitless yesterday until his game-breaking homer. The Red Sox had to come from behind with two runs to tie the score at 3-all in the ninth on singles by Johnny Pesky, Ted Williams, and Stan Spence, and a wild throw by losing pitcher Dizzy Trout. It was Boston's fourth straight victory and a heartening one because Kinder indicated he was ready for starting duty.
Walt Masterson held the Chicago White Sox to four hits—two of them in the last inning—as the Washington Senators scored a 6 to 0 victory in a night game at Washington. It was Masterson's first win in two decisions, and the first shutout for the Sox in 40 regular and exhibition games this season.
The Pirates, continuing their onslaught against top flight pitchers, won their sixth straight, 3 to 2, from the Braves at Pittsburgh. They beat right-handed ace Johnny Sain on four singles which produced two runs in the ninth, Danny Murtaugh's blow bringing home the winning run.
Yesterday Pittsburgh maltreated Boston's southpaw ace, Warren Spahn, who was behind 3 to 0 when rain saved him, and blasted Ewell Blackwell, Cincinnati's star, in the game before that.
Reds End Slump
The Beds came out of a four-game losing streak by topping the Giants, 5 to 2, at Cincinnati. They scored all of their runs in the first three innings. Then breezed in behind the five-hit pitching of young Kent Peterson.
Grady Hatton led the assault with a homer and a double. The Giant runs were homers by Johnny McCarthy and Bobby Thomson, giving the club a total of 18 in 15 games.
The Phils won a costly victory at Chicago, 13 to 9, when pitcher Lyn Rowe suffered a fractured thumb on his glove hand knocking down a line drive.
Today's Pitchers
Sr. Louis (Fannin 1-1) at New York (Reynolds 3-0).
Detroit (Newhouser 1-3) at Boston (Kramer 1-0).
Cleveland (Feller 2-1) at Philadelphia (Fowler 0-0).
Chicago (Wight 1-0) at Washington
(Wynn 1-2), night game.
New York (Pont 1-1) at Pittsburgh (Bonham 0-1).
Boston (Voiseille 2-0) at Cincinnat
(Blackwell 2-1).
brooklyn (Hatten 1-1) at Chicago (Borowy 1-1).
Philadelphia (Dubiel 0-1) at St.
Louis (Pollet 0-0), night game.
Nebraska came back in their halt on the same inning with a three-run barrage to gain a lead which they never relinquished.
Bob Grogan opened up Nebraska's half of the fatal inning by polling a four-bagger in the same spot that French had. W. Maser was then walked and Bob Cerv and Bob Schleiger followed with singles, scoring Maser. Cerv came home when Dil Blatchford grounded into a force out.
The Huskers added single runs in the fifth and eighth innings and Kansas produced one in the ninth.
The Jayhawker uprising in the final frame came after two outs. Pinch hitter Dick Gilman, who was charged with Tuesday's loss, was hit by a pitched ball and scored when Scott Kelly doubled into left
Ron Norman, winner of seven letters at Iowa State college, has been named basketball coach at Ames, Iowa, High school. Norman, who has been a threat to Jay-hawker football and cage teams for the past three years, will teach social science in addition to his coaching duties.
Iowa State Star Gets Ames Job
The Kansasans collected five hits off Husker hurler "Lefty" Gloystein while pitchers Guy Mabry and Ralph Freed were giving up six to the Nebraskans. Mabry was charged with the loss. Freed pitched the last three and two-thirds innings.
field
Each team committed two errors. Kansas left seven men on base and Nebraska five. Kansas outfielder "Red" Hogan clouted a double in the fourth inning but was stranded.
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THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Golf, Tennis Teams Try For Third Loop Victories
Jayhawker golf and tennis teams, razor-sharp and primed for their third consecutive Big Seven victories, invade the Tiger's lair today to tangle with Missouri.
On the basis of comparative scores, the tennis match shapes up as an event contest. The Jayhawkers trounced Kansas State Tuesday, 7 to 0, while the best the Bengals could do the day before was a 5 on 2 victory over the Wildcats. On the other hand, Kansas was twice decisively thumped, 0 to 7, by powerful Washington university, while Missouri managed to salvage one point in each of two matches with the Bears.
In other matches, Glenn Tongier, recently promoted to the number two spot in place of the ineligible Hal Miller, will face Missouri's George Stemmler; Hervey Macferran, Kansas, will oppose Bill Johnson; Dick Cray, Kansas, will battle Bill Rowe; and Charlie Carson, Kansas, will take on Bill Lane.
Most of the interest in today's match centers around the clash between Missouri's Rip Manning and Kansas's Dick Richards. Again using past records as a gauge, Richards will take the court a slight underdog against the steady Missouri.
In doubles, Manning and Johnson will play Richards and either Tongier or Cray; Stemmler and Rowe will oppose Macferran and Carson.
Jaybawker golfers, their victory appetite stimulated by impressive conference victories over Nebraska and Kansas State, will have their hands full with a reportedly tough Bengel team. Coach Bill Winey said that his regular foursome of Dick Ashley, Bob Beecker, Hal DeLongy, and Courtland Smith would tee off against the Tigers.
The outey against the administration is in full voice; outs crying to get in.
Frosh Crew Takes Lead
Floyd Greenwood, promising hurdler won the 120-yard high hurdles in 15.3 seconds. He finished nearly 10 yards in front of the rest of the field. Greenwood has been clocked in 14.7 seconds. Besides running the timbers he high jumps 6 feet and has run the century in 10 seconds flat. He finished third in the 100-yard dash.
The mile run, 440-yard dash, 120- yard high hurdles, and 100-yard dash have been run off. A heavy downpour accompanying the first day of the meet and strong winds kept times slow. All field events and the remaining running events will be held this afternoon beginning at 3:45. The mile relay will be run tomorrow.
Bill Easton's freshman track squad took an unofficial 36 to 7 lead over the varsity in a freshman-varsity meet which got underway Wednesday.
The Kansas track team was slated to run against the Oklahoma Sooners here this weekend. But because of the Oklahoma state high school meet which is to be held in Norman tomorrow and Saturday, the meet was cancelled.
Emil Schutzel, freshman speedster from Kansas City, won the 100-yard dash. He was clocked in 10.3 despite the soggy track and high winds.
Macon, Ga.—(UP)—Charles L. Bowden, retiring mayor, and Lew M. Wilson, newly-elected mayor, rode elephants on the day Wilson took office. The stunt was for publicity pictures. Both men are Democrats.
Mayors Take Elephant Ride
Intra-Squad Results
Mile run: Semper (F); Morrow (F); and Abel (F) (4.34.5).
440-yard dash: Sites (V); Henchee (F); and Waggast (V). (51).
120-yard high hurdles: Greenwood (F); Brown (F); and Follansbee (V) (:15.3).
100-yard dash: Schutzel (F); Biter (V); and Greenwood (F) (10.5).
Tells Classical Club Of Mithra Religion
An "electric eye" for control of smoke nuisance is in use in Australia. It controls fuel supply and regulates smoke volume automatically.
Dr. James E. Seaver, assistant professor of history, spoke to the Classical club Wednesday night on "Mithra Religion and Christianity in the Roman Empire." He showed slides illustrating points of his speech.
Dr. Seaver brought out the similarities of Mithraism and Christianity. Mithra was born on Dec. 25, the same as Christ, and healing was a principle of his philosophy, as well as baptism and a belief in immortality.
Doctor Tells Therapy Club Of Research In Medicine
Dr. Donald L. Rose, director of physical medicine at the University Medical center in Kansas City, spoke to the Physical Therapy club Wednesday on research in physical medicine.
He illustrated how this research is being carried out in machines used to test the amount of current necessary for stimulation in nerve injuries and fractures.
It was the last meeting of the Physical Therapy club for this year.
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1948
The 1948 Jayhawker Football Squad
REDS
| | Ht. | Wt. Pos |
| :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Del Norris | So. 6-2 | 190 E |
| Lynn Smith | Fr. 6-1 | 180 E |
| Glenn Starmer | Fr. 6-1 | 165 E |
| Ed Lee | So. 6-0 | 202 T |
| Bob Ogilvie | Jr. 6-2 | 225 T |
| D.Fambrough | Jr. $5\cdot 10^{-3}$ | 190 G |
| John Idoux | Fr. $5\cdot 10^{-3}$ | 198 G |
| Forrest Noll | Fr. 5-8 | 195 G |
| Dick Monroe | Jr. 6-0 | 208 C |
| Roland Ellerts | So. 6-1 | 190 C |
| Bob Drumm | So. 6-1 | 195 C |
| D.Tomilinson | So. 6-1 | 200 G |
| Matt Rodina | Fr. 5-10 | 196 G |
| Paul Jones | Fr. 5-10 | 195 G |
| W.M.c Carter | Jr. 5-7 | 185 G |
| M.Mc cornmack | Fr. 6-3 | 225 T |
| Duke Burt | Jr. 6-1 | 200 T |
| John Powell | So. 6-2 | 250 T |
| Chuck O'Biel | So. 6-1 | 180 E |
| Bob Kline | So. $6\cdot 1$ | 193 E |
| D.Bangs | Jr. 6-2 | 188 E |
| Bill Hogan | Jr. $5\cdot 10^{-3}$ | 185 Qb |
| D.Hamilton | Fr. $5\cdot 10^{-3}$ | 165 Fb |
| F.Pattee | Jr. 6-0 | 180 Hb |
| Bud Lamping | Fr. 5-11 | 170 Lh |
| B.C McDonald | So. 5-4 | 130 Lh |
| Dale Mallon | So. 6-1 | 180 Rh |
| F.Griffle | So. 5-11 | 190 Fb |
| Gene Cox | Fr. $5\cdot 10^{-3}$ | 175 Fb |
| Jim Griffith | Fr. 6-2 | 185 Fb |
WHITES
Marvin Small Jr. 6-2 190 Po
Al Lowrie Fr. 6-1 205 E
D. Norris So. 6-4 188 E
G. Sherwood Sr. 5-10 210 T
Hally Brott Fr. 6-0 215 T
Jack Fink So. 5-10 198 G
Jim Stevens Jr. 5-11 195 G
J. Faerber Fr. 6-1| 185 G
H.Fischer Jr. 6-1 180 C
Ed Bray So. 5-11| 180 G
T. Farnoff So. 5-10 180 C
Phil Hawkins Fr. 5-11 165 C
Ken Sperry So. 5-10 174 G
Dolph Simons Fr. 6-0 195 G
Keith Grant Fr. 6-3 205 G
H. Johnson Jr. 6-2 188 T
Wally Rouse So. 6-3 215 T
Tom Nelson Fr. 6-5 225 T
J. Mendenhall Fr. 6-1 180 E
Don Fischer Fr. 6-2 190 E
Ray Boswell Fr. 5-10 165 E
Tom Scott Jr. 6-0 177 Gb
Ken Morrow So. 6-0 160 Qb
Dick Gilman So. 6-2 190 Qb
C. Moffett Jr. 5-9 175 Lh
W. Stinson So. 5-11 175 Rh
C. Wathall Fr. 5-10 175 Lh
A. Stricker So. 5-8 165 Rh
L. Thompson Jr. 6-0 180 Rh
Bob Near Fr. 6-1 175 E
John Amberg Fr. 5-11 175 Fb
Jim Sackridge Fr. 6-1 195 Fb
Reds Will Be Favored In Grid Treat Friday
Although coach Jules V. Sikes has attempted to divide his 66-man squad as evenly as possible for the intrasquad game in Haskell stadium tomorrow night, the Reds will go into the game slight favorites on paper.
With eight lettermen, two of them all-Big Six selections the past season, the Reds show the greatest strength in the middle of the line and in the backfield
However, the Whites may be able to dominate play at the tackles and ends, and their backfield is not to be underrated. Boasting seven lettermen, one an all-Big Six choice in 1944, they're a good bet to give the Reds a real battle.
Don Fambrough, Dick Monroe, Ed Lee and Dick Tomlinson will form the nucleus of the Red line. Fambrough and Tomlinson will be at the guard' posts, Monroe at center and Lee at right tackle.
Griff, Pattee Together
Tom Scott, who shared quarter- backing duties with Bill Hogan behind Lynn McNutt last fall, Charlie Moffett, all-conference choice in '44, and freshman hopeful John Amberg are backfield standouts for the Whites.
In the backfield for the Crimson crewmen will be standouts Forrest Griffith, Frank Pattee, and Bill Hogan. Griffith and Pattee teamed to form the most powerful fullback combination in the conference last fall. Hogan will handle passing chores for the Reds. Cliff McDonald, whom Sikes has praised for his improvement in spring practice, will also be in the Red lineup.
Scott, who displayed some genuine passing and kicking talent the past season, will team with Amberg to form a threat on the ground or in the air. Amberg's driving power from fullback has been compared to that of Griffith by some.
In the line the Whites have such stalwarts as Howard Fischer, 1946 letterman at center; Gene Sherwood, 210-pound back converted to tackle; Hugh Johnson, and Marvin Small.
Tomorrow's game will give Jayhawker fans a chance to see what they expect from the 1948 Kansas grid edition. With the loss of eight regulars, the Jayhawker team for next fall has been a question mark.
Missing when the intrasquad teams lineup for the kickoff will be Ray Evans, Otto Schnellbacher, Don Ettinger, Joe Crawford, Steve Renko, Lynn McNutt, Terry Monroe, and Hoy Baker. Of these eight, three—Evans, Schnellbacher, and Ettinger—will be seeing action with professional teams next fall.
3 Will Miss Game
Lettermen Dick Bertuzzi and Bud French, who are out for baseball this spring, do not appear in the lineup of either team for tomorrow's game. Also out of the line-up is Bryan Sperry, who is nursing an injury.
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Machinery To Enforce 'Sanity Code' May Soon Undergo Its Initial Test
Chicago, May 6—(UP)—A test of the N.C.A.A. "sanity code," designed to preserve the amateur purity of college athletes, appeared imminent today.
Dr. James L. Morrill, president of the University of Minnesota and one of the staunchest supporters of the purity code, contended that N.C. A.A. members could clean up sports
A. A. members could clean up sports at the conference level, but that the N.C.A.A. itself is inadequate because of its size.
Such a statement from a man who has twice spoken at N.C.A.A. conventions during the period when the "sanity code" was being developed could mean only that he knew of violations, or of practices that might be considered violations by the N.C.A.A. compliance committee.
Thus, it appeared that the code,
adopted by the N.C.A.A. with numerous strengthening amendments last January, was destined for a test within a year.
"Machinery to enforce the code has been set up." an N.C.A.A. spokesman said today, "and the N.C.A.A. is prepared for any steps to be given under it."
You Are Always Welcome at SNAPPY LUNCH
At the same time the committee completed its plan for action on complaints of violations by any member schools.
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THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE NINE
Annapolis Has One Idea To Produce Naval Officers
The naval academy at Annapolis seems to be interested in teaching one trade only—that of a naval officer. Everything else is secondary.
At least that is what Paul J. Uhlig and Theodore W. Tober, N.R.O.T.C. students say. The two men recently returned from a week's visit to Annapolis, as representatives of the University. They were chosen for the honor on the basis of their work as members of the N.R.O.T.C. unit team.
At the academy, everything is regimented and all of the cadets match wherever they go—even to church. Everyone follows the same curricularum, and there is no such thing as an elective subject. Each class period begins with a quiz and the remainder of it is devoted to discussion and recitation.
Competition at Annapolis is extremely keen, Tober said. Every sport imaginable is played, and those who play are in the game purely to win.
"Strangely enough, everything is run by the cadets," Uhlig said. "The officers do nothing but teach in the classes and act as general supervisors. The graduating class sets up the rules and sees that the others abide by them."
They stayed in a monstrous dormitory, about twice the size of Frank Strong hall. Among the many other conveniences in the building were a gymnasium and swimming pool.
During their stay at the academy, the K.U. men took two cruises in radar navigation boats, flew in a navy flying boat, and visited the crvpt of John Paul Jones.
"Annapolis is not only an interesting and hospitable place, but beautiful as well. Everyone treated us so well that we hated to leave," Uhling and Tober said.
Hotel Business Declines
Atlantic City, N. J.—(UP)—The week-end business of hotels has declined 30 per cent during the last year, according to John F. Kinerk, promotion director of the American Hotel association. Kinerk told the New Jersey state Hotel association that the buyers' market has returned to the hotel industry after seven years of the sellers' market.
Club Distributes Voting Information
Information sheets on voting requirements were distributed at a meeting of the Schoeppel-for-Senator club Tuesday. This information was compiled by Charles D. Stough, Lawrence city attorney, and is being distributed by the club for new voters and those who will vote by absentee ballot this year.
Fred A. Beaty, second year law student, reported on a speech made by Mr. Schoeppel on the campus recently. Mr. Schoeppel is a former governor of Kansas.
During an informal discussion of the campaign issues, Jack Greene, chairman, explained that the club has been a "spontaneous organization that started with a dinner given for Mr. Schoeppel recently and has continued with the active support and interest of the students."
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Jim's Kissin' Days May Have To End
Rockford, Ala., May 6—(UP)—Alabama's huge governor, James E. (Kissin' Jim) Folsom, vacated his "most eligible bachelor" post today and honeymooned with a beautiful new bride half his age and little more than half his size.
The 6-foot 8-inch governor was wed to tiny Jamelle Moore, 21-year-old former secretary on the governor's staff, in a surprise ceremony here yesterday.
The governor and his new first lady, a gorgeous brunette, left immediately on a wedding trip to Florida. Friends and relatives would not tell exactly where the couple had gone.
The 39-year-old widowed governor is currently facing a paternity suit filed by a blonde divorcee, Mrs. Christine Putman Johnston. Mrs. Johnston, a native of Governor Folsom's home county; claims that he is her common-law husband and father of her 22-month-old son.
Babies Are All Caesarian
Boston—(UP)—Mrs. Edward Madden of Dorchester is the mother of seven children ranging from one to 11 years, all born by Caesarian section.
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Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan.
PROGRAM
Business School Day
8:00—1:30—BUSINESS SCHOOL ELECTIONS (Second Floor Frank Strong)
8:00—REGULAR CLASSES
9:00—REGULAR CLASSES
10:00—GUEST SPEAKERS PERSONNEL—Fraser Auditorium. E.R.Esch, City National Bank
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PAGE TEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1948
The Editorial Page
Say Mister-I'm Lost
"My name is Lawrence, Kansas. I am 90 years old. I live half way between Topeka and Kansas City on the Kaw. And I'm lost.
"In fact, I have been lost most of my life. I can't seem to get straight-ened out and make progress like my sister towns do. Of course, you say what is progress compared with the easy life that I have been living. I know—there is really no need to◇
improve when the money keeps rolling down the "Hill" and in from Sunflower as it has been doing. Many of my home folks didn't like the idea of that big powder plant going up so close to town guess they figured that new ideas and a semblance of life might reach this community so they never did quite accept those people.
"Now most of them are gone and the money with them. My body is a little worse for wear, and the merchants that I sheltered so closely during the war years don't feel like putting out a little of those war profits to give me the "new look." I guess I'll just remain completely lost 'cause I can't do a fine community job in the condition that I'm in now.
"I need so many things. A number of my store fronts look down at the mouth; most of my streets are the same old ones that I have been using since any of you can remember; the kids, my how I like the kids—they're my future you know—what am I doing for them? My swimming pool isn't much bigger than the Saturday night bath tub and my playground facilities are next to nothing. If the kids weren't allowed to use the University's tennis courts in the summer and the Haskell stadium for football games, the city fathers might realize they were shirking their duty to their offspring.
"The present double-parking situation binds me around the middle like last years' girdle. I can't seem to get rid of this situation so that I can relax and expand and make room for all the folks in the county to come to town and have plenty of room to park their cars. The more room that I have, the more people I can accommodate, and the more the tills will jangle.
"Well, now that I've told you all these things, do you suppose that you could let my city council and the merchants know where I am so
Dear Editor-
Who Knows?
Dear Editor:
Referring to the letter to the editor of April 30 quoting Booker T. Washington, it mentions a "thirst for publicity" by the members of C.O.R.E. How many people know the chairman of C.O.R.E. and many of its members? How many people know that C.O.R.E. on the campus has more colored than white members?
Daniel M. Kirkhuff College junior
The Daily Kansan would be glad to publish a list of all members of C.O.R.E. and its chairman for the benefit of all interested persons. If you know of such a list, Mr. Kirkhuff, how about sending us a copy?—Editor.
that they can raise my head as a first class city—and keep me from getting lost in the future?"
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Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Education Association, and the Associated College Press. Represented by the National Advertising Company. 420 Madison Ave, New York City.
Editor-In-Chief ... David H. Clymer
Managing Editor ... Cooper Rollo
Asst. Man. Editor ... Clarke M. Thomas
Asst. Man. Editor ... Gene Iignery
Asst. Man. Editor ... John Stuarti
Asst. City Editor ... James Beatty
Asst. City Editor ... Richard Barton
Telegraph Editor ... James Roinson
Asst. Tel Editor ... Hal Neilson
Asst. Tel Editor ... Bill Nyquist
Sports Editor ... Paul Zel
Sports Editor ... James Jones
Business Manager Bill Alderson
Adv. Manager Paul Warner
Cir. Manager Don Waldron
Asst. Cler. Mgr. Bill Binter
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THURSDAY. MAY 6. 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE ELEVEN
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Phone KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid at your expense during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office, Journalism department, 10 a.m. the day before publication is desired.
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856. Bill McCarter. I'
"TUXEDO AND white dinner jacket
excellent condition. See 10
1428 New York
ONE WHEEL trailer, 1947 Trailway. All steel, perfect condition. Full swivel complete, deebon taligna large capacity, ideal for hills, moving, camping, etc. Tracks only any speed. Sell cheap or make offer. 1 No Lane 1, Sunflower, after 5 p.m.
ROLELIFLEX 127 mm. in excellent condition, 2.8 Zeiss Tessar lens. Also 6-M light meter. Call or write Geordano, 132 Lane P. Sunflower. 10
1940 MODEL Pontiac coupe, $920.00
19th and Arkansas, phone 1772M. 1
1
19th and Arkansas, phone 1772M. $10
3 ROOMS of furniture, excellent condition and misc items for sale at Apt. 3A,
Sunsyme, to 1 by 7 p.m., daily except Sat-
murda.
FOURS FOR only $665—1940 Ford Tudor
radio, gasoline heater. Engine in excellent
condition. See at 916 Term. After 5:30 or
Saturday and Sunday. 7
ATTENTION Shutterbugs—must sell my Albert Contact Printer—like new—prints up to 5 x 7: $15 Bob Ferber, 943 Indiana. 1351-W.
1928 MASTER Buick. Excellent motor lots of miles still in her. Name, "Beu-ish." 129 W. South Park, Phone 1171- R-10
TWO USED executive type swivel chair for sale—Student Union Book Store. 10 AN IDEAL "Mother's Day" Eiffel-Park-room for rent during ROOMS for rent during the month—Will rent single or double to men students. Close to campus. 1012 Alabama Street.
NEW PORTABLE typewriter at wholesale, carrying case for 10 and 12-achair wiper, sweeper, practical Crossey convertible auto. Art Ruppehnal. Phone 2236J.
VETERANSI! We will buy, trade or sail for you any Army or Navy gear in good condition that you may wish to dispose of. Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. 669 HTFD
Business Service
LET US help you with your Airline reservation. We have complete information and service. Phone 30, ticket office, Rose St., Mgr. Mr. First National Bank 7 TUTORING MATHEMATICS Lucius Dougherty, Phone 3084M. Please call for appointment.
*TYPING*-thesis and term papers. Quick chap, and accurate Phone 2369...10 Quick chap, and accurate Phone 2369...10 Vice, 1028 Vermont. Phone 1168R...7 TENNIS RACKETS restrung or repaired
Nylon, $3.30; sht, $4.90; epp, $10.00
Wellhausen, Jr., 21 J. 10th E 107, Tel. 2446J.
J.
TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Telephone 418 or bring to 1218 Com. St. 20
TYPING done: Term papers, reports, speeches. Measures. Accurate work at reasonable prices. CD-W. Attendment 2, 1101 Tennessee.
TAILOR-MADE suits, $36.50 to $65.00. George alteration and tailoring. George Hartert & Son, Tailor Shop, $83 1/2 Mass
NEW vacuum cleaners for rent. Attachments included. $1.50 per day. Al Brooks Sweeper Co., 831% Mass. Ph. 1104 between 9 and 12 a.m.
Wanted
WANT RIDE to California on June 3. Call Warren Smith, 2631W after w11:00. 10
upon arrival for a furnished apartment beginning with the fall term. Call Cliff Bail, 3057. 6
Transportation
COMMUTING TO K.U. Summer School Riders.will call Riders.Will call 10,850. K.C.Mo. C.Mo.
Miscellaneous
WILL PARTY who exchanged Parke "SI" pen monday please call for theirs Mine was a keepsake. Acme Bachelor Laundry & Dry Cleaners. 11
DANCE every Saturday night at Odd Fell
Wednesday. Informal. Jo Langwright
westchest.
Lost
WILL THE MAN who accidentally picked up my Retailing Notebook in the men's room on Saturday, May 1, please call me at 2358. I need it immediately. Bob Perhio. 10
$$.00 REWARD for return in raincoat,
possibly lost in Engineering Labor-
atories. Size 36, cravetne gabardine.
natural. Call 1135. 10
RAINCOAT MIXUP. Will person who exchanged my blouse, mixes collars, mixes type raincoat. Size 40 with summer school catalogue in pocket, for same
type, but size 38, at main Union cafeteria, please call HI Kraft, 14197^3. 10 GLASSES IN a black case somewhere between Fraser and Corbin hall. Finder please call Margaret Robinson, 660. 10 BLACK COCKER spaniel, answers to the name "Frisky". Last seen on the camper van, wearing leather harness Reward. Ph. 1967.
LOST: REWARD, black and white striped
dress through groove. Courtney Cogwalt, 415, 7
For Rent
PARTMENT for rent for summer months. Two beds, half bath. Call 2661W or see at 912 Alabama after 5:00. Very reasonable rent. 10
Professor's Son Elected Secretary
David Horr, 12-year-old son of Prof. W. H. Horr of the botany department, has been elected state secretary of the Kansas Junior Academy of Science.
Twenty-nine students and five teachers from Lawrence Junior High school attended the meeting in Pitts-
sauga to discuss the award for projects, and exhibits.
Exhibits by the Lawrence students were fossils from the Lone Star area; David Horr; black light demonstration, Jim Koch and Kenneth Olson; diorama exhibit, Dorothy Dickle and Martha Ottinger; mineral collection, Joe Beaty; fossils from the Lecompton area, George Kreyeg; general collection of fossils from the Lone Star area, the entire group.
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Construction of a $600,000 Wil-
liam Allen White memorial library on the campus of the Kansas State Teachers college of Emporia has been approved,' the Emporia Gazette reports.
The library, named for the late Kansas editor, will have space for 200,000 volumes. The reserve room will seat 208 persons. A room in the new building will be reserved for the works of Mr. White and books and articles written about him.
Construction is expected to begin early next year.
BILL'S GRILL
JUICY STEAKS
Delicious Dinners
Sandwiches—Malts
Open Daily 6 a.m. 1:30 p.m Across from Court House
Waters Discusses Co-ops
Leslie Waters, associate professor of economics, went to Salina Wednesday where he spoke to the annual convention of the Kansas Cooperative council on the subject "Business Outlook and the Co-operatives."
Attend the Topeka Drive-in Theater 25th and California First Show ... 8 p.m.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Kodachrome?
We have it, 8mm and 16mm.
Mosser - Wolf's
1107 Massachusetts
The image shows a man leaning over a large, flat surface, likely an easel or a table. He is smiling and appears to be drawing something with a pencil on the surface. The man is wearing a suit, suggesting a professional setting. The background is plain and does not contain any distinctive features.
"My future's in the telephone business"
"I've been in the telephone business a little more than two years.
"And what busy years they've been!
"The Bell System has added more than 6,000,000 new telephones, erected some 1200 buildings, buried thousands of miles of cable and made great strides in extending and improving telephone service in rural areas.
Telephone service has been extended to automobiles, trucks and trains, and a new system for transmitting telephone conversations and television programs by microwaves put in operation.
"At Bell Telephone Laboratories they're working on new electronic devices which will bring still wider horizons of electrical communications within view.
"Ive had a part in this post-war progress."
There's a future in telephony.
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PAGE TWELVE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 6, 1948
Noted Authors To Be Lecturers At Conference
The lecture schedule for the Kansas Writer's conference to be held at the University June 21 to July 2, is as follows:
June 22—Allen Tate, poet and literary critic. He has written several volumes of poetry, three biographies, two volumes of criticism, and a novel.
June 23—Katherine Anne Porter, who received a Guggenheim fellowship in 1931 and 1937. Two of her works are "The Flowering Judas" and "Pale Horse. Pale Rider."
June 29-Walter Van Tilburg Clark, author of "The Ox Bow Incident" and "The City of Tremling Leaves." His short stories have won several prizes and have appeared in leading anthologies.
June 28—Caroline Gordon, author of a volume of short stories and six novels, the latest of which is "The Woman on the Porch."
June 24-John Frederick Nims editor of "Poetry: A Magazine of Verse." He has taught at Notre Dame and the University of Toronto and has contributed to literary magazines.
June 25-George Davis, fiction editor of "Mademoiselle." He is author of "The Opening of a Door."
June 30- round-table discussion,
"The Writer and the World He Lives In." Participants will be Ray B. West, associate professor of English; Mr. Clark, Erskine Caldwell, Miss Porter, Mr. Davis, and Miss Gordon.
July 1- Erskine Caldwell, author of "God's Little Acre," and "Tobacco Road." He has served as lecturer at the New School for Social Research.
The drama loan service of the University Extension library set a new record recently when it sent out 101 plays to high schools in a single day.
Loan Service Sets Record
In the first eight months of the current school year the service sent out 3,023 plays for review by teachers and directors. From this number 600 loans were made for production in 210 communities. In the past year 3,472 plays were sent to 187 Kansas towns.
The 35-year-old service now has more than 6,000 plays on file for every age group of children and adults. Mrs. Virginia Maddox is the director of the Extension library.
The service which was originally limited to Kansas towns has been extended to include out-state areas not served by similar services. Plays have been sent recently to California, Iowa, Kentucky, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, Oklahoma, Utah, and Washington.
Plays are classified for players of various abilities, for subject matter, and special occasions. An up-to-date list of contest winning plays is maintained because directors like "a winner."
Legal Eagles Practice Practice
The second of a series of trials by law students in the trial practice class of Carl Slough, assistant professor of law, will begin at 3 p.m. today in the court room of Green hall.
The case will be a suit on a sales contract. Attorneys for the plaintiff will be Everett Bell, Oral W. Bilyeu, Edward M. Boddington, Jr., S. J. Boutz, and Jack B. Bowker.
Counsel for the defense will be George R. Mankin, Jr., Robert L. Marrietta, Edmond I. Marks, Karl W. Masoner, and Marion P. Mathews.
First year law students will act as members of the jury, Millard M. Rud, assistant professor of law, will be the judge.
The next case will be in the Douglas county court house at 7 p.m. May 11.
Y. W.C.A. celebrated its 75th year on college campuses with a diamond jubilee banquet Wednesday night.
YWCA History Is Acted Out
A skit, depicting the history of Y.W. at the University, was presented by girls living at Henley house. Data for the skit was compiled by Mary Lees, College senior and the adaptation was made by Joanne Michener, College junior, George Caldwell, College senior; and Phyllis Jean Fortner, College sophomore.
Members of the cast were Mary Lees, Lorna Green and Carolyn Covert, College seniors; Nancy Sylvia Smith, Wilma Hildebrand, Joanne Michener, and Phyllis Jean Fortner, College juniors; Eleanor Kerkord, Joyce Harkerload, Phyllis Rust, College sophomores; Shirley Elliott, fine arts sophomore; Margaret Connell education freshman.
The first university Y.W.C.A. was organized at Illinois State Normal university in 1863. The K.U. chapter is 62 years old. It was started in 1886, abandoned, then reorganized in 1892 with 12 girls. Meetings were held each week in the Congregational church and later in Fraser hall.
Henley house was acquired in 1922 and became an inter-racial co-operative in 1945.
Through the years, Y.W.C.A. has grown from an organization for Bible study and mission study to an organization with nine varied committees; campus problems, deputations, political effectiveness, comparative religions, world relatedness and international relations, community service, minorities, religious seminar, and cell groups.
Must Sign For Western Civ Test
Brooklyn-Type Baseball Hits Campus With Business School Game Friday
Students must register today and tomorrow in the office of the registrar, for the Western Civilization examination. It will be given at 2 p.m. May 15, according to Hilden Gibson, director of Western Civilization. The place of examination will be assigned when students register.
The umpire's cry of "batter up" will perhaps be the only way in which the Business school faculty-student baseball game will resemble any other such game.
This athletic "event" will be at 2 p.m. Friday on the practice field near the stadium. It is a regular feature of Business school day.
Joe R. Small, accounting instructor and manager of the faculty team, has not announced his line-up, except that he is the pitcher. He did say that his team would be up to its "usual excellent performance."
Last year's game ended in an 11-11 tie but the faculty won when it was agreed to pick the winner by the toss of a coin. "This year," Mr. Small said, "there will be no need to toss a coin as we are out to win."
Donald R. Baumunk, business
senior and manager of the student team, said "I hope we have a large crowd to cheer the faculty members as they will need it. I am delighted to hear that Joe Small is going to pitch as this will assure a high-scoring game."
Expect Senate To OK Funds For Air Force
Other faculty members and students seemed to have no convictions about the outcome of the game but they believed that officers would not lack entertainment.
Washington, May 6—(UP)—Senate Republican whip Kenneth S. Wherry today predicted prompt senate approval of funds to start building a 70-group air force as they met to take up house-approved legislation providing 3 billion 198 million dollars for immediate expansion of the air force and naval aviation.
The house voted 343 to 3 in favor of funds for 70 air groups.
That is 822 million dollars more than was asked by Defense Secretary James Forrestal in his overall budget request. Forrestal at first proposed only to bring the present 55-group air force up to full strength. Later, he agreed to a "compromise" calling for 66 air groups. Now he feels the proposed 70-group unit would throw the air force out of "balance" with other branches of the armed forces.
Meanwhile, in other defense developments;
1. Several members of the senate armed services committee met privately with Chairman Walter G. Andrews, (R.-N.Y.), of the house committee to discuss differences in manpower legislation being prepared in the two branches. Mr. Andrews reportedly stood pat against the senate plan to merge a two-year, 19-through-25 draft, with a one-year military training program for 18-year-olds.
2. Owen J. Roberts, chairman of the National Security committee, endorsed the combination plan "if U.M.T. cannot be enacted" at this session. "As a temporary means for immediate strengthening of the reserves," he said, "this compromise measure would be effective."
3. Rep. Leo E. Allen, (R-III), claimed considerable house support for his plan to build up the army by offering $1,000 bonuses for two-year enlistments and $1,500 for three years. Chairman Chan Gurney, (R.-S.D.), of the senate armed services committee however, said, "you won't find any support in the senate."
4. The National Guard association criticized the 19-through-25 draft bill approved by a house committee as "inadequate" if war threatens, and "unjustified" in time of peace.
Can't Bare Dare, SMU Deans Say
Dallas—(UP)—Yvette Dare's pilfering parrot had Southern Methodist university students in a dither
Andy Blalack, student from Dallas and a candidate in today's elections as vice president of the student council, came up early this week with his sure-fire plan to attract attention to his campaign.
Contrary to the plans of student politicians, the bird will not go through a routine of stealing Miss Dilworth's scarf at least, not on the S.M.U. campus.
He and his aides built a big stage on the campus. That's where Miss Dare, performer at a local night club, plays with her friends, to upyell the body beautiful.
It was to have been just a repetition, for free, of the act Miss Dare and the parrot go through every night. Blalack's campaign posters advertised that the public "would see more than ever before."
But just before the big show, campus deans stepped in. Fully or scantily clothed, with or without parrot, Miss Dare, they said, would not appear on the S.M.U. campus.
Hagen To Discuss Vowel
Seniors Must Pay Dues For Dance
Sigmund Hagen, instructor of German, will speak on "The Development of the Unstressed Vowel in English" at the Speech Therapy seminar meeting at 4 p.m. today.
The seminar will meet at the home of Miss Margaret Anderson, associate professor of speech, 1126 Louisiana street. Refreshments will be served.
Seniors are urged to pay their dues before Saturday for the Senior Cakewalk to be held from 9 p.m. to midnight in the Union ballroom, said John J. Irwin, dance chairman, today.
Admission to the dance will be a receipt for senior dues, or a note from the registrar stating the student's standing. The dance is for seniors and their dates only. Del Weidner's orchestra from Topeka will play.
Essay Deadline Is Tomorrow
Deadline for manuscripts submitted in the 1948 Hattie Elizabeth Lewis essay contest has been extended to tomorrow.
Manuscripts must be turned in to the office of the chancellor. They should be signed with an assumed name, and accompanied by a sealed envelope with the exact title of the essay and the writers assumed name on it. The envelope should contain the contestant's real name.
First prize winner of $100 the past year was Arden Almquist, for his essay on "Christian Mission in One World." Second prize winner of $75 was Ronald D. Albright, who wrote on "Japan—A Challenge to Christians."
Duplicate third prizes of $50 were awarded the past year to Robert B. Hutchinson and Isabel Fraser Duncanson. Mr. Hutchinson wrote on "Christian Love and the Problems of Conflict" and Miss Fraser's paper was entitled "Responsibility of the Veteran."
Miss Mattie E. Crumrine, essay committee chairman, said that she expects more essays this year than the past year.
All Tower Bells Less Than $7,000 Are Spoken For
All bells in the memorial carillon for sums less than $7,000 have been spoken for, Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the Alumni association has announced.
Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Selfridge, Liberal, purchased a $2,500 bell in memory of their son, Rodney W. Selfridge, who was killed in action on Ie Shima, May 20, 1945. He was a student at the University in 1945 before he joined the army air corps.
the memorial campaign victory drive has passed the $200,000 mark with the goal of $350,000 still to be attained. This amount is necessary to start construction on the memorial shaft by June 7.
Jack Taylor, general campaign director, said that more than $220,000 has been received with the larger cities not yet reported. He and Mr. Ellsworth were in Topeka Wednesday for a general memorial committee meeting. Mr. Taylor will attend the kickoff meetings in Wichita today and in Oklahoma City tomorrow. Jack H. Spines, Jr., '39, is in charge of the Wichita meeting and Clyde O. "Cob" Burnside, '23, at Oklahoma City. Mr. Ellsworth will go to Kansas City today for a report of special gifts and a general kickoff meeting is scheduled there May 10. Chancellor Deane W. Malott is expected to be present.
The memorial office has reported 730 bellringers, those contributing $100 or more. Recent bellringers in the Douglas county campaign are Mrs. R. L. Thomas, Emil W. Heck, Jg., Sam's Produce company, Allen Press, Holmes, McGrew and Peck, insurance, and an anonymous donor.
The Douglas county campaign conducted by the Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce reached $10,-685 Wednesday.
Bus Service to Football Game at Haskell Stadium
FRIDAY - MAY 7th
SPECIAL—Service from West End of Campus and Bus Shelter to Haskell via Miss., 19th, & Mass. Starting at 6:50 p.m. and every 10 minutes until game time.
REGULAR—Service available to downtown and transfer to Haskell Buses at 11th and Mass
THE RAPID TRANSIT CO. Your City Bus Service
45t L4 Fi Ir N
University Daily Kansan FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1948 OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Lawrence, Kansas
Five Men Hurt In Auto Wreck Near Myers Hall
Five students were injured at around 1 a.m. today when their car smashed into a tree in front of Myers hall.
John Haddock, College sophomore, driver of the car received multiple bruises of the arm, shoulder, and knee. Dean Whitehead, pharmacy sophomore, Max Hand, College sophomore, Ralph Dicker, engineering sophomore, and Dwight Henry Thompson, medical student, received minor cuts and bruises. They were treated at Watkins hospital.
Haddock said the accident occurred at approximately 1 a. m. when he turned into Oread drive from 13th street and hit a tree on the east side of the street.
"I was lighting a cigarette and the glare blinded me," he said.
Tiddly-Winks Is The Rage
The right front windshield of the car was broken and the back of the front seat bent double, Haddock said.
Table tennis or tiddly-winks—take your pick and travel the Midwest.
Men in the 1240 Tennessee club have taken up tidly-winks and may ask the All-Student Council for funds to help defray expenses for a challenge match with the University of Missouri.
"After all," one councilman said "tiddly-winkers have as much right to $20 as table tennis stars."
All this came about when the Student Council granted $20 to help with expenses for three table tennis players who will compete in the National Intercollegiate tournament at Norman, Okla.
Arnold J. England, business senior, opposed the appropriation. "Students shouldn't be wasting their time on such nonsense," he said when asked about the tiddly-wink tournament, which was announced in the official bulletin Wednesday.
Fine Arts Group Entertains Kiwanis
Students of the School of Fine Arts entertained the Kiwanis club Thursday with a special musical program
day with a special musical program. Ruth Joan Dudley, senior, sang "The Nightingale and the Rose" (Rimsky-Korsakoff). She was accompanied on the piano by Robert Jerald Hamilton, senior. Marc E. Hahn, graduate student, accompanied Miss Dudley with a flute obbligate during her second selection, "The Wren" (Benedict).
Andrew T. Klapis, Jr., College senior, sang a solo, "Air From Comus" (Arne). Marie Wilkins, voice instructor, accompanied Klapis. He also sang the Prologue from "I Pagliacci" (Leon Cavallo).
A trumpet solo, "Concert Study" (Geordicke), was played by Dorothy Louise Brenner, senior. Melvin L. Zack, graduate student, accompanied her.
The voice students are from the studio of Prof. Joseph F. Wilkins.
Beta Gamma Sigma To Initiate
Beta Camma Sigma, national pro-
fessional honorary fraternity, will
initiate its new members at 5:30 p.
m. May 17 in the English room of
the Union.
There will also be a business meeting for the purpose of electing officers for the coming year and a banquet.
PETER RICKMAN
GIDEON D. SEYMOUR
Kansan Dinner To Be Tonight
The annual Kansas Board dinner will be held at 6:30 p.m. today in the Kansas room of the Union.
Gideon Seymour, executive editor of the Minneapolis Star and Tribune, will be the guest speaker. The title of his speech is "Kilroy Was Here."
Awards will be presented to the outstanding students in the William Allen White School of Journalism. Recognition will be given for the best news story, feature story, headline, and retail advertisement.
The dinner will be followed by a dance in the Kansas room. Charlie O'Connor and his orchestra will play.
Jay Janes Install10
The Jay James installed 10 officers at its regular meeting Wednesday. They are Louise Lambert, president; Bernice Brady, vice-president; Hortense Bedell, secretary; Patricia Waits, treasurer; Mary Helen Baker and Kathleen Broers, social chairmen; Joan Strowig, notifications chairmen, and Marjorie McCullough, publicity chairman.
Following the installation, plans for the convention of Phi Sigma Chi national university women's pep organization, were discussed. It is to be held tomorrow in the Union.
Representatives of the six Phi Sig Chi organizations will attend. They are the Purple Pepsters, Kansas State college; the Tassels, University of Nebraska; the Twisters, Iowa State college; the Ichadettes, Washburn university; the Feathers, Omaha university; the Wheaties, Wichita university; and the Jay Janes.
The Lawrence public schools will present a musical program at 8 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium as part of the Music week festival. Approximately 685 school children will take part. There is no admission charge.
Lawrence Schools To Give Program
Jess Rose, fine arts junior, will be guest baritone soloist, and R. Jerald Hamilton, fine arts senior, will play the organ.
The program will feature "A Ballade for America," presented by Liberty Memorial High school students.
"The Bridge," a four-act play by James E. Strub, College freshman, will be presented at the Trinity Lutheran church, 1245 New Hampshire, at 7:45 p.m. Sunday.
Lutheran Students
Engineers Vote For Officers Council Today
Engineering students will elect officers and members of the engineering council today. Polling booths have been placed in the rotunda of Marvin hall and on the first floor of Lindley hall.
Students must have their activity books to vote, said John L. Margrave, president of the engineering council. Polls will be open from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Each student will vote for a class representative, department representative, and officers of the council.
Department representative candidates are: civil engineering—Glenn C. Gray, Martin J. Ellis, Albert J. Alcott; mechanical engineering — Francis Van Benthem, James V. Meredith, Richard W. Hartzler.
Nominees for class representatives are; senior—Jack B. Bruyr, Edward R. Lambert, Paul H. Jackson, Winton L. Studt; junior—Robert K. Thayer, Walter R. Stockbrand, Robert J. Greenwell; sophomore—William D. Leake, Elton B. Noble, Gerald H. Frieling.
Candidates for council officers are president—Warren A. Shaw, William R. Gibbs, John J. Irwin, and John C. Monroe; vice-president—Billy H. Hamilton, James M. Ralls, Charles R. Freeberg, and Charles R. Svoboda; secretary-treasurer—Laurence L. Alred, Dorothy J. Quirk, and David B. Wilkie.
Herman B. Chubb, professor of political science, spoke to the Rotary club of Carthage, Mo., Thursday night. He will return to Lawrence tomorrow.
Professor Chubb Addresses
Electrical engineering — Charles A. Grimmeth, Theodore C. Bernard, Robert L. Lindsay; areonautical engineering—Lawrence D. Smith, John C. Brizendine, Charles W. Spiep; engineering physics — Wayne T. Lewis, John M. McKinley, David B. Thompson.
Chemical engineering—Robert D. Talty, Paul Chambers, Lawrence L. Gore, Carl Van Wadden; petroleum engineering—Leonard M. Rickards, Harold D. Raymond, Virgil Krutsinger; mining and metallurgical—John R. Sacks, Dorman S. O'Leary, Theodore H. Crane.
Architectural engineering-Harley L. Tracy, Paul N. Ericson, Edward G. Hartronft.
School Of Business Has Annual Holiday
Extensive electionering today featured the Business School association voting for 1948-49 officers.
British Troops Quit Holy Land
Jerusalem, May 7 — (UP) — Between 3,000 and 4,000 British troops boarded the transport Georgie in Haifa harbor today for what the troops themselves said was a return to England.
The evacuation cut heavily into British troop strength in the Holy Land, last estimated at 20,000 men.
The British are scheduled to lay down their mandate at midnight May 14, at which time British forces no longer will be responsible for any part of Palestine except a narrow evacuation sector in and around Haifa.
By 11 am., more than 100 ballots had been cast in the election. The competition is between the Commerce party and Delta Sigma Phi, each backing a complete slate.
The British have brought in an estimated 5,000 crack marine commandos and other troops from Cyprus, Malta, and the Suez Canal zone to cover the evacuation of regular Palestine forces.
British Foreign Minister Ernest Bevin cabled the United Nations today that the British high commissioner in Palestine was "unable to appoint an emergency mayor for Jerusalem. Bevin asked the U.N. to do the job.
Fifteen International Red Cross nurses arrived in the Holy City to help care for refugees.
Jerusalem meanwhile remained quiet under a British cease-fire order, enforced by three heavy tanks that paraded back and forth across the British security zone.
WEATHER
Foreign consulates will take their own measures for protection when the British leave. French soldiers began guarding the French consulate and eight Americans, including some former marines, were guarding the U.S. consulate.
Kansas--Fair and warm today and tonight. Partly cloudy tomorrow with scattered showers tomorrow afternoon. Cooler northwest. High today in 70's and low tone 50.
Sunday Is Mother's Day; Be At Home If You Can
Have you forgotten that day after tomorrow? Probably the "gift" that pleases mother's best is to have their children home on that day.
Have you forgotten that day after tomorrow is Mother's day?
Pi Beta Phi, Alpha Chi Omega Delta Gamma, Delta Delta Delta and Kappa Sigma will entertain their parents on the traditional day May 9. Chi Omega has postponed their Parents' day celebration until May 16.
The celebration of a day in honor of mothers dates back to the middle ages when, in England, the second Sunday in Lent was known as "Mothering Sunday." Unfortunately, the observance was abandoned in later centuries.
Since then, the holiday has been observed in organized houses. Mon-
Theta Phi Alpha cobined their Founder's day and Mother's day celebrations on May 1.
It was not until 1908 that any serious attempt 'was made to put Mothers' day back on the calendar. The idea originated with Miss Ann Jarvis, a Philadelphia Sunday school teacher. By 1914 it had gained sufficient popularity for congress to take legislative action to establish a Mother's day to be celebrated on the second Sunday in May.
chonsia hall, Miller hall, Watkins hall, Sigma Kappa, Kappa Kappa Gamma, Pi Kappa Alpha, and Phi Delta Theta held Parents' day observations Sunday, May 2. Phi Delta Theta also honored their house-mother of the past 20 years, Mrs. J. H. Kreamer.
Celebrated May 1
Idea of Sunday School Teacher
Until 1943, an annual Mother's day was held here on the campus, with mothers of all registered students invited to attend festivities.
Other activities of the morning included two lectures, one by A. R. Maulsby, consumer sales manager of Kansas and Missouri for the Scoomy Vacuum Oil company, and E. R. Esch, personnel director of the City National Bank, Kansas City, Mo.
The University chapter of the American Association of University Professors will hold its annual spring meeting and dinner at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow in the Kansas room of the Union.
Mr. Mausley, who spoke on the subject "The Master Salesman," said that the confidence and good will of a customer depends upon service given by business and the salesman. The existence of business can be justified only in the service it gives, he added.
"The two most important groups of people in the world today, are those in high office, who have the power and duty to keep channels of trade open, and the American businessman whose duty is to keep channels of trade full of consumer's goods in such a way as not to jeopardize the peace of the world."
He said that the youth of today are "not looking for something to come back, but are looking to the future" and a new era is being started by the young men and women in a world that is being made a neighborhood by scientific developments.
Mr. Esch said that the work of a personnel manager in business today is scientific. There has been a complete change from the former close relationship of the boss and the employee, he said.
"The characteristics of a good personnel man should include an interest in, and a desire to know and understand workers and their problems. A personnel manager should be sincere and have the courage of his own convictions toward people and ideas."
It is also necessary, Mr. Esch said,
that a personnel man have an intellectual curiosity, backed up by education in a number of fields.
"In short it is imperative that he have a well rounded background."
AAUP Will Hold Annual Dinner
The program will include reports on, "The Economic Status of the Profession," by L. J. Pritchard, associate professor of finance; "Retirement Policies," by Spencer Smith, assistant professor of economics; and "Annual Meeting of the National Association," by J. O. Maloney, professor of chemical engineering.
All members of the University faculty are eligible for membership in the association. Banquets and meetings are held about four times a year. E. O. Stene, associate professor of political science, is president.
Must Pay Dues To Go To Cakewalk
Admission to the Senior Cakewalk to be held 9 p.m. to midnight tomorrow, will be receipt for senior dues, or a from the registrar giving the student's standing, John J. Irwin, dance chairman, has announced.
Students who plan to attend the dance should pay their dues before tomorrow.
The dance is for seniors and their dates only, and will be held in the Union ballroom. Del Weidnor's orchestra from Topeka will play.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1948
Official Bulletin
May 7,1948
A. V.C. picnic has been called off. For refunds on tickets see Edgar Sherbenou.
Students planning to take Western Civilization examination, 2 p.m. May 15 must sign at office of the registrar at once. Admittance card received at the office of the registrar must be presented at time of examination. Examining place also assigned there.
German club May party 6:30 p.m. today, home of Prof. and Mrs. George Kreye.
Low School admission test of college entrance examination board to be given to registered candidates, 8:45 a.m. tomorrow, 9 Frank Strong,
K-Club sponsored football game, 8:30 tonight, Haskell stadium. Students, 50 cents plus activity book, Tickets at athletic office.
All planning to attend annual
Baptist student picnic, Lone Star
lake, Sunday, notify Martha Oatman,
Wattins hall. Sixty cents a person.
Departure time, 3 p.m. from
1124 Miss. Cars and drivers needed
Pi Tau Sigma infiltration banquet. May 13. Make reservations engineering library by tomorrow.
Pi Sigma Alpha initiation, 5 p.m.
May 10, Pine room, Union. Dinner in Kansas room at 6:30. Members desiring to attend contact Russell Barrett.
All new cabinet members of Baptist Student group, Roger Williams foundation, Theta Epsilon, or College S.S. class, meet at 1124 Miss,
7 p.m. May 10.
Math club annual picnic, 4 p.m.
May 12. Clinton park. Sign in 205
Frank Strong by May 10. Sixty
cents a person. Election and program
award. Everyone welcome.
Psi Chi meeting following psychology seminar May 10, 11 Frank Strong.
- Mortar Board rehearsal for Honors convocation, 3:50 p.m. May 10, Hoch auditorium.
Snow Zoology club annual picture, 5 p.m. May 10, front of Snow hall.
Unitarian Liberal club, 7 p.m.
Sunday, Pine room. Dr. and Mrs.
Cline Hensley to speak on their
experiences in Europe.
A.S.C. social committee, 5 p.m. to-
morrow, Pine room of the Union.
Partition Means A Hope For Peace In Palestine, Says Ben Benjaminov
Partition is the only hope for peace in Palestine in the opinion of Benjamin Benjaminov.
Benjaminov, a pre-medical student, came to the University from Tel Aviv in March. Although born in Bulgaria, he has lived in Palestine for the past eight years.
Jewish acceptance of partition $ ^{\textcircled{2}} $ shows their willingness to compromise, according to Benjaminov.
"Before the last war the Jews wanted all of Palestine and Trans-Jordan. Later they wanted only Palestine, but they soon realized that even this was impossible and accepted partition as the only solution.
"Naturally the news was a disappointment when the United States withdrew her support of the plan. The Jews are not in favor of a trusteeship because it is not a solution but only a prolongation of the problem. Their determination to establish a Jewish state has not decreased," he contended.
"The Jewish element has helped raise the standard of living and build prosperity. This is admitted by the Arabs in Palestine and many of them have come to favor partition. But Palestine has no representation in the United Nations so they have no influence."
Communist influence is negligible. Benjaminov thinks. There is a Jewish Communist party, but it has joined other factions in the fight for a Jewish state.
Freshman Debate Team
Defeats Baker University
Frederick K. Cross and Lee H. Reiff, freshman debate team members defeated Baker university at a student convocation Wednesday in Baldwin.
The University freshman team, undefeated in 24 debates, argued the affirmative of "Resolved, that a federal world government should be established."
A flashlight that shows either green or red has been developed for traffic policement.
University Daily Kansan
Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence买单 1.00 a semester postage), Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University of Kansas summer 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.
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"All Jewish forces are united, and I think they will continue to fight for partition without support from other countries if necessary," he said. "It is impossible for them to change their attitude in this short a time.
"I am surprised at the capture of Haifa. This gives the Jews control of all the coast between there and Tel Aviv. Right now they are victorious, but they will be greatly outnumbered if Arab troops come into Palestine after the British evacuation.
"I don't know if a truce could be effected independently or not. Arab-Jewish relations have always been expressed through the British and this has greatly hampered understanding. If they could work without interference they might reach an agreement," he concluded.
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FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Here Today, Gone Yesterday Veterans Say About Raise
How do you plan to spend your G.I. subsistence increase?
How can you plan to spend your GN? Consider four of eleven veterans answered this question saying they would use it attempting to meet the high cost of living. Two were planning to spend it for food, two for rent, and one for hospital costs of the expected baby.
Most of the veterans declared that for the increased benefits. The amount of increased money-to-bring home-the-bacon varies from $10 for single students to $15 for married veterans, and $30 for those with more than one dependent.
Randall W. Lovell, engineering sophomore with one dependent, said, "It is no big problem how to spend it. Probably spend it for food."
rent and Frank H. Lawler, College junior with one dependent, said, "Now I won't have to take that extra $15 month out of the bank or out from under the rug."
Bill Alderson, College senior, with no dependents, said "I do not plan to increase expenditures. The money will probably go for gasoline though."
Albert B. Callahan, engineering junior, with two dependents, said, "It is already spent for hospital bills for the expected baby."
for the expected baby.
C. E. "Swede" Erickson, College senior with two dependents, said,
"I plan to save as much as possible since I am making a little extra by working."
Laurence M. Finney, College senior with one dependent, said, "Eight collarls will go for the increase in rent and the rest for food."
Rex Lucas, Jr., engineering sophomore with no dependents, said, "I will use it to pay my added house
Robert Davis Will Edit YM Jayhawker Next Year
Robert L, Davis, College sophomore, has been named editor for 1943-40 of the Y.M.C.A.'s Jayhawker, a monthly newspaper. Davis succeeds Morton Newell, College junior, as editor.
The next issue of the Y's Jaya-
hawker will be published about May
15, and will contain articles
describing the Y.M. summer program.
bill."
bil.
James Lee Parmalee, College freshman with no dependents, said,
"I am going to try to make ends meet with the extra $10."
William Frank McInturf, engineer junior with no dependents, said, "I can spend it for food, cigarets and shows."
Harry B. Tiller, College senior, with no dependents, said, "The $10 increase will enable me to make a token payment on the debts I've accrued with no dependents to live on $65 a month."
Design Drawings Exhibited In FS
Charles M. Wardin, business junior with no dependents, said, "I plan to spend it instead of my savings."
Design department exhibits on the third floor in the west wing of Frank Strong hall include original drawings by Wanda Gag of illustrations she has done for books. They are for children's stories, including "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" and Grimm's "Fairy Tales." These are in a case on the west wall.
in a case on the
an exhibit of textile designs by
Michael Andrews, instructor in design,
is on the east wall. The designs were made from crystalline forms reproduced through action of acid on various metals and microphoto-graphed.
In a case outside the ceramic room is an exhibit of American slip-decorated pottery. They are late 18th and early 19th century pieces. This display has been loaned to the design department by Spooner-Thayer museum.
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Show Water Colors At Spooner-Thayer
The Palace
843 Massachusetts
Water colors by Charles B. Rogers, professor of art at Bethany college, Lindsborg, are on display in the north gallery of Spooner-Thayer museum. The exhibition will continue until May 29.
The paintings include many landscapes of the United States. Some of the pictures are very realistic in the use of subject and color. An example of this style is "Day in June," with vivid coloring, gnarled oak trees, and deep shadows. Other paintings, such as "Fowl in Flight," show his technique with straight strokes.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1948
Socially Speaking-
More And More Parties Prove That Spring Is Really Here
Sigma Pi Elects
Sigma Pi, newly organized social fraternity, announces the election of Donald Carr, sage; Edward Shehey, first counselor; Robert Morris, second counselor; Edmond Fiedler, third counselor; Donald Clark, fourth counselor; and Pedro Antonelli, herald.
Initiation was held Sunday for Ralph W. Clark, professor of pharmacy; Carr, Morris, Feldier, Antonioli, Clark, Sheheey, Dale Sharp, Robert Herriott, and Eugene Cooper.
Acacia Election
Acacia fraternity announces the recent election of William Wilson, venerable dean; Glenn Vernon, senior dean; Kenneth Tyso, junior dean; Robert V. Ford, secretary; and George Kroesing, treasurer.
The Kansas chapter of the fraternity was reactivated by the Acacia chapter of Kansas State with the formal initiation of Thomas Armstrong, Leo Mendenhall, Curtis Waim, Frank Clinesmith, George Kraft, Gayler Alexander, Robert L. Hughes, Eugene Wetzel, George Kroesing, Gordon Chapple, Robert V. Ford, Rix Shanline, Glenn Vernon, Edward Galyon, Marvin Liiggett, John Jacques, James Eatmon, William Wilson, Kenneth Tyson, Richard Garnand, and Charles Hall.
Theta Phi Alpha
Theta Phi Alpha entertained at the chapter house the past weekend in celebration of Founders' day.
Caryuth Hall Dance
dumbre president, Miss Margaret Dortland, Mrs. Dorothy Leonard Kannapel, and Mrs. Agnes Krenzer, Kansas City, Mo; Mrs. Georgiena Keutzer and Mrs. Carl Fangman, Seneca, Mrs. E. G. Schreck, Independence; Mrs. John P. Habiger, Wichita; Mrs. R. B. Owen, Hutchinson; and Mrs. John Koppers, Olathe.
Carruth hall entertained May 1 with a Ballerina Ball held at the chapter house. Ten-inch silhouettes of ballet dancers with pastel crepe paper skirts decorated the rooms, and a false ceiling was made from pastel-colored strips of crepe paper. On the mantel a 20-inch doll dressed in a double skirt revolved slowly. Three small stages each of which held a silhouette of a ballet dancer and a long pink and white curtain holding eight dancers decorated the tables.
Guests were Romney Ketterman,
Jr., Gayle Achterberg, Frank Lamar,
Thomas Mahan, Kenneth Geo-
ftrey, William Clarkson, Ervin Johnston, David Harman, Grant Vonderschmidt, Chet Somerville, Roger Parland, Richard Ehrman, Richard Dohrman, Robert Light, Norman Wycoff, Wray Strowig, Thomas McMahon, Oscar Resmit, John Oliver, Mr. and Mrs, James Fuller, and Doris Klein, Phyllis Oliver, and Howard Hessel, Kansas City, Mo.
Chaperons were Dr. and Mrs. Robert Foster, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Ferguson, and Mrs. H. M. Miller.
Phi Beta Guests
Luncheon guests of Phi Beta Pi Monday were Dr. Alrick B. Hertzman, head of the physiology department, St. Louis university School of Medicine; and Dr. Kenneth Jochim, head of the physiology department of the University of Kansas School of Medicine.
Silver Dollar Saloon
Battenfeld hall held its annual Silver Dollar Saloon party May 1.
Guests included Virginia Shimer,
Alice Carleen Jacobson, Jewell
Mishler, Ruth Brothersman, Naida
Craig, Mavis Browning, Rosetta
Snow, Esther McKinney, Betty Hatcher,
Maxine Holsinger.
Arlene Brown, Mary Anna Ward,
Norma Jean Hawkins, Patricia Dosien,
Ellen Spurrey, Mary Lorraine
Estopy, Marjorie Courtright, Lenna
Norman, Marijean Kent, Martilyn
Rust, Christine Mann, Martha Jewett.
Isabel Moya, Carolyn Weigand
Jean Calvert, Phyllis Doane, Phyllis
Debus, Helen Miller, Sheryl Holland,
Beverly Bettan, Myra Lynch, Mari-
lyn Jamison, Martha Webb, Jean
Francisco.
Melba Mather, Ruth Wolf, Patricia Wiggins, Martha Pennock, Ruth Courtright, Mary Hallman, Dean Smith, William Nagle, Marion Summers, Joyce Randolph, Bobby Andrews, Mary Lou Stanley.
Jerald Hamilton, Jean Murray,
Victor Hogg, Dale Griswold, Eleanor Brown, Stewart Lambers, Dalton Easch, Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Postlethwaite, Baldwin; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Witt, Phyllis Betz.
Robert Richter, Richard Lading, Glenna Anderson, Harold Sand, Independence, Mo.; Mrs. Treva Brown, Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Youngberg, Mrs. C. L. Hollingsworth, Seward; and Mrs. C. J. Mann, Junction City; Ruth Russell, Richard Behm, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dickerson, Meade; Dr. and Mrs. L. C. Woodruff, Mrs. F. J. McDonald, Mrs. Elizabeth Kite, and Miss Tudle Youngberg.
CHEVROLET
SERVICE HEADQUARTERS
Mrs. Treva Brown, Corbin hall housemother, has announced the engagement of Constance Walruff, daughter of Lt. Commander and Mrs. C. A. Walruff, Olathe, to Philip Kiser, son of Mrs. Eva Kiser, Manhattan.
The announcement party was held May 1 at Corbin hall. Chocolates were passed. Miss Walruff wore a corsage of gardenias, and her attendant, Jane Anderson, and Mrs. Brown wore carnation corsages.
Weddings And Engagements
Miss Walhuff is a College freshman, and Mr. Kiser is a fine arts junior.
Out-of-town guests were Mr. and Mrs. David Kiser and Lt. Commander and Mrs. C. A. Walruff. A reception was held afterwards at the Olathe Naval Air station.
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DeArmond-Pihlblad
Norma Lee Loske, Billie Powell,
and Joan Bushey, who were Miss
DeArmond's attendants, received
nosegays of roses and sweetpease.
Miss DeArmond received a corage
of green orchids.
Walruff-Kiser
Miss DeArmond is a College senior, and Mr. Pihiblad is also a College senior. He is a member of Kappa Sigma.
Alpha Chi Omega announces the pinning of Betty DeArmond, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. DeArmond, San Dimas, Calif., to Leslie Pihlbil. The announcement was made by Mrs. W. C. Jackson, housemother.
DRIVE IN TODAY
A granite marker has been placed in Okla., where the late Will Rogers played the game between cow-punching chores.
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Mrs. Lee Sears Heads KU Dames
Mrs. Lee Sears Wednesday was elected president of the K.U. Dames for 1948-49. Other officers are Mrs. Mary Alice Amelung, vice-president; Mrs. Betty Yaple, club hostess; Mrs. Dixie Peterson, secretary; and Mrs. Wilda Kracht, treasurer.
Club members voted to accept the invitation of the Sunflower Dames to be guests at their meeting, May 19. They also decided to buy cards to be used at the Wednesday night birdie parties.
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FRIDAY. MAY 7, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Up And Coming
Today
Locksley hall, picnic, Lone Star lake,
5 to 11 at 31 p.m.
Harman Co-op, spring formal, harman Co-op, 9 p. to midnight.
Briar Manor, formal dance, Briar Manor, 9 p. to midnight.
Manor, 9 p.m. to midnight
ambda Chi Alpha, format, dance
Gamma Chi Alpha, formal dance,
chapter house, 9 p.m. to midnight.
Gamma Phi Beta, formal dance, 9 p.
m. to midnight.
Tomorrow
Phi Beta Pi, dance, Country club,
8 p.m. to midnight.
Senior Cakewalk, Union, 9 p.m. to midnight.
Lambda Chi Alpha, tea dance, chapter house, 3 to 5 p.m. Sunday
The 12th National Ceramics show will be held at the Nelson Art gallery in Kansas City, Mo., May 9 through 30.
11 Fla Tau Sigma, picnic, Lone Star lake,
3 to 7 p.m.
Has Vase in KC Ceramics Show
J. Sheldon Carey, assistant professor of ceramics, will exhibit a volcanic ash vase. The vase was shaped by throwing on the potter's wheel and finished with cream glaze over light red clay.
The exhibit includes 200 pieces of dynamic sculpture, pottery, and enamel taken from the annual exhibit held in September at Syracuse, N.Y. It is sponsored by the Syracuse Museum of Fine Arts, and will be displayed in Minneapolis, Minn., Detroit, Mich., Springfield, Mass., Baltimore, Md., and Alfred, N. Y. Last year was the first time the exhibit has been resumed since the war.
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William E. McGovney, chairman of the summer program committee, has invited all Protestant student groups of the city to take part.
Plan Summer Youth Groups
The Student Religious council is planning religious activities for inter-denominational youth fellowship during the summer session.
According to McGovney, fellowship and student interests will be the basis for this program. This is the second year that the Student Religious council has functioned in this respect.
Its primary purpose is to fill the gap that is left during the summer months in most denominational youth group programs, McGovney said. This program, will have the benefit of inter-denominational fellowship and the sharing of ideas, he added.
Wyoming boasts the greatest antelope population of any state in the Union.
'Goal Of Modern Dancer Is Expression Of Personality. Through Body Movement'
The modern dance classes begun at the University about 10 years ago are very often confused with a different type of dance, ballet.
This was the opinion of Miss Elaine Sellicovitz, modern dance instructor, who was recently interviewed by a University Daily Kansan reporter.
"The goal of modern dance," explained Miss Selicovitz, "is to let each person develop his unique personality by creating combinations of bodily movements for whatever he wishes to express, whether it be a lynching, a psycho-neurosis, or baseball. The movement may be weird, graceful, powerful, or grotesque.
quine.
"The purpose of ballet is toward beautification of certain steps and positions which are the same for a period of years. Steps in the ballet dance as presented before spectators are exactly like the exercises which the dancer practises."
Ballet in its original form was
strictly technique and had no relation to what it accompanied, but it has gradually become more meaningful in recent years because of the influence of modern dance, she added.
"The modern dancer, like the bullet dancer, must go through a definite training period," continued Miss Selcovitz. "He must take exercises of limbering, stretching, bending, and aerial work to obtain a movement vocabulary just as a student of speech must develop a speech vocabulary."
Guest Day Is May 15
Miss Sellicovitz explained that the two dances may overlap in that there is a limit to the number of techniques, or exercises, which the human body can do. During his training period the modern dancer may rehearse the same techniques practiced by the ballet dancer, and then use them in his dance as basic movements for control and poise.
K. U. Guest Look day, which is May 15, is the time when high school seniors from surrounding areas are to be guests of the Jewish Student Union at the University.
The program for the day as announced by Ira Gissen, College junior, is as follows:
11:30 a.m., assembly and registration at Frank Strong hall; noon, guest luncheon at the Union and American Legion hall; 2 p.m., tour of the campus starting from the front of Frank Strong hall; 5 p.m., picnic at Potter lake; and 8:30 open air dance at Potter lake.
Will Send Student To Camp
The Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship Wednesday elected Herbert L. Ketterman, College freshman, as its delegate to attend the Camp in the Woods in Canada. The purpose of the camp is to train men for leadership.
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY. MAY 7, 1948
Ideal Weather Likely For Spring Grid Climax
The weatherman predicted ideal football weather in the neighborhood of 50 degrees for tonight's full-dress intra-squad game under the lights of Haskell stadium. The kickoff will be at 8 p.m.
The game between Norman Cooper's Reds and Cliff Kimsey's Whites will climax six weeks of spring practice under the Jayhawker's new staff headed by J. V. Sikes, and will in clude parts of the
nates, and will include most of the performers who are expected to carry the lead for the defending conference co-champions.
It will be the last opportunity for local fans to see the Jayhawkers in full-dress battle regalia until they open the season next September 18 against Texas Christian university. Lettermen Are Divided
Rival coaches named their startling lineup late Thursday. The Red lineup includes two all-Big Six lections, guard Don Fambrough and fullback Forrest Griffith as starters, along with lettermen Ed Lee, Dick Monroe, Dick Tomlinson, Frank Patee, and Cliff McDonald.
The Whites will counter with eight starting letter winners including Marvin Small, end; Gene Sherwood, tackle; Jack Fink and Ken Sperry, guards; Howard Fischer, center; and Tom Scott and Charlie Moffet, backs.
Snerry Is Injured
Missing from tonight's encounter will be Bryan Sperry who is sidelined with an injured finger and Dick Bertuzzi and Bud French, on leave to the baseball team.
Game officials will be Henry Shenk, referee; Clarence Douglas, ampire; and Reginald Strait, head linesman. Probable starting line-ups:
Whites
Reds
Del Norris, 190 le
Lee, 200 lt
Fambrough, 189 mg
Monroe, 208 c
Tollinson, 201 rg
McCormack, 225 rt
O'Neal, 180 rt
Wilson, 175 qb
Pattie, 175 lh
McDonald, 179 rh
Griffith, 190 fr
Whites 190, Small 210, Sherwood 190
198, Fink
180, Fischer
174, K. Sperry
188, Johnson
180, Mendenhall
177, Scott
178, Moffett
165, Stricker
178, Amberg
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Washburn A Threat To Retain Titles
J. V. SIKES, the new Jayhawker head coach, who will unwrap his football machine in Haskell stadium tonight.
Topeka, May 7—(UP)—Wash burn university had a good chance today to retain Central conference golf and tennis championships won last year.
The Ichabods held a seven-stroke golf lead, over Emporia State, at the half way mark of the 36-hole medal play. Pittsburg and Fort Hays trailed.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Kansas Nine Faces Tigers In 2 Weekend Contests
The Kansas Jayhawkers baseball team will be host to the Missouri Tigers in a Big Seven twin bill today and tomorrow. Today's game is slated to begin at 3:30 p.m. and tomorrow's at 2:00 p.m. The high-flying Tigers will be
The high-flying Tigers will be after their seventh conference win against only two losses. One of the losses was to Oklahoma by a 3 to 2 score and the Huskers edged them
The high-flying Tigers will be against only two losses. One of the score and the Huskers edged them in a fight 3 to 1 contest. Kansas dropped two to the Tigers at Columbia earlier in the season. MU Is Balanced
The Missourians have a well-balanced team with veterans at position. Their ace right-hander, Englert, is one of the best pitchers in the league, and he is backed by such men as McMillen, who tossed a one-hitter at the Jayhawkers in Columbia.
The Jayhawkers, with a one and seven record after dropping two to Nebraska, will be trying to average two earlier losses to Missouri and at the same time climb out of the loop cellar.
Medlock To Keystone
Coach Russ Sehon will start Charlie Medlock at second in place of Scott Kelly in a move to tighten the leaky Jay Hawkeyn defenses. All of the losses thus far could be charged to errors, Sehon believes. Freed might get the starting nod on the strength of his no-hit relief performances turned in on consecutive days against the Huskers. If Freed pitches, it will probably be Fencyk behind the plate and Jack Fink if Gilman starts. The probable starting line-ups:
Kansas
Bud French, ss
Lou DeLuna, 1b
Bog Hagan, cf
P. Gilkison, rf
Hal May, 3b
C. Medlock, 2b
D. Bertuzzi, lf
John Fency, k
Lou Hammer, p
Missouri
**MISSouri**
Eatak, bf
Boran, ms
Entsinger, rf
Alberts, 3b
Volz, cf
Wackerle, lf
Spinks, rf
Frier, 1b
Verlin, c
Englert, p
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
Kansas Highs Busy With 8 Regionals
Big meets Saturday will be at Lawrence and Hutchinson (class AA A, B;) and Hays (class A and B).
Five regional meets are being held today in the following cities: Eureka and Manhattan (class AA, A and B); Oberlin (class A); Beloit and Kinsley (Class B).
Eight regional track meets are being held throughout the state this weekend to determine qualifiers for the Kansas Schoolboy track and field meet at Manhattan on Friday, May 14.
Regional tennis meets open a two-day program at Dodge City, Hutchinson, Independence, and Topcake. Winners will go to the state tourney a week hence, which will be held at Topcake.
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THESE LETTERMEN will form the nucleus of the forward wall for the Reds in tonight's full-dress intra-squad game at Haskell stadium. They are, left to right: Dick Tomlinson, Dick Monroe, Ed. Lee, and Don Fambrough.
Golfers Bow To Missouri
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The Jayhawkers led up to the 16th hole in the 18 hole match and could have won the contest if each K. U. golfer had parred the last hole. However, they found the rough a little too deep on the final stretch and the Missourians finished in front in each of the two foursomes.
Although trailing only five strokes, a four-man University of Kansas golf team bowed 6½ to 11½ to an undefeated Missouri foursome in a Big Seven match at Columbia Thursday.
Tomorrow the Jayhawkers will be host to the Colorado golf team in a match at the Lawrence Country club.
Don Provow, Missouri, took medalist honors for the day by carding a 74. He was trailed closely by team mate Lowry Henley with a 75. Bob Meeker and Diek Ashley, Kansans, tied with J. S. Rollins, Missouri, for third in total stroke play with 76's.
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Hitt To Attend Conference
James K. Hitt, registrar, will attend the conference on International Student Exchanges May 10-12 at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, Mr. Hitt plans to return to Lawrence May 13.
Still A Messenger At 100
DeSoto, Mo. — (UP) — Henry M. Roe, 100-year-old lodge caretaker who was personal messenger for President Lincoln during the Civil War, claims to be the oldest person on the social security benefit rolls. He served during World War II as a messenger in a St. Louis war plant.
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FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
ATO's Beat Champions To Take Division Lead
The list of undefeated fraternity teams was narrowed down to three Thursday as ATO bumped off Phi Delt, the defending champion. Sig Alph and N.R.O.T.C, also scored victories.
Herb Weidensaul's base hit with the bases loaded in the last half of the eightth inning gave the ATO's 11 to 10 triumph over the Phi Delt's. It was Phi Delt's second loss in two years.
ATO shoved in a tally in the last of the seventh to send the game into extra innings. A Phil Delt threat in the top of the eighth ended with runners on second and third.
In the bottom of the frame Joe Levy opened with a double, Chet Laniewski drew an intentional pass, and Jack Eskridge laid down a perfect bunt to load the sacks with no one out. Weidensau then came through with his game-winning single.
The victors collected 17 hits while Dave Nesser, ATO hurler gave up ten. He issued eight bases on balls. Hitting honors went to Joe Levy and Eskridge as each collected four hits in five trips for the winners. Clay Dellrick sparked the Phi Delt's with three safe blows in four appearances.
N. R.O.T.C. stretched its winning streak to four games by nudging Alpha Kappa Psi 7 to 4. The winners led all the way.
Steve Jacobs, N.R.O.T.C. pitcher,
set eight men down swinging and
effectively scattered the same
number of hits. He walked three men.
Phi Delt 205 102 00—10 10 4
AEFI 187 391 11 — 110 10 4
Paul Ensch, AK Psi, banged out three hits and scored a run to take hitting honors. Bill Bowly paced the victors with two hits.
AK Psi 100 001 2-4 8
N. R.O.T.C.
The Sig Alph's combined eight hits with five bobbles and a pair of walks to account for their scoring in the big second. Bob Glover's three-run hammer highlighted the frame.
After seoring 12 runs in the second inning Sig Alph went on to vanquish the Teke's 24 to 9.
Glover smashed out four hits and tallied three times to pace the winners. Jim Briley and Jack Hubeli scored four times each to lead in the run-making department. Jim Silvius collected three hits, one a homer, and scored twice to star for the Toke's.
stg Alph 6(12)0 06-24 20
Tcke 2 0 1 60-9 9
Frosh Hold 67-50 Lead
The freshmen racked up victories in the 220-yard low hurdles, half-mile and two-mile runs Thursday. The varsity men won the broad jump, pole vault, javelin, and discuss throw.
With only the mile relay to be run the freshman track squad holds an unofficial 67 to 50 lead over the varsity. The freshman led 26 to 10 Wednesday.
The match will be played there Wednesday, May 12, Jim Seaver, tennis coach, said today.
Herb Semper, freshman distance star, copped the two-mile run Thursday as he blazed the eight laps in 9:43.5. He won the mile Wednesday with a creditable 4:34.5 time on a soggy track. Other results are as follows:
Broad jump: Crowley (V); Hamilton (F); and Bunton (V). 21 feet, 10 inches.
226-ward low hurdles; Greenwood (F); Kopka (F); and Robinson (V). 26 seconds.
Pole vault: Wilson (V); Apitz (V) and Hamilton (F). 11 feet, $5\frac{1}{2}$ inches.
Two-mile run: Semper (F); Morrow (F); and Abel (V), 9:48.8.
Javclin: Robison (V); Henoch (V); and Drumm (F)); 180 feet.
880-yard run: Bowers (F); Study
(F); and white (F). 1:59.5.
Discus: Robison (V); Mallas (F);
and McKinley (F), 140 feet.
220-yard dash) Bunton (V); Schutzel (F); and Wagstaff (F). :23.8 seconds
Shot put: Robison (V); Zagic (F);
and Fiendt (F). 43 feet, 9 inches.
Tennis Matches Are Rained Out
The Big Seven conference tennis match between Kansas and Missouri scheduled to be played at Columbia Thursday was postponed because of the wet condition of the clay courts.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
IM Softball In Last Lap; Ties In Four Divisions
With most teams having but two games remaining to play, the intramural softball race is now entering on the last lap of the season. This year 51 teams were split into separate independent and fraternity leagues with six divisions in the former and four in the latter group.
At the end of the regular schedule, the top two teams in each division will be allowed to enter a playoff
At the end of the regular schedul will be allowed to enter a playoff for the championship of the respective leagues. This will be followed by an all-intramural championship game between the independent and fraternity league winners. Here are the standings of the teams to date: Division 1 (Fraternity)
ATO, by virtue of defeating the Phil Delt's, are leading the division with three wins and one loss. Battling close behind in second place are the Sig Alph's and Phil Delt's with a season's record of two wins and single defeats. Fighting it out in fourth place are the TKE's who have a record of a lone victory against two losses. The Lambda Chi's are practically out of the race with three straight losses.
In division two the Sig Ep's and the Beta's are tied for the lead. Both have won three and lost none. The Delta Chi's and the Phi Kappa's are tied for second place with one defeat and two losses. Trailing are the Alpha Kappa Lambda's with three losses.
Division 2
Division 3
Phi Kappa Psi leads division three with two wins and no defeats. They are followed by Triangle who have two tallies in the win column and one loss. Sigma Chi has one game in the credit side with one defeat. Following them is Phi Kappa Alpha with one win and two losses. Kappa Alpha Psi brings up the rear having dropped two with no wins. Division 4
The Phi Gam's dumped the Kappa Sig's from undisputed first place in division four with a 2 to 1 victory in the last of the eighth last night. Also rising to make their bid for the lead are the DU's who took a win over last place Phi Kappa Sigma. The season's record for all three teams is now three wins and one defeat. In second place is Delta Tau Delta with two on the credit side and three losses. Sigma Nu is third with one win and three losses. In his cellar is Phi Kappa Sigma with four losses.
In the Independent league the
N. R.O.T.C. holds the spotlight in division 1 with four wins. Alpha Kappa Psi holds second place with two wins and one defeat. The Silent Men and Armanav have one and one while the Cadets are in the cellar with three losses. Following them is Pi Kappa Alpha the last of the eighth Tuesday. Also Division 2
In division two Theta Tau and Army are tied for the lead with two wins and no defeats. They are followed by the Doghouse with two wins and one loss. The Air Screws hold third place with two losses and no wins while Oread Hall has undisputed possession of the cellar with three defeats.
Division 1 (Independent)
Division three is also tied with Alpha Phi Alpha and Battenfeld having two wins apiece. Househerr House is in second place with one and one. Mavericks and Last Chance are tied for the cellar position with one victory and two losses each.
The Wildcats lead division four having won three and dropped none. Close behind is the Dine-A-Mite with two wins while dropping one, and the Y.M.C.A. who has two on the win side and one loss. Dix Club and Spooner-Thayer are tied for the cellar spot with one victory and two losses.
Division 3
Division 4
Trailer Vets have won three to take undisputed first place in division five. Close behind is the tricky Co-Op's with two wins and no losses. Third place is held by the Law School with one and one. Trailing are the Edgehill Roaders with one win and two losses. Wesley holds the bottom rung of the ladder having rounded four. Division 5.
Alpha Chi Sigma holds the lead in division six having tallied three wins with no losses. The Gushers and Smith hall are tied for second place with two victories and one defeat. Aces High stand third with one win and two defeats. In the hole-is Delta Sigma Phi having lost four.
Division 5
Early Showers For Feller As A's Take Over AL Lead
New York, May 7—(UP)—Everybody looks the same to the flying Philadelphia Athletics these days—including Bobby Feller. The A's rode into first place yesterday by blasting Feller and the Cleveland Indians out of that position with an 8 to 5 victory, their fifth straight and their second in a row over the Ohioans.
Sharing responsibility for the defeat with Feller was Manager Leu Boudreau, who had said that he expected Cleland to "tatten up" at the expense of the "weaker" clubs like the Athletics, White Sox and the Brown's.
For the second time this year—in two starts against first–division caller—Feller was knocked from the mound in the early innings. The A's got to him for four runs in the first, and two errors by usually reliable Boudreau started the rally. Feller had given up eight hits and six runs when he gave up in the fourth. Yankee Victory Disputed
Mangrum To Front In $10,000 Play
Bobby Brown sacked a two-run homer in the last of the eight inning to give the New York Yankees a 6 to 5 victory over the St. Louis Browns giving Allie Reynolds a 4-0
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The Browns claimed that the blow was foul, and the fact that the Yankee fans supported them by booing the decision and showering the field with cushions was expected to prompt St. Louis manager Zach Taylor to lodge an official protest with the league office.
New Rochelle, N.Y., May 7—(UP)
—Lloyd Mangrum of Chicago, who cracked the course record with a first round 66, faced an immediate showdown today with red-hot Herrman Barron of White Plains, N.Y.
in the second round of the $10,000 Goodall round robin golf tournament.
record, best in the majors this year.
The Tigers salvaged the finale of their series at Boston, 8 to 3, in another bitter game in which catcher Birdie Tebbels of the Red Sox and rookie first baseman George Vico of Detroit, were ejected for a fist fight. The molee occurred when Tebbets fell over Vico tagging him on an attempted squeeze play.
Today's Pitchers
Mangrum was the leader as the 16 leading pros in the game headed into the second round but Barron was only a point behind. The luck of the draw sent them out together for simultaneous matches against Henry Cotton of Great Britain and Claude Harmon of Mamaroneck, N.Y.—and against each other.
American League
Bob Hamilton, of Reynolds, Ky.
Detroit (Hutchinson 1-1) at New York (Lomat 1-2)
Chicago (Grove 1-1) at Philadelphia (Scheib 2-0)
St. Louis (Sanford 2-1) at Boston (Harris 1-1)
Cleveland (Lemon 2-1) at Washington (Haeffner 1-2)-night
National League
Brooklyn (Hatten 1-1) at Chicago (Borowy 1-1)
Boston (Voiselle 2-0) at Cincinnati (Blackwell 2-1)
Philadelphia (Donnelly 1-1) at St. Louis (Dickson 1-1).
New York (Jansen 2-1) at Pitts-
burgh (Gregg 0-1)-night
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1948
Teaching May Be Dull After Life With The Head Hunters
"I'm afraid I'll be a school teacher," E. H. Taylor, professor of zoology, chuckled when asked what his plans were for the summer. Dr. Taylor usually spends his summers collecting reptiles and amphibians in many parts of the world.
He started collecting for Dyche museum while a student at the Uni- 40 years he has added*
versity. In 40 years he has added about 30,000 specimens to his collection end has given between 8,000 and 9,000 to the museum. He has spent 15 years obtaining specimens from the Pacific, Australia, Indonesia, and Mexico. He has also bought collections from other parts of the world.
The reptiles and amphibians in his collection, preserved in alcohol ard.1 in skeleton preparation, are kept in total darkness in a Snow hall storeroom to prevent loss of their natural coloring.
Names New Species
Dr. Taylor has described and named over 250 new species of reptiles and amphibians. Art students make scientific drawings for his publications. He has published approximately 120 works.
After graduation from the University in 1912, Dr. Taylor went to the province of Agusan on the island of Mindanao in the Philippines as an assistant to the governor. He spent two years living there with the Manobo head hunters, building villages, and establishing schools. While in Agusan he translated an elementary reader into their language.
This was a political job, Dr. Taylor explained, and when the administration changed, he was " fired for inefficiency." Then he was hired as chief of the fisheries at Manila with a noticeable increase in salary. After four years in Manila he resigned and explored the entire Philippine group for four years.
When the depression came, Dr Taylor began teaching and collecting during the summer.
During World War II Dr. Taylor spent three years with the army in Asia. Part of this time he loaned to the British army. While in Asia he said he saw many specimens he would have liked to have brought out. He was able to collect one a few while he was fighting. Finds War in Czech Russia.
In the summer of 1947 he and his son flew to Costa Rica for his first journey under the auspices of the University.
"We ran into a pocket-sized edition of a revolution in Costa Rica," he said. The revolution did not hinder them in obtaining 4,000 specimens for the museum.
Dr. Taylor also takes the 12 members of his class studying lower vertebrates on half-day and week-ends; nature, fresh fishes, amphibians, and reptiles.
At present, Dr. Taylor is describing and naming new species which he found in Mexico, and finishing his part of the book on which he and Dr. Hobar M. Smith, '36, are collaborating.
Among the prize possessions in his office in Dyche museum are a hand-carved laughing Buddha, given him as a favor at a dinner in China; a god from Mexico, and pictures of his son and daughter.
He says he is happy in his penthouse, "complete with etchings provided by Prof. Allen Crafton."
If You're A Licensed Ham Operator Lines Of Communication Are Cheap
Would you like to call someone half-way round the world by radio? If you're a licensed "ham" you can do it yourself. If not, a member of the Radio club will do it for you. And all for free.
Club members have contacted operators in Hawaii, Guam, the Philippine Islands, Australia, New Zealand, Sweden, Denmark, Finland, France, England, Cuba, Mexico, and nearly $ ^{*} $ every state in the nation.
Membership Open To All
The 25 members of the club own two transmitters which are kept in club headquarters, room 205 in the electrical engineering laboratory. Either set can contact any point on the globe if weather conditions are favorable. The radios were obtained from army surplus in the spring of 1947.
Jerry Kuehne, activity manager of the club, said that membership is open to any person interested in radio. About half the present members are licensed operators and the others are studying for the Federal Communications Commission test, he added.
Passing the FCC test qualifies a member for a "ham" license. To pass the test, a person must have a thorough knowledge of radio code and equipment, and FCC laws.
Melvin Cottom, instructor in electrical engineering, is faculty adviser for the organization. He too is a licensed ham. Other club officers are Paul Gratny, president, and Robert Kurtz, secretary-treasurer.
The main activity of the club is using the radios, which leads to many interesting experiences, Kuehle said.
Have Friendly Chat
"One of our members contacted another operator in Van Nuys, Calif. recently, and by -coincidence, this operator's next-door neighbor had an aunt in Lawrence. So we got
National Magazines Print Two Poems by KU Professor
Two poems by Prof. L. R. Lind, chairman of the department of Latin and Greek, have been published recently.
The poems appear in current issues of the Saturday Evening Post for May 1 and in the May issue of the Ladies Home Journal. A third poem appeared in the Saturday Evening Post on Dec. 13, 1947.
these relatives together and they had a 30 minute chat," Kuehnle said.
During the Kansas Relays, the club communicated with England, Denmark, and the Philippine Islands.
Three of the members have carried their radio interest outside the regular activities of the club. Kurtz, Gratny, and Donald Oppenheimer have installed two-way radio sets in their automobiles.
Four speakers have been scheduled for the summer session lecture series, George B. Smith, director of the summer session, said today.
Four Men To Speak At Summer Lectures
Frank Rising, general manager of automotive and aviation parts manufacturing association of Detroit will sneak on "Labor Economics," June 17.
Erskine Caldwell will speak on "The Writer in the Soviet Union," July 1.
Dr. Kurt von Schuschnigg, ex-cancellor of Germany, will speak on "Problems of Central Europe," July 22.
Engineers Set Up New Petition Rule
Josh Lee, ex-senator from Oklahoma, will lecture on July 7.
Members of the engineering council amended their constitution Thursday to require fewer signatures on petitions for nominations to council offices. The new regulation will go into effect today's election, John L. Margrave, president, said.
Watson Library Gets More Books
Under the new ruling 40 engineering students can petition for nominations to president, vice-president, or secretary-treasurer. Formerly 10 per cent of the engineering school had to sign petitions.
Among the new books received by the Watson library are "The Purple Plain," by Herbert Ernest Bates (fiction); "Lucinda Brayford," by Martin Boyd (fiction): "Lawyers, Law Schools and the Public Service," by Esther Luile Brown; "American Foreign Policy," by Lawrence Henry Chamberlain; "Miracles from Microbes," by Samuel Epstein; "Religion in the Twentieth Century," by Vergilius Ture Anselm Ferm.
"The Foreign Affairs Reader": "Curriculum Implications of Armed Services Educational Programs" by Samuel Myron Goodman; "The Place of Psychology in an Ideal University," Harvard university: "Theories of Learning"; by Ernest Ropiequep Hilgard; "Thomas Paine", by Joseph Lewis; "Eagle in the Sky", by Van Wek Mason (fiction).
"American Potters and Pottery," by John Ramsay; "Value of Commodity Output Since 1869," by William Howard Shaw; "Your Newpaper: Blueprint for a Better Press," by Leon Svirsky; "The Psychology of Human Differences," by Leona Elizabeth Tyer; and "American Military Government in Germany," by Harold Zink.
University Plans Fall Orientation
Tentative plans for the orientation of new students next fall were made at a meeting of representatives from 10 University organizations recently.
These plans include tours of the museums and campus, sponsored by Alpha Phi Omega; student receptions at Lawrence churches, sponsored by the Student Religious council; new student induction; and "meet your faculty" forums.
Representatives were present from Y.M.C.A., Y.W.C.A.; Union Activities, A.W.S., registrar's office, I.S.A., Boys' State alumni, A.S.C., Inter-Fraternity council, and the Dean of Women's office.
Routzahn To Teach Public Relations
Mrs. Mary Swain Routzahn will conduct the summer public relations course for social workers at the University from July 12 to 22.
Mrs. Routzahn has been with the Russell Sage foundation, New York, for 35 years. In 1944 she received the first national award in health education. Since 1936 she has been director of the Russell Sage foundation's department of social interpretation.
The University is offering four separate courses. Each enrollee will be able to choose a combination of two of the four said Prof. Esther Twente, chairman of the graduate department of social work.
County Memorial Drive Has Reached $10.990
The Douglas county memorial drive sponsored by Junior Chamber of Commerce has reached $10,-990 in its campaign to raise $17,000.
John Chaney, president and chairman of the drive, said they expect to close the drive today.
New "bellringers" are Cottage cafe and Zim's snack shop.
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FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE NINE
Liberty At All Ports M'Lads Show Us To A Beer Hall, Mac
Heave anchor and cast off the mooring lines, the K.U. navy is on its way—but not until June 26.
erty is promised at every port touched on the cruises.
The summer cruise schedule of the University N.R.O.T.C. was announced recently by Capt. J. V. Peterson, professor of naval science. Embarkation points for the cadets will be near San Francisco. And, check this, you old navy men, liberty is promised at every port touch-
Seniors will board the cruiser Duluth at San Francisco on June 26 for a run to Victoria, B. C. By July 12 they will return to the California coast for gunnery practice at San Clemente island. The seniors, old salts that they are, will be returned to "civilian life" at San Francisco on July 16.
The juniors are in for the wildest and most varied cruise. After joining the aircraft carriers, Princeton and Boxer, they will go to Hawaii. There they will fly as passengers off the carriers. Later, they will receive submarine indoctrination in the
same waters. Tours have been arranged for the cadets of recreational, educational, and armed forces installations on Hawaii.
From Hawaii, the juniors will return to San Diego for a period of observation of fleet amphibious operations. They will disembark at San Francisco on August 20.
Bolivian Students Run Universities; Elect Chancellor; Fire Professors
The sophomores will shove off from Treasure Island and sail to Seattle. From there, they will cruise to Long Beach for gunnery practice. From there, it's Pearl Harbor and submarine training. They will wind up the cruise at San Diego with more gunnery training and practice amphibious landings. Their cruise ends at San Francisco on August 21.
"Bolivian students direct and manage their colleges and universities to a great extent," said Louis Arturo Alexander in a recent interview comparing the educational systems of Bolivia and the United States. Alexander is a College sophomore whose home is in La Paz, Bolivia.
"The students elect their chancellor who then becomes a representative of that school to the government," he said. "In Bolivian colleges we have a student council comparable to the All Student Council here at the University, except our student council has more power."
Alexander stated that Bolivian students could even effect the discharge of a professor. This action can be brought about for political, physical, or other reasons. The professor, however, cannot be discharged because of any ill feelings between himself and students. The students meet at a general assembly and a vote is taken upon the matter. This vote determines whether the professor will remain or resign.
"We have no tuition fees," Alexander said. "Anyone graduated from high school is permitted to attend college regardless of his financial status; however, few take advantage of the opportunity."
Alexander's father is president of the central bank in La Paz and has served as president on the conciliation board in the Argentina-Bolivia tin treaty. At present, he is a member of the Pan-American economic mission in the Pan-American conference.
Chinese Vase Is Masterpiece of May
A Chinese porcelain vase taken from a Chinese palace during the Boxer rebellion is on exhibition at the Spooner-Thayer museum. It is the masterpiece of the month for May.
The five-clawed dragon on it indicates it once was a personal possession of the emperor. It was made during the Ch'ing dynasty of the Ch'ien-lung period from 1736 to 1795.
Many of the art treasures of China which had belonged to ruling dynasties for centuries were taken during the Boxer rebellion.
Few art treasures were seen outside the country before the rebellion.
Call K.U. 376 with your Want Ads
Russell Stover Candies Always Fresh
Stowits REXALL Store
Where The Family Loves To Dine
FAMILY DINNER
Our Specialty -
Spaghetti and Meat Balls
Ravioli
Breakfast
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Canuteson, Lane Are In Detroit
Dr. Ralph I. Canuteson, director of the health service, and Dr. H. W. Lane, health service physician, are attending the national meeting of the American Student Health association in Detroit. It is being held today and tomorrow at Wayne university.
SENIORS!
During the last 25 years, about 12,000 persons have been killed in auto accidents in Minnesota.
Dr. Canuteson is a former president and secretary-treasurer of the association. He is now on the executive council.
If you haven't ordered your
Class Ring
you have only a few days left.
BUSINESS OFFICE
FRANK STRONG HALL
Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan.
For Mother
C M
Flowers--are the Most Thrilling Gift
Only Choice Selections and Arrangements
at
941 Mass. ALLISON AT Shop THOMAS Ph.
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PAGE TEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1948
The Editorial Page
After You, Mr. Motorist!
The fact that so many traffic accidents happen at intersections brings to light an unattractive, though fairly prevalent human characteristic—the urge to push in ahead of the other fellow.
Most of us have laughed at those classic comedians, Gaston and Alphonse, who stood eternally bowing and scraping before a doorway, murmuring "After you, Alphonse!" "No."
muring, "After you, Alphone!" "No,
after you, dear Gaillon!"
Nothing like that happens on the highway, and it might be a healthy sign if it did. Sounds ridiculous, perhaps, but think about it a moment and it makes sense. Compare the daily scene at intersections when two motorists try to beat each other to the crossing or occupy a space where there is room for only one. When they fail, nobody laughs. The result is death, injury, property destruction and tragedy.
Safety authorities emphasize that discourtesy and disregard for the rights of others are leading causes of highway accidents. That is not a very admirable state of affairs; the best cure for it is law enforcement. Explicit rules for precedence and right of way have been formulated by traffic specialists. It remains for drivers to learn them thoroughly and observe them meticulously. Those who won't, must be made to. It is worth nothing, too, that the first commandment of these safety rules is based on simply courtesy: when in doubt, yield the right of way.
Driving conditions are becoming increasingly hectic every year. That makes courtesy on the highway even more of a "must" than it is at home—literally a matter of life and death No motorist is even slightly ridiculous when he says:
"After you, Mr. Motorist. I want to live!"
Step Down
The University will lose several excellent teachers when the "family" policy goes into effect a year from September. K.U. is taking steps to reinstate its pre-war policy which allowed only one member of a family to teach on the staff.
By the time the ruling goes into effect the University will have the benefit of two overflowing classes of graduate teachers. Although the University will lose the services of some extremely valuable teachers, this school and many others have found that in the long run this policy pays off.
Without such a ruling the University would be subject to the pressures of faculty members or department heads who want to place their relatives on the staff. These relatives may not always be desired by the administration or other members of the staff, but they either must yield or faculty relationships become strained.
Corporations often have such a policy to prevent dissension on their staffs, and most states have nepotism statutes which prevent state officers from hiring their relatives.
The University is moving by degrees toward its pre-war policy. The persons affected by this ruling realized that they were hired during the war on a temporary basis.
The first step is not to hire any more relatives to teach. A year from September members of the family who have held temporary positions will have to step out. The third logical step which has not been announced will prohibit a relative from teaching not only in the same department, but on the entire staff...Marian Minor.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
DANGEROUS
MAKING LEFT TURN BY
QUICK, WIDE DVING FROM
RIGHT-HAND LAKE
GIVING NO HAND SIGNAL
SAFE
GRADUALLY MOVING TO LEFT
USING HAND SIGNAS-MAKING
TURN AT CENTER OF INTER-
SECTION WHEN CLEAR
Greatest Need
Whenever the subject of the World War II memorial is mentioned to certain persons, the desire that the money could have been used for a field house is expressed. To many students, the University's greatest need is a field house, and perhaps it is. To some, a bell tower seems useless and a waste of money which could be used for a better purpose than the tower and parkway.
But, the present plan for a memorial was selected after a careful study of several suggestions and a survey of student and alumni opinion. Many persons believe that the money already collected for the carrion should be used for a field house because the state legislature, which appropriates money for such buildings at a state institution, has failed to do so. This obviously can not be done because of the red tape involved in obtaining permission from all donors to use the money in this way plus the fact that approximately $40,000 has been spent for advertising, soliciting, and promotion.
Why didn't the committee choose a field house by the legislature, why twice as much money would be needed.
If K.U. had chosen a field house
Letters To The Editor -
Dear Editor:
We are constantly being told to keep our campus clean, and we, the students at K.U., should do this. But how? We have no place to dispose of our waste paper, or at least, I have not found any.
What does the average person do when he is finished eating a candy bar? He drops the wrapper on the grounds and keeps on walking.
K. U. has a beautiful campus and we should definitely help to keep it clean, and if these disposal cans could be placed on several corners, our campus would look much neater.
Some People Will
Fine Arts freshman
Wanda Hatcher
Dear Editor:
Less than a hundred names from 8,060 students! That doesn't speak so well of the resolution of April 21. Especially when one considers the fact that some people will sign anything just to see their name in print.
W. T. James
P. S. Just what is the resolution?
A letter to the Daily Kansan entitled "Resolved" was run on
College sophomore
for a memorial, many would have said, "Kansas State was given a field house by the legislature, why weren't we?"
If a drive were to be waged to solicit money for a project that was built by state funds at a neighboring school, many alumni would think twice before sending money to a cause which is similar to one that they had partly paid for through taxes at another school.
True, there are many "dyded in the wool" athletic enthusiasts who would welcome the chance to give to such a building, but they could not make up for the great number of alumni who have forgotten what it is to cheer at a basketball game or the necessity of good intramural facilities. The students might have supported this project much better than they have the scenic drive and bell tower and would have contributed more heavily, but their total contributions would represent only a drop in the bucket.
The only way for the University to get a field house is the same Kansas State received he rs—through the legislature.—John Stauffer.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
are no problem when you do them in Maytag machines at
DIRTY CLOTHES
RISK'S
It's The COURT HOUSE Cafe 1105 Massachusetts for
Help-Yourself Laundry
It's The
COURT HOUSE Cafe
1105 Massachusetts
for
Tempting Sandwiches
Delicious Meals
Tasty Snacks
Rich, Creamy, Malts
Phone 623
1900 III.
for
that date and it pertained to discriminatory practices by several local cafes.—Editor.
What It Takes
My attention is riveted upon the unproar about cheating on examinations. Some have suggested "tatling" as a remedy. Rather than this, et the cheating go on to the 'crack- doom.' Don't go Hitler. The K.U. student body and faculty can do something more sensible and democratic.
Dear Editor:
Do not hope for a perfect cure In so large a group there will always be diseased minds that will manifest themselves in this way.
K. U. professors are handicapped by numbers. They should get down to brass tacks and think out a way to conduct daily classes and examinations to give the students a chance. I recommend that the professors burn some midnight oil on this problem. That is what it takes.
A high school instructor
Not Courteous
Dear Editor:
I was one of the many people who sat through the entire performance of the Messiah Sunday, but there's always that 2 per cent who either can't get there on time or who simply must leave before the program is over. Not only was it distracting, but also showed disrespect to a group of musicians who gave a superb performance. Few of us probably realize how much time and work was put in on this great masterpiece, and those who participated deserve all the credit we can give them. Although most of us are not music majors, we do appreciate fine music, especially the high caliber of that given Sunday.
Ralph Winter Engineering junior
Read the Daily Kansan daily
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DRAKE'S
907 Mass.
Ph. 61
University
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Daily Hansan
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 ... David H. Clymer
Managing Editor ... Cooper Rollow
Asst. Man. Editor ... Claire Thomas
Asst. Man. Editor ... Gene Thomas
City Editor ... John Stuaffer
Asst. City Editor ... James Beaty
Asst. City Editor ... Fernando Rodriguez
Philipph Editor ... James Rooninson
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Hal Neison
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Hil Friesen
Paul Zeh Sports Editor ... Paul Zeh
Sports Editor .. James Jones
Women's Sports Ed. Anna Mary Murphy
Feature Editor .. Robe Nielsen
Picture Editor .. James Mason
Photography Editor .. Patricia Bentley
Business Manager Bill Alderson
Adv. Manager Paul Brennan
Admin. Manager Dale Widron
Asst. Clerk Dan Binder
Biller Clint Biner
Class. Adv. Mgr Clathay
Asst. Clerk Mgr Erik
Asst. Class. Adv. Mgr Carol Buhler
Nat. Adv. Mgr Soleckel
Asst. Nat. Adv. Mgr Elephant
Asst. Promotion Roger James
Promotion Mgr Don Tennant
The Kansas Press Association
19 MEMBER 48
National Editorial Association
A FREE PRESS—YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW
To the recruiting poster which says "Worried about the future? Join the Navy and you'll never have to skimp and save for your old age," the following comment has been added: "You should live so long!"
NEW
GOLFING
Skyline Miniature Golf
Course
(3 blocks east of Haskell bus line, Highway 10. East of Lawrence.)
You still have time to try for this weeks low score. Ends Sunday night.
It's different, it's fun, and you'll learn in a minute if you haven't played before.
Come on out this afternoon and sharpen your skill on our 18 hole course. You'll enjoy the spring weather too.
OPEN
Weekdays
Weekdays
1:00-5:30 — 25c
7:00-12:00 — 35c
Sundays
1:00-12:00 p.m.
FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE ELEVEN
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Phone KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be returned within 2 hours 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 a.m. the day before publication is desired.
Classified Advertising Rates
One day five days Five
day days days
25 words or less 35c 65c 90c
additional words 1c 2c 3c
Classified Advertising Rates
For Sale
FORD — 1946 Tutor, fully equipped. Low mille-
gage. 26C. Sunnyside. 1449 L2. L1
FORD—1946 Tudor, tully equipped. Low mileage. 216. Sunnyside, 1449 L2.
ONE INNERSPRING roll-away twinsize bed and one Jenny Lind single bed; new Haynes mattress. Call 3478R.
NISSAN Enlerger. In larger anistrafigurant G. 5 ARus A-23 mm camera. Both good condition. Ph. 125. Bill McCarter.
TUXEDO AND white dinner jacket
1423 New York excellent condition. See 10
1423 New York
ONE WHEEL trailer, 1947 Trailway. All steel, perfect condition. Full swivel deck,deeboard tailgate large capacity, complete cabin, easy for ideal for moving, camping, etc. Tracks perfectly any speed. Sell cheap or make delivery. 1 Lane H, Sunflower, after 5 p.m.
ROLLEFLEXI 127 mm. in excellent condition, 2.8 Zeiss Tessar lens. Also 6-M light meter. Call or write Geordano, 132 Lane P. Sunflower.
1940 MODEL Pontiac coupe, $920.00.
1940 and Arkansas, phone 1772M. 10
10
3 ROOMS of furniture, excellent condition and misc. items for sale at Apt. 3a, Sunside, 1 to 7 p.m., daily except Saturday, Sunday after 10:30 a.m. 11
YOURS FOR only $665—1940 Ford Tudor,
radio. gasoline heater. Engine in excellent
condition. See at 916 Tenn., after 5:30 on
Saturday and Sunday.
1928 MASTER Buick. Excellent motor Lots of miles still in her. Name, "Beulah." 129 W. South Park. Phone 1171-R 10
TWO USED executive type swivel chairs
School Store Swivel Chair
AN IDEAL "Mother's Day" Porker
*11* stel. Student Union Book Store, 10
ROOMS for rent during the summer—
Will rent single or double to men
stents. Close to campus. 1012 Alamat St.
NEW PORTABLE_typewriter at wholesale, carrying case for 10 and 12-inch laptops, using sweeper; practically new Crosley convertible auto; Art Rumpenthal; Phone 2236J.
VETERANS! We will buy, trade or sell for you any Army or Navy gear in good condition that you may wish to obtain. Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. Phone 669 803-2475 HTFD
Wanted
EXPERIENCED stenographer wants permanent position. I have passed the State Civil Service examination for stenography and presidential. Phone, morning or evening. 1185W WANT RIDE to California on June 3. Call Warren Smith, 2631W after 11:00. 10
For Rent
PIANO—NEW and used. Piano-tuning
916 Illinois, Phone 815.
916 Illinois, Phone 815.
APARTMENT for rent for summer months. Two beds, half bath. Call 2621W or see at 912 Alabama after 5:00. Very reasonable rent.
TYPING: Reasonable rate. Phone
3250J 1930 Kentucky. 13
Business Service
LET US help you with your Airline reservation. We have complete information and service. Phone 30, ticket office, Rose Gleesman, Mgr., First National Bank 7 Dougherty, PHOTEMATICS Lucy Dougherty, Phone 3084. Please call for appointment.
TYPING—thesis and term papers. Quick, cheap, and accurate. Phone 2369—J 10 TYPING: Reasonable rate, prompt ser-
vice. Vermont. Phone 1168R. TENNIS RAILWAY: Expired, acquired. Nylon. $3.50; gut. $4.50 to $10.00. E. L. Wellhausen, J. 211. E. I. Tel. 2443J.
*TYPING DONE:* Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Telephone 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. 20
*TYPING done:* Term papers, reports, special attention given thesis. Accurate work at reasonable prices. Call 1996-W. Apartment 2, 1101 Tennessee. www.taylorLOR.com $36.50 to $65.00. Ex-
ALOR-MADE MATS $6.50 to $65.00. Ex-
berhert & Son, Tailor Shops $13.15 Mass
Sports
NEW vacuum cleaners for rent. Attachments included $1.50 per day. Al Brooks Sweeper Co., 8311% Mass. Ph. 1104 between 9 and 12 a.m.
COMMUTING to K.U. Summer School
to Riders wanted. Can
La 6380, K.C. Mo.
L4830, K.B. Mo.
Transportation
Miscellaneous
A NEW-TIE every month. Be the center of attention for your team, send $1.19 immediately to Tie-A-Month Club, Box 397, 37th and Sruce 4th, or Penn, 4th, and receive the first selection.
WILL PARTY who exchanged Parker
'S11 pen Monday please call for theirs
Mine was a keepsake. Acme Bachelor
Laundry & Dry Cleaners. 11
DANCE on Saturday night at odd Feli-
lms. Informal. Joan Langdale
orchestra.
Lost
BROWN BILLFOLD, either Monday night or Tuesday morning. Keep money and return billfold to Dorothy Quirk, phone 781, 1144 La. I1
WILL THE man who accidentally picked up my Retailing Notebook in the men's room of F. S. hall on Saturday, May 18, asked "I need it immediately. Bob Perling,"
$5.00 REWARD for return of raincoat,
possibly lost in Engineering Laboratories.
Size 36, cravetene gabardine,
natural. Call 1135. 10
RAINCAIT MIXUP: Will person who exchanged my black, Navy enlisted man's shirt and a naval infantry school catalogue in pocket, for same type, but size 38, at main Union cafeteria, please call H-Kraft, 14193? ___ 10 between Fraser and Corbin half. Finder please call Margaret Robinson, 860 ___ 10 BLACK COCKER spaniel, answers to the teacher. Last seen on the campus Monday, wearing leather harness. Reward, Ph. 1967.
LOST: REWARD, black and white striped
hair through groove. Courtney Cowgil, 415,
7
Two new refrigerator accessories are a plastic divider for ice cube trays that is described as non-sticking, and a plastic, stain-proof vegetable tray with hinged lid.
WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES
Eye
Large Selection of Distinctive Frames Lawrence Optical Co.
Suitcases in Steel or Plastic $3.95 - $4.95 - $5.95 Plus Fed. Tax
Going Home Soon? We Have The Luggage
All-Steel Footlockers $7.50 and $8.50 Plus Fed.Tax
Former air force personnel, both officers and enlisted men, can now get a commission as second lieutenant in the regular air force, under a new plan.
Graduate students and seniors graduating in June are particularly desired, especially in civil engineering, electricity, physics, meteorology, law, chemical engineering, electrical engineering, industrial and production engineerig, metallurgy, physiology, psychology, and aeronautical engineering.
They must have had service in the air force since Dec. 7, 1941, must not be over 27 years old, and their previous record must be of honorable and efficient service.
Plus Fed. Tax
$18.50-$19.95-$22.95
Former officers selected and appointed will be returned to active duty as permanent grade second lieutenant, U.S. air forces, and in the temporary grade which they held before separation. Terminal leave promotion in the air reserve does not count. Enlisted men selected will be returned to active duty in the permanent grade of second lieutenant.
All-Steel Trunks
Three Practical Sizes
$18.50 - $19.95 - $22.95
Offer Air Commissions
Phone 588 or 669
LAWRENCE SURPLUS
The Most Interesting Stores In Lawrence
Ph. 1630
Anyone who can meet the above qualifications and is interested should see Lt. Col. John D. W. Haesler, 2125 Tennessee street within 10 days so that the men who are selected can be notified before school is out.
740 and 911 Mass.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Gravitt's Tire and HOME SUPPLY 916 Mass. Ph 1
GOODYEAR TIRES
for
and it's KIRKPATRICK'S AUTO REPAIR
- Motor tune-up
- Carburetors
- Ignition
- Motor t
for
Brake Repair our Specialty
SEA SCALLOPS
FOODS FRIED SHRIMP
Duck's Tavern
824 Vermont
Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
Morgan - Mack 609 Mass. Phone 277 Service-FORD-Sales
YOUR CAR KNOWS THAT EVERY 5000 MILES
IT NEEDS THE FOLLOWING SERVICE!
- Pack Wheel Bearings
- Fill and Adjust Shocks
- Inspect Brake Linings
- Pack Generator -- Inspect Armature
- Lubricate Speedometer Cable
- This service should be given every car each 5,000 miles for maximum safety and economy.
- Replace Generator Brushes
COME IN TODAY
only $8.00
PUBLIC
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PHOTO SUPPLY Gifts
PHOTO SUPPLY Gifts
HYPO
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PHOTOGRAPHY
you can get here
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also
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AIR TRANSPORT
of Photo Finishing
Hison's
721 Mass.
Phone 41
PAGE TWELVE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 7, 1948
Presidents To See Preview Of 'College Daze'
A preview of "College Daze." all student musical review, will be presented at the last presidents' breakfast of the year at 9 a.m. tomorrow in the west cafeteria of the Union. All presidents of organized houses are asked to attend.
Faculty guests who have been invited are L. C. Woodruff, dean of men; Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women; Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women; Willis L. Tompkins, assistant dean of men; and Miss Hermina Zipple, director of the Union.
Tickets for "College Daze" are on sale in the rotunda of Frank Strong hall and at the business office. They will also be sold at the box office May 12. A limited number of tickets is being sold in organized houses.
At the president's breakfast tomorrow, Norma Jean Guthire, fine arts sophomore, and Dargan Montgomery, College sophomore, will sing "When You're Near." Ann Hogue, fine arts sophomore, and Dean Frazier, College junior, will sing "Come Along Baby." Words and lyrics to these songs were written by Jesse E. Stewart, director of the musical.
Charles T. Freshwater, fine arts nepomore, and Bill P. Pog. College junior, will sing "I've Got That Old Look From Seeing That New Lock." It was written by Jack Moorhead, author of the show.
Stewart will give a short talk on the show.
Jagel Recital Is Pleasing
Bv CRYSTAL CHITTENDEN
Brooklyn can be proud of its native son, Frederick Jagel, tenor, who sang in Hoch'auditorium Thursday evening. He presented a well-rounded program, opening with Handel's "Vanne, si superba, va" from the opera "Giustino." Although Mr. Jagel has a large range with depth and volume in the lower register, the pianist, Mr. Whitaker, gave him severe competition in the first few numbers.
Mr. Jagel, who is adept at singing in foreign languages, presented his German group as though he not only understood the intended musical meanings of Hugo Wolf's and Brahn's compositions, but also the words. Of this group the melancholy mood of Brahm's "Der Tod, das ist die kuehle Nacht" drew the greatest response from his listeners.
"Like Blossoms Dew-Freshen'd to Gladness" and "Love Song" by Rachmaninoff were highly contrasted. The latter seemed more in the Rachmaninoff spirit by building up to a big climax. Somber dignity marked Miaskovsky's "To the Serene Master."
His French group, presented with subtle artistry, included the composers Faure, Poulenc, and Debussy. The audience had no difficulty in grasping the dreamy quality of Faure's "Apres un Reve" or the elusive beauty of "Clair de Lume" by Debussy.
The closing group of American songs opened with "Lament of Ian the Proud" by Charles Griffes, who strongly leans toward Ravel's brand of impressionism. Like John Charles Thomas who sang here recently, Mr. Jagel included a selection by William Roy, the 14-year-old American youth.
25 Fellowship Members To Attend Convention
Twenty-five members of the University Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship will attend the annual state conference, today, tomorrow and Sunday at Camp Webster, near Salina.
The conference will consist of study and discussion groups. Guest speakers will be the Rev Lind Hodges, Topeka, and Dr. Alexander Vazakas of Bethany college, Lindsburg.
By Bibler
Little Man On Campus
B. B.
"Boy, did the prof ever pull a fast one today—he took all the questions from the text!"
Eclipse Begins Sunday, Ends Saturday; It's That International Date Line Again
An annular eclipse of the sun will begin Sunday and end Saturday. The solution to this paradox lies in the "polywog's" dunking place, the international dateline. An annular eclipse is one in which a thin ring of sunlight is visible encircling the dark moon.
The eclipse will be.
It will travel northeast across the international date line and end five and one-half hours later Saturday, said N. W. Storer, associate professor of astronomy.
The eclipse will begin at sunrise Sunday, south of the island of Ceylon.
It will be seen as an annular eclipse along a narrow path and a partial eclipse from the side. Persons in the northwest corner of the United States will see the spectacle as a partial eclipse for a few minutes before sunset Saturday.
From Ceylon the eclipse will travel northwest across Burma, Siam, China, Japan, and the Aleutian islands to about 700 miles southwest of Seattle.
The eclipse has caused an important election in southeast Asia to be postponed. Authorities believe the superstitious natives will not turn out to vote.
Because the moon will be farther from the earth than at other times it will not be able to obscure the sun completely. This will leave a ring of the sun showing around the moon. This is called an annular eclipse, Professor Storer explained. A total eclipse results when the moon is closer to the earth.
"This occurs on the average of once every two years," he said. "Only once in about 200 years is a total eclipse visible from any one location. The next one will be visible in November over central South America and south of Australia."
The next total eclipse visible from Kansas was the last on crossed Kansas in 1918.
About 540 students have signed up for the Western Civilization examination which will be given at 2 p.m. May 15, according to J. K. Hitt, registrar.
Students may register today and tomorrow for the examination. The place of examination will be assigned when the students register. Hidden Gibson, director of Western Civilization, said he expected between 800 and 1,000 students to register for the examination.
540 Students Sign For Western Civ
Columbia, Mo., May 7-(UP)—Five journalists, a southern newspaper, and a national picture magazine today received distinguished service in journalism awards as a part of the 39th annual University of Missouri journalism week.
MU Presents News Awards
The awards, based upon records of performance over many years, were presented by Dean F. L. Mott of the School of Journalism.
The awards went to:
David C. H. Lu, correspondent of the Central News agency of China, Washington, D. C.
Don D. Patterson, former advertising director of the Scripps-Howard newspapers.
Jack Shelley, news manager of station OH, Des Moines, Iowa.
Joyce Swan, vice-president of the Minneapolis Star and Tribune company.
Inez Robb, International News service correspondent.
The publications honored were the Atlanta Journal and Life magazine. The Journal was commended by Dean Mott for "progressive ideas and liberal sentiments in the south."
Robert Acker Gets $5 For Best Paper
Robert L. Acker, engineering senior, Wednesday was awarded a $5 first prize for the best paper on technical aviation by the Institute of Aeronautical Science. His paper was entitled "A Goodyear Castering Landing Gear."
Quentin J. Keller, engineering senior, took first place for his lecture presentation of a paper on "A Copper Pilot Relief-Tube." Both contestants will receive two years free membership in the National Institute of Aeronautical Science.
John C. Brizendine, engineering junior, was elected the chairman of the institute for the summer session. Levi A. Barnes and William H. Wetz, juniors, will serve on his committee.
Clubs On The Campus
Marksmanship Trophies To Be Given By Women's Rifle Club
Two trophies will be awarded and officers will be elected at the May 18 meeting of the Women's Rifle club. The trophies, donated by the First National bank and the Kirkpatrick Sport shop, will be given for outstanding marksmanship and membership. The outstanding member will be chosen by vote of the club.
Lewis Mitchell, Loren Fincham, Edward Dembeck, and Bob Adrian tied for first place with scores of 37.5 at a meeting of the Four No bridge club Thursday. There were eight tables and the average score was 52.5.
Four No Bridge Club
The club has recently been recognized as a member of the American Contract Bridge league. All bridge players are invited to the next meeting May 13.
A Mother's day program will be held by Kappa Phil, Methodist sorority, today at the rear sanctuary of the Methodist church, 10th and Vermont streets. The program will start at 7 p.m. and is open to mothers and house mothers of members.
Kappa Phi
APO Hears Aruba Scout
"Being a boy scout in Aruba is exciting." Walter Buchholtz, engineering freshman, told members of Alpha Phi Omega Thursday. "When enemy submarines shelled the oil refineries, the scout troops were asked to maintain lookout posts. We performed this duty for about a month, until the army relieved us."
Buchholtz and his family moved to Aruba, Netherlands West Indies, in 1939. He is one of two eagle scouts on the island.
Charles Svoboda, Newman club president, announced the appointment of Patricia Jordon and Clifford Malone, College sophomores, as cochairmen of the membership committee for 1948-49 at an executive board meeting Tuesday. The rest of the committee will be chosen from organized houses and independents-at-large.
Newman Club Chairmen Named
The Episcopal College club will meet at 5:30 p.m. Sunday in the parish house at 10th and Vermont. A technicolor film, "Moon Over Sur Valley," will be shown.
Ensconal College Club
Quack Club
Seven new pledges were taken into the Quack club as minor quacks Thursday. They are Virginia Harris, Margaret Wolfe, Jeanne Clambers, Rosetta Snow, Kathleen McKelvey, Nanette Hyer and Barbara Burkholder. The test for becoming a minor quack is to swim three lengths of the pool in 38 seconds.
Unitarian Liberal Club
Dr. and Mrs. Cline Hensley, '44,
who have just returned from 18
months in Augsburg, Germany, will
speak to the Unitarian Liberal club
Sunday. Dr. Hensley is a graduate
of the University School of Medicine.
German Club
Members of the German club will hold a buffet dinner to be held at 6:30 tonight at the home of Dr. and Mrs. George Kreye, 1215 Oread.
American Veterans Committee
The picnic originally scheduled for Clinton park at 6:15 p.m. today has been cancelled by the A.V.C. Any student who purchased a ticket can claim a refund at the business office.
Truman Waits On Rail Seizure As Talks Go On
Washington, May 7—(UP)—Attorney General Tom C. Clark said today that he has advised President Truman that the government has ample authority to seize the strike-threatened railroads.
454 N L R V H
The government was holding off on seizure, hoping that it can avert the nationwide strike called for May 11. But high officials made clear that the lines will be taken over if the government fails to settle the dispute between three unions and the carriers.
Even as Mr. Clark gave his opinion to Mr. Truman, leaders of the three unions prepared to meet in another wing of the White House with Presidential Assistant John R. Steelman. The presidential aide was reported ready to submit a number of proposals to the union leaders designed to forestall the strike.
Informed sources said the proposals which Mr. Steelman would put to the union leaders would not give them much hope for a better settlement than recommended by a presidential fact-finding board in March. The board recommended $15\%$ cent hourly increases. The unions want 30 cents. The railroads accepted the board's suggestions, but the unions turned them down.
The shadow of John L. Lewis also fell across the labor scene again. He told hard coal operators that his United Mine Workers union wants to reopen their contract for discussion of new terms. The contract can be "reopened" or terminated on 30 days notice.
Meanwhile, the C.I.O. United Auto Workers broke off negotiations with Chrysler corporation, declaring that a nationwide strike of the firm's 73-,000 employees next Wednesday is "inevitable."
Mr. Lewis already was preparing for negotiations on a new contract with soft coal operators.
Engineering, agriculture, and education are next in order, according to a survey released recently by the Veterans administration. The number of veterans listed under the on-the-job training is 546,000 or one-fourth of those enrolled.
Veterans' enrollment in business courses is more than 311,000; engineering 252,000; agriculture 223,000; and education 85,000. More than 237,000 veterans in liberal arts did not declare majors when the survey was taken.
Business courses rate first with the two million veterans attending schools under the G. I. bill.
GI's Prefer Business
Entertainment for the children included a song fest, competitive games and refreshments of ice cream bars provided by a local firm.
Ned D. Linegar, Y.M.C.A. secretary, told stories to the children. Other Y.M.C.A. members also helped with games.
Y. W.C.A. Community Service committee sponsored a "Mayday Playday" at Lincoln elementary school in North Lawrence Thursday,
Sally Pegues, College sophomore, community service chairman, was director of the playday.
YW Has Playday At Lincoln School
Margaret McKinney, graduate student, and Frank H. Bobb, senior engineer, underwent emergency appendedomies at Watkins Memorial hospital. Miss McKinney was operated on Thursday, and Bobb this morning.
Two Have Appendectomies
Attending physicians report Miss McKinney's condition as good, but no report has been received on Bobb.
University Daily Kansan
STUDENT NEWS PAPER
Lawrence, Kansas
Roy A. Roberts Will 'Chat' At Honors Meeting
Roy Allison Roberts, '08, president and general manager of the Kansas City Star, will speak at the University Honors convocation tomorrow at 9:20 a.m. in Hoch auditorium. His talk will be "An Informal Chat About The Future."
Mr. Roberts has been with the Kansas City Star since 1908. From 1915 to 1928 he was Washington correspondent for the Star. He has covered every national political convention since 1912.
8 o'clock classes 8 to 8:30 a.m.
9 o'clock classes 8:40 to 9:10 a.m.
Convection 9:20 to 10:30 a.m.
10 o'clock classes 10:40 to 11:10 a.m.
11 o'clock classes 11:20 to 11:50 a.m.
12 o'clock classes noon to 12:50 p.m.
He lectured at a University convoction May 4, 1934 on "Freedom of the News." Time magazine recently featured him as "cover boy."
Preceding the address, Chancellor Deane W. Malott will present honors and awards for the 1947-48 school year.
Following the talk by Mr. Roberts the audience will sing the Crimson and the Blue. Arthur Ruppenthal, head cheer leader, will close the convocation by leading the group in the Rock Chalk yell.
Engineers Elect Council
William R. Gibbs, engineering junior, was elected president of the Engineering council May 7 in a closely contested race. He had a 15-vote margin over his nearest opponent.
Other officers who will head the council next semester are Charles R. Freeberg, engineering junior, vice-president, and Dorothy Quirk, engineering freshman, secretary-treasurer.
Representatives elected to represent the engineering classes are Winton L. Studt, senior; Robert R. Thayer, junior; and Elton B. Noble sophomore. The freshman representative will be elected in September.
Departmental representatives are Harley L. Tracy, architectural; Glenn C. Gray, civil; John R. Sacks, mining and metallurgical; David B. Thompson, engineering physics; Leonard M. Rickards, petroleum; John C. Brizendine, aeronautical; Robert L. Lindsay, electrical; Lawrence L. Gore, chemical; and Richard W. Hartzler, mechanical.
Engineering Frat Will Initiate 19
Nineteen new members will be infilated into Pi Tau Sigma, national honor mechanical engineering fraternity, at its annual banquet at 6:15 p.m. Thursday in the English room of the Union.
Max Dreeden, assistant professor of physics will speak on the relation between physics and engineering.
Students to be initiated are Thurston Cowgill, Dick Dickey, David J. Foley, Chester J. Frazier, Chester D. Hall, John R. Harris, Brownell W. Landes, Hugh S. McClelland, James V. Meredith, Normal W. Neaderhiser, James E. Oram.
Bruce R. Pennington, Arthur R. Puffinbarger, Lee G. Celden, Robert E. Sterrett, Jack P. Stovall, Charles R. Svoboda, Arthur R. Thompson, and Clayton W. Williams.
BENJAMIN M.
ROY A. ROBERTS
Students Attend Annual Banquet
About 75 students attended the Union-sponsored presidents' breakfast Saturday in the Union cafeteria.
Jack Schreiber, master of ceremonies, introduced the guests. They were Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women; Willis L. Tompkins, assistant dean of men; Hermina Zipple, director of the Union; Evans Jay Francis, Union Activities president; Doris Jane Tihen, Union Activities secretary; Leland G. Norris, College freshman; and LuAnne Powell, former Union Activities president.
A preview of "College Daze" was given by several members of the cast. Mildred Ann Hogue, fine arts sophomore, and Dean W. Frazier College junior, sang "Come Along Baby" and "When You're Near." Norma Jean Guthrie, fine arts freshman, and Dargan Montgomery, College sophomore, also sang.
Bill P. Ogg, College junior, and Jack Moorhead, freshman, sang "I Got That Old Look From Seeing That New Look." The duets were accompanied on the piano by John S. Nichols, business senior. All of the songs were from the show, "College Daze."
Business School Elects, Listens, And Plays Ball
Richard A. Yaple was elected president of the Business School association in the voting May 7, along with the entire slate of the Commerce party.
Yaple received 61 votes and his opponent, Charles M. Wardin, received 39. Other officers elected were Ajas E. K laer, vice-president; Maribah L. Barrett, secretary; and Park C. Pennington, treasurer. All are business juniors.
In addition to the election, Business school day featured guest speakers, the student-faculty baseball game, and a picnic.
R. Hugh Uhlmann, vice-president of the Midland Flour Milling company and a director of the Kansas City Board of Trade described operations of the grain exchange.
"The worst handicaps in the grain market," he said, "are the get-rich-quick amateur buyers who cause abnormal fluctuations in the market. I don't see why these overnight grain dealers think they can predict the market when experts often fail."
He defended the rather unpopular speculative element in the markets on the grounds that prices are fixed by the law of supply and demand and not by members of the board of trade as some people believe.
F. S. Nicklas, representative of the International Business Machines corporation, said that "In the census of 1880, it took ten years to compile the information because the machines needed were not available."
He predicted that all future accountants will have to know machine accounting, which is, he said, "Merely the placing of adequate tools in the hands of accountants to eliminate as much as possible the human error."
In the afternoon baseball game, the faculty team, billed as the "K. U. Flunkers," nosed out the senior team by a score of 10-9. The faculty team made six runs in the first inning, an advantage the students were never able to overcome.
WEATHER
Kansas—Cloudy and cooler with occasional showers east today. Partly cloudy and cooler east tonight. Tomorrow partly cloudy and cool High today near 50 extreme north to upper 50's south. Low tonight 35-43.
'College Daze' Chorus
TOMMY JONES
DANCING CHORUS left to right: Rita Hartwell, Virginia Gard, Joan Happy, Dick Blasdel, Al Dougherty, Virginia Brown, Betty Boiling, Jeanne Peterson, Carl Hoskins, Edith Malott and Fran Bernard.
Truman Seizes Rails As Strike Threatens
Walkout Set For 6 AM Tomorrow As Brotherhoods Remain Silent
Washington, May 10—(UP)—President Truman at 11 a.m. today seized the railroads of the nation and called on every railroad worker to cooperate with the government by remaining on duty.
Student Musical Numbers To Be Presented Today
The President acted as representatives of the three brotherhoods which have called a strike for 6 a.m. tomorrow and representatives of
Thirteen original musical compositions by members of the School of Fine Arts will be presented at 8 p.m. today in Frank Strong auditorium. The compositions are by students of Laurel E. Anderson, professor of organ and piano.
The contemporary music string quartet will interpret compositions by Jack Stephenson, Chester Vincent Bleecker, and Richard Simon, graduate students. The quartet includes W. Thomas-Marroco, first violin, Myron McNown, second violin, Bleecker, viola, and Maurice Pollom, violoncello.
Six students have prepared musical scores for poems. They are 'Escape' (Elinor Wylie) by Beth Bell, College senior; "This Is My Beloved" (Walter Benton), Wayne Ruppenthal, graduate student; "Perfect Peace" (Augusta Larned), Richard Simon, graduate student; "Sonnet" (Santayana), Mary L Stryker, College senior; "Velvet Shoes" (Elinor Wylie), Horace Edmons, graduate student, and "Ece Puer" (James Joyce), Robert MacKinnon, fine arts junior. Loraine Mai, soprano, will sing. Maxine Dunkleberg, pianist, will play.
Stek has also composed a sonata for trumpet and piano, "Allegro Energico," "Scherzand," and "Chorale." It will be played by Leo Horaceck, trumpet, and Melvin Zack, piano.
Horace Edmonds has prepared a piano solo suite for children, "The Piper," "Sorrow," "Lullaby," and "Gaiety." Frank White, fine arts sophomore will play.
MacKinnon has written a flute obligato for "Carol" (Anonymous) which will be interpreted by Loraine Mai, soprano, and Marcus Hahn, flutist, accompanied by Maxine Dunkleberg.
A trio for piano, violin, and violoncelo written by Margaret Dunn, former fine arts faculty member, will be played by Marian Jersild, piano, W. Thomas Marroco, violin, and Raymond Stuhl, violoncelo.
'Daze' Tickets Are Being Sold Now
Tickets for "College Daze," all student musical revue, are on sale in the rotunda of Frank Strong hall, at the business office, and at a booth in the Union.
Admission to the musical, which will be presented at 8:20 p.m. Wednesday in Hoch auditorium, is 75 cents a person.
Members of the cast are selling tickets personally, and there are special representatives for each organized house on the campus. Tickets are also on sale to the Lawrence population downtown.
Tickets are also on sale to the Lawrence population downtown.
◦ management continued fruitless dis-
cussions at the White House.
Mr. Truman directed Secretary of the Army Kenneth Royall to operate the lines in the name of the government.
At about the time the executive order was issued, representatives of the three brotherhoods left the White House, declining to say whether their members would accede to the president's work request.
Government officials, however, believed the three unions later would instruct their members to keep on the job. The government might take court action against them if they went ahead with the strike.
The union leaders left their latest conference with John R. Steelman, assistant to the president, at 11:05 a.m. The conference apparently had not broken down completely. Alvanley Johnston, head of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, said the union group would return to the White House at 12:30 p.m.
The president's seizure order was effectively immediately.
Mr. Truman, in a statement accompanying the order, warned that "a strike on our railroads would be a nationwide tragedy, with worldwide repercussions."
The executive order provided that present wages and conditions of employment would continue in effect while the railroads are under army operation.
Mr. Truman stated that since the three brothershoods had refused to accept the recommendations of an emergency board, a situation had developed which made government seizure "imperative for the protection of our citizens."
Mr. Truman acted under a 1916 law giving the government power to seize and operate railroads in time of war emergency.
Government officials asserted confidence from the first that the seizure maneuver would prevent the strike. In Chicago, A.F.L. President William Green said he believed the A.F.L. union involved, the switchmen, would stay on their jobs. The other unions involved are the engineers and firemen, both independent brotherhoods.
The first reaction of high officials of the engineers' brotherhood in Chicago, New York, and Pittsburgh had been that the strike would go on as planned unless the top union leaders here canceled it.
As the nation entered one of its most critical weeks of labor unrest in history the government was also attempting to prevent a Chrysler automobile strike set for Wednesday, settle the 55-day-old packinghouse workers strike, and end the Boeing aircraft strike that has tied up an important portion of the country's military and commercial plane production.
Meanwhile John L. Lewis asked hard coal operators today to begin negotiations with his United Mine Workers May 20. Mr. Lewis did not mention union demands, but in a letter to the mine owners he said he wanted negotiations completed by July 10.
Two College Students In Accident Near Shawnee
George D. Clay, College sophomore drove into the rear of a car on state highway 10 near Shawnee, May 7. Richard Oberhelman, College freshman, was riding with Clay. Neither of the students was hurt.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 10, 1948
Official Bulletin
May 10,1948
I. S.A. meeting with house representatives, 7:15 tonight, 228 Frank Stradg, Meeting dismissed if no quorum by 7:25.
Snow Zoology club picture, 5 p.m.
teday, front of Snow hall.
Mortar board rehearsal for honors convocation, 3:50 today, Hoch auditorium.
Phi Chi meeting following psychology seminar tonight in room 11 Frank Strong.
Pi Signa Alpha initiation, 5 to day, Pine room. Dinner in Kansas room at 6:30. Members desiring to attend contact Russell Barrett.
All new cabinet members of Baptist student group, Roger Williams Foundation, Theta Epsilon, or College S.S. class, meet at 7 tonight, 1124 Mus.
Phi Alpha Theta piemic Thursday. Contact Harold Hixon by tomorrow night for details.
Aranavay, 7.30 tomorrow, Union ballroom. Social gathering after meeting.
Math club, 4 p.m. Wednesday,
Clinton park, Sign today in 205
Frank Strong, Sixty cents per person.
Election and program award.
Student court will review appeal cases on parking tickets, 7:30 pm tomorrow court room, Green hall. All defendants notified by mail.
K. U. Dames bridge, 7:30 p.m.
Wednesday, Pine room, Union.
Home Economics club. 5 p.m.
Thursday, Fraser dining room. Election of officers. Sign at home economics office before 5 p.m. Wednesday.
Letters of application for dance manager job to Sue Webster, 1625 Edgehill Road. Enclose address and phone number. Deadline Friday.
All organized houses and organizations leave dates, preference and alternative for next year's parties at office of dean of women by Thursday. Indicate closed dates desired.
Devotion each morning. 8:30-8:50 Danforth chapel, sponsored by Student Religious council. All are welcome.
150 Will Study Democracy
Basic problems of democracy will be studied by 150 students, workers and farmers at the Encampment for Citizenship from June 28 to Aug. 7 in Riverdale, N.Y.
Besides studying courses on the meaning of democracy, minorities, international policy and economics, the group will take field trips to the stock exchange, housing projects, Hyde park, the United Nations and other points of interest in New York. They will live on the 14-acre campus of Fieldston school.
Guest speakers and staff members will be experts on civic, political, farm, labor or business problems. Workshops on public speaking, propaganda techniques, political organization, inter-racial committees and foreign policy will be open to the campers.
Tuition and living expenses for the six weeks cost $125. Applications and further details may be obtained from Dr. Kathryn Frederick, executive secretary, Encampment for Citizenship, 2 West 64 street, New York 23, N. Y.
In 1947, 990 Americans were killed and 22,000 injured by automobiles with defective brakes. Check your car and check accidents!
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Spooner-Thayer Exhibits Textiles Of Four Countries
Sealamandre textiles are being shown at the Spooner-Thayer Museum of Art until May 29. They are reproductions of historic designs made for modern interior decorations.
These textile designs represent various historical periods of France, Germany, England, and the United States, and are examples showing the economic and political conditions of each country as important factors
in determining trends in art.
The exhibition came from the Scalamandre Museum of Textiles in New York.
Biedermier, a red and white candy - striped textile, represents German decoration from 1810 to 1850. After the Napoleonic wars, the German people were too poor for any but the simplest home decorations, hence the simplest of designs with bright colors for their plain rooms
One of the French designs, which was popular during the reign of Louis XV, has a pastoral and floral motif in green silver. During this period graceful naturalness replaced the magnificent designs of the preceding era.
The Louis Philippe pattern of deep green with a rose and ribbon design is typical of the Romatic epoch in which the king boasted that as he was a man of simple tastes, ornamentess was forbidden.
The early Republicans, textiles in the early American group, show a large blue eagle on a red and white background. This indicates the intense patriotism of the early Americans who used eagles and stars on practically everything.
A design copied from a painting by de Chirico, "The Ancient Horse," depicts the ancient horse frightened by the voice of the oracle and is an example of modern American textiles.
Colorful weave patterns of brocade, lampsa, brocalle, amure, and damask are displayed with explanatory labels to describe the different weaves.
Child Death Rate Drops
New York—(UP)—The death rate of children from one to four years old has dropped 60 per cent since 1930, according to Dr. Louis I. Dublin, statistician of the Metropolitan Life Insurance company. He noted drastic reductions in deaths resulting from diarrhoea, enteritis, childhood diseases and pneumonia.
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Most Famous Rose Not Exhibited At Show
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Atlanta, Ga. — (UF)—Mrs. Helen Hutson Weber, director of the national rose show held here, revealed that the show did not exhibit any specimens of the country's most famous rose—the American Beauty. For three decades, she says, florists have been palming off the Red Delicious and Rome Glory for the publicized Beauty because of its "unpredictable temperament."
Across from Post Office
Parker 51 Fountain Pens Super Chrome Ink Stowit's Rexall Store
Geology Class Visits Mines
BILL'S GRILL JUICY STEAKS
Delicious Dinners Sandwiches—Malts
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Across from Court House
R. M. Dreyer, associate professor of geology, took his class in mineralogy on a field trip to Arkansas.
They visited lead, zinc, and bauxite mines near Little Rock. Bauxite is the ore from which aluminum is made.
Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence and $1.00 a semester postage), Published in Lawrence, Bee every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sunday in similar periods Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
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MONDAY, MAY 10, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Picnics, Banquets, And Dances Make Up Spring Entertainment
Sigma Nu Reunion
Sigma Nu fraternity will hold the 64th annual reunion of its alumni association at the chapter house this weekend. Approximately 100 guests are expected to attend the banquet Sunday.
Bud Hinkle, fraternity commander, qpd Dr. Edward F. Hashinger, Kansas City, will be the speakers Dr. Hashinger was formerly grand regent of the national organization of Sigma Nu.
- *
Hillcrest and two unorganized houses at 1245 Louisiana and 1147 Tennessee, held a spring formal in the V.F.W. hall May I.
Guests were V. Boyd Bainter, Henry Black, Roderick Brady, Harlan Burns, Robert Clark, Phil Clark, Ryland Coe, Rolland Cole, Richard Cracken, Robert Dale, Charles Freshwater, Norman Hull, James Kanehl, Clyde King, Bud Kramer, Robert Kuckelman, Al Lang, William Madden, Mendole Marsh.
Duane McMillin, John Meyer,
Dean Nelson, Joseph Nipper, John
Ott, Darwin Runke, Benny Simpson,
Leo Smith, Earl Spidel, Frank
Stevens, Arthur Toch, Garth Van
Pelt, William Votapka, Tom Watkins,
Phil Woodward.
Mary Lou Bonjour, Amy Bowers, Barbara Byington, Charity Fischer, Betty Jane Fortune, Marcia Griebel, Helen McMeyen, Marjorie Quiring, Elsie Marie Randell, Martha Stewart, and Mr. and Mrs. A. S. McDonald
Chaperons were Mr. and Mrs. E.
C. Anderson and Mrs. H. M. Nusbaum.
Sleepy Hollow Dance
Sleepy Hollow's spring formal was given May 1. A night club theme was used.
Guests were Laurence Hamilton, Robert Sleigh, William Ogg, Richard Houts, Richard Price, Richard Pickler, Harold Simmons, Ted Hanske, John Cejka, Dewey Blank, Ralph McClung, Raymond Sparks, Robert Seacat, Donald Brown, Dale Cheney, Herbert Gromeyer, Don Vaughn, Parsons; Doris Drummond and Jo Ann Michanek, St. Joseph, Mo.; Morce Murray, Kansas City, Kan; Jack Kennedy, Topeka; Harry Pittman, Independence; Neal Thompson, cottonwood; Harold Black, Manhattan; and Virginia Chamberlain, Kansas City, Mo.
Watkins Hall Entertains
Watkins hall entertained their mothers May 1 and 2 with Saturday night desert and coffee and a Sunday morning breakfast.
Guests present were Mesdames James E. Rummer, Henry Levi, Paul E. Stember, George Ross, Clara A. Childers, Andrew Moser, E. J. Neeley, Russell G. Davis, Fred Dickerson, Marie Robertson, Chris E. J. Mann, Carol G. Harris, Margaret Thomas, G. E. Van Wormer.
N. C. Calvert, J. V. Skonberg, A.
E. Prettyman, J. E. Mharg, J. E.
McKinney, E. R. Strowig, H. A.
Kelly, A. R. Jacobson, Arthur C.
Oatman, P. Hawkins, Albert Pinki-
n, J. W. Holm, Sharon French, W.
G. Stout, E. J. Bolas, Caroll V. Miller,
Millie Carter, Glen S. Shipp, R.
D. Calvin, Dan Rebbert, M. F.
Hyde.
Dale Edmonds, C. B. Gold, Charles Ruhlen, Lloyd B. Locke, Lester H. Hoffman, F. N. Peterson, Elmer Waterman, Litta Kent, Kent, Merle Hoover, Misses Peg Glover, Jayne Glover, Bessie Wilder, Margaret Habein, Martha Peterson, and Mrs Julia Willard.
- * *
Dinner Guests
Dinner Classes
Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Ruth and Mrs.
Kenneth Irving, Solomon; and Mr.
and Mrs. A. J. Talmadge, Kansas
City, Kan., were dinner guests at
Battenfeld hall May 2.
Former Student Visits
Mrs. Mel Hanna, a former student at the University, visited the design department Wednesday. She lives at Lyndon.
Pledge Class Smoker
Pledge Class Smoke The pledge class of Sigma Chi was recently guests of the Kappa Sigma pledge class at a smoker.
Kappa Sigma Officers
Harlan Ochs was elected grand master of Kappa Sigma Monday. Jack Steinle was chosen grand procurator, Jack Foster, grand master of ceremonies, and Richard Randall and Judson Greer, guards.
※ ※ ※
Pi KA Elects
Louis Silks, Kansas City, Mo. was elected president of Pi Kappa Alpha for the fall term of 1948.
Other officers are James Small, vice-president; Edward Eagle, secretary; Charles Lindberg, treasurer; and Robert Flatt, historian.
- * *
SK Parent's Day
Sigma Kappa held its Parent's Day dinner May 5 at the chapter house, Patricia Beuhler, president, made the speech of welcome.
Guests present were Mrs. Inez A. Dunn, Garden City; Mr. and Mrs. Bethel O. Young, Hardtner; Mr. and Mrs. Chester Hemphill, Lawrence; Mr. and Mrs. Dewey Allen, Sedan; Dr. and Mrs. E. N. Farnham, Abilene; Mr. and Mrs. Lon Mishler, Richmond; Mr. and Mrs. Don E. Brewer, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Carter, Mrs. Hattie Ramsey, Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Alton, Mr. and Mrs. E.T. Guenther, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Stuhley, Kansas City, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. James B. Smith, Topeka; Mr. and Mrs. George W. Ott, Madison; Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Sagnoen, Kansas City, Kan.
City, Kan.
Tech. Sgt. Fred Baldwin, Fort Leavenworth; Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Fawkes and Gary Sullins, Independence, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Miller' and Ellis Miller, Langdon; Mrs. G. K. Miller and Mr. C. R. Raymond of Greensburg; Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Wettig, Fredonia; Mr. and Mrs. Theo F. Buhler, Harrisonville, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Murphy, Salina; Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Hadley, Topeka and Mrs. Ruth C. Routon, Merriam
Pledge Class Entertains
The pledge class of Pi Kappa Alpha entertained pledges of Gamma Phi Beta at a dinner-dance from 6 to 8 pm. Wednesday. Chapers were Mrs. Clark Mandigo and Mrs. Ralph Baldwin.
Speeding was the direct cause of 9,400 deaths and 260,000 injuries in 1947 traffic in the United States. Heed speed limits!
the national examination for registration of occupational therapists will be given at the University June 25. Nancie Greenman, associate professor of design, said today.
National OT Exam Will Be June 25
The examination is given twice a year to students who have completed their academic work in occupational therapy. They must take the examination to become registered for positions. The fee is $10, Miss Greenman said. University students who are nearer another school where the examination is given can take it there.
The examination is prepared and distributed by the American Occupational Therapy association office in New York.
Weddings And Engagements
Hershberger-Enns
traditional chocolates were passed by Louise Warner, Georgia Haun, and Margaret Doll to announce the pinning of Wilma Hershberger to Myron "Sonny" Enns at the Delta Delta house April 30.
Miss Hershberger an orchid corsage, and her attendants wore a white gardenia and white carnations. Mrs. Charles Wentworth, housemother, received a white gardenia and pink carnations.
Miss Hershberger, a college freshman, is a daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. D. Hershberger, Newton. Mr. Enns, a College sophomore and a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity, is a son of Mr. and Mrs. R. B. Enns, Newton.
Frack-Campbell
the pinning of Imogene Frack, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Frack, Ingalls, to Jack A. Campbell, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Campbell, Lakin, was announced recently at the Theta Phi Alpha chapter house.
Mrs. W, L. Patterson made the announcement. She wore a corsage of gardenias. Miss Frack was attended by Geraldine Koelzer and Patricia Patten who received corsages of red roses. Miss Frack wore an orchid.
Mr. Campbell, a business junior is a member of Alpha KappaLambda fraternity. Miss Frack is an education senior.
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IT'S WEDNESDAY — MAY 12
COLLEGE DAZE
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Religious Council Drafts Constitution
- Specialty Dances
A constitution for the Student Religious council is now being drafted. The council has never had a constitution before.
A tentative constitution is being sent to the various churches this week for suggestions and approval. It will be discussed and final amendment will be made at the next meeting May 20.
Gardner-Coker
Alpha Chi Omega announces the engagement of Marjorie Gardner, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George D. Gardner, Arkansas City, to James Coker. The wedding will take place August 22 in Arkansas City.
Miss Gardner is a College senior. Mr.Coker is a business junior at the University of Oklahoma.
Crandall-Weaver
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Crandall,
Corning, announce the engagement of their daughter, Mildred, to Eldon R. Weaver, son of Rep. and Mrs.
Beniamin O. Weaver, Mullinville.
The announcement was made May 1 at the Jolliffe hall spring dinnerdance. They will be married this summer in the First Methodist church, Centralia.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FOUR
MONDAY, MAY 10, 1948
Potent Aerial Attack Highlights Grid Treat
Hopes for a winning 1948 football team on Mt. Oread looked bright as the Jayhawkers displayed a surprisingly potent passing attack in an intra-squad game at Haskell stadium Friday night. In the unveiling of this year's grid team, the favored Reds won from a scrappy White eleven, 19 to 14, before an estimated crowd of 4,500.
Although only one touchdown was scored through the air, the entire game was punctuated by successful passes. Thirteen times quarterbacks Bill Hogan of the Reds and Tom Scott of the Whites connected with receivers for healthy gains. Ken Morrow, 160-pound reserve holdover, also displayed passing talent by rifting several completed aerials for the Whites.
Long Runs A Highlight
Other highlights of the game included long touchdown sprints by sophomore Bud Lamping and Forrest Griffith, the all-round aggressive play of Charlie Moffet, and Arnold Stricker, and a fast-charging Red line. But perhaps the most pleasant surprise of the evening was the excellent pass receiving.
For the Reds, Del Norris, Cliff McDonald and Frank Pattee were outstanding in the receiving department, while Marvin Small and Moffett snagged most of the White aerials.
The game's first touchdown came early in the second quarter when Red fullback Griffitht plunged over from the one-foot line. The ball had been moved to the five when Hogan tossed an 18-yard pass to Cliff McDonald.
Smith Blocks A Punt
Lamping and Griffith each added a T.D. to the Red total in the same quarter on long runs. Lamping went for 36 yards on his scoring trip and Griffith 52 yards.
After the Reds recovered a Scott punt, blocked by Lynn Smith on the White 36-yard line, Lamping skirted left end, tape-walked the sidelines, then cut to the right and scored standing up. Griffith, aided by excellent down-field blocking, repeated Lampling's performance a few minutes later from his own 48.
In three attempts, Don Fambrough was able to send but one place-kick through the uprights in extra point trys for the Reds.
The first White score came just before the half when a Scott to Moffett aerial from the Red 22-yard line was good for six points. The ball had been moved down into Red territory on runs of 17 and 15 yards by Moffet, and an 18-yard Scott-to-Mendhann aerial.
Johnny Amberg plunged over the second White touchdown. The ball had been placed on the Red one-yard line when interference was ruled on a White pass to All Lowrie, Ken Sperry converted both White extra-point attempts with place-kicks.
In commenting on the game, coach Jules V. Sikes said he was well pleased with the passing of both teams but that he was dissatisfied with the blocking.
Breaking a six-game losing streak,
Russ Sehon's Kansas Jayhawkers beat the Missouri Tigers 4 to 2 in the second game of a two-day baseball series Saturday afternoon. The Tigers trounced the Jayhawkers 8 to 2 in the first game Friday.
KU Splits With Tigers
Righthander Dick Gilman allowed the Tiger hitters only five hits in the Jayhawkers victory. He was in hot water most of the time due to shaky control, but he received excellent support from his teammates as he hung up his first victory of the season.
Kansas scored its initial run in the first when Lou DeLuna rapped out a single, to second on a passed ball, took third on Ensminger's error, and came home on a double steal.
French Runs Wild
The Jayhawkers added two more in the fourth on consecutive hits by DeLuna, French and Gilkison. Bud French scored the final Kansas run in the seventh inning when he walked, stole second, third, and home. The speedy shortstop had little trouble pilfering second and third and waited just two pitches at the hot corner to catch his breath. McMillan A Master
Coach John Simmons' boys breezed along behind the four-hit pitching of Don McMillan in Friday's game to notch an easy win.
The big righthander mastered the Kansas hitters as he gained his second triumph over the Jayhawkers in three weeks. McMillan pitched a one-hitter against Kansas when they played at Missouri three weeks ago.
Although coach Sehon's diamond crew could not hit McMillan they looked like a different team defensively. In the second Bus Entsminger was safe on second when Hogan dropped his long fly ball. Wilbur Volz slapped a hit to short which French knocked down, holding Entsminger on second. Alberts, the next Tiger hitter, banged a sizzling line drive to Charley Medlock, who made a shoe string catch, then riffed the ball to French covering second, and French then completed a triple-killing by relaying to DeLuna at first to nip Volz.
Kansas scored its only runs in the fifth innning when pitcher Lou Hammer walked and Dick Bertuzzi homered over the left field fence, about 370 feet. Hammer, who started the game, was relieved in the first of the sixth by Ralph Freed.
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Double Win Over Buffs
Kansas scored Big Seven golf and tennis victories over Colorado university here Saturday. The netmen won 6 to 1 and the linksmen defeated the Buffaloes, $12 \frac{1}{2}$ to $5 \frac{1}{2}$.
Blond Courtland Smith turned in a neat two-over par 70 despite a high wind to pace the golfers to their third conference victory. Smith defeated Colorado's Fowler, 3-0. Heiderstadt, who was medalist for Colorado with a 75, defeated Fred Brinkman, 3-0. In best ball match Smith-Brinkman defeated Heiderstadt-Fowler, 3-0.
In the back foursome, Bob Meeker tied Smith. Colorado, $1\frac{1}{2} - 1\frac{1}{2}$, and Hal Delongy, Kansas defeated Sheridan, $2\frac{1}{2}$ to $\frac{1}{2}$. Meeker-Delongy defeated Smith-Sheridan, $2\frac{1}{2}$.
Dich Richards helped the netmen to their third conference victory, defeating Colorado's Speers, 6-3, 6-1. Glenn Tongier defeated Demuth, Colorado, 6-2, 6-3; Hervey Macferran, Kansas, defeated Schwartz, 8-6, 6-1; Charlie Carson, Kansas, defeated Lipson, 6-1, 6-2; and Dick Cray, Kansas, defeated Aceell, 4-6, 6-3, 7-5. Richards-Dave Cowley defeated Demuth-Lipson, 14-12, 6-4, 6-4; Speers-Aceell defeated Macferran-Cray, 3-6, 6-4, 6-3.
Alaska is one-fifth the size of the United States-590,848 square miles.
Santa Fe, N. M.—(UP)—Charles Gonzales went to police headquarters to report burglary of his car, but all the articles taken were waiting there for him. An officer had noticed a window in the car had been broken and took the articles to headquarters for safekeeping.
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MONDAY, MAY 10, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Two Remain Undefeated In Friday's Softball Play
Battenfeld hall and Phi Psi kept clean slates Friday by rolling up intramural softball victories. Sigma Chi and Doghouse also won contests.
Battenfeld hall increased its winning streak to four games, defeating Hauserr house 7 to 3 behind Harold Erlich's seven-hit pitching.
Erlich blanked the losers until the fifth inning when Bob Dale walked.
stole second, and scored on Ray Trennepohl's double. Hauserr house rallied to shove in two more runs in the seventh.
Battenfeld hit pay dirt in the initial stanza as Erlich's walk, a double by John Dickerson, a stolen base, and a fielder's choice accounted for two runs.
The victors added two in the third on a double, and a single combined with a pair of walks. They put the game on ice with two more runs in the fourth. John Wilcox doubled in the sixth and came in on Dickerson's single to account for the final Battenfeld tally.
Hauser house 000 010 2-3 7 0
Battenfeld 202 201 x 7 8 1
A four-run uprising in the last half of the fifth inning enabled the PIR Rays to up an 8 to 4 win over Kappa Alpha. Was it was Phi PSi's third straight victory.
The losers romped off to a 3 to 0 lead in the first innning but the Phi Psi's scored once in the second and added two more tallies in the third to knot the count. The Kappa Alpha Phi's took a 4 to 3 lead in the top of the fifth but the Phi Psi's clinched the game with the four-run explosion.
Bill Cavanaugh slammed a home run, a triple, and a single in four trips to the plate of pace the winners. Bob Graham, who clouted a homer and a single in three times at bat, also starred for the Phi Psi's Lloyd Kurford banged out a round tripper and a single to lead the stickwork for the losers.
KAP 300 010 0-4 1-4 1
Phi Psi 012 041 x - 9 9 0
Doghouse spoiled Theta Tau's spotless record by dumping the engineers 14 to 8 in a free-scoring, free-hitting contest.
The lead see-sawed through the first five innings but the Doghouse team put the game on ice in the bottom of the sixth with a seven-run assault. The victors combined six hits with four walks to account for the heavy scoring.
Ken Beck, George Holden, and Johnny Couch were big guns in the Doghouse batting attack. Beck had a perfect day at bat with four for four. Holden and Couch rapped out three hits each.
Heavy scoring in late innings provided Sigma Chi with an 11 to 6 verdict over Triangle. The Sig's scored 10 runs after the third frame.
Theta Tau 105 101 0—8 10 3
Doghouse 220 127 x—14 19 0
Triangle held the lead for the first three frames but fell as Sigma Chi shoved in five runs in the fourth, four in the fifth, and one more in the sixth. Triangle committee five misplays to aid the winning cause.
Bob Burwell and Charles Owsley Triangle, and Bob Hagg, Sigma Chi tied for hitting honors, each collecting two hits in three appearances. Lee Vogel, Sigma Chi, blasted a triple and Chuck Shockey, Sigma Chi, and Bob Godfrey, Triangle, hit doubles.
Today's Pitchers
American League
Triangle 202 002 0—6 7 5
Sigma Chi 010 541 1—11 7 2
Chicago (Wight 1-1) at New York (Reynolds 4-0)
Cleveland (Gettel 0-0) at Boston (Ferris 1-5)
St. Louis (Zoldak 0-1) at Washington (Wynn 2-2)-night (Only games scheduled)
New York (Jones 2-1) at Chicago (Chambers L-1)
Brooklyn (Palica 2-0) at-Pittsburgh
(Riddle 2-0)-night
Boston (Sain 1-2) at St. Louis
(Hearn 1-1)-night
(scheduled)
No Serious Injury For Phil Infielder
He suffered a painful concussion above the right eye.
Heart 1-1-1-might
(Only games scheduled)
St. Louis, Mo, May 10—UP)—Bert Haas, Philadelphia Phillies third baseman injured by a batted ball he Saturday night, expected to be released from a hospital today.
Students To Rebuild Manila U New York—(UP)—Students of New York university College of Arts and sciences have "adopted" the devastated University of the Philippines at Manila. They will conduct a fund raising campaign and collect books for the Philippine institution.
Astonishing A's Extend Streak To Eight Straight
Connie Mack, astonishing 85-year old Methuselah of baseball, and his equally astonishing grab-bag ball club were the talk of the baseball world today after an eventful weekend of diamond activity found the amazing A's winning two more to hang to the American league lead in games won and lost. Cleveland, also a double-winner yesterday, has the lead on percentage points.
The A's, now possessing the longest victory string of the campaign, trimmed the Tigers, 10 to 5 and 5 to 3, yesterday to make it eight in a row. Connie's kid pitchers and his castoff lineup shone brilliantly all the way. In the opener six runs in the first inning made it easy for Joe Coleman to notch his second victory. In the second game, Rookie Lou Brissise won number three, but it took a four-run rally in the eighth to put it away for him. Eddie Joost, sparkplug of the streak, hit safely in both games to make it 15 in a row. Keltrner Poles 3
Ken Keltner of the Indians, hit three round trippers in a double victory over the Red Sox at Boston. 4 to 1 in 10 innings and 9 to 5, to give him nine for the season and the major league leadership. He got only 11 all last year and, with a puny .257 average, had been considered strictly a liability in Cleveland's 1948 plans. His second homer in the opener touched off a three-run rally in the 10th that gave Bob Feller victory over Joe Dobson. It was Feller's third win. Ted Williams, runner-up in the homer derby, got one round tripper in each game.
Russ Meyer of the Cubs held the jolting Giants to three safeties in a duel with Dave Koslo that was scoreless until a pair of unearned runs in the eighth gave Chicago a 2 to 0 decision. It was Meyer's second great showing, his first being a one-hitter over the Cards.
Cocky Frank Shea seemed well on his way to a no-hitter against the Chicago White Sox at Yankee Stadium when Bob Kennedy broke it up with a single in the seventh. Shea went on to win, 8 to 0, on five hits.
Smith Paces Theta To Win
Locksley added another win by downing Pi Beta Phi 16 to 6. Vander Smissen, on the mound for Locksley, allowed 11 hits but was never in trouble as she won her second game in a row. Hoffman, Locksley first baseman, and van der Smissen each scored three runs to match the total Pi Phi effort. Keplinger, Baker, and Chubb, cracked out two hits each for the Pi Phi's.
More than 70 per cent of 1947 automobile accidents occurred on dry pavement. Drive carefully—always!
By downing Delta Gamma 11 to 1, Corbin remained undefeated. Shepard, Corbin pitcher, held the Delta Gamma's to nine hits and struck out 11. Atkinson, Delta Gamma hurler, allowed only 11 hits but she received rather spotty support in the field.
Three home runs by Marilyn Smith, freshman catcher, gave Kappa Alpha Theta the needed power to defeat Kappa Kappa Gamma 15 to 10 last week. Corbin and Locksley also posted wins to loom as leading contenders for the women's softball crown.
Although the Kappa's managed to get 15 hits off McCune, Theta pitcher, they couldn't offset the extra-base power of the Theta's. The Theta's took a 4- to 3 lead in the first and gradually built up their margin. Francisco and Ross, Theta left fielder and first baseman, contributed three hits each.
The Senators topped the Browns at Washington, 3 to 1, getting all of their runs off Rookie Ned Garver in the first inning on a two-run single by Johnny Sullivan and a steal of home in a double theft by Mickey Vernon. Walt Masterson, with relief help, scored his second victory.
Cards Into First
The Cardinals took over first place in the National, following Brechene's great Saturday night job, with a 6 to 4 victory over the Braves at St. Louis in which they batted out Brave ace Warren Spahn.
Trailing 3 to 0 on home runs by Jeff Heath and Jim Russell, the Cards attacked Spahn for all of their runs in the sixth and seventh. Enos Slaughter drove in three with a double and single to lead the 10-hit drive. Murry Dickson was the winner to chalk up his second victory.
The Phils got excellent southpaw pitching and terrific hitting to beat 14 to 2 and 8 to 0, at Cincinnati, pushing the losers into last place.
Ralph Kiner's two homers and a good relief job by pitcher Rip Sewell gave the Pirates a 10 to 8 triumph over the Dodgers after Brooklyn won the opener, 14 to 2, at Pittsburgh.
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Tickets on sale in Frank Strong Rotunda and Union Bldg.
PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 10, 1948
The Editorial Page
UWF Needs Your Support
The United World Federalist organization is taking hold here at the University. After only two meetings, the group appointed committees to further its work on the campus and is going ahead under full steam.
The turnout for the first meeting far surpassed all expectations. The enthusiasm and interest which burst forth from that meeting are an indi-
Every student should take part in this organization which has three main points;
1. Making use of the amendment processes of the United Nations to transform it into a world federal government.
2. Taking part in world constituent assemblies, whether of private individuals, parliamentary or other groups seeking to produce draft constitution for consideration and adoption by the United Nations or by national governments in accordance with their respective constitutional processes.
3. Pursuing any other reasonable and lawful means to achieve world federation and world peace.
The group is only a small part of a large national movement but it will nevertheless be instrumental in turning the minds of those it reaches against the idea of war as a means of settlement.
Be a part of a worthwhile organization and pledge your support to the cause of the United World Federalists. As the K.U. group grows, so will the demand for peace.
With spring in full swing, it might be well to make friends with your neighbor by returning his lawnmower which has been standing in your garage all winter.
Taft may be a good party man, but Stassen's the one who's having the picnic.
If John L. Lewis and his miners keep running afoul of the government, they're going to have to dig deep.
A Harvard professor says the human family will eventually revert to the ape. At least that should solve the housing shortage.
University
Daily Hansan
Student Newspaper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assm. Na-
sion Assn., and the Associated Collegiate
Press, Represented by the National Ad-
mission Service, 420 Madison Ave.
New York, NY
Editor-in-Chief... David H. Clymer
Managing Editor... Cooper Rollow
Admin. Editor... Clarence Thomas
Asst. Admin. Editor... Gene Viorel
City Editor... John Stauffer
Ast. City Editor... James Beatty
Administrator... Richard Rush
Telegraph Editor... James Robinson
Ast. Tel. Editor... Hal Nelson
Ast. Tel. Editor... Bill Mayer
Ast. Tel. Editor... Lek Zeb
Sports Editor... James Jones
Women's Sports Ed... Anna Mary Murphy
Feature Editor... Robert James
Society Editor... James Wilson
Society Editor... Patricia Bentley
Business Manager...Bill Alderson
Adv. Manager...Paul Warren
Assist. Mgr.Don Walden
Asst. Clerk, Mgr...Bil Binter
Class. Adv. Mgr...Ruth Clayton
Assist. Class. Mgr.Elea McGrath
Asst. Class. Adv. Mgr.Carel Buhler
Nat. Adv. Mgr...Solekoc Hollow
Assist. Mgr.Eleanor Eleanor
Promotion Mgr...Roger James
Assist. Promotion Mgr.Don Tennant
The Kansas Press Association
19 MEMBER
48
National Editorial Association
A FREE PRESS—YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW
Dear Editor
Dear Editor:
List Is Growing
Please add the following names to the letter which appeared under the title "Resolved," in the April 21 edition of the Daily Kansan:
Pat Waits
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Shirley Foster
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Norma Kesterson
Jose Portguez
Marybeth Rea
John Harbaugh
Jim Mundell
Margaret Gordon
Joyce Harkleroad
Henry Pinault
Diane Johnson
H. H. Hobrock
W. G. Rose
Chester Spencer
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Sanford, North Carolina—(UP)—Marvin Johnson sat around and looked at his dog today, wondering just what the beast was thinking about. He said it was an awfully smart dog.
Mr. Johnson told how when the deadline for getting dogs vaccinated rolled around he asked his wife—in the dog's presence—to remind him to have the pup vaccinated. But both of them forgot about it.
Later the Johnson's telephone rang and the veterinarian said the dog was waiting to go home and had been vaccinated.
"No one," said the doctor, "He just dropped by."
"Who brought him?" Mr. Johnson asked, somewhat startled.
Fred G. Gartung, civil engineering junior, Thursday was elected president of Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineering fraternity.
Other officers elected are John H Robinson, vice president; David S Jones, recording secretary; John M Suptic, corresponding secretary; Howard H. Hobrock, treasurer; and Paul H. Jackson, cataloger.
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MONDAY, MAY 10, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
For Sale
RADIO-PHONOGRAPH, latest model
model automatic record-changer, IP 128
1046.395.237.301
RECORD PLAYER; Two-burner hot plate; and fencing mask and foil. Cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap, cheap. Phil Billou, 1324 Louisiana, phone 3009.
MkAsPRING roll-away twin-
bed bed, twin-
new Haynes mattress. C3478RJ.
1234567890.
FORD-1946 Tutor, fully equipped. Low mowing. 28C, Sunnyside, 1449 L2. Y
GOOD SUN RAY Enlarger with Ilex
enastigmat F 6.3 lens also Argus A-2
35 mm camera. Both good condition. Ph
966. Bill McCarter. 12
TUXEDO AND white dinner jacket
exception condition. See
1423 New York.
ONE WHEEL trailer, 1947 Traillaw. Alh
one steel, perfect condition. Full swivel
steel tires. Perfect for complete with hitches, used one week.
Ideal for moving, camping, etc. Tracks
perfectly any speed. Sell cheap or make
No. 1 Lane H, Sunflower, after
ROLLEFLEXI 127 mm. in excellent condition, 2.8 Zeiss Tessar lens. Also 6-M light meter. Call or write Geordano, 132 Lane C, Sunflower.
1940 MODEL Pontiac coupe, $20.00.
1940 and Arkansas, phone 1773M, $10.00.
19th and Arkansas, phone 1772M. $10
3 ROOFS of furniture, excellent condition and misc. items for sale at Apt. 3a. Savings from 40% to 50%. Accept all Saturday, Sunday after 10:30 a.m.
1928 MASTER Buck. Excellent motor.
Lots of miles still in her. Name, "Beu-
lah." 129 W. South Park. Phone 1171-R.
10
TWO USED executive type swivel chairs for sale - Student Union Book Store, 10 AN IDEAL "Mother's Day" gift-parker "12L Student, Student跃 Book Store, 10
ROOMS for rent during the summer. Will rent single or double to student. Close to campus. 1012 Alabama St. 10
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. Phone 499
Lost
THURSDAY: Cuff link with gold with brown set. Reward. Phone Mary Ellen Barker.
BROWN BILLFOLD, either Monday night or Tuesday morning. Keep money and return billfold to Dorothy Quirk, phone 781, 144 La. II
WILL THE man who accidentally picked up my Retailing Notebook in the men's room was on Saturday, May 1, please call me at 2353. I need it immediately. Berry Petošhi.
$5.00 REWARD for return of raincoat possibly lost in Engineering Laboratories. Size 36. cravente gabardine, natural. Call 1135. 10
RAINCOAT MIXUP: Will person who exchanged my black. Navy enlisted man's type raincoat, size 40 with summer cover, color blue with same type, but size 38, at main Union cafeteria, please call Hi Kraft, 141937 . . . 10 GLASSES IN a black case somewhere between Fraser and Corbin hill. Finder please call Margaret Robinson, 860. 10
EXPERIENCED stenographer wants permanent position. I have passed the State Civil Service examination for stenographer and am a local resident. Phone, morning or evening, 1159W. *13. Woman in uniform on June 3. Can Western Union account of.*
Wanted
WANT RIDE to California on June 3. Call Warren Smith, 2831 W1 after 11:00.
For Rent
WILL HAVE two double rooms for rent; close to the campus, for the summer term. See or call after 6 p.m. 1725 Indiana Street. Phone 26311. 12
PIANO—NEW and used. Piano-tuning and repairing. Jerope Jomo Company. Phone 815. Phone 815.
APARTMENT for summer months. Two beds, half bath. Call 26311 or see at 912 Alabama after 5:00. Very reasonable rent. 10
Business Service
LET ME TYPE your themes, reports, and thesis. Accurate, and reasonable work. Lawrence Business College, 64 Mulberry, phone 894. Ask for Charles Longenecker.
TENNIS RACKET restreining and repair—silk, nylon, ngut. $3 to $10.00. Leave rackets at Student Union Book Gallery or Richards or Hal Miler, Oread Hall, 3083.
TYPING: Reasonable rate. Phone 2520J. 1930 Kentucky. 13
TYPING—thesis and term papers. Quick, cheap, and accurate. Phone 2369J. -1
TYPING RACKET restreining or repaired. Nylon, $3.50; gutt. $4 to $10.00. E. J. Wellhausen, Jr., 211 E. 10th Tel. 2446J. 13
TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Telephone 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. 20
TYPING done: Term papers, reports, specimen and accurate work at reasonable prices. Ca. 1969-W. Appointment 2, 1101 Tennessee.
TAILOR-MADE suits. $6.50 to $10.00. Expert alteration and tailoring. George Eberth & Son, Tailor Shop, 311% Mass. rites
NEW vacuum cleaners for rent. Attorneys included, $1.50 per day. Al Brooks
New vacuum cleaners for rent. Attachments included $1.50 per day. Al Brooks Sweeper Co., 8311% Mass. Ph. 1104 between 9 and 12 a.m.
Miscellaneous
A NEW TIE every month. Be the center of attention in your group. Only $1.19 a student. Join A-Month Club, Box 397, 377 and Spruce Sts. Philadelphia 4, Penn, and receive selection.
Will Fletcher also exchange Parker's "51 pen Monday please call for their Mine was a keepsake. Acme Bachelor laundry & Dry Cleaners.
11
Davis Saturday night at Odd Fellows hall. Informal. Joe Langwert's rites orchestra.
Baptist Youth Picnic
The Baptist Youth fellowship, Roger Williams foundation, and the College Sunday School class held their annual picnic at Lone Star lake Sunday.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Morgan-Mack 609 Mass. Phone 277 Service-FORD-Sales
YOUR CAR KNOWS THAT EVERY 5000 MILES IT NEEDS THE FOLLOWING SERVICE!
- Pack Wheel Bearings
- Inspect, Brake Linings
- Fill and Adjust Shocks
- Pack Generator - Inspect Armature
- Replace Generator Brushes
- Lubricate Speedometer Cable
This service should be given every car each 5,000 miles for maximum safety and economy.
only $8.00
COME IN TODAY
Attend the Topeka Drive-in Theater 25th and California First Show . . . . 8 p.m.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
THE EYE IS A GLASS
WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES Large Selection of Distinctive Frames Lawrence Optical Co.
"THERE'S NO FINER CIGARETTE THAN CHESTERFIELD. I KNOW, IT'S MY BRAND."
Rita Hayworth
AS
"THE LADY FROM SHANGHAI"
A COLUMBIA PRODUCTION
"THERE'S
Rita Hayworth
AS
"THE LADY
FROM SHANGHAI"
A COLUMBIA PRODUCTION
Chesterfield
CIGARETTES
WHY... I smoke Chesterfield
( FROM A SERIES OF STATEMENTS BY PROMINENT TOBACCO FARMERS )
FROM A SERIES OF STATEMENTS BY PROMINENT TOBACCO FARMERS I have done business with Liggett & Myers for over 40 years. They buy the best crops in the house at the auctions. I am exclusively a Chesterfield smoker. I think they are the best cigarette made.
Allin M.Dowell
TORRAGEO FARMER, INC.
TOBACCO FARMER, NICHOLASVILLE, KY.
WILLIAM M. TURNER
ALWAYS BUY
HESTERFIELD
ALWAYS MIDDER BETTER TASTING COOLER SMOKING
Copyright 1948, LIGGETT & MYERS TOBACCO CO.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 10, 1948
PAGE EIGHT
Faculty Salaries Behind Those Of Other Schools
Faculty salaries at the University are better than they have been but "lag behind those of other schools in whose educational circles we feel that we belong." University chapter of the American Association of University Professors reported at its dinner Saturday in the Kansas room of the Union. Approximately 75 faculty members attended.
E. O. Stene, associate professor of political science and president of the chapter, read a preliminary report of the committee on retirement policies The report was prepared by Spencer M. Smith, assistant professor of economics.
The report was prepared by Ross M. Robertson, instructor in economics, and read by L. J. Pritchard, associate professor of finance.
However, the report added that of the 12 universities compared, Kansas has the lowest minimum salaries for professors, associate professors, and instructors. The report was based on 1948 salaries, and in addition to Kansas included the universities of Georgia, Oklahoma, Colorado, Iowa, Missouri, Texas, Ohio State, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Michigan, and Illinois.
J. O. Maloney, professor of chemical engineering, and Tom Page, instructor in political science, reported on the national A.A.U.P. convention held recently in St. Louis. E. E Bayles, professor of education, reported on the A.A.U.P. state central committee, which is now gathering information on why faculty members leave Kansas colleges to go elsewhere.
At Kansas the minimum for professors is about $3,600, with the maximum about $6,200 and the median about $4,800. Illinois has the highest minimum with $6,000, and the highest maximum with about $13,500. The lowest maximum is Georgia's $6,000.
The minimum for associate professors at Kansas is about $3,000, with about $4,600 as the maximum and $4,000 as the median. Illinois has a $5,000 minimum and an $11,000 maximum. Georgia has the lowest maximum, with $4,500.
The median is the half-way mark in a series. Thus half of the salaries will be above that mark and half below.
The Kansas minimum for assistant professors is about $2,300, with about $4,200 as the top, and $3,600 as the median. The Illinois bottom is $4,000 and the high $6,800. Georgia and Missouri have the lowest minimums with $2,500. Georgia also has the lowest maximum with $4,000.
Kansas minimum for instructors is $1,800, which ties with Iowa for low in the group. The Kansas maximum is about $3,200, with about $2,600 as the median. Again Illinois has both the highest minimum with $3,900, and the highest maximum with $5,500. Colorado has about $2,.900 for the lowest maximum, and Missouri has about $2,400 for the lowest median.
The report of the committee on retirement policies contained the April 23 ruling of the board of regents. Briefly, the ruling is that teachers can retire at 70 on one-half of the average of their pay between the ages of 60 and 65, but not to exceed $2,000 a year. Administrators are to be retired at 65 on the same pay basis.
Both must have served at least 25 years for full retirement benefits. Proportional retirement pay is granted for less than 25 years of service, but a minimum of 10 years must have been served.
The retirement pay of teachers who retire before July 5, 1953, will be based on the average of their pay during the ages of 65 to 70, provided that the retirement pay is not more than $2,000 a year.
Any staff member who cannot perform his duties because of physical or mental disability can be retired on the same basis as a staff member who has reached the age of 70.
KU Names Harp To Cage Staff
For the first time since 1935 the University will have a full-time assistant basketball coach.
Dick Harp, former K.U. basketball player and new varsity coach at William Jewell college, Liberty, Mo., has been appointed assistant varsity and freshman basketball Frosty Cox, who resigned to coach coach. The last assistant coach was at Colorado.
Harp, a regular on the 1938, '39,
and '40 teams and co-captain in
1940, will report for duty July 1.
He was graduated from the University in 1941.
Pep Clubs Hold 12th Convention
Marjorie McCullough, publicity chairman for the Jay Janes, was elected vice-president of Phi Sigma Chi, university women's pep organization, at its 12th national convention held Saturday in the Union.
Other officers were elected from other ppclubs which are members of Phi Sigma Chi. These are the Tassels of Nebraska, the Purple Pepsters of Kansas State, the Twisters of Iowa State, the Ichadettes of Washburn university, the Feathers of Omaha university, and the Wheaties of Wichita university.
The convention opened with a breakfast at which Marion Minor, college senior and past president of both Jay James and Phi Sigma Chi, presided.
Conboy And Miller To Run Jayhawker
William A. Conboy and Dean M.
Miller, College juniors, were appointed editor and business manager of the 1948-49 Jayhawk.
They were chosen by the Jayhawker board of faculty members and students.
Conboy has been a reporter and sports editor on the University Daily Kansan, and has been on the Jayhawkter staff. He is also co-editor of the Quill club magazine.
Miller has had two years experience with the business management of the Jayhawker.
6 Million Vote In South Korea; Red Block Fails
Seoul, Korea. May 10—(UP)—More than six million South Koreans voted today in the first general election in Korea's 4,000-year history, despite a Communist campaign of terror.
At least 100 persons were killed, 62 were wounded, and 233 were arrested over the week end as Communists sought to keep South Koreans from the polls in the United Nations-supervised elections.
Two hours after the polls closed election officials estimated that 92 per cent of registered voters had cast ballots in Seoul, and probably 80 per cent or more in other areas of the United States-occupied zone. About eight million had registered, no elections in the
There were no elections in the Soviet-occupied northern half of the nation.
American troops merely observed the elections. They took no hand in keeping order. But Korean police swarmed against the Communists, and smashed their planned reign of terror.
In Seoul, police surrounded a secret meeting of 200 Communists and arrested 54 of them, scattering others. There were Communist assinations, attacks on polling places, but no organized violence on a large scale.
Most Koreans took the election day in holiday spirit. Dressed in their best clothing, they were waiting in hundreds at the polls when voting began. In Seoul, 80 per cent voted before noon.
The monthly dinner of Summerfield scholars will be held at 6 p.m. May 12 in the Kansas room of the Union. It was originally set for May 13.
The election is for candidates to a 200-man national assembly designed to draw up a constitution and form a government. Only South Koreans are voting despite United Nations instructions to hold elections throughout the country. The Russians forbid an election in their zone in North Korea.
Scholars' Dinner To Be On May 12
Little Man On Campus
Jerald Hamilton, fine arts senior, and Richard Potter, engineering senior, will be the after-dinner speakers.
By Bibler
AFRICA
DON'T OPEN!
TO DARKNESS
AFRICA!
CATCH!
RETURN VOTING
NOT QUADRATIC!
"Professor Snarf!-I think it's for you."
Apply Now For Union Committees
Applications for membership to Union Activities committees for next year will be accepted in the Union Activities office tomorrow through Thursday.
Chairmen of the committees have been selected and students who apply now will form the foundation for next year's organization.
The committees are sports and organization, social, entertainment, public liaison, coffee and forums, K-Union, secretarial, decorations, special projects, publicity, announcements, and art.
Application cards are available in the Union Activities office.
Men's Counselors To Be Chosen
One hundred and fifty men students will be chosen to counsel 1500 new men students next fall, L. C. Woodruff, dean of men, announced today.
The counselors will be chosen from recommendation lists of the deans of each school, the Owl society, and men from organized houses, Otis Hill, spokesman, said.
Aimless all new students will be fresh out of high school and won't be able to live in organized houses." Hill said. "It is important therefore, that men's counseling be more effective than ever."
Each counselor will write to 10 boys this summer to facilitate counseling in the fall, Hill said.
Members of the counseling committee are Dean Woodruff, Ned Linegar, Y.M.C.A. secretary; Willis Tompkins, assistant dean of men; Bob Chesky, president of the Y.M.C.A.; Bruce Bathurst, men's counselor for last year; and Hill, former Union president.
Any male student interested in being a counselor should apply at the Y.M.C.A. office.
2 Students Enter Engineer's Contest
Two University engineering students will compete for over $100 in prizes at the annual conference of student branches of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers in Tulsa, Okla. Friday and Saturday Charles H. Green will read a paper on stresses in steam piping, and James T. McKinney will read one on heat purposes. Both are engineering seniors.
Harry L. Daasch, professor of mechanical engineering, said the students' papers were selected in an elimination contest held at the University. Professor Daasch, mechanical engineering instructors, and other mechanical engineering students will also attend the conference.
Students from Kansas State college, the Universities of Oklahoma, Nebraska, and Arkansas, and Oklahoma A. and M. will also enter the contest.
Chancellor Malott To Give Two Addresses This Week
Chanceflor Deane W. Malott will speak Wednesday at the annual honors convocation at Warensburg State Teachers college. His topic will be "The Place of Scholars in the Turbulent World."
Thursday he will speak at Commencement exercises at the Labett County Community High school at Altamont. His topic there will be "A Compass in the Storm."
Faculty Will Have Picnic
The faculty engineering wives will entertain their husbands and families at a picnic at 5:45 p.m. Thursday at Potter lake. If it rains they will meet in Robinson gymnasium.
Jewett Touring For Survey
Dr. J. M. Jewett of the state Geological Survey will be in Pittsburgh his week at the Southeastern offices of the survey. He will also attend a meeting of the Kansas-Oklahoma Water Flood association in Independence, Kan., Wednesday.
44 Journalists Honored For Kansan Work
"Newspapers in the future will be judged not by their objectivity but by their good morals and integrity." Gideon D. Seymour, executive editor of the Minneapolis Star and Tribune, told journalism students and faculty members at the annual Kansan board dinner Friday.
Forty-four students in the William Allen White School of Journalism received recognition awards at the dinner.
"Objectivity is colorless," Mr. Seymour said. "No newspaperman can write a story or place it in a certain position in the paper without taking a point of view. Newspapermen must develop a sound basis for interpreting the news."
This basis must be specialization in reporting, Mr. Seymour said. The reporter of today not only has to have a well-rounded education, but should be a specialist in some field such as science, labor, city or state government, economics, or politics.
Mr. Seymour used the phrase "Kilroy Was Here" as a symbol of the intellectual curiosity of Ameri cans all over the world. Since newspapermen will be concerned with the affairs of that world, they must have the moral integrity to do interpretative reporting.
William T. Smith, Jr., Dighton, received the citation of achievement from Sigma Delta Chi, national journalism fraternity, as the outstanding senior man in the Journalism school.
The Henry Schott memorial prize was given to Fred Kiewit. College junior. The award is for the junior man who shows the most promise of success in journalism. The cash prize is the income from a fund of $2,275 established in memory of the late Henry Schott of the Kansas City Star staff.
Clarke M. Thomas was chosen by the faculty as the outstanding senior man and Marian Minor as the outstanding senior woman in the news-editorial sequence.
William L. Brown and Joan Schindling were chosen as the outstanding senior man and woman in advertising.
Seven students in the upper 10 per cent of the senior class received the scholarship awards of Sigma Delta Chi. They are Thomas, Smith, Allan W. Cromley, Anne Scott, Alverta Niedens, Cleo Norris, and Robert C. Snyder.
The following are the awards for outstanding work on the University Daily Kansan:
Best news story: first, John Wheeler; second, Martha Jewett; third, Robert E. Dellinger; honorable mention, Charles Roter, Fred Brooks, James L. Robinson, Mildred Gulnik, Cooper Rollow, James H. Raglin, Darrell Havener, Lois Lauer.
Best feature story: first, Fred Brooks; second, Wendell Bryant; third, Caspar Brochmann; honorable mention, Don Vaughan, Clarke Thomas, Leonard Snyder, Rosemary Rospaw, Barbara Felt, Ruth Keller.
Best and most consistent editing and news heads: first, Wallace W. Abbey; second, Lois Lauer, third, James L. Robinson; honorable mention, Alan J. Stewart, Robert E. Dellinger, Joseph Cannon, Cooper Rollow.
Best editorial: first, Allan W,
34-3-Journalists 789 9 33 93 9339
Cromley; second, Clarke Thomas;
third, William von Mauer; honor-
able mention, Patricia James, Marian
Minor, Harold Nelson, William Barger.
Best. single headline: first, Donald Croil; second, the tie between William Mayer and James L. Robinson; third, Lois Lauer.
Best advertising campaigns; first,
William Dill; second, Gene Mc-
Laughlin; third, John Ford; honor-able mention, Gregg Stock, Paul
Sokoloff, Frank Rotman.
Best retail advertisement: first,
Carlos Melton; second, Glenn
Amend; third, William L. Brown;
honorable mention, Anna Hemp-
hill, Ladeen Steinkirchner, Anne
Scott.
University Daily Kansan 45th Year No.146 Tuesday, May 11, 1948 STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Lawrence, Kansas
Russia Seems Eager To Discuss Peace US Denies Proposing Any Meetings But Is Ready To Settle Differences
London, May 11—(UP)—Russia took swift advantage today of what Moscow labelled a United States proposal to settle by diplomatic discussion all the differences involved in the mounting cold war between the East and the West.
Radio Moscow reported that U. called on Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov May 4 and proposed discussions to compose differences between their two countries.
Meanwhile in Washington, the United States proclaimed its "readiness and eagerness" to settle its differences with Russia. but high diplomatic officials denied that the U.S. had formally proposed two-power talks for that purpose at the present time.
Officials were frankly puzzled by Russian Foreign Minister Molotov's interpretation of a statement made to him May 4 by U.S. Ambassador W. Bedell Smith in Moscow.
Moscow radio, in broadcasting Mr Smith's statement Monday night, quoted Mr. Molotov as saying in reply:
"The Soviet Union agrees with United States wishes to improve relations and the proposal to begin discussions."
The state department hastily summoned reporters to an after-midnight news conference to distribute texts of Mr. Smith's "oral statement."
While the statement said that the "door is always wide open for full discussion and the composing of our differences," it made it plain that a change in Russian policy must come before such discussions could hope to get anywhere.
It said the U.S. policies to which Russia most objects were necessary to defend "other countries" against attempts by Communist minorities to "seize power and establish regimes subservient to foreign interests."
"Should these attempts cease," it said, "the necessity for some of the manifestations of U.S. foreign policy which are apparently unwelcome in Moscow, would cease with them."
Ambassador Smith told Molotov that Russia has the power "to alleviate many of the situations which today weigh so heavily on all international life."
At Lake Success, N.Y., the alleged decision by Russia and the United States to discuss the issues dividing them was regarded by United Nations diplomats as the first solid peaceful gesture between Washington and Moscow since the U.N. organization became an East-West bat tieground two and a half years ago
The unexpected turn in the direction of negotiation between the two great powers, conceivably could blossom into a much-needed boost for U.N. prestige.
Average reaction to the news from Moscow was that it would improve international relations if both powers follow through with some real efforts to settle the major disagreements.
Some U.N. delegates felt that negotiations might at least bring an end to the warlike talk between the two nations.
Lawrence Drive Dates Extended
The Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce has extended the final date of its memorial drive campaign drive to June 1, John Chaney, president, said today. Of the $15,000 goal $11,000 has been raised. Regular campaigning will continue until the goal is reached, Mr. Chaney said.
S. Ambassador Walter Bedell Smith
Joins NISA Executive Board
Margaret van der Smissen, former LSA. president, was elected a member of the executive council of the National Independent Students association at a national convention in Iowa State university May 8.
Miss van der Smissen received th highest number of votes out of 15 nominations, although she did not attend the convention, Alice M. Wismer, L.S.A. president, said. The University was represented by 12 delegates.
Miss Wisner lead a discussion on "Competition and Co-operation with Fraternities and Sororities." She found that the Independent associations in most schools represented took a "more active part in campus politics" than the University chapter.
The I.S.A., in cooperation with the newly-created Independent's week, will give a party and dance between Sept. 27 and Oct. 2 next semester. Official Independent's day is Aug. 2.
Included in the new resolutions made by the 43-university convention was a statement limiting LS.A. members to students who are members of any fraternity or sorority. According to Miss Wismer, the University association formerly has accepted any student not living in an organized house.
In addition to being "impressed with the convention," the delegates have decided to accept some of the new ideas brought out there. Two more faculty members will be added to the I.S.A. advisory board, including George B. Smith, dean of the School of Education.
the resignation of Joseph Mellon as editor of the Kan-Do was accepted. The final Kan-Do for th spring semester will be published in two weeks.
Preliminaries scheduled for today have been cancelled, but all entries for the finals will be accepted by Orvill Roberts, speech instructor, and William Conboy.
The contest will be held at 7:30 p. m. Thursday in Green hall. Gold cups will be awarded first place winners in both men's and women's divisions.
Deadline for organized houses to enter the final intramural speech contest for after-dinner speakers as 5 p.m. tomorrow.
Speech Deadline Is Wednesday
Two undergraduate entrants will be accepted from each house. Speeches must be from four to six minutes long.
No students are eligible who are members of the Forensic league. Delta Sigma Rho, or the University debate team.
WEATHER
Kansas—Cloudy and cool today. Partly cloudy, continued cool tonight. Tomorrow generally fair. Warmer in afternoon.
Students Are Honored At Convocation
Chancellor Deane W. Malott announced the names of the upper 10 per cent of the senior classes of the eight schools in the University, at the honors convocation this morning. They are:
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences,
Loren G. Agee, Robert L. Bailey, Irwin L.
Burnett, Robert L. Brown, James W.
Bibb, Frances E. Brooks,
George H. Caldwell, Robert W. Campbell,
Frances Chubb, Clifford D. Clark, William
Camerer, Carl J. Cram, Jr., Virginia C.
Dearle, Marlie Marcile Davis, Nancy
Dilore, Marlie Elizabeth Dinsmorr, Elizabeth
Evans, Perguson, Patricia
Garrett, Richard J. Goertz, Arnold H. Greenhouse.
Shirley Ann Griggsy, Margaret Alberta Gruenthal, LaVeria Harris, Richard Scott Hawkinson, Herman Hileer Holmes, Charles Hobbs, Martha B. Hogan, Ira Dean Jordan, Melvin G. Kettner, Joan Kirkham, Mary Wiser Leeens, Joe Lillie, Norma Leeoske, Donald J. Lyssaugh, Robert Harman, Kevin McGregor, John Marsh, Patricia Matlock, John H, Michener Mitchell, Mitchell Newcomer, Carolyn Nigg, Dwayne Ogleys, James Parks, Philip Persky, Richard Phster, Phillip Phillips, Howard R. Pyle, Uclec Balston
Robert K. Ready, Norris Requisit, Mary Rice, Edward Rolfs, Helen Scamell, Marion Scipioni, Anne Faye, Betsy Sheilynne, Donna Snart, David Sommerville, William Allen Stewart, Marion Sumner, Virginia Shimer, Marian Smith, Smith, Clare Claus, Claus Paul, Paul M. Walmer, Gracia Ward, Paul B Watson, Nancy Ann, Welker, Shirley Wellborn, John M. Wetmore, Mary Jo Wilson, Quentin Wheatley, James Winfield
School of Business: George W. Beck, Billy K. Brackman, Anderson W. Weidemann, John R. Cowley, Charles W. Crowl, y. Charles A. Dillon Robert B. Docking, Francis Fowell, J. Robert McCoy, Hodgson, Carroll McBuck, Wilbur Ostrom, Robert Pearson, McRobert M. Pemberton, Frank Petitte, Don Victor Plantz, Billie Jean Swart, Mr. Stewart, Betty Jean Swart.
School of Education: Betty J. Barkis, F. Kirkpatrick, M. Lennard, Berry, Amyela Sout, Harold Harvey, Theodora Speer, Robert Unkefer, Lorita Johnston, John M. Burnatt, Patricia Flaming.
School of Engineering and Architecture; Marion F. Bearisy, Morris E. Boorne, Carroll B., Bower, Jack Bradley, Leroy L. Case, Case Douglas, Ferguson E. Fitch, Walter Garrison, Paul S. Gratmu, William J. Hall, Robert Hall Harris, Howard Hobrock, Jack Waring Hollingson, Hobrock, Harry W, Johnson, Elmo Maiden
Norman G. Miller, Dorman O'Leary,
Robert Partridge, Richard R. Potter,
Caller H. R. Dale, Rason Rummer,
Seller S. Soler, Robert Vernon Sellers,
Paul W. Shark.
School of Fine Arts: Jeanne Bowman, Dorothy Brenner, Margaret Gansle, Robert J. Hamilton, Austin Harmon, Daniel McGraw, Ellen Schaefler and Dorothy Sohn.
School of Medicine: James P. Carey, Robert F. Cavitt, William N. Harsha, Don R. Milley, Dorothy S. Waterman, and Robert W. Wright, Jr.
School of Law: James H. Bernard, Robert L. Briley Howard G. Engleman, Robert B. Foulson Charles D. Dippa Marmoney, John Q. Royce, and Glenn E. Smith.
Sohomores: Dolly Anderson, Robert
Brown, Michael Rutherford,
Wallace Holderman, Marion Kelley, J.
Jean Krkham, Sidney Lida, William
Cosmos, Simmons, Carl Simpson,
Doris Tilper.
The following juniors, sophomores, and freshmen lead their' classes in scholarship. More than one name is given when the decision was close;
School of Pharmacy: Jack L. Beal.
Marie Schreiber, Charles S. Shull.
College of Liberal Arts and Sciences
Juniors: Albert C. Blair, Joy E. Esch,
James S. Masters, Kenneth E. Miller,
Wilbur B. Nable
Freshmen: Wavne LeRoy Attwood,
Clinton R. Fouk, Margaret Granger, Hillin
w D. Hornbaker, Diane H. Johnson.
Mary Lou Lane, David Mondry, Lee H.
Donald S. Rice, Bernice Charles,
Charles Rita, Rita Swingeren, Rita
Weland
School of Education: Junior; Donald
Luffel, Sophomore; Harold E.
Flehlman
School of Business; Juniors: William W, Biddell, and Algert M. Syngle.
School of Engineering and Architecture: Junior: George Rolland Cole. Sophomore: David J. Foley. Freshman: Lloyd W. Davis.
School of Fine Arts: Junior; Bessie W.
Masoner, Sophomore; Martha L. W.
Pennock, Freshman; Willard E. Straight,
School of Law; Second year; Franklin
(Continued To Page 8)
Roberts Calls For 'Uncommon Men'
Ray Evans, Shirley Wellborn Receive Dual Honor Awards
Bv MARY LOU FOLEY and NORA L. TEMPLE
Roy A. Roberts, '08, told the 25th annual Honors convocation that "the world needs uncommon men," but the audience really picked up its ears when he said that the Kansas City Star would not support Senator Capper for re-election.
RAYMOND EVANS
A. R. H.
Raymond Evans and Shirley Wellborn were named the senior honor
No Relief Pay Until June 18
Veterans are forbidden by federal law to draw servicemen's readjustment allowance for unemployment while receiving leave pay for schooling.
Those who plan to receive the leave pay must wait until June 18 before they are eligible to draw from the "S2-20" unemployment allowance, according to a recent V.A. bulletin.
An automatic 15-day leave subsistence for June 3 to 18 will be paid veterans upon completion of the semester unless the V.A. is notified immediately that they do not wish to draw it. The leave pay is deductable from training time allotted the veteran under the G.I. bill.
To qualify for the servicemen's readjustment allowance for unemployment, a veteran "must be seeking any type of work usually performed by students at vacation time," the V.A. bulletin said.
John Morrison, director of the Kansas employment security division, said jobs are "fairly plentiful and we will be able to direct many veterans to satisfactory employment. Veterans will be given preference for jobs."
University Club To Hear Britisher
Miss Joan S. Ley, former British newspaperwoman now on the staff of the Topkea State Journal, will speak to members of the University club and their guests at 45 p.m. today. The meeting will be in the University club room at 1007 Massachusetts street.
Miss Skipsey will discuss the English attitude toward socialization, the Labor government, and Western-Eastern power disagreements.
the first time an honor woman has been named.
In remarks which deviated from the main thread of his talk, Mr. Roberts said that "Senator Capper is too old for the problems of his position.
"When I speak, I speak what is on my mind," Mr. Roberts said. "My attitude is no reflection on Senator Capper's ability. I would go through hell for him, and in fact I have. But a younger man is needed."
"Riflin' Ray" $ ^{14} $ Evans put the University in the national spotlight with his outstanding athletic performances. In football he was All-Big Six and All-American in 1947.
Miss Wellborn is president of Mortar Board this year and was elected to Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary society in liberal arts and sciences, this fall.
In a backstage conversation with two University Daily Kansan reporters, Mr. Roberts said that he would support Governor Dewey on the first ballot "because he's a good man."
"What the people need is for the uncommon man to step out of the mass and lead them," he insisted.
However, the Kansas City Star president added that he did not believe Mr. Dewey would be nomi- ted, but he would probably be Senator Vandenberg first, Mr. Dewey second, and Mr. Stassen third.
"With world conditions as they are, Mr. Vandenberg would be an excellent president because of his knowledge of foreign affairs.
"If the convention becomes deadlocked, Taft and Dewey will not throw their support to Stassen." Mr. Roberts added. "Stassen has stepped on too many feet. And you can bet that if he offered the vice-presidential nomination, he'll jump at the chance."
In the main part of his talk, Mr. Roberts said that "this is the century of the common man, and that's what is wrong with the world.
"We need civilized educated leadership to guide the world out of chaos," he said. "Your leadership career has started here in college. Take the qualities you have shown here and apply them in the world."
In discussing the problems of war and peace, Mr. Roberts said he did not believe we would have a war with Russia.
MARGARET DAVIS
SHIRLEY WELLBORN
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 11, 1948
Hot Pilots Keep Road Hot From University To Olathe
By CHARLES R. ROTER
A well-beaten path is beginning to appear between the campus and the Olathe naval air base as a small-sized caravan of 150 students make the 60-mile trek two Sundays every month.
"We occasionally do cross-country runs to Chicago, Denver, Dallas, or St. Louis," Shimer said, "but most of our work is on the bombing targets in this vicinity. One of them is down by Osage and the other is near the Lake of the Woods."
These students are members of the former "fly-boys and airedales." The each month on the air base is the little matter of a paycheck for some, and for others, the "kick" of "hanging a Corsair on its nose or snaprolling a Hellcat."
Henry H. Shimer, business junior, is a good example of the men who travel out there. Shimer is a lieutenant commander in the reserve and commands a light carrier squadron such as might operate from a carrier of the Princeton class.
According to Shimer the navy is not too worried about the situation, either. It has recently added a new tarppeo bomber squadron to complement at the Olafie base but very little abnormal action is being taken by the officers in charge. The theory of the program is merely to keep the fliers from becoming "rusty and stale."
Shimer is not too worried about the international crisis. He explained that the group he commands would probably be no more subject to call than the average veteran, "only a little quicker."
University Daily Kansan
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year. (In Lawrence add 1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University holidays and summers, every holiday summonsation periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
"The reserve program is not confined to flying officers," Shimer said. "We are having a hard time finding enough enlisted men to fill out our ground crews—one of the most important parts of a compact, well-organized carrier group."
Shimer believes that the enlisted men get a "good deal." They are allowed to enroll and not enlist. Should an enlisted man feel like dropping out of the program, he can do so merely by speaking to the commanding officer.
Pay is given at the end of every three months. For each Sunday a man attends he is given two "drill periods," or roughly the equivalent of two days pay. Four drill periods are required each month.
The program is open to any person, with or without past experience. Army personnel who would like to enter the program may retain their old rating.
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Music Frat Holds Initiation Banquet
Pi Kappa Lambda, honorary professional music society, held its annual initiation banquet May 8. Forty guests attended.
Raymond J. Eastwood, associate professor of drawing and painting, was guest speaker. Professor Eastwood's topic was "A Short History of Painting Methods and Materials."
D. M. Swarthout, dean of the School of Fine Arts, reported on the bi-annual national Pi Kappa Lambda convention held recently in Chicago.
Names of the initiates, which include the upper 25 per cent of the graduating class and members of the faculty who have a degree in music or have taught five years in the school, were released at honors convocation today.
Houston, Texas—(UP)—A 52-year-old Houston mailman recently stumped the experts when he disproved the theory that a person can always be identified by his fingerprints.
Postman Wears Off His Fingerprints
Mailman Jefferson C. Banks has no fingerprints.
The millions of letters and thousands of rough mail sacks which have slipped through his fingers for 22 years have worn away the ridges on his fingers.
"There's no place on my fingers for the ink to get a hold," said Mr. Banks.
Federal officials in Washington were forced to accept Mr. Banks' loyalty questionnaire minus fingerprints.
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TUESDAY, MAY 11, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Socially Speaking-
Weddings And Engagements Monopolize Social Spotlight
Pi Phi Banquet
Pi Beta Phi recently celebrated its 76th year on the campus with a Founder's Day banquet at the chapter house. Guests were Mrs. Ethan Allen, Mrs. Adrian Lindsey, and Mrs. Richard Stevens, Lawrence; and Mrs. Oliver Simmons and Mrs. John Foster, Kansas City, Mrs. Simmons, the national historian of the fraternity, was the speaker.
Joann Rusee received the chapter honor pin the scholarship awards were presented to Sue Newcomer and Martha Keplering. Mrs. Lindsay presented these yearly awards.
Pi KA Elects Officers
Pi Kappa Alpha announces the election of Louis Silks, president; James Small, vice-president; Charles Lindberg, treasurer; and Robert Flatt, historian.
The following appointments were made; Edgar Eagle, secretary; Daniel Clinger, sergeant-at-arms; Samuel Busby, pledge master; Channing Hiebert, social chairman; Richard Lowe, rush captain; Scott Thompson, house manager; Robert Brownlee, publicity representative; and Harold Hanshaw, alumni secretary.
Parent's Day
Members of Triangle fraternity held a tea for Parent's Day Sunday
Guests were Mrs. C. Bower, Mr. and Mrs. J. Klaas, Mr. and Mrs. C. D. Holliman, Mrs. H. Francis, Mr. and Mrs. H. Woltkamp, Mr. and Mrs. K. H. Royer, Mr. and Mrs. T. Yonley, Mr. and Mrs. H. Faris, Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Gratny, Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Rowland, Mr. and Mrs. L. P. Cain, Mr. and Mrs. D. G. McCammant, Mr. and Mrs. I. I. Hartzler,Mr. and Mrs. B. J. Furnish, Mrs. G. M. West, Mrs. W. A. Hyde, Mrs. M. Thelen, Mr. and Mrs. W. Joyce, Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Sagmoen, Miss W. Westman, Miss V. Smoots, Mrs. C. Ackerman, Mrs. G. Brown, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Stevenson, Mr. and Mrs. O. E. England, Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Frazer, Mr. M. R. Stein, Mr. and Mrs. P. Godfrey, and Mr. and Mrs. I. J. Sankey.
Oehrle-Johnson
Mr. and Mrs. W. W. G. Oehrle, Overbrook, announce the engagement of their daughter, Janice Elleen, to Harry W. Johnson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lee W. Johnson, Manhattan
Miss Oehle is a College junior Mr. Johnson is an engineering senior.
The announcement was made at Miller hall recently by Mrs. R. G. Roche, housemother. Chocolates were passed by Dorothy Scroggy and Marylee Masterson.
Chubb-Brown
Sleepy Hollow announces the engagement of Mary Lucile Chubb daughter of Mrs. Erna D. Chubb Topeka, to Donald Arden Brown son of Mr. and Mrs. Dorance Brown, Eudora.
The announcement was made by Mrs. Lea Whiteford, housemother, at the Sleepy Hollow spring formal May 1. Chocolates were passed by Billie Bullard and Patricia Davidson at dinner Sunday.
Miss Chubb is a College freshman, and Mr. Brown is an engineering freshman.
Archibald-Carson
Delta Delta Delta announces the pinning of Jane Archibald, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Archibald, Ashland, to Charles Carson, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Carson, Kansas City, Mo.
The announcement was made April 30 at the chapter house by Mrs. Charles Wentworth, house-mother. Miss Archibald received an orchid corsage. Traditional chocolates were passed by Eunice Carlson and Shirley Scheufele who wore corsages of white gardenias. Mrs. Wentworth also received two white gardenias.
Miss Archibald is an education senior. Mr. Carson, a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon, is a business junior
Stout-Ensch
Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Stout, Roth-
ville, Mo., announce the engagement
of their daughter, Ann, to Paul Ensch,
son of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Ench,
St. Paul. The announcement was
made at Watkins hall May 1.
Miss Stout wore a corsage of pink rosebuds. Mrs. Stout and Miss Julia Ames Willard, housemother, wore corsages of pink carnations. Chocolates were passed by Esther Calvin and Barbara Glover.
Miss Stout is an education senior and Mr. Ensch is a business senior.
The engagement of Doris Bixby, daughter of D. B. P. Bixby, Valley Center, to Wayne Hird, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hird, Lawrence, was recently announced by Mrs. W. S Shaw, Delta Gamma housemother.
Miss Bixby presented the girls in the house with rosebuds, and traditional chocolates were passed following the announcement.
Bixby-Hird
Miss Bixby, a member of Delta Gamma, is a senior in the School of Medicine. Mr.Hird is a sophomore in the School of Medicine and a member of Phi Kappa Psi and of Phi Beta Pi.
Marks-Ready
the pinning of Mildred Marks, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. J.M Marks, Valley Falls, and Robert K. Ready, son of Judge and Mrs. Robert Ready, Wellington, was announced recently by Mrs. W. S. Shaw, Delta Gamma housemother.
Miss Marks was assisted by Jane Belt and Nancee Bell who received corsages of yellow roses. Mrs.Shaw received a corsage of red roses. Miss Marks wore a corsage of pink roses. Chocolate were passed following the announcement.
Safford-Hoopes
Mr. Ready is a College senior and a member of Beta Theta Pi. Miss Marks is a College sophomore.
Delta Gamma announces the engagement of Dorothy Jean Safford daughter of Mrs. Verna Safford, Augusta, and Lee Hoopes, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Hoopes, Winfield.
The announcement was made by Mrs. W. S. Shaw, Delta Gamma and Miss Safford presented the house with flowers, flowers, and chocolates were passed.
Miss Safford, a member of Delta Gamma, was graduated from the University in 1946. Mr. Hoopes is a College sophomore.
Miss Doris Uehling, instructor of home economics, was married to Arthur C. Wilcox, assistant instructor of chemical engineering, May 1 at the home of the bridegroom's parents in Kansas City, Kan.
Leah Uehling, College senior, attended her sister as bridesmaid. Ray J. Stanclift, Jr., assistant instructor of chemical engineering, was best man.
Mrs. Wilcox is a graduate of the University of Wisconsin, Mr. Wilcox is a graduate of the University of Kansas and is doing advanced work in chemical engineering.
The ceremony was performed by the bridegroom's uncle, the Rev. Bensene of Bensene, Wash. Only close relatives and relatives were present at the wedding.
You Are Always Welcome at SNAPPY LUNCH
Police Dogged By Pooch Owners
In a sense you could say that crime has gone to the dogs in Lawrence.
A dog catcher was hired recently by the city. Since then, worried dog owners have kept the telephone ringing at police headquarters continuously. Dog owners apparently have developed a fear that their pets have run afoul of the law.
for
The Jay James will hold a rush tea from 3:30 to 5 p.m. tomorrow in Myers hall. All rushees must have completed 24 hours credit and have a C average.
Jay Jane Rush Tea Will Be Tomorrow
Independents-at-large are invited to attend the tea as well as women from Alpha Chi Omega, Alpha Omicron Pi. Delta Gamma, Theta Phi Alpha, Corbin hall, and Foster hall.
Desk screntge Wilbur Dowers said that he couldn't get anything done "except ride herd on a bunch of stray pooches."
Here's A New Way To Resist Eviction
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New Orleans—(UP) The seven constables in New Orleans who evict people have a problem in a woman with a 92-year-old mother.
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Every time they go to evict the woman, she disappears through the back door, leaving her mother to face the constables.
"Time after time we have been in her house to serve the notice," one constable said. "Every time she was gone. We would find her mother in bed naked. We couldn't put the old lady out like that and we couldn't dress her.
They Have Dogs. Too
"But we'll catch her one of these days."
Bellfontaine, Ohio—(UP)—The current drive for donations of food to be sent overseas to Europe has netted a large quantity of canned goods—including a can of dog food.
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Six University women will model 30 outfits for morning, afternoon, evening and sports wear from Lawrence department stores. The models are Alyce L. Fawkes, fine arts freshman; Nina L. Green, College senior; Mary Lynn Hegarty, College sophomore; Constance Kendall, College freshman; Althea Voss, College junior; and Sally Ann Tremblay, fine arts freshman.
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KU Dames To Have Dance At Sunflower
Mila Williams, College sophomore will be narrator, and Helen E. Ward, education junior, will play the piano
The Sunflower chapter of the K.U. Dames will hold its annual spring semi-formal dance at 8 p.m., Saturday in the Community building auditorium in Sunflower.
Danny Bachmann and his orchestra will play. Joe S. Turner, engineering senior, will be master of ceremonies. A floor show, produced and directed by Mariann Cain, will be given during the evening.
Couples may leave their children at the nursery.
Crossing between intersections killed 3,200 and injured 51,000 pedestrians in this country in 1947. Don't joywalk!
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 11, 1948
Western Kansas Is Booming But Geologist Fears Dust
Bv GUS AUGUST
Western Kansas wheat farmers are optimistic about the prospects for this year's wheat crop, Walter Kollmorgen, professor of geography, said after a trip through the dust bowl area.
Hundreds of new grain elevators have been built, and land sales are booming, Professor Kollmorgen said. However, he is not as optimistic as many of the farmers are.
Throughout the trip, farmers assured him they were due for a rain, but none fell during the tour, he said. Prospects for dry years are greater now than prospects for wet years, because the wet cycle has been longer than previous wet cycles, Professor Kollmorgen explained.
"From a number of angles, indications are that some reverses will be experienced," he added.
Lighteen inches of rainfall is the minimum amount needed for reasonably successful wheat production in this part of the country, but much land has been broken beyond this rainyline. Therefore, there is the likelihood of another drought siege and another dust bowl, Professor Kollmorgen said. In higher latitudes, where evaporation is less, wheat can be grown with less moisture.
See Another Dust Bowl
Soil specialists and geographers anticipate another dust bowl "sooner than later," Professor Kollmorgen said. He explained that when the soil is first broken, it is held together by stubble and other organic matter. This binding structure breaks down after a few years, leaving little to hold the soil together. Then it starts blowing away
"The government sodded thousands of acres in the 1930's, Professor Kollmorgen said. "A lot of this has been turned again with the hope that several crops can be realized before disaster overtakes the operator"
"Some government agencies are planning another sodding program, but they are meeting opposition from people who don't think it is necessary. They want to go on planting wheat and hoping it will rain."
Professor Kollmorgen explained that the question is who will absorb the difference between the value of the land as wheatland and as grass-land.
The high price of wheat is another factor which keeps the farmers hoping for a good crop, he added. 'A Stroke of Luck'
"To have wet years and high wheat prices is a stroke of luck we may never see again. It is one of the most remarkable coincidences in Midwest history," he remarked.
In an interview with Spencer M. Smith, assistant professor of economics, the University Daily Kansan got some idea of the economics of wheat.
Professor Smith said that it is almost impossible to analyze accurately the effects of one commodity when prices depend on all commodities. There is no assurance that a bumper crop will lower wheat prices.
Theoretically, if production increases, prices decrease, but only if demand remains the same. Actually, supply and demand are functions of each other. If general production increases, demand increases and prices rise, he explained.
Wheat Price to Stay Up
Wheat prices probably won't drop too much in the near future because many factors are acting to keep the prices high, he said. These include the decrease in taxes and the resulting increase in public purchasing power, and the European recovery program with its heavy demand for wheat.
The whole thing is one big gamble. One good rain will assure a bumper wheat crop. The thing is, will we get it?
Official Bulletin
May 11, 1948
O. T. club picnic. 5:30 p.m. today Meet in Design office.
Armanav regular meeting, 7.30 tonight Union ballroom. Social gathering after meeting.
K. U. Dames bridge, 7:30 p.m. to-morrow, Pine room, Union.
Student Court will review appeal cases on parking tickets, 7:30 tonight. Court room, Green hall. All defendants have been notified by mail.
United World Federalists, 4 p.m. tomorrow, Kansas room, Union. All interested invited.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship. 7 p.m. tomorrow, 113 Frank Strong.
Student Union Activities fashion show, 4 to 5 p.m. tomorrow, Kansas room. Harzfeld's and Weavers. Everyone welcome.
El Ateneo se reune el jueves a las 7:30 in 113 de F.S. para la ultima reunion del semestre. Programa especial, muchas sorpresas.
Applications for committee membership in Student Union Activities accepted in Union Activities office through Thursday.
Phi Alpha Theta picnic Thursday. Contact Harold Hixon by tonight for details.
Home Economics club, 5 p. m.
Thursday, Fraser dining room. Election of officers. Sign at office before 5 p.m. tomorrow.
All organized houses and organizations leave dates, preference and alternative, for next year's parties at office of dean of women by Thursday. Indicate closed dates desired.
Letters of application for dance manager job to Sue Webster, 1625 Edgehill Road by rFriday. Enclose
address and phone number.
Campus Christian Missionary fellowship, 4 p.m. tomorrow, Myers hall. Plans outlined for next year.
Veterans' requisition books for current semester not honored after May 20.
Mrs. Carl Nelson was elected president of the University Women's club at the annual business meeting and tea held in Myers hall recently. She succeeds Mrs. D. W. Malott, retiring president.
S. A.M. meeting, 7:30 tonight. Union building. Election of officers.
University Women Elect Officers
Those in charge of the tea were Mrs. E. C. Quigley, chairman; Mrs. Elmer F. Beth, hostess chairman; Mrs. E. L. Falkenstein, food and serving; Mrs. C. G. Bayles, decoration; and Mrs. George W. Stratton, tea table.
.
Other officers are Mrs. Karl Klooz,
vice-president; Mrs. Kenneth Jochim,
recording secretary; Mrs. Paul Roofe
corresponding secretary;
Mrs. George Anderson, treasurer;
Mrs. Clayton Crosier, finance chairman; Mrs. Ethan Allen, social chairman; Mrs. J. W. Twente, program chairman; Mrs. Elmer F. Beth,
publicity chairman; Mrs. Gerald Carney, newcomer's chairman; Mrs. Ralph Clark, assistant to the newcomer's chairman; Miss Helen Lohr,
Mrs. M. D. Clubb, and Mrs. C. A.
Thomas, members at large.
Silverton, Ore.—(UP) — Thieves broke into the Eugene Field grade school here and stole 24 quarts of applesauce.
This Seems Much Applesauce
Eta chapter of Pi Delta Phi, national French honorary fraternity, has elected seven new members.
7 Members Elected To French Society
They are Billie Joan Kent, Sue Newcomer, Marjorie Jane Scott, College seniors; William Belt, Jack L. Kendall, J. Chalmers Herman, and Ralph Herman, graduate students.
Honorary members elected are Mrs. J. C. Malin and Mrs. Wilma Collins, Lawrence; Dr. Edith Kern, assistant professor of French.
Jean Delord, French exchange student from Montaubau, France, was elected a special member.
The skeleton of a Pleistocene wolf will be exhibited on the first floor of Dyce museum in a few days. It is a specimen of a Dire wolf, scientific name Aenocyon dirus, which was secured from the Rancho La Brea tar pit within the city limits of Los Angeles.
Wolf Bones To Be Exhibited In Dyche
The wolf roamed North America about 25,000 years ago. It was large, with almost the same form and proportions of the timber wolf.
The tar pits at La Brea are a natural trap for animals. Skeletons of almost 5,000 prehistoric animals and birds have been taken from the pits.
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TUESDAY, MAY 11, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Home Run Leaders Open Series Today In New York
New York, May 11—(UP)—Things don't always come off as advertised, but it is quite possible that the home run smashing in the big series starting today between the Indians and Yankees will be terrific even in the house that Babe Ruth built.
be doesn't have the exclusive patent on home runs any more.
The Babe doesn't have the extra If things keep going as they have to date, it would be that his historic mark of 60 homers in a season, plus a lot of others in the books, will be surpassed.
These two teams which have designs primarily on the American League pennant, with home run honors as merely a means to an end, are the ones leading the early season round parade. Tellhe H2 8 Honors
Cleveland, pacing the American League race with 11 victories in 15 games, has collected 28 homers in that span, which is seven ahead of the 1947 record-setting pace of the New York Giants. The Giants marked up an all-time major league team record of 221 homers for the season, but in their first 15 games last year they connected for 21 homers.
The Yankees, swinging for the fences as they did in that olden, golden era featuring Ruth & Co., rank next in the majors with 23 homers in 17 games, also ahead of the 1947 Giants who didn't get their
did homer until their 18th game. The Giants, of course, aren't doing too badly either in the home run department this season. With Walker Cooper, one of their big bats, out indefinitely with a knee injury and Johnny Mize having been temporarily disabled, they still have a respectable mark of 21 homers for 18 games.
All Arc Slugging
The rest of the clubs are chipping in, too, with 107 homers to date in the American and 104 in the National. At that rate, both leagues will go over their all-time high totals and will surpass the major league mark of 1.571 for a season set in 1940.
The Indiang, swinging for the fences as usual, swelt their three-game team. Bobby yesterday with a 12 to 7 win, they also came up with a triple play.
The Yankees won their fifth game in six starts at New York as Joe DiMaggio, Billy Johnson and George Stirnweiss poled homers, bringing the club total to seven in two days
I-M Playoffs On Saturday
Playoffs in intramural softball will begin Saturday while playoffs in the minor spring sports will get underway Monday, May 17, Don Powell, intramural director announced today.
In order to begin playoffs in the minor spring sports on May 17, results of all scheduled matches must be turned into the intramural office by 9 a.m. Saturday, Powell added. This will allow teams tied for division championships the weekend to play off those ties. Drawings for the playoff of ties will take place Saturday morning, so teams are warned that matches must be completed by that time.
Ralph Kiner smacked his sixth homer of the season last night at Pittsburgh, and it gave the Pirates a 4 to 2 victory over the Dodgers, hoisting the Bucs to a tie with New York for second place in the standings.
Softball team managers are also cautioned by the intramural director to warn members of their teams to remain here for the weekend. If the weather permits, th playoff will begin in full swing on that day.
In the other two night games Early Wynn's two runs-batted-in and five-hit pitching gave Washington a 6 to 2 win over St. Louis at Washington. Johnny Sain hurled the Braves to a 6 to 0 decision over the Cardinals at St. Louis in the National. The shutout was the first of the season for the Redbirds and snapped their win streak at five games.
in the 9 to 3 drubbing of the White Sox.
Kiner Poles No. 6
With 3 Shutouts
The Giants were rained out at Chicago.
'The Cat' Aims For Records
St. Louis, May 11—(UP)—Next thing you know, the fans will be asking "The Cat" has a shutout "Claws" in his contract.
St. Louis Cardinal pitcher Harry Brecheen, only left-hander to win three games in a World Series, has opened the 1948 season with three whitewash jobs. And he is getting better all the time.
Brecheen shrugged, squared his shoulders and went on to set the next seven batters down in order. Thus he missed baseball immortality just by the margin of that dinky pounder. Had Blatnik been thrown out, Brecheen would have become the first National league pitcher in 68 years to hurl a perfect game.
Resting after his eight-strikeout masterpiece, the 33-year-old Oklahomaman displayed a stoic calm. Yes, he knew he had not allowed a runner to reach base when Blatnik got
Rookie first-sacker Nipy Jones flattened out, stretching to the limit for the low throw. But umpire Babe Pinelli wig-wagged the speed Blatnik safe by a hair's margin.
Close Play At First
He applied the brush to the Chicago. Cubs twice, beating them at Chicago 1-0, on April 23, and thwarting them at St. Louis on May 1 by a 4-0 count. Breechen allowed nine hits in the first game and six in the second.
But in his last outing Saturday night he hit the weights. Harry turned back 20 consecutive Philadelphia Phillies as a big crowd looked on with mounting excitement. Then, with two down in the seventh, outfielder Johnny Blatnik, sliced a twisting slow bounder down the third base line. Whitey Kurokiwis charged the tantalizing hopper, gloved it just past the bag and put everything his aching arm had into the long throw.
Despite the disappointment of that game, there are still plenty of marks for the Cat to shoot for. He must pitch two more whitewash games to tie the major league mark set by G. Harris White of the Chicago White Sox in 1904. The mark for consecutive scoreless innings in the majors was fixed at 56 in 1913 by Walter Johnson of the Washington Senators.
his scratch. Answering a question,
Brecheen said he thought Blatnik was out on the throw.
Can Set A Record
"But," he confessed with a grin. "Till admit I'm prejudiced."
Most observers believe Brecheen has a good chance to match one or both of the marks. He is at his best with a full four-day rest between assignments, a rest he did not get during the past two seasons.
But this year manager Eddie Dyer's pitching plans call for a fiveman staff of starters. If Howie Pollett, Murry Dickinson, Red Munger and Jim Hearn can deliver, there will be no question about Brecheen.
Meet Baker In Baseball
The Jayhawker baseball squad will take the field today against Baker university at 3:30 p.m., barring further rain, coach Russ Sehon said this morning.
Sehon plans to start Lee Ethridge junior righthander, against the Wildcats, with Jack Fency receiving, Dick Fletcher, Karl Ebel, and Bill Hinrichs may also see mound duty for the Javhawkers.
Hal Stewart will again start in centerfield in place of Red Hogan, out for the season with a shoulder injury. Neil Shaw, bespeckled lefty, will start in left field in place of Dick Bertuzzi. Sehon said.
Others who may see action in today's contest are Merle Spring and catcher Steve Mead.
Golfers Face A Tough Foe
The Oklahoma A. & M. golf team comes to Lawrence today for a match with the Mt. Oread foursome at the local country club. It will be the second time this season the Aggies and the Jayhawkers have tangled on the links.
In a previous match at Stillwater the Oklahoma golfers walked away from the Kansans, $13\frac{1}{2}$ to $4\frac{1}{2}$. The A. & M. team, paced by crack linksman Bo Winninger, is rated to be one of the top fairway outfits in the Valley area.
To date the Kansans have won eight and lost three for the season. Losses have been to Missouri, Oklahome, and the Aggies. The Winey-coached crew has won once from K-State, Colorado, Tulsa, and Nebraska. They hold double victories over Washburn, and Emporia State Teachers college.
Coach Winey has announced that Dick Ashlev, Bob Meeker, Hal De-Longy, and Courtland Smith will take the links against the Cowboys today.
Legal Action Likely In Basketball Feud
Chicago, May 11—(UP)—Open war raged today between the National Basketball league and the Basketball Association of America, the nation's two top professional hardwood circuits.
The B.A.A. started the scrap by whisking away four teams—Minneapolis, Indianapolis, Rochester and Fort Wayne—from the 12-year-old rival loon.
In retaliation, the National league broke off the year-old joint draft of college players and claimed it to be their players of the four deserving teams.
It was possible that some legal actions would result from the split. The National league's contention that it retains rights to the players on the shifting teams could be the basis for injunction suits against the players and possibly the teams.
Manhattan, Kan., May 11—(UP)
A two-hit hitpitch performance went for naught here yesterday as four University of Oklahoma miscues handed Kansas State a 5-1 diamond victory.
Okie Errors Hand Wildcats A Win
Hurler Elton Davis held the Wildcat batters in cheek but committed two errors himself. Sooner shortstop Lewis Eubanks also accounted for two bobbles. The combined errors permitted three runs to score.
Kansas State moundsman Jack Bell struck out 17 batters and allowed only seven hits.
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Hogan Injury To Specialist
Dr. Robert Jordan, football team physician, said today that Dr. James Weaver of the University of Kansas medical center is now treating quarterback "Red" Hogan, who was injured in the intra-squad football game May 7.
The team physician stated that it is Dr. Weaver's hope to have Hogan in condition for football next fall. The injury was diagnosed as a separation of the acromio-clavicular joint. Commonly called a knocked down shoulder, the injury is not uncommon to football players.
Hogan will be wearing a heavy cast for about two months. This will not only keep him out of the Jayhawker baseball lineup but will probably keep him from playing any baseball this summer. The past summer he played for the semi-pro Wichita Bombers.
An outfielder for the Jayhawker nine, Hogan is batting 282 in the cleanup spot. He has been replaced in the lineup by Hal Stewart.
Milkman Dies At Birthplace
Marinette, Wis. — (UP) — Christ Christensen, a milkman, made his regular delivery to the house where he was born 50 years ago. As he bent to put the milk on the porch, Christensen collapsed and died on the steps of his former home.
War Hero Back For More
Columbus, Ohio—(UP)—Cpl. Edward A. Bennett, of three living Ohio men who received the Congressional Medal of Honor in World War II, is back in the army. He reenlisted here and was assigned to recruiting service in Cincinnati.
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 11, 1948
The Editorial Page
Presidents' Breakfast
Two rolls, one slice of bacon, fruit juice, and coffee or milk, were approached with dainty movements by the women present while the men blitzed the victuals mentioned with the voracity of an "extra hand" at harvest time.
It must be mentioned, however, that the preview of a few of the scenes from the musical, College Daze, which will be presented tomorrow night, provided the only refreshing bit of entertainment and the only source of joy for getting up at such an early hour.
Such was the point of general interest at the last of a series of Presidents' Breakfasts which was held here Saturday. Sell Democracy
As a result, it would seem that there is no reason for students to get interested in the affairs of the campus if the people they select to head the various important organizations are not interested in attending a meeting which is designed to be of general help to everyone.
As the "big wheels" assembled, it was interesting to note that out of 115 invitations only 60 accepted and of this number approximately 40 remained for the entire period.
Considerable work has gone into the planning of these breakfasts and an informative program is usually planned. The Student Union Activities plan to continue these affairs next year and will try to raise points for discussion which may be presented at the student-faculty conference.
If the student body is to be expected to get into high gear and take a more active part in the activities which are planned for them, the "big wheels" had better take a
Democracy needs to be publicized to the people in those countries which are coming under the influence of communism, or those countries which might be forced under communistic influences.
Communist publicity in Europe appeals to the people of nearly all classes. It emphasizes steady employment, educational and welfare advantages, and medical assistance in relation to need. In return, the individual is forced to work productively, to serve the state loyally and to accept the directives of the party hierarchy without question.
Our state department has spoken of "democracy" in international terms but its concept seems to be the mere right of political democracy—the right of all citizens to vote in free elections, the right to criticize the government, to express their own ideas to read varying opinions, to work where they please. What we have failed to emphasize is the common man's right to land ownership, of food and shelter, and a decent minimum of education and health.
The communists have taken advantage of our failure by posing as the one great power which really
greater interest in carrying their share of the load.
Dear Editor
I am becoming quite proficient at hitting my wastebasket with one shot with the letters which come across my desk which do not include the writer's address and telephone number and those which exceed the 150-200 word limit. Gentle reader, take a hint.-Editor.
Great Picture
Dear Editor:
"Gentlemen's Agreement" is one of the few truly great motion pictures I have seen. If only it had been possible to materialize the emotions of the departing audience. There would have been some walking out thinking about what they would do in the future, and there should have been some crawling out thinking about what they have done, are doing now, and what is worse, will probably continue to do.
Crayton D. Benton Engineering senior
concerns itself with the interests of the people. They exclaim, with great effect, "Communication stands for economic democracy, which means higher standards of living through state planning. America stands for political democracy, which you cannot eat and which will not protect you when it rains."
Anti-communist posters in the recent Italian elections may have had some influence. Posters stating, "If you don't vote now you may never vote again," and "God can see you vote-Stalin can't" were typical.
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
University Daily Hansan
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 ... David H. Clymer
Managing Editor ... Cooper Rolley
Asst. Man. Editor ... Clarke M. Thomas
Asst. Man. Editor ... Gene Ignyer
Asst. Man. Editor ... Dousta Stafford
Asst. City Editor ... James Beatty
Asst. City Editor ... Richard Barton
Telegraph Editor .. James Robinson
Asst. Tel. Editor .. Hal Nelson
Asst. Tel. Editor .. Bill Meyer
Sports Editor .. Paul Zeh
Sports Editor .. James Jones
Women's Sports Edn .. Anna Mary Murphy
Feature Editor .. Robert M. Newman
Picture Editor .. Matt Macdonald
Society Editor .. Patricia Bentley
Business Manager .. Alderson
dv. Manager .. Paul Warner
Ct. Manager .. Don Waldron
Asst. Ctr. Mgr .. Bill Binter
Class. Adv. Mgr .. Ruth Clayton
As a nation of high-pressure salesmen and publicity conscious advertisers we could certainly put our knowledge to good use. A new campaign teaching our democratic ideals and practical application to other peoples in the world might help stop the advancing communist forces—Rosemary Rospaw.
BILL'S GRILL JUICY STEAKS
Deliecious Dinners Sandwiches—Malts
Open Daily 6 a.m.1:30 p.m Across from Court House
Mathematics Club To Elect Officers Tomorrow
Next year's officers will be elected at the Mathematic club's annual spring picnic to be held at 4 p.m. tomorrow in Clinton park.
An award to the undergraduate who gave the best talk before the club this year will also be made.
All mathematics majors, faculty members, and anyone else interested in the club may attend. The charge will be 60 cents a person. Anyone who plans to attend and has not signed up, should do so immediately in 205 Frank Strong.
Fall In Line with Formal - Time
She's having her alterations made now—for that special dance
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BOB EBERLY, the romantic ballad singer, gives some old but good advice to cuddlesome twosomes on this click-disc.
And Bob has another good word for smokers. As Bob sings it, "I've tried a lot of different brands of cigarettes--but Camels suit me best."
Try Camels on your "T-Zone"-T for Taste... T for Throat. See for yourself why, with Bob Eberly and countless other smokers who have tried and compared. Camels are the "choice of experience."
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TUESDAY,MAY 11,1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
University Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
V
Phone KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid on time, even if it is delayed during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansas Business office. Journalism and public publication is desired.
Classified Advertising Rates
For Sale
One day Three days Five days
25 words or less 35c 65c 90c
additional words 1c 2c 3c
For Sale
WILLYS, 1938, 4-dr., radio, heater, good shape, clean, good mileage. (Price $425)
See at 1027 Pennsylvania. Phone 259838.
REFRIGERATOR: with deep freezer compartment. Less than a year old, like new. Have to sell before last of May.
Reasonable price. Phone 3478W.
MERCURY CONVERTIBLE. See in evenings at 1030 Maine.
RADIO-PHONOGRAPH, latest model. Automatic record-changer. Ph. 3067.
RECORD PLAYER. Two-burner hot plate; and fencing mask and foil. Cheap,便宜。Phone Billion, 1332 Louisiana, phone 3009.
FORD—1946 Tudor, fully equipped. Low mileage, 26C, Sunnyside, 1449 L2.
INNER LENSING roll-away twin-size bed and one Jenny Lind single bed; new Haynes mattress. Call 3478R.
INSTRUMENTS for E.3 lens also Argus A-2 35 mm camera. Both good condition. Ph. 956. Blk McCarter.
ROOFS of furniture, excellent condition and misc. items for sale at Apt. 3A. Save on Lawnmaster A-235 may accept Savannah. Sunday after 10:30 a.m.
VETERANS! We will buy, trade or sell you for any Army or Navy gear in good condition that you wish to choose Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. Phone 669. HTFD
Business Service
STUDENT'S WIFE wants typing at home. Your term paper, thesis, or any typing done promptly and accurately.
Dr. Baskin Wade, 1306 New Hampshire Phone 1699R.
TYPING: Thesis. Reasonable and prompt. Phone 2693J.
LET ME TYPE your themes, reports, and texts as a reasonable work. Bring to Lawrenceburg phone 641 Louisiana, phone 894. Ask for Charles Longanegue.
14
TENNIS RACKET restringing and re
pairing—silk, nylon, gut. $3 to $10.00.
Leave rackets at Student Union Book
Store or see Dick Richards or Hal Muller,
Oread Hall, 2083. 14
Rackets. Reasonable rate. Phone
25201. 1630 Kirk Rackets.
TENNIS RACKETS restreaks or repaired.
Nylon. $3.50; gut. $4.50 to $10.00. E. L.
Wilhussen, Jr., 211 E. 10th Tel. 2442J.
**TYPING. DONE:** Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Telephone 418 or bring to 1218 Comn. St. 20.
**TYPING done:** Term papers, reports, special attention given thesis. Accurate work at reasonable prices. Call 1996-W. Apartm TAILOR-MADE suits, $36.50 to $65.00. Alteration and tailoring. George Eberhart & Son, Tailor Shop, $31.13 Mass. rites
NEW vacuum cleaners for rent. Attachments included. $1.50 per day. Al Brooks Office.
NEW vacuum cleaners for rent. Attachments included $1.50 per day. Al Brooks Sweeper Co., 831½ Mass. Ph. 1104 between 9 and 12 a.m.
Wanted
WANT GOOD used French's Differential Diagnosis. Keith H. Ferrell, 1333 Tenn. Phone 2039. 13
I WANT transportation to California 3. Will share expenses and help drive. Scott Workman, 1121 Ohio Phone 11. 13
WANT TO RENT or lease apartment, furnished or unfurnished, for next fall. Entrance at least two or three years. Bob Coldswain, 1409 Rhode Island, 2670J. 17
EXPERIENCED stenographer wants permanent position. I have passed the State Board of Nursing. I am a stenographer and am a local resident Phonemorning or evening. 1195W. 13
Lost
LEAVING EVERY Friday at 4:00 p.m.
for Wichita, returning Sunday evening.
Please call only Wed. or Thur., between
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Transportation
BLACK MALE cocker, wearing leather harness, Monday of last week. Name: Friskie. Return to Dick Williams. Reward. Call 1967. 17
CUFF LINK: Gold with brown set, old, to owner. reward. Please phone Mary E. Cordell, Corry. BROWN BILLFOLD, either. Monday night or Tuesday morning. Keep money and return billfold to Dorothy Quirk, phone 781, 1144 La.
For Rent
ROOM and BOARD for four men students. Single beds. Reasonable rates. Available for summer and fall terms. Call 2535J or see at 909 Mo. 13
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Nights are brighter, now that Van Heusen Van Tux is back again. And in two smart, low-setting collar-attached models: regular length and wide-spread. The pleated front and cuffs are cuffs, snowy white piqué—on a body of fine handkerchief cloth. We've spared no tailoring detail to make these the quality shirts you expect. $5.95 each. PHILLIPS-JONES CORP., NEW YORK I, N. Y.
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WILL HAVE two double rooms for rent, close to the campus, for the summer term. See or call after 6 p.m. 1725 Innsi
house phone 26314 IPIANO—NEW York, Piano-tuning and repairing Jerome Phone Company,
916 Illinois, Phone 815. 20
Miscellaneous
A NEW TIE every month. Be the center of attention in your group. Only $1.19 a month. Send $1.19 immediately to Tie-Ench, Box 379, 37th and Scurce St., Philadelphia, 4, Penn, and receive the first selection.
WILL PARTY who exchanged Parker "51" pen Monday please for theirs. Mine was a keepsake. Arme Bachelor
Laundry & Dry Cleaners.
BATH AND BLOOMS
DANCE every Saturday night at Odd Fellows hall. Informal. Joe Langworthy's orchestra.
rtes
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
Attend the
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First Show ... 8 p.m.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE EIGHT
TUESDAY, MAY 11, 1948
Congress Ready To Approve Air Force Bill
Washington, May 11—(UP)—Congress was ready to give final approval today to the 70-group air force bill, and send it to the White House
At the same time, the senate armed services committee was expected to okay its plan to "blend" the draft and universal training The legislation then goes to the senate floor where G.O.P. leaders have promised prompt action.
The $3,198,000,000 air force expansion bill got the nod Monday from a joint conference committee. Approval of the house and senate is considered a mere formality.
If President Truman signs the measure, orders for some 4,200 new planes for the air force and navy will be placed without delay. During the air power controversy, the president stood solidly behind Defense Secretary James Forrestal in his contention that 55 groups fully manned would be adequate for the present. Later, Secretary Forrestal agreed to a "compromise" 66-group air force.
The combined draft-U.M.T. bill has met with "general acceptance" within the armed services committee, according to Chairman Chan Gurney (S.D.). Of the 13 committee members, only Senator George Wilson (R.-Iowa), is expected to vote against the measure.
The senate proposal to "blend" the draft and U.M.T. was offered as a compromise when changes faded for passing universal military training at this session.
It would require 18-year-old trainees to serve 12 months in the regular armed forces, and then three years in an active reserve outfit of four years in the inactive reserve. The measure also would draft 190,000 men a year in the 19-through-25 age bracket for two years of service.
Give Bell To Honor Sons
Three families have co-operatively purchased a $750 bell as a memorial for their sons.
Mr. and Mrs. V. P. Dolecek, Russell, are contributing in memory of their son, Victor Dolecek, a student in '44. Lieutenant Dolecek was killed in a bomber crash in Germany June 21, 1944.
James H. Ferguson, a student in '43, and son of Mr. and Mrs. Homer Ferguson, was killed when his plane crashed on Mindoro island July 15, 1945
Lieut. John Risoe, '40, was reported missing in the South Pacific Oct. 1, 1944. Mis mother, Mrs. Jennie Risoe, Wichita, has joined the other two families in presenting the bell. While at the University he was a Summerfield scholar and received his master's degree in philosophy.
The results of the drive to contact freshmen and new students have not been reported, but Patrick Thiessen, committee chairman, urged all organized houses to complete their campaigne as soon as possible.
The Douglas county drive for $17,
000 closed May 7.
Student Injured In Five-Car Crash
Robert E. Edwards, College freshman, received a broken nose and cuts when his car and three other cars crashed into a parked car Monday night.
The accident occurred on highway 24 just east of the Jefferson county line northwest of Topeka. Edwards and two unidentified persons were taken to a Topeka hospital for emergency treatment.
The crack-up happened after a car leading a string of five cars pulled to one side of the highway. Because of the rain, the four following cars were unable to stop in time to avoid hitting it.
The condition of Charles W. Lear, business senior, is improved, attending physicians reported today.
Lear Improved Doctors Report
Lear suffered a scalp laceration and concussion in a fall yesterday morning in Frank Strong hall. He fell while descending the basement stairs leading to the lower floor of the building and struck his head on the bottom step. Witnesses report that he apparently "blacked out."
Honor Students At Convocation
(Continued From Page 1)
(Continued From Page 1)
P. Snyder. First year. Joseph D. Lyswys
School of Medicine; Juniors; Mary J.
Blood and Alexander; Marshall, Fresh-
ing
School of Pharmacy, Junior: Philip M Preble. Sophomore: Jamie L. Estack. Freshmen: Raymond M Hill and Moreno Keplering.
The newly elected members of honorary societies are as follows:
Sigma Xi, national honorary scientist and president of the Sigma Fischer, Richard M. Hoover, Quiff E Hopla, Allison L. Norkbaker, Henry E. Warren, Warren K. Moore, Wayne L. Reeve, James D. Riley, Charles F. Smith, Ray J. Stanciflow, William Thompson, Austin H. Warren
Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary society for liberal arts students: Robert F. Bailey' Thomas A. Barlow, Kenneth Boussel' James A. Braun, Bernard E. Brooks, Robert W. Campbell, Neil P. Cramer, Carl J.ramc, Marlene Davis, Nancy Dille, Elizabeth Evans, Nancy Jane Goering, Arnold H. Greenhouse, W. Johnson Ha Da D Jordan, Melvin G. Kettner, Mary W. Lesna, Norma Lee Loske, Robert H. Malott, Thad N. Marsh, John H. Micheen, Sue newcomer, Phillip H. Richard, William D. Phillips, Rice, Edward J. Rolfs, Helen Scamell, Nicholas J. Schmidt, Marion Scibilian,玛丽莉 Scott, Betsey Sheidley, Virginia Shimer, William D. Sommers, Daniel B. Surface, Clarke M. Thomas, Quentin D. Wheatley, and James N. Winblind
Tau Beta Pi, national honorary society in engineering. John R. Burrett, utermieth B. Bowden, N. Butts, Dale B. Cheyness, Philip C. Davis, David J. Foley, Frederick J. Gartung, William C. Harrison, Joseph A. Hull, James C. Harrison, Joseph A. Hull, Elbert E. Innis, James R. Kanehl, Carl G. Klaus, Donald L. Luffel, Russell B. Oesner, Bernard W. White, Robert R. Owen, Grady L. Randle, Ebugen R. Bin Harold C. Smith, Leo F. Spector, John N. Suptic, Charles R. Swooda, Michael P. Tuckman, John Paul Whittford, and Gerald G. Wilson.
Sigma Tau, national honorary society in education. James F. King, Alen Anker, Edward J. Bruyne, Edward J. Edward J. Bray, James R. Bruce, Jack R. Bruyr, Dale B. Chesney, Earl G. Denbaugh, John P. Elissi, David D. Forrin, Norman G. Fritz, Truman Gore, Glenn C. Gray, Charles H. Green, William J. Hall, Robert Hall Harris, Edward A. Leifer, Henderson Joseph A. Hul, James R. Kaneh, Joseph W. Kell, Scott Lynn, William V. McCruel, Russell B., Mealer, William J. Ries, Frank J. Roizch, John R. Sacks, Warren A. Shaw, Cllye P. Shockley, Harold S. Smith, Charles W. Spiehl, Stephen C. Wilson, Winton L. Studt, John M. Suptic, Warmen V. Van Benhem, Carl E. Von Woden, Raymond T. Wagner, Boyd H. G. Wilson, G. Wilson, and Francis M. Winterburg
Delta Phi Delta, national honorary society in art: Doris Baysinger, William M. Dubbs, Marilyn Glover, Evelyn Hoffman, Dana F. Johnson, Mae Junold, David Shaw, Caroline W. Mae Junold, Soske Peck, Barbara Ann Ricard, Ellen Spurney, and Lois M. Timken.
Pi Stigma Alba, national honorary society, political science, aurence W. Bibb, Emalouise Britton, Robert L. Prock, William R. Case, Virginia Powell Conard, James Hardy, Jancy Goering, newell W. Jenkins, Richard Doe, newell N. Jenkins, Robert Dale I. Martin, Horace M. Mason, Maryles Moesterson, Jack F. McKay, John H. Nichen, Kenneth E. Miller, Rolla E. Beadw, Vireinia Shimo, Robert K. Beadw, and Vireinia Shimo
Pi Kappa Lambda, national honorary society in music; Jerald Hargilton, H Clay Jent, Jack Moehlenkamp, Dorothy H. Shoum and Emma Strain.
Sachen circle of Omicron Delta Kappa, national honorary society for senior men. Richard H. Bertuzzi, Alumni. Aimam F. Gerthung, John I. Jirwin. Irwin E. Klieben, Billy L. Lakewe, Joseph W. McCroskey, Wilbur B. Noble, Charles L. O'Connor, Victor E. Reinking, Ben W. Shanklin, Warren E. Shaw and Patrick H. Thiles-
Torch chapter of Mortar Board, national honor society for senior women. Jeanne Cooper, Jane Ferrell, Harriet Harlow. Dorothy James, Hilda James, Joan Joseph, Margaret Meeks, LuAnn Meredith. Carolyn Sergelye, Seroggy and Betty van der Spraisen.
Owl Society. homorny organization or junior men: rich N. Schiller, Roberto Boccalieri, Jr.
Little Man On Campus
By Bibler
40 POISONS
AND HOW
THEY WORK!
ILLUSTRATIONS
1001
WAYS
SUICIDE
A KILLING
NOVEL
IT'S A MISTO
PLEASE TO
DIE!
KRWL
STORY ABOUT
DEATH!
Si Byer
Library Picture Room Tells Early Kansas Story
"Hi. Pal. howdia come out in the finals?"
On the third floor of Watson library is a room which tells the story in pictures, of the eary days of Kansas.
The pictures are so arranged that they tell a continuous story, beginning at the front of the room and continuing around three walls.
S. Friesen, Charles E. Hoffhaus, Harrison E. Madden, L. Edward Stolenwerk, Gerald R. Waugh, William E. Ruth, and Evans J. Francis.
Schools that have direct responsibility of the veterans' programs will not be effected by the change. The V. A, pointed out that schools must provide effective education. Reports of veterans' progress and attendance must be submitted to the V.A. periodically.
There are pictures of the members of the first immigrant aid party and two early newspaper The Herald of $ \circ $
two early newspapers The Herald o. Freedom and the Kansas Tribune. There are also pictures of the second immigrant aid party, pictures of men and women important later in Lawrence's history, a bust of Gen. James H. Lane, pictures of John Brown, pictures of Mrs. J. B. Watkins and some of the buildings which she contributed to the University and to Lawrence, pictures of early churches, a portrait of Amos Lawrence, for whom the town was named.
This is to simplify the V.A. program and to free personnel for other work. More time can be devoted to direct supervision of disabled veterans' training under the vocational rehabilitation act, a recent V. A. bulletin stated.
The Veterans' administration has shifted more responsibility for supervision of veterans' training to school and institution authorities.
Behind the door hangs a picture of Quantrill and a list of the people he killed in his raid. There are two copies of a map of Lawrence made by Robert Searl which shows the city almost as it is today. There also are pictures of the Lawrence Boat club; the Turnverin, a group of Lawrence men of German ancestry; early women's clubs; and the Old Dutch windmill.
A Picture Of Quantrill
A call bell and a chair from the old Free State hotel, a John Brown pike, one of the 1000 he ordered from Connecticut to Harper's Ferry; Gov. Charles Robinson's gun, a six shooter used by one of Quantrill's men; a Sharps rifle, a scabbard belonging to General Lane, and "Old Sacramento," the cannon to have
VA Grants Control Of Veteran To KU
fired the first shot for slavery in Kansas are all on exhibit.
How It Originated
The idea for a Lawrence room originated when Prof. F. W. Blackmar, executor of the estate of Governor Robinson, gave Mrs. Watson pictures of the governor and his family. The collection grew from contributions and was placed in the library in 1928. A card catalog, arranged by Miss Carrie M. Watson, former librarian, has information on each item in the collection.
Miss Maud Smelser, who worked with Miss Watson, former librarian, for many years, and who is familiar with all the articles in the room, now serves as guide.
Joseph McCoskrie was elected president of the Inter-fraternity council Monday.
Inter Frat Council Elects McCoskrie
Other officers elected are Murray Davis, vice-president; Ernest Friesen, secretary; and Robert Krueger, treasurer. The four members of the executive council elected are Gerald Waugh, Ralph Kiene, William Burris, and Malcom Dryden.
A discussion was held at the meeting to suggest a revision of intramural sports for fraternities. s
SAM Will Elect Officers Today
Members of the Society for the Advancement of Management will elect officers for 1948-49 at 7:30 p.m. today in the recreation room of the Union.
The nominating committee will present three candidates for each position. Members will be allowed to make additional nominations from the floor.
Members of the nominating committee are Robert M. Harris, James L. Marsh, and Leo J. Tolle, business seniors; John Brooks Egelston, Ted Richard Hanske, and M. I. Swan, business juniors.
Trains Operate On Schedule As Unions Work
Washington, May 11—(UP)—The country's rail traffic obeyed smoothly under army operation today as the men who run the trains obeyed union orders calling off a strike scheduled for dawn.
The union leaders dramatically surrendered to a no-strike order won by the government. Late Monday they set telegraph wires humming with notices that the walkout was off.
They had feared the cancellation order was too late to reach all of their 150,000 members in time to keep all of them on the job.
"There is bound to be a lot of confusion this morning," one union official said, "but it will not last more than a few hours. Then things should straighten themselves out."
But practically everywhere the trains were manned and rolling. They were hauling their cargoes of freight, mail, and people under government supervision in normal or near-normal fashion.
One hangover of the strike threat remained. Railroad officials said it would be several days before they could reduce mountains of fry foods which piled up at feright loadings while freight embargoes were in force.
The embargoes, ordered as the strike deadline approached with no settlement in sight, were promptly lifted when President Truman seized the railroads at 11 a.m. Monday.
Federal Judge T. Alan Goldsborough—the judge who twice slapped big contemp of court fines on John L. Lewis—issued the nine day no-strike order shortly before 8 o'clock last night. It came less than seven hours after President Truman seized the railroads and turned the job of running them over to the army.
Judge Goldsborough's order against the three railroad unions will remain in force until May 19, at which time a hearing will be held on the government's petition for a preliminary anti-strike injunction.
The students were members of the Washington High school journalism class who were voted as the group contributing the most to their school.
While the strike was averted, the dispute over wages and working rules which provoked the crisis remained unsettled. There was no immediate indication whether the White House would continue its mediation efforts between the unions and the railroads or negotiate a government settlement with the unions.
At 8:20 p.m. an official announcement calling off the strike was issued by a spokesman for the three unions involved—the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers, the Brotherhood of IFremen and Enginemen, and the Switchmen's union.
Forty high school students from Bethel peered into the molten lead on the linotypes, spelled out news on the teletype, and filed slowly past the editing desk on a reward tour through the Journalism building Monday.
Prof. Elmer F. Beth conducted the tour. The group was accompanied by C.A. Hayck, principal, and Horace Powell journalism teacher.
Neophyte Writers Look Over Shack
Tickets are now on sale for the spring dance show to be held at 8 p.m. Thursday in Fraser theater, Miss Elaine Selecovitz said today. The show is sponsored by Tau Sigma, modern dance group.
Tickets, at 50 cents each, may be purchased in the rotunda of Frank Strong hall. 106 Robinson gym, at the Union during eating hours, and from any member of Tau Sigma.
Tickets On Sale For Dance Show
The program will include foreign dances, American folk dances, and modern jazz.
University Daily Kansan
Wednesday, May 12, 1948 Lawrence, Kansas
STUDENT NEWS PAPER
Students Give 'College Daze' Tonight In Hoch
"College Daze," student musical. will be presented at 8:20 tonight in Hoch auditorium.
Three skits, three dancing numbers, songs by four students, a 42-voice chorus, and music by a pro-author extra will be combined in the program.
Singing the leads are Norma Jean Guthrie and Ann Hogue, fine arts sophomores. Dargan Montgomery, College sophomore, and Dean Frazier. College junior.
The skits will be on a campus scene, a classroom scene, and a vacation scene. The dancing numbers are a ballet, a novelty ballet or jitterbug, and a South American number.
Charles T. Freshwater, fine arts sophomore, will portray "Joe College," and a change in plans puts Virginia L. Brown, College freshman, in the role of "Josephine College."
Administrators for the show are Jack Moorhead, author; Jesse E Stewart, director and composer of the music: James C. McCaig, orchestrations; Bill P. Ogg, skit director; Charles W. Kassinger, orchestra leader; Ralph E. Kiene, business manager, Craig W. Hampton, scenery and co-originator of the South American dance with Betty Joe Lorber; Frank H. Rotman, publicity; Robert L. Bottoms, program chairman; and Frank G. Pomeroy, ticket sales. The show is sponsored by Union Activities. Faculty sponsors are Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women, and Willis L. Tompkins, assistant dean of men.
In the skirts are Judson L. Greer, Jack M. Kendree, Charles T. Freshwater, Ted J. Coltharp, Robert E. Harriott, Wilbur B. Noble, Richard A. Blassdell, Robert L. Bottoms, Joan R. Happy, Betty A. Bolinger, James W. Hawes, Virginia L. Brown, E. Keith Wilson, Louise Lambert, Dorothy J. Scroggy, and Gwendolynne S. Jones.
Dancers are Craig W. Hampton, Betty Joe Lorbeer, Jean A. Gillie, Mary Flo Spilman, Thomas H. Steinle, Joan E. Wales, Kathryn A. Walter, Betty A. Boling, gwendolyne S. Jones, Betty Rae Thomas, Delores Travelent, M. Sue Jones.
In the chorus are Jeanne Atkinson, Betty A. Boling, Frances A. Bernero, Virginia L. Brown, Nila T. Brewster, Billie Ann Carter, Ted J. Coltharp, Richard A. Digh, Phyllis T. Deane, M. Virginia Gard, Marianie Gear, A. Edward Green, Carl E. Hoskins, H. Frances Hall, Rita
100
WILLIS TOMPKINS
Tompkins Quits To Go To Ohio
He plans to finish requirements for his masters degree in business before leaving he added. Mr. Tompkins was graduated from the University in 1943 with a bachelor's degree in business. He has been assistant dean of men since 1945.
Willis L. Tompkins, assistant dean of men, today announced his resignation to be effective July 31. He will accept the office of assistant dean of men at Ohio university at Athens, Aug. 1.
Mr. Tompkins said, "I am leaving with a good taste for the University. I feel I need the stimulus of a new environment since I have been around K.U. so long."
F. Hartwell, Joan R. Happy, Catherine F. Jarboe, Mary J. Katherman, Darrell O. McNeil, Robert H. Malott, J. Lawrence Nieman, Edith E. Malott, Barbara A. Pack, Jeanne M. Paterson, Mary Ann Suderman, Thomas H. Steinle, Mary Ann Warner.
No successor to Mr. Tompkins has been named.
Nancy Wilkinson, Virginia A. Walsh, Kathryn A. Witter, Jae Young, George E. Nettles, George Sehe, Carol A. Dunn, Edwin S. Barstow, Alan V. Dougherty, Donald W. McDaniels, Richard A. Blasdel, George Shaeffer, Dean A. Gilley, Lila L. Hyten, and M. Ann Hogue.
Members of the Inter-fraternity sing committee will meet at 5 p.m. today in Lindley auditorium.
Committee To Meet Today
Student Court Hears Appeals In Three Cases
Appeals in three parking cases were heard by the student court Tuesday.
Harold S. Warwick, business junior, appealed four tickets. Three were affirmed for a fine of $3. The court held that Warwick should have obtained a temporary parking permit. He set aside his defense of conducting University business.
I. H. Hoover, engineering sophomore, appealed two of three violations. One was reversed and he was fined $1.
Andrew William Berry, College sophomore, appealed seven of nine violations. All were reversed. The seven tickets were received on another car driven by his sister, who is not a student, Berry testified.
Default judgment was entered against six students. They are J. D. Bottin, College sophomore, five violations, $7; Elinor Frye, College junior, seven violations, $11; Joe E. Greenhaw, engineering junior, six violations, $9; William W. Howard, engineering freshman, five violations, $7; Lawrence T. Nelson, College freshman, five violations, $7; and Dutton A. Stahl, engineering sophomore, two violations, $1.
The case of Richard L. Ashley, College freshman, was set aside until the next session.
The court will meet for the last time this semester on May 18. Only tickets received during May may be appealed, and notice of appeal must be filed with the parking office before 11 a.m. May 17.
Vets Books Void May 20
Veterans' requisition books will not be honored after May 20, the veterans' bureau said today. The old books should be turned into the bureau in Frank Strong hall annex C.
Student-veterans who plan to attend the summer session under the G.I. Bill will receive new requisition books at the time of registration. Different colored pages will help the veterans distinguish the old from the new books.
If the veteran uses the old book after May 20 he will have to re-enter his information in a new requisition book.
English Proficiency Exam Results Are Out
The results of the English Proficiency examination given April 10 have been announced by John M. Adams, instructor in English in charge of the examinations.
Mr. Adams said that the percentage of failures this year, between 7 and 10 percent, is about the same as it has been in past years. Another exam will be given June 29.
The following students in the College passed the examination:
Wallace W. Abbey, Bessie Louise Agins, Marta Aldrith隆贤, Alvah David Allen, John E. Armel, Andrew David, Aubrey Iwain L. Baird Flexd W. Baker, Waker W. Baker, Jerald K. Bales, Russel N. Barrett, Kenneth E Beau, Dean A. Beck, Kenneth F. Beck, Patrick T. Bentley, Patten Bentley, Gaylan Beautilh, Albert C. Blair, Brian L. Bock
Robert E. Bodmer, Robert N. Bolitho,
Mary F. Bovaide, Elbert A. Bowen, Eleanor Bradford, Richard A. Brooks, Milford O. Brown, Robert C. Brown, William R. Brown, Robert H. Brownsberger, Edward W. Brunk, Betty Ann Bryant, Janney Turgess, James Burdick, B. Burns, James Burdick, Carolyn Campbell, Edith Carey, William T. Cavaughn, Robert F. Cebula, R. E. Chamberlain, Bailey Chauney, Barbara Chapin, Alvaro V. Chauurria, Lewis O. Chubb, Clay, Cliff Clark, Roger L. Clubb
Joanne Cockreham, Charles B. Comst,
Boyd N. Connaway, Paul R. Con-
naughton
rad, Reginald Cook, John M. Couch,
Joseph Dowlery, Carl J. Cramm,
Constance M. Cultra, Donald Daerleur,
Marjorie Darby, William N. Dougherty,
A. F. Davidson, Alice J. Davis, Joseph
Dowell, Charlie K. Davis, Dean
Dean, Joan P. Deeds, William Degen,
Harold Dittermore, Gerald F. Dobel,
Robert Dobratz, Thomas K. Klebeler,
Franklin Fearing, Gerald V. Fetteroff, Jeanne L.
Fischer, Clifford Fosse, Dorothy Ford,
Dean W. Frazier, James D. Frisbie, Wal-
ley E. Frazier, D. Froman, Jeanne Fry
David L. Davidson.
Charles G. Fuller, Larry L. Funk,
Rosemary Gaines, Raymond J. Garcia,
Robert C. Glish, Ira Glsen, Harold Goodman,
Barnray Garneham, Thomas M. Gregg,
Marvin G. Gregory, Omar D. Gregory,
Joshua B. Gibson, Eric R. Miller,
m Robert D. Hagg, James R. Haggard,
Raymond W. Hanna, Arleen L. Hale,
Lucille Harlow, Nicole K. Kostes,
Derek D. Dight House, Lewis C.
Haws, Meredith Heinsohn, Alberta Hensel,
Walter W. Higgins, Wilma White
brand, Gloria Hill, Charles K. Hinshaw,
Stephen C. Hinshaw, John M. Hirschler,
Stephen B. Hinshaw, William L.
ham H. Holway, B. Morris Hopkins,
Robert P. Hudson, John D. Hunt, Chester
P. Huston, Robert A. Jellinek, Clarence
D. Jellinek, William W. Williams,
H. Johnson, Keith D. Jones
Donald N. "deearis, Orion Meye, Noah J. Cobb, Joseph Meye, Joan W. Meyer, Frank W. Meye, Renata W. Meyer, Charles D. Miles, Charles D. Moore, Richard Morrison, Joseph W. Meyer, Philip K. Murphy, Murphy, Robert D. Nelson, Patricia Newman, George A. Newton, George M. Newman, Michael J. Land, Reyburn Ocamb, Robert P. O-Dwyer, Janice E. Oehrle, Richard A.
Vonda Geane Jones, Robert L. Jongema, I Dean Jordan, Leeman C. Joslin, John L. Kapistros, Melyn V. Kelth, L. Kapistros, Melyn V. Kelth, Jerny J. Kersen, Harlan S. Klnur, Rither B. Kinyon, Edwin E. Kirchhoff, Daniel M. Kirchhuff, Arthur H. Kruse, Walter W. Lancaster, Lorrine Larson, George Learned, Lorenzo Larson, Lorenzo L. Levy, R. Lowey, Robert C. Long, Nina Lull, Harrison E. Madden, Joyce Mamigianon, Basil C. Marhofer, Donald M. Marks, Robert L. Marshall, Harvey M. Marks, Barbara K. Kathie, McClanahan, Arthur S. McDonald, Nancy C. McGraw, Jack B. McDonald, E Thomas E. McMillin
(Continued to Page 2)
University Senate Sets '49-50 Class Calendar
The University senate Tuesday approved a calendar which provides for $91\frac{1}{2}$ class days during the first semester, and 90 days in the second, in the 1949-50 academic year.
Thanksgiving will be five days, Christmas vacation will be 12, and the spring holiday will be eight days long. Because the Monday after
Deadline Tomorrow On K-Book Dates
Closed dates desired and events to be listed in the K-book for next year should be turned in at the dean of women's office by tomorrow.
The All Student Council, which approves the dates, urges all organized houses and organizations to turn in the dates and preferences for next year's parties.
19 To Present Progress Recital
Nineteen students will present a musical program at 7:30 p.m. today in Frank Strong auditorium. The students, most of them in fine arts, are those recommended by their instructors as showing progress in their particular field.
The program includes piano solos by Elizabeth Ann Schoewe, freshman, "Polichinelle" (Rachmaninoff); Billie George, sophomore "Ricordanza" (Liszt); Willard Straight, freshman, "Two Intermezzi, Op. 4, Numbers 1 and 6" (Schumann); Martha Myers, junior, "Rhapsody in E Flat" (Brahms); and Maxine Dunkleberg, junior, "Prelude, Op. 23, Number 2" (Rachmaninoff).
Students of voice who will appear are Patricia Waits, sophomore, "The Little Shepherd's Song" (Edwards) and "Comin' Thro' the Rye" (arranged by Krugeford); Harriet Harlow, junior; "Inner Leiser Wird Mein Schlummer" (Brahms); Jess Rose, junior; "Thanks Be to Thee" from "Israel in Egypt" Blandel and "Israel Not Me" Jeanne Leidl, idulde; education junior; "Die Mainacht!" (Brahms); Sidney Dawson education junior; "It is Enough" from "Elijah," (Mendelssohn).
Donna Rumsey, sophomore, "Vissi D'Arte" (from "Tosca," Puccini); Mary Ardis Sly, sophomore, "Je Veux Vivre" (from "Romeo En Juliette" Gounod); Ben Shanklin, senior, "Money O" and When I Think Upon the Maidens" (Michael Head); Nancy Messenger, "Ritorna Vincitor" (from "Aida," Verdi); and Harriet Ruth Reisner, "O Patricia Mia" (from "Aida" Verdi).
Thomas McMillin, College sophmore, will present a violin interpretation of "Ballade Et Polonaise" (Vieuxtemps).
An ensemble composed of Myron McNown, violin, Maurice Pollum, cello, and Frank White, piano, will conclude the program with "Trio in E Flat" (Schubert).
Psi Chi Club Elects Phelps President
Kermit Phelps, graduate student was elected president of Psi Chi, honorary psychology organization, at a business meeting Monday.
Other officers elected are Jack Deiter, vice-president; Barbara Gibson, secretary-treasurer; and George Yeekel, social chairman. The group planned a picnic for Friday.
WEATHER
Kansas-Partly cloudy with slowly rising temperatures today through Thursday. High today upper 60's. Low tonight 40 to 45.
New Year's day, 1950, will be a legal holiday, classwork will resume on Tuesday morning, Jan. 3.
Thanksgiving recess will begin at noon the Wednesday before the holiday.
Appoints Advisory Committee
Assuming the summer session, 1950, will be pre-war in makeup, the calendar-makers plan for class-work to begin the Thursday after commencement.
Chancellor Deane W. Malott appointed an advisory committee on general education at the senate meeting. It will study programs of other schools in that field, and recommend changes here.
Prof. M. D. Clubb, chairman of the English department, will be committee chairman. Others are Jacob Kleinberg, Kenneth Rose, Hilden Gibson, Elmer F. Beth, Max Dresden, M. Carl Slough, D. Gagliardo, Henry Smith, James Nickerson, and E. S. Robinson.
Profs. George Beal and J. O. Jones were elected to the advisory committee of the senate. Profs. Guy Smith and Carroll Clark were reelected to the athletic board, and Prof. Ray Q. Brewster was named chairman of the committee on committees.
$500.000 In Research Grants
Dr. E. B. Stouffer, dean of the University, and Dr. J. O. Maloney, director of the research foundation, reported that grants from outside sources in recent years for research at the University were nearing the $500,000 mark.
They explained how faculty members might apply for research grants. The trend for independent agencies to finance research of fundamental nature, and for which there was no immediate prospect of practical application, was described as "most encouraging."
"Problems today are essentially the same wherever you go," said Miss Joan Skipsey, former British newspaperwoman, who discussed conditions in England with the members of the University club Tuesday night.
University Club Hears Reporter
Miss Skipsey, now on the staff of the Topeka State Journal, said that most American are not getting any more food because of the high costs, than English people do because of rationing and shortages.
She also said that there is solid support behind the labor government, chiefly because of the success with which they handled demobilization and found jobs for the demobilized army.
The attitude of the British people toward the Marshall plan is one of "complete gratefulness to Americans, although they dislike the feeling of dependence," she added.
"I don't think the public feeling in England is nearly as agitated about the war threat," Miss Skipsey said. "They are confidently working toward reconstruction."
Will Be Models For An Afternoon
University women will model 30 outfits from Lawrence department stores in a fashion show. 4 p.m. today in the Kansas root of the Union. The show is insured by the Coffee umittee.
EVUE
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 1948
Official Bulletin
May 12, 1948
Square dancing, 7 tonight, recreation room, Union. Everyone interested in learning.
United World Federalists, 4 today.
Plue room, Union. All interested.
Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship, 7 tonight, 113 Frank Strong.
K U. Dames bridge, 7.30 tonight
Pine song, Memorial Union.
Home Economics club, 5 p.m. tomorrow, Fraser dining room. Election of officers. Sign at Home Economics office by 5 today.
Student Union Activities fashion show, 4 to 5 today, Kansas room. Harzfeld's and Weavers. Everyone welcome.
Campus Christian Missionary fellowship, 4 today, Myers hall. Plans outlined for next year.
All organized houses and organizations leave dates, preference and alternative for next year's parties at office of Dean of Women by tomorrow. Indicate closed dates desired.
Letters of application for dance manager job to Sue Webster, 1625 Edgehill road. Enclose address and phone number. Deadline Friday.
Applications for committee membership in Student Union Activities being accepted at Student Activities office through tomorrow.
El Atenco se reune el jueves a las 7:30 en 113 de F.S. para la ultima reunión del semestre. Programa especial, muchas sorpresas.
Four-No Bridge club, 7:30 tonight Union ballroom. All interested.
Student Religious council, 4 p.m tomorrow. Myers hall.
Deutscher Verein wird sich Donnerstag um 4:30 in 402 Fraser versammein. Herr Thomas Morris wird reden.
K U. Amateur Radio club, 5 p.m.
tomorrow, 205 E.E. Lab. Election of
officers. Don Oppenheimer, "Harmonic Crystals."
Christian Science organization,
7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Danforth chapel.
Episcopal College club Holy Communion, 7 a.m. tomorrow, Danforth chapel.
Picnic for Pre-Nursing group, 5 p.m. tomorrow, Potter lake. Meet in basement of Fraser.
Y. M.C.A. Movie Forum on Russia, talk by Russell Barrett, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, recreation room, Union.
Westminster fellowship treasure hunt Friday evening. Jim Kaneh in charge. Leave from Westminster house at 8 sharp.
Veterans requisition books for current semester will not be honored after May 20.
Hearing Specialist To Talk
To Speech Class Thursday
Miss Miriam Levitt of the University Medical center will speak on "Some Aspects of Audiometry" at a Speech Therapy seminar at 4 p.m. tomorrow in the East room of the Union.
Miss Levitt is an assistant to Dr. J. B. Spake in the hearing clinic at the center.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
University Daily Kansan
Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.60 a semester postage), published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, University hours. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
They Passed English Exam
Ong, Elvita D, Opigler, Kenneth M Oyer, Mary H. F, Face, Max F, Pachi, Peter, B. Foley, Pennier, George L, Peterson, Fleix A, Pilegg, Robert J, Piller, Robert A, Pine.
(Continued from Page 1)
Richard H. Piper, Don Plattner,
Duane Postlethwaite, William J. Porter,
Pengle Fingle, Rumie Rankin, Walter
O. Quaile, Jean Rankin, othely Ely Ravaldal, Harold Reddoch, Paul C. Redmand, Henry H. Reed, Richard M. Reed, Paul J. Richardson, John E. B.
Barnett, Kevin W. Reynolds,inson H. Cooper Rowlow, James A. Ross,
Frank H. Rotman, Anthony F. Rotoli,
David B. Rowlett, Janet I. Runmer,
John F. Tynerson, Jean Sanders, Betty
K. Rymeson, Robert S. Martyn,
L. Schloesser, David O. Schmidt, Martlyn
Schneckel, Robert D. Schnur.
Anne Schaeffer, Kathleen Sheridan,
Harold L. Shipman, Byron C. Shutz, Eugene Siler, Jeanne Sisson, Josephine Smith, Nancy S. Smith, Betty J. Sneeary,
Leonard J. Snyder, Donald B. Sprinkle.
Elmer G. Stegman, Marilyn Steinert,
William J. Stoneer, George G. Stout,
Jim I. Stoneer, Robert D. Huckey,
Orin L. Strobel, Robert B. Stuckey,
Henry B. Sullivan, Marvelyn M. Swann,
James Swoyer, Warren I. Taylor, Nora Lesa Temple, Don L. Tennant, Grover Cerry, Harry B. Tillen, James A. Tilson.
Bernard L. Tornigal, Mary Lynn Trousdale, Margaret van der Slmissen, Ora W. andiver, Jennifer D. Dolores Wood, J. Walsh, J. John W. William J. Weigel, Don W. Welch, Leslie A. Welch, John F. Wheeler, Haworth White, William D. Wiley, William D. Wiley, William D. Wiley, Aaron A. Wilson, Keith Wilson, James N. Winblad, Charles E. Workman, George Wright, Mary Lou Wright Yendes, Robert B. Young, Marion Z.Rellinski.
In the school of education,
Rachel MacNeil, Martha Jane
Blades Wilma Dunne, Francis Fischer,
Sara Givens, Grace Gwinner, Eugene
Lamish, Wallace Holleadsmith, Jerry
Knopf, Nicholas Reed, William
Roland Nielswender, William F.
Perkins, Esther R. Rich, William G.
Grimson, Jean Saulding, Nelda M.
Graham, Seal D. Trull, and Darlene
Zimmerman.
Wesley Foundation Leads Danforth Devotions
Morning devotions from 8:30 to 8:50 are being conducted in Danforth chapel by students from the Methodist Wesley foundation this week.
Morning devotions in the chapel are sponsored by the Student Religious council.
Parker 51 Fountain Pens Super Chrome Ink Stowit's Rexall Store
"College Daze"
TONIGHT AT HOCH
Velvet Freeze Ice Cream A SPECIAL TREAT - RICH FLAVORS 742 Mass. Call 720
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Ice Cream at its Best It's delicious!
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"College Daze" TONIGHT AT HOCH
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Short Orders
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TONIGHT AT HOCH
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ONCE OUR CUSTOMER---- ALWAYS OUR CUSTOMER!
Chet's Drive-In North on Hi-way 24-40, in City Limits
Dinners
Noon 'til Midnight
ALL ATTENDANCE RECORDS BROKEN
HELD OVER
ONE MORE DAY
Positively Ends Thursday
LIFE Say "VIOLENCE AND PLAIN SEXINESS
project a feeling of dangerous struqgle
Hollywood seldom approaches!"
OPEN CITY
SHOWS
2:30
7-9
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—N.Y. Film Critics
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DON'T MISS THIS
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Loose Look' Is Coming In Much To Relief Of Tummies
Socially Speaking
Corbin Hall Dance
Corbin hall will hold its spring semi-formal dance from 9 p.m. to midnight Friday.
Phi Psi Election
Phi Kappa Psi announces the election of Dionne O'Leary, president; Duane McCarter, vice-president; Gene Nelson, treasurer; Ernest Neuer, assistant treasurer; Robert Foerschler, corresponding secretary; William Lacy, recording secretary; and Floyd Grimes, historian.
Entertain Mothers
The mothers of the members of Phi Kappa Psi fraternity were entertained at a Mother's Day lunchun at the chapter house May 8.
Battenfeld Hall Elects
Battenfeld hall announces the election of Ray Frisby, president; Lyle Wheatcroft, vice-president; Warren Ansmiger, secretary; Bruce Talmadge, treasurer; Russell Cooper and Robert Dunwell, social chairmen.
Harold Eurlich, intramural manager; Douglas Kent, song leader Delmer Harris, publicity chairman and Robert Casad and Claude Moore forums board.
**
Parents' Day
Pi Beta Phi recently entertained their parents with a Mother's and Father's Day at the chapter house.
Guests were Dr. and Mrs. Jay Scott, Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Sweet,Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Boyle,Mr. and Mrs. H.T. Stodard,Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Rowe,Dr. and Mrs. Craig Cundiff,Mr. and Mrs. J. Frank Hudson,Mr. and Mrs. Earl Newcomer,Mr. and Mrs.J.C. Hume,Dr. and Mrs.Frank Foncannon,Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Wilkinson.
Dr. and Mrs. W. B. Granger, Mr. and Mrs. B. C. Godbehme, Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Pack, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Lambert, Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Gear, Mr. and Mrs. John Dean, Dr. and Mrs. Fred Campbell, Mr. and Mrs. John Foster, Mrs. W. Love, Mrs. F. S. Cable, Mrs. S. A. White, Mrs. D. D. Hoag, Mrs. Harry Darby, Mrs. R. C. Ellis, Mrs. Dorothy Buxton, Prof. H. B. Chubb, Mr. L. W. Keplinger, Mr. Henry Pegues, Mr. Jack Dressler, and Mr. Ralph Varner.
★ ★ ★
Tri Delts Entertain
Delta Delta Delta celebrated its chapter Founder's day Sunday with a tea in honor of Mother's Day.
The house was decorated with spring flowers, and the table where refreshments were served carried out the theme of silver, gold, and blue. Vocal selections were sung by Dorothy O'Connor, Bernadine Read, and Kitty Walter. Mothers and alliance members were guests.
Corbin Elects
( )
Bernelda M. Larsen, education senior, was recently elected president of Corbin hall for next year. Other new officers are Rebecca Ann Larson', vice-president; Ruth Marie Brotherson, secretary; Martha L. Penn, treasurer; Bette E. Davis, fire-chief; Patricia Ann Dosien and Betty Lou Hatcher, social chairmen; Mary Helen Shepard, intramural manager; E. J. Spurney, song leader; and Beverly K. Pyke, scholarship chairman.
Phi Beta Pi Formal
Phi Beta Pi held its annual spring formal at the Lawrence Country Club May 8.
Chaperons were Dr. and Mrs. Kenneth Jochim, Dr. and Mrs. R. C. Mills, Dr. and Mrs. Paul D. Roofe, Dr. and Mrs. O. O. Stoland, and Mr. and Mrs. Ivan D. Rowe.
Bacteriologists Plan Picnic
The Bacteriology club will give a picnic for all members of the department of bacteriology at 5:30 p.m. May 18 at Potter lake.
Paris-(UP)-Women no longer need to be "strangled around the stomach" to be in fashion, Capt. Edward Molyneux said recently.
Captain Molyneux, whose Paris and London dressmaking houses have been operating for 30 years, said he's setting out to soften up "the look" and turn it into "something comfortable and wearable."
"What I'm working toward is a loose silhouette," he said.
The first big break for the stomach turned up in his summer collection. Straight skirts were cut with nice relaxing drapery over the tummy. The fullness was then pulled back for further comfort in the bustle department.
Other developments in the "loose look" included the restoration of shoulder padding—just a little to overcome that tired-looking droop.
Waistlines still look small, but it's done with clever cutting rather than stays. And the pads are out of the hips.
mps.
Mr. Molyneux said he heard a lot about how uncomfortable "the look" was to wear.
"Too many persons have complained," he said. "The tight waist, the padded hips, the yards and yards of material were not practical."
But he denied that he and other high fashion designers had been trying to sell the world's women on a revolution in fashion.
"We designers aren't ghastly robber barons who push poor women into buying new dresses because of radical changes," he said. "We believe that fashion has to undergo big changes. Then they are modified until a new, little change comes in."
Five Law Profs To Attend Meeting
Five University law professors will attend the annual Kansas Bar association meeting in Wichita May 20, 21, and 22.
They are F. J. Moreau, dean of the School of Law; Millard H. Ruud, William R. Scott, and M. Carl. Slough, assistant professors; and Leslie T. Tupy, professor.
A luncheon for University alumni will be held May 21 in the Grill room of the Lassen hotel. Arrangements are being made by Eugene G. Coombs, '36, and Carl (Sandy) Winsor, '22, both of Wichita.
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The pinning of Mary Alice Martin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Martin, Salida, Colo., to William "Red" Rush, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Rush, Salida, Colo., was announced May 7 at the Phil Delta Theta house at Boulder, Colo. Miss Martin and her parents are former residents of Kansas City, Kan.
Miss Martin, a College sophomore, is a member of Delta Delta Delta. Mr. Rush is a student at the University of Colorado.
Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Wagenfield, St. Joseph, Mo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Ellen, to Hubert M. Church, son of Mr. and Mrs. Noah Church, St. Joseph, Mo. The wedding will be next fall.
Wagenfield-Church
Miss Wagenfield was graduated from the University in 1945, receiving a bachelor's degree in music education. Mr. Church, an engineering senior, will receive his bachelor of science degree in civil engineering next month.
Kendall-McIrath
☆ ☆
Pi Beta Phi announces the pinning of Connie Kendall, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Donald A. Kendall, Great Bend, to Don McIlrath, son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald McIlrath, Great Bend.
The pinning was announced at dinner by Mary Varner, after which chocolates were passed. Mrs. Dean Alt, housemother, wore a corsage of gardenias and carnations. Miss Kendall wore an orchid corsage.
Miss Kendall is a College freshman. Mr. McIlrath, a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity, is a College sophomore.
The American Institute of Chemical Engineers will elect officers for 1948-49 at 7:30 p.m. today in 426 Lindley. It will be the last meeting of the year.
AChE Will Elect Today
Naturally, your troubles are over when you have your clothes pressed while you wait.
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Business Women's Group Elects Officers For Fall
Phi Chi Theta, business woman's fraternity, recently elected Dorothy Jones, president; Betty Jane Booth, vice-president; Elinora Eudaly, secretary; Doris Margreiter, treasurer; and Meribah Barrett, reporter. All are business juniors.
A ton of grain can be consumed in a year by 20 rats.
Philosophy department faculty members attended a meeting of the western division of the American Philosophical association May 6 to 8. The meeting was held on the campus of Knox college in Galesburg, Ill.
Professors In Illinois
Professors attending the meeting were E. H. Hollands, C. P. Osborne, and Edward Robinson.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 1948
Sehon's Subs See Action In Kansas Win Over Baker
Coach Russ Sehon used sixteen men in the lineup, including four pitchers, as the Jayhawkers edged the Baker university Wildcats 5 to 3 in an inter-conference tilt played on the Stadium field Tuesday.
Jayhawker pitchers Dick Fletcher and Karl Ebel made their first appearance against a foe, each twirling two frames. Fletcher came into the
game in the top of the fourth replacing Lee Ehtridge and held the Wildcats scoreless on one hit. Ebel allowed one run on one hit while striking out three. Bernard Hinrichs, Kansas' fourth twirler, gave up two runs on two hits and fanned two in two innings.
Kansas started with a rush in their half of the first, scoring three on two fielder's choices and a single. Neil Shaw hit safely but was forced at third by Lou DeLuna. After Bad French was safe on a fielder's choice, Paul Gilkison singled, scoring DeLuna and French. Gilkison talled on May's long fly.
KU Starts Fast
John Fency crossed the plate in the bottom half of the second when he was hit by a pitched ball and Shaw singled to drive him in. The Jayhawkers pushed across their last run in the fourth when Fletcher singled sharply to center when teammate Hal Stewart aboard.
Gilkison, who is leading the Jayhawkers in batting, upped his average by collecting a single and double in three appearances. In spite of the wet field a total of only three errors were made; one charged to the Jayhawkers.
The Wildcats couldn't score until the seventh when pitcher Steve Ward doubled and came home on a wild pitch by Ebel. They added two more in the eighth on a hit batsman, a fielder's choice, and a single, to round out their scoring. Gilbert Faces Attack
Ethridge, K.U. righthander, got credit for the victory. Ward went the distance for Baker, limiting the Jayhawkers to nine hits, and banging out a sold double in three trips.
Chicago, May 12—(UP) —The Boston Braves today announced a deal involving the Cincinnati Reds, Washington Senators, and the Milwaukee Brewers. Brave farm club in the American Association.
Braves Announce Three-Player Deal
John J. Quinn, Braves general manager, said that veteran outfielder Danny Litwhiler, who was with the Philadelphia Phillies and St. Louis Cardinals before joining Boston in 1946, has been sold to Cincinnati.
Quinn said the Reds, in turn, will sent outfielder Marvin Rickert to Milwaukee to replace outfielder Carden Gillenwater, who has been purchased by the Senators for a reputed sum of more than $20,000.
Two Engineers Win Aeronautical Prizes
Joseph Q. Keller, engineering senior, won the award for the best lecture presentation of a technical subject.
Robert L. Aker, engineering senior, received first prize for his paper on technical aviation. The award was made by the Institute of Aeronautical Science.
Both men were given two-year memberships in the National Institute of Aeronautical Science. Aker also received a cash prize of $5.
Today's Pitchers
American League
Chicago (Grove 1-2) at Boston (Parnell 1-1)
Cleveland (Bearden 1-0) at New
Lyon (Lonat 1-3), night
St. Louis (Fannin 1-2) at Philadelphia (Fowler 1-0), night
Detroit (Newhouser 1-4) at Washington (Hudson 1-2), night
Brooklyn (Hatten 1-1) at Cincinnati
(tVander Meer 1-3), night
New York (Poat 2-1) at St. Louis (Pollet 1-0)
Boston (Voiselle 3-0) at Chicago (Chambers 1-1)
Philadelphia (Leonard 2-2) at Pittsburg (Bonham 0-2).
KU-Baker Box Score
KU-Baker Box Score
BAKER (3)
Adams, 1b
Enos, 2b
Black, ss
Irick, 3b
Ward, p
Dillon, c
Doleshal, lf
Winkler, cf
Moss®
Hulings, rf
Shores, rf
AB R H E
4 1 0 0
4 1 2 2
2 0 0 0
4 0 1 0
3 1 1 0
4 0 0 0
4 2 0 0
2 0 0 0
1 0 0 0
1 0 1 0
3 0 0 0
7 3 2 7
*Moss (for Winkler) fanned in 9th KANSAS (5) (5)
Shaw, lf 4 0 2 0
DeLuma, 1b 4 1 1 0
Campbell, 1b 0 0 0 0
French, ss 4 1 0 0
Gilkison, rf 3 1 2 0
Spring, rf 2 0 0 0
May, 3b 2 0 1 0
Bertuzzi, 3b 2 0 1 1
Stewart, cf 2 1 1 1
Medlock, 2b 4 0 0 0
Fencyk, b 0 1 0 0
Meade, c 2 0 0 0
Ethridge, p 0 0 0 0
Fletcher, p 1 0 1 0
Ebel, p 1 0 0 0
Hinrichs, p 0 0 0 0
31 5 9 1
Baker 000 000 120-3 7 2
Kansas 310 100 00-5 9 1
5th Straight For Reynolds
New York, May 12—(UP)—Winning 30 games in a season is an ambitious chore, one unaccompanied since "Dizzy" Dean turned the track with a 30 and 7 record on the 1934 Cardinal staff, and Indian Allie Reynolds wasn't optimistic today about coming up with such a record with the Yankees.
Reynolds, who won't be used every other day in relief as Dean was in 1934, still looks like he might be a good bet to come close to "Dizzy's" mark. If the Yankees keep backing him as they did Tuesday in their 4 to 1 triumph over the Cleveland Indians. In that game Reynolds scored his fifth straight win to build up his record as top pitcher in the majors.
Kramer Hurls Shutout
The Red Sox got squared around at the expense of the laggardly Withe Sox, breaking a five game losing streak with an 8 to 0 victory in which Jack Kramer pitched six-hit ball and gave no walks and Vernon Stephens hit two homers. Bobby Doerr also hit a homer.
The Philadelphia Athletics regained the American league lead under the lights at Philadelphia with an 11-inning 3 to 2 victory over the Browns, the ninth win in a row for the A's. But victory didn't come gloriously. Pete Suder's walk with the bases loaded forced in Ferris Fain with the winning run.
The Phils made it three in a row over the Reds at Cincinnati, mainly due to the efforts of Del Emnis who hit a homer, two doubles and a single in a 4 to 3 triumph. It marked the fifth straight loss for the Reds who went deeper into the National league cellar. Relief pitcher Ed Heusser, third of three Philly pitchers, was the victor.
In the other rgt game, Vic Wertz two triples gave Detroit a 4 to 1 decision over Washington at Washington. **Philip Poe** Poe
Phils Nose Reds
New York-(UP)-Research by the board of education showed 45 per cent of the errors which make writing illegible are made on the letters A, E, R, and T. The most frequently unreadable numbers are 5, 6, and 7.
New York at Chicago and Boston at St. Louis in the National were rained out.
A,E,R,T, Jinx Correspondence
Aggie Lefty Cracks Par
Loddie Kempa, Oklahoma Aggie's lefthanded golf star, fired a brilliant one-under par 67 Tuesday at the Lawrence country club to give the Cowboys a $11\%$ to $61\%$ victory over Kansas. The Cowboy victory broke a six-match home winning streak for the Hawkeyers.
Kempa had to be hot because he was pressed all the way by Jayhawker Courtland Smith who carded a 72, best score turned in by the Jayhawkers. Kempa, who reached the finals of the national lefthander's tournament recently, had a 36 on the front nine, but caught fire on the back nine and burned up the fairways with a 31. He had three birdies along the way.
The outcome of the contest hinged on the Smith-Kempa match because the Cowboys and Jayhawkers tied in the front foursome, and in the first half of the back foursome Dick Ashley had given Kansas the edge with a 2-1 victory over Billy Maxwell. Ashley and Bob Meeker carded 74's and Hal Delongy had a 73 for Kansas.
Salem, Orc.—(UP)—Rear Adm. Thomas L. Gatch has been admitted to the Oregon bar by the state supreme court. Gatch is retired from the U. S. Navy. He was captain of the U.S.S. South Dakota until he received a shrapnel wound during the battle for Guadalcanal.
Navy Admiral Turns Lawyer
| | AB | R | H | E | Pct. |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Gilkison lf | 19 | 0 | 3 | 1 | .328 |
| Fencyk c f | 16 | 0 | 5 | 2 | .312 |
| Hogan cf | 29 | 10 | 10 | 3 | .328 |
| Kelly 2b | 36 | 5 | 9 | 6 | .250 |
| DeLuna 1b | 45 | 8 | 10 | 6 | .222 |
| May 3b | 38 | 4 | 8 | 7 | .210 |
| French ss | 49 | 8 | 10 | 14 | .204 |
| Mabry p | 10 | 0 | 2 | 0 | .200 |
| Shaw rf-3b | 23 | 3 | 4 | 6 | .173 |
| Bertuzzi lf | 43 | 5 | 7 | 4 | .162 |
| Gilman p | 19 | 0 | 3 | 1 | .157 |
| Fink, c | 27 | 0 | 3 | 1 | .111 |
Batting Averages
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Play Inside Against MU
Balked by rain the past week, Kansas and Missouri tangle today at Columbia in a Big Seven tennis match that will probably be the longest of the season for either team.
Coach Jim Seaver received word from Columbia Tuesday that today's match would have to be played inside on a wooden court, because Missouri's clay outdoor courts are still too soggy for use. This means that only one match can be played at a time instead of four or five.
"We have played all but one of our matches either on clay or concrete courts." "The only time we have used wooden courts was against Oklahoma at Norman when rain forced our match and we failed."
About an hour and quarter is required for each match, or about 10 hours to play the 10 matches on the lone court. Seaver was not too happy about the setup and was pessimistic about his squad's chances on the wooden court.
Seaver tried unsuccessfully to get today's match moved to Lawrence, and even dickered for the use of Stephens college courts, near the Missouri campus, but to no avail. On the basis of comparative scores against common foes the match shapes up as an even affair, although the Tigers will have the advantage of performing on their own court.
Kansas blanked Kansas State, 7 to 0, while the Tigers could only defeat the Wildcats, 5 to 2. Against Washington university Missouri fared slightly better than the Jayhawkers. The Bears dumped the Tigers, 6 to 1, twice and blanked Kansas twice, 7-0.
Manning Meets Richards
Missouri ace Rip Manning, who holds twin victories over Washington's diminutive star, Bob Ziervogel, clashes with Dick Richards in the feature. Richards was beaten by Ziervogel in their only meeting of the year in a close, three-set match.
In other matches, Glenn Tongier, Kansas, opposes George Stemmler; Hervey Macferran, Kansas, plays Bill Johnson; Dick Cray, Kansas, battles Bill Rowe; and Charlie Carson, Kansas, takes on Bill Lane. In doubles Manning and Johnson oppose Richards and Tongier; Stemmler and Rowe play Macferran and Carson.
Dillard Within 1 Of Rice's Record
Cleveland, May 12—UP)—The way was clear today for hurryin' Harrison Dillard to set a new world's record for consecutive track victories.
He won the 100-yard dash in 9.8 seconds, the 120 high hurdles in 14.1 and the 220 in 21.2.
Dillard raced to his 64th straight win Tuesday, and Saturday he'll run three more races. If he wins the first, he'll tie Greg Rice's record of 65 straight victories. And anything after that will set a new mark.
Dillard, the surest Olympic prospect since another Negro named Jesse Owens streaked down the cinder paths in 1936, hung up first numbers 62, 63, and 64 carrying Baldwin-Wallace colors Tuesday in a triangular meet.
Baldwin-Wallace won the meet with 122 points. Akron university scored 28 and John Carroll 3.
Manhattan, Kan., May 12—(UP) —The Kansas State Wildcats and the Oklahoma Sooners were even today as the Sooners nosed out Kansas State, 6 to 5, yesterday. The Wildcats took the first game Monday by a 5 to 1 score.
OU Bounces Back With 6-5 Triumph
The Sooners scored two markers in the first frame, added two in the fifth inning, and put the game on ice in the eighth. Danny Burrell went the route for the winners, allowing nine hits.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
Battenfeld Ekes Out A Win To Extend Wins To Four
Battenfeld hall notched an intramural softball victory on a muddy field and the Wildcats won by forfeit Tuesday to remain among the eight undefeated independent teams. Three scheduled contests were postponed because of wet grounds.
Battenfeld hall made it four in a row in handing Alpha Phi Alpha a 15 to 14 setback, its first loss of the season.
The victors scored the winning tally in the top of the seventh after deadlocking the game with a six- outburst in the sixth. Heavy scoring in the early innings enabled the losers to maintain an upper hand in the first five innings. Battenfeld hall trailed 9 to 2 in the second inning.
Ray Fisby led Battenfeld's hitting with a double and a triple in four trips. Bernard Beatty slapped out four hits in four appearances to pace the Alpha Phi's. Charley Kelly clouted a three-run homer for the losers in the opening frame.
Battenfeld
A.P.A.
021 236 1—15 16
360 032 0—14 13
Although outhit 15 to 13. Hauser House managed to whip Last Chance 14 to 10. The winners took a 4 to 2 lead in the second inning and kept it the remainder of the game.
Slapping out four hits in six appearances at the plate Robert Dale showed the way for Hausser House. He scored three of the winner's runs.
Big gun in the losing attack was Charley Benson who bagged four hits in four trips. Staney Baldwin,
Locksley Hall Entrants Win
Lockesley hall is the only team with two entrants still unbeaten as the women's tennis doubles tournament enters the quarterfinal round. Easy victories and defaults characterized the third round completed last week. Third round results are:
Van der Snissen-Greenlee (Lock-sley) won by default from Hillyer-Bagby (Kappa Kappa Gamma).
Shepard-Mitchell (Corbin) de-
foced Kaff-Williams, I.W. 6-0. f-
eatured
Anderson- Cleaves (Alpha Delta Pi) defeated Stuckey - Gunsloh (Kappa Kappa Gamma) 6-2, 6-0.
Hiscox-Scott (Pi Beta Phi) defeated Goodrich-Crosby (Kappa Kappa Gamma) 6-2. 6-2.
Hoffman-Williams (Locksley) defeated Brown-Belt (Delta Gamma) 6-1, 6-2.
McKelvy-Meeks (Kappa Kappa Gamma) won by default from Smith-McCune (Kappa Alpha Theta).
Mueller-Hartwell (Delta Gamma) defeated Bentley-Markley (Alpha Delta Pi) 6-1, 6-0.
St. Paul maintained its one-game hold on first place in the American Association last night by defeating the Kansas City Blues 5 to 1 at St. Paul. Second-place Indianapolis also won, edging Columbus 4 to 3 in their home park.
Saints Down Blues To Hold Top Spot
A home run by infielder Dan Ozark with two men aboard gave St. Paul its margin of victory over the Blues. Phil Haugstad blanked the Blues until the ninth. The Saints touched John Robinson for nine hits in eight innings, and were also aided by three Blue errors.
The Louisville Colonels squeezed past Toledo, 3 to 2, and Minneapolis drove into third place past Milwaukee by shutting out the Brewers, 8 to 0.
Memphis—(UP)—A soaring birth rate has forced the Memphis zoo to offer for sale one baby hippi, four lion cubs, four young Sika deer and six baby red foxes. Other new additions are two baby audacks, a pair of Russian brown bear cubs and a buffalo calf.
Memphis Zoo Sells Animals
(Editor's Note: According to Webster, an "aoudad" is a species of wild sheep found in North Africa).
Last Chance, and Dale hit round trippers.
H.H. 043 403 0—14 13
L.C. 113 100 4—10 15
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 1948
The Editorial Page
What Should Drivers Fear?
When safety specialists tell us that more than half of the drivers killed in grade-crossing accidents last year were disregarding warning signs and signals, we cannot help but wondering what is so basically wrong with the psychology of such drivers. Why is it that a motorist who will stop instantly at a policeman's warning signal will, a moment later, drive placidly
through a red light—and possibly straight into a serious accident?
Various excuses are offered by motorists caught violating traffic control devices, the most common being that the driver didn't noise the red light, or that he was going too fast to stop when it turned red. Actually, if the truth were admitted, the big difference was that he was afraid of the traffic policemen but not afraid of the red light.
Fear is a powerful deterrent. But is it possible that much energy is being wasted running away from the wrong bogey? Are some motorists perhaps more afraid of being arrested for a safety violation than of violating their own safety?
If that is the case, they are misinterpreting the very reason for law enforcement and it is high time to take a different view of traffic policemen and highway patrolmen. If sometimes it appears that these guardians of safety enjoy bawling out traffic law-breakers, possibly it is because they much prefer it to picking them up in a basket after a fatal accident. Motorists should prefer that, too.
Traffic control devices are the outposts of the law. They cannot prevent motorists from killing themselves, they can only try. Every motorist will find that it pays to stop for them, look for them, and listen to what they say!
The union and John L. Lewis were fined,heavily for recent actions. The bottom seems to be dropping out of Lewis's union suit.
Man should now feel a little prouder of his ancestry. An anthropologist has stated that if man and ape did have common ancestors, it was 29,000,000 years ago and that should be sufficient time to remove the stigma.
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 Collegeate Press. Represented by the National Advertising Service, 420 Madison Ave. New York City.
Editor-in-Chief... David H. Clymer
Managing Editor... Cooper Rollow
Asst. Man. Editor... Clarke M. Thomas
Asst. Man. Editor... Geo. Nigarry
City Editor... John Shaffer
Asst. City Editor... James Beatty
Asst. City Editor... Richard Barton
Telegraph Editor... James Roemison
Asst. City Editor... Michael A. Foster
Asst. Tel. Editor... Bill Mayer
Sports Editor... Paul Zeh
Sports Editor... James Jones
Sports Ed. ... Anna Maier
Feature Editor... Robert M. Newman
Picture Editor... James Mason
Society Editor... Patricia Bentley
Business Manager... Bill Alderson
Adv. Manager... Paul Warner
Cr. Manager... Don Walton
Bill Manager... Bill Kruger
Class. Adv. Mgr... Ruth Clayton
Asst. Class. Adv. Mgr... Elizabeth Berry
Asst. Class. Adv. Mgr... Carol Buhlher
Nat. Adv. Mgr... Nat. Sloekoleff
Nat. Adv. Mgr... Eleonora Pronoviton
Promotion Mgr... Roger James
Asst. Promotion Mgr... Don Tennant
The Kansas Press Association
KANSAS
19 MEMBER
48
National Editorial Association
A FREE PRICE. YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW
Three To One
In a feature article in the Sunday Kansas City Star, Howard Turtle wasted a shower of tears on the "dateless" men at the University of Missouri.
In a line beneath one of the pictures illustrating the article, the Star said "The ratio at M.U. is 8,784 men to 2,014 girls. It's almost as bad at the University of Kansas, where the figure is 7,718 men to 2,-440 women."
Mr. Turtle has undertaken a noble crusade, but he could have picked a more worthy group of recipients for his sympathy.
It isn't necessary to dispute Mr. Turtle's figures, but his adding is lousy. Beneath another picture, he admits that in the same town, Columbia, there are an additional 2-247 girls at Stephens college and 340 more at Christian college.
Thus, the totals for the two college towns are Lawrence, 7,718 men to 2,440 girls, and Columbia, 8,784 men to 4,601 girls. By ratios, these figures mean, three men for each girl in Lawrence, and 1.9 men for each girl in Columbia.
Mr. Turtle, in picturing the suffering at Missouri, quoted one young man in a tavern as saying that he could "just hear the money jingling" as he walked down the street with his rich Stephens date. This same thwarted young man said that he had quit dating because the Stephens and Christian girls cannot go into the taverns where beer is served.
We have a feeling that most of the extra men at K.U. would swallow their prides and get used to the "jingling."—Gene Vignery.
Lawrence Honored For Traffic Safety
A National Safety council award for completing 1947 without a traffic death was given to the city of Lawrence at the regular meeting of the city council Monday night by C. A. Bliesner, chief of police and local representative for the national organization.
"The tremendous increase in traffic in Lawrence has made driving hazardous and the public must be given much of the credit for this record. We particularly appreciate the help and co-operation given us by students in keeping down the number of accidents. However, we hope, that in the future, students and townspeople will observe traffic regulations even more closely so that we may keep this fine record." Chief Bliesner said.
4,000 children under 15 years old were killed in automobile accidents in America in 1947. Innocence is fatal if you don't drive carefully!
The award, which is in the form of an "honor roll certificate." will be on display at the city hall, he added.
Faculty To Talk At 70 Schools
University faculty members will deliver baccalaureate and commencement addresses at 70 Kansas high schools this month.
The University will supply nearly a fourth of the speakers to schools having principal addresses, according to an estimate by Guy V. Keeler, director of the lecture course bureau Engagements for 20 speakers have been recorded.
Rose Lee's LUNCH
Nearly half of the 650 high schools in the state have replaced the main address with short talks by outstanding students.
Teaching schedules have forced most speakers to accept only two or three engagements, but one expects to fill ten.
7 a.m.-10 p.m. Weekdays
7 p.m.-12 p.m. Fri., Sat.
9:30 a.m.-12 p.m. Sun.
Forty per cent of all 1947 traffic deaths occurred on week-ends. Drive carefully on Saturday, Sunday—and every day!
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2:30 Excursions in Science—"Motorless Flight."
2:45 Doorway to Knowledge—Todd Douglas
9:30 K.U. Brainbusters
**Tommorrow**
2:30 Flying carpet—Robert Calderwood
2:45 Music
More Hats In The Ring
St. Joseph, Mo.—(UP)—While lightning may or may not hit the same place twice, firemen's helmets do, say F. X. Schott. Mr. Schott operates a furniture store. Twice in three days, as fire trucks spun around the corner, helmets spun through the air and landed at his front door.
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Phone KU 376
7
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 bridge business office, Journalism bridge not later than 5 p.m. the day before publication is desired.
Classified Advertising Rates
Classified Readers
One day Three days Five days
25 words or less 35c 65c 90c
additional words 1c 2c 3c
For Sale
BERMINGTON NOISELESS portable type-writer, model 47, $112 original value, will sell for $80. If interested phone 16381, address, 946 Ohio. 14
'41 OLDS SEDANETTE,' 46 motor, David A. Harner, 3427, 1238 Miss. 14
ONE PRACTICALLY new Courtland tennis racket, Nylon strung and in excellent condition. Call Wayne Lorimer, Carson Hall, 561-743-3311. 14
FORD, 5 passenger club coupe. Excellent condition, radio and heater, good tires. Call between 4-6 p.m. 30608, 1414 Tenn. 14
WILLYS, 1938, 4-dr., radio, heater, good shape clean, good mileage. (Price $425). See at 1027 Pennsylvania. Phone 25988l.
REFRIGERATOR: with deep freeze new. Have to sell before last of May.
1939 MERCURY Convertible. See in
examples at 1000 Mauve. 17
GOOD SUN RAY Enlarger with Ilex
enastigmat F 6.3 lens also Argus A-2
35 mm camera. Both good condition. Ph.
966. Bill McCarter. 12
RADIO-PHONOGRAPH, latest model
automatic record-changer. CH12
F60052A447981981981981
**Y'TRANKS! We will buy, trade or sell**
you any Army or Navy gear in good
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HTTP
Business Service
TYPING: For better grades have your term papers and other written work neatly and accurately typed. Phone 2193M, 729 Missouri, Mrs. Earl Wright.
TUTORING MATHEMATICS: Lucy A.
Dougherty, 906aine, Phone 30844
Lakewood, WA
AIRLINE RESERVATIONS. City Ticket office. The First National Bank of Lawrence. Miss Rose Giesemann, Mgr., 8th and Mass. Phone 30. 14
STUDENTS' WIFE wants typing at home. Your term paper, thesis, or any typing done promptly and accurately.
Phone 10038 Wade, 1306 New Hampshire 13
LET ME TYPE your themes, reports, and tests. Accurate, and reasonable work. Bring to Lawrence Business College, 641 Louisiana, phone 894. Ask for Charles
TYPING: Thesis. Reasonable and prompt. Phone. 2363J 17
TENNIES RACKET restreigning and repairing—sik, nylon, nugat. $3 to $10.00. Shop at Dick Richards or Hal Miller, Oread Hall, 3083. 14
TYPING: Reasonable rate. Phone
23610 1920 Knoxville
TENNIS RACKETS restrung or repaired
Wilhelmus, J. 211 E. 109 Tcl. 2446J.
Wilhelmus, J. 211 E. 109 Tcl. 2446J.
TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accept phone 418 or bring to 1218 Corn. St. 2t.
TYPING done: Term papers, reports, specs
attention given thesis. Accurate work
reasonable prices. Call 1996-W. Apartment
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TAILOR-MADE suits, $35.50 to $65.00. Expert alteration and engineering. George Eberhart & Son, Tailor Shop, 831½ Mass. rtes
NEW vacuum cleaners for rent. Attachments included. $1.50 per day. Al Brooks Sweeper Co., 8311'% Mass. Ph. 1104 between 9 and 12 a.m.
Wanted
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WANTED TO BUY: 1946 or 47 Ford,
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Phone 11. 13
WANT GOOD used French's Differential
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WANT TO RENT or lease apartment,
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Room is located on the west side of
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800-830-5444
EXPERIENCED stenographer wants permanent position. I have passed the State photographer and an auburn resident. Plot morning or evening. 1155W.
Transportation
LEAVING EVERY Friday at 4:00 p.m. for Witchia, returning Sunday evening Please call only Wed. or Thur., between 7:00-9:30 p.m. Harry Schryer, 3170. 13
Lost
LOST on or about April 17, a gold-topped Schaeffer fountain pen, probably at Stadium. Call Maxine Majers, 1768. Hopkins hall.
BLACK MALE cocker, wearing leather
harness. Monday of last week. Name:
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For Rent
ROOMS one block from Union for eight girls and two boys available for summer and fall. Phone 3231R after 3. 18 Girls in special classes. Men, quiet and studious, to intoxicates. Those renting for summer may stay over next term. Mrs. Hoffman, 1244 La.
MOVE CLOSER for the summer. Room for 2 boys. 1346 Ohio. 14
ROOMS WITH sleeping porches available summer school. 1416 Tenn Phone. 1416
829-7050
BOOM and BOARD for four men students. Single beds. Reasonable rates. Available for summer and fall terms. Call 2353J or see at 909 Mo. 13 WILL HAVE two double rooms for rent, close to the campus, for the summer term. See or call after 6 p.m. 1725 Izumi Street Phone 2631W. 12
PIANO—NEW and used. Piano-tuning
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Miscellaneous
A NEW TIE every month. Be the center of
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DANCE every Saturday night at odd Fel-
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Found
FOUND: Large ring in practice room in Hoch auditorium Tuesday morning identify and pay for ad in Kansan office. 14
Legion Convention Starts Saturday
About 700 delegates are expected to attend the second annual district convention of the American Legion to be held at the Community building Saturday and Sunday.
Special guests and speakers will include Gov. Frank Carlson, Harry Colmothy, former national commander; Congressman Errett P. Scrivener, StateCommander Fred Wallas, and all staff members of the Kansas department of the Legion.
Members will discuss membership child welfare, and rehabilitation.
GIFTS-FOR-ALL-OCCASIONS
This One Must Have Hurt
Washington, Pa.—(UP)—A toothache caused a freak accident here. Mrs. J. A. Yusko, who was driving to her dentist, told police she was struck by a sudden sharp pain in her jaw, causing her to crash into a parked truck.
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 12, 1948
HORSE LANE
(University Dally Kansan Photo by Wallace Abbey) THIS GIANT CRANE, working southeast of Watson lawn, daily hoists steel beams into place in the library addition. The new subbasement and two floors are expected to be completed by the end of the year.
Necks Crane As Crane Brings 'Baby' Into World
Necks are craning to see the machine crane as it swings beams into place on the new library addition.
Students watching the birth of the "baby" experience mingled feelings of pleasure and agony. Pleasure comes with the wonder of the great mechanical fellow's ease as it picks up and swings the large steel beams into action. Answer is felt on the warrior.
muscles of the necks of those watching, as they tilt their heads backward following the movement of the mechanical giant.
Observers unconsciously grean as the crane operator hoists one steel beam after another into place. They sigh with relief after the big steel object has swung past the two workers high above with what seems like only inches to spare. They are perched in a precarious position htop the structure to bolt the beams together as quickly as they are swung into place.
The new addition which is to be finished this year will consist of a sub-basement and two additional floors. A stack room will be built later on the east side of the building. Huff Brothers Construction company is doing the work.
All of the students on the ground agree that they would not like to be in the position of the men at the top of the steel frame work. The workers seem to be unaware of any danger as they fit and bolt the beams into place. In fact, a circus monkey might even eny their light and easy effort as they scamper over the steel skeleton.
Dean, Taylor Win Quill Club Contest
Mary Jane Dean and R. W. Taylor, graduate students, are winners of the Quill club short story and poetry writing contest.
Taylor, graduate student in the department of English, received the $10 prize for his winning short story "Snow in the Wind." Miss Dean graduate student in the department of speech and drama, was awarded $5 for her two poems, "Inspiration and "Malevolent Madness."
All three manuscripts will appear in the May issue of Trend, magazine published by Quill club. Both Miss Dean and Mr. Taylor will in addition be given honorary memberships in Quill club.
Students interested in becoming members of Quill club have until May 13 to submit a short story or poem for consideration by the club. Three copies of each manuscript for the contest must be submitted to Prof. Ray B. West, 211 Fraser.
Schoeppel Club Hears Denious
J. C. Denious, former lieutenant governor of Kansas and now campaign manager in the Andrew Schoepel race for senator, met with the local Schoepel for Senator club Tuesday for an informal discussion of the campaign.
He told members that "Mr. Schoeppel now intends to visit all the counties in central and western Kansas in the next 30 days and will visit the eastern counties following harvest."
Mr. Denious, who is also editor and publisher of the Dodge City Globe, stated that in the near future there would be a "Schoeppel for Senator" club in every county in Kansas.
Others who attended the meeting were William Turrentine, secretary of the Schoeppel campaign, Dolph Simons of the Lawrence Journal-World, and Charles D. Stough, Lawrence city attorney.
The next meeting of the local club will be June 15, after the beginning of the summer session, Jack Greene, chairman, announced.
F. Carter Stevens, business columnist and art critic for the New Orleans Item, was a visitor to the William Allen White School of Journalism today.
Columnist Visits Campus Today
He told the Reporting I class that a liberal education is an essential part of a newspaperman's training.
Detroit, May 12- (UP)—Some 73-
000 Chrysler corporation auto workers struck today in a nation-wide test of labor's demand for a third round of pay raises.
Mr. Stevens is spending a two-weeks vacation with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Chase Stevens. His father is professor emeritus of botany.
Chrysler Strike Idles Thousands Across Nation
Fairchild, '10. Visits Here
C. I.O. United Auto Workers began leaving their jobs on an almost exact schedule at 10 a.m. in 11 Detroit plants. The pattern stretched into Indiana and to California.
Many thousands more auto workers will be idled by the Chrysler strike. Briggs Manufacturing company, which makes bodies for Chrysler cars, announced immediate layoff of 11,000 workers.
Briggs said it will lay off 2,000 more Monday because of the Chrysler tie-up, leaving only 10,500 out of its 23,500 employees on the job. Other Chrysler parts supply plants also are expected to close throughout the country.
Mr. F. P. Fairchild, chief engineer of the Public Service Electric and Gas company of New Jersey, visited the University School of Engineering today. Mr. Fairchild was a graduate in mechanical engineering in 1910.
Chrysler was the U.A.W.'s first target in the auto industry. The union demanded 30 cents an hour. It also seeks 25 cents an hour from General Motors corporation and 30 cents from the Ford Motor company.
The G.M. labor contract expires May 28 but a strike against two of the "big three" companies at the same time appears highly unlikely labor observers here say.
Norman Matthews, chief of the union's Chrysler department, declared flatly: "We'll give them the damnest attack they've ever seen."
A veteran management-labor observer said he feared the strike would be "long and bitter."
Sign Parties With Dean Of Women
All organizations at the University are requested to turn in dates for parties next year to the dean of women by Thursday, Sue Webster, chairman of the All Student Council social committee, said today.
Students who wish to apply for the job of dance manager for the 1948- tern are to turn in applications to Marymaster, 1625 Edgehill Road, by Friday.
Miss Webster said that organizations are to specify an alternate date for social functions, and are to designate whether or not they wish it to be a closed affair.
Applicants for dance manager should state their qualifications in a letter. The All Student Council will choose the manager from the applications received.
Activities, Character, Service Win Honors For Ray, Shirley
Two University customs were overridden Tuesday as Raymond Evans and Shirley Wellborn reigned as honor man and woman.
For the first time in 25 honors convocations and in the history of the University a woman was chosen for the top honor position. This was the third time that two persons have shared the throne.
The chancellor is pointing committee deviated from preceding traditions when they named a student who had not yet graduated for the honors. Both Shirley and Ray were chosen on the basis of breadth of interest in activities, character, leadership, scholarship, and unselfish service to the University.
The good natured Ray and the busy Miss Wellborn have sparkplugged student activities during their college careers. Ray's brilliant athletic performance brought the University to the fore in the athletic field. Miss Wellborn's organizational work helps keep the student body running smoothly.
The tall immortalizer of number 42 was graduated from the School of Business last semester and now plans to turn to professional football. He was named All American three times, for basketball in 1942 and '43, and once for football in 1947. He was on the Big Six basketball team in 1942 and '43 and football in 1947 and '48.
Riffin' Ray was the nation's leading passer in 1942, 1946, nd 1947. During his absence from the University he played for the second Army Air Force Superbombers at Colorado Springs. He was the number one ball carrier in the league.
Ray Evans will be remembered for his attempts to spark a losing Jayhawk football team in 1941 and 1942. His completion of 18 out of 21 passes in one game and then losing
to Nebraska will not be forgotten.
Ray's athletic career began early on the baseball sandlots. He became a catcher and during the summer his team always won the championship, At Wyandotte High school he starred in basketball. Just before tournament time, he injured his left leg, and with a special device improvised by his coach he played the games and entered the tournament. His senior year was climaxed by his being named on the All State basketball and football teams.
Miss Wellborn's college career sparkles with the offices she's held, her activities and scholarship. She was one of six persons chosen to the Phi Beta Kappa, honorary scholastic fraternity, last fall. She served three years on the All Student Council and was secretary this year until she had to resign because of the pressure of other activities.
Presidentships were only part of her intensive program. She is president of Mortar Board and was president of the I.S.A. in the spring of 1946 and fall of 1947. She was president of the Associated World Students in 1946 and helped build the organization. An independent, she was president of Locksley hall in 1945 and vice-president in 1944.
Shirley was president of the Women's, Executive committee in '46 and a member of the Inter-Dorm council the same year. She was elected to Jay Janes in 1945, and served as treasurer in 1946.
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University Daily Kansan Thursday, May 13, 1948 OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Thursday, May 13, 1948
STUDENT NEWSAPER
Lawrence, Kansas
Art Students Stage Annual Walkout Today
At 10 a.m. today Raymond Eastwood, associate professor of drawing and painting, entered an empty classroom. His students were celebrating an annual walkout which Professor Eastwood described as, "as old as the Hill itself."
The University Art club had planned the walkout carefully and all students in the drawing, painting and design department were invited to go on a picnic at Lone Star lake.
Craig Hampton, club president, said that although much of the club's time was devoted to perfecting plans for transportation, refreshments, and incidentals, the students were careful to protect their annual "top drawer" secret.
Professor Eastwood took a philosophical view about the business of having his class "take to the woods." He explained that on the whole the faculty was more likely to "relax and enjoy it" than to launch any sort of reprisal on the delinquent students.
"They will be back in class tomorrow," he said and then added, "that is if they aren't too sunburned."
Nurses Will Study In KC
Nurses from Kansas, Iowa. Missouri, and Nebraska will attend a three-day refresher course held at the University Medical center in Kansas City, Kan., May 25 to 27. This will be the final post graduate medical offering of the academic year.
Three guest instructors will assist 16 from the University nursing and medical staff in presenting the course. They are Geneva Feamon, consultant on medical assistance, Social Security administration, Washington, D. C.; Lulu K. Wolf, professor of nursing, Vanderbilt university, Nashville; and Sister M.Pancrata, Mercy hospital, Parsons.
Attendance is expected to be over 300. The program includes panel discussions on topics and materials that will be a registration of $2 to cover administrative expenses. The fee for a single day will be $1.
Wilson To Speak Tonight In Green
Gen. T. B. Wilson, who is running for Republican nomination for congressman from the first district, will speak at 7:30 p.m. today in 106 Green hall.
He will give his views on international problems and the domestic situation. The speech was arranged by a group of University students from the first district who believe more of the public should get to know the candidate.
General Wilson was born in, Williamstown. He attended high school in Lawrence and Kemper Military school in Booneville, Mo. He has been an executive of the Southern Pacific railroad, Southern Greymound bus lines, and Alaska steam ship lines, and he was chairman of the board of T.W.A. During World War II he was a major general in charge of army transportation in the China-Burma area.
These Also Received Honors
Students in the School of Education whose names should have been in the honors list printed in the University Daily Kansan Tuesday are Emma P. Bachus, Carolyn Ann Campbell, and Francis S. Stalzer.
10 Compete Today In Speech Contest
Ten students will compete in intramural after-dinner speaking contest at 7:30 tonight in Green ball.
This is the final speech contest this year sponsored by the Forensic league. A gold loving cup will be given first place winners in both the women's and men's division, according to Orville Roberts, instructor in speech.
Dance Recital Is Tonight
The program will be a series of dances representative of each of the periods since primitive dance to jazz. It is directed by Miss Elaine Selfcovitz, instructor of physical education. Tom M. Shay, College junior, is stage manager, and Marjorie Shryock, graduate student, will be narrator.
History in dance will be presented by members of Tau Sigma, modern dance group, at a spring recital at 8 tonight in Fraser theater.
Tau Sigma dancers will be Corrine Carter, Rozanne Croff, Dorothea Fuller, Peggy Graber, Mildred Gulnik, Jeanne Hillyer, LaVaughn Hodgson, Bette Krenzer, Shirley Kyle, Betty Jo Lorbeer, Glenda Luehring, Mary Anne McClure, Judith Tihen, Eleanor Wells, and Sue Jones.
Guest dancers will be Robert S. Bell, Craig W. Hampton, Harold A. Harvey, Margaret Gosney, and Wade Stinson. H. Rugh Reisner, will be guest soloist.
There will also be sixteen guest dancers from the University high school directed by Miss Joie Stapleton, associate professor of physical education. Miss Ruth Hoover, assistant instructor of physical education, will assist her.
Piano accompanists will be Catherine Spalding, Wayne Ruppenthal, and Harriet Graves. Loren Orr will give the drum accompaniment.
give the drill
Tickets will be on sale tonight for 50 cents at the University Players ticket booth in Fraser.
Truman Doesn't Expect A Meeting With Stalin
Washington, May 13—(UP)—President Truman said today he does not expect to have a meeting with Josef Stalin—even though the Russian leader has a standing invitation to visit Washington.
For the first time since Russia's "peace offensive" began two days ago, the atmosphere began to clear. Initial hopes for an early end of the cold
Little Man On Campus
The president also said the Moscow "peace offensive" has not increased his hope for peace.
His feelings, he said, have not changed since earlier this year when he said his faith and hope for peace had been shaken by the Communist coup in Czechoslovakia.
By Bibler
Mr. Truman, also gave his unqualified support to everything Secretary George C. Marshall said about Russia Wednesday. Mr. Marshall ruled out separate U. S.-Russian talks aimed at settling the "cold war," and called on Moscow to demonstrate its good faith by actions instead of words.
the atmosphere began to clear. Into war and a less tense world situa-
tion were blasted, to be sure. But those hopes were ill-founded from
the first.
Secretary Marshall, however, raised another ray of hope. He thought the incident provoked by the Soviet-American diplomatic exchange had not hurt chances of world peace; in fact, he though the incident may have helped those chances.
Mr. Marshall also was optimistic about the chances that the exchange, plus Soviet publication of it, might lead to Russian efforts to break some of the stalemates which have kept the two countries at loggerheads for so many months.
In Moscow today the back pages of all Soviet newspapers carried full factual reports from Washington, London, Paris and Warsaw on the reaction to the Russian announcement of the talks between U. S. Ambassador W. Bedell Smith and Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov.
WEATHER
Kansas--Partly cloudy and warmer today and tonight. Scattered showers west and central tonight. Tomorrow fair and warmer. High today in 70's, low tonight 45-55.
CHEM.
BLOG.
"Our first move will be to find who has been dumping his experiments out this window!"
6 Cheer Leaders Are Needed
Six new cheerleaders and three assistants will be selected by the pep committee at 7:30 p.m. May 20, Richard D. Wintermote, head cheerleader, said today. Tryouts will be held on the east side of Robinson gymnasium.
Any student is eligible to attend practice sessions to learn the yells at 4 p.m. May 17, 18 and 19 on the east side of Robinson gymnasium.
The pep committee will select at least two women cheerleaders. Members of the committee include the football and basketball coaches, the president of the Ku Ku club, the Jay Janes, the K club, and the traditions committee of the All-Student council.
YM Cabinet Appoints 24
Twenty-four Y.M.C.A. cabinet members for 1948-49 were announced today by Robert Chessy president.
The committees are: Joseph Brown and Darrel Wood, Christian heritage commission; Lee Reiff Hugh Gibson, Wendell Walker and Elmer Rusco, chairman, social responsibility commission; Dean Gregory, Baquar Shirazi, Ralph Kienge and Glenn Varenhorst, chairman, world relatedness commission.
Fellowship groups: Elton Noble, freshman camp; Bob Thayer, freshman council; Otis Hill, freshman counseling; Bob Veeper, couples club; Don Clark, recreation; and Bob Payne, intramurals.
Administrative chairmen: Fred Henderson and Richard Collins, membership; Norman Bigham, ways and means; Robert Davis, publications; Harry Greaver, publicity.
The cabinet officers elected four other representatives. They are Edward Cheskey, regional representative; Bromleigh Lamb and Albert Grimes, student religious council representatives; Wilbur Noble, all student council representative.
the cabinet officers elected by mail ballot April 20 are Robert Chesky, president; John Eberhardt, vice-president; Hardy Scheuermann, secretary; and Dale Spiegel, treasurer.
Fine Arts School Has 2 New Majors
Industrial design and history of art were announced today as two new major courses of study in the School of Fine Arts by Dean D. M Swarthout.
Industrial design is a combination of art, engineering shop work, draftsmanship, business, and advertising. It is administered by the department of design.
History of art will be taught by the department of drawing and painting. It will be combined with existing art courses taught by the departments of architecture and history.
Addition of the two courses of study brings to 15 the number of majors offered by the school of fine arts.
Foreign Brass Will Visit Here On May 18,19
The student U.N.E.S.C.O. council will hold its last meeting of the semester at 8 p.m. May 18 in Lindley auditorium.
Nine foreign military officers representing three members of the United Nations will visit the University May 18 and 19 as part of a good will tour.
They are Col. Fu De I, Lt. Lc.
Wen Kwei Lin, and Lt. Comdr. Chao
Lin Han, China; Brig. Gen. P, Fay.
Col. M. Penette, and Comdr. V.
Marchal, France; Group Capt. H.
Eeles, Col. G. O. H. Jameson,
and Comdr. H. Firth, United Kingdom.
The group will be accompanied by
Col Brooke E. Allen of the U.S. air
force.
A dinner in honor of the group will be given at 6:30 p.m. May 18, in the Union ballroom. Presidents of the student U.N.E.S.C.O., United World Federalists, Federal Union, Inc., the International club, the International Relations club, and one student from each of the three countries will be invited to attend.
The program for May 19 includes an inspection of University military facilities in the morning, a luncheon given by Chancellor Deane W. Malott in the English room of the Union, and student seminars in the afternoon. The group will be guests of organized houses May 19 for dinner.
Seminars will be held in the Pine room beginning at 2 p.m. The student U.N.E.S.C.O. will have the hour between 2 and 3 p.m., the International Relations club, 3 to 4 p.m. From 4 to 5 p.m. the group will sit on a regular meeting of the United World Federalists.
The officers will leave May 20. They will visit the University of Ohio, the only other university included on the tour.
UNESCO To Meet May 18
Projects for the 1948-49 academic year will be the theme of the program. Carolyn Campbell, deputy chairman, will be in charge, and Hobson Crockett, secretary, will speak on the role of the student in U.N.E.S.C.O.
All delegates and alternates should attend so that they may be listed on the roll, H. Bruce Wilder, chairman, said. Representatives not listed at the end of this semester must receive a two-thirds majority vote of the council and approval of the advisory committee for admittance. Those unable to attend should notify John J. Killinger, corresponding secretary.
The council will comprise three divisions, Wilder said. Hilda James, College junior, will be in charge of education; Melvin Lieberstein, graduate student, science; and William Conbov, junior, culture.
Appointment of two committee chairmen was announced by Wilder; They are Mario Rivera, surveys and information; and Lee Reiff, public relations. Both are College freshmen.
Anderson To Head Kappa Psi
Anson R. Anderson, pharmacy junior, was elected regent of Kappa Psi, professional pharmacy fraternity, Tuesday night.
Other officers ejected were Rudolph Sandberg, vice-represent; George Dale Glasco, secretary; Thomas Charles Marriott, treasurer; all juniors, and John Pistorious, historian; and James R. Kiene, chapain, sophomores.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1948
Official Bulletin
May 13.1948
Alpha Kappa Psi, 4 today, Memorial Union.
Quack club will not meet today. Initiation and election of officers at picnic, 8 p.m. Sunday. Reservations at Robinson gym by 4 p.m. tomorrow.
Jayhawkers for Wallace, 7:30 to night, 210 Frank Strong.
All organized houses and organizations leave dates, preference and alternative for next year's parties at office of dean of women by 5 p.m. today. Indicate closed dates desired.
Letters of application for dance manager job to Sue Webster, 1625 Edgehill road by tomorrow. Enclose address and phone number.
Applications for committee membership in Student Union Activities due today in Union Activities office
At Eteno se reune el jueves a las 7.39 en 113 de F.S. para la ultima reunion del semestre. Programa especial, muchas sorpresas.
Four-No Bridge club, 7:30 tonight Union ballroom. All interested invited.
Student religious council, 4 p.m. today, Myers hall.
Deutscher Verein wird sich Donnerstag um 4:30 in 402 Fraser versammlen. Herr Thomas Morris wird reden.
K. U. Amateur Radio club, 5 p.m. today, 205 Electrical Engineering laboratory. Election of officers. Talk by Don Oppenheimer, "Hamonic Crystals."
Christian Science organization
7:30 tonight, Danforth chapel.
Picnic for Pre-Nursing group, 5 p.m. today, Potter lake. Meet in basement of Fraser.
Y. M.C.A. Movie Forum on Russia talk by Russell Barrett, 7:30 tonight recreation room in the Union.
Westminster Fellowship treasure hunt, Junt Kanhei in charge, tomorrow night. Leaves from Westminster house at 8 p.m. sharp.
Veterans requisition books for current semester will not be honored after May 20.
A. S.C. social committee, meets 3 p.m. tomorrow, Pine room of the Union.
Phi Kappa Tau, a new social fraternity, will meet at 8 p.m. today at 1801 Indiana. Any men interested in attending the meeting or joining the fraternity should call George Wilson or Paul DeCora at 2732.
SAM Elects Ted Hanske President For 1948-49
Ted R. Hanske, business senior,
was elected president of the Society
for the Advancement of Management
for 1948-49 Tuesday night.
Other officers are John B. Egelson, vice-president; Ralph R. Smith, secretary, and Wayne H. Smith, treasurer. They will take office at the beginning of the summer session.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
All-University Art Show May 23,24,25 Calls For Hidden Talent Of Students
Step right up, ladies and gentlemen, and enter the all-University art exhibit contest to be held in front of Robinson gymnasium May 23; 24, and 25. You don't do oil painting, you say? Well, don't worry about it; just enter that water color, pencil sketch or funny piece of sculpturing you did in your spare time.
The purpose of the annual exhibit sponsored by Delta Phi Delta, honorary art fraternity, is to bring out hidden artistic talents within the student body. The organization has divided the exhibit into four divisions; oil painting, water color, pencil, sketch and miscellaneous. First, second, and third prize ribbons will be given for the best work in each division. The divisions will be judged by faculty members on the basis of originality, subject matter and color scheme.
Entries, properly matted to prevent ruining in the process of exhibition, should be in the hands of the design department on the third floor of Frank Strong hall not later than May 19. All work submitted will be returned promptly to the owner after exhibition.
University UWF Receives Charter
An organizational charter of the United World Federalist was presented by Lee Reiff, chairman, at a meeting in the university chapter Wednesday in the Union.
The charter was sent by the head-quarters of the Student Federalists in New York.
John Rix, College sophomore, was elected summer chairman of U.W.F. in charge of the group's activities on the campus during the vacation.
Evalyn Honomichi, College sophomore in U.W F. for the fall semester.
Reiff announced that the last meeting this semester will be held May 19 at 4 p.m. in the Pine room of the Union.
Two Fined For Speeding
Ray Simonson, College freshman,
was fines $25 in police court Monday
for traveling 45 miles an hour in
a 30-mile zone. He was arrested
in North Lawrence. Clifton Calvin,
1504 Crescent road, was also fined
$10 for speeding on the campus.
In United States cities, fire protection costs about $3.9 per capita.
University Daily Kansan
Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage), published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University of Missouri's 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.
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A new course, Human Relations in Business, will be offered to seniors in the School of Business next fall, according to Paul Malone, acting dean. Three hours of credit will be given for the course and admission is by consent of the dean and the instructor only.
This course will include a study of some contributions to the body of knowledge about the way people behave in organized business activities. Materials will be taken from certain areas of psychology, sociology, and anthropology, and from statements by historians, economists, and business men as they apply to business problems.
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THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
With Stays And A Prayer Ladies Hold Up New Brocks
"With stays and a prayer," women will demurely whisper when asked how they bbld up the new strapless summer fashions.
A preview of fashions from Lawrence department stores Wednesday revealed that simplicity is the keynote of the flattering lines in the colorful summer dresses.
German Club Party
Socially Speaking
Prof. and Mrs. George Kreye were hosts to members of the German club at a garden party May 8 at their home. Miss Irma Spangler and Miss Renata Meyer, instructors in German, and Miss Magaret Beltz assisted with the dinner.
Members and their guests were Prof. and Mrs. J. A Burzle, Richard Garnard, Hollis Hands, Dean Gregory, Mildred Roch, Wendell Sho-Walter, Alice Schoonover, Sigmund Hagen, Geran Karlberg, Jeane Aldridge, Renata Meyer, Joseph McClure, Margaret Beltz, Shirley Gordon, C. E. Azure, Irma Spangler,
Jerald Hamilton, Betty Lou Wens,
Benjamin Benjaminou, Robert
Spalsbury, Jac Stalpers, Stuart Been,
Robert Clave, Joan McCamish,
James Lolliff, H. C. Turk, Janet
Turk, Peter Baumann, and Prof. and
Mrs. Kreye.
* *
Phi Delts Elect
Kansas Alpha of Phi Delta Theta elected John Stauffer president in their spring election Monday night. Other officers elected were J. Morton Newell, reporter; Russell Mammel, freshman trainer; Don McIlrath, social chairman; Dale Oliver, treasure; Loren Powell, intramural manager; John Hirschler, recording secretary.
Fred Six, alumni secretary; James Porter, waerden; Richard Ong, choister; Howard Nearing, historian; Dean Johnson, librarian; Edward Perry, chaplain; Henry Zoller, pacacamac representative; Charles Hall, Inter-fraternity council representative; Harold Warwick, senior member of executive committee; and Corb Bedell, decorations manager.
* *
AD Pi Dinner Guests
Guests at the Alpha Delta Pi house for dinner May 6 were Wise Beverly Braeckveldt, Duane Postlethwaite, Miss Virginia Scheuer, Mrs. Patricia Poland, Mrs. Nina Drennan, and Mr. and Mrs. John Conard.
Dinner guests Sunday were Ramona Sprinkle, Hutchinson, and Carol Wineinger.
AK Psi Spring Forma1
Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business fraternity, will hold its spring formal Saturday at the Eldridge hotel, according to William Pierson, publicity director.
Templin Hall Elects
Templin hall announces the election of Eleanor Bradford, president; Lois Timken, vice-president; Verla Achey, secretary; Betty Bryant, treasurer; Grace Vaniman, house manager, and Joan Gray, social chairman.
Former Student To Art Conference
Miss Alma Eikerman, former student at the University, is one of 12 teachers selected to attend the 1948 Silversmithing workshop conference. It is to be conducted in August by Baron Erik Fleming, court silversmith to the King of Sweden, at the Rhode Island school of design.
The conference is limited to 12 teachers who competed for places by submitting application forms, photographs or samples of their work and letters of reference. The director of the conference will be Miss Margret Craven, '29, a former teacher at the University.
Miss Eikerman was a special student here in 1937 and attended the Graduate school in 1938. She is now a teacher at Indiana university.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
A pleasing style difference is the change in accessories. Gold and silver will be dominate in shoes and bags. Heels are higher. Especially attractive on the models were the large brimmed hats.
The new styles were modeled by six University women. They were Joan Bushey, College sophomore; Allyce Fawkes, fine arts freshman; Nina Green, College senior; Constance Kendall, College freshman; Sally Tremblay, fine arts freshman; and Althea Voss, College junior.
Mila Williams, College sophomore narrated the parade of fashions while Helen Ward, education junior played background music on the piano.
Geranium pink clam digger shorts with a pink long sleeved blouse were suggested for an active game of tennis. For the pastime of industrious loafing, shrimp pink cord box shorts with matching shoes were shown.
The perfect solution for picnic wear was a two-piece brief midriff number. Fashioned of green chintz material, it would provide a perfect background for the grass stains that are always so closely associated with picnic activities.
Ideal for beach wear was the smart blue and dubonnet two-piece bathing suit with matching skirt. The wired bra makes it possible to dispense with straps.
A strapless black cotton dress with Swiss peasant embroidery of tiny hearts was modeled for cool summer wear. The dress is completed by a matching scarf to wear in as many ways as needed.
Suggested for spectator sports wear was an array of colors in sunback and casual dresses with white or gold accessories. The simplicity of the dresses played up the body lines.
Gay pastels and whites were present in the afternoon dresses where bare necklines were especially popular. Boleros and jackets gave the strapless creations a two-piece look if desired.
Evening wear offered a large variety of styles and materials. Dresses were ankle and formal length.
Don't Worry, Baby,
I Just Want Money
The fashion show was sponsored by the coffee and forums committee. Betty DeArmond, College senior, was chairman of the committee.
Nagano Japan—(UP)—Japanese farmers' daughters have shown a deplorably "realistic trend" in their preferences for a marriage partner, the manager of a matrimonial bureau reports.
Ikuro Hayashi said the modern Japanese girl does not want to marry a salaried man but prefers an industrialist with plenty of money.
The Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship elected Herbert L. Ketterman, College freshman, as its delegate to a leadership training conference at the Camp in the Woods, Canada. The conference is scheduled for Aug. 5 through Sept. 2.
Ketterman Elected Christian Delegate
On the other hand, men are less exacting. They place a rich dowry seconds as a desirable qualification, with beauty coming first.
Ketterman is president of the K.U. chapter of Inter-Varsity. Alice Almstrom attended the conference last summer as university delegate.
This Proves That Nothing Is Safe On The Street
Memphis, Tenn.—(UP)—When a gust of wind blew little Joan Furchgott's yellow balloon into the street, her grandmother, Mrs. Ernest Oppenheimer, gave chase. At the curb, Mrs. Oppenheimer waited for a passing motorist who suddenly stopped, picked up the balloon, and raced away.
New Tea Room Will Open Aug. 1
The tea room should be ready for business about Aug. 1, C. W. James, superintendent of construction, said. It will have a seating capacity of about 48.
The 60 by 26 foot building under construction in back of the Chi Omega house will contain a tea room and two store rooms.
It will be in the center part of the building with the store rooms on either side.
The owner of the building is Robert B. Gorrill who was a business student at the University in 1939 before entering the service.
ASCE To Celebrate At Picnic Saturday
The American Society of Civil Engineers will have their annual picnic Saturday. John G. Montfort, president, said that cold beer and plenty of food will be on hand at the picnic site, at Manloe Acres on Coleman's farm seven miles west of Lawrence.
Members of the society who plan to go will meet at 1 p.m. Saturday in front of Marvin hall. Transportation will be provided. Civil engineering professors will also attend the stag gathering.
Red Cross Offers Camp Job
The Red Cross has a summer job opening as water front director for a girl scout camp.
The job requires a senior lifesaving certificate or a water safety instructor certificate. For additional information call, 405, the Red Cross office.
The camp will be at Lone Star lake from July 7 to July 25.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1948
Sehon Nine To I-State
The cellar-dwelling Jayhawkers, with a 2 and 8 won-lost record in conference play, will travel to Ames today for a pair of league tilts Friday and Saturday with the fifth place Iowa State Cyclones. Game time is 3 p.m. for both tilts.
With a six-game losing streak dissolved Kansas hopes to hoist itself out of the Big Seven baseball cellar during the next five days. The Jayhawkers are hosts to the Nebraska Cornhuskers May 17 and 18 for a two-game series. Kansas dropped two to the Huskers May 4 and 5 at Lincoln.
Luffa.
Russ Sehon's gang broke its slump here last Saturday with a 4 to 2 win over Missouri, displaying marked improvement despite the loss of Red Hogan. The squat outfielder suffered a knocked-down shoulder in the intra-squad football game Friday night and will be out of action the remainder of the season. He was batting .282.
Stewart To Center
Hal Stewart, holdover squadman was moved into Hogan's centerfield spot and either he or Neil Shaw will be there when they open against Iowa State Friday. Paul Gilkison, left-hand hit star, moved up to the vacated clean-up position. He bettered his .322 batting average with two for three, including a timely double, in the Baker game.
Sheen seems to have found a stabilizer for his infield in Charles Medlock. The hustling Atchison junior started one triple and one double play in the Tiger opener here, handling 12 chances with only one error for the weekend. The Jayhawkers committed a total of six miscues against Missouri, an improvement over past games.
a few victories L-S Wins Close Ones
provement of it. If they can continue to show defensive improvement the Jayhawkers may blend their stingy pitching and fleet base running into a few victories from here in.
The Cyclones are opportunists, as proved by their recent victories over Colorado. They edged the Buffers 4 to 2 and 3 to 2 on a total of five singles, with some heady base running
sing. State will probably have their ace twirler, Hogue, on the mound in the series opener, Hogue, a pitcher who can hit, plays the outfield and bats in the clean-up spot when not toiling on the hill.
Sehon will have his ace, Dick Gilman, on the slab in the opener with Guy Mabry, slim right hander a likely bet for the Saturday game.
KU Blanks Tiger Netmen
Kansas solidly established itself as a contender for the Big Seven tennis championship with a convincing 5 to 0 victory over Missouri Wednesday at Columbia.
It took eight hours to play the match because only one court was used. The match began at 1 p.m. and singles play ended at 9 p.m. Doubles play was called off.
Dick Richards, who has finally rounded into his championship form of 1947, trounced unbeaten Rip Manning, 6-4, 2-6, 8-6, Glenn Tongier upset Bill Johnson, 6-1, 0-6, 6-3. Hervey Macferran outlasted George Stemmler, 7-5, 1-6, 6-4 Dick Cray defeated Bill Rowe, 6-3, 6-4, and Charlie Carson bumped Joe Wycoff, 6-3, 6-4.
Tennis and golf teams entertain Iowa State tomorrow in their next-to-last match before championship plays begins at Lincoln next week.
More Eggs This Year
Champaign-Urbana. Ill.—(UP)—Your poultry yard should have about 34 more cackles a year than it did back in 1936. That's because the average hen laid only 121 eggs a year in 1936, but she had hiked her output to 155 ten years later. The report comes from the University of Illinois college of agriculture.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
Phillies Are Muzzling In On Connie Mack's Glory
New York, May 13—(UP)—Baseball's new "Philadelphia story" isn't being written entirely by Connie Mack after all—it seems Ben Chapman wants to be co-author.
The Phils, like the Athletics, are fit; still don't figure as serious pennant gram that was started when Chapman became manager in 1945 is beginning to pay off. Only two players on the team, pitcher Oscar Judd and catchet Andy Seminick, were there when Chapman took over as manager.
Chapman's oddly-assorted crew of kids and oldsters won its fourth straight game yesterday and its sixth victory in its last eight starts when Sylvester "Blix" Donnelly, the little Cardinal castoff, pitched a three-hit 5 to 8 shutout over the Pirates at Pittsburgh. It was the first time this year that the belting Bues had been shut out.
Rookie Spark Attack
The offensive punch was supplied in the main by rookie outfielders Richie Ashburn and John Blatnik, who got seven of Philly's 13 hits.
Ine Athletics, who just won't be beaten, it seems, ran their victory streak to 10 games by drubbing the Brown's, 8 to 4 building up an 8 to 0 lead, they coasted in as Dick Fowler won his second game and Eddie Joost ran his hitting streak to 17 consecutive games. Barney McCosky's three-run double in a big six-run second inning was the game's key blow.
Bobby Doerr hit his second homer in as many days and it came at a most opportune time, bringing home three runs in the 10th to give the Red Sox a 6 to 5 victory over the White Sox at Boston. It was Chicago's eighth straight defeat. Tigers Hit Hard
The Tigers outslugged the Senators in the rain at Washington, winning 14 to 9 as Hoot Evers and Jim Outlaw batted in three runs apiece. Sherry Robertson, Washington outfielder, suffered a wrenched knee when he fell on the wet turf.
Brooklyn won a marathon game at Cincinnati, 9 to 7, Carl Furillo leading the 12-hit attack with a double and three singles. Rookie Hank Sauer paced the losers with a homer, double and single to emerge from a hitting slump.
Grid Tickets Selling Fast
"There have been 3,000 season tickets sold for next season's football games and at the present rate we expect to sell around 6,000 season tickets," Earl Falkenstien, business manager for the athletic department said today.
This year's pre-season sale will exceed last year's sale by about 1.600. Last season 4,400 season tickets were sold, which was a new record at that time.
Orders begin coming into the athletic office before the end of football season last year. Before and after the Orange Bowl game there was a rush of orders for tickets to see next year's edition of the Jayhawker team in action.
This year reserve seats will include section F to section P. This includes all seats on the west side between the 10-yard lines. The student section will remain the same as last year. Falknstien said.
Orders for season tickets will be filled before any requests for single game tickets are considered. No orders will be taken yet for tickets for single games.
Today's Pitchers
Cleveland (Feller 3-2) at New York (Raschi 1-1)
Chicago (Goodwin 0-0) at Boston (Harris 1-2)
Detroit (Hutchinson 2-1) at Washington (Masterson 2-1)
American League
(Only games scheduled). National League.
New York (Poat 2-1) at St. Louis (Plallet 1-0)
Brooklyn (Roe 0-1) at Cincinnati
(Raffensberger 0-0)
Boston (Voiselle 3-0) at Chicago (Schmitz 1-3)
piladelphia (Leonard 2-2) at Pittsburg (Bhesns 0-0)-night.
The Yankee-Indian game was rained out at New York with the Yankees ahead 3 to 1 in the fourth on Joe DiMaggio's three-run first inning homer.
Today is the last day for events and desired closed dates to be turned in to the office of the dean of women for listing in the K-book next fall.
All organized houses and organizations are also urged to list their preferences for dates for next year's parties.
Turn In Choices Today For Events, Closed Dates
Meet Your Friends . . .
Have a Coke . . .
at the
Eldridge Pharmac
Hill View 2 Miles South on Hi-Way 59S Play
Ph. 752N3
Weekdays —36c
GOLF
Sundays & Holidays —51c
Golfing Equipment
● Wilson
● Hagen
Kroyden
kroger
Did you know that Kroger has to sell $80 worth of merchandise in order to make a net income of $1? That's the way our low-profit margin figures out—we use $79 out of the $80 to buy our merchandise, get it into your hands, and meet general business expenses. That's why Kroger prices are always close to cost.
How to Make a Dollar
$80
WORTH OF
MERCHANDISE
ONE
NET
PROFIT
B
Margarine 34c
Krogers Eatmore, lb
Libby Peaches - $1
Sliced of Halves,
No. 2½ can; Four for
Blended Juice - $1 Kroger 46 oz can, 5 for
Grapefruit Juice $1 Kroger 46 oz can, 6 for
Tomato Juice - $1
Kroger 46 oz can, 5 for
Fresh Eggs ___ 42c
Direct from farm, doz
Apricots $1
Pkrs, No. 2½
Can, 4 for
Fruit Cocktail $1
Libby's, No. 2½
Can, 3 for
Hominy $1
Otec. No. 2 can. 11 for
Lemons 19c
Sunkist, lb
Otoe, No. 2 can, 11 for
Cabbage 7c
New Firm, lb
Tomatoes ... 25c
Firm slicing, ctn
Radishes ... 10c
Home grown, 3 bchs
Picnic Ham - 43c Swift quality, lb
Chuck Roast_ _67c
Kroger cut, lb
Peas $1
Pkrs standards,
No. 2 can, 12 for
Pork Loin lb
Roast 49c
7 ribs end cut
kroger
Shrimp ... 89c
Vein x, lb
Marshmallows 19c
10 oz. pkg
Spotlight Hot-dated Coffee, 3 lb bag
Spotlight - - - 1.15
Shows 2:30----7---9:05
Jayhawker NOW, Thru Tuesday It's "Howl"arious!
"THE BISHOP'S WIFE"
Cary GRANT
Loretta YOUNG
David NIVEN
Monty WOOLEY
and
the
Mitchell
Boy
Choir
WARNER BROS.
GRANADA NOW, Thru Saturday
Shows
GRANADA
NOW, Thru Saturday
BEHIND THE HEADLINES
...of Chicago's
Greatest
Newspaper
SCOOP!
James Stewart
CALL
NORTHSIDE
777
with
Richard CONTE
Lee J. COBB
Helen WALKER
Shows
2:30
7:00
9:00
Daily
Added
Added Latest World News
THE EDITOR
LAST CHANCE Positively Ends TONITE
OPEN CITY
LIFE says VIOLENCE and PLAIN SEXINESS project a feeling of dangerous struggle Hollywood seldom approaches! OPEN CITY "SENSATIONAL. DON'T MISS IT LIBERTY MAG Shows 2:30-7-9
Varsity
All Shows 50c inc. tax.
Kiddies 12c
FRIDAY, 2 Days Allen Rocky LANE in "THE BOLD FRONTIERSMAN" "HALF-PAST MIDNIGHT" with Kent TAYLOR
PATEE
TONITE — Ends Saturday
A double barrel spook
thriller!
Basil RATHBONE
Boris KARLOFF
Bela LUEOSI
Son of Frankenstein
—Hit No. 2
Boris KARLOFF
"Bride of Frankenstein"
一
O in s hitt tear Kap Sig KA
HURSDAY, MAY 13, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Phi Kappa Psi Takes Division Three Crown
Phi Psi captured the division three softball title and Co-Op stretched its winning streak to four games Wednesday. Spooner-Thayer, Sigma Chi, Gushers, and Edgehill Roaders also scored triumphs.
Banging out 28 hits while twirler Bob Graham tossed four-hit ball the Phi Psi's whitewashed Pi K.A. 27 to 0. Only one Pi K.A. reached third in the five-inning contest.
The Phi Psi's belted three home runs, three triples, and a pair of doubles in its blistering batting assault.
Max Kissell, Graham, and Lee Hamilton paced the Phi Psi hitting with perfect days at bat. Jackson Shanahan collected two of the Pi K.A. safeties.
Pi K.A. 000 00— 4 28
Phi Psi 03(14),(10)×27 28
Co-Op whipped the Trailer Vets 9 to 3 to preserve its undefeated standing. The loss was the first for the Trailer Vets.
The Trailer Vets got off to a flying start in the opening stanza, scoring all three of its runs. Wayne Bollinger started the fireworks with a single, LaVerne Mausofollow with a double. Dave Stewart then tripped and Harry Curry doubled.
Co-Op broke the scoring ice in the second Gene Scott's single scoring league. It was a huge victory for
Henry Dillon and Ullysses Curry followed a second Scott hit accounted for two additional markers in the second.
Scott slapped out three hits in as many appearances to spark the Co-Op hitting. Henry Curry was big gun for the Trailer Vets as he poled out a pair of doubles in three appearances.
T. V.
C. O.
T. V.
000 300 0—3 12
022 320 x-9 16
The Guskers shoved in a run in the top of the ninth to nip Delta Sigma Phi 12 to 11. It was the loser's fifth straight defeat.
The Gusher's started rolling in the sixth and seventh innings with a pair of four-run outbursts. Delta Sig scored a lone lally in the last half of the seventh to send the game into extra innings.
Frank Davis and Ludwig Lena smashed out doubles to lead the Delta Sig stickwork. Kirk Harvey rapped in a triple and Gib Stramel and Bob Zalakor each hit doubles for the Gusher's.
Gushers 300 004 401—12 9 5
D.S.P. 170 101 100—12 9 5
Scoring nine runs in the last three innings Spooner Thayer slipped past Dix club 13 to 12. The winners were outhit 16 to 12. Dix club rolled off to an 8 to 2 lead at the end of two innings but a three-run outburst in the fifth and a five-run rally in the sixth put Spooner Thayer back in the game.
Bill Good banged out four hits in four trips to take hitting honors for Spooner Thayer, Jim Rubick clouted a homer and bagged a pair of singles in three trips to spark the losers.
202.035 1—13 13
260 111 1—12 15
S.T.
D'C.
Edgehill Roaders defeated Law school 12 to 7 in a loosely-played affair.
The victors took advantage of twirler Ernie McRae's wildness to score seven runs in the third and virtually sew up the game. After Don Wells had singled McAtea gave up three walks. He was then nicked for singles by Vic Eddy, Bob Shyne, Clyde Burnside and a double by Richard Hamilton.
Hamilton led in the hitting department with three hits in four times at bat. Grant Cole paced the Law school with three hits in four appearances, one a first-inning homer.
L.S. 302 110 0—7 11
E.R. 007 221 x-12 11
Pounding out 17 hits Sigma Chi swamped Kappa Alpha Psi 10 to 2. They were never threatened and they held their opponents scoreless until the last of the fifth when the
until the last of the fifth when the
users tallied twice on three hits.
Odd Williams clubbed out five hits in seven trips to top the Sigma Chi hitting. Bob Hagg and Williams were all on defense to hold the Kappa FsL to four hits.
Sig Chi 102 223 0—10 17
KA Psi 000 002 0—14
I-M Crown To Corbin
Dominating women's intramural softball play right down to the wire, Corbin hall outclassed Locksley hall Wednesday 21 to 8 to take the 1948 softball crown. Locksley entered the finals by defeating Kappa Alpha Theta 37 to 11 in the semi-finals Tuesday.
This was the fifth Corbin victory against no defeats this spring and was the second defeat suffered by Locksley. The outcome was never in doubt after Corbin pushed across 11 runs on 11 hits and two errors in the top half of the first innning. Randel, Lander, and Kirkham, each got two hits and scored two runs during this early bombardment.
Locksey managed to collect 15 hits off Shepard, Corbin pitcher, but a rather leaky defense committed six errors to add to the havoc created by Corbin's 23 hits off van der Smissen, Locksey hurler.
Kirkham, Corbin catcher, got five hits in five grips to the plate to pace the Corbin offense, while Hoffman, Locksley backstop, was leading her team's hitting with three for three.
Pick Women's Class Teams
Fifteen women softball stars have been named to each of the class teams on the basis of their performance in the spring softball tournament.
Class games begin today with the freshman taking on the seniors, and the sophomores -tangling with the juniors. The winners and losers will meet in the finals Monday. Members of the team are:
Sophomore: Virginia Coppeed, Betsy McCune, Jody Stuckey, Kathleen KMcVely, Peggy Baker, Peggy Shimn, Atkeon Attkinson (manager), Anne Hunter, Virginia Loveless, Barbara Burnham, Shirley Hoffman, Stella Gabrielson, Jeanette Bolas, Joan Happy, Margaret Stodder.
Freshman: Marilyn Smith (manager), Beverly Pepper, Geneva Fleshman, Lorraine Ross, Mary Anne Carter, Ruth Wolf, Anne Ellis, Nancy Moore, Elsie Randell, Nanette Hyer, Pat Lander, Sarah Strickland, Margaret Connolly, Gloria Wilson, Nancy Bell.
Seniors: Maxine Gunsolly, Marjorie Kaff, Bernedla Larsen, Mary Shepard, Joan Anderson, Nancy Jack, Ruth Granger, Jeanne Cooper, Joan Kirkham (manager), Geneva Laman, Pearl Leigh, Mary Varner, Georgia Lee Westmoreland, Anne Stout, Martha Goodrich.
Junior: Donna Mueller, Peneaicia Wright, Elsie Lemon (manager), Betty van der Smissen, Rachael Cooper, Marian Greenlee, Pat Bentley, Geraldine McGee, Evelyn Stoll, Harriet Connor, Phyllis Doane, Joan Strowing, Caroline Hamma, Hortense Bedelh, Shirley Liem.
Geological Surveys Test Garden City Water Wells
They will determine by tests how much water can be safely drawn from the wells without diminishing the supply. It has been estimated that about 20 million gallons of water a day will be needed to operate the plant.
Glenn C. Prescott and Woodrow Wilson, of the ground water division of the state and federal Geological Surveys, will go to Garden City today to make pumping tests of water wells dblled for the Stano-lind synthetic gasoline plant being constructed near there.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
BAND
The Blue & Crimson Day Dance
WAYNE WILLS and Orchestra All "K" Club Members will be awarded their certificates of membership at 10:45 p.m.
Semi - Formal
SAT., MAY 15——9:00 to 12:00
Union Ball Room $1.20 Couple—tax incl.
Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan.
STERLING'S
Show off that lovely baby!
IN A Thayer
FOLDING COACH
A man in a uniform is calling out to a woman pushing a baby stroller. The woman is walking away from the camera.
Thayer
FOLDING COACH
A very special baby (and whose isn't?) deserves a THAYER, glamour name in coaches. Beautiful aluminumfinished steel chassis and handsome new body colors. Jolt-proof, Sway-proof Body Stabilizer. Self-oiling, Squeak-proof wheel bearings. Patented Feather-Touch 3-Position Back Rest. Adjustable aluminum push handles. Safety brakes and stand.
By the makers of The Humor of Thayer Folding Coach. $24.95 up
ADVERTISED IN
LIFE
Sterling Furniture Co. 928 Mass. Easy Terms
THE Walker SHOP'S SPRING CLEARANCE SALE
CLEARANCE SALE
Fine SHOES
from this season stock at fine savings. Were up to 19.95
and
10.95
now
9. 95
All types; all
heel heights; all
sizes; all widths.
All colors.
All famous
brands:
Johansen, Jolene,
Selby Arch Pres-
server.
All materials:
Suede, buck, calf,
kid, cobra, alligator, lizard.
PLUS
PLAYSHOES CASUALS
Were up to 12.95
4. 95
813 Mass. Phone 259
PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1948
The Editorial Page
Evans-Honor Man Indeed
The highest honor of this University has been paid to a man who has helped so much to put this school "on the map." It was only a natural that "Riffin" Ray would be given this accolade.
Seldom from the student body of any University comes a man who has the qualities of scholar, athlete, leader, and good citizen. K.U. has found such a man in Ray Evans.
Quiet and unassuming, he has taken his laurels in the manner befitting a good sportsman and a sincere competitor. He has never let the praise of his fellow students or that of the sports writers turn his head. Only recently has he agreed to play professional football and everyone believed that he made the right choice. His presence with that group of salaried players will mean a grea deal in raising the standards of that national sport. He will carry with him the same fine qualities which made him so well-liked here.
which made him His wide abilities made him the seniors' choice for their class president. His fellow athletes honored him with the captainacy of both the football and basketball squads. Sports writers were high in their praise for Ray, and it was always a threat to watch a game in which he participated. He is one of five athletes in the history of collegiate sports who have been named first team All-American in both football and basketball.
Ray played the game for sport, and he guided his college career along business lines so that he could prepare for a future other than athletics. He recently made his first step in this direction by joining a Kansas City bank.
His interest in helping any worthwhile organization in any way that he can, is shown by his present speaking tour for the American Legion in various towns across Kansas promoting the Legion baseball program. In the minds of the youngsters, he is the only individual to do the job. He is their hero. He is a product of a Kansas school. This summer many young boys at play will yell, "Watch me, watch the way I do it, I'm Ray Evans." Ray is a young boy's idol, and he deserves to be.
Yes, the choice this year was not difficult—for Ray Evans is an Honor man indeed.
The Hollywood know - it - alis breathlessly report that Lana Turner is still as unspoiled and unaffected as the day she was discovered in a drugstore booth. If 10 years, movie stardom, three husbands, a daughter and umpteen romances can leave Lana girlishly sweet, then who's worried about the threat of Joe Stalin and the Russian army?
Russian workers recently presented Stalin with a crystal ball which he promptly placed in a museum. President Truman is reported to have suggested that Secretary Marshall open negotiations to borrow it.
Nowadays a student has to worm his way to class every morning.
--has just arrived. These beautiful books are ideal gifts for the graduate. You are cordially invited to come in and see them.
BILL'S GRILL
JUICY STEAKS
Delicious Dinners
Sandwiches—Malts
--has just arrived. These beautiful books are ideal gifts for the graduate. You are cordially invited to come in and see them.
Open Daily 6 a.m.1:30 p.m.
Across from Court House
Dear Editor
Dear Editor:
Pie Praise
I should like to thank the Student Union Cafeteria employees and management for its excellent service. Those who serve the food, the checkers, and the cashiers are pleasant and courteous and fully deserve the highest praise from the student body.
The food is tasty, wholesome, and the meals are well balanced. My deepest appreciation is for the desserts, in particular the pies. For such a large institution, this is truly remarkable.
I congratulate the cafeteria staff, including those in the kitchen who actually prepare the food and deserve an equal if not a greater share of the credit. I am certain that in the future the staff will find new and better ways of serving the needs of the student body.
Aaron Feldstein Graduate student
Romantic Antic
Dear Editor:
We should all be happy when an educational department comes down out of its ivory tower and gives its students an example of life as she is lived. We should be particularly gratified when the Romance language department lives up to its name by sponsoring a great foreign language film like "Open City." After all, what department can more appropriately advertise "Violence and Plain Sexiness. . . . Sponsored by K.U. Romance Language department!"
Yours in envy,
Tom Page,
Instructor,
Political Science
Expert Watch Repair
Guaranteed Satisfaction
1 week or less service
WOLFSON'S
743 Mass.
A new shipment of Peter Pauper Press Books
University
Price $2.00.
Daily Hansan
NOOK
Phone 666
THE BOOK 1021 Mass.
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 ... David H. Clymer
Managing Editor ... Cooper Rollow
Asst. Man. Editor ... Clarice M. Thomas
Man. Editor ... Wagner G.
City Editor ... John Stauffer
Asst. City Editor .. James Beatty
Asst. City Editor .. Richard Barton
Elegante Manager .. James Replaiman
Tel. Editor .. Hul Nelson
Asst. Tel. Editor .. Mile Mayer
Sports Editor .. Paul Zeh
Sports Editor .. James Zahn
Sports Editor .. Anna Mary Murphy
Feature Editor .. Robert M. Newman
Picture Editor .. Jamaon Mason
Society Editor .. Patricia Bentley
Business Manager .. Bill Alderson
Adv. Manager .. Paul Warner
Admin. Manager .. Dave Walden
Asst. Manager .. Bjn Binter
Class. Adv.Mgr .. Ruth Clayton
Asst. Class. Adv.Mgr .. Elizabeth Berry
Asst. Class. Adv.Mgr .. Carol Buhler
Nat. Adv.Mgr .. Peter Schmidt
Eleanor Bradford
Promotion Mgr. .. Roger James
Asst. Promotion Mgr. .. Don Tennant
The Kansas Press Association
19 MEMBER
48 NATIONAL Editorial Association
A FREE PRESS--YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW
The National Tax Equality association, whose purpose is opposing tax-exempt features of national legislation, is classified as an educational organization by the Treasury. As such, the N.T.E.A. does not have to pay taxes.
Drew Pearson predicts that the Kremlin does not want a shooting war now. Mr. Pearson's predictions are 81 per cent correct but 19 per cent has ruined more than one experiment.
fine watch repair
Electronically Checked
REGISTERED · INSURED
Harmony
DIAMOND RINGS
Authorized Dealer
Q
for a large selection of fine jewelry and gifts, stop in at—
Samples
914 $ ^{1} / 2 $ Mass. Ph.368
GARAGE
BODY NOISES
REMOVED
'O.K., start on that one!
There may be one noise we can't stop but who can? If it's coming from the body or chassis of your car we surely can! Or stop in for a check-up before the noises develop.
CITIES SERVICE
FRITZ CO.
Phone 4
8th and New Hampshire
CITIES SERVICE
Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
Summer SLACKS
Comes s
can't
slack
and
get 'c
Many Fabrics and Colors
Comes summer, a man can't have too many slacks. Now's the time and here's the place to get 'em. Come in today.
$5.95 to
$14.50
Gibbs Clothing Co.
811 Mass. St.
---
---
THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
Phone KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid by cash at the business office during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journalism on publication is desired.
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five
day days five
25 words or less 35c 65c 90c
additional words 1c 2c 3c
For Sale
CAR, DODGE 1935; price $200-$300.
Please phone to-day (6:00-8:00 p.m. at
3:00 p.m. 10:00-12:00 p.m. at KU 409
217, German instructor, 1323
Louisiana.
1948 FORD station wagon—3,000 miles.
1949 FORD station wagon—2,600 miles.
at 1639 Massachusetts. 1269-M. 17
1937 CHEVROLET tutor coach. Black
heater, radio, and tire. Price $150.
REMINCTING NOISELESS portable type-
writer, model 47, $112 original value, will sell for $80. If interested phone 16358,
address 946 Ohio. 14
"AI OLDS SEDANETTE, 46 motor, David A. Harner, 3423, JA138 Miss. 14
ONE PRACTICALLY new Courtland tennis racket, Nylon strung and in excellent condition. Call Wayne Lorimer, at 876 up to 6 p.m. 14
1941 FORD, 5 passenger club coupe.
Excellent condition, radio and heater, good tires. Call between 4-5 p.m.
3060R, 141 Tenn.
WILLYS, 1938, 4-dr. radio, hester, good
machine for amateur radio use.
See at 1027 Pennsylvania, phone 25988.
M
DEFRIGERATOR: with deep freeze compartment. Less than a year old, like new. Have to sell before last of May. Reasonable price. Phone 34785W. 13 1839 MERCURY Convertible. See in evenings at 1030 Maine. 17 VETERANS! We will buy, trade or sell for you any item you need in good condition that you may wish to dispose of. Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. Phone 669 HTFD
Business Service
FOR GRADUATION it's jewelry! Buy from K.C. JEWELER Manufacturers. They repair and service. Free pick up and delivery, contact John Basnett. 19 FORTRIGHTS TIPED—good work, resale. CALL 2477-M or bring to 1830 Kentucky. 17
ATTENTION! Sorority and fraternity pins, rings, and special jewelry manufactured, repaired, cleaned by K.C. Jewelry Manufacturers. Free delivery, contact us now. 2084.19 Term papers and other written work neatly and accurately typed. Phone 2193M. 729 Missouri, Mrs. Earl Wright.
TUTORING MATHEMATICS: Lucy A.
2014
TUTORING MATHEMATICS: Loc-
Dougherty, 309 Maine, Phone 3084M
Phone call for app.
AIRLINE RESERVATIONS. City Ticket office. The First National Bank of Lawrence, Miss Rose Giesmann, Mgr., 8th and Mass. Phone 30. 14
STUDENT'S WIFE typeing at home. Your term paper, thesis or taping, promptly and accurately. Mirro Rollin Wide, 1366 New Hampshire, Phone 1699R. 13
TYPING: Thesis. Reasonable and prompt. Phone 236JY. 17
LET ME TYPE your themes, reports, and thesis. Accurate, and reasonable work. Bring to Lawrence Business College, phone 694. Ask for Charles Longuecker. 14
TENNIS RACKET restering and repairing—silk, nylon. gut. $3 to $10.00. Leave rackets at Student Union Book Store or see Dick Richards or Hul MIr. Oread Hall, 3083. 14
TYPING: Reasonable rate. Phone 1320 Kirkland. 14
TENNIS RACKET restoring or repaired. Nylon. $3.50; gut. $4.50 to $10.00. E. L. Wellhausen, Jr., 211 E. 10th Tel. 2445J. 14
TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Telephone 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. 20
TYPING done: Term papers, reports, specimen letters. Accrual at reasonable prices. Call 189-W. Apartment 2, 1101 Tennessee.
RISLEY'S AUTO TRIM
AUTO TRIM
10th and New Jersey
Phone 939
Finer
Body and Fender
Repair
Convertible Top and Seat Repair
FAILOR-MADE suits, $36.50 to $65.00. Exter-
al alteration and tailoring. George
Eberhart & Son, Tailor Shop, $81.2$2 mass.
Our Prices Are Right
Expert
NEW vacuum cleaners for rent. Attachments included. $1.50 per day. Al Brooks Sweeper Co., 8311' Mass. Ph. 1104 between 9 and 12 a.m.
SEE US FIRST!!
Wanted
VETERAN STUDENT and wife desire or two or three room furnished apartment or next fall. No children or pets. Will occupy two more years. Bob Bulc 4021
$10 REWARD for information of suitable
veteran. Married veteran. Jim Mueller, 753.
Maried veteran. Jim Mueller, 753.
WANTED TO BUY: 1946 or 47 Ford,
Chevrolet or Nash "600" in good
condition. No convertible. Call 1162 after
10:00 p.m.
14
WANT GOOD used French's Differential
in Luther H. Ferrell, 133 Temp
Phone, 2093
I WANT transportation to California June 2 or 3. Will share expenses and help drive, Scott Workman, 1121 Ohio. Phone 11. 12
Transportation
WANT TO RENT or lease apartment, furnished or unfurnished, for next fall. No children, no pets. Will be in Lawn, Bold Snowdon, 1409 Rhode Island, 2670J. 17 EXPERIENCED stenographer wants permanent position. I have passed the State Board of Public Instruction for stenographer and an a local resident. morning or evening, 115W. 13
LEAVING EVERY Friday at 4:00 p.m.
for Wichita, returning Sunday evening;
Please call only Wed. or Thur., between
7:00-9:30 p.m. Harry Schryer, 3170. 12
Lost
CIGARETTE LIGHTER — lost Sunday,
initials N. W. Call Woodruff, 2296-J.
17 BLACK BILLFOLD—Wednesday, May
12. Contains Social Security card, drive
license, and pictures. If found,
please return to Corry Novak, telephone
LOST on or about April 17, a gold-topped Schaefer fountain pen, probably at Stadium. Call Maxine Majers, 1768. Hopkins hall.
BLACK MALE cocker, wearing leather
harness, Monday of last week. Name:
Friskie. Return to Dick Williams. Reward.
Call 1967. 17
CUFF LINK: Gold with crown set, old. 12
Bernard E. Mackenzie, 860, Corbin hall. 12
Mary E. Barker, 860, Corbin hall.
Miscellaneous
A NEW TIE every month. Be the center
month. Send $1.19 immediately to Tie-A-
Ment Club, Box 397, 37th and Spruce
month. Send $4.99 to P. Penn, and receive
the first selection.
DANCE every Saturday night at Od Fello-
therese. Informal. Joe Langworthy or
orchestral.
Found
FOUND: Large ring in practice room in Hoch auditorium Tuesday morning. Identify and pay for ad in Kansan office 14
EYE
WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES
Eye
Large Selection of Distinctive Frames Lawrence Optical Co.
For Rent
ROOMS for girl summer students. One room per month, up to 124 students. phone 1784-71.
block from campus. $15.00 per month.
1241 Louisiana, phone 1784-J. 26
ROOFS one block from Union for eight
girls and two boys available for sum-
mer school. Phone 3231R after a. 18
ROOFS CLOSE. quiet, and no透露.
quiet, and quiet, no透露.
Those renting for summer may stay
over next term. Mrs. Hoffman, 1244 La.
MOVE CLOSER for the summer. Room
for 2 boys, 1346 Ohio. 14
ROOM and BOARD for four men students. Single beds. Reasonable rates. Available for summer and fall terms. Call 2535J or see at 909 Mo. 13
--for
PIANO—NEW and used. Piano-tuning
916 Illinois, Phone 815.
Illinois Company
ROOMS WITH sleeping porches available
summer school, 1416 Tenn. Phone
855-727-3555
A feature story about Robert Bock, College senior and state representative from Stafford county, will appear soon in Pic magazine. The article was written by Leonard Snyder, College junior.
Bock Featured In Pic Magazine
Bock became well-known when he was elected state representative on the Democratic ticket in 1946. He was 21 years old at the time and became the youngest political office holder in Kansas.
Earlier this school year Bock appeared on the "We The People" radio show over Columbia Broadcasting system.
The article will appear in "Spotlight," Pic's personality column. A picture of Bock playing the piano will be printed with the feature story.
Twente To Give Addresses
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Spring Graduates Will Have Tea
A tea for all graduating women will be given by the American Association of University Women from 3 to 5 p.m. today at Tennlin hall.
Mrs. Robert M. Davis will play two violin solos and the Madrigal singers of the Lawrence Music club will sing.
Mrs. F. T. Stockton, president of the Lawrence chapter of the organization, said the purpose of the tea was to acquaint the wompa with the purpose and aims of the association.
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1948
1935
(University Daily Kansan Photo by James Mason) Applause filled Hoch auditorium Wednesday night as these students appeared in "College Daze," the student musical review. They are, left to right, Jack Kendree, Judson Greer, and James Hawes.
'College Daze' Is A Hit In Spite Of Grade Points
Cheers and applause of approval filled Hoch auditorium Wednesday evening as "College Daze," all student musical revue was presented before approximately 1,000 persons. Jack Moorhead, author of the revue, was unable to be in the show because of a "below sea level grade average." Several jokes were aimed at the idea of keeping him out the show.
The songs were terrific, skits were hilarious, dances were spectacular, and music was excellent but not too distinct at times because of the acoustics.
Charles T. Freshwater as "Joe College" stayed in character very well, and kept the audience in an uproar before he was on stage.
Norma Jean Guthrie and Dargan Montgomery sang "When You're Near," a ballad. Montgomery was a little stiff in his actions, but his delivery was not affected. Delores Travalent, ballerina, danced gracefully during the number.
The classroom skit was hilarious. James W. Hawes, as George Gargogle, sparked the act with his antics and pretended reading of an oversized pamphlet, the "Kinsey Report, Illustrated."
The South American dance was outstanding with Betty Joe Lorbeer drawing "Oohs" and "Ahs" from the audience as she performed in a distinct latin manner. Craig Hampton was her partner. Mario R. Rivera, from Costa Rica, and Bolivar Marquez, from Panama, played Latin drums during the number.
Ann Hogue, a fine arts sophomore, and Dean W. Frazier, College junior, who sang "Come Along Baby," had a little trouble getting started, but the number moved with ease. Both vocalists performed commendably and won the approval of the crowd Sue Jones and Phillip M. Young astounded the audience with their flips in a jitterbug dance between choruses of the song.
The best skit of the show was the scene depicting college students home on vacation. Gwendolyn Jones played New Look Newberry; James Hawes was her brother, Chalmer; and Judson Greer played his friend, Adelbert Lustless.
"I've Got That Old Look From Seeing That New Look," comedy song and skit, was done by Bill P. Ogg, skit director, and Freshwater. They were dressed as French Foreign Legionaires and complained about the "new look." Words to the song were not clear and the meaning of the act failed to reach the audience.
As the curtain fell, shouts from the audience called for Moorhead. He was dragged on stage and greeted by a great ovation.
A cup and other awards will be
Wichita, May 13 — (UP) — Dr. Franklin Murphy, dean-elect of the University Medical school, said today he planned to ask the next state legislature for an additional $2,-500,000 to expand the school.
Med School Too Small'
Dean Murphy addressed a Lions club meeting here Wednesday night on "Education and Training in Free Society."
He said the University Medical school would admit only 80 students this year because of "cramped facilities."
Fine Arts Recital At 3 pm Today
The School of Fine Arts will present five students in the regular weekly recital at 3 p.m. today in Frank Strong auditorium.
Two students will present pian solos: James Blethroad, will play the Presto from Sonata in D Major, Op. 10. No. 3. (Beethoven), and Margaret Jane Lutz, Sonata, Op. 90 (Beethoven). Both are fine arts freshmen.
John Wesley, College freshman, will sing "Ich grole nicht" (Schuummand) and "Loveliest of Trees" (Duke). Marylee Masterson, College senior, will sing "Menud 'eDaustad" and "Non, je n'irai plus au bois" (arranged by Weckerlin).
John Ehrlich, fine arts senior, will complete the program with a cello solo of selections for Sonata for Cello and Piano in C Minor (Samuel Barber).
given the couple who contributed the most to the presentation of the show, and to the best actor, vocalist dancer, stage hand, and James C. McCaig, arranger.
The cast will give another performance if the demand is great enough. Students and faculty members should make their desires known at the Student Activities office if they want another performance of the revue.
Thousands Idle As Strikes Plague Nation
By UNITED PRESS
The C.I.O. meat packing strike has kept close to 100,000 workers idle for almost two months. Another 73,-000 workers were added to the strike total Wednesday when the C.I.O. United Automobile Workers struck in 16 Chrysler plants in three states.
Labor disputes idled more than 225,000 workers today as organized labor pressed demands for third- round wage increases.
A United Press survey showed that at least 75,000 more workers were on strike in other industries across the nation. Thousands more were idle as the indirect result of labor disputes.
The total included construction workers, painters, movie studio workers, steel workers, electrical workers, bakery truck drivers, Seattle aircraft mechanics, Milwaukee brewery workers, and newspaper printers in Chicago, Philadelphia and elsewhere.
In the meatpacking strike, fighting broke out at South St. Paul, Minn., for the second day in a row. Three men reported that they were beaten by strikers near the Swift and company plant.
Pickets ignored an injunction limiting their numbers to 10 at plant gates. They formed solid lines and kept office workers, mostly women, from entering.
John Moran, president of the American Union of Telephone Workers, said the union may decide today whether to call its 25,000 long lines members out on strike.
The C.I.O. Farm Equipment Workers abandoned its five-week strike against the Caterpillar Tractor company at East Peoria, III., in the face of a bargaining election that showed that the strength of the union was shattered.
ROTC Will Be Inspected
The annual inspection of the University's R.O.T.C. unit will be held today and tomorrow at the Military Science building. The inspection is being done by a team of officers from the Fifth army headquarters in Chicago and the Second air force headquarters in Omaha.
The team is one of 14 inspecting units all over the country. It consists of Col. Tyler Calhoun, Jr., field artillery; Lt. Col. Warwick L. Dell, engineers; Maj. Ardin R. Jewett, air forces, and Capt. Robert B. Stiles, quartermaster corps.
Colonel Calhoun, spokesman for the team said that they had a "very favorable impression of the University's unit," and that the University had provided its unit with "some of the best training facilities in the country."
The team is inspecting units all over the Middle West. The University of Kansas is the eight place to be visited by them. They came from the University of Missouri and will go to Kansas State.
"As a result of last year's inspection," said Col. John Alfrey, professor of military science, "we were permitted to wear the blue star of excellence on the left sleeve of our uniform. This inspection will determine if we can continue to do so."
YMCA Freshman Camp To Be Held Sept. 10 To 12
The third annual University Y.M. C.A. freshman camp will have accommodations for 40 high school students to meet with faculty members at Lone Star lake Sept. 10 to 13.
Elton Noble, director of the camp,
said about 100 letters have been
sent out to Kansas high schools and
helping them to attend the freshman
camp.
freshman camp.
This Brew Blew Its Top As Well As Pans, Glass, And Eight Week's Work
Bailey chemical laboratories had a hangover this morning. It all started when Paul W. Gilles, assistant professor of chemistry, told two engineering students to obtain information about alcohol and acetic acid (as in vinegar).
The two students worked four weeks preparing for the experiment. Tuesday morning they put four 6- $ \textcircled{4} $ inch tubes, filled with ethyl acetate John B. Hedge and J. into a pan of paraffin.
All this they put on a hot plate and turned on the heat.
The experiment brewed until about 9 p.m. Tuesday.
Then it blew up for one of Bailey's major explosions of the year.
Dr. Gilles told engineering juniors
John B. Hedger and John D. How-
land that 'the only thing to do is—
to do it all over.' .
Total damage, estimated at about $10, included one tin pan completely demolished, three glass panes of the hood, shattered; one hot plate with fantastically bent legs, wax spatterings over the vapor hood.
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University Daily Kansan
Friday, May 14, 1948
Lawrence, Kansas
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
S
STUDENT NEWS PAPER
S
Speech Honors Taken By AOPi And Phi Kappa
Edith R. Williamson representing Alpha Omicron Pi and Richard J. Bulger of Phi Kappa took first place in the men's and women's intramural contest in after dinner speaking Thursday. In winning, they acquired the final Sweepstakes cup for their organized houses. The cup is given the men's and women's houses winning the largest number of points. Individual gold losing cups were
Individual gold loving-cups were given to the winners.
Bugler, engineering sophomore, warned the audience against dishonest politicians and gave humorous examples of what people can expect in 1948 campaign speeches. He also won first place in the informative speech contest.
Second place in the women's division went to Doreen J. Wallace of Delta Delta Delta, and Alla E. Beece of Alpha Omicron Pi won third. In the men's division, Arthur H. Fitch, Phi Kappa, took second and Charles Oswald of Beta Theta Pi won third place.
Miss Williamson, College freshman, who also placed second in the informative contest, defended the rights of the Wyandotte Indians as she told how the white men drove the red men from their hunting and burial grounds.
Placing as second in the final Sweepstakes contest were Beta Theta Pi for fraternities, and Delta Delta Delta for sororities.
Other contestants were Alla E. Beebe, Alpha Omicron Pt, Betty Hits, Delta Delta Delta, and Paul J. Uhlig, Battenfeld, Edward L. Stollenwerck presented the awards for the Forensic league who sponsored the contest. Aldo Aliotti introduced the speakers.
Seven Frats Open Contest
Seven fraternities will take part in the inter-fraternity singing contest to be held at 3:30 p.m. Sunday in Hoch auditorium.
They are Sigma Chi, Delta Upsilon, Phi Delta Theta, Lambda Chi Alpha, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Kappa Sigma, and Tau Omega.
The contest is sponsored by Phi Mu Alpha, men's music fraternity. It is an annual event on the campus and is designed to encourage group singing. The fraternity groups will be judged on interpretation, pitch, and enunciation by Paul DeCora instructor, Robert Briggs, and Marcus Hahn, assistant instructors, in the School of Fine Arts.
The groups may sing three songs, a fraternity chapter song, any school song, and one song of their choice. Those taking part will meet at 2:30 p.m. in Hoch. A trophy cup will be awarded to the winning fraternity. The songs will be recorded.
James Strub, College freshman will play popular music on the organ before the singing.
The annual speech and drama department banquet will begin at 6 p.m. today in the Kansas room of the Union. Awards will be made to outstanding students.
Speech Department To Hold Banquet
Miss Margaret Anderson, associate professor of speech, will give a talk on "Activities in the Field of Speech Correction." Robert Calderow, associate professor of speech, will pre-ide.
Dance Manager Applications Due
Today, is the deadline for student dance manager applications. Applications are to be turned in to Sue Webster, 1625 Edgillh Road. Applicants should state their qualifications in a letter. The All Student Council will choose the manager from the letters received.
Engineers Initiate Nineteen Men
Nineteen new members were initiated into Pi Tau Sigma, national honorary mechanical engineering fraternity, at an annual banquet Thursday.
They are Thurston Cowill, Arthur R. Puffinbarger, and Charles R. Svoboda, seniors; Dick' Dickey, Chester J. Frazier, Chester D. Hall, Brownell W. Landes, Hugh S. McClland, James V. Meredith, Norman W. Neaderhiser, Bruce R. Pennington, Lee G. Selden, Robert E. Sterrett, Jack P. Stovall, and Arthur R. Thompson, junior; David J. Foley, John R. Harris, James E. Oram, and Clayton W. Williams, sophomores.
John M. Suptic, engineering junior welcomed the new members
Max Dresden, assistant professor of physics and guest speaker, said that many engineering students do not have a definite goal in mind when they come to the University.
"No one seems to know where he is going," Professor Dresden said, when telling of students who come to his office for advice about the best course of study to follow. He said that many of them seem to think a sudden 'shudder' will solve their problems. A young person should plan a definite goal for himself, then work for its attainment, he said.
Professor Dresden also said that an engineer should broaden his knowledge in the fields, and thereby equip himself for better living in this modern world.
James R. Kaneh, president of the fraternity, introduced the speaker. Each new member gave a short introductory speech.
Keeler Names Chairmen For Commencement
Guy V. Keeler, head of the commencement planning committee, announced committee chairmen today
They are Dean D. M. Swarthout and Russell L. Wiley, music; Fred Ellsworth, class reunions and alumni meetings; Florence Black, assisted by George Beal, Charles Stricky, and Louise Cochran, decorations; Mildred Seaman, radio; Eda N.A. Hill, registration; Martha Peterson, mortar board reunion; F. C. Allen and Paul Endacott, reunion of the 1923 basketball team; Robert K. Ready, class breakfast; Mary Larson, all-University lunchroom; Mr. and Mrs. Henry Shenk and Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Twente, receptions; Ray Brewster, marshal; L. D. Woodruff, tickets for luncheon and commencement services.
Program for the 1948 commencement:
Friday, June 4
8 p.m. Fine Arts commencement
recital, Hoch auditorium.
Saturday. June 5
5:30 p.m. Mortar Board reunion,
Memorial union
6 p.m. Reunion dinner of the 1923 basketball team, Memorial union
Sunday, June 6
12:30 p.m. and 4 p.m. Class reunions. Union building
3:30 p.m. Band concert, Fowler grove
7:30 p.m. Baccalaureate services Memorial stadium
Monday. June 7
7:30 a.m. Class of 1948 breakfast, Union building
10:15 a.m. Annual Alumni association meeting, Fraser
12:30 p.m. Commencement
luncheon. Hoch auditorium
Little Man On Campus
4 p.m. Reception for seniors alumni and families, Union building
7:30 p.m. Commencement exercises. Memorial stadium
By Bibler
COED'S VS EDS
"And stop saving. 'There goes another three bagger!'"
"And stop saying, 'There goes another three bagger!' "
Truman To Speak On Radio Tonight
AAUW Has Tea For 300 Seniors
Washington, May 14—(UP) —President Truman will deliver a nationally broadcast speech tonight. before the national young Democratic dinner here. His address, scheduled for 8:30 p.m., will be carried by the Mutual Broadcasting system.
Approximately 300 senior women attended a tea Thursday given by the American Association of University Women in Templin hall.
Mrs. F. T. Stockton, president, explained the ideals and aims of the A.A.I.W
Some of the community benefits sponsored by the A.A.U.W. here in Lawrence are the children's theater, which was discontinued during the war, but is being revived next year; recreation programs; arts and crafts festivals, and teachers welfare legislation.
Mrs. F. B. O'Brien, past state president of the organization, said in her talk that the University of Kansas has been included in the association since the original charter was issued in 1880.
The Madrigal singers of the Lawrence Music club sang "It Can Not Be a Strange Country," "Good Night," a Bavaria folk song, "Little Brown Baby" by Mrs. Louise Cooke Don Carlos of Lawrence, and a "May Day Carol." Members of the group directed by Mrs. H. W. Craig, are Mrs. Robert Price, Mrs. George Lowman, Mrs. Harold Steeper, Mrs Arthur R. Colburn, Mrs. Robert Lc-Nair Davis, and Mrs. Walter Keeler accompanied by Mrs. Maurice Clarkson.
Mrs. Davis played a violin solo, "Romanza," from the second concerto of Wieniawski. Incidental music during the afternoon was provided by Marie Bartwell, College junior; Shirley Ousley, fine arts junior, and Wilma Jean Anderson, fine arts freshman.
In the receiving line were Mrs. Stockton, Mrs. J. W. Murray, vicepresident, Mrs. George Anderson, president-elect, Mrs. Virginia Wilder, vice-president-elect, and Mrs. F. J. McDonald, Templin house mother.
Drama Groups Plan 3 Plays
Three plays will be presented by members of the drama department next week. There will be no admission charge.
A three-act play, "Private Lives," by Noel Coward will be produced at 8 p.m. May 18 in the Little theater of Green hall.
Mary K. Booth, graduate student is, directing the play, which will be read from script.
Members of the cast are Elizabeth Brady, Herk Harvey, Sarah J. Heil, and Tom P. Rea.
Two one-act plays, "The Hungerers" and "Comin' Through the Rye," both by William Saroyan, will be presented by the University players at 8 p.m. May 19 in Fraser theater. They will be directed by Rea and Dan Palmquist, education senior.
Members of the cast of "The Hungerers" are Milton Commons, Gwendolyne Jones, Loren Orr, Miss Booth and Palmquist.
WEATHER
Kansas—Fair, warmer and windy today. Scattered thundershowers tonight and tomorrow. Warm in south tonight. Somewhat cooler northwest
"Comin' Through the Rye" will be enacted by Tom Shay, Harry Patterson, a student at Oread High school Miss Booth, Commons, and Rea.
Pickets Invade Packing House Wreck Plant
BULLETIN
St. Paul, Minn., May 14—(UP)—Gov. Luther W. Youngdahl said today he will order out the national guard to halt violence in the meat packing strike.
Gov. Luther W. Youngdahl reportedly was considering calling out the National Guard to halt the violence which had flared in this meat packing vicinity for the third day in a row.
South St. Paul, Minn., May 14—(UP) About 200 men armed with clubs, knives, and hammers broke into the Cudahy meat plant at nearby Newport, Minn., early today, smashed thousands of dollars worth of machinery and abducted 30 non-striking workers.
On the picket lines at Swift and Armour plants here, strikers continued to ignore court injunctions limiting their numbers.
Hours after the attack, seven of the abducted workers still were missing. The others had been released along country roads. Some of them were badly beaten.
The Cudahy invaders, many of them identified by company officials as striking employees of the firm, moved into the plant in a well-organized attack that caught the 65 non-strikers inside unawares.
Storming the plant from front and rear, the attackers smashed machinery, beat and kicked the men on the job, threw power switches and yanked telephones from their connections.
They ransacked the building, breaking into all rooms but the main office in search of non-strikers. They broke into livestock pens and freed more than 100 hogs. Then, the plant interior shambles, they left in cars they had parked near the plant, forcing 30 workers to accompany them. Most of the non-strikers were driven a short distance and then put out of the cars along the road.
About 200 pickets massed before the plant gates later in the morning and refused to permit the 35 workers still inside to leave. However, Sheriff's deputies escorted some workers inside at their regular reporting hour.
R. J. Swenson, plant manager, said six men inside the plant were injured in the fierce fighting. Two required hospitalization.
Several of them massed before the main Swift plant early today. Non-strikers made no attempts to cross the lines. Sheriff Norman Dieter and 20 deputies and city policemen tried to pierce the lines yesterday and were repulsed.
The University Men's and Women's Glee clubs will present a joint concert at 8 p.m. May 17 in Hoch auditorium. Irene Peabody and Joseph Wilkins will direct.
Glee Clubs Will Sing
The clubs will join to sing three numbers from the Fred Waring glee club series. A group from the Men's club will sing two Negro spirituals, "Ezekiel Saw The Wheel" and "Dry Bones."
Solos will be sung by Gregory Simms, DuMont Reed, John Mowers, a trio composed of Terry Colton, Carol Prochaska, and Carol Buhler; a woman's quartet composed of Noggin Dogs, Logan Helen Ward, and Jean Young; Lewis Bales, Doris Gilman, and Clarence Hooper.
Twila Wagner and Roger Butts will be accompanists.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 14, 1948
Scholars Hear Science Talk
The world has gone "science mad," said R. Jerald Hamilton, fine arts senior, in a talk at the Summerfield dinner Wednesday.
Richard R. Potter, engineering senior, said that there will be a steady increase in the use of frequency modulation in the immediate future.
Hamilton, who spoke on "Fact or Fancy," explained that another field which gives information about the physical world is the humanities. He said that all arts have in common line, rhythm, and color; but beyond these, similarities cease, Music, he said, "is an emotional trigger which sets off in every individual the shotgun of his own experiences."
L. C. Woodruff, dean of men and a member of the Summerfield scholarships committee, presided. Guests included Miss Carlotta Nellis, Battenfold housemother; Mr. and Mrs. Earl Potter, parents of Richard; Donald G. Wilson, assistant professor of electrical engineering, and Mrs. Flora Boynton, endowment association secretary.
Potter, whose topic was "Frequency Modulation," explained that under the present set-up of amplitude modulation, double reception and interference occur wherever the frequency of a broadcasting station wave is 1 per cent of those of a stronger station. With the recent perfection of frequency modulation, double reception occurs only in the area where the frequencies of conflicting stations are exactly equal, he explained.
Pi Sigma Alpha Elects Colburn
Pi Sigma Alpha, political science fraternity, elected Edward Colburn president recently.
Other officers are Robert D. Judy, vice-president; Nancy Goering, secretary, and Russell Barrett, treasurer.
Twenty three members were initiated. They are Laurence Allen, Kenneth Beasley, James Bibb, Ema Louise Britton, Robert Brock, Mrs Virginia Powell Conard, J. W. Drury, Richard Hawkinson, James Jackson, Newell Jenkins, Joe Lill, Wendall Link, H. M. Mason, Marylee Masterson, Jack McKay, John Michener, Kenneth Miller, R. Elvin Miller, Virginia Lee Shimer, Robert Ready, Marvin Martin, Judy and Miss Goering.
Following the initiation the new members were honored at a banquet. Speeches were given by Prof. Herman Chubb, Tom Page, Prof. Ethan Allen, and Colburn.
Official Bulletin
May 14.1948
Letters of application for dance manager job to Sue Webster, 1625 Edgehill road by today. Enclose address and phone number.
Westminster fellowship treasure hunt tonight. Jim Kanehl in charge. Leaves from Westminster house at 8 p.m. sharp.
A. S.C. social committee, 3 p.m. today. Pine room.
Sachem circle of ODK, 10:30 a.m. tomorrow, English room, Union, Jayhawker picture at 11. Important.
K.U.D.F. spring picnic, 2:30 p.m.
Sunday, Myers hall.
Quack club picnic, 8 p.m. Sunday. Initiation and election of officers. Reservations at Robinson by 4 p.m. today.
Kansan board, 4 p.m. May 17, 107 Journalism. Election.
Tau Sigma, 7:30 p.m. May 17. Robinson gym. Return show tickets.
Meeting of Ku Ku club, 7:30 p.m May 18, 200 Frank Strong. Election
Veterans requisition books for current semester will not be honored after May 20.
Students Will Dig For Indian Remains
An eight-week field trip to recover archeological deposits dating from 1000 A.D. will be under taken by University students this summer in Ellsworth county. Water from the Kanopolis dam will soon flood the area.
Carlyle S. Smith, assistant curator of anthropology at Dyche museum. will direct the work.
A few vacancies remain for students taking the course for six hours credit or for no credit. If the course is taken for no credit, summer session fees are not paid and subsistence will be provided.
Work will be done from a tent camp base. The group may also dig in the area which will soon be flooded by the Fall river dam near Fredonia.
Several graduate students from Columbia university may join the group.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
University Daily Kansan
Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence哎加 $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University holidays and Sundays, University holidays and Sundays, Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
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HERE's your chance to find out about one of the best opportunities ever offered college upper-classmen. It's a job that qualifies you as a pilot and as an executive . . . that puts you in touch with the very latest developments in the field of aviation . . . that pays you up to $336 a month after one year of intensive training.
The U. S. Air Force interviewing team is coming back on the campus to tell you more about it. It is set up to answer all your questions, to interview applicants for the July 1 and October 15 Aviation Cadet Classes, and to give preliminary physical examinations and flying aptitude tests.
If you can qualify,you begin training as an Aviation Cadet. You draw $75 a month pay, plus food, quarters,
uniforms, medical and dental care. Upon successful completion of the 52-week training course, you're commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant, Air Force Reserve, and assigned to flying and administrative duties with the U.S.Air Force.
No other job offers such a broad background for a career in aviation. To those who meet the high standards, it's a real opportunity.
Stop in after class and get all the details. Check the date, time and place below.
CAREERS WITH A FUTURE U.S. Army and U.S.Air Force
1
INTERVIEWS WILL BE HELD
FRIDAY, MAY 14, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
I'd Rather Ride Circus Horses Says Pretty French Countess
New York—(UP)—A pretty French countess has given up a chance to be a photographers' model because she'd rather ride horses in a circus. It's just that she's crazy about horses.
And unless the modeling offers get too attractive she's going to stick to her horses and Ringling Brothers circus.
to her horses and Ringing Brothers cross.
Claude, Mataldeine, Marie, Eugenie◎
Claude Madeleine Marie Eugenie $ ^{ \circled{e} } $
Panaque, Countess Mesnet De La Cour, is the daughter of a wealthy Parisian champagne and brandy merchant. When the Germans occupied France, she had just turned 20, and she had 100 horses. A friend suggested she could save some of them from requisition by saying she rode them in a circus. The Germans wanted proof. Claude took her horses to a circus at Amiens and gave a riding demonstration that convinced the Germans.
A year ago a Ringling Brothers agent in France heard her story and signed her up to tour America with the big top.
Harry Conover, model agency head, said he was "simply minding my own business at home" when Claude's act followed the aerialists on the television screen.
"Something struck me about her." Mr. Conover said. "Of course, I always look at faces. And she had such wonderful bearing, not strictly circus."
He sent her around to a fashion magazine editor and a top flight photographer. They're crazy about her, Mr. Conover said. He's prepared to start her out at $15 an hour and send her around with an interpreter.
"Oh yes, I would like it, a little," Claude said. "But for work, I would rather be with the circus."
Up And Coming
Kappa Psi, dance. Eldridge hotel,
9 p.m. to midnight.
Today
Corbin hall, spring formal. Corbin hall, 9 p.m. to midnight. Kappa Psi, dance, Eldridge hotel,
Templin hall, formal, Templin hall,
9. pm, to midnight.
Delta Gamma, party, chapter house, 9 p.m. to midnight. Karen
Campus house, dance, Kansas room. 9 p.m. to midnight.
Tomorrow
Sigma Nu dinner-dance, chapter house, 6:30 p.m. to midnight.
Alba Kappa Pei dance. Eldridge
Saturday, Chi, dance, chapter house,
9 p.m. to midnight.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, formal dance,
chapter house, 9 p.m. to midnight.
Delta Chi, party, chapter house,
8 p.m. to midnight.
Alpha Kappa Psi, dance, Eldridge
bdtel 9 p.m. to midnight.
Phi Gamma Delta, spring party,
chapter house, 9 p.m. to midnight.
Ricker hall, dance, Ricker hall,
9 p.m. to midnight.
Jewish Student Union, mixer.
American Legion hall, 8 to 11 p.m.
Pershing Rifles, picnic, Lone Star
lake, 4 to 8 p.m.
Phi Kappa, dance, chapter house,
9 p.m. to midnight.
Hopkins hall, spring formal, Hop-
kins hall, 9 p.m. to midnight.
Tau Kappa Epsilon, spring formal,
chapter house, 9 p.m. to midnight.
Alpha Phi Omega, picnic, Robinson
farm. 2:30 to 8 p.m.
Sasak picnic, Pioneer cemetery,
4 to 8 p.m.
Briar Manor, tea, Briar Manor,
3 to 5 p.m.
Last year, a majority of all Americans killed in automobile accidents met death during the hours of darkness. Night and day-drive carefully!
BILL'S GRILL
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Delicious Dinners
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Across from Court House
Socially Speaking
Hold Spring Formal
Briar Manor and Monchonsia hall held their spring formal May 7 in the Union ballroom. A garden theme was used for the party.
Guests were Robert Perish, Raymond Jones, Dalton Lemon, Charles Kendall, Arthur Francis, John Foust, Henry Doering, Richard Stucky, Donald Millikan, Keith Wolfenbarger, Elmer Weigel, John Weigel, Ernest Crates, Robert Morris, John Tabor, James Selig, Donald Clark, Gene Calderaar, Eldon Weaver, Mildred Crandall, Erma Handke, Robert McClure.
Nancy Kastman, Arthur Toch,
Warren Helsely, Jack Dausman,
Lewis Chubb, Al Brooks, John Altenbernd, Herbert Taylor, Frank Rotman, Raymond Schmalzried,
George Cousins, Robert Rowley,
Keith Kost, Roy Smoots, Russell Stewart, Warren Shaw, James Jasper, Ed Norris, Donald Huffman,
John Jacques, Jack Franklin, Kenneth Cooper, Rex Stout, Arthur Nussbaum, Lowell Elliott, William Conroy, John Hickox, Melvin Keith, Deverne McKenna, and Mr. and Mrs.
Don McLain Bradley, College freshman from Blue Mound, received word recently of his acceptance to West Point Military academy, West Point, N.Y.
Don McLain Bradley To Enter West Point
He will report for assignment July 1.
Bradley's appointment was made at the beginning of the spring semester by Rep. Errett Scrivner of the Second Congressional district. He took the West Point entrance examination March 1 at Leavenworth.
Earl Gerharter.
Chaperons were Mrs. Harry W. Potts, Mrs. Wilma Hooper, Mrs. C. A. Thomas, Mrs. Vivian Christian, Mrs. Elizabeth Stanley, Mrs. Fanny DeLozier, and Mrs. Paul Parman.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 14, 1948
Missouri Is Favored In Tune-Up Dual Here
In preparation for the Big Seven outdoor meet just one week away, coah Bill Easton will send his thinly-talented Jayhawkers against a strongly favored Missouri squad at 10 a.m. tomorrow in Memorial stadium.
the Tigers have decisively beaten Nebraska, Kansas State and Oklahoma.
Both Missouri and Kansas show perfect records for the outdoor season. Kansas holds two close victories over Nebraska and Kansas State, while
The Tigers have whipped Kansas the last two years in dual meets, and it's a good bet that they will be on the long end of the score tomorrow. The defending Big Seven outdoor champs are strong in almost every event, with the possible exception of the javelin.
KU Strong In Javelin
Coach Tom Botts will rely on Tiger team strength to pile up points, while Easton will depend on individual stars Bob Karnes, Hal Moore, Tom Scofield, and Bob Crowlev.
The Jayhawker trio of Bruce Henoch, Bob Drumm and Leroy Robison should provide K.U. with its only sweep of the morning, while the Tigers appear strong enough in the shot and high hurdles to walk off with all three places in those two events.
KU Strong In Javelin
Two of the top battles of the day will be the 440 and the half mile. John Sites and Bill Binter will be up against a whole flock of speedy Missouri quarter milers, led by record holder Dick Ault. If either Binter or Sites can repeat last week's 49.5 performance against Kansas State they will finish in the money.
Shea Faces Champ
Dick Shea may have an opportunity to pull the surprise win of the morning if he can repeat last week's 1:56.4 half mile. The quiet-mannered senior will be running against Big Seven indoor champ Charles Lancaster. Lancaster has posted a 1.57 mark for the half this season.
The Tigers seem almost a cinch to sweep the high hurdles with Bud Gartiser, Bob Blakely, and Bill Self. Gartiser is the speed demon of the trio, holding both the Big Seven indoor 60-yard high hurdle record and the M.U.-KU. meet record.
Big Ed Quirk is favored to win the shot put, and his palds Mel Sheehan and Kelly Pelts should follow in order. Leroy Robison carries the Red and Blue colors in the shot. Broad Jump A Feature
The broad jump, featuring Bob Crowley of Kansas and Bob Teel of Missouri, may be in for a record performance. Both Teel and Crowley have jumps of 24 feet this season. The record is 23 feet 10 $ \frac{1}{8} $ inches.
Coach Easton's crack distance stars Bob Karnes and Hal Moore should continue their winning ways against the Tigers weaker plodders. The two runners have not lost a race between them during the entire indoor and outdoor seasons. Last week at Manhattan Moore beat Karnes in the mile in the fast time of 4:21, so Karnes will be out to win this week.
Stewart To Nats For Culberson
New York, Mary 14—(UP)—The New York Yankees today announced the trade of rookie outfielder Ed Stewart to the Washington Senators for outfielder Leon Culberson and an undisclosed amount of cash.
Culberson, whom the Senators obtained from the Boston Red Sox in a trade during the winter, was slated to go to the Yankees'
Probable Pitchers
Philadelphia (Scheib 3-0) at New York (Bachi 3-1)
American League
St. Louis (Zoldak 0-2) at Detroit (Wiltshire 1.4)
Washington (Masterson 2-1) at Boston (Harris 1-2), night
National League
Boston (Barrett 2-1) at Brooklyn
(Branca 2-3), night
(Cheyenne 2-4) at Chicago.
incinnati (Wehmeirer 0-0) at Chicago (Borowy 1-1)
With Cyclones
Short Orders
Kansas netmen came in for a few words of praise from coach Jim Seaver as they prepared to meet Iowa State today in the last home match of the year. The golf team is entertaining the Cyclones at the Lawrence country club in the other half of the dual meet. The golfers teed-off at 10:30 this morning.
Jayhawkers Eye Lincoln
The blond, tanned, former Stanford net star could hardly restain his enthusiasm after watching his Jaya-hawkers shutout highly-regarded Missouri 5-0 on the Tiger's court Wednesday.
And On Wood Courts
"All the boys played well against Missouri—and on a wooden court, too. We had too much staying power for them. Look at the summaries—three of the five matches went to three sets."
Seaver was particularly pleased with the performance of his number one player, Dick Richards. "Richards got off to a bad start this year, but he's hit his peak now and should be a tough contender at Lincoln next week in the Big Seven tourney." Winey Also Please
Meanwhile golf coach Bill Winey was not exactly in low spirits. He was pleased with the squad's showing against Oklahoma A. & M. The Cowboys reached the finals on the Southern Collegiate golf tournament against Louisiana State university.
"We played good golf against the Cowboys, and should do all right at Lincoln in the Big Seven match—especially if we get Bill Jones back,"
The hitters took over Thursday as the freshmen and juniors pulled out two-run victories over the seniors and sophomores in women's class softball play. The winners and losers will meet Monday in championship and consolation games.
Frosh, Juniors Win I-M Class Games
North on Hi-way 24-40, in City Limits
Chet's Drive-In
The freshmen, paced by catcher Marilyn Smith who banged out four hits including a home run, held a slight edge throughout the game to win, 15 to 13. They collected a total of 25 hits off Shepard, senior pitcher. The seniors had their batting eye sharpened, too, but their 21 hits off Carter, freshman pitcher, weren't quite enough.
Due to a mixup the sophomores had to play with only seven players. But in spite of the handicap they hold the juniors to a respectable 12 to 14 score. It took hits by Strowig, Bentley, and Bedell in the last half of the fourth inning to push across the two winning runs. McKelvy and Coppedge was scored for the sophomores to tie up the game at 12-all in the first half of the inning.
Kansas City farm club. He batted 238 for the Red Sox in 47 games last year.
Van der Smissen was on the mound for the juniors_ while Coppeidge pitched and played third base for the sophomores.
Noon 'til Midnight
ONCE OUR CUSTOMER— ALWAYS OUR CUSTOMER!
Dinners
he said. It is rumored that Jones, number one man on the 1947 squad, will return to the team in time for the conference match May 21 and 22. He left the team early in the season to play intramurals.
The committee on legal education and admission to the Kansas State Bar association will meet for dinner and a business meeting at 6:15 p.m. today in the East room of the Union.
Legal Committee Will Meet Today
Dean F. J. Moreau, chairman, has invited attorneys James L. Hogin, Kansas City; Arthur S. Humphrey, Junction City; T. N. Lirrard, Topeka; and W. F. Lilleston, Wichita, to attend.
The purpose is to draw up a report of the committee for the bar association meeting in Wichita May 20, 21, and 22.
Rose's Rancho
STEAK-CHICKEN DINNERS
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K. U.
GLEE CLUBS
Spring Concert
Chorus of 100 voices singing MUSIC EVERYONE LIKES
MONDAY, MAY 17, 8:00 P.M.
Hoch Auditorium Act. Tickets Admit General Adm. 50c tax incl.
Plenty of them by Puritan and Van Heusen
in white and solid pastel colors as well as novelty effects and stripes.
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Shows 2:30—7—9:05
Jayhawker NOW, ends TUESDAY
THIS PICTURE WILL MAKE YOU STOP AND THINK...
CARY GRANT LORETTA YOUNG DAVID NIVEN
The BISHOPSWife
WEDNESDAY One Week
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katterson HEPBURN
huh JOHNSON
Frank CAPRA'S
STATE OF
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SUNDAY—one week World Premiere Showing Dana ANDREWS in "THE IRON CURTAIN"
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ALLAN ROCKY LANE
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Son of Frankenstein Hit No.2
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FRIDAY, MAY 14. 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Beta Defeats Sig Ep In Feature I-M Game
Beta Theta Pi capitalized on the wildness of Sig Ep hurler Bob McNeive to topple the 1947 softball finalists 9 to 4 Thursday in the feature game of the week, and establish themselves as leading contenders for the softball crown held by Phi Delt.
fast-firing Sig Ep fanned 13 men while Bill Conboy, Beta ace, fanned nine, yielded seven hits, and walked four.
McNeive limited the Beta's to four safeties but issued 12 walks. The fast-firing Sig Ep fanned 13 men$\textcircled{4}$
One of the largest crowds of the season saw the Beta's come from behind in the later innings. Hanging on to a 4 to 3 lead going into the seventh the Beta's sewed up the game by scoring five additional tallies.
Sig Ep got off to a first-inning advantage when leadoff hitter Karl Kappelman scored a wild pitch but the Beta's were quick to retaliate. They knotted the count in the third. Sig Ep came back in the bottom of the frame to push in two more runs and command a 3 to 1 lead.
Beta took the lead in the fifth with a three-run rally. Sig Ep scored its final tally in the last of the seventh. Karl Kappelman, Sig Ep, took hitting honors with three hits in four trips. Bill Conoby slammed out three of the Beta safeties, one seventh-inning triple. Tom Wregglesworth, Sig Ep, also poled out a triple and commutes Lee Garrish and Vernon immer bagged a double oprise.
001 030 5—9 4 2
102 000 1—4 7 2
Beta Sig Ep
Alpha Chi Sigma, summer champion, established a new individual team scoring record in mauling Kappa Eta Kappa 44 to 0 in a five-inning game. The champions had a field day at bat, pounding out 43 hits. They scored in every inning but the fourth.
A.C.S. (13) 3 (11) 1(16)-44 43 3
K.E.K. 0 0 0 0 -6 0 9
Dale Clark tossed six-hit ball for the winners and smashed out five hits in seven trips at the plate. Oliver Edwards, however, was the leading slugger, collecting six safeties in seven appearances. Al Lindenstruth had six hits to show for eight trips.
Behind Warren Reigle's five-hit pitching Phi Gami downed Delta Tau 8 to 3. Nine Delt errors contributed to the Phi Gami win.
The winners scored four runs in the opening frame. Earl Strong and Warren Reigle hit doubles and Jess Van Ert, Wally Miller, and Jim Lord followed with singles.
Delta Tau broke into the scoring column in the second, Dick Nesch singling Clay Coburn home. The Delt's garnered two more runs in the fourth on doubles by Dick Nesch, Dick Dodson, and Hout Baker.
Van Ert and Lord sparked the victors, each hitting safely three times in four appearances. Nesch's two doubles was high for the Delt's.
Phi Gam Delt
403 000 1-8 14
010 200 0-3 5
Phi Delt nosed out Sig Alph 4 to 3 in fast-moving contest although Orval Kaufman, Sig Alph hurler, limited the Phi's to four hits. The win enabled the Phi Delt's to move into a first-place deadlock with A.T.O. in division one. Both have
won three games while losing one.
won three games while losing one. Loren Powell, Phil shortstop, starred as the center for severalerical nice stops. Don McIlhnail scored two of the winner's runs. Jay Humphries sparked the Sig Alph's, clouting a home run and a double.
Clay Hedrick, Phil Delt pitcher, scattered eight hits to gain credit for the win. He walked one and struck out one.
P.D.
S.A.E.
120 010 0—4 4
010 010 1—3 8
Scoring in every frame but the second Smith hall nudged Aces Hi 17 to 12. The lead see-sawed until the sixth when Smith pushed in five runs.
George Worrell started it off in the big sixth with a walk, John Hoppech strolled, and Claude Engleke doubled. Ray McMillen, Aces Hi flinger, then issued four straight walks.
Maurice Stryker hit three for three to lead the slugging. Worrell collected three for five. Francis Galbraith homered for the losers in the fifth.
Aces
201 525 2—17 18
221 223 0—12 15
Phi Kappa swarmed over Alpha KappaLambda 16 to 4 in an abbreviated five-inning tilt. The Phi Kiap's scored 11 runs in the third inning.
Bill Hart clubbed two triples and a pair of doubles in four trips to pace the Phi Kap's. Vernon Lang, Phi Kappa, clouted a homer and a double. Dwight House homered for the losers in the third.
Kenneth Dieker stopped the A.K.L's on two singles. He walked four and fanned three. House, A.K.L pitcher, was nucked for 14 safety.
P.K. 10 (11) 40-16 14 5
A.K.L. 20 1 01-4 1 2
Green, McKinny To Attend Engineering Conference
Charles H. Green and James T. McKinney, engineering seniors, will present papers at the annual student branches conference of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. The conference will be held in Tulsa, Okla. today and tomorrow. Harry L. Daasch, professor of mechanical engineering, will accompany the representatives from the University.
The papers will be entered in a technical writing contest. Green's paper is on stresses in steam piping and McKinney's paper covers heating. They were chosen in an elimination contest held at the University.
Attend the
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First Show ... 8 p.m.
First Show . . . . . 8 p.m.
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Other new officers are Ivan K. Johnson, executive secretary, and Henry Tinault, treasurer.
Stanley Kelley, Jr., College sophomore, will replace Bob Stewart, education senior, as president of the Committee on Racial Equality for next year.
Chemical engineers are said generally to be the best paid members of the engineering profession.
A woman is sitting on a rock, with her hand on her forehead. She is wearing a dark dress and has long hair. There are two other women standing behind her, both wearing dark dresses and holding hands. They appear to be in a small village or town setting, with a wooden house and a fence in the background. The scene is depicted in black and white woodcut style.
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWKENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 14, 1948
The Editorial Page
It Could Happen Here
Substitute the letters K.U. in the headline "Rescued in M.U. Blaze" which appeared on the front page of Tuesday's Kansas City Star and the story could have happened here.
Fire is a dangerous enemy and it spares no one. At a time when it is critical, it is even more important that every precaution is
Fire is a dangerous enemy and housing is critical, it is even more taken to prevent such a loss as oc- curred at Missouri university early Tuesday morning. The fraternity whose house was destroyed will have trouble replacing it, as construction costs will go far above the insurance they will receive.
It is surprising that such an incident has not occurred sooner with the possible loss of lives. Students living in organized houses give little thought to safety conditions in their living quarters. The house officers are usually too busy with other things to take fire prevention measures under consideration. They take for granted that the houseman keeps all furnaces and hot water equipment in good repair—but this is not enough. Even the best equipment in the best of condition can go haywire on short notice. Students, themselves, must take an individual responsibility in knowing that their possessions and their house is free from the causes of such disasters.
Since the war, many of the houses have been re-decorated and re-modeled at considerable expense. Many of these houses are landmarks and are just as much a part of the University as are the buildings on the "hill."
Yet, students continue to "clutter" the upper floors of these houses with their personal belongings, and the typical college "room" is itself a fire trap. A carelessly tossed match or a smoldering cigarette could be responsible for a fire which could cause tremendous damage.
Don't learn the hard way. Use the coming summer months to check your house thoroughly for possible fire hazards and remedy such faults before the house is filled in the fall, Have your officers check your insurance program and make sure that you have full coverage. Use stricter police methods in keeping individual rooms free from overcrowded closets and general untidiness.
There is no profit in fire. Do your share by removing every possible fire hazard. We don't need that kind of publicity on the front page of any newspaper.
University
Daily Hansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assm. Na-
Assm., and the Associated Collegiate
Press. Represented by the National Ad-
dresser. 420 Madison Ave. New York City.
'Low Man'
Editor-In-Chief David H. Clymer
Managing Editor Cooper Rollow
Asst. Man. Editor Claire Worsham
Asst. Man. Editor Gene Vignery
City Editor John Stauffer
Asst. City Editor Brian Kelley
Richard Barton
Telegraph Editor James Roelson
Asst. Tel. Editor Hal Nelson
Tel. Editor Briley Mayer
Sports Editor Paul Keith
Sports Editor James Jones
Women's Sports Ed. Anna Mary Murphy
Noble Editor Robert Sullivan
Picture Editor James Mason
Society Editor Patricia Bentley
Despite Harold E. Stassen's convincing chain of victories in the Republican presidential primaries, Old Guard Republicans have refused to accept the young ex-governor as a leading candidate for the Republican nomination.
To qualify their convictions, the senior Republicans can point to the history books and proclaim that Stassen, like former primary-winning-candidates, is riding for a fall
The Old Guard recalls Teddy Roosevelt's victory string of nine primaries in 1912 and his subsequent loss of the nomination to William Howard Taft.
In 1920, Senator Hiram Johnson, of California, won six primaries and Gen. Leonard Wood won five, but is was Warren G. Harding who won the nomination in Chicago a few weeks later.
Business Manager Bill Alderson
Adv. Manager Paul McKinnon
Admin. Manager Don Waldron
Asst. Grip Bill Binter
Class. Adv. Mgr Ruth Clayton
Asst. Class. Adv. Mgr Elizabeth Green
Asst. Class. Adv. Mgr Carol Butler
Nat. Adv. Mgr Solokolec
Asst. Nat. Adv. Mgr Eleanor Bradford
Asst. Promotion Mgr Dom Tennant
Asst. Promotion Mgr Dom Tennant
Many of the Old Guard Republicans who can remember the 1940 convention when Thomas E. Dewey was the primary king, but dark horse Wendell Willkie walked off with the nomination.
The Old Guard does not deny that Stassen may be a dangerous factor come convention time, but so far the veteran Republican standbys are striking to their old saw: "Primaries indicate, convention nominate."
For the older Republicans, the energetic Mr. Stassen is still "low man on the totem pole."—John Wheeler.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
- Letters To The Editor -
High Praise For 'College Daze'
Annual Event
Dear Editor:
Will you permit me, through the Kansan, to congratulate the Student Union Activities for sponsoring and seeing through the tough job of the presentation of "College Daze"? There was nothing trite about it except the title. It displayed talent; originality, good editing and hard work. Here's hoping it becomes an annual event. It certainly has the backing of the drama department.
Allen Crafton
Repeat 'Daze'
Dear Editor:
Since I was unable to see "College Daze" last night and because I have heard it praised so highly, I wondered if this production might be presented again next week? Several of my friends have expressed the same wish, and we are sure that there are many students on the campus who feel the same way.
Don G. Glasco College freshman
Real Spirit
Orchids to the east of "College Daze" for presenting a wonderful evening of entertainment.
The spontanity displayed by this group of students is typical of the spirit which we want at K.U.
Dear Editor:
"College Daze" is a show that every K.U. student should see. Let's have it again.
Kathy Culley College junior
By this time the University must have drawn enough "queens" to boast a pat poker hand.
JACK SCHENCK
Presents
HOLLYWOOD STARS OF TOMORROW 1
Mammoth STAGE Show 12 IN PERSON STARS
— BILLY PAPON —
One of America's outstanding artists of pantomime, in a variety of impersonations, impersonating Larry Adler and Borah Minnevitch, with his unusual harmonica interpretations.
team. The 2nd Charlie Chase — eating everything!!! The climax of this act is his BULL WHIP Special!
S S S
In 3-line, show stopping specialty acts.
6 Line Girls
The Engford Team
Sensational Acrobatic Hand Balancing Specialists!
ALSO: — PAUL WEISS — Pianist Extraordinary!
Congratulations
On The Screen
All Star Comedy—"SQUAREHEAD AT THE ROUND TABLE" and Community Sing—Featuring 'Now Is The Hour', 'Four Leaf Clover', 'I'll Dance At Your Wedding'
Dear Editor:
George Ablah College freshman
At our
OWL SHOW
After seeing "College Daze" Wednesday night, I think it is one of the greatest musicales that I have seen. May I put in my second for a repeat performance. Congratulations to a marvelous cast.
Again Next Week
SAT. ONLY • GRANADA • Low Prices
Dear Editor:
I saw a great comedy and musical Wednesday night, combined into one play, "College Daze." I have heard several people say that they wish they could see it. I wonder if this production might be presented again next week. It was the best 75c worth of entertainment I have ever received.
Bill Paxton College freshman
The letter the Sig Ep sent to his father concerning damage to the family car, after a tree hit it, would seem to be the acid test of father's trust of son.
Finalists in the Kansas state chess tournament had to abide by a new ruling requiring 22 moves an hour. Maybe they'll get around to speeding up basketball too.
Geologists Return From Conference In Indiana
Dr. R. C. Moore, director of research of the state Geological Survey, and four of his students returned recently from a trip to Indiana where they attended the Indiana geologic field conference held at Mitchell, Ind.
The four men who made the trip were Roy I. Jindra, Sailendra Chakavory, James M. Parks, and Frank D. Holland, Jr.
Representatives from schools in and near Indiana attended, and studied the stratigraphy of upper Mississippi rocks.
Call K.U. 376 with your Want Ads
Eye
Eye
WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES
Large Selection of Distinctive Frames Lawrence Optical Co.
Gravitt's Tire and HOME SUPPLY 916 Mass. Ph.1630
for
GOODYEAR TIRES
and it's KIRKPATRICK'S AUTO REPAIR
for
- Carburetors
- Ignition
- Motor tune-up
Brake Repair our Specialty
Connie Whites
YOU'LL LOVE OUR PLATFORM'D SUEDES
expensive looking
yet they're only
$7.45 & $7.95
"Jacquelines"
$7.95 & $8.45
OUR PLATFORM'D SUEDES
So flatteringly tall and slender heeled for your new-length skirts! AS SEEN IN GLAMOUR. Haynes and Keene
819 Mass.
Phone 524
FRIDAY, MAY 14, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Phone KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be returned at your request during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University office. May not be used for business office. Journalism blog longer 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
MAN'S GENIUNE Palm Beach spring formal, size 38, 1 pair of white trousers and 1 black. Like new. 916 Ohio, Phone 2621.
SOLVE YOUR housing problem by seeing this 20 foot Ironwood trailer home. Drive to campus, R. W. Quinn, 2047 La. set up, ideally located. *6 blocks from campus, R. W. Quinn, 2047 La.* 1948 FORD station wagon—3,000 miles. Call or phone between 7:00 and 8:00 pm-at 1639 Massachusetts, 1263-M. 17 with heater, radio, television with heater, radio, and good tires. Price $300. Phone 380. 19 Remington NOISELESS portable type-
REIMINGTON NOISELESS portable type-
writer, model 47, $112 original value, will sell for $80. If interested phone 1638J,
address 946 Ohio. 14
'41 OLDS SEDANETTE, 46 motor, David
David, 3471, 1728, Miss
ONE PRACTICALLY new Courtland tennis racket, Nylon nylon and in excellent condition. Call Wayne Lorimer, at 876 after 6 p.m. 14
1941 FORD. 5 passenger club coupe.
Excellent condition, radio and heater,
good tires. Call between 4-6 p.m.
FORD. 1434 Tean. 14
VETERANS! We will buy, trade or sell
139 MERCURY Convertible. See it
evenings at 1030 Maine.
VETERANS! We will buy, trade or sell for you any Army or Navy gear in good condition that you may wish to obtain. Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. Phone 669 HFTD
Business Service
TYPING: Reasonable rates. Call 3250J.
1930 Kentucky.
FOR GRADUATION it's jewelry! Buy from K.C. Jewelry Manufacturers. They repair and service. Free pick up and delivery, contact John Basnett, 208-19
FORTRATTS TINED—good work, real-
work. Call 247-4M or bring
1530 Kentucky.
ATTENTION! Sorority and fraternity pins, rings, and special jewelry manufactured, repaired, cleaned by K.C. Jewelry Manufacturers. Free pick up and contact John Bassett, 2084 19 THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 19 TWIRDAY, NOVEMBER 19 Term papers and other written work neatly and accurately typed. Phone 2193M, 729 Missouri, Mrs. Earl Wright.
TUTORING MATHEMATICS; Lucy A
TUTORING MATHEMATICS: Lucy A.
Gordon, Phone: 3084 1457
Please call for num.
AIRLINES RESERVATIONS, City Ticket
AIRLINE RESERVATIONS. City Ticket office. The First National Bank of Lawrence. Miss Rose Giesemann, Mgr., 8th and Mass. Phone 30. 14
TYPING: Thesis. Reasonable and
promise. Phone 2391. 17
LET ME TYPE your themes, reports, and thesis. Accurate, and reasonable work. Bring Lawrence Business College, phone 884. Ask for Charlaine Lorrannecker.
TENNIS RACKET restringing and repairing-silk, nylon glove, $3 to $10.00,
repairing-glass, uranium uranium brass bore or see DICK Richards or Hal Miller, Orden Hall, 3083.
14
TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Telephone 418 or bring to 1218 Comm. St. 20 Telephone or come: Term papers, reports, special attention, Accuracy at reasonable prices. Call 1986-W. Apartment 2, 1101 Tennessee. rtes
TAILOR-MADE suits, $36.50 to $65.00. George alteration and tailoring. George Eberhart & Son, Tailor Shop, 831½ Mass.
NEW vacuum cleaners for rent. Attachments included $1.50 per day. Al Brooks Sweeper Co., 831% Mass. Ph. 1104 between 9 and 12 a.m.
Wanted
VETERAN STUDENT and wife desire two or three room furnished apartment for next fall. No children or pets. Will care two more years. Bob Burwil. 8021.
$10 REWARD for information of suitable
medical veteran. Jim Mueller, 753
Maryd贤 veterans. Jim Mueller, 753
WANTED TO BUY: 1946 or 47 Ford Chevrolet or Nash "600" in good condition. No convertible. Call 1162 after 2:00 p.m. 14
WANT TO RENT or lease apartment, furnished or unfurnished, for next fall. Attendance at least two or three years. Bob Coldswain, 1469 Rhode Island, 26704J. 17
Lost
GAREETE LIGHTER — lost Sunday,
INNS N. W. Call Woodruff, 2296-17.
INLS FIELDOLD—Wednesday, May
12. Contacts Soul School security, driver's license, and pictures. If found,
please return to Corky Novak, telephone
860.
CIGARETTE LIGHTER — lost Sunday.
initials N. W. Cellworked.
LOST on or about April 17, a gold-topped Schaefer fountain pen, probably at Stadium. Call Maxine Majers, 1768, Hopkins hall.
BLACK MALE cocker, wearing leather
harness, Monday of last week. Name:
Friskie. Return to Dick Williams.
Reward. Call 1967. 17
Miscellaneous
DANCE WITH me at the Community building Wednesday night. Get a thrill plus a chance to win a Westinghouse radio phonograph for only 25c—Betty.
DANCE every Saturday night at Od Fellows hall. Informal. Joe Lungworthy's
Found
FOUND: Large ring in practice room in Hoch auditorium Tuesday morning. Identify and pay for ad in Kansan office. 14
For Rent
ROOM FOR men for summer or fall
Call 1432M or see at 801 Indianapolis.
FOOMS FOR GRLLS: Summer school and
workshop. Mrs. Wilson, 122-90
Ohio Phone: 3248W.
ROOMS for girl summer students. One
room from campus, $15.00 per month,
1241 Lakeland Avenue.
ROOMS one block from Union for eight
girls and two boys available for summer
and fall. Phone 3231R after 3. 18
ROOMS CLOSE to college for young
students. Please do not rent intoxic
Those renting for summer inbox
over next term. Mrs. Hoffman, 1244 La-
MOVE CLOSER for the summer. Room
for 2 boys, 1346 Ohio.
ROOMS WITH sleeping porches available
in summer school. 1416 Tenn. Phone
1-800-735-2922
PIANO—NEW and used. Piano-tuning
916 Illinois, Phone 815.
916 Illinois, Phone 815.
3.
FRENCH FRIED
SHRIMP
AND SCALLOPS
SEA
FOODS
Duck's Tavern
824 Vermont
GIFTS-FOR-ALL-OCCASIONS
THE COLLEGE JEWELER
Jordan Describes Nomographic Charts
Serving K.U. Students For 44 Years.
Gustafson
809 MASS.
.
Prof. H. E. Jordan of the mathematics department gave a demonstration on the theory nomographic charts at the mathematics colloquium recently.
Nomographic charts, which make possible the computing of complex mathematical problems by aid of only a straight edge, are used a good deal in engineering, especially aero-autical and electronic.
More than 80 per cent of 1947 automobile accidents in the United States occurred in clear weather. Drive carefully—always!
Send Your Woolen Clothing To Us Now!
WE USE HOGGATT'S MOTH SPRAY LIQUID "Moth Proofs Everything"
Russell Stover Candies Always Fresh
Prevent Moth Damage!
Stowits REXALL Store
THE MERMAID'S TUNE
NO, we don't cater to mermaids!... but ACME does specialize in expert laundry & dry cleaning of clothes.
ACME
Bachelor Laundry and Dry Cleaning
Call 646 1111 Mass.
20% Discount CASH and CARRY Cleaning
It's The COURT HOUSE Cafe 1105 Massachusetts for Tempting Sandwiches Delicious Meals Tasty Snacks Rich, Creamy, Malts
for
---
Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
KEEP COOL
HEARTY JUICE
REDY - PAK
CRUSHED
ICE
or
CUBES
Iced Drinks
Bottle Cooling
Ice Cream
for
PARTIES
or PICNICS
Delivered
Phone 48 or At Our Ice Dock 616 Vt.
MIGRATION
The sense which guides the migrating bird has long been a source of mystery and intrigue to man. We still do not know how or why the guiding force works.
BUT THIS WE DO KNOW-they go in the quickest and most convenient manner possible-BY AIR.
YOU TOO CAN GO HOME BY AIR—plan to arrive hours earlier, ahead of the crowd.
FLY ANYWHERE from The Air Travel Desk of Betty Jost at
Lawrence National Bank
647 Mass.
Phone 70
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE EIGHT
FRIDAY, MAY 14, 1949
Reds Cut Power To US Zone Of South Korea
Seoul, May 14—(UP)—The Soviet puppet government of Northern Korea cut off all electric power to American-occupied southern Korea today, causing a new crisis between the United States and Russia.
The cutting off of power, which caused temporary confusion in the American occupation zone, came exactly at noon when southern Korean representatives failed to arrive in northern Pyongkang in answer to a Communist ultimatum.
Lt. Gen. John Hodge, American occupation commander, immediately put into operation a vast emergency power generating plan. With maximum effort U.S. army authorities could only hope to produce one-half to three-quarters of the power needed in the American zone.
Two and one half hours after the "blackout," power from the north was still off but Seoul street cars were operating with Diesel generators shipped in from Japan for just such an emergency.
The U.S. already has one navy power barge at the southeastern port city of Pusan, and Korean utility officials said another American barge at Inchon would add to the southern Korean power pool in a short time.
The Communist-dominated northern government, which the U.S. has refused to recognize, charged American officials had not dealt honestly with them and insisted on negotiating with southern Koreans.
Faculty Approves Geology Study
A four-year course of study for the new degree in geological engineering has been approved by the faculty of the School of Engineering and Architecture.
Dr. Robert M. Dreyer, chairman of the department, said the curriculum was prepared after a survey of all schools offering that degree. He believes the new course will be the most modern of its type.
The curriculum is especially suitable for students desiring to do practical geological work immediately after graduation and who do not wish study, said Dr. Dreyer.
Details of the course may be obtained from the geology office.
Pass English Examination
Richard L. Emerson and Ebben Farley passed the English proficiency examination given April 10. Because of a typographical error, their names were not in the list printed in the University Daily Kansan Wednesday.
Westminster Foundation
Westminster Foundation will have a treasurer hunt and hamburger fry at Westminster house at 8 p.m. today. Dr. and Mrs. John Patton will be host and hostess.
IN THE FIRST WEDDING OF JANUARY 1946, MARIONA AND JENNIE GILLEWALKER CAME TO THE STAGE FOR A NEW DRESS. THE WEDDING FOOTBALL GAME IS NOW IN ORIGINAL MODEL.
(University Daily Kansan Photo by James Mason)
A SUMMER FASHION preview sponsored by the coffee and forums committee of Union Activities was given Wednesday in the Union. Miss Nina Green (left) and Alyce Fawkes model outfits from local department stores.
By NOLA JEAN HOSEY
Tau Sigma Shows The Dance From African Drums To Jazz
An appreciative and pleased audience filled Fraser thater Thursday to see "History in Dance," a recital by Tau Sigma dance fraternity. Miss Elaine Selicovitz, modern dance instructor and sponsor of Tau Sigma, directed the review.
The eight University High students, under the direction of Miss
The show told the complete history of dancing from the early primitive one present day jazz $ ^{ \textcircled{1}} $
tribal dances to our present day jazz and included a narrative by Marjorie Shryock to explain the primitive, religious, Spanish, Chinese, Russian, early American, ballet and exhibition dances.
The first number starring Elaine Selicovitz and several Tau Sigma members demonstrated successfully the use of the weird drum and hand clapping used by the primitive tribes.
The Spanish dance "Sequidilla" by Bette Krenzer and Rozanne Croft seemed less professional than the others. While the dancers were dressed appropriately in Spanish costumes they failed to express the emotion and dignity of the Spanish dance to the audience.
Joie Stapleton, did an interpretation of the minuet, representing the early French colonial stiffness in dancing.
The comedy exhibition act starring Margaret Gosney and Herk Harvey stole the show. Starting a very serious exhibition ballroom dance, the audience was surprised when the singer, Rozanne Croff, began skating about the stage.
The South American dance with Betty Jo Lorbeer and Craig Hampton was as outstanding as it was in the "College Daze" presentation Wednesday night. Their distinct Latin rhythm readily won the approval of the audience.
Sue Jones and Phillip M. Young who also appeared in "College Daze" represented the modern jazz type of dancing.
Alpha Phi Omega Installs Officers, Initiates Pledge Class
Clubs On The Campus
Officers are Luster G. Main,
president; David B. Wilkie, vice-
president; Ralph H. Martin, secr-
tary; Robert B. Stucky, treasurer;
Ralph W. McClung, corresponding
secretary; Harold E. Shigley, histi-
rian; Laurence L. Allred, alumni
secretary; Leonard D. Sturm, ser-
gent-at-arms.
Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity, installed next year's officers and initiated their spring pledge class Thursday at the Castle Tea room.
Pledges are Bruce A. Etherington,
Moreno L. Keplinger, Bromleigh S.
Lamb, William M. Layman, Thomas
M. Mahan, Douglas M. Oney, James
M. Small, John G. Sarris, Don
Stonger, James W. Townsend, Kenneth
B. Tyson, Duane Wilderson.
Barbara Cleaves, Ruth Mitchell,
Clinton Foulk and Philip Smith presented a 16th century Spanish play for the Spanish club Thursday. Mario Rivera and Ruben Veldenanna sang.
Spanish Club
Mr. and Mrs. Max Marquez were guests of honor. He is a former student at the University from Panama.
Thomas Morris, College junior, presented an original soap opera in German at the German club meeting Thursday. Morris wrote the "drama" as part of his work in a German conversation class.
German Club
Dr. L. C. Woodruff, dean of men, will speak to the Baptist Student fellowship at 5 p.m. Sunday in the Baptist church.
He will speak on "God and Evolution."
The final meeting of the year will be held May 20.
Baptist Fellowship
The Quack club will elect officers and initiate new members at a picnic at 9 a.m. Sunday in Clinton park. They will leave Robinson gym at 8 a.m.
Quack Club
Episcopal College Club
'Next Two Years May Decide War'
"The next two years will be a critical legislative period and will perhaps determine if we have a war in the near future or put if off indefinitely."
These were the words of T. B. Wilson, candidate for representative in congress from the first district in Kansas, speaking before a group of students from that district Thursday.
Vets Who Didn't Get Raise Should Notify VA Office
The Episcopal College club will meet at 5:30 p.m. Sunday in the parish house at 10th and Vermont streets.
Any veteran who has not received his allowance increase should report to the University veterans administration so this information may be sent to the Kansas City office for correction, E. R. Elbel, director of the veterans administration, said today.
"We are facing a grim and critical period," he said, "and by our actions can save the world from a possible war by a definite foreign policy, something that we have not had to date."
Mr. Wilson has had varied experience in world affairs, both of military and civilian. He was in charge of transportation on General MacArthur's staff during World War II, and later served in the China-Burma-India theater in the same capacity.
Mr. Wilson emphasized the fact that he was not in the race in order to get a job, but that it was his only idea to be of service to the state. "I am not connected with any political organization or faction and am identified only with the Republican party," he said.
In discussing the current plan of aid to European countries, he said that such aid should be put on a business basis and the direct aim should be getting these countries on their feet so they will not expect aid indefinitely.
Lawn Service To Be At Danforth Sunday
Eighty persons will take part in the Newman club "Living Rosary" ceremonies at 6:15 p.m. Sunday on the lawn of Danforth chapel. After songs and recitation of the rosary by the group, the May queen, Eileen O'Brien, College senior, will crown the statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary. Ellen Joyce Spurney, College junior, will sing "Ave Maria."
Practice for the ceremonies will be held at the breakfast meeting of the club Sunday morning. William Conboy, College junior, will give a report on the Province convention of Newman clubs which was held at the University of Nebraska in April.
ROOSTER
Something To Crow About
You will be proud of your clothes when you use our Press-While-U-Wait Service.
ROGER'S
FASHION CLEANERS 8 East 8th
Jewish State Is Proclaimed; Fighting Begins
Tel Aviv, May 14—(UP)—A new Jewish state was born in Palestine today, and immediately bitter Arab-Jewish fighting for Jerusalem began.
Even as the Jewish dream of almost 2,000 years—a state of their own—came true with a formal proclamation by Jewish leaders, Haganah troops were fighting Arabs in the Holy City.
The veteran Jewish troops appeared to have the best of the fighting which probably will decide final control of Jerusalem, according to reports. They had seized the former British security zone as the last of the Tommies moved out, ending 30 years of stormy British rule in Palestine.
The state will be ruled by a provisional government from midnight tonight, the official end of the British mandate, until a constitution can be drawn up and officers can be elected under its terms, the proclamation said.
The state of Israel will be open o immigration of Jews of all countries, the proclamation said, adding hat their coming would promote development of the country.
The Jewish leaders made plain that they were accepting the partition decision of the United Nations general assembly as the legal basis for their state.
Jayhawker Needs Secretary
MINIATURE GOLF
YLINE
WOW!
She Did It Again!
Applications for secretary of the Jayhawk magazine must be in by 5 p.m. May 17, Dean M. Miller, business manager, has announced.
B
SKYLINE
WOW!
She Did It Again!
(It was her afternoon on the course and she's made another hole in one.)
Women play miniature golf just as well as men. They find it's easy to learn, different and lots of fun. Try it this afternoon or evening.
18 hole course.
- have course.
- Greens resanded and rolled. Fine shape.
- Soft drinks.
3 blocks from Haskell Bus Line—Hiway 10—East of Lawrence
SKYLINE MINIATURE GOLF COURSE
University Daily Kansan 45th Year No.159 May 17,1948
Monday, May 17, 1948
Lawrence, Kansas
Glee Clubs Give Annual Concert Tonight In Hoch
The men's and women's glee clubs will combine to present their annual spring concert at 8 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium.
The program will feature three Fred Waring arrangements: "It's Spring" (Boland-Ringwald), "Sourwood Mountains" (arranged by Tom Scott), and "Down the Wind" (Tom Scott). The last number will present Lewis Bayles, bass, Doris Gilman, soprano, and Clarence Hooper, tenor, in solos.
Familiar melodies and sea chanties fill the rest of the program: "Halle-Iujah, Amen" from "Judas Maccaebaus" (Handel), "Turn Ye to Me," Scotch folk song, Arr. and "Land
Four negro spirituals will be presented by the men's group, "Old Ark's A-Moverin'," (Arr. Bartholomew), "Steal Away," (Arr. Barthoimew), "Ezekiel Saw D Wheel" (arranged by Burleigh), and "Dry Bones" (Arr. Gearth).
The women's glee club will sing "The Valley of Dreams" (Fletcher). "Polish Child's Morning Prayer" (arranged by Gaul), and "Open Your Window" (Wolf).
Swift's arrangement of "Three Blind Mice" will be interpreted by the solo trio: Carol Buhler, College sophomore; Theresa Colton, fine arts freshman; and Carol Prochaska, College freshman.
legee is Mannah
Ann Hogue, first soprano, Nancy Haffner, second soprano, Helen Ward, first alto, and Jean Young, second alto, a quartet chosen from the women's glee club will sing "When You Wore a Tulip" (arranged by Bass).
The closing number by the women's glee club will be Romberg's "When I Grow Too Old To Dream."
Eleven Kansas high school seniors were notified today of their selection as Summerfield scholarship winners.
Fourteen students received awards for outstanding work in speech and dramatics at the annual speech banquet Friday.
Eleven Win Scholarships
The scholarships are maintained from a fund provided by the lata Solon E. Summerfield. From 10 to 15 scholarships are awarded annually to graduating seniors from Kansas high schools. Candidates are judged on superior ability, character, training, and promise of future usefulness to society.
The other winners are: Glenn O. Bair and Harold D. Swanson, Wichita North; George Betz, Glen Elder; Henry H. Bradshaw and Frank H. Thorn, Topeka; R. C. Broadstone, Dighton; George E. Farris, Shawnee Mission; Edward D. Grandle, Pittsburg; Harold Miller, Chapman; and Lee C. Sheppead, Clay Center.
All other veterans who want their subsistence for June 1 to 3 sent to other than their present address should also notify the V.A. They should include their present address, the new address, and the date when the new address is to take effect.
Milton D. Commons, education freshman, received the award for the student "contributing the most valuable service to the theater," and Phyllis Mowery, College junior, received the award for the actor or actress "showing the most promise."
Departing from the general custom, the award for the person showing the most improvement in acting was presented to two students, Betty Ann Hilts, College senior and Mariorie Shryock, graduate student.
Among them is Roger Beth, son of Elmer F. Beth, professor of journalism, who attends the Liberty Memorial High school.
The scholarship provides funds for a total of eight semesters or an equivalent of that period, the amount depending upon individual need.
Veterans who want their subsistence check for May to be sent to a new address should notify the Veterans' administration before May 21.
Speech Awards Made For 1948
Forms for the change of address are available at the veterans' bureau in Frank Strong annex C. Veterans may leave the filled out forms at this office.
Vets To See VA For May Checks
WEATHER
The awards for 'excellence in acting' went to Darlene Van Biber, who was the first winner. She has also been the usual custom to make this award to only one person.
Kansas—Fair today, tonight and Tuesday. Widely scattered night time thunderstorms mostly in south portion. High today in middle 80's, low tonight 55-60.
The awards for outstanding works in speech and debate this year went to A. Conboy, College junior, and Hal M. Friesen, business junior.
Songs particularly commended by the judges at the Hooh auditorium contest were "Phi Delt Drums;" "Sweetheart of Sigma Chi;" "All Hail to Lambda Chi;" "College Days" by Sigma Alpha Epsilon, with special mention to the soloist and director, Du Mont Reed; and "Pretty As A Picture" and the unusual arrangement of the "Alma Mater" by Kappa Sigma.
"The general quality of the singing was excellent," commented judges Paul De Cora, Robert Briggs, and Marcus Hahn, instructors in the School of Fine Arts. They explained that the contest was particularly hard to judge because of the small number of groups participating.
Four students elected to Delta Sigma Rho, national honorary debate society, were Ralph E. Eacock, Aldo G. Aliotti, Ernest C. Friesen, and L-Edward Stollenwerck. Richard L. Schiefelbusch, assistant instructor in speech, was given a membership-at-large.
Each fraternity group sang three songs, a fraternity chapter song, a school song, and one song of their own choice. They were judged on interpretation, pitch, and enunciation.
The contest was as follows: Phi Delta Theta, 36 men directed by Don Cousins; "Stand Up and Cheer"; "Wiffenpoof Song," "Phi Delt Drums." Lambda Chi Alpha, 14 men directed by Gene McKellar, "All Hail to Lambda Chi," "Onward Kansas," "Beyond the Blue Horizons."
Phi Delts Win Fraternity Sina Contest Sunday
Top honors in the inter-fraternity singing contest Sunday went to Phi Delta Theta, Sigma Chi and Lambda Chi Alpha, respectively, won second and third awards. Sigma Alpha Epsilon and Kappa Sigma earned fourth and fifth ratings.
Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 24 men directed by DuMont Reed, "College Days," "When Day Is Done," "S.A.E. Sweetheart Song;" Sigma Chi, 37 men directed by Bob Hagg with Jack Moenhlenkamp as piano accompanist, "Alma Mater," "Sweetheart of Sigma Chi," "I've Got You Under My Skin;" Kappa Sigma, 29 men directed by John Nichols, "Pretty As A Picture," the "Alma Mater," "Nature Boy."
By Bibler
Little Man On Campus
WIVW OF KARVI
KU KU
"I see the Chancellor is driving to work again."
Frances Feist Gets Broadway Play Role
- Instructor Receives 'Harvey' Offer After Starring In KU Production
Mrs. Frances Feist, speech instructor who scored a hit in "Harvey" playing with Brock Pemberton in Fraser theater, apparently will have a chance to carry on in the role.
Only it will be on Broadway.
She will play the part of Veta Louise Simmons, taking it over from
Phi Beta Kappa Initiates 42
Forty-two members were initiated into Phi Beta Kappa, national honorary society for liberal arts students, at the annual dinner May 13.
They are Robert F. Bailey, Thomas A. Barlow, Kemneth E. Beasley, James W. Bibb, Doraen Bouska, Frances E. Brooks, Robert W. Campbell, Neal P. Cramer, Carl J. Cramm, Marcile Davis, Nancy J. Dille, Elizabeth Evans, Nancy Jane Goering, Arnold H. Greenhouse, Herman W. Hierester, William J. Johnson, Ira D. Jordan.
Melvin G. Kettner, Mary W. Lees,
Norma Lee Loske, Robert H. Malott,
Thad N. Marsh, John H. Michener,
Sue Newcomer, Phillip Persky,
Richard L. Pfister, William D. Phillips,
Mary Rice, Edward J. Rolfs,
Helen Scamell, Nicholas J. Schmidt,
Marion P. Scippioni, Marjorie J. Scott,
Betsey Sheidley, Virginia L. Shimer,
William D. Sommerville, William A.
Stewart, Marion M. Sumner, Edward B.
Surface, Clarke M. Thomas,
Quentin D. Wheatley, and James D.
Winblad.
W. E. Sandelius, professor of political science, outlined the philosophical and historical background of the idea of world federation.
Professor Sandelius stressed that the essential thing is to revitalize democracy throughout the world. Democracy and peace can be achieved only through emphasis on an economic equality and liberty and on the basis of the responsible and co-operative kind of individual.
He stated that whether this can be done will depend ultimately on the realization, that the world crisis is intellectual and moral in nature. He added that American education must resist the relativistic philosophies which have undermined intellectual foundation and moral values
Wealthy Babcock, associate professor of mathematics, presided at the dinner.
Rifle Team Meets To Present Awards
The Rev. George Towle gave a short talk.
The girls' rifle team will meet at 7 p.m. tomorrow in the drill hall of the Military Science building. Officers for the coming year will be elected and trophies will be awarded.
Conrov Gives Report
William Conroy, College junior, reported on the province convention of Newman clubs held at the University of Nebraska in April at the Newman club breakfast Sunday.
A trophy will go to the member who is the best shot and outstanding scholar, and another will be presented to the best all around member and rifle woman. The trophies will be presented by Cols. John Alfrey e. J Kenneth E. Rosebush.
Miss Josephine "Hen" who is leaving Wash. WI to "Hen" graduated at the University April 8 to 10. Mr. Pemberton himself played the lead role of Elwood P. Dowd.
Mr. Pemberton called Chancellor Deane W. Malott Sunday night and asked him if Mrs. Feist could be given a leave of absence for the rest of the semester and for the summer session to play the role.
The University Daily Kansan called New York for a statement in Bentonburg, but his office said that he was on his way to Washington.
However, Thomas Kilpatrick, general manager for Mr. Pemberton, said that the office had received a wire from Mrs. Feist, saying that she would arrive Thursday afternoon. Mr. Kilpatrick said that Mrs. Feist will appear first in the matinee May 31.
Allen Crafton, professor of speech,
said this morning that he could not
release information about Mrs. Feist
going to New York.
In the play Mrs. Feist will play opposite Jack Buchanan, an English actor who will play the role of Elwood P. Dowd. The production is running at the 48th Street theater.
"Both Mr. and Mrs. Pemberton commented on her work when they were here," he said. "However, no one told me of the role to New York to play the role."
A job interviewer for the Glenn L. Martin company of Baltimore, Md., will be on the campus tomorrow to interview engineering seniors who will be graduated in June.
T. DeWitt Carr, dean of the School of Engineering, said that the company wants mechanical, electrical, civil, and aeronautical engineers.
Plane Firm To Interview
"Any aeronautical engineering graduate who hasn't a job yet should see the interviewer, Dennis Fennelly, because Mr. Glenn Martin wrote to me that his company will hire all the aeronautical engineers available," Dean Carr said.
Mr. Martin is a personal friend of the dean.
Mr. Fennelly will start interviewing at 9 a.m. tomorrow. Application forms for an interview are available in the dean's office, 113 Marvin hall, where the interviews will be held.
Summer Jobs Open For Men Students
Summer jobs for students are being offered by two companies, one of them in Kansas.
The Stokely Canning company, Lawrence, needs 90 men to work during the canning season, starting about May 24. Jobs pay 65 cents an hour with time and a half for overtime. Hiring is being done by the Kansas state employment office, 201 West Eighth street.
The Rogers Canning company, Milton, Ore., will start employees June 10. Base pay is $1.04 an hour, plus overtime. The work usually runs six days a week, 10 hours a day. Details may be had from the employment bureau, 228 Frank Strong hall.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 17, 1948
Official Bulletin
Tau Sigma, 7:30 tonight, Robinson gym. Return show tickets.
May 17. 1948
Kansas board, 4 today, 107 Journalism. Election.
Business School lecture: "Mechanics of Using Tax Reporter Service." Illustrated. R. C. O'Connor, Dallas, Tex., speaker, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, 101 Snow.
I. S.A. meeting, 7:15 tonight, 228 Frank Strong,
Beta Gamma Sigma initiation, 5:30 tonight, Pine room. Banquet to follow in English room.
Archery club tournament, 4 p.m. tomorrow. Sign in Miss Stapleton's office by noon tomorrow if planning to attend tournament and picnic.
Jewish Student union final meeting tomorrow. Election of officers.
Student U.N.E.S.C.O. council last meeting, 8 p.m. tomorrow, Lindley auditorium.
Alpha Kappa Psi business meeting was cancelled.
College faculty meeting scheduled for tomorrow has been postponed one week to May 25.
Ku Ku club, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow.
200 Frank Strong. Election of officers.
K.U. Dames, 7:15 p.m. Wednesday,
Meet at Community building to go
to Sunflower K.U. Dames, Call
1322-J for reservations
Army To Construct Tubercular Clinic
Construction plans to build a 745-bed VA. hospital in Kansas City have been started. The tuberculosis clinic and general hospital is one of 71 medical centers to be constructed throughout the United States by the army engineer corps, the VA said.
Seven V.A. hospitals totaling 5,195 beds will be constructed in the four state area of Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri, and Oklahoma.
A site for a 1,000 bed neuropsychiatric hospital at Topeka is being approved, Lee D. Mork, director of V.A. construction and supply service of the four state area, said. At St. Louis the government is taking over property for the site of another 1,000-bed general medical center. President Truman recently approved a site in Oklahoma City for a 1,000-bed general hospital.
Mork said that the army engineer corps has been awarded contracts for 12 hospitals since January.
Freshman Week committee, 4 p.m. Wednesday, 217 Frank Strong, to complete plans for next fall. All organizations wishing to participate should be represented.
A.S.C. regular meeting, 7:15 p.m.
tomorrow, Pine room, Union.
International Relations club, 3 p.m. Wednesday, Pine room, Guests, United Nations military staff committee members.
An assortment of die casting has been presented to the mining and metallurgical engineering department. They will be displayed on the first floor of Lindley hall.
Give Die Castings To Engineers
The Doehler-Jarvis corporation gave approximately 100 pieces of finished and unfinished castings. They were selected to illustrate the versatility of die castings, said Kenneth E. Rose, associate professor of mining and metallurgy. The castings include brass, aluminum, magnesium, babbitt, and tin.
The company has a program making specimens and literature available to educational institutions. The castings will be used for display and illustrative purposes in the mining and metallurgical engineering classes.
University Daily Kansan
Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year. (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and holidays. Unversity mailing address: 928 Main Street, Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence. Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
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MONDAY, MAY 17, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
He Remembers The Exercise In'76, A Skeleton Attended The Ceremony
John Henry Albach, '86, 618 W. 4th, retired publisher of the Lawrence Democrat, though 85 years old and totally blind, can still remember the first graduation ceremony held in Fraser hall.
He was 14 when the inaugural ceremony was conducted in Fraser in the spring of 1873. The former newspaperman wistfully recounts a vivid incident that happened during the cere-
"In 1876 Fraser hall was not yet finished, but it had been subjected to a severe pummeling by wind and rain. The graduating class and a considerable crowd of well-wishers were assembled in Fraser theater while Gertrude Bulline, a graduating student, was giving her oral recitation (then required of all graduating students).
"Suddenly a section of the ceiling directly over the stage fell. It was several moments before the frightened Miss Bullene was able to re-address the shocked audience.
"She had just resumed when a manikin of a human skeleton was suddenly dropped through the hole in the ceiling. She fainted and so
did many others in the big room. "A professor of mathematics sitting in the front row led a search through the building and stationed two men at each descending stairway, but found only a rope hanging from the top of one of the air shafts and extending all the way to the basement. The prankster probably made his getaway down that robe and joined the hunt for himself."
Mr. Albach was one of seven students to be graduated from the School of Law in 1886. It was then a two-year law course, and "Ucle Jimmie" Green was the dean. Mr. Albach has two sons who were graduated from the University, Robert, '20, and Henry, '22.
37 Snakes To Be Exhibited At Dyche Harmless Models, Plaster And Paint
An exhibit of snakes from several states, including Kansas, will soon be completed in Dyche museum, said Russell Camp, preparator of verte- me Paleontology.
The exhibit consists of 37 snakes of various types including bull snake, king, ribbon, garter, red-bellied, and pine snakes. It will also include such common ones as the rattler and copperhead. The snakes are made of plaster of paris and painted to look like real-like specimens.
The collection was sent to the museum several months ago by Glenn Rinker of Hamilton who has collected them from all over the United States. He reproduced and painted the snakes himself.
The exhibit is being prepared by Mr. Camp and George White, the museum's taxidermist.
Mr. Camp said that snakes appeal to the majority of people and that he believes they are wrong in killing every snake they see. He said there are only three snakes in Kansas which are harmful. They are the rattler, the copperhead, and the cottonmouth, all of which can easily be recognized. Most snakes are beneficial to the farmer, he continued, because they destroy rodents, insects, and other animals which destroy crops and stored foodstuffs.
Summer Session Registration Schedule
Registration lines for the summer session will form at 1 p.m. June 10 at the center door of Frank Strong hall. Law students will register at 122 Frank Strong hall from 1 to 5 p.m. on June 8.
Order of enrollment and Registration will be determined by the first several letters of the students' last names. The schedule is as follows:
Thursday. June 10
Thursday, June 21
Red-Rid 1:00-1.10
Red-Rid 1:10-1.20
Rie-Rom 1:20-1.30
Ron-Rz 1:30-1.40
S-Sch 1:40-1.50
Seo-Seo 1:50-2.00
Sep-Sjj 2:00-2.10
Sik-Smh 2:10-2.20
Sik-Smj 2:20-2.40
Suo-Scqj 2:30-2.50
Suo-Scqj 2:50-3.00
Sud-Td 3:00-3.10
Te-Tol 3:10-3.20
Tom-Us 3:20-3.40
Ute-Ut 3:30-3.40
Vos-Was 3:40-3.50
Wat-Whh 3:50-4.00
Friday, June 11
Whi-Wil 8:00 - 8:10
Wim-Wq 8:10 - 8:30
A-Am 8:30 - 8:40
An-At 8:40 - 8:50
Au-Baq 8:50 - 9:00
Bar-Bec 9.00-10.10
Bed-Bic 9.10-10.20
Bld-Bol 9.10-10.30
Blo-Brot 9.40-10.50
Boo-Brot 9.50-10.60
Brou-Brt 10.00-10.10
Bru-Bur 10.00-10.20
Bru-Bot 10.00-10.30
Carm-Che 10.30-10.40
Cflt-Cit 10.40-10.50
Clu-Coo 10.50-10.10
Cop-Cn 11.00-11.10
Coul-Cu 11.20-11.30
Daw-Dh 11.20-11.30
Dl-Dt 11.30-11.40
Du-Dz 11.30-11.40
Ford-Fd 1.00-1.10
Eve-Fein 1.10-1.20
Flo-Frd 1.20-1.30
Freg-Gar 1.40-1.50
Gil-Grd 1.50-2.00
Gre-Hag 2.00-2.10
Kab-Haq 2.20-2.30
Har-Hax 2.20-2.30
Harge-Hge 2.20-2.40
Political Science Picnic To Be Friday
Saturday, June 12
L-Lau 8:00-8:10
Lav-Lh 8:10-8:20
Li-Lov 8:10-8:30
Menkak 8:30-8:40
Mal-Mas 8:40-8:50
Mat-MeE 8:50-8:60
McF-Meb 9:00-9:10
McF-Mec 9:00-9:10
Mor-Mur 9:20-9:30
Mor-Mur 9:20-9:40
Mus-Nic 9:40-9:50
Nid-Ol 9:50-10:00
Dim-Ol 10:10-10:20
Pes-Per 10:10-10:20
Pes-Pim 10:20-10:30
Pin-Pz. Q 10:30-10:40
The annual political science department picnic will be held at 4 p.m. m. Friday at Holcomb's grove, three miles south on highway 59.
Het-Holk 2:40-2.50
Holl-Hr 2:50-3.00
Holt-Hr 3:10-3.20
J-Jog 3:10-3.20
Joh-Kam 3:29-3.50
Koen-Kam 3:29-3.50
Ket-Kn 3:40-3.50
Ko-Kz 3:40-4.00
Tickets must be purchased by May 18. They are available at the political science office, 202 Frank Strong hall; the bureau of government research office, Strong Frank annex F; and the Western Civilization office, annex C. The cost is 60 cents each.
The picnic is open to political science and personnel administration majors, public administration students, and faculty members.
'Beware Of Kiss In Park'
Memphis—(UP)—It's the kiss in the park that's dangerous, says Mrs. Ila Huff, a girl's club director. The kiss is a wholesome part of growing up Mrs. Huff says—not too bad at a party, but the park "that out."
Featured at the picnic will be faculty- student soft ball and volleyball games, Bob Hallman, chairman of the games committee, announced.
The music education department will have its annual "May Time Frolic" at the Nickerson farm at 4 p.m. Wednesday.
Music Department Picnic Is Wednesday
Reservations for the picnic should be made by 4 p.m. today with Ann Cowger, Ann Hague, Lila -Hyten, Bob Ausherman, Marilyn Lee, or in room 35 Frank Strong hall.
Dr. Jewett Sees Meteor
Stanford Doctor Is Visitor
Dr. J. M. Jewett, of the state Geological survey, went to Norton recently to observe the 100-pound meteorite fragment which fell near there. He returned to Lawrence with a pocket-size specimen from the fragment.
The meteorite, which is 18 inches long, "22 inches wide, and 9 inches deep, was found May 1 on the H. R. McKinley ranch about 12 miles northwest of Norton by Ralph Wester, who lives on the ranch. Dr. Jewett agreed with other authorities that the fragment was undoubtedly a remnant of the "ball of fire" seen in that area Feb. 18.
Dr. George Hamilton Houck, director of the Stanford university health service, was a guest of the University health service recently. Dr. Houck visited the University after attending the American Student Health association meeting in Detroit May 7 and 8.
Dr. Jewett said that the discovery probably was due to the interest shown by Dr. Lincoln La Paz, of the Institute of Meteorites at the University of New Mexico. He mentioned that Dr. La Paz investigated the Norton area shortly after the fall the past winter, picked the McKinley ranch as the most likely spot for specimens, and instructed those living on the ranch as to what to look for and how to look for fragments. The fragment was imbedded about three feet in the earth and had weathered somewhat since its fall.
More meteorites have been found in Kansas than in any two states west of the Mississippi except Texas. This is probably due. Dr. Jewett said, to the interest in meteorites by the people, the plowing up of fragments, the fact that meteorites do no resemble the common rocks found in Kansas, the level land the fairly heavy population, and the lack of vegetation.
He mentioned that meteorites were of two types, iron and stone. Stony meteorites, of which this specimen is one, are the most common. Since most meteorites do not reach the earth, there being only 1000 recorded finds, this is a find indeed. The largest stony meteorite ever found was a 700 pound one near Long Island in 1891.
Nurses To Attend Refresher Course
At least 300 nurses are expected to attend the three-day refresher course offered at the University Medical center in Kansas City, Kan., May 25 to 27.
H. G. Ingham, University Extension director of the post graduate program, said that nurses from Missouri, Iowa, and Kansas will attend the course.
the course.
The program will include panel discussions on obstetrics and pediatrics. Instructors will include 16 University nursing and medical staff members and three guest instructors, Geneva Feamon, consultant on medical assistance, social security administration; Lulu K. Rolf, professor of nursing, Vanderbilt university; and Sister M. Pancratia, Mercy hospital, Parsons.
Deaf May Be Aided By Modern Care
Those who suffer from defective hearing or deafness can be cured or aided through proper medical care, mechanical aids, or learning to read lips. Miss Miriam Levitt of the hearing clinic at the University Medical center, Kansas City, Kan., told members of the speech therapy and their guests May 13.
Dr. E, L. Glenn, ear specialist at the center, also attended.
The modern Belgian horse is a descendant of the Flemish horse used by the Roman armies.
BILL'S GRILL
JUICY STEAKS
Delicious Dinners
Sandwiches—Malts
Open Daily 6 a.m.1:30 p.m Across from Court House
17 Million Dollars In Medical Equipment To Be Given To Chinese By KU Medics
---
Could you live on 13 million dollars a month?
Not if they were Chinese dollars, because that many Chinese dollars make only 30 American dollars. This is the salary of Prof. Y. C. Tsang, head of the anatomy department at National Peking University, Peiping, China. He says, he really can't complain because his is nearly tops in teachers' salaries. He supports his
Professor Tsang wrote to Dr. Paim Roofe, professor of anatomy, asking for some textbooks and equipment. The two had worked together at the University of Chicago. Professor Tsang said he wouldn't be able to pay for the items until exchange restrictions were relaxed.
Dr. Roope thought a $40 debt (17 million Chinese dollars) was too much for a $30 monthly salary, so Phi Chi, Phi Beta Pi, and Nuga Nu, professional medical fraternities, are donating the texts. Independent medical students are buying slides and other equipment.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 17, 1948
Memorial Drive Netted $64,000 In Spring Drive
The spring all-out victory drive for the World War II memorial has netted more than $64,000. The total fund now stands at $229,000.59 with Kansas City, Mo., Kansas City, Kan., Lawrence, Topeka, and Wichita still to complete their drives.
Kansas City, Mo. alumni have set $100,000 as their goal and are
Kansas City, Mo. alumni launch an extensive campaign The Lawrence Junior Chamber of Commerce has extended its drive to raise the Douglas county goal of $50,000.
Since March, 29 bells have been reserved as individual memorials. Only seven remain to be bought and all these are above the $7,000 mark. Justice Hugo T. Wedell, memorial president, said he felt the order for the carillon could be placed this spring.
Jayhawk Motors, Lawrence; Walker Shop, Lawrence; Orinne Lee, Kansas City, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. Harold F. Warner, Kansas City, Mo.; Wm J. Campbell, Kansas City, Mo.; Cottage Cafe, Lawrence; Zim's Snack Shop, Lawrence; A. C. Bradley, Et. Worth, Texas.
Twenty-eight new bellringers have been reported. They are: Henry E. Sannon, Roswell, N.M.; Glenn R. Siddon, Platte, S.D.; Edward C. Adams, Topeka; Maurine Shuler, Jacksonville, Fla.; Charles N. Belcher, Detroit, Mich.; Crown Drug Store, Lawrence.
Dr. Baline Hibbard, Kansas City, Mo.; Allen Press, Emil Heck, Jr., Holmes, McGrew & Peck, Lawrence; Mr. and Mrs C. W. Carson, Albuquerque, N.M.; W. J. Trachsel, Goodland; Byron T. Shutz, E. L. Winn, Frank R. Grant, J. Clyde Nichols, Jr., Miller Nichols, and Wilford Wamn Kansas City, Mo.
J. C. Nichols, Kansas City, Mo. has added $1,000 to his former $1,000 contribution, Bates Huffaker, Kansas City, Mo., contributed $250, and Don Davis, Kansas City, Mo., has given $400.
A total of $77,000 has been received from 36 gifts of $1,000 or more. The K.U. Endowment association topped the list with a contribution of $15,000. Other contributors include Mrs. Ernest Blaker, Akron, Ohio, $11,750; Phi Gamma Delta, $4,000; Laura O'Bryan Kilworth, Lawrence; Mr. and Mrs. P. W. Selfridge, Liberal and A. B. Weaver and Weaver's store, Lawrence, $2,500.
Carl V. Rice, Kansas City, Kan; Roy A. Roberts, Kansas City, Mo; John T. Stewart, Wellington; a memorial to Hiram William Stowls, Lawrence; and the classes of 1946 and 1948 have each contributed $2,000.
Gifts of $1,500 include Beta Theta Pi. Dr. Roy Cross, Kansas City, Mo., and an anonymous gift from Kansas City. The memorial fund for Thomas Pitt Hunter, former K.U. athlete, netted $1,317. The class of 1921 sent $1,246.50. the production of "Harvey" and the gift of the World Publishing company, Lawrence, each added $1,100.
Seventeen $1,000 gifts have been received from Chi Omega; Gamma Phi Beta; Harry Harty, Dodge City; Jenkins Music company, Kansas City, Mo.; Kansas Electric power company; Kansas Public Service company; Lawrence Paper company, Lawrence; Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Laird, Talmage; Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Linsett, Erie; Pi Beta Phi; Lester B. Pollim, Topeka and I. W. Pollim, Detroit; Solon E. Summerfield foundation, New York, N.Y.; Kenneth A. Spencer, Kansas City, M.; University Daily Kansan; the class of 1922; and an anonymous gift.
Home Economics Club
Margaret Lowe and Roselyn Skonberg were elected co-presidents of the Home Economics club May 13.
Other officers are Berniece Stroup,
secretary; Bonnie Cunningham, treasurer;
Pat Tomlinson, social chairman;
Beverly Pyke; publicity chairman.
Pi Lambda Theta
Anita Bedell was elected president of Pi Lambda Theta, honorary education sorority, May 13.
Other officers are Joan Clough, vice-president; Margaret Townsend, secretary; Miss Ruth Kenny, treasurer; Mrs. A. H. Turney, keeper of the records; Betty Pinckney, publicity chairman.
50 Directors Here For Conference
More than 50 Kansas recreational directors will attend the Recreational Leadership at the University May 24 to 26 to exchange ideas of summer programs. All physical education classes will be dismissed to attend the conference.
Highlighting the three day event will be lectures, panel discussions, a banquet, and demonstrations of playground equipment. Arthur Todd, national recreation association representative, will be guest lecturer.
The conference is sponsored by the University department of physical education and University Extension in co-operation with the Lawrence recreation commission and the National Recreation association. Registration fee is $2.
Scheduled for the first day is registration and demonstrations of games and equipment for a summer program by faculty members of the physical education department and School of Fine Arts. Larry Heeb, director of the Lawrence recreational commission, and Mr. Todd will speak on "Planning and Administering the Summer Program."
Mrs. Frank T. Stockton, secretary of the Lawrence recreation commission, will speak on "Securing Volunteer Personnel and Working with Existing Organizations" on the second day. Dr. E. L. Novotny, superintendent of the Lawrence schools, will be guest speaker at a dinner in the Kansas room.
Members of the University Y.M.
C.A. and Y.W.C.A. will have a box
unch picnic at 5:30 p.m. tomorrow
sear Potter lake.
YM-YW To Have Box Picnic By Lake
The box lunch is to raise expense money for students to attend the annual Intercollegiate Christian conference at Estes Park, Colo., June 10 to 19.
The camp is sponsored by the Rocky Mountain region Y.M.C.A. and Y.W.C.A.
Recreation at the camp will include archery, fishing, mountain climbing, hiking, horseback riding and tennis.
That's Not The Half Of It
Atlanta, Ga.—(UP)—When the U.S. census bureau announced that Georgia leads individual Southern states in prison population, the Atlanta Constitution commented editorially: "This is especially disturbing in view of the fact that probably not half the persons are in jail who ought to be there."
N. M. McClung, instructor of botany at the University of Michigan, explained a group of organisms belonging to the actinomycetes to the botany department May 12. They are believed to be intermediate between the bacteria and fungi in the scale of evolution. Mr. McClung showed slides illustrating members of the group.
Botany Department
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Spring Concert
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MONDAY, MAY 17, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Do It Up Brown-Not Red
C
"These beautiful tans are very becoming," Ralph L. Canuteson, director of health service at Watkins hospital, said. But he added, "There is nothing attractive about a skin that looks like an old shoe."
At the first sign of warmer sunny weather, women donned scant bathing suits and scampered to roofs and lawns to get the full benefit of the spring sun. A swift glance around the campus readily suggests that their long hours of basking were successful.
Enviously, fair-skinned maidens gaze on the fortune with beautiful tans. Sympathetically, they glance at those who overbaked in their eagerness to get a tan.
Dr. Canuteson stressed that suntans should be acquired gradually as sunburns can be just as dangerous as a burn by any other agent; even more so perhaps because more
of the body is involved. Not all people react the same to sunlight. To some it is a delightful tonic; others achieve nothing from it but headaches and successive burns. Blondes are more sensitive than brunettes. Men are more sensitive than women. And in ages blow 20 and over 50 years less sunlight is tolerated.
The following advice is given by Dr. Canuteson to those endeavoring to get a suntan.
"Select a location sheltered from the wind. Lie with your feet toward the sun. Use a suntan oil if you wish. Start with an exposure of 10 or 15 minutes front and back, depending upon your skin pigmentation. Increase the dose five minutes daily. Don't go to sleep in the sun. You will be a lot healthier and handsomer, with an untanned skin than with a shell like a boiled lobster."
Socially Speaking
Omega Psi Phi
Omega Psi Phi fraternity has Andrtw Ttkinson, vice-basileus and Andrew Atkinson, vice basileus and Super of finance; Ray Pleasant, keeper of records and seal and chapter editor; John L. Franklin, keeper of peace; and Arthur Ford, dean of pledges.
\* \* \*
SK Elects Officers
Elizabeth Sue Webster, business junior, has been elected president of Sigma Kappa for the fall term.
SK Honors Dinner
Other Officers elected by the chapter are Donna De Munn, first vicepresident; Phyllis Mowery, second vice-president; Mary Lou Brewer, recording secretary; Tolene Dudley, corresponding secretary; Jean Young, treasurer; Diane Danley, house manager; Jacqueline Walker, historian-librarian; and Ann Clifford, rush chairman.
John Ise, professor of economics, was the guest speaker at the annual Sigma Kappa honors dinner held May 11 at the chapter house. He spoke on the value of an education to those who are preparing to enter the business world of today.
Jewell Mishler, education junior, received the award for the highest scholarship of the fall term. Elizabeth Sue Webster, business junior, received the achievement award, presented for outstanding achievement in all phases of University activi- tion. Patricia Bohler, president
ties. Patricia Behler, president, presented the awards.
Harman Co-Op Formal
A garden theme was used at the Harman Co-op spring formal recently.
Guests were Merle Clayton, Carl Bilger, James Drewelow, Jack Pinney, Melvin Kettner, Howard Joseph, Duddley Potter, Thomas McMahon, Stanley Kelley, Carroll McCue, Donald Gordon, Lawrence Wensel, Paul Probsaco, Dewey Churchill, Warren Smith, Fred Cooper, Paul Goddard, Arthur Snyder, David Wilkie, Raymond Harper, Carroll Sprague, Donald Wilson, Robert Kurtz, Carroll Seib.
Betty Jean Ratzlaff, Wichita; La-Meyn Brenthour, Holywood; Doris Rea, Branson, Mo.; Doris Dennis, Trenton, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. John Tripplet, Sunflower; Mr. and Mrs Clarence Erickson and Mr. and Mrs Kenneth Stone, Lawrence.
Chaperons were Miss Bertha Cummins, Prof. Max Dresden, Mr. and Mrs. Rhoten Smith, and Miss Porteus Latimer.
Elect Officers
Samuel Epstein was elected president of B'nai J'hudah social fraternity for the fall semester at a dinner-meeting at the Hearth May 11
Other officers elected were Melvin DeLeve, vice-president; Ira A. Gissen, secretary; Gerald B. Baru, treasureur; Irwin Block, sergeant-at-arms; and Fred S. Hirsekorn, corresponding secretary.
Dance Will Open Union Roof Garden
The Twilight Twirl, which will officially open the Roof Garden at the Union, will be held from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Wednesday if weather permits. It was postponed May 5 because of rainy weather.
Harlan Livinggood and his orchestra will play from 7 to 9 p.m. although dancing will not start until 7:30 p.m. Admission will be 35 cents per person. Tickets are on sale in the business office in Frank Strong hall, at the hostess desk in the Union, and in the Union Activities office. Tickets will also be on sale at the rate at the dance.
The Roof Garden will be decorated with potted palms donated by Miss Hermina Zipple, director of the Union. Free punch will be served and the fountain will be open in the Union.
In a short program, Ann Cowger,
fine arts freshman, will sing "Dixie"
and "If I Should Lose You"; and
Ann Hogue, fine arts sophomore,
will sing "Love."
Chaperons will be Miss Zipple, and Mrs. Grace Byrn, hostess at the Union.
Jay Janes To Have Rush Tea At Union
The Jay Janes will have a rush tea from 7 to 8 p.m. Wednesday in the Kansas room of the Union. All rushes must have completed 24 hours work at the end of this semester and have maintained a C average.
Independents-at-large are invited to the tea as well as women from Kappa Alpha Theta, Pi Beta Phi, Sigma Kappa, Locksley hall, Corbin hall, Miller hall, Foster hall, Jolliiffe hall, Watkins hall, and Sleepy Hollow.
The longest stretch of railroad without a curve in the United States is the 79 miles of the Seaboard Air Line between Wilmington and Hamlet, N.C.
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Dance Manager Wanted By ASC
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Students who want to apply for the position of dance manager have until Friday. They must submit qualifications in a letter to Elizabeth Sue Webster, 1625 Edgehill road, by that day.
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The All-Student Council will consider applications and choose the manager.
to twist out of line.
George H. Caldwell, College senior, and Edward J. Zimmerman, '45 are among the 171 students who received scholarships and fellowships from the Graduate college of the University of Illinois for advanced study during the coming academic year.
to twist out of line.
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Two Receive Scholarships
BANDING TWINT
Caldwell was granted a $700 scholarship in political science but is not going to accept it because he had previously been awarded the $1,000 Arthur Lehman fellowship to Harvard university.
Zimmerman was awarded a $1,000 fellowship to continue his advanced studies in physics at the University of Illinois. He is now in his third year of post graduate work there. His home is in Hays.
These awards are given to outstanding college graduates to help them finance further study. Caldwell will graduate in June.
Where Did The People Go?
Concord, New H.—(UP)—Eighty-four per cent of New Hampshire's small towns have declined in population during the past 48 years. A study of 14 of the communities has been started to investigate the financial and political aspects of the decline.
Rose Lee's LUNCH
7 a.m.-10 p.m. Weekdays
7 p.m.-12 p.m. Fri., Sat.
9:30 a.m.-12 p.m. Sun.
Chicken Dinners 1305 W. 7th Parking Space Sunny
Visit Sister By Recordings
Aberdeen, Idaho—(UF)—Mr. and Mrs. Harold Ross of Aberdeen visit Ross' sister in Los Angeles each week. But they don't budge fromings of their conversation, singing, their home here. They make record- and piano selections and send them to the sister, Mrs. T. O. Sharp, who is almost blind.
Attend the Topeka Drive-in Theater 25th and California First Show...8 p.m.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 17, 1948
Mabry's 5-Hit Shutout Gives Kansas A Split
Coach Russ Sehon's baseball squad gained an even split of their series with Iowa State by copping Saturday's game 2 to 0 after dropping the Friday tilt 9 to 7. It was the first win on the road for the Jayhawkers and gives them a 3 to 9 won-lost record in conference competition.
Guy Mabry, cool righthander, tossed a neat five-hit shutout at the Cyclones Saturday to notch his first win of the season, after the Cyclones had taken advantage of eight Jayhawker errors to win the Friday contest.
Win On I-S Error
Kansas pushed across two tallies without a hit in the third frame to gain the victory in Saturday's game. John Fencyk walked, Mabry got on by an error, and Neil Shaw advanced them with a sacrifice. Second baseman Johnson then muffed Bud French's grounder, allowing both Fencyk and Mabry to score. Anderson, Cyclone twirler, gave up only two hits, singles by Bertuzzi and Shaw.
Boehner was the only man able to touch Mabry for two safeties. The slim righthander kept the Cyclone singles well-spaced and bore down beautifully in the clutches.
The Cyclones garnered three scores in the initial frame of the Friday contest when Knox blasted out a homer with teammates Johnson and Boehner aboard. The Jayhawkers broke into the scoring circle in the fourth on Hal May's double and an error. Our Wes
Karl Ebel, former javelin thrower,
took the mound for Kansas in the
seventh and turned in a good relief
performance, giving up one run
on one hit, after Dick Gilman had
been clubbed hard.
Ebel Works Well
The Jayhawkers batted around in their half of the eighth to score five but the rally fell short when Paul Gilkison flied to center for the third out. Merle Spring's pinch-hit drove in two of the runs. Lou Hammer retired the boys from Ames in order in the eighth.
Friday's Game
Whitemarsh, Pa. May 17—(UP)—It was dripping wet outside with heavy rain beating down on the course but it was all sunshine and bright skies in the locker room where Johnny Palmer of Badin, N. C., fingered a $2,500 check. It was the first prize for the Philadelphia Inquirer's fifth annual invitation golf tournament.
KANSAS AB R H
Shaw, cf 3 1 1
DeLuna, 1b 3 0 1
French, ss 4 0 1
Gilkison, rf 4 1 0
May, 3b 5 1 1
Bertuzzi, lf 5 1 2
Medlock, 2b 3 1 0
Fink, c 3 0 0
Fencyk, c 0 1 0
Gilman, p 3 0 0
Ebel, p 0 0 0
*Spring 0 1 1
Smilin' John Sees Only Sunshine
*Batted for Ebel in 8th
IOWA STATE AB R H
Johnson, 2b 5 2 2
Miller, 3b 4 1 2
Boehner, ss 5 1 0
Hogue, p 3 1 0
Knox, cf 4 1 2
McLuen, rf 1 2 0
Paulson, 1b 3 0 2
Miller, J., c 4 0 1
Moore, lf 4 1 3
Saturday's Game
| | 33 | 9 | 10 |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| KU | 000 100 150—7 | 7 | 8 |
| IS | 300 122 10x—9 | 10 | 2 |
INNSAS
Shaw, cf 4 0 1
DelLuna, 1b 4 0 0
French, ss 4 0 0
Gilkison, rf 4 0 0
May, 3b 4 0 0
Bertuzzi, lf 3 0 1
Medlock, 2b 3 0 0
Fencyk, c 3 1 0
Mabry, p 3 1 0
IOWA STATE
Johnson, 2b 32 2 2
Miller, 3b 3 0 0
Boehner, ss 4 0 1
Hogue, rf 3 0 2
McLuen, cf 3 0 0
Knox, cf 4 0 0
Moore, lf 4 0 0
Paulson, 1b 3 0 1
Frochle, c 3 0 0
Anderson, p 3 0 0
31 0 5
KU 002 000 000—2 2 2
IS 000 000 000—0 5 - 3
Dick Harp Returns To KU To Help Allen In Rebuilding
By LEAFORD MILLER, DAILY KANSAN SPORTS WRITER
Dick Harp, new assistant basketball coach, will be a great contribution to K.U. basketball which is definitely on its way back to the position it occupied in pre-war years, coach Forrest C. "Phog" Allen believes.
He asserted that the addition of Harp to the staff will be a great aid, since he is well-acquainted with the old style of play which Allen hopes to revert to this year.
Harp, who was adept to the post position in college, will be able to teach freshmen how to handle this the post position. During the war when the freshman ban was lifted, Allen did not have time to train the freshmen in his style of play, and as a result, most of the boys retained hapazhard systems which they had been taught in high school. Coach Allen plans to have Harp teach the team defensive tactics, freeing the head mentor to concentrate on the offensive training. No Aloe Since 1925
No Aide Since 1935
Harp will be the first full time assistant basketball coach since 1935 when "Frosty" Cox left to take over the coaching reins at Colorado. The only other full time assistant was Johnny Bunn, who has turned out several outstanding teams and famous players, including "Hank" Luisseti, for Stanford. Kansas is the last school in the Big Seven to obtain an assistant basketball coach on its staff.
The new aide was graduated from Rosedale high school in 1936 and entered the University of Kansas in the fall. While in high school he lettered as a fullback in football and guard in basketball. His college athletics were limited to basketball because his mother, like so many other mothers, objected to football. He obtained his degree from K.U. in 1941.
A Former Star
After spending one year on the freshman squad, Harp held a regular birth on the variness in 1938, '39, and '40. In 1940 he was elected co-captain with Don Ebling. As a member of the Jayhawkers, the 6 foot $1\frac{1}{2}$ inch Harp was considered one of the smartest players Allen had ever coached. He was also feared for his deadly long shots and was known as a strong bulwark on defense, and always able to open up the enemy defense.
While playing on the varsity, he was a sure fire starter along with famed Ralph Miller and all-American Bob Allen. His other teammates on the famous Crimson and Blue team which played in the finals of the N.C.A.A. tournament were all-American Howard Engleman, who relieved Coach Allen of his duties in the middle of the 1947 season, Don Fbling, and Bruce Voran.
He was chosen by the N.C.A.A. on its second team of All-American selections after Kansas had lost to the University of Indiana in the finals of the N.C.A.A. tournament for the National championship.
Harp dropped in the two-pointer which gave the Kansans victory over the Oklahoma Aggies in an overtime period at Oklahoma City in 1940 in the fifth district play-offs. Was All-American
As a First Sergeant in the Army engineers, Harp spent 14 months overseas. After his discharge he entered law school at the University of Kansas City. While in Kansas City, Harp coached the Aereon Manufacturing company basketball team. He is married and has one child.
For the past two years Harp has been head basketball coach at William Jewell college. His 1947 team placed third in the M.C.A.U. and his 1948 squad was ranked second.
BROOKLYN
DICK HARP, a pupil of Phog Allen who made good both as a player and a coach, who will return to the University next year as a coach.
Fish Are Leaving Russian
Istanbul—(UP)—Even the fish are fleeing from Russian domination, according to Turkish fisherman, who claim they "never had such luck."
Within three days, Istanbul fishermen pulled in more than one million pounds of anchovies and 70,000 pounds of mackerel. When the sudden glut hit the market, the wholesale price of anchovies dropped from 25 cents a pound to 9 cents in one day. The next day, when prices dropped to less than $1_{1/2}$ cents a pound, fishermen disgusted began throwing their anchovies back into the sea.
Owl
That he can save time in our press- while-you-wait Service.
A Wise Man Knows...
Blues Still Fade From AA Picture
Come In Today.
ROGER'S Fashion Cleaners
The luckless Kansas City Blues were buried deeper in the American Association cellar over the weekend as the Milwaukee Brewers sent them down for the count on two occasions.
8 East 8th
The Brewers were outhit in the first game but got the bug when Damon Phillips homered with the bases loaded in the fifth and scored the winning marker in the eighth inning. In the second game, the Blues were limited to six hits. Marv Ricket, former Chicago Cub outfielder, homered for Milwaukee with two men on to climax the second game.
Indianapolis was the only team to make progress in the league over the weekend.
Peace Is On Its Last Leg
Latrobe, Pa.—(UP)—Peacemaking,
says Hershel Walters, is a tough
business. When he saw two friends
in a fight he jumped in to separate
them. Walters escaped the punches
but as the two battlers fell back, he
lost his balance and broke a leg.
Comes A Rain----Goes A House
Grand Rapids, Mich.,—(UP)—Fred A. Filkins has realized a 20-year ambition—to have a trout stream running through his home. Filkins built his new house so that a two-foot stream runs through the recreation room and solarium.
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MONDAY, MAY 17, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Four Win Thrillers In Greek Playoffs
Beta, ATO, Phi Delt, And Phi Gam Play Today In Softball Semi-Finals
It looks like anybody's race for the fraternity softball championship today as four well-matched teams move into semi-final contests. Phi Gam meets A.T.O. and Delt Goes up against the Beta's at 4:15 afternoon.
Scoring all of its runs in a spectacular seventh-inning rally, Beta squeezed past Sigma Chi 4 to 3. Bill Conboy, Beta, and Bob Hagg, Sigma Chi, locked horns in a tight pitching ◊ duel. |
All runs were scored in two big innings. Successive doubles by Bob Maupin, Alfred Miville, Bob Hagg, and Lee Vogel gave Sigma Chi its runs in the second frame.
Hagg blanked the Beta's on two hits up until the fatal seventh when three singles, two walks, and a pair of errors gave them four runs and the victory. Charley Oswald opened with a single, moved to second as John Wassmer walked, and scored when Coboy was safe on an error. Singles by Bob Schwanzle and Harry Hunter, combined with another walk and a bobble brought in the three additional tallies.
Conboy gave up five hits, fanning 12, and issuing three bases on balls. Hagg also yielded five hits, all singled out, struck out eight and walked four.
Beta 000 000 4—4 5 1
Sig Chi 030 000 0—3 5 3
Sparked by lanky Jack Eskridge who scored four runs and rapped out four hits, one a two-run homer. A.T.O. whipped Phi Psi, 15 to 7. The victors scored in every inning and led all the way.
A. T.O. ran wild at the plate, banging out 19 safeties, including homers by Eskridge, Dick Cory, Dave Nesser, and Joe Levy: Bill Cavanah garnered a double and a pair of singles in four appearances to pace the Phi Psi hitting.
A.T.O. 323 211 3—15 10
Pbi. Psi* 203 000 2 — 19 70
Loren Powell's two-run homer in the seventh inning enabled Phi Delt to defeat Kappa Sig 7 to 5 The round tripper came after Dale Oliver's Texas-leaguer in left field had scored Ed Marquis to tie the score.
Kappa Sig opened with a 2 to 0 lead in the first. Don McLirthr's two-run nomer for Phi Delt into right corner knotted the count in the second.
Tex Langford's single combined with two passed balls and Jim Walker's long fly gave Kappa Sig the lead again in the bottom of the frame. Bill Sapp's single, a walk, a passed ball, a fly, and a balk stretched lead to 5 to 2 in the fourth. Bill Debus and Oliver belted homers in the fifth for the winners.
Sig Ep Rally Fails
Phi Gam piled up an early 10 to 10 lead but had to score two runs in the eighth inning to squeeze past Sig Eg 13 to 11. Bob McNeive, Sig Ep mound ace, gave way in the third frame after displaying much wildness.
Taking advantage of nine walks and six hits off McNeive, Phi Gam ran wild in the first three frames. Karl Kappelman took over the third and after yielding two runs kept pagan control the remainder of the same.
Sig Eo broke the scoring ice with a four-run shelling in the third, and hacked away to knot the count in the sixth by pushing in five runs.
A walk followed with successive doubles by Jim Sallee and Neil Post gave Phi Gam the victory in the eighth. Si Strong sparked the winners by batting in six runs on a double and a grand slam homer.
Phi Gam 235 010 02—13 13
Sig Ep 004 205 00 14
Find Twenty-Two Skeletons Of Quarter-Ton Moo Birds
New York—(UP)—The American Museum of Natural History announced that Dr. Robert Cushman Murphy of its staff is bringing back skeletons of 22 moa birds from New Zealand. The largest specimen was 10 feet tall and weighed a quarter of a ton when it lived more than 100,000 years ago.
Dr. Murphy estimates that the last living moa probably was killed and eaten by natives about 1350 A.D.
7 Advance In Playoffs
In the Independent league of intramural softball, the following seven teams advanced to the quarterfinals of playoffs by victories over the weekend:
Alpha Chi Sigma, Trailer Vets, Wildcats, Gushers, Alpha Kappa Psi, Aces, and Spooner Thaver.
Virgil Bruning's second - inning double robbed Oliver Edwards, Al- Garth Sigma mound ice, of a rookie gate ball. It hit 14 hits to rout Roussel House 10 to 0.
The speedy right-hander fanned two men and walked three. No Houser House player reached third. Ward Graham took hitting honors for AXE with two singles and a double in three trips.
A.C.S. 330 210 1----10 14
H.H. 000 000-----0 1
--iowa State's Ken Schneider defeated Dick Ashley, 2-1, and Courtland Smith scored Kansas's only victory, winning over Don Webb, 2-1. In the best ball match, Ashley-Smith tied Schneider-Webb, $1/2\cdot 1/2$.
The Trailer Vets piled up an early lead and went on to down Dog House 10 to 7 although outbit by the same margin.
Henry Curry, who clouted a homer in the first inning, and Dave Stewart, who slapped out three hits and scored four runs, starred for the winners. Bob Anderson hit safely three times in four appearances to pace Dog House. Pat Thiessen hit a bases-empty homer for the losers.
T.V. 405 001 0—10 13
D.H. 120 031 0—7 16
A power-hitting Wildcat rambled over Smith hall 13 to 4 as Bill Olin, Wildcat hurler, held the losers to 10 well-scattered safeties.
003 001 0—4 10
830 002 0—13 16
The Wildcats highlighted their scoring with eight runs in the initial frame, Norman Yackle, losing pitcher, was touched for 16 hits. Leading hitter was Bob Rudkins, Wildcats who clubbed three singles in four trips. Claude Engelke was the only Smith batter to get two hits.
Wildcats
Herk Harvey handcuffed Batten-feld on six hits as the Gushers coasted to a 9 to 3 triumph. Harvey faced but 25 men, whiffing three, and walking two.
The victors got to Harold Erhlich for 11 hits. They managed to score at least once in every inning, Dick Van Gundy spearheaded the Gushers with a round tripper, a double, and a single in four trips. Roger Davis collected a homer, a triple, and a double for Battenfeld.
With the aid of 13 walks off pitcha George Stout, Alpha Kappa Psi rolled over Army 14 t 6. It was Army's first defeat in five starts. Both teams got nine hits.
The victors started off with four markers in the first and added three more in the second to salt the game away. Leon De Young topped the hitting with three hits in four trips.
Gushers 111 112 2—9 11
Batt. 000 011 1—3
Aces Hi trounced the Co-Ops, 11 to 3, with a 17-hit batting attack. Edwin O'Brien limited the losers to six hits. Maurice Stryker and Francis Followell paced the Aces slugging, collecting four and three hits respectively.
A.K.P. 430 222 1—14 9
Armv 031 020 0—6 9
Spononer-Thayer forfeited to Dine-
A-Mite in the other scheduled game.
Aces 200 510 3—11 17
Co-Op 102 000 12 6
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Golfers, Netmen Split Pair In Final Home Session
Kansas swapped golf and tennis victories with the Iowa State Cyclones Friday in the Jayhawker's final home stand of the year.
The netmen again demonstrated their strength from top to bottom by sweeping their match with the Cyclones, 7 to 0. The linksmen ran into trouble on the back nine and dropped an 8 to 10 decision.
--iowa State's Ken Schneider defeated Dick Ashley, 2-1, and Courtland Smith scored Kansas's only victory, winning over Don Webb, 2-1. In the best ball match, Ashley-Smith tied Schneider-Webb, $1/2\cdot 1/2$.
Dick Richards, defeated only once $ \textcircled{6} $
DeLongy tied Firkins-Webb, 1½–
14% for best ball honors.
Scheider fired a three-over-par 71 to capture medalist honors. Ashley and DeLongy carded 74's to take low honors for Kansas.
Dick Richard, defeated only once this year on the home court, polished off Iowa State's ace Harold Johnson in straight sets, 7-5, 6-2. Glen Tongier coasted to a 6-0, 6-4 victory over Kent Drummond. Hervie Macferran and I-Latee's Gene Gildermaster hooked up in a real marathon in the first set of their match before the Jayhawker prevailed, 10-8. Macferran also copied the second set, 6-2, Southpaw Dick Cray defeated Jim Harris in the only match that went to three sets, 6-1, 3-6, 6-2. Charlie Carson gave up only two games in trouncing Lyle Gildermaster, 6-2, 6-0.
Invade K-State Today
Out at the Lawrence country club, the Cyclones tagged the Hawkwaters with their third conference defeat. In the front foursome, Jack Webb, Iowa State, defeated Bob Meeker, $21\frac{1}{2}-\frac{1}{2}$ and Bruce Firkins tied Kansas's Hal DeLongy, $11\frac{1}{2}-\frac{1}{2}$. Meeker-
In doubles, Richards-Tongier defeated Johnson-G. Gildermaster, 6-3, 6-2, and Macfearran-Carson defeated Harris-Drummond, 7-5, 7-5. *Third Loss For Golfers*
The Jayhawkers invade Manhattan today for golf and tennis matches with the Wildcats today.
Golf mentor Bill Winey is taking along Meeker, Glenn Scott, C. Smith and DeLongy. The golfers also defeated the Wildcats in an earlier match.
Tennis coach Jim Seaver said Tongier and Richards would stay home for examinations and that Macferran, Carson, Cray, Dave Cowley, and Art Fitch would take the court against Kansas State. Kansas holds an earlier 7-0 victory over the Wildcats.
New York, May 17—(UP)—The Yankees and Cardinals are the teams to beat but the Indians and Athletics in the American and practically everybody but the Reds in the National are going to bear plenty of watching, it appeared today after one month of major league competition.
Cardinals Win, 6-5, In 10th; A's, Yankees Rained Out
The Cards played like men of de victory over the Pirates at St. Louis in which they came from behind with four runs in the eighth and won the game when Terry Moore's pop fly fell safely between outfielders Ralph Kiner and Johnny Hopp, in the 10th, enabling Ralph LaPointe to come home all the way from first with the winning run. Kiner hit a Pirate homer.
The Reds won a battle of bats from the Cubs, 13 to 11, at Chicago in 10 innings when Johnny Wyrostek's triple, a long fly, a walk, an error and Virgil Stallcup's single provided the winning margin. Cincinnati made 15 hits, the Cubs getting 17.
Rookie Whitey Platt had a big time in Detroit, hitting a homer, triple and double as the Browns edged the Tigers, 3 to 2. He scored the winning run in the ninth when he hit a 440-foot triple. Bryan Stephens got credit for the victory in a relief role. Art Houtteman suffered his fifth straight defeat.
The White Sox ended a nine-game losing streak winning 6 to 4 in 10 innings at Cleveland but the Indians came back to make 13 hits and give Rookie Bill Kennedy a victory in his first major league start in the afterpiece.
Ken Keltner got his 12th homer and Allie Clark, Eddie Robinson, Joe Cordon and Pat Secrey also honored for Cleveland in the double bill, bringing the club's total to 36 in 19 games. Bob Kennedy's single with the sacks loaded gave Chicago the opening victory.
The Red Sox got 19 hits to top the Senators, 14 to 5, at Boston, with Birdie Tebbetts and Vernon Stephens getting three apiece. Relief Pitcher Earl Johnson who gave up two hits and no runs in six innings was the winner.
The New York at Philadelphia double header, and Boston at Brooklyn in the National, and Philadelphia at New York and the second Washington-Boston game at Boston were rained out.
Probable Pitchers American League (No games scheduled)
National League
Boston (Sain 2-2) at Brooklyn
(Branca 2-3) night.
lynn
EYE
New York (Koslo 2-1) at Philadelph-
ia/Sirmium 1-2)-night.
Eye
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Latest farm census figures show that dairy products make up 44 per cent of the total value of New York state farm products and poultry about 13 per cent.
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图
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 17, 1948
Teel, Gartiser Star In Tiger Track Win
Led by broad jumper Bob Teel and hurdler Bud Gartiser the University of Missouri track men lived up to pre-meet predictions by smotherin coach Bill Easton's thinclad crew by 84 1-3 to 46 2-3 Saturday morning a Lawrence.
Because the meet was held at 10 a.m. only a handful of spectators were loud to watch Missouri's Bob
on hand to
Teel break a 27-yard old mark in the broad jump. Teel leaped 24 feet 1 inch to better the former mark of 23 feet 10 % inches, which was set in 1927 by Sol McInerney of Kansas.
The Tiger's star hurdler, Bud Gattiser, produced the only other record breaking performance of the morning. Running into a strong wind the speedy hurdler skimmed the highs in 14.7 to tie the record set at Kansas last year by Gauldney, also of Missouri.
Despite the strong competition which the Jayhawkers were up against, Coach Easton's boys did surprisingly well in notching 40 points against the Tigers. Dick Shea pulled the upset of the day when he beat the Bengal's star half miler, Bill Chronister, in the 880 race. Shea finished about six yards in front of Chronister as he measured the distance in 1:57 flat.
Shea Upsets Chronister
Bob Karnes, dependable Jayhawker distance demon, eame through as usual to win the mile and two mile runs. Karnes fought off a final sprint by Missouri's Bosworth and Chronister to win in 4:21.
The dark haired sophomore came back a half hour later and won the two-mile run with considerable ease. He sprinted the last of eight laps to win, after dogging Gene Madden throughout most of the race. His time for the two-mile was 10:12.6. Tigers Sweep Twice
Big Ed Quirk, Mel Sheenan, and Kelly Pelts teamed up to sweep the shot put. Quirk won first place with a toss of 51 feet $6\frac{1}{2}$ inches. The Tigers also swept the high hurdles. The Tiger trio of Bud Gartiser, Dick Ault, and Bill Self left the lone Kansas entry, Red Follensbee far behind.
Little Sonny Howard, who stands just 5 feet 11 inches, upset tall Tom Scofield in the high jump. Howard leaped 6 feet 3% inches or practically five inches over his head to win. Scofield placed second just one inch lower, and Delvin Norris of Kansas took third.
Lee Schlosser started the Jayhawkers off with four unexpected points when he finished in a dead heat with Elmer Klein in the 100 yard dash. Running into the wind, the speedstars could post only a 10.4 mark for the century. Harry Guth, star Tiger dash man missed the meet because of a leg injury.
Women's Doubles Into Semi-Finals
Teams representing Corbin, Locksley, Alpha Delta Pi, and Pi Beta Phi, slammed their way to the semifinals of the women's tennis doubles tournament the past week.
Shepard-Mitchell, Corbin, proved strong contenders for the title as they won an easy 6-2, 6-2 match from van der Smissen - Greenlee, Locksley.
Another Locksley team, Hoffman-
Williams, fared better as they hand-
ed McKelvyn-Meeks, Kappa Kappa
Gamma, a 6-1, 6-0 trouncing.
Hiscox-Scott, Pi Beta Phi, almost had more than they could handle in Mueller-Hartwell, Delta Gam. The Pi phi pair, who reached the semifinals last year, rallied after losing the first set 6-8 to outlast the Delta Gamma combination 8-6, 9-7 in hard second and third sets.
The other semi-finalists, Anderson-Cleaves, advanced by forfeit.
Woman. 82. Travels 75 Miles
Memphis, Tom—(UP)—Mrs. W.
A. Wells, 82, still enjoys her fishing
well enough to awake at dawn and
travel 75 miles to her favorite spot.
KU-MU Results
Shot put: (Quirk (M); Sheehan (M); Pelts (M); 51 feet $6 \frac{1}{2}$ inches).
Mile run: Karnes (K); Bosworth (K).
She doesn't use fly rods, reels, and artificial bait. The octogenarian is strictly a cane-pole and real-bait fisherman.
Mile run; Karnes (K); Bosworth (M); Chronister (M). (4.21).
440-yard dash Schmidt (M); Ault (M); Stites (K). (4.21).
100-yard dasn: Klein (M) and Schloesser (K), tied for first; Binter (K) (10.4).
220-yard dash: Klein (M); Wagstaff (K); Binter (K). (22.6).
Pole vault: Knapp (M); Darell Norris (K), Wilson (K), Vandyne (M) all tied for second.
120-yard: high hurdles: Gartiser (M); Blakely (M); Self (M). (14.7).
High jump: Howard (M); Scofield (K); Delvin Norris (K). (6 feet 3% inches).
Broad jump: Teel (M); Crowley (K): Bunken (K), (24 feet, 1 inch).
Discus: Sheehan (M): Pets M();
Robison (K). (153 feet, 11% inches)
Two-mile run: Karnes (K): Mad-
dow.
Javelin: Henooch (K); Drumm
(K); Robison(B), (178 feet).
Mile Relay: Missouri (Wolfe, Schmidt, Klein) (3:21).
220-*yard dasin*: Ault (M); Gartiser (M); Schlosseres (K). (23.8).
880-yard run: Shea (K); Chronis-
ter (M) Wolfe (M). (1.57).
Leave Us Save Leaves
Waltham, Mass.—(UP)—Each time you touch a match to a bushel of dry leaves it's like burning money, according to Prof. Paul Dempsey of the University of Massachusetts agricultural experiment station. He said leaves should be gathered and permitted to decompose, thus furnishing valuable organic fertilizer.
World Track Records Fall
New York, May 17-(UP)-The first new world's 100-yard dash record in 19 years and the longest victory streak in modern history combined today to promise new glory for old glory in the 1948 Olympics.
Mel Patton's 9.3-second 100 at Fresno, Cal., headed the delightful developments for Uncle Sam's trackmen, and at the same time Harrison Dillard won his 61th consecutive race in a meet at Oxford, Ohio, breaking the record of 65 held by Greg Rice.
The 9.4-second 100-yard dash record was set by George Simpson of Ohio State in 1929 and has since been equalled by eight others, including Patton.
At Denver, Herb McKenley, who will run for Jamaica at London, set a new Rocky Mountain A.A.U. record of 46.2 in the 400. McKenley was due to run a match race with Colorado's celebrated Dave Bolen, but he entered the regular 440 instead when Bolen withdrew because of a pulled muscle.
Lloyd LaBeach, who will run for Panama this summer, finished inches behind Patton in the 100- yards at Fresno and then won the 100-meter dash (which Patton did not enter) in 10.2, tying the world's record set by Owens in 1936 and equaled by Davis in 1941.
Hubert Meier and Frank Wykolf in 1930, D. J. Doubert in 1931, Ralph Metcalfe in 1933, Jesse Owen in 1935 and 1936, Clyde Jeffrey in 1940, Harold Davis in 1942 and Patton May 24, 1946, the others who have run 9.4 hundreds, Patton's was recognized as official only Friday.
Dillard, the speedster from Baldwin-Wallace, scored his 67th in a row in a dual meet against Miami U. when he won the 100 in 9.3, the 120-yard high hurdles in 14.4 and the 220-yard low hurdles in 23.9. None of the times is sensational, but Dillard is awaiting official acceptance of two world records—22.3 in the lows and 13.6 in the highs.
One-third of the nation's 1947 automobile fatalities occurred on the open highway. Heed speed limits.
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Speedway Wreck Kills Noted Racer
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Indianapolis, May 17—(UP)—Ralph Hepburn, who had been piloting big race cars almost since the sport began, was killed in a crackup yesterday while warming up for this year's 500-mile Indianapolis Speedway race.
Hepburn, one of the smallest drivers in the business but as tough as they come, had stepped on the gas as he roared out of the northwest turn at 130 miles per hour. His Novi special lurched into a spin and banged into an inside retaining wall. Hepburn was crushed in the cockpit.
Although the 35,000 spectators didn't know it at the time, he had become the 39th fatality since the track was built and the first in this year's classic.
The track doctor said Hepburn died of a crushed chest and fractured skull. The $50,000 car, owned by Lou Welch of Novi, Mich., was damaged so badly Welch said he would not enter it in the race.
The 52-year-old Hepburn was certain he would win this year. He had set two track records in the many years he had raced at the speedway.
Galloping Goldmine Off To New York
Baltimore, May 17— (UP) "General Greenbacks" pointed for New York today.
Citation, the Calumet conqueror who took the place and show out of racing, was due to run either in the Witers mile May 29 or the Peter Pan handicap June 5 as a warmup for his thrust at the third jewel on the triple crown, the Belmont stakes. June 12.
The horse that is making owner Warren Wright a "Fort Knox with legs" hoisted his earnings to $268,000 for this year as he waltzed home the Preakness winner Saturday by six lengths.
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WEBSOURCE
MONDAY, MAY 17, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE NINE
University Building Names Honor Men, Women Builders
- The University is a living monument to the men and women who built it. Seventeen of the major buildings on the campus are named in honor of them. They include former administrators, professors, governors, and benefactors.
John Fraser became the first chancellor of the University in 1867. He came to America from Scotland. He $ ^{\textcircled{2}} $
came to America from Scotland. He became so popular with the students at Jefferson College in Pennsylvania, that when he enlisted in the Union army, a whole company of his pupils joined with him and fought under his command. He came to K.U. in 1867 and worked to get Fraser hall built, which was first known as University hall.
Charles Robinson was one of the earliest governors of Kansas. He lived in Lawrence and vetowed a bill which would have placed the University at Manhattan instead of Lawrence.
Francis Huntington Snow was a great entomologist at KU. He interested his students in collecting bugs during the summers and by 1882 the collection numbered 100,000 specimens. The collection was housed in the old Snow hall which was declared unsafe after 44 years of use. Old Snow hall stood just west of Watson library, but now all traces of the building have disappeared.
Prof. E. H. S. Bailey was head of the chemistry department in 1883. He decided that the chemistry department needed a new building, because the smell from the basement laboratories drifted up and disturbed the other students in Fraser. The new building is now the Journalism building. The chemistry laboratories have been moved to the present structure which bears Professor Bailey's name.
James W. Green was one of the most beloved figures in University life in 1878 and is known to many generations of students as "Uncle Jimmy Green." He was the first dean of the Law School.
Frank O. Marvin was the son of James Marvin, the first chancellor of the University. Prof. Marvin later became Dean of the School of Engineering.
Erasmus Haworth was a professor of geology and state geologist at the University. Professor Haworth published the first work on the geology and mineral resources of Kansas in 1896.
Lucien I. Blake came to K.U.
1887 as a professor of physics and astronomy. He finally got appropriations for a new physics building which was named after him in 1898,
W. B. Spooner was a resident of Boston. He died in 1880, bequeathing funds for a chancellor's home and a library. His will was so complicated that the money was not given to the University until 1891. The will gave nearly $100,000 which was the largest sum ever bequeathed to a state university at that time.
The Spooner library, was moved to the new Watson library, and it was decided to house the art collection offered by Mrs. W.B. Thayer of Kansas City, Mo., in the old library. In the spring of 1926, the building was reopened as the Spooner-Thayer Art Museum.
George A. Fowler, a wealthy packer of Kansas City, Mo., gave Professor Blake a check for $18,000 to be used for the construction of a shop building. The shop was built in 1888.
Leviis Lindsay Dyche was a professor of science, collector, and taxidermist at KU. He prepared the horse, Comaniche, which is now in the museum which bears his name. Prof. Dyche went to Greenland for the relief of Perry and accompanied Cook on one of his polar expeditions.
Frank Strong was the chancellor of the University from 1902 to 1920. At a dinner held in Chancellor Strong's honor the night of his inauguration, 26 after dinner speakers were heard.
Ernest H. Lindley was chancellor of the University from 1920 to 1939. He wanted paved streets for K.U. because as one report said, "Every car which drives over the cinder highways of K.U. travels two blocks forward and three blocks up and down."
Miss Carrie M. Watson was the head 'librarian of the University from 1877 to 1921. She was described as a woman who disciplined students in silence and inculcated in them a respect for good books.
E. W. Hoch was a former governor of Kansas, and one time member of
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home to the University. The gifts
amounted to over 2 million dollars.
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PAGE TEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 17, 1948
The Editorial Page Light On A Dark Subject
Drivers who tail you they can drive best at night are either rare exceptions to the general rule, or they are simply talking through their hats—mostly the latter. Accident statistics do not bear them out; they indicate that it is not only harder, but more dangerous to drive at night. Three out of every five motor vehicle deaths happen after dark, and this
If that seems over-stressing the obvious, it is only because drivers and pedestrians have allowed themselves to become over-confident. Twenty thousand night-time traffic deaths in a year cannot be laughed away.
Safety in night driving is entirely a question of visibility, and there are, therefore, only two ways by which night accidents can be reduced. One is to provide increased visibility wherever possible; the other is to acquire the habit of increased caution wherever visibility is below daylight standards.
in spite of fewer cars on the roads and a yearly average of fewer darkness than daylight hours.
Away from city limits, on roads which are not artificially lighted, responsibility rests with individual travelers. Automobile headlights giving the same visibility as normal daylight have not been invented, and motorists must make allowances accordingly. If a driver cannot stop within his headlight range, he may have the doubtful satisfaction of seeing what he is going to hit, only a split fraction of a second before he hits it. It may well be the last thing he will ever see.
The responsibility for adequate street lighting rests squarely with the community concerned. The cost is small compared with the saving in life and property.
The All Student council recently passed an amendment that will make it an offense for anyone willfully to obstruct the polling places during the school elections.
Wasted Time
Under the University's two-slate system, Pachacamac and N.O.W. versus the Independent Men and Women's parties, one group obviously felt that by obstructing the polling places it had a better chance of winning. The other group, angry at such political tactics, presented this bill to the A.S.C. and the obstructing group could do nothing but let the bill be passed. Therefore, anyone who willfully obstructs the polls may be punished by a minimum fine of five dollars to possible suspension from school for one semester.
This bill is a childish move because it is not enforceable. Who is to say whether a person who spends ten minutes marking a ballot is obstructing the polling place? Who is to say that a person who becomes confused in a poll line and somehow manages to slow down the tedious process is willfully obstructing the polls?
The bill provides that such students can be tried by the student court upon indictment by at least two poll workers. But once such a student is before the court, two poll workers from his own party will appear and testify that he was merely confused and bewildered, or the student himself could testify that he wasn't sure whom he wanted to vote for and was just thinking it over.
The A.S.C. is wasting its time with such bills as this unless they have a fool-proof method for seeing that it can be carried out to the letter.—John Stauffer.
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Our Tradition
The Chicago Tribune has a new reason why the proposed resolution to admit an additional 350,000 immigrants to this country should not become law. The Tribune says that the new immigrants will take housing needed by veterans.
The Tribune has forgotten to mention a few significant facts. The additional 350,000 people to be admitted will not all come in the same year. The resolution calls for them to be admitted at the rate of 70-000 each year for the next five years. At this rate, we should be able to absorb them without too much inconvenience, as many of the immigrants will live with relatives for a while.
The Tribune's reasoning is an emotional appeal calculated to work on prejudices. It does not go to the heart of the problem. America's greatness is based on the fact that it has always been the refuge of the oppressed, the hungry, and the homeless. We are all immigrants or the descendants of immigrants. Where would we be today if the founding fathers had restricted immigration?
Those who will be admitted under the new law will be professional people, scientists, and farmers. They will have to conform to the existing immigration regulations, as to health and ability to support themselves. They will be an asset to us, because they will bring with them a love for democracy, besides whatever material aid they can give our society.
America's life blood has been the mingling of various races and the opportunity to live and work in peace. Down-trodden people remember all too well their experiences with deserts. It is our duty to make a place for refugees from Europe. This is in our tradition, may we never forget it.-John Stewart Smith.
Dear Editor
One-Any More?
Dear Editor:
My hat is off to the K.U. student who attended the Honors convocation last Tuesday. I am a lowly housewife in the city of Lawrence but am an interested mother of a busy K.U. student. I enjoyed each unit of the program very much but I especially enjoyed the unselfish and simene spirit shown by the students who were on-lockers to those honored. It was, indeed, upifting and inspiring to note with what real friendliness and enthusiasm they greeted and applauded the various announcements of honors. That's really something of which to be proud, and I was pleased to be "among those present" to see something that is even greater than the honors bestowed.
I wish to cast my vote for the University of Kansas student body as the Honor Group of the year!
President Truman has issued a proclamation putting Washington, D.C. on daylight saving time. The Republicans are accepting this move with the mental note that Harry just wants to spend more time on his new "back porch."
Name withheld by request
The United States mint has coined a half dollar bearing the image of thrifty Benjamin Franklin. Now if they could only inculcate the wisdom of Franklin into all those persons who will put these coins to foolish usage.
There is a bill in Congress to call in all $100 bills, because some representative thinks that they are being hoarded. Maybe the Treasury will pass out a few samples so we poor folks could identify them if we ever see one.
President Truman has expressed his preference for Democratic presidential nominee but he has been careful not to mention any vice-presidential possibilities.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
University Daily Kansan
Student Newspaper of THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn, National Ad-
mission and the Associated Collegiate Press. Represented by the National Ad-
mission Press 420 Madison Ave. New York City.
Editor-in-Chief ... David H. Clymer
Managing Editor ... Cooper Rollow
Asst. Man. Editor ... Clarence L. King
Man. Editor ... Gene Vigory
City Editor ... John Stauffer
Asst. City Editor ... James Beaty
Asst. City, Ed. Richard Barton
Asst. City Editor James Hopkins
Asst. Tel. Editor Hal Nelson
Asst. Tel. Editor B. Meyer
Paul Zach
Sports Editor ... James Jones
Women's Sports Ed. Anna Mary Murphy
Feature Editor Robert Rudin
Managers ... James Mason
Society Editor Patricia Bentley
Business Manager ... Bill Alderson
Adv. Manager ... Paul Warner
Dau Walker ... Dan Walker
\ast. Clu. Mgr ... Bint Binder
Class. Adv. Mgr ... Ruth Clayton
Asst. Class. Adv. Mgr ... Elizabeth Berry
Asst. Class. Mgr ... Elizabeth Berry
Asst. Class. Mgr ... Paul Sokcleff
\ast Nat. Adv. Mgr ... Eleanor Bradford
\ast Nat. Promotion Mgr ... Don Tennant
\ast. Promotion Mgr ... Don Tennant
The Kansas Press Association
19 MEMBER
48
National Editorial Association
FREE PRESS - YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW
While at the University, Mr Tanner was a member of Sigma Tau and Tau Beta Pi, honorary engineer fraternities, Scarab, honorary architectural fraternity, and Phi Kappa Psi, social fraternity.
Edward W. Tanner, 16, was recently chosen man-of-the-month by Swing, professional architectural magazine, according to information received by Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the alumni association. Mr. Tanner contributed his services as architect for Danforth chapel, in memory of his mother.
He has done much of the planning in the country club plaza district in Kansas City, Mo. During the war he drew plans for many government projects including those at the airfield at Knoenoster, Mo., and O'Reilly hospital at Springfield, Mo.
Alumni Get Jobs, Honors
The alumni office has also received word that L. Vaughn Downs 31, has recently been appointed engineer in charge of construction at Grand Coulee dam, Washington.
Another alumnus, Paul Mennen,
'33, has been appointed head of the
art department in the College of
Arts and Sciences at New Mexico A.
and M. college at Las Cruces.
Charles Terry Elected President Of Math Club
Charles Terry, College junior, was elected president of the Mathematics club at its annual spring picnic held recently in Clinton park. picnic held Wednesday in Clinton park.
he held Wednesday in Clinton park Other officers elected were Elneta Richmond, vice - president; and Christine Marie, secretary-treasurer. Francis Brooks was awarded a prize at the undergraduate who gave the best talk before the club during the year.
'Go To Hell'—And He Did
St. Louis, Mo. — (UP) — Upraised eyebrows met a suggestion by an American Airlines ticket clerk that one of his customers go to Hell. He quickly explained to bystanders that the man was going to Oslo, Norway. He merely was recommending a sightseeing trip to the nearby town of Hell.
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MONDAY, MAY 17, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE ELEVEN
Haskell Prepares Indian Youth For Modern Community Life
Bv BOB HILGARDNER
"Listen! War drums on the prairie. The thud-thud of the war drums. The painted bodies; the cries of the women. The swing of the tomahawk; the flight of the arrow. The raid at the dawning; the war cry at dawning. The wail of the death song; the wail of the women."
The Indian war drums on the prairie are silent, but there are descend- ents of these ancient versions still.
The Indian war drums on the pra ents of those ancient warriors still living in Lawrence. They are the friendly students at the Haskell Indian institute located at the south end of Massachusetts street.
Students from 70 tribes and 30 states as well as Alaska are enrolled at the school. Indian tribes from the Alabama-Coushatta to the Zuni are represented and include Apache, Blackfeet, Cherokee, Comanche, Hopi, Kipapoo, Mohawk, Osage, Pawnee, Shoshone, and the Sioux. The Eskimo of Alaska are there, and the Choctaw, Chickasaw, and the Chipewa too. The Indian students come from all parts of the United States.
Some interesting people go to Haskell. Albert St. Clair of the Shoshone tribe from Ft. Washakie, Wyo, is a descendant of Sacajawae, the Bird Woman. Sacajawae led the Lewis and Clark expedition from the Mandan-Sioux tribe to the Columbia river in 1805.
The grandfather of Francene and Marline Eagle was White Eagle, the last, great chief of the Ponca Indians. Grace Putkuk, Eskimo, was born in an igloo north of Nome, Alaska. She completed her training in the commercial department at Haskell and has gone to work in the Indian office in Washington, D.C.
The Haskell Indian club gives programs, tribal dances, and pageants. The members are interested in perpetuating the tribal ceremonies of their forefathers. They have given programs at Winter hospital in Topeka and Wadsworth government hospital in Leavenworth. The group has also appeared in the American Royal parade in Kansas City, Mo.
A short film of the members doing a tribal dance was taken recently by the state of Missouri, and they appeared on a program for the national convention of physical education, health, and recreation in Kansas City. A pageant, "Teepee Tales of the Prairie," was presented as part of the Kansas Arts and Crafts festival in Lawrence in February.
In 1946, more than 15,000 persons saw the "Pagent of the Peace Pipe" presented in honor of Haskell men and women in World War II. A statue by Allan Houser, Apache Indian sculptor, now stands in the foyer of the Haskell auditorium as a memorial to the 33 Haskell men who lost their lives in the war. The statue, entitled "Comrade in Mourning," is of white Italian marble and shows an Indian with downcast eyes and a war bonnet at his feet.
On Sept. 1, 1884, the Indian Training school at Lawrence opened with 14 pupils enrolled. The school was named in 1890 in honor of Dudley C. Haskell, representative from Kansas and chairman of the house committee on Indian affairs. Haskell institute includes approximately 1,000 acres of land owned by the United States Indian service.
Some of the 100 buildings at Haskell are named after famous Indians such as Pocahontas, Winona, Keokuk, and Osceola, Tecumseh, and Hiawatha.
Haskell institute occupies a unique place among the secondary schools of the Indian service. It is the only institution which is authorized to offer two-year post-high school courses in advanced vocational work. Haskell also enrolls high school students from the 9th through the 12th grades. There are 750 pupils enrolled at the school. Twenty-five vocational courses in a variety of subjects are offered.
The basic purpose of the Haskel program is to prepare young Indian men and women to take part in the modern social and economic life of the nation. The training is also designed to prepare the student to return to Indian community life and to improve his social and economic condition as well as that of his people.
"Silent the thud-thud of the war drums. The war cries are gone and peace has come to the prairie. The Kiowa warriors dream of their young ones and ask for schools and instruction. They pledge their young folk that the-prairie may be the home always of freedom, liberty, and peace."
Haskell Indian institute carries on these traditions.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Chicago—(UP)—Dill Lamar Pickle, 23; of Rolling Follr, Miss, today was named "man of the year" by the National Pickle Packers association. Pickle sells pickles in his father's grocery store.
Physical Ed Men To Meet
Pickle Packers
Pick Pickle
Th second annual physical education conference will be held at the University June 28 and 29. C. H McCloy, research professor of physical education at the University of Iowa, will be the principal speaker
Approximately 150 coaches and athletic directors will meet to hear a series of lectures and hold panel discussions. The guest speaker list is not yet complete.
Professor McCloy has lectured throughout the United States for several years. He was chairman of the civilian advisory commission for the U.S. navy physical fitness program during the war.
He was president of the Pan-American institute of Physical Education from 1946 to 1948, and is a member of the American Association for Health, Physical Education, and Recreation. He is a member of the Phi Beta Kappa, Sigma XI, and Phi Tau Phi, honorary Chinese society. He was a member of the Education commission to Japan in 1946.
Seniors May Take Accounting Systems
The course number of "Accounting Systems" will be changed from Economics 303 to Economics 266 next fall to open the course to seniors instead of graduate students only.
Accounting Systems is the study of the preparation of forms and the analysis of systems of accounts for such organizations as banks, insurance companies, railroads, department stores, and public utility corporations. Prerequisites for the course are Cost Accounting and Valuation Accounting. Two hours credit will be given for Accounting Systems.
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25 words or less 30c 45c 90c
additional words 1c 2c 3c
For Sale
47 MOT-SCOOT in excellent condition. The oak moon. Ben Ward, 1247 Obit. of call 3238.
MAN'S GENIUE Palm Beach spring formal, size 38, 1 pair of white trousers and 1 black. Like new. 916 Ohio, Phone 2621. 18
SOLVE YOUR housing problem by seeing this 20 foot ironwood trailer home. keep it in your yard, awnings, seats, ideally located in campus, R. W. Quinn, 2047 La. 20
1937 CHEVROLET tudor coach. Black
400-$200 and good tires. Price
$800. Phone 880.
1948 FORD station wagon—3,000 miles.
1948 at 1639 Massachusetts, 1269-M. 17
at 1639 Connecticut, 1269-M. 17
1939 MERCURY Convertible. See in evenings at 1030 Maine. 17
VETERANS! We will vill buy, trade or sell
you any Army or Navy gear in good
condition that matches your wish to
of. Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. Phone
689 HTFD
Business Service
TYPING: Reasonable rates. Call 3250J
1030 Kentucky 20
FOR GRADUATION it's jewelry! Buy from K.C. Jewelry Manufacturers. They repair and service. Free pick up and delivery, contact John Bassett, 208.19
PORTRATS TINTED—good work, reasonable rate. Call 2477-7 or bring to office.
ATTENTION! Sorority and fraternity pins, rings, and special jewelry manufactured, repaired, cleaned by K.C. Jewelry Manufacturers. Free pick up and delivery contact Joe Basnett. 2084. 19 TYPING: better teacher grades have your term papers and assignments neatly and accurately typed. Phone 2193M, 729 Missouri, Mrs. Earl Wright.
NEW vacuum cleaners for rent. Attachments included. $1.50 per day. Al Brooks Sweeper Co., 831% Mass. Ph. 1104 between 9 and 12 a.m.
VETERAN STUDENT and wife desire two or three room furnished apartment for new fall. No children or pets. Will be住型 two more years. Bob Burs-well. 3021
TYPING: Thesis. Reasonable and prompt. Phone 2369J. 17
NYSE MPT Prompt attention, accurate work and NME promotion attention, accurate work and NME promotion attention, accurate work and 1218 Stn. Conf. phone 418 or bring to 1218 Stn. Conf. 20
TYPING done: Term papers, reports, special attention given thesis. Accurate work at reasonable prices. Call 1996-W. Appointment for TAILOR-MADE suits, $65.19 to $65.00. Expert alteration and tailoring. George Eberhart & Son, Tailor Shop, $331\%$ Mass.
Wanted
WANT TO RENT or lease apartment, furnished or unfurnished, for next fall. Residence at least two or three years. Bob Coldson, 1499 Rhode Island, 2670J. 17
A PERMANENT part-tytist. Phone
975
Lost
GICARETTE LIGHTER — lost Sunday,
initials N. W. Call Woodruff, 2296-17 J
BLACK BILLFOLD—Wednesday, May
contains Social Security card, driver's
license, and pictures. If found,
please return to Cocky Novak, telephone
680.
BLACK MALE cocker, wearing leather harness, Monday of last week. Name: Friskie. Return to Dick Williams. Reward. Call 1967. 17
DANCE WITH me at the Community building Wednesday night. Get a thrill plus a chance to win a Westinghouse radio phonograph for only 25c-Betty.
Miscellaneous
DANCE every Saturday night at Odd Fell
Snow; Informal. Joe Langworthy
or orchestra.
For Rent
MEN'S rooms for summer and fall; one block from Union. Singles and doubles. 6:00 at 1228 Louisiana. 19 ROOMS for summer or summer—includes two cool, basement rooms. Two blocks from campus, one block from bus. 130 Ohio. W. P. Meek.
LARGE well-furnished rooms for men at 1218 Mississippi. One-half block from the front. Summer school and fall, 1948. Call Jack Campbell, 730, for 21 formation.
ROOM. FOR men for summer or fall season. Walk-in porch. Call 1426M or at 801 Indianapolis.
ROOMS FOR GIRLS; Summer school and fall, $20.00 a month. Mrs. Wilson, 1229 Ohio. Phone 3248W. 20
ROOMS for girl summer students. One block from campus, $15.00 per month. 1241 Louisiana, phone 1784-3. 26
ROOMS one block from Union for eight and two boys available for summer after fall. Phone 3234R after 3. 18
ROOMS CLOSE; college for men, quiet and studious. No intimidation. Those renting for summer may stay over next term. Mrs. Hoffman, 1244 La.
Piano—NEW and used. Piano-tuning
916 Illinois. Phone 815. Piano Compan-
y 815.
Transportation
WANTED—Ride to Chicago or Waukee,
Illinois. Can leave after 10 a.m. June
1. Will share driving and expenses. Call
Jim Amend. 3355-W. 21
Demand Exceeds Supply, But Psychology Staff Adds Eight
In the face of a demand for professional psychologists which far exceeds the supply, the University has added eight new members to the staff of its psychology department.
Dr. Roger Barker, Dr. Fritz Heider, Dr. Herbert F. Wright, Dr. Milton Horowitz, Mrs. Grace Heider, Miss Margaret Riggs, James Simpson, and Mrs. Harriet Yeckel are teaching at the University for the first time this on the social doubles year.
Dr. Barker, new department chairman, explained that during the war a great deficit in professional psychologists appeared. Increased demands for psychologists for the treatment of behavior problems in hospitals and guidance clinics, and in business and industry, have also depleted the supply.
"One of the present problems of the department is to keep the graduate enrollment down to a level which can be handled adequately," Dr. Barker said.
48 Graduate Students
Forty-eight graduate students are enrolled in the department at present. Sixteen of these are students of clinical psychology, receiving their basic training here and special training at the Meninger foundation, Topeka.
The other 32 take all their work at the University, concentrating in four fields, child, social, clinical, and industrial psychology.
Dr. Barker came here from Clark university, Worcester, Mass. He specializes in the fields of child and social psychology. He received his doctor of philosophy degree at Stanford.
Takes Leave Of Absence
Dr. Heider has taken a leave of absence this year to work on theoretical problems of inter-personal relations on a Guggenheim fellowship. He came to the University from Smith college. Dr. Heider received his doctor's degree at the University of Graz in Austria. He is interested in theoretical psychology, particularly as it applies to perception and social psychology.
Dr. Wright is collaborating with Dr. Barker on a research project
Dr. Wright taught at Northwestern university before coming here. He specializes in the fields of child and theoretical psychology. He received his doctor's degree at Duke university.
on the social development of children. This project is supported by funds from the United States public health service.
Teaches General Psych
Mrs. Heider taught at the University of Massachusetts last year. She is teaching General Psychology
Dr. Horowitz received his degree at Stanford university and taught there before coming to Kansas. He specializes in experimental and social psychology.
Miss Riggs was chief psychologist at the Northampton State hospital in Massachusetts before coming to the University. She is working on her thesis for a degree at Harvard, and is teaching Abnormal Psychology.
Mr. Simpson taught at Willamette university, Salem, Ore., before coming here to work on his doctor's degree and teach General Psychology.
Mrs. Yeckel was chief psychologist at the Child Guidance clinic at Worchester, Mass. She is head of the psychological clinic here, and is studying for her doctor's degree.
Two Other Staff Members
Dr. Buelah M. Morrison and Dr. Anthony Smith are the other fulltime members of the department staff. Dr. Morrison has been at the University since 1924. Her fields are the history of psychology and child psychology.
Dr. Smith came here from the University of Illinois last year. He teaches Business Psychology and Statistics.
"It is largely due to the guidance of Dr. Morrison that so many new persons have been added with such ease," Dr. Barker said. "She has been a great help to the new members of the department."
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PAGE TWELVE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 17, 1948
University Band Will Give Final Concert Tomorrow
THE MUSIC BAND OF THE BOSTON UNION IN MARYLAND
The 115-piece University band, directed by Russell L. Wiley, will present 10 numbers in the final concert of the year at 8:15 p.m. toorrow in Hoch auditorium.
The concert highlights a busy season and the band works especially hard to present a good program Mr. Wiley said. This year the band made an eight-day trip to play at the Orange Bowl in Miami, Fla., and played a music hall concert in Kansas City, Mo. on March 9. Three concerts were given in the Topeka High school
and the Municipal auditorium at Topeka March 19, and two programs were presented in Memorial hall in Independence May 10.
More than 400 high school music students in this area are expected to attend the concert Mr. Wiley said. Last year students from Leavenworth, St. Joseph, Mo., Topeka, Ottawa, Baldwin, Tongonoxie, Wamego, and Osawatomie attended.
Mr. Wiley said that "people who have never heard the final concert
have never really heard the band.
"I feel that the band is the busiest service organization of the student body maintained by the University. This band belongs to the students of the University, and is made up of 115 highly talented musicians of which 63 are music majors. There were seven music majors when I first came here 14 years ago.
"I would like to extend a personal invitation to all students to come and hear their band at its best. The band in one respect is
like a football team, in that the presence of all the students is always highly desirable for stimulation in putting on a good performance." Student activity books will admit.
The program to be given is as follows:
program to be given is
follows:
Finale from Symphony No. 5
Shostakovich
Roumanian Rhapsody No. 1
Georges Enesco
Waltz from "Serenade for
Tschalkovsky
First Movement from Symphony
No.5
"The New World" Dvorsk
Ave Maria Schubert-arr.
Ave Maria ... Schubert-arr.
Wm Ward. Jones. Johns corr.
Wm. Ward, James Sellars, cornet soloist.
Molly on the Shore ... Grainger
Symphonie Moderne ...
Teacher Polka and Fugue from the Beater "Schwabya, the Beginner"
"Schwanda, the Bagpiper" ... Weinberger
"Onward Kansas" Laffer-Ward
Marches Selected
Weinberger
Exhibition in Baton Twirling ...
3 Weapons OK'd In Atomic Test On Pacific Isle
Washington, May 17—(UP)—President Trump announced today that this country has successfully tested three improved atomic weapons. The results, he said, "indicate very substantial progress."
Chairman David E. Lilienthal of the atomic energy commission, said the latest tests, carried out in secret at the remote Pacific proving ground on Eniwitok atoll, are "a milestone in atomic development."
The president said he has generally approved commission plans to start at once further nuclear development based on information gained from the tests.
There was no indication what the improved weapons are or how they are improved. That and other details of the test remain secret.
It is considered likely, however, that at least one of the weapons is an atomic bomb much more powerful than those dropped on Japan in World War II and tested at Bikini in 1946. Whether the others include the much-discussed radioactive cloud is not known.
Secretary of Defense James Forrestal and the atomic energy commission have authorized military and scientific leaders of the task force returning to Honolulu tomorrow to make statements in acknowledgement of services of personnel engaged in the tests.
This was the first official indication of more than one test at the newly-constructed and closely-guarded atomic proving ground on Eniwetok. The commission announced on April 19 that "an atomic weapon" had been tested. It did not reveal the type of weapon and withheld the date of the test "for security reasons."
Weapons Display At M.S. Building
An exhibit from the gun collection of Col. Walter S. Mayden is now on display at the Military Science building. Students and visitors are shown weapons of Spanish, Swiss, Italian, and German make.
War equipment in the display includes telescopic rights, tent negs, storm trooper arm bands, and knives. The collection contains Sumari, Russian and Swiss swords, German fire pistols, and machine pistols.
The collection was prepared by Sgt. Richard V. Cloke, assistant instructor of military science.
Kansas Engineer Ready Wednesday
The Kansas Engineer, official publication of the School of Engineering, will be ready for distribution at noon Wednesday. Fred G. Gartung, editor in chief, said today. Copies may be obtained in the rotunda of Maryin hall.
Engineering students have paid for the magazine in activity fees. Others may purchase a copy for 25 cents, Gartung said.
Lit Magazine Now On Sale
The second edition of "New Writers," containing stories written by eight University students has been printed and is on sale in front of Watson library. The stories are a sample of the type of work done in the creative writing courses.
The eight students with stories in the book are Nina Wolfe, John S. Baird, and Albert C. Blair, College juniors; Frank Curry, and Caroline Campbell, education seniors, Sidney P. Anderson, College senior; Charles W. Schuler, business senior, and Robert W. Taylor, graduate student. The volume this year was open to any student enrolled in a course in creative writing.
The William Allen White award of $2,500 is offered annually for a book length manuscript, and the William Herbert Carruth poetry prize of $150 is offered as an incentive for writing verse.
The creative writing program at the University has more than doubled during the past year by the addition of courses for freshman and sophomore students. It now provides assistance to any student from the second semester of his freshman year through the graduate school. Most of the work is done in fiction.
The writing course for the summer of 1948 has been set up to interest beginning writers. Prizes are awarded.
Party_pictures, football practice, cartoons, humorous stories, and jokes will be in the last issue of the Biter Bird magazine when it goes on sale tomorrow.
Last Bitter Bird Out Tomorrow
Jews Surrender In Jerusalem To Arab Force
Students may obtain the magazine in Marvin hall, the rotunda of Frank Strong hall, Watson Library, Frazer hall, and in the Union lounge.
Subscribers may pick up their copy in the rotunda of Frank Strong hall, or at the business office.
Amman, Trans-Jordan, May 17—(UP) Jews within the old wall city of Jerusalem have surrendered to Arab forces, Neiuwenhuwys, Belgian consul-general at Jerusalem, told United Press today.
Mr. Nieuwenhunhys came here with other members of a United Nations commission which is seeking to obtain a truce for all of Jerusalem.
He made the statement that Jews in the old walled city, which contains the most sacred shrines of all Christendom, had surrendered after he and other members of the commission had conferred with King Abdullah of Trans-Jordan and Abdul Bahman Azzam Pasha, secretary-general of the Arab league.
It was understood that the Arab leaders did not flatly reject the idea of a truce for the holy city, but that no conclusive agreement was reached.
"A pooled dispatch from correspondents in Jerusalem indicated that Abdullah agreed Friday to a truce in Jerusalem, but that Jewish attacks seeking control of the city had begun before word of King Abdullah's agreement reached Jerusalem. As a result, the truce attempt failed at that time.
Mr. Nieuwenhuys indicated Jewish forces held most strategic points in Jerusalem outside the old city. Arabs had the city under shellfire, the commission members said.
Five faculty members of the William Allen White School of Journalism attended a regional institute of university teachers of journalism in Lincoln, Neb. Friday and Saturday.
Journalism Faculty Attends Meeting
The University of Nebraska was also celebrating the 25th anniversary of the founding of the school of journalism. Dr. William Swindler is director of the school.
The faculty members were: Elmer F. Beth, Charles G. Pearson, Emil L. Telfel, John Malone, and Harold Addington.
Saturday, the group drove to Omaha to visit the journalism school at Creighton university. Professor Beth said they met Prof. Verdun Daste, head of the school of journalism, who was a teacher at the University in 1941-42.
Will Hold Tryouts For Cheerleaders
Persons interested in trying out for cheerleader must attend one of three practice sessions, Richard D. Winternote, head - cheerleader said today.
Practice sessions will be held from 4 to 5:30 p.m. today, tomorrow, and Wednesday in Robinson gymnasium.
Tryouts will be held Thursday. the time and place will be announced later.
Newman Club Held Service
Three hundred persons gathered on the lawn of Danforth chapel Sunday to see the Living Rosary ceremonies presented by the Newman club. The procession, composed of a color guard, cross and crown bearers, May queen, attendants, escorts, and the 59 members of the Living Rosary, began in front of the Union and formed the Rosary around the statue of the Blessed Virgin Mary beside the chapel.
Hymns, led by Vernie Clinch, and the recitation of the Glorious Mysteries of the Rosary were followed by the crowning of the statue by the queen Eileen O'Brien. Ellen Joyce Surney spung Schubert's "Ave Maria," and the ceremonies were closed by a praver and hymn.
Miss O'Brien was escorted by Charles Svoboda, president of the Newman club. Her attendants and their escorts were Patricia Jordan and William Conroy, Jean Sullivan and Wallace Benton, Cathleen Collins and Edward Daly, and Carol Prochaska and Robert Miller.
The color guard was composed of Kenneth Dieker, Ralph Collins, Ed Mossillon, and Harry Halligan. The cross beaten, in the man and on Power Feller Fillet.
The Living Rosary was planned and directed by Svoboda, Clifford Malone, and the Reverend George Towle.
Student Watchman Charged With Theft
Edward C. Beal, 34, student watchman, was arrested early Saturday morning and charged with petty larceny, according to Ralph Hubbell and Chester Foster, arresting officers.
Police records reveal that Been was arrested in Lindley hall where he is accused of taking $1.30 from a cash box in a filing cabinet.
Charges against Beal, will be heard in police court Wednesday. He is an engineering junior.
Crash Injures Four Students None Seriously
Four University students were injured at 12:30 a.m. Sunday when their car crashed into a ditch on a dirt road five miles northwest of the Lawrence Country club.
These injured were Ruth Henry, fine arts freshman; Sally Sheppard, former student now living in Kansas City, Mo.; James Raglin, College senior; and Robert B. Wood, fine arts sophomore, driver of the car. The car was badly damaged.
Wood said that he was approaching a dead-end corner when his lights suddenly failed him. "I thought the ditch ahead would be a small one and I could go on into the open field." Wood said that the head-light shields had dropped down suddenly causing the blackout. "I just had the lights fixed but they must not have been fixed very well," he said.
Miss Henry had to be taken to Watkins hospital in an ambulance called by Rod Weltmer, College junior, who came upon the scene of the accident. Weltmer also took Miss Sheppard to Lawrence Memorial hospital but she was released Sunday morning, after being treated for minor cuts and bruises.
Students Attend Jewish Guest Day
More than fifty Jewish students from Kansas and Missouri high schools were present at the "K.U. Guest Look Day," held at the University Saturday. The Jewish Student union, which sponsored the event, provided a full afternoon and evening program for the visitors.
A registration and welcoming assembly was held at Frank Strong hall. Following this, the men were given a stag luncheon at the American Legion hall by B'nai Jhudah, social fraternity, and the women were given a luncheon at the Union.
In the afternoon, the visitors were taken on a tour of the campus, with members of the Jewish Student union as guides. A picnic supper and an open-air dance were held at Potter lake in the evening. There was a short ceremony to observe the founding of Israel, the newly-formed Jewish state in Palestine. Sherman Steinzeig, president of the Jewish Student union, was master of ceremonies.
University Dailu Kansan 45th Year No.151
Tuesday, May 18, 1948
Lawrence, Kansas
STUDENT NEWS PAPER
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Stalin Proposes Wallace Plan; Truman Balks
Washington, May 18—(UP)—The Truman administration today prepared another resounding "no" to Russia's second "peace talk" proposal.
There was no immediate official comment on Soviet Premier Josef Stalin's proposal that the United States and Russia negotiate an end to the cold war by using Henry Wallace's "peace program" as a basis.
Premier Stalin, in a letter handed to foreign correspondents, said he did not know whether the U.S. would approve the Wallace program but that he believed "not one statesman desiring peace and collaboration of peoples can ignore this program."
"Despite the difference in economic systems and ideologies," Premier Stalin said, "peaceful settlement of differences between the U.S.S.R. and the United States not only is possible but undoubtedly indispensable in the interests of general peace."
He pointed out that the Wallace letter did not cover all points of difference between the Soviet and U.S. but he added that it provided a concrete program and was "a most important document."
But there was reason to believe it would be rejected even more vigorously than the overtures made the past week by Soviet Foreign Minister V. M. Molotov. Premier Stalin's suggestion, based as it was on Mr.Wallace's idea, would place President Truman in the position of negotiating on terms outlined by the man he fired from his cabinet for "interfering" with foreign policy.
The administration is committed on one hand to all-out cold war to the finish. But it is confronted on the other with world opinion which desperately wants the two giants to bury the hatchet.
Premier Stalin's statement indicated the Soviet Union is prepared to press its "peace offensive" campaign to the limit in this American presidential election year. Nevertheless, the administration is not receptive because its Russia experts are convinced the Soviets are not sincere. Some high U.S. officials said they are not impressed either by Henry Wallace's program or Josef Stalin's proposal to use it as a basis of negotiation.
They said the Wallace program is only a restatement of general ideas to which everyone has subscribed in principle but for which it has been impossible to work out a formula with the Russians for practical application.
Mr. Wallace said he was "overwhelmed" by Premier Stalin's response to his peace program. He described the Soviet leader's reply as an offer by Russia "to sit down and find a way to end the cold war."
Postlethwaite Quits Alumni Post
Kenneth Postlithwaite, associate editor of the Alumni magazine and former organization director of the World War II memorial drive, has resigned his position to join the staff of the Nevada, Missouri, Dally Mail. His resignation is effective today.
Mr. Postlethwaite came to the University in 1946 after his discharge from the army.
Mrs. Bvrn Gives New Flag
A 5 by $91 \frac{1}{2}$ foot, all-wool flag has been donated to the Union by Mrs. Grace Byrn, hostess at the Union.
The flag will soon fly from the Union pole.
Little Man On Campus
By Bibler
G-127
Bilee
"So this is Oread hall, huh?"
Combined Glee Clubs Give Pleasing, Varied Concert
By CRYSTAL CHITTENDEN
First place winners at the meeting of the club May 13 were Carl Reed and J. W.Brown.
Irene Peabody and Joseph Wilkins assembled an entertaining program for the combined Men's and Women's glee club concert in Hoch auditorium Monday. The numbers ranged from religious pieces and Negro spirituals to popular selections.
Home Economics Club
In "Sourwood Mountain," a Kentucky mountain fiddle tune, the clubs
In "Sourwood Mountain," a rock formed the background music by humming and occasional hand-clapping on the offbeat, to the baritone solo by Gregory Simms.
The next meeting of the 4-No Bridge club will be 7.30 p.m. tomorrow in the Union ballroom.
4.No Bridge Meets In Union
Members of the Home Economics club will have a dinner at 6 p.m. tomorrow in the Union. The club will pay for all senior members.
"Polish Child's Morning Prayer," arranged by Gaul and sung by the Women's club, showed the keen balance that exists between the soprano and alto sections.
DuMont Reed, in a rich and flowing tenor, sang the solo in the Men's club number, "Turn Ye to Me," a Scotch folk song. He took two bows before the audience stopped applauding.
The Women's club presented Swift's arrangement of "Three Blind Mice." A woman's quartet sang "When You Wore A Tulip" and "When You Come to the End of a Lollipop."
Club Showed Balance
The final number, sung by the combined clubs, was "Down the Wind" by Tom Scott and presented Lewis Bayles, Doris Gilman, and Clarence Hooper in solo parts
The Men's club added to the program with its distinctive interpretation of the Negro spiritual, "Steal Away." For a lighter touch, 10 men with piano and string bass accompaniment sang the Negro spiritual, "Dry Bones," the chromatic song that amused the audience by repeating bones of the body from the toe up to the head and back. "Three Blind Mice."
"Three Blind Mice"
The new "Roof garden" at the Union will soon be sporting all the facilities of the sidewalk cafes, popular in Europe.
Furniture will arrive and be set out this week. Tables with umbrelias, lounging chairs, and "Rock-o-glider" chairs will be the main items. The "Roof garden" will be used this summer for plain lounging, playing bridge, chess, etc. in the afternoono. Organizations which want to have dances there must see Miss Hermina Zipple, director of the Union.
Committee Will Consider Exam Change Requests
The Calendar committee will meet to consider all written requests for changes in the final examination schedule, James K. Hitt, registrar, said. The deadline for requests was May 13, and requests received after that date will not be considered unless they are termed extremely urgent by the committee.
Roof Takes On European Air
Air conditioning units for the main cafeteria have arrived and will be installed soon for more comfort while eating during the hot months. The new annex and the fountain are also air conditioned.
WEATHER
Last Band Concert At 8:15 Tonight
Kansas—Partly cloudy today, tonight, and tomorrow with few widely scattered night-time thunderstorms west. Slightly warmer extreme east today and in east half tonight. High today near 90 low tonight 60-65.
The 115-piece University band will present its final concert at 8:15 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium.
The program will feature James Sellards, finds arts junior, in a cornet interpretation of Shubert's "Ave Maria," and Bill Sears, baton twirler, in a comedy number featuring numbers by the entire band include the First Movement from Symphony No. 5. "The New World" (Dvorsak) and the Polka and Fugue from the opera "Schwanda, the Bagpiper" (Weinberger).
Student activity books will admit.
Ten students will represent the University Y.M.C.A. in national intercollegiate summer projects this summer, D. Ned Linegar, executive secretary, said.
10 To Represent 'Y' In Projects
Robert H. Chesky, Y.M.C.A. president, will attend a school for Y.M.C.A. presidents at Columbia university. Edward J. Chesky, College junior, will also serve in social agencies in New York to study social problems of city life. He will act as a member of the summer service group.
John L. Eberhardt, vice-president will work on the Students-in-Government project in Washington, D.C. Donald O. Clark. College freshman will be a member of the Student Leadership Training seminar at College camp, Wis., directed by D. Ned Linegar, University Y.M.C.A. secretary. Albert L. Grimes will attend a leadership seminar at Estes Park, Colo.
Elmer R. Rusco, College freshman will serve on the Students-in-Industry project at Chicago. This group will be connected with the Chicago Theological seminary under the direction of Dr. Victor Obenhaus.
Humberto Trujillo, graduate student, and Philip E. Smith, College sophomore, will work on the international service seminars sponsored by the American Friends Service committee. Smith will work in Mexico.
Elmer E. Harvey, third year law and Mary Alice Harvey, College junior will participate on the Student-in - Cooperatives project in Minneapolis, Minn.
Five Are Elected To Kansan Board
Paul Warner, College senior, was elected chairman of the Kansan board for the year 1948-1949 at a meeting Monday.
Ruth Clayton, College junior was elected secretary.
Other students elected to the board were Harold Nelson, John Stauffer, and Harlan Lill, all College juniors.
The Twilight Twirl has been cancelled indefinitely by L. C Woodruff, dean of men. The Twirl was to have officially opened the "roof garden" at the Union tomorrow night.
Twilight Twirl Cancelled,
Union Activities Told
Ogden Jones, chairman of the Union operating board, said today that students who have purchased tickets for the dance will "certainly be refunded."
YW Secretary Resigns To Be Housemother
Mrs. Alford will be housemother at Kappa Alpha Theta sorority next year. She is a member of the sorority.
Mrs. Christine Alford, University Y.W.C.A. secretary, has announced her resignation effective at the end of the present school year.
Mrs. Alford came to the University three years ago from Sioux City, Iowa, where she was secretary of the Business and Professional Girls organization. She worked with the community Y. W. in Sioux City for six years.
As first president of the high school Y.W.C.A. at Topeka, she was a representative at the Estes Park Y.W. camp in 1915.
In addition to her regular duties, Mrs. Alford has done volunteer work in Kansas City and has helped with relief work, food and clothing drives. She was chairman of the Lawrence food drive in the spring of 1945.
Y. W.C.A. members presented Mrs. Alford with a candy dish and candel holders at the last executive meeting. The Y.M.C.A. Jayhawker recently paid tribute to the Y.W.C.A. secretary. "With enthusiasm, poise, and energy, Mrs. Alford has helped to direct the destinies of the University Y.W.C.A. The men of the University Y.M.C.A. wish to take this opportunity of expressing their appreciation for her help and encouragement."
'20 Graduate Stops In KC
Lt. Gen. Ennis C. Whitehead, '20,
stopped in Kansas City, Mo., Monday
night on the fourth stop of a flight from his Tokyo headquarters to Washington, D.C. He is flying in the "K.C. Headwind" a C-54 plane. Other stops on the route have been Wake Island, Honolulu, and Chandler, Ariz. The purpose of General Whitehead's visit in Washington was not disclosed, except that he would discuss "air force matters in Japan."
The general received his A.B. degree from the University in 1920. He lived on a farm near Westphalia, Kan. as a boy, and was graduated from Burlington High school.
On the return trip to Japan, he hopes to be able tivosthilktfuaoin hopes to be able to visit his father, J. E. Whitehead, in Westphalia. He also plans to take his son, Ennis C. Whitehead, Jr., back to Japan with him. The son will be graduated from the United State Military academy in June.
General Whitehead planned to leave Kansas City this morning. The main purpose of his overnight step was to rest his crew. His plane will land at Wright field, Dayton, Ohio, before taking off on the final leg to Washington.
Foster Is Awarded Research Fellowship
Charles V. Foster, graduate student and assistant instructor in chemical engineering, has been awarded a research fellowship to the University of Delaware.
Mr. Foster will start the fall term at that University. He will do research work sponsored by industrial firms, and will begin work on his doctor of philosophy degree in chemical engineering. He expects to finish work for his masters degree at the University of Kansas this summer.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1948
Official Bulletin
May 18,1948
Bacteriology department picnic,
5:30 p.m. today, Potter lake.
Sigma Tau election meeting, 7 to-
night. 210 Marvin. Keys arrived.
Mortar Board, 8:30 tonight, home of Mrs. Fred Ellsworth.
A. S.C. regular meeting, 7:15 to night, Pine room, Union.
Business School lecture: "Mechanics of Using Tax Reporter Service." Illustrated. R. C. O'Connor; Dallas, Texas, speaker; 7:30 tonight, 101 Snow.
Student U.N.E.S.C.O. council last meeting, 8 tonight, Lindley auditorium.
Ku Ku club, 7:30 tonight, 200
Fraud Struck, Election of officers.
College Faculty meeting scheduled for today postponed until May 25.
Ku Ku club, 7:30 tonight, 200
Jewish Student Union election and last meeting today.
Freshman Week committee, 4 p.m. tomorrow, 217 Frank Strong, to complete plans for next fall. All organizations wishing to participate should be represented.
K.U. Dames, 7:15 p.m. tomorrow.
Meet at Community building to go
to Sufflower K.U. Dames. Call 1322-
J for reservations.
International Relations club, 3 p.m. tomorrow, Pine room, Guests United Nations military staff committee members.
United World Federalists, 4 p.m. tomorrow, Pine room, Union. Visiting members of United Nations Military Staff committee.
A. S.C.E., 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, 101 Snow. Election of officers. Movie, Pan American Highway. Talk on registration by Prof. Bradshaw.
Everyone interested in learning square dancing, Recreation room, Union. 7 p.m. tomorrow.
Sociology club, 4 p.m. Thursday, 210 Frank Strong. Election of officers.
Tau Beta Pi final business meeting for semester, 7 p.m. Thursday, Hydraulics Lab.
University Forums Board to present classical movie, "Alexander Newsky," 7:30 p.m. Thursday, Fraser Theater. No admission charge.
A.V.C. business meeting, 7:15 p.m.
Thursday, 206 Frank Strong. Last
meeting of semester.
Le Cercle Francais, 5:30 p.m.
Thursday, home of Mrs. J. C. Malin,
1641 University drive, for wafer supper.
Notify French office, 115
Frank Strong, if planning to attend.
Gifts for box to France may be brought to meeting or left in office
Quill initiation and election, 8
p.m. Thursday, East room, Union.
Westminster Fellowship, 5:30 p.m.
Sunday, 1212 Oread Important.
University Daily Kansan
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year. (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., 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.
BILL'S GRILL JUICY STEAKS
Delicious Dinners Sandwiches—Malts
Open Daily 6 a.m.1:30 p.m Across from Court House
--recommend this type of work for any college student. It is good training for the acceptance of responsibility."
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
This Is More Fun Than Work, Student Baby-Sitters Say
Caring for professors' grade school children is a pleasant task.
Pat B. Gray, College sophomore from Bartlesville, Okla., said, "I've never done anything like this before but it has proved to be more fun than actual work." 'Susie,' the 11-year old daughter of Dean and Mrs. L. C. Woodruff, is an interesting child.
Loren Warner, College freshman, who is the companion of 9-year old "Ray" Nichols, said, "I definitely
"Susie likes to play games such as monopoly and checkers. She likes to play ball, and she certainly likes her radio. In fact I sometimes have to call upstairs twice to tell her that it's 8:30, her bed-time. She'll protest, 'But it's an awfully good program.'"
Ray is well-read for a youngster of his age, according to Warner. Sometimes Ray makes observations which startle even his parents, Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, and Mrs. Nichols. After reading that Jose Itubi was coming to Kansas City, Ray said, "You know, Itubi might be all right, but Petruilo is more renowned."
The students are usually at home on week nights studying and looking after the children, but both of them can have any night free if it is necessary.
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Read the Daily Kansan daily.
MAKE PLANS
NOW
THE
TO ATTEND
*
Presentation Of Trophies and Awards
*
DANNY BACHMANN and His Orchestra
SECOND ANNUAL
All-Student INTRAMURAL BALL
Saturday, May 22
9-12 p.m.
MILITARY SCIENCE BUILDING
Semi-Formal
$1.00 COUPLE
TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
Blaids Can Be Slimming If They're Tailored Right
Socially Speaking
Delta Chi Party
Delta Chi fraternity held its annual spring formal Saturday night.
Guests were Corinne Carter, Ruth Murphy, Mary Savory, Courtney Cowgill, Helen Harkrader, Carol Crow, Helen Duffin, Betty Crawford, Ann Angle, Shera Hardy, Patricia Hutchings, Gayle Day, Eva Zum Brunnen, Betty Brown, Shirley Varnum, Martham Brady, Peggy Circle, Barbara Kuhn, Evelyn Brunn, Gerry Tillery, Carol Ann Hastings, Barbara Pickens, Mary Alice Kuhn, Patricia Kellys, Arlene Williams.
Joan Bennett, Betty Lou Robinson,
Marge Colbert, Kathryn Hessling,
Emo Berry, Virele Reardan, Betty
Preble, Darlene Hindes, Joan Strowig,
Virginia Larson, Jerre Lyons, Mary
Lou Colyer, Rut Crow, Virginia
King, Pat Rutledge, Betty Galbraith,
Rosalie Bishop, Anne Hunter, Helen
Mahoney, Ann Preble, Donna Kempster,
Shirley Constantos, Phyllis
Wilson. Ruby Adams.
Sue Leeds and Donis Hughes, Columbia, Mo.; Harold Honux, Kansas City, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. Evan R. Stevens, Jr., Prof. and Mrs. Gerald M. Carney, Mr. and Mrs. Ed Hall, M. Carney, Mr. and Schrubauer, Mr. and Mrs. Ed-Lohr, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lane, Mr. and Mrs. Duane Harvey.
Chaperons were Mrs. Treva Brown, Mrs. T. Wayne Harris, and Mrs. H. J. Overholser.
ATO Formal
Alpha Tau Omega held its annual spring formal May 14 at the Lawrence Country club.
Guests were Marilyn Gibson, Mary Wilkins, Arlene Wray, Bea Senor, Aimee Guinotte, Barbara Brown, Shirley Rice, Betty Webb, Jo Anne Jacobs, Barbara Hume, Donna Harrison, Dorothy Miller, Patricia Brown, Portia Baldwin, Iriscilla Schachter, Edith Matti, Jon Midhub, Sally Stepper, Marynane Harwood, Bunny Denson, Joan Duvall, Charlene Lashbrook, Lee Pringle, Patricia Brubaker, Jane Wilcox, Margaret Dickinson, Ruth Henry, Anne Sheaffer, Lu Anne Powel
Kathleen Larson, Ruth Mitchell,
Rosalie Bishop, Gloria Wasson, Virginia Johnston, Mary Beth McNaily, Patricia Barron, Margaret Leisey, Alice Goldsworthy, Barbara Feth, Laurie Birmingham, Agnes Husband, Marjorie Seidmore, Mary Anne Brown, Ethel Pearl, Carolyn Carter, Delphine Bohnack, Patricia Harris, Marjorie Jostark, Virginia Osborne, Charlene Farrell, Dorothy Thomas, Jean Rankin, Lucille Murray, Doris Bondank, Isabel Faurot, Jeanie Biscann.
Ruth Williams, Zara Zoellner, Norma Mendenhall, Ada Watson, Barbara Zimmerman, Dolores Garrett, Wilmetta Bennett, Retta Desmond, Rose Evelyn Tuohey, Mr. and Mrs. William Wood, Mr. and Mrs. Don Taylor, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Martindell, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lysaugh, Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Link, Mr. and Mrs. Ted Heuer, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Haas, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Coffin, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Clevenger, and Mr. and Mrs. Glenn Shanahan.
Chaperson were Mrs. T. Wayne Harris, Mrs. Esther Reed, Mrs. H. J. Overholser, and Mrs. Wilma Hooper.
***
Kappa Epsilon Dinner
Mu chapter of Kappa Epsilon, national pharmaceutical sorority, held its annual Founders' Day formal dinner recently. Edith Schreiber and Marilyn Lindberg reported on the national convention held in Columbus, Ohio.
Mina McKelvy was installed as president; Rosemary Chamberlin, vice-president; Marilyn Lindberg, secretary; Phyllis Bice treasurer; historian Geraldine Bobbitt, social chairman; and Jamie Estlack, pledge trainer.
Associate members present were Miss Audrey Chapman, Mrs. Ralph Clark, Mrs. J. H. Burekhalter, and Mrs. J. Allen Reese.
New York, May 5-(UP)-The lines of plain needn't box you square.
That was the lesson taught by a program. The imaginative cutting of showing of fall woolen fabrics.
Plains, had top billing on the 27 manufacturers and three pattern companies proved again that the same square that makes one weirer look a little heavier can do a flattering, slimming job on another.
First of the slimming tricks is a bias-cut skirt, with the heavy lines of the plaid matching in V's at center front and back. A new trick on one plaid shirtwaist dress involved pie shaped insets on either side of the armhole at back and front, a means of breaking up a square pattern for softer flattery.
Stripes and plaids worked together to make two handsome ensembles. A widely spaced light green stripe on a dark green background was used for a full swinging coat over a dress in plaid of the same color combination, cut with a bias skirt. Straight cut plaid was used for a skirt teamed with a boxy, stripped jacket.
Pleats worked two miracles in another presentation. Both gave slimming qualities to the up and down line. One followed the slim fashion line with shallow all-around pleats. The other, broadly pleated from wide front and back panels, had a swing to its walk.
Clan plaids in the fall collection included Angus, Menzies hunting, MacDonald, ancient Frazer, ancient red Frazer, and hunting royal Irish. Imaginative plaids featured sunset-like color effects. Also in bright appearance were multi-colored checkerboard weaves and a group of handsome regimental stripes Muted pin checks in three colors completed the pattern picture.
Hopkins Hall Formal
The Hopkins hall spring formal Saturday was based on the theme of an old fashioned garden.
Guests were Ruth Ellen Crow, Horton, Barbara Jorns, Preston; Margery Scheutz, Coffeyville; Vern Birney, Walter Cheng, Joseph Davis, David Garlock, John Goddard, Richard and Harris, Harry Spalding, Walter Moore, Walter Mueller, Jess Mumford, Paul Pfortmiller, John Rowland, Horne Scarborough, Harvey Snapp, Jack Spalding. Don Walker, and John Wesley.
* *
Chaperons were Mrs. Elizabeth Stanley, Miss Louise Cochran, Dr. and Mrs. I. J. Jones, Miss Idabelle Bradley, and Wilbur Ostrum.
DG's Have Tea
The Delta Gamma's recently entertained their families with a tea. The program included the presentation of the "D G Pinafore," a skit of college life, and music by Harriet Harlow.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. E. M.
Paxton, Lawrence; Mr. and Mrs.
Fred B. Kubik and Mr. and Mrs.
Godfrey Harwell, Wichita; Mr. and
Mrs. A. J. Stanley, and Susan Stanley,
Bethel; Mrs. F. J. Harlow, Mrs.
Ralph Casford, Lylian Casford, Mrs.
R. B. Harness, and Mrs. C. K.
Kill, and Mr. and Mrs. G. R. Westmoreland, Kansas City, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. W. P. Hall and Mrs. H. K.
Allen, Topека; Mrs. E. G. Hill,
Independence, Mo.; and Mrs. R. B.
Webb, Blue Springs, Mo.; M. and
Mrs. J. B. Hartman, Mo.; B.
McCain, Coiffure, Dx. and
Mrs. J. M. Marks, Valley Falls; and
Mr. and Mrs. G. D. Hanna, Newton.
DG Spring Formal
Delta Gamma entertained with their annual spring formal May 14. Guests were Paul Brownlee, Dayton Molzen, Joe Levy, Edwin Hirleman, Paul Heinemann, Jack Haynes, Kenneth Smith, George Mastio, Robert Andrews, William Dodson, R.K. Ready, Leland Bohl, Robert Docking, William Conboy, William Haggard, Max Klewer, William Richardson, James Richardson, James Fishback.
Syd Bennett, John Kennedy, William Binter, Lynn Leigh, Jack Emerson, William Pierson, Ralph Brock, Tom Mayhew, Cliff Johnson, Lee Sauder, Wallace McKee, James Modelmog, Donald Relihan, George Newton, Cooper Rollow, Jack Boiz, Richard Blassdell, Jack Veatch, Don
Morning Devotions Ended Till Fall
Morning devotions in Danforth chapel have been discontinued for the rest of the semester. Ronald Gillespie, minister at Religious counsell, has announced.
Plans are being made by the Student Religious council for the morning devotions to be continued at the opening of the fall semester.
Startz And Moberly Win AlChE Problem Contest
John Startz and John Moberly were announced as winners of the local chapter of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers senior problem contest at a meeting May 12.
Truman Gove was elected the new president of the chemical engineers. Other officers are: Oliver Edwards, vice-president; Fred Hirsekorn, secretary; Edward Wolski, treasurer; and James Bowden, corresponding secretary.
Chaperons were Mrs. Gertrude Stuart, Mrs. Dorys Veatch, Mrs. H. P. Ramage, and Mrs. W. S. Shaw.
Curry, John Irwin, and Gene Robinson.
Guests at the ATO Sister-Daughter banquet at the chapter house Sunday were Barbara Brown, Lee Pringle, Agnes Husband, Nancy Haffner, Sally Sue Woodward, Zara Zoellner, Connite Kendall, Barbara Bihr, Patricia Link, Jacquelyn Logan, Jane Belt, Martha Willis, Betty Ann Sawyer, Beatrice Senor, and Betty Schrier.
ATO Banquet
\* \* \*
DU Pledge
Delta Upsilon announces the pledging of Ernest Crates, Kansas City, Kan.
Miss Dorothy Whitney, '28, is visiting her sister, Miss Marjorie Whitney, head of the design department. Miss Whitney is a research associate at the Texas Medical school in Galveston.
Miss Whitney Visits
WHAT IS IT?
*Pat. Pend.
PAGE THREE
Some call it a "WALLET"...
...it holds bills, coins, cards, photos
... it holds cigarettes, lipstick, mirror,
keys
We call it . . . The Mighty Midget
Reg. U.S. Pat. Off.
Some call it a "BAG"...
"SWING-A-BOUT"*
BUT call it what you will, there's nothing like it for . . .
It's perfect to have . . .
It's perfect to give . . .
Shopping, at play, on the campus
Cobra Plastic in white, green, brown, black $2.98 plus taxes
Handbag dept.—Main floor
Things Must Be Tough
The Lion's Den Has Robbits
Weaver
Syracuse, N. Y.-(UP) — Mayor Frank J. Costello is concerned over the state of the Syracuse zoo.
"The leopard was bought 20 years ago," he said, "and at that, second-hand.
"The puma died in October."
"The baboon is dead."
"The baboon is dead."
The old lion has cataracts.
The elephant has contracts.
"The jaguar is the only lively animal up there, and he bit the tail off the leopard.
"We have rabbits in the lion's den and turtles in another cage.
"Something has to be done."
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
You Are Always Welcome at SNAPPY LUNCH
for
Hot Chili Sandwiches Soup Malts
1010 Massachusetts
Learn New Square Dance
Chronographs a Specialty
Instruction was given in the new square dance, Sally Goodin, at the Square dance club meeting recently, Texas star, grapevine twist, dive for the oyster, birdie in the cage, and two gents swing with an elbow swing were reviewed.
L. G. Balfour Co.
414 W. 14th Ph. 307
The final club meeting this semester will be at 7 p.m. tomorrow.
Major Repairs Slightly Longer
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10
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Baby Brownie Special ... 3.16
Cine Kodak 8 ... 64.17
Revere 8 Magazine ... 127.50
Revere 88 ... 77.50
Bell & Howell Sporster ... 102.61
Bell & Howell Auto 8 ... 296.23
Bell & Howell Auto Load, 16 mm ... 186.67
Victor Model 5, 16 mm f 1.5 ... 251.50
Get Your Film HereLeave Them For Careful Finishing
Hison's
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Phone 41
PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 18. 1948
League-Leading Nebraska Wins Easily From Kansas
Kansas dropped the first game of a twin bill to the League leading Nebraska Cornhuskers 7 to 1 Monday on the Stadium diamond. The loss marks the third time this season that the Jayhawkers have bowed to the Cornhuskers, having dropped two at Lincoln earlier. Kansas now has won 3 and lost 10 in conference play.
Nebraska showed why they are.
Nebraska showed why they are leading the league in the second as they marked up three on five hits, two going for extra bases. Bob Grogan, first man up, started the fireworks with a solid double, and took third on Dick Bertuzzi's bobble. Wes Maser singled and Bob Cerv blasted a triple to deep center.
Lou Hammer, Jayhawker starter, retired Bob Schleicher on a fly to Neil Shaw, but Buzz Powley and Jim Sandstedt followed with one-baggers. Shaw, on a beautiful throw, nailed Powley at third, then Dil Blatchford was out second to first to retire the side. The Huskers added one in the sixth and two in the seventh off Hammer and one in the ninth off reliefer Karl Ebel.
Score On An Error
The Jayhawkers took advantage of two Nebraska errors coupled with a single to score their lone run. Charlie Medlock led off with a single and coasted to second as Maser momentarily fumbled the ball. After John Fencyk had whiffed, Scott Kelly, pinchting for Hammer slapped one through the shortstop's legs, scoring Medlock. The rally was choked off as Shaw was picked off first and Lou Deluna popped to short.
Ehel Believes Again
Kansas got eight hits off Husker hurler Sandstuck, but they failed in the clutches, leaving eight men stranded. Paul Gilkison, clean-ur batter, continued in a slump, having gone hitless in his last eleven appearances.
Karl Ebel, big right-hander, came into the game in the eighth and allowed one run on no hits. Cerv tallied when he walked, stole second, took third when Ebel threw wild attempting to pick him off, and stole home as Fencyk threw to second trying to nip Powley who had walked. Ebel, who gave up throwing the javelin to take a fling at baseball has made two appearances as a reliefer and has shown up well for his wildness.
The two teams will play again today at 3:30 p.m. Dick Gilman will probably be on the mound for Russ Sehon's crew with Tom Novak, husky football star, opposing him. The box score.
NEBRASKA
AB R H
Blatchford, c 5 0 2
Hays, 2b 3 0 1
Denker, 3b 5 0 0
Grogan, ss 5 2 3
Maser, rf 4 2 1
Cerv, cf 4 2 1
Schleiger, 1b 5 1 0
Powley, 1f 3 0 1
Sandstedt, p 5 0 2
KANSAS AB R I
Shaw, cf 3 0 1
DeLuna, 1b 3 0 1
French, ss 3 0 1
Gilkison, rf 3 0 1
Spring, rf 1 0 1
May, 3b 3 0 1
Bertuzzi lf 4 0 1
Medlock, 2b 4 1 1
Fencyk, c 4 0 1
Hammer, p 1 0 1
Ebel, p 0 0 1
*Kelly 1 0 1
**Mabry 1 0 1
32 1 1
*Batted for Hammer in seventh.
*Batted for Ebel in ninth.
R H E
KU 000 000 100—1 8 9
NU 030 001 201—7 11 4
But That's In Missouri
Jefferson City, Mo.-(UP)—Hubert Wheeler, state commissioner of education, reports that there are 823 school teachers in rural Missouri who have never been to college. The average teacher's salary in Missouri the past year was $1,562.
Turnabout's Fair Play, Etc.
Santa Fe, N. M.—(UP—The rent control office here was evicted from its quarters when the general land office in the federal building office, whose room it has occupied in the federal building here, said it needed the space.
10
DICK ASHLEY, former high school golfing wizard for Chanute, is now a capable performer for Bill Winey's Jayhawker squad.
Boston Belts Bum Hurlers
New York, May 18—(UP)—Now is the time for Brooklyn's flag-defending Dodgers to settle down—or else forget about any designs on the 1948 National League bunting.
Although the club's official brass section still refuses to view with the fact remains that the play generally has been mediocre at best.
It was Boston, putting on an old-fashioned slugging demonstration in a 12 to 3 triumph over the Brooklyn last night, mistreating five Dodger throwers and in the masterminding department Billy Southworth had it all over the Dodger pilot, Leo Durocher.
Snider, Campanella Get Train Tickets
Southworth had his kids dropping successful squeeze bunts, running out their hits for extra bases on a diamond that had the color and consistency of fresh chocolate cake icing, and in general playing heads-up ball.
The Phils moved into fourth place with a 7 to 1 triumph over the Giants at Philadelphia in which Blix Donnelly pitched four-hit ball and contributed a triple to the winning 10-hit attack. Rookie John Blatnik led the Phils with three hits.
New York, May 18—(UP) The train ticket tremors shook the major leagues today as clubs slashed their squads in a rush to meet the 25-player limit by the deadline Thursday. Brooklyn led the parade, shipping eight players to various minor league farm clubs. The Cubs, Phillies and Cards followed suit.
There were no other major league ames scheduled.
The Dodgers, who had been playing with a Notre Dame-sized squad, pared down to 26 players. One of them was outfieldier Duke Snider, the man who was supposed to make the Flatbush faithful forget Dixie Walker. He heads for Montreal.
Roy Campanella, the Negro catcher will be the first member of his race to play in the American Association when he reports to St. Paul. Infielder Ramazzotti went to St. Paul along with Campanella.
The Dodgers still must shear one more player by Thursday midnight. Outfielders Gene Hermanski and Marvin Rackley and first baseman Preston Ward were all prospects, with Hermanski good trading bait.
The Cardinals sent John Bucha, a the-year-old rookie, catches for Houston. He hasn't past half
Scalpel, 5-Iron Are
Tradition For Dick Ashley
Golfers and doctors seem to run in the Ashley family—the Ashleys of Chanute, that is.
Kansas's own Dick Ashley, one of the vital cogs in the Jayhawker golf team and an ambitious pre-medical student, comes from a long line of parbusters and physicians.
Dick, who is eagerly looking forward to the Big Seven golf tournament at Lincoln this weekend, modestly nominates his dad as the "best golfer in the family." That would be Dr. Sam Ashley, of Chanute, who long ago discovered that medicine and golf went together like Siamese twins.
Two Golfing Brothers
Dick, an unassuming, rawboned, six-footer also has two older brothers who are practicing medicine in Chanute. They, true to the Ashley tradition, are also handymen around the fairways. Dr. Ed Ashley was cutting capers with the Kansas golf squad back in 1934 and 35, while Dr. Glenn Ashley earned his letter in golf at K.U. in 1938.
Although Dick has yet to prove his ability in the field of medicine, he doesn't have to doff his hat to any member of his family when it comes to playing golf. 3 Times State Champ
3 Times State Champ
The baby brother at 23, Dick was state high school sand gregs champions for three consecutive years while playing for Chanute high school. He is the first player in Kansas to accomplish this feat.
As a youngster of 15 years, he won the Garnett Invitational tournament. A few years later he really hit his stride and set the course record there, shooting a brilliant 134, 10 under par for 36 holes.
Dick went on to cop the Chanute Invitational the three years he competed—1942, 1946, and 1947. In service, Dick managed to keep his game fresh by playing on the Rapid City, S.D., Army Air base team.
Kansas City before being eliminated.
Had to Adjust Game
The past summer he took a crack at the big-time circuit and went to the semi-finals of the Mid West P.G.A. pro-amateur tournament in
When Ashley came to the University in 1947 he had to adjust his game to meet the difficult change from sand greens to grass greens. Asked how he found the switch, he replied "It was terrible."
"It's all the difference in the world," he explained, screwing up his tanned face. "Sand greens are smaller for one thing. A 20-foot putt on sand is a rarity, but on grass I have had putts from 35 yards out. Good golfers consistently one putt sand greens.
"Another thing, on sand you don't get that crazy roll that you do on grass. When playing sand greens you don't have to be afraid of hitting your approach shots too hard because the soft sand cuts down the roll of the ball."
Says He Needs Weight
Dick belongs to the school that believes the heaviest golfers are generally the most successful. The sophomore links star, who weighs a light 160 pounds considering his height, said he could use a few more pounds.
"Weweight in the right places means added stamina, and, believe me, that extra bit of stamina may mean the difference of a couple of strokes in those 36 hole matches. Some of the lighter boys appear to tire at the end of long matches. I know that I do."
Asked what part of his game gives him the most trouble, Dick replied without hesitating, "That short game around the green—putting and short approach shots. My woods don't give me much trouble."
Guy W. Keeler Elected To National Extension Group
Guy V. Keeler, director of the University lecture course bureau, was one of four elected to the executive committee of the National University Extension association at its national meeting in Chicago last week.
Mr. Keeler's election was for a three-year term. Extension divisions of 67 schools belong to the association.
Call K.U. 376 with your Want Ads
German Film Will Be Shown
At 4 p.m. Thursday In Fraser
"Emil und die Detektet," a German film, will be shown at 4 p.m Thursday in Fraser theater.
The comedy is the last picture the department of German is sponsoring this semester. No admission fee will be charged. The picture has English sub-titles.
Historians have gained knowledge of 15th and 16th Century Persian dress and customs from clay tile murals depicting scenes of everyday life, found in Persian ruins.
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VARSITY ENDS TONITE "Under California Stars" TUESDAY, 4 Days Gangway for Action
DANGEROUS YEARS
WILLIAM HALOP • ANN E. TODD
Hit No.2
GENE AUTRY in CALL OF THE CANYON
'Canadian Mounted'
PATEE
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George BRENT
Priscilla LANE
"SILVER QUEEN"
WEDNESDAY, 4 days
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2nd Hit Jane WYATT Richard DIX "THE KANSAN"
TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Phi Delt To Finals; Protest ATO Win
Betas Are Edged Out, 3-2, In Seventh As Clay Hedrick Bests Bill Conboy
J. R. Perkins singled home El Marquis in the last half of the seventh innning Monday to give Phi Delt, defending champion, a thrilling 3 to 2 victory over the Beta's and qualify them for the finals of Fraternity league IM softball. ATO defeated Phi Gam 10 to 9 in the other semi-final game which is under protest. Dine-A-Mite won a re-scheduled first round independent playoff contest from Spooner Thayer.
The Phi Delt victory halted a five-game Beta winning streak. Clay Hedrick, Phi Delt hurler, stymied the losers on five hits while Bill Conboy, Beta fireballer, scattered six hits.
Beta opened the scoring in the top of the second. R. D. Moore blasted a triple and scored on a fielders choice. Phi Delt evened the count in the fourth when Loren Powell doubled, moved to third on Hedrick's bunt, and came home on Sam Harris' long fly.
The Phil's took a 2 to 1 advantage in the fifth as Lou Goehring walked, went to second on Ed Marquis' sacrifice, and tallied on Dale Oliver's line single.
Beta knotted the count in the sixth on Hal Hunter's home run blast into deep center. The Beta's went down one-two-three in the top of the seventh, then Perkin's single broke up the ball game. Perkins and Marquis each collected two of the Phi Delt's six hits.
P. D.
010 001 0—2 5 ;
000 110 1—3 6 ;
ATO scored twice in the last half of the eighth inning to nip Phi Gam 10 to 9 in a bitterly contested battle. Neal Post's triple scored Wally Miller in the top of the frame and had given the losers a one-run advantage.
Dave Nesser started off the ATO eighth by reaching first on an infield error. He scored on Joe Levy's two-bagger and the game was tied 9 to 7. Chet Lankiewski was then safe on another infield boot. After Jack Eskridge flied out to the second baseman, Levy attempted to steal home but was tagged out.
The ball became lost at home as several players gathered around home plate and in the confusion Laniewski scored. Phi Gam contested the score, maintaining that time had been called when Levy was called out. Final decision on the matter is to be reached in the intramural office today.
The game was tied at the end of the second, fifth, and eight innings. Phi Gam grabbed a 1 to 0 lead in the first but ATO tie it up with a run in the second and jumped into the lead with three more tallies in the third. Laniewski's three-run homer accounted for the runs.
Phi Gam counted once in the fourth and deadlocked the game with a three-run outburst in the fifth. ATO again took the lead in the sixth by one run.
Phi Gam smashed out five hits in the seventh to score three runs and command a short 8 to 6 lead but ATO deadlocked the game with two more runs in its half of the frame.
**PG**
130 31 17 16
**GO**
107 9 1 K
PG 100 130 31 9 16
ATO 013 101 22 10 14
Dine-A-Mite snagged its first playoff victory by outlasting Spooner Thayer 20 to 16 in a loosely-played tilt. The two squads collected a total of 39 safeties.
What Was Good For Grandpa
Is Good Enough For Me
Nespcem, Wash. — (UP) — When this Indian reservation was connected with the outside world by telephone for the first time, at least one member of the Colville tribe chose not to talk on "the white man's smoke signal."
Chief Billy Curlew refused an invitation by telephone officials to be the first to speak over the "voice wire."
Chief Curlew said he was satisfied with "moccasin telegraph."
The winners scored heavy in late innings to gain the win. They were on the short end of a 10 to 4 count going into the fifth. Then they broke loose for eight runs, added three more in the sixth, and pushed in five more in the ninth to come from behind and take the game.
Leading hitter for the Mites was Ralph Moore who collected five hits in six appearances, including a double and a triple. W. R. Good captured honors for Spooner with four hits in five trips. He belted a homer and two doubles.
Mites 400 803 5-20 19 5
ST 334 024 0-16 20 3
Frosh Win Class Title
Having beaten the Seniors in their first game the Freshmen completed the job of convincing the upper-classmen of their football superiority Monday by trouncing the Juniors 13 to 3 for the class title.
The Sophomores and Seniors fought it out for third place with the Sophomores finally pulling out a 10 to 9 win.
Carter, Fresh pitcher, struck out 14 of the 22 batters she faced and limited the Juniors to seven scattered hits. The Frosh got to van der Smissen, Junior moundsman, for 18 hits. Carter and Smith, Freshman battery mates, also led their team's offense, each getting three hits.
The Seniors held a 6 to 5 lea-
ver over the Sophomores in the fourth
inning when Burnham, Sophomore
second baseman, doubled to drive
Inkinson, Sophomore pitcher,
with the tying run.
The Seniors came back to score three in the top of the fifth, but the Sophomores went them one better with Burnham again accounting for the crucial run with a home run.
No 'No Vacancy' Signs In Peguaming, Mich.
Pequaming, Mich.—(UP)—Pequan- ing is one town in the United States that has an over-supply of housing.
Reversing the sad story of "no vacancy" that the house-hunter usually hears, only 10 of Pequaming's 70 neat, frame houses are occupied. The others are begging for tenants.
This attractive town in Michigan upper peninsula once was a hustling lumber settlement, built by the Ford Company to its automobile manufacturing needs.
When the supply of timber was exhausted, the company moved out, leaving a skeleton community of 40 people where there were formerly 400.
We Done Beat Kansas Again!
Toot The Whistles, Milton
Kansas State college officials' were toying with the idea of declaring a school holiday today following the Wildcats' first tennis victory over the Jayhawkers in ten years Monday. The score was 4 to 3, and the match was played on the Wildcats courts.
Oh, Yes. The Wildcats' golf team also beat our boys, $13\frac{1}{4}$ to $4\frac{1}{2}$.
Now, about the tennis liking:
Dick Richards and Glenn Tongier,
our number one and two players
respectively stayed at home to
study, but they whipped the subs
fairly and squately. Here are the
scores to prove it.
Louis Thompson, K. S., defeated Hervey Macferran, 6-1, 6-0. Dick Cray, Kansas, trounced Roy Sherrill, 6-4, 6-3, and Charlie Carson, Kansas, defeated Marvin Dungan, 4-6, 6-1, 6-2; Dave Cowley defeated Dick Powers, 6-3, 8-6. We had them 3 to 1 at this point. Jim Neumann of K-State defeated Art Fitch, 6-1, 6-4.
In the doubles we really fell apart Sherrill-Thompson defeated Carson-Macferran, 6-2, 6-4, but Cray-Cowley came near pulling the match out of the fire before losing to Powers-Neumann, 5-7; 6-1, 7-5.
Now, about that golf match. Of course we lost, but our regular golfers thought it was more important to win than to lose. Anyway, they threw a fellow
Today's Pitchers
American League
Washington (Haeffner 1-4) at Chi-
cago (Mmpl. hn2-2)
New York (Reynolds 5-0) at St Louis (Kaplin 13).
Philadelphia (Brissis 3 - 2) at Cleveland (Black 0-0), night game.
Boston (Harris 1-2) at Detroit
(Fruits 3-0)
Pittsburgh (Lombardi 0-2) at Boston
(Voisele 4-6), night game
St. Louis (Hearn 1-2) at Brooklyn (Branca 2-3)
Cincinnati (Vander Meer 1-4) at New York (Poat 3-1), night game Chicago (Borowy 1-2) at Philadelphia (Simmons 1-2)
How's That Again?
Milwaukee — (UP) — A woman called the Pabst theater box office and asked. "What are you going to have Friday?"
"Horowitz," replied the theater manager.
"What?" asked the caller.
"Vladimir Horowitz," the manager repeated.
"Oh, that's nice," she said. "Who's in it?"
Consumption of canned baby food has jumped annually from 13 pounds per child under three years of age to 45 pounds in the past seven years, Cornell university farm economists estimate.
Russell Stover Candies Always Fresh
Stowits REXALL Store
College Students OPPORTUNITIES FOR YOUNG WOMEN
Artists
For designing or lettering HALLMARK Greeting Cards.
Verse Writers To compose and write. Greeting Card Verse.
Office Positions For Stenographers, Typists, and Office Technicians.
Permanent Full-Time Positions in our Kansas City Office.
HALL BROTHERS, Inc.
Manufacturers of HALLMARK Cards
Kansas City, Missouri
2505 Grand Avenue
named Don Bishop at us right off the bat and he shot an eight-underpar 62 (sand greens), just one stroke off the course record. That was mighty discouraging for our Bob Meeker, who did all right for himself on grass greens. But Bob could not tie the course record so he lost to Bishop, 0-3.
In case you are interested here are the rest of the scores: Murray Regier, Kansas, defeated Junior Lovell, 3-0; Bob Moss, Kansas State, defeated Carl Markwell, 3-0; Mike Myers, Kansas State, defeated Glenn 2-1, 2-1; Bishop-Lovell defeated Regier-Meeker, $2\frac{1}{4}$ -$1\frac{1}{2}$; Moss-Myers defeated Scott-Markwell, 3-0.
Before Pearl Harbor, American women spent about 30 million dollars a year buying perfume. Now, according to The American Magazine, they spend some 60 million dollars.
MEN:
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PAGE SIX
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1948
The Editorial Page
It's Not Too Late
"Spring-itis" is lurking on the campus with the hope of catching the student body with its grade-point average down.
At this time each year, all of us have the urge to toss the books aside and lead "a fuller life" resting quietly under some shady tree. The cankermyers nearly ruined the shade but the large buildings will come in for some use to keep the hot rays of the sun from interrupting the mid-afternoon doze enjoyed by a great number of students.
Sufferers of an attack of "spring-
itis" seldom realize that they have
become victims of this not-so-
strange malady until all of their re-
ports, term papers, notebooks, etc.
fall due and they haven't even be-
gun to get their's prepared. Con-
sequently, when the student wakes
up to what is happening to him, he
has an up-hill pull to get the work
done before finals begin. Much of
the time that should be spent in prepa-
ration for the final exam is used to
catch up on work that has been
slighted by students who have found
it more pleasant to bask in the sun.
With only six more actual school days, it is time to take stock of the situation and fit the pieces together. Some students will find that considerable damage has been done; others will not have been hit so hard but their work will be impaired.
To those who find that they have slipped miserably behind, please take a word of advice-if needed. There is yet time for you to meet satisfactorily the requirements for passing most of the courses if you will only apply yourself and discover the meaning of hard work. This is your zero hour. There is no time to waste. School is serious business and work. The race cannot be won if the pace is cut in the home stretch. Make up your mind that you will try to recoup your losses and you will be amazed at the results. Throw off "spring-itis" and get to work. It's not too late.
University
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Daily Hansan
Member of the Kansas Press Assm. Na-
tional Ad-
mission Assm., and the Associated Collegiate
Press. Represented by the National Ad-
ministration. 420 Madison Ave.
New York City.
Editor-in-Chief ... David H. Clymer
Managing Editor ... Cooper Rollow
Astt. Man. Editor ... Clarke M. Thomas
Astt. Man. Editor ... Geyer M.
City Editor ... John Stauffer
Astt. City Editor .. James Beatty
Astt. City Editor .. Richard Barton
Telegraph Editor .. James Robinson
Astt. Tel Editor .. Hal Nielson
Astt. Tel Editor .. Bill Palmer
Sports Editor .. Paul Zeh
Sports Editor .. James Jones
Business Manager Bill Alderson
Adv. Manager Paul Warner
Clr. Manager Paul Warner
Grand Marshal Bill Bunting
Class. Adv. Mgr Ruth Clayton
TAXI Service
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For Fast Friendly Service Call UNION CAB CO.
Failing Again
People pay little attention to the vice-presidential nominations. Nobody seems to care who becomes the vice-presidential nominee. That is, at least, nobody except the national delegates, and even they let it ride until the presidential nomination has been made.
Despite this attitude of insignificance toward the second highest office in the country, seven of the 32 men who have become president of the United States, have been raised from the vice-presidency following the death of the chief-executive. Thus, 22 per cent of our presidents have been considered insignificant when nominated.
As a result of this indifferent attitude, the United States has suffered from poor leadership. Zachary Taylor, who had a keen political insight, was succeeded in 1850 by Millard Filmore, who was considered a colorless and weak president.
Abraham Lincoln, who had a profound sense of the importance of government by, for, and of the people, was succeeded in 1865 by Andrew Johnson, Johnson lacked tact, patience, and self-control to be an effective president.
The latest death of a president in office is, of course, that of Franklin D. Roosevelt. Roosevelt's success in bringing America safely through the greatest depression and the greatest war in world history was an accomplishment of the highest statesmanship.
Harry Truman, his successor, although doing his best, has failed miserably in following up the standards set by Roosevelt.
In spite of the many successes of a vice-president to the presidency, and in spite of the 1945 succession yet fresh in our memories, we are again failing to stress the importance of a proper vice-presidential nomination.—Keith H. Ferrell
Medical men have recently stated that one cause of baldness is the lack of fatty tissue in the scalp. At least, if they cannot remedy baldness, they seem to be trying to console the victim that he isn't a fat head.
Avdacious Harold Stassen was trying to pick some plum out of Robert Taft's political orchard.
Letters To The Editor -
Agnes M. Brady
Assist. Prof. of
Romance Languages
Vulgar Latin
We hope that we can later show a more romantic film on "life as she (sic.) is lived," instead of a documentary file of that desperate and dangerous struggle in Europe. This "education department not only sponsored a file showing horrible life as "she (sic.) was lived" in Italy for more than five years, but also provided its students with an opportunity to hear a foreign language spoken. The Italian of this film is clear, beautifully enunciated, and sincerely spoken.
Dear Editor:
If the Romance language department (not the department of "Romances") had written the comments for Life magazine on the "violence and plain sexiness" of "Open City," it could appropriately claim the right since "Romance" refers to those languages that developed from vulgar Latin, and "vulgar" refers to the speech of the common people (who may, or may not be, "romantic"). (The students of political science liked the Life ads so much and chuckled so loud just outside our offices as they read the glowing accounts written down with misspelled words describing the movie that we had to take the posters and ads away.)
We hope "Yours-in-Envy" was not disappointed in the film because it actually had little of the "violence and plain sexiness" attributed to it. The advertisers (not the Romance language department) had to say something to attract political science students to come out of their ivory towers to witness the realistic and powerful account of the spiritual triumph of a conquered people over their brutal oppressors. The Romance language department didn't come out of its ivory tower to give an example, because it does not recommend living in "ivory towers," or other places of isolation.
Thank goodness for democracy where a man can do as his wife pleases.
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at the
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Serving K.U. Students For 44 Years.
THE COLLEGE JEWELER
809 MASS.
Oversight-Sorry
In the "College Daze" story which appeared in the May 13 issue of the Daily Kansan, the name of a gentleman who contributed greatly to the success of the production was omitted—the orchestra leader. I trust the omission was inadvertent for Charlie Kassinger's direction was thoroughly capable, and certainly worthy of mention.
Charlie O'Connor College junior
Hope For Peace
Dear Editor:
We have no great words on this great occasion but would like to humbly offer our thanks to the American people for their support in the establishment of the new Jewish state of Israel. The United States government, by recognizing the new state, reaffirms its policy of supporting the rights of the little peoples of the earth and does its part in supporting Democracy in the Middle East. My friends and I, therefore, sincerely thank the people of K.U. and of Lawrence for their share in and sympathy with this great undertaking. Let us hope that there will soon begin an era of peace in the Holy Land.
Mel Leiberstein Graduate student
eyes
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
-
WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES
Large Selection of Distinctive Frames Lawrence Optical Co.
Expert Watch Repair
Guaranteed Satisfaction 1 week or less service WOLFSON'S 743 Mass.
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Remington portable typewriter with carrying case Regular price $84.27 with excise tax Sale Price $69.50 with excise tax
98
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48
Ice Cream at its Best
It's delicious!
Velvet Freeze Ice Cream A SPECIAL TREAT-RICH FLAVORS
742 Mass.
Call 720
J. Paul Sheedy\* Switched to Wildroot Cream-Oil Because He Flunked The Finger Nail Test
Panda
ALL panda-monium just broke loose for this little guy with the hairy ears and two black eyes. Somebody switched his Wildroot Cream-Oil! You may not be a panda — but why not see what Wildroot Cream-Oil canda? Just a little bit groomes your hair neatly and naturally without that plastered-down look. Relieves annoying dryness and removes loose, ugly dandruff. And Wildroot Cream-Oil helps you pass the Fingernail Test! It's non-alcoholic . . . contains soothing Lanolin. Get a tube or bottle of Wildroot Cream-Oil hair tonic at any drug or toilet goods counter today. And always ask your barber for a professional application. In case there's a panda in your house—keep some Wildroot Cream-Oil handa for him!
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TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Mayberry To Leave For Washington
Q
"Although I am not too happy about leaving K.U., my home state of Kansas, and my relatives, I am enthusiastic about my new position in Washington," says M. W. Mayberry, assistant professor of botany.
Professor Mayberry is leaving the University this fall to accept a position as associate professor in the Central Washington College of Education. at Ellensburg, Wash.
The life of a college professor isn't all cream, according to Professor Mayberry. He says that in 1930 he took on three jobs. He got married; began work on his Ph.D. at the University; and took the position of assistant instructor and technician in the botany department. "All on a salary of $1,350 a year" he adds.
It took him ten years from the time of his graduation from Washburn college, Topeka, in 1926 to receive his Ph.D. from the University in 1936. During this time he spent two years teaching high school in Oklahoma and the remainder studying and instructing at the University.
"I attribute a great deal of my success to Dr. W. C. Stevens, professor emeritus, who was head of the department when I entered, and who encouraged and aided my efforts," says Professor Mayberry.
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Phone KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be received at the office during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journalism department is available on m. the day before publication is desired.
Classified Advertising Rates
Classified Advertising Hates
One Time Five
day days days
25 words or less 35c 65c 90c
additional words 1c 2c 3c
For Sale
MERCURY, '47 model, 4-door sedan. Radio, heater, rubber cushions, and new tires. A clean car. $2,000. Inquire Ist and Michigan Street. Hunkziel. Phone 2847-M.
MINIATURE Speed Graphic, Tessar-F4.5.
Speedgun Flash, Kalart Range-Finder.
seem holders, pack, adaptor,
and film Louisiana. $25.18 L. H. Shift-
man, 1140 Louisiana.
UMBER formal with white coat. Size SUMUER 1940 BUICK coupe. New muffler, battery, seal covers, water pump. Good cond. 1329 Connector or call 2124-IM. See 124 1329 Connector or call 2124-IM.
HOLLYWOOD double bed, bookcase,
three-way floor lamp, end table, dining
room table. Just like new. Price real-
est at $105 India. Call 116-800-24
at 105 India.
47 MOTO-SCOCTO in excellent condition call 3238, Dan Wander, 1247 Ohio, 2147 call 3238
MAN'S GENIUNE Palm Beach spring formal, size 38, 1 pair of white trousers and 1 black. Like new. 916 Ohio, Phone 2621. 18
SOLVE YOUR housing problem by seeing this 20 foot ironwood trailer home. Sleeps 4. Ventilatin airwings, all aluminum floors. Jacketsocks from campers. R, W, Ouim, 2007, La.
1937 CHEVEROLET tutor coach. Black
tires, and good tires. Black
Rangers. Rough roads.
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 HTFD
Business Service
THESES typing wanted by teacher-typist
Spelling. Will also do term reports. Work
with students.
Typing. Will also do term reports. Work with students on graduation gifts. Parker pen sets and leather brief cases. See them at the Student Union Book Store. 24
TYPING: For better grades have your students accurately typed. Phone 213-83-M. 729 Missouri, Mrs. Earl Wright. 24
DOES your pen need repairing? We have a complete pen repair department with an experienced repairman at Student Union Book Store.
TYING: Reasonable rates. Call 3256J4.
1930 Kentucky 20
FOR GRADUATION it's jewelry! Buy from K.C. Jewelry Manufacturers. They have high-quality jewelry and delivery, contact John Basnett, 2084, 19 ATTENTION! Sorority and fraternity pins, rings, and special jewelry manufactures. Contact John Basnett. Jewelry Manufacturers. Free pick up and delivery, contact John Basnett, 2084, 19 TYPING: For better grades have your phone neatly and accurately typed. Phone 2193M, 729 Missouri, Mrs. Earl Wright.
TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Telephone 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. 20
TYPING done: Term papers, reports, specimens. Accurate work. Attenance at reasonable prices. Call 1986-W. Rates 2, 1101 Tennessee.
TALOR-MADE suits $3.50 to $65.00. Ex-
cellent quality, fast delivery.
Harbert &erson, Tailor Shop, $112.50
NEW vacuum cleaners for rent. Attachments included. $1.50 per day. Al Brooks Sweeper Co., 831% Mass. Ph. 1104 beween 9 and 12 a.m.
Wanted
INTERESTED in a good used jeep.
Sleigh, phone 2082. 18
WANT to contact woman or couple going to or near Washington, D.C., by car, bus, or rail, about May 28 or 30. Phone 2906-R. 24
A PERMANENT part-time typist. Phone
975. 21
VETERAN STUDENT and wife desire two or three room furnished apartment for pet fall. No children or pets. Wet school two more years. Bob Burwell, 3021.
DANCE every Saturday night at Odd Fel-
re orchestra. Informal. Joe Langwright
orchestra. Rites
Miscellaneous
HOUSE Trailer for summer term. See
George Wrighton, 1002 New Hampshire
Hospice.
For Rent
George Knight, too. New Hampshire after 4:00 p.m. 20
SUMMER session rooms for boys. 1234 Oread. Phone 2917-9. 24
TWO double and one single room for summer and available for fall-double $12.50 each. single $15.00. Mrs. J. N. Gorham, 1131 Kentucky, phone 1423. 20 MEN'S room for summer and fall; one double. Singles and doubles. See after 6:00 at 1232 Louisiana ROOMS for rent for summer—includes two cool basement rooms. Two blocks from campus, one block from bus. 1339 Ohio. W. P. Meek.
LARGE well-furnished rooms for me, it 1218 Mississippi. One-half block from Building. Summer school and fall. (948) Jack Campbell, 730; for 121
formation.
ROOM FOR men for orat fail
foramen porch. Call 1426M
see at 801 Indiana.
**TOOMS FOR GIRLS:** Summer school is one, $20.90 a month. Mrs. Wilson, 1225 S. 3rd St.
Ohio. Phone 562-309.
ROOMS for girl summer students. One block from campus. $15.00 per month. 124 Louisiana, phone 1784-J. 28 Louisville, phone 2402-B for girls and two boys available for summer and fall. Phone 2321R after 3. 13 ROOMS CLOSE to college for young men, quiet and studious, no intoxicants. Those renting for summer may stay over next term. Mrs. Hoffman, 124 LU
PIANO—NEW and used. Piano-tuning
916 Illinois, Phone 815.
PIANO-Companion
916 Illinois, Phone 815.
Transportation
LEAVING every Friday at 4:00 p.m. for
me. Please call only Wed. or Thurs. between
7:00-9:30 p.m. Harry Schultz, 3170.
DANTED—A ride to Washington, D.C.
can help you drive and will share exp-
eenses. Phone 2889-R.
WANTED—Ride for two to New York City or vicinity. Leave June 3 or after, share expenses and help drive. Call Leonard Snyder. 1752. 24
WANTED—Iris to Chicago or Waukegan, Illinois. Can leave after 10 a.m. June 1. Will share driving and expenses. Call Jim Amend, 3355-W. 21
ONE blue loose-leaf notebook containing biology and chemistry notes and biology worksheets, and a Reward. Phone 565. Jim Childers. 20 LOST: Large book of Spanish plays with important notes inside. Invaluable to me. 2694-M or Spanish office.
Lost
MAY 11, at or near university, round
Reward. Call 1761.
24
10th and New Jersey,
Phone 939
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 18, 1948
PAGE EIGHT
Union Disputes Still Pending On Labor Front
By UNITED PRESS
The C.I.O. United Packinghouse Workers turned down a Swift and Company proposal for settling the meat strike but hopes still were high that the two-month-old work stoppage would end soon.
The packinghouse union rejected a Swift and Company proposal for settling the dispute because workers discharged for illegal acts during the strike would not be re-hired automatically. However, the union did not comment on the firm's offer of a nine-cent wage boost, indicating that the union might be willing to reduce its demands for a 29-cent hike.
hall Here are the latest developments on the labor scene:
page would end soon.
A return to work of the 100,000 striking meat workers would cut the total number of workers idle in strikes across the nation almost in half.
be reopened after a year. Union and management representatives were to meet today for talks in the railway labor dispute, but there was little hope for a quick settlement which would end government operation of the railroads.
Wayne county prosecutor James McNalley said he would call officials of the C.I.O. Auto Workers to his Detroit office today to determine why the union struck against the Chrysler Motor corporation and to "search for violations" of the Michigan law which provides for taking a strike vote before a walkout is called.
The Chesapeake & Petomac Telephone company and the Communications Workers of America (Ind.) signed the first 1948 contract for the Bell Telephone system. It provided no immediate wage increase but can be reopened after a year.
Soft coal operators and representatives of John L. Lewis' United Mine Workers were to meet today for opening talks on a new contract to head off a possible soft coal strike when the present contract expires June 30.
Students Try Mock Cases
Fifteen students will take part in the last two of the series of trials by members of the trial practice class of M. Carl Slough, assistant professor of law. The cases will be tried at 3 p.m. today and tomorrow in the court room of Green hall.
court room of GRA-
the suit today will be a civil case.
Attorneys for the plaintiff will be
Charles F. Hall, Elmer E. Harvey,
Franklin Hiebert, and Kenneth H.
Hiebsch.
The case tomorrow will be a criminal case involving a murder. Counsel for the state will be Richard K. Hollingsworth, Frederic M. Hulett James S. Jenson, and Vernon T. Tashima.
Counsel for the defense will be Vernon L. Nuss, Donald L. Randolph, Howard A. Rankin, and Charles Sciangula. Frank Pitt, associate professor of law, will be the judge.
Counsel for the defense will be Roger G. Tilbury, Harry W. Trueheart, and Gerald L. Wait. F. J Moreau, dean of the School of Law will be judge.
Condition Of Henry Reported Good
Richard B. Henry, College junior from Garden City, underwent an emergency appendectomy at Watkins hospital Monday night. Attending physicians reported today that his condition is good.
Ruth Henry, fine arts freshman from Des Moines, Iowa, is receiving treatment at Watkins hospital for a fractured nose. Miss Henry was taken to the hospital late Saturday night after being in an automobile accident north of Lawrence.
Movie "Our Town" To Be In Fraser
The movie made from Thornton Wilder's Pulitzer prize play, "Our Town," will be shown at 4 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. today in Fraser theater.
Martha Scott and William Holden are cast as the young lovers. The late Frank Craven has the role of the commentator, and the mothers are played by Fay Bainter and Beulah Bondi.
Admission will be 25 cents.
Stalemate Holds In Palestine
Jerusalem, May 17 — (UP) — As Arabs cannonaded the central thoroughfares of New Jerusalem today, killing two and injuring 33 Jews, both sides consolidated their positions inside the walled-off Arab section of the city during a pause in the Bazar battle.
By UNITED PRESS
With no indications beyond guessing that the Arabs and Jews were staking everything upon taking or holding the cluster of houses between the Zion gate and the Wailing Wall enclosure, a United Nations truce commission made another move to restore "cease fire" conditions.
Assisted by consuls of other Western Powers, the security council's consular peacemakers established contact with both sides in the new truce effort.
The Arabs said, according to a Jewish agency spokesman, that they are ready to refrain from using mortars to avoid damaging Holy Land places, but would not accept "cease fire" requests. The Jews said they could only agree to a full "cearce fire", but refused assurances not to employ mortars saying they must be allowed every means of defense That stalemate continues.
ISA Plans New Fall Program
I.S.A. week will be held from Sept.
27 to Oct. 2. Letters will be sent to
all surrounding universities, in-
cluding Washburn, Kansas State, and
Missouri asking them to take part
and to observe national I.S.A. pro-
jects, according to Alice M. Wismer,
I.S.A. president.
Four new features will be introduced into the I.S.A. orientation week for the fall semester, including an open house, I.S.A. week, student-faculty parties and awards to outstanding independent students.
A complete report on housing for students, cafeterias patronized by students, and student wages was given by Jack B. Pringle, chairman of the social welfare committee. Pringle said that prices for room and board are higher at the University than other schools in Kansas.
Details of the student-faculty parties will be in the Kan-Do, LSA. publication. The Kan-Do will be distributed Friday. Nora L. Temple is the new editor of the Kan-Do.
Alice Wismer, who will head the summer project, said that pamphlets will be sent out to new students during the summer orientation period. One Kan-Do will be published. In addition letters will be sent to former L.S.A. members in an effort to create an alumni association for the fall semester.
Tau Sigma To Dance At Topeka Hospital
Members of Tau Sigma, modern lance group, and guests who took part in a recital recently will perform at Winter General hospital in Ropea tonight.
The invitation was made by Marcella Wolfson, Red Cross chairman of the entertainment for the hospital.
Members of Tau Sigma will allow men to enter the tryouts for membership in the fall. The requirement for those who tryout will be one semester of modern dancing or the equivalent.
United Nations Staff Officers To Visit Today
The ten United Nations Military staff committee officers who are to visit the University today, tomorrow, and Thursday will arrive in a twinengine C-47 plane at the Lawrence airport between 3:30 and 4 p.m. today.
Escorting the group is Col. Brooks E. Allen, U.S. air force representative on the U.N. committee. He will be accompanied by three representatives each from the French, United Kingdom, and Chinese delegations.
The group will be met by T. DeWitt Cram, dean of the engineering school, Capt John V. Peterson, commandant of the N.R.O.T.C. unit, and Col John Alfrey, commanding officer of the R.O.T.C.
K. U. is one of two universities to be visited by the committee to determine sentiment regarding the U.N. in typical American universities and to gather information on their operations and military training programs.
Four Officers Will Elect
The Forensic league will elect four officers at its annual banquet at 6:15 p.m. today at the Hearth tea room.
Offices to be filled are president, vice-president, secretary, and treasurer, Hal M. Friesen, president of the Forensic league, will act as toastmaster.
Winners in the four intramural speech contests sponsored by the Forensic league will be guest speakers. The three winners are Gene Courtney, first place in the demonstrative speech contest in the men's division, and Richard Bugler, winner of the informative and after-dinner contest. Doreen Wallace, who won first place in both the informative and demonstrative contests, in the women's division, also will speak.
Other guests will be Prof. and Mrs.
Allen Crafton, Prof. and Mrs. E. C.
Buehler, Mr. William T. Wilkoff, and
Mr. and Mrs. Richard L. Schiefelbusch.
Lewis Carroll, 23, a mid-term graduate this year, was killed May 15 in a head-on automobile collision near Los Altos, Calif., according to word received by members of the Triangle fraternity.
Car Wreck Kills Former Student
He received a bachelor's degree in aeronautical engineering in February and has been working for an aeronautical laboratory in Los Angeles.
Carroll was graduated from Westport High school in Kansas City, Mo. in 1942 and attended the University prior to World War II. He returned in 1946, completing his work here in February.
Dr. Alfred M. Lee Is Visiting Campus
Dr. Alfred M. Lee, head of the sociology department of Wayne university, is visiting the William Allen White School of Journalism this afternoon. An authority on press communications, Dr. Lee will speak to several journalism classes.
Dr. Lee taught in the journalism and sociology departments at the University from 1934 to 1937. While at the university, he completed his book, "The Daily Newspaper in America."
Dr. Lee is enroute to Denver university where he is to speak on "Communications and Freedom" tomorrow and Thursday.
Stassen, Dewey Spar For Votes
Portland, Ore., May 18—(UP)—Both Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York and former Gov. Harold E. Stassen of Minnesota claimed victory today in their radio debate on a proposal to outlaw the Communist party.
But supporters of the two candidates for the Republican presidential nomination, and listeners who heard the broadcast, said it was a draw.
Mr. Stassen seemed to abandon his stand for a complete outlawing of the party in favor of the Mundt-Nixon bill which would make it unlawful to attempt to establish a totalitarian dictatorship in the United States.
Mr. Dewey said the Mundt-Nixon bill "does not outlaw Communism" and is perfectly harmless. He did not say he would support the bill, however.
The New York governor said that by advocating the bill, Mr. Stassen "surrendered and is no longer in favor of outlawing the Communist party."
Mr. Stassen countered that "if Governor Dewey will agree to the Mundt-Nixon bill, I will be satisfied that we are agreed that communism is outlawed."
When Mr. Dewey pronounced the bill "perfectly harmless" but failed to endorse it, Mr. Stassen said the New York governor "sort of walked around" the question.
When it was over, the debaters shook hands three times for the benefit of photographers and agreed on at least one point.
"That was quite a discussion," Mr. Stassen said.
"It sure was," Mr. Dewey replied. With no judges to hand down a decision, supporters of both men looked toward the Oregon primarie: Friday for an indication of this state's reaction.
Housemothers Association Elects Mrs. C. A. Thomas
Mrs. C. A. Thomas was electe president of the Housemothers association at its annual spring picnic Monday. Mrs. Arthur Little was elected vice-president; Mrs. Elizabeth Kite is treasurer-treasurer. The picnic was held at the Sigma Nu house. Mrs. Onita S. Miller, Mrs Dean Alt and Mrs. O. L. Horner were in charge of the food.
They May Not Have Been Girl Scouts But Lady-Carpenters Are Practical
Never let it be said that the woman's place is in the home. At least not to the 17 women in the occupational therapy department who are taking an Elementary Wood Work course.
taking an Elevator ride
From noon to 3 p.m. every Monday and Friday the second floor of Fowler shops is invaded by these lady carpenters. Russell Lefferd, instructor of shop practice, teaches the class.
The women have learned to operate the band saws, drill presses, jig saws, and lathes, and have made everything from letter-holders to coffee tables. That includes rolling pins fellows, and one of the lady carpenters made a picnic basket which opens as a table.
Not only have they learned wood craft, but Mr. Lefferd has taken them to the foundry to watch some of these processes. He plans to teach them blue printing also.
Here's your chance fellows to have a wife who can fix her own jelly closets.
Lewis Freed Of Civil Charge By Government
Washington, May 18—(UP) The civil contempt conviction against John L. Lewis and the United Mire Workers was set aside today by Federal Judge T. Alan Goldsborough at the government's request.
But Judge Goldsborough balked at a second government request—to dismiss the no-strike injunction which is in effect against Mr. Lewis and the U.M.W. He took that request under advisement and asked attorneys to submit briefs after giving Assistant Attorney General H. Graham Morison a dressing down.
"You have to give me a good reason for that," Judge Goldsborough said.
Mr. Morison argued that the miners are back at work and that there is evidence the union would not strike regardless of the outcome of the dispute over the miners' pension plan.
The government's surprise move had no effect however on the fines of $1,420,000 imposed on the union, and $20,000 on Mr. Lewis for criminal contempt for failing to obey sooner a court order to call off the recent soft coal strike.
"The court doesn't think there is any force in your statement at all." Judge Goldsborough said.
He also said he did not "think for a moment that the pension dispute is dissolved."
The judge had imposed the fines. They are being appealed by Mr. Lewis and the union.
Applicants can not be drawing pensions, disability allowance, disability compensation, or retired pay from the government. They must be over 17 years and less than 25 years old when they graduate. Juniors must be veterans having served on active duty not less than 12 months. They must also pass a physical examination.
To be eligible for the platoon leaders class, applicants must be male citizens of the United States, must be freshman, sophomore, or junior and must not be a member of any other military organization including Army and Navy R.O.T.C. They must be unmarried and remain so until they complete the advanced summer course. They must sign an agreement to serve for the required periods of active duty training and if a veteran, must be honorably discharged.
After completing the periods of training and upon graduation, students are commissioned second lieutenants in the marine reserve. A limited number are commissioned into the regular Marines, if they wish.
Applications for the marine corps platoon leaders class are still being accepted, Maj. R. W. Anderson announced recently.
Under this program freshmen, sophomores, and junior receive officer training in the marine corps during the summer months. Freshmen and sophomores attend two six-week periods while juniors with one year of military service are required to attend only the advanced training. These classes are held at the marine corps schools in Quantico, Va.
During the first period of training, students are corporals and are paid 90 dollars a month. In the advanced training they are made sergeants are paid 100 dollars a month besides having all their needs furnished by the government, including fare to and from camp.
Marine Class Still Open
Phi Sigma Hears White
Richard P. White, graduate student, spoke to Phi Sigma, biology society, Monday in Snow hall. His subject was blood coagulation in insects and mammals. Phi Sigma will not meet again until the fall semester.
1x
University Daily Kansan 45th Year No.152 Wednesday May 19, 1948 STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Wednesday, May 19, 1948 Lawrence, Kansas
STUDENT NEWSPAPER
13 Architects Given Awards For Excellence
Honors for 13 students were announced at the annual architectural banquet Tuesday.
The Gertrude Goldsmith prize for excellence in beginning courses in architecture went to John D. Miller. The Loerentz Schmidt prize for the most progress during the freshman year went to Peggy Jean Baker.
The Scarab fraternity awards for the best solution to an architectural problem went to Richard Beach, Don Lee Noyes, William Conrad, Donald Palmer, and Donald Robertson. Honorable mention went to Claude Mason. The Thayer medal for excellence in architectural design went to Jack Bradley, Jr. Lon Heuer received a Thayer medal for excellence in the first two years of architectural design.
The Alpha Rho Chi medal for leadership, valuable service to the school, and promise of professional merit went to John LoPinto. The first place American Institute of Architects medal, awarded on recognition of excellence in scholarly standing of students in architectural schools, went to Herbert Foster. Second place went to Lee F. Hodgden.
Announcement of the full accrediting of the department of architecture of the School of Architecture and Engineering was made at the banquet by Prof. George M. Beal, chairman of the department.
The approval was made on the basis of physical equipment, coordination of curriculum, content of courses, training, experience and capabilities of teachers, and achievements of graduates as well as entrance requirements.
Guest speaker at the banquet was Arthur W. Archer, central states regional director of the American Institute of Architects.
Dinner For Staff To End Bitter Bird
Members of the Bitter Bird staff will hold a dinner at 6:15 p.m. tomorrow in the East room of the Union.
The gathering will mark the end of the magazine which has been on the University campus the past three years. It was the successor of the Sour Owl, campus humor magazine, which was banned after 25 years of publication. Byron C. Shutz and Leland G. Norris will give short talks.
Staff members, who will attend the dinner are: Byron C. Shutz, editor in chief; William H. Braum, Hank Brown, Carol M. Muhler, Ruth Clayton, Paul A. Coker, Jr., Louis D. Duff, Jr., Myron W. Husband, Arlene L. Johnson, Ruth Keller, Louise Lambert, Ray E. Martin, James G. Mason, Leland G. Norris, LuAnne Powell, Marilyn Sweet, Elger L. Talley, Helen E. Ward, and William D. Waters
Guests invited are Karl Klooz, Ray B. West, Harold Swartz, and E. C. Buehler.
Court Duties Over For Semester
The final semester session of student police court was held Tuesday night.
A default judgment was entered against Charles Spencer for $1 for two parking violations.
In the case of Richard L. Ashley who had 10 tickets, four were reversed and six were affirmed. He was fined $9.
Plays Postponed To Friday Night
The two one-act Saroyan plays which have been scheduled for 8:15 tonight in Fraser theater have been postponed until Friday night.
The plays, "The Hungers" and "Comin Through the Rye," will be presented by the University Players. The public is invited.
AWS To Set Up Guidance Board
More University women will have an opportunity for positions of leadership and responsibility when a personnel board is established next fall, according to Betty van der Smissen, president at the Associated Women Students.
The board is made up of three committees, Helen Piller, College sophomore, is the keeper of the records; Emily Stewart, College freshman, is activities counselor; and Jean Dressler, College freshman, is chairman of the filing committee.
Miss van der Smissen, in announcing the system said, "by using a personnel board we hope to have at the University a personal relationship in which each girl feels she is an individual with a real place in the University."
The plan is to help each girl get into the activities of her choice, to keep an accurate record of work done by each individual with notations on the quality of the work performed, and to get women into activities.
The system includes a permanent activity card, A.W.S. double-file system, organizational reports, and interest lists. New women at the University will fill out forms which identify her, what she has done in the past, and what she would like to do in the future.
All of this information would be transferred by the keeper of the records onto a permanent card. A women's activities and the quality of work done would also be kept on this permanent card. After a woman graduates or leaves the University the card would be transferred to an inactive file which is kept for reference.
Engineers Attend Technical Meeting
Chemical engineers from K.U. Kansas State college, and the University of Nebraska attended a technical meeting in Manhattan May 15
W. W. Deschner of the J. F. Pritchard Co. of Kansas City gave the main talk of the afternoon. K. O. Maloney, professor of chemical engineering, and 16 students attended the meeting.
Hoyt, Kan., May 19-(UP)—The bank of this small Kansas town was held up shortly after 11 a.m. today by three men driving a 1941 Oldsmobile club coupe.
George Worrall, chemical engineering senior, and Aldo Aliotti, assistant in the romance language department, presented papers on "Soda Ash In Kansas" and "Technical Education in Europe."
Bandits Rob Bank In Lawrence Area
Witnesses said the automobile bore Kansas license number 3-4886. Two of the bandits were described as young men, the other about 60 years old.
Amount of the loot was not determined immediately.
Hoyt is in northeastern Kansas about 15 miles north of Topeka.
Bitter Bird Has No Place At KU Editor Says
In an editorial in the fourth issue of the Bitter Bird, the editor, Byron C. Shutz, said, "I sincerely hope this is the last issue of the Bitter Bird as a so-called campus humor magazine."
When informed that the All Student Council had granted permission for the publication to continue next year, Shutz told a University Daily Kansan reporter that he still maintained there was no place on the campus for the kind of magazine the Bitter Bird should be.
"Part of the success of this year's magazine," he said, "was because about 700 subscriptions had been sold to parents of students and that the magazine delivered differed in many respects from the kind of magazine intended at the outset."
"It is my idea," he said, "to publish a magazine containing news of social life, sports, and fashion, with little space devoted to humor. Such a purpose is being served at the University at present by the Jayhawker since it has been put on a quarterly basis."
Shutz said the current trend in such campus publications is away from such material as was contained in the Sour Owl, a publication banned on the campus three years ago.
Sachem To Initiate 16
Sachem, University chapter of Omicron Delta Kappa, national senior honor society for men, will initiate 16 members at 10:45 p.m. to-day in Battenfell hall.
Initiates are Richard Bertuzzi,
William Conboy, Wilbur Noble,
Charles O'Connor, Victor Reinking,
and Patrick Thiessen, College juniors;
Fred Gartung, John Irwin,
Ralph Kiene, and Warren Shaw,
engineering juniors; Robert Franklin,
business junior; Billy Lakey, fine
arts junior; Joseph McCuskey, eng-
signing mariner; Mr. Newell Jenkins, '43 a former member of Saehem; and I. C. Woodwuff, dean of men.
Dr. Woodruff will succeed Willis Tompkins, assistant dean of men, as one of four faculty members in the society. The others are F. C. Allen, professor of physical education: Frank E. Melvin, associate professor of history, and Gilbert Ulmer, assistant dean of the College.
Today Is Deadline To Buy SAM Tickets
New officers have tickets for sale. Reservations may also be made at the School of Business office. Tickets are $1.50 a person. Members may bring their wives or dates.
Tickets for the Society for the Advancement of Management farewell banquet at 6:30 p.m. tomorrow must be bought today.
J. Alden Trovillo, former S.A.M advisor and associate professor of industrial management, will speak to the group in the Kansas room of the Union.
Student Treated For Injury To Eye In Handball Game
Evan D. Ritchie, engineering sophomore, is undergoing treatment at Watkins hospital for a severe eye injury received while playing handball Monday. Physicians report that his condition is improving
The condition of Ralph E. Russell, College freshman, is reported improved by attending physicians. Russell has been a pneumonia patient at Watkins hospital since May 4.
Woodruff Closes Union Activities
Closing of the Student Union Activities committee for an indefinite period was announced this morning by L. C. Woodruff, dean of men, following several violations of scholastic eligibility requirements by members of the cast of "College Daze."
ASC To Select Dance Manager
In a statement released this morning, Dean Woodruff
The All Student Council social committee will meet Friday to select a new student dance manager for the coming year.
Sue Webster, chairman of the committee, said that applications for the position are to be turned in by Friday. They should be forwarded to Miss Webster at 1625 Edgehill road.
Noble Takes 'Y For Summer
Wilbur B. Noble, former University Y.M.C.A. president, will take over the duties of D. Ned Linegar, executive secretary of the Y.M.C.A. tomorrow. He will serve as assistant secretary during the summer months.
Mr. Linegar has been granted a two-months leave to direct a training program in College camp, Wisc He will leave June 1.
Noble will direct the summer Y.M.C.A. program and will supervise the concessions at the summer recreation program. He will organize a picnic for new men students.
Mrs. Susan DeWater, office secretary, will supervise the service of the office in the Union building. The office will be the center for the University Extension in its handling of the conferences that will be held at the University this summer.
Elton Noble will develop plans for the freshman camp, Otis Hill, Jr. will work out the details of the student counselor program. Hugh Gibson and Noah Bigham will assist with the serving of refreshments at the summer recreation program.
Seminar Play Shows Young Married Life
Four actors and a narrator presented the play "Private Lives," a three-act comedy by Noel Coward, Tuesday night in the Little theater of Green hall.
The plot of the play centered around the private lives of two married couples on their honeymoon. The bickering and swapping of mates was the backbone of the plot.
Western Civilization grades will probably not be available until after June 5. The examination board is not certain of the length of time required to grade the papers.
Western Civ Exam Grades
Available After June 5
The play was the project of the graduate experimental seminar class. Mary K. Booth, graduate student, was director of the play and served as the narrator. The members of the cast included Elizabeth Brady, Sarah Jane Heil, Dan Palmquist, and Tom P. Rea.
The play was read by script as the members of the cast sat at a square table in the middle of the stage. The narrator sat at a small table on the extreme right side of the stage. The narrator described the scenes and physical actions of the players.
very much that this matter had to come up in connection with "College Daze," which was a splendid student production and a type which should be encouraged. However, I feel certain that basic policies of the Union Activities committee must be resolved to the satisfaction of all concerned."
Certain students in the cast of "College Daze" produced under the sponsorship of the Union Activities committee, had roles in the musical comedy, although their grades were not up to requirements.
"Both the Union Activities committee and the students concerned were notified last February that in order to participate they must conform to elegibility requirements," Dean Woodruff said. "It is the responsibility of any organization involved in scholastic requirements to check such scholarship."
Dean Woodruff will meet today with members of the Union Activities executive board, and the students involved in violations of scholastic rules. They will consider the action to be taken and the future plans of the Union Activities committee.
Unavailable for comment were Evans J. Francis, president of the committee; Jack Moorhead, author of the play, and Jess Stewart, who was in charge of production for "College Daze."
Speech Club Elects Hill
Otis J. Hill, College sophomore,
was elected president of the For-
ensic league at their annual banquet Tuesday.
Aldo G. Aliotti, engineering senior, will be vice-president. Other officers elected are Diane S. Stryker, College junior, secretary, and Curtis A. Nystrom, College sophomore, treasurer.
Three winners in the Forensic league intramural speech contests were guest speakers. Gene B. Courtney, College senior, spoke on "How to Improve Your Memory," and Doreen Wallace, senior, described "Quack in Psychology." Richard Bugler, engineering sophomore, repeated his first place after-dinner speech on "1948 Campaign Speeches."
League members recalled that approximately 300 students and 25 organizations had taken part in three intramural speech contests. The league has awarded eight gold cups to contestants.
Cafeteria Will Be Air Conditioned
A new water cooling tower is being erected on the south side of the Union.
The tower will provide cool air for the eight air conditioning units which have been installed in the cafeteria. The entire system, tower and units, weighs 70 tons. The air conditioning will make the temperature in the cafeteria about 15 degrees cooler than outside.
WEATHER
Kansas—Fair today, partly cloudy tonight and Thursday with a few widely scattered thundershowers west. Warmer extreme east today. Not quite so warm extreme west Thursday afternoon. High today near 90. Low tonight near 60.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 19, 1948
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Socially Speaking-
Social Wheel Is Spinning With Dances, Engagements
Theta's Entertain
Pi Phi Pledge
Kappa Alpha Theta entertained faculty members and deans with dessert at the chapter house Tuesday night.
Pi Beta Phi announces the pledging of Mary Agnes Hungate, Kansas City, Mo.
Kappa Eta Kappa
Kappa Eta Kappa, professional electrical engineering fraternity, announces the election of David Thomson as president for the fall semester. Other officers elected were Theodor Bernard, vice-president; Boyd Pond, secretary; Walter Stockebrand, treasurer; Chesley Looney, corresponding secretary; Charles Grimmett, librarian; and William Hamilton, sergeant-at-arms.
Sigma Chi Dance
Alpha Xi chapter of Sigma Chi held its annual Sweetheart dance May 15. The dance was held on a platform built in front of the chapter house.
Martha Goodrich was elected Sweetheart of Sigma Chi for this year. She was crowned by Joanne Ruese, retiring sweetheart.
Chaperons were Dr. and Mrs. L. C. Woodruff, Mrs. K. W. Perkins, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Pinet.
Correction
Due to a typographical error in the University Daily Kansan, the name of Wendell J. Walker, was omitted from the list of new officers of Omega Psi Phi. Mr. Walker was elected basileus of the fraternity.
Ricker Hall Formal
Ricker hall held its spring formal May 15.
Guests were Jack Broadhurst, Jon Ferguson, Frank Hursh, Charles Babcock, George Osborne, Brownnell Landes, Ralph Comer, J. Sterling Baxter, Lowell Elliott, W. I. Brooks, and Gerald Peters.
Women's Club Picnic
The Faculty Women's club will have a picnic at 5 p.m. Friday at the Potter lake picnic area. In case of rain it will be held at the club house at 6 p.m.
Miss Wealthy Babcook, Mrs. John Feist, Miss Kathleen Doering, Miss Loda Newcomb, Miss Irna Spangler, Mrs.H. H. M. Stucker, Miss Florence Black, M. Jeannet Cass, and Miss Jeanne Chenoweth are in charge of arrangements.
Watkins Elects
Joan Strowg was re-elected president of Watkins hall recently.
Other officers are Barbara Glover, vice-president; Esther McKinney, secretary; Evelyn Hoffman, treasurer; Jeanette Bolas, house manager; Jane Hyde, social chairman; and Christine Mann freshman counsellor
Watkins Hall Guests
\* \* \*
Dinner guests at Watkins hall Sunday were Gene Strange, Thomas Franklin, Glenn Gray, Kathleen
University Daily Kansan
Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturday and Sunday. Entered as second class termination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan. under act of March 3, 1879.
Broers, Dwight Oglesbee, Miss Gladys Hendricks, and Mr. and Mrs Wayne Gugler.
Weekend guests were Frances Lindbolm, Salina; and Donis Hughes, Stephens college, Columbia, Mo
AKL Elects
...
Robert L. Davis was elected president of Alpha KappaLambda fraternity for the fall semester at elections recently.
Other officers elected were Dale A. Spiegel, vice-president; Jack A. Campbell, corresponding secretary; Robert R. Teel, recording secretary; Joe Keeling, steward; Ted H. Beaver, social chairman; Harry Robson, scholarship chairman; Robert R. Teel, membership chairman; Ross C. Keeling, intramurals chairman; James Kanehl, Inter-fraternity council representative; and Don E. Spiegel, song leader.
Connell-Zimmerman
Mrs. Karl W. Perkins, Kappa Alpha Theta housemother, announces the pinning of Barbara Connell, daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Evan S. Connell, Kansas City, Mo., to Matt Zimmerman, son of Mr. and Mrs. Matthew H. Zimmerman, Kansas City, Mo.
Patsy Clardy, Miss Connell's attendant, and Mrs. Perkins received corsages of white carnations. Miss Connell's corsage was an orchid.
Miss Connell is a fine arts junior. Mr. Zimmerman, a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity, is an engineering junior.
***
Sigma Kappa announces the pinning of Eileen Deutschman, daughter of Mr. George Deutschman, Albert Lea, Minn., to Perry D. Wilcox, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Wilcox, Garden City.
Deutschman—Wilcox
Miss Deutschman attended the University last year and is now doing illustration work for Wooil Brothers in Kansas City. Mr. Wilcox, a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon, is a business senior.
The announcement was made Sunday by Ann Clifford, and chocolates were passed by Elizabeth Sue Webster. Miss Clifford and Miss Webster each wore a corsage of lavender stock. Miss Deutschman's corsage was four green orchids. Mrs. Mary Younkman, housemother, wore a corsage of gardenias and American Beauty rose buds.
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Benson Is Speaker At Math Colloquium
Dinners
Vernon E. Benson, graduate student, spoke before the Mathematical colloquium at its final meeting Monday.
He gave a demonstration on the generation of quartic curves by pencils of lines, which is a method in mathematics that may have a possible application in the design of airplanes and projectiles. Benson has written his master's thesis on the subject.
William Hatch, sophomore; Ethel Swart, junior, and Cary Taylor, freshman, all in the School of Fine Arts, have sold greeting card designs to a Kansas City firm.
Three Sell Card Designs
The designs were made in the classes of Mrs. Jeen Lysaught, instructor of design.
Sigma Pi Elects
The Kansas colony of Sigma Phi national social fraternity, announces the election of Edward L. Shehey, Scarsdale, N.Y., as social chairman.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 19, 1948
Alpha Chi Sigma, Navy Win Again In Playoffs
Alpha Chi Sigma, summer titlist, rolled on to its seventh straight victory in spring competition by thwarting Dine-A-Mite 13 to 6 as Dale Clark tossed seven-hit ball for the winners in the Independent playoff feature Tuesday.
a chemists grabbed a two-run advantage in the opening frame and
The chemists grabbed a two-wheel never got behind in the game. Both teams were then blanked until the fifth when the winners broke loose for five runs They added three more in each of the last two frames.
Carl Johnston and Dale Clark clouted four-baggers for the Chi Sig's. Bob Brownsberger smashed a triple and Ward Graham doubled to aid the winning cause. Dave Frisbie bagged a double and a single in four trips to pase Dine-A-Mite.
A.C.S. 200 053 3-13 14 4
B.A.M. 000 024 0-6 7 5
N. R.O.T.C. took advantage of weak fielding to triumph over Aces High 6 to 3 for their sixth straight without a loss.
The Aces took a short-lived 2 to 1 lead in the opening stanza when Arnold Stryker and Ed O'Brien walked, Stryker scored on an error, and Bob Clark doubled home O'Brien.
Navy grabbed the lead in the second as two more errors combined with a pair of walks netted two runc. It added another tally in the third when Steve Jacobs followed Bill Bowlby's double with a single.
Aces Hi rallied for its final run in the sixth as Francis Galbraith doubled and came home on Harold Duke's single.
Aces 200 001 0—3 8 4
Navy 121 110 x—6 7 4
Joe Small handcuffed the Wildcat's on five hits as Alpha Kappa Psi pounded out a 6 to 3 verdict. A. K. Psi scored two each in the second-third, and fourth.
The winners jumped into the lead in the third as Bob Baumunk's walk, Leon DeYoung's single, and Small's double accounted for two markers. Lance blasted out a bases-empty homer in the third to end the Wildcat scoring. Singles by Paul Briley and Paul Ensch followed by Carl Campbell's triple gave the winners another pair of runs in the fourth.
201 000 0—3 5
022 200 0—6 10
a four-run uprising in the sixth enabled the Gushers to knock off the Trailer Vets 5 to 3. Bill Wilbur's two-run homer was the winning blow.
Dick Van Gundy opened the big sixth with a walk and came home on Gib Stramel's three-bagger. Norbert Harvey's fly ball to right field scored Van Gundy. John Armstrong then singled and coasted when Wilbur smashed out his four-master. Herk Haryve gave up six hits while whiffing seven to gain the mound victory.
I.V. 300 000 0—3 8
Gushers 100 004 x—5 9
Annual Awards To Climax
WAA Picnic And Initiation
Members of the Women's Athletic association are having a picnic at 5 p.m. today in Clinton park.
W. A.A. awards for the year will be presented at the picnic. New members will be initiated.
KU Drops 4th To NU
The Nebraska Cornhuskers made it four in a row over the cellar-dwelling Kansas Jayhawkers Tuesday by handing coach Sehon's boys a 9 to 3 defeat on the K.U. home diamond. Kansas practically gave the game away, committing seven errors behind the six-hit pitching starter Dick Gilman.
Elroy Golystein, the Cornhusker lefthanded ace, held the slumping Jayhawkers to five hits, three of them coming in the fourth inning. The portsider also sent 12 Kansas hitters back to the bench as strike-out victims.
Bertuzzi Gets Two
The Crimson and Blue did not get a safety off Golystein until the fourth inning when left fielder Dick Bertuzzi hit a Texas leaguer over second base. Bertuzzi also got a line drive single to center in the fifth inning.
After picking up one run in the first inning, and two in the second, the Huskers score three times in the third to grab a quick six-run lead.
In the third Bill Denker was safe on French's error, and Wes Maser was safe on May's bobble. After both runners advanced on a pass ball Bob Cerv, Nebraska center fielder, hit a short single to center. The ball got past Neal Shaw, and Denker and Maser had both scored. Crev, who had gone to third on the play, scored a moment later on a passed ball.
KU Scores In 6th
Kansas scored two of its three runs in the fifth inning on a lone hit by Dick Bertuzzi, Gilman walked and Shaw was safe at second on left fielder Harlan Powley's error of a high fly ball. Bertuzzi then stepped into the batters box and drove both runs across.
The Cornhusker victories this week over K.U. virtually sewed up the Big Seven title for red caps from Lincoln. Both Kansas State and Missouri cannot qualify for the number one slot because of a Big Seven ruling which states that no team can win in the title unless they play every other team in the league. The Cornhuskers are the only team of the three that meets this requirement.
Stinson's Name Omitted
The name of Wade Stinson, College sophomore, was omitted from the story of the Tau Sigma modern dance recital, Miss Elaine Selicovitz, instructor in physical education, said today.
Stinson did a jazz dance with Sue Jones. Miss Jones appeared with Phillip M. Young in the "College Daze" musical.
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Protests Fly Over A Play
A final decision on the protested A.T.O. Phi Gam playoff softball game was reached this morning by the intramural protest board which upheld the protests of both teams and ordered the disputed part of the eighth inning replayed this afternoon at 4:15 p.m.
Ruling on the A.T.O. counterprotest that Jess Van Ert, Phi Gam catcher, had illegally blocked the base to retire Joe Levy in the eventful eighth, the board decided that Lvy should not have been called out. Yesterday they ruled for Phi Gam that Chet Laniewski's game-winning run should not have counted for A.T.O. because of confusion on the field at the time.
According to early-day superstition in Oklahoma, if a cock crowed three times at one's door, on the porch or on the back doorsteps, a stranger would arrive soon.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 19, 1948
PAGE FIVE
Talent Raids Irk Faurot
Kansas City, Mo., May 19—(UP)—Don Faurot, athletic director at the University of Missouri, today stuck to his guns on his allegations yesterday here at a luncheon in which he charged six major colleges with making wholesale raids on football talent in Missouri.
"I doubt if such practices are sanctioned by the National Collegiate Athletic Association," Faurot heatedly stated, "but to meet such unfair competition maybe it would be best to drop out of the Association."
The head grid mentor at Missouri told the Quarterback club that he feels "lucky" if he manages to grab one or two of the gridiron stars and suggested a solution might be to withdraw from the N.C.A.A.
Faurot charged the colleges were paying the expenses for prospective players in a trip to the campus even first class airplane trips to the southern schools.
Faurot declined to name high school football stars involved, but he named the schools as Tulane, Alabama, Kentucky, Mississippi State, Arkansas and Kansas.
"The youths are offered highly attractive offers to enroll in those colleges." Faurot said.
"Each year there are about 25 outstanding high school football players and if we can get two-thirds of that group we can stay on par with other schools in athletic competition."
Faurot explained the reason for the verbal blast yesterday was in hopes of "airing the matter" out in the open so that something can be done about the situation.
Blues Win In 16th, Halt Losing Streak
Second division teams roused the American Association Tuesday as the lowly Toledo Mud Hens and Kansas City Blues marked up outstanding victories.
Toledo swept a double header from Louisville, 7 to 1 and 5 to 4, yesterday to move past the Colonels into sixth place. Kansas City, defending pennant winner, remained in the cellar but defeated the first place St. Paul Saints, 9 to 8, in a 16-inning contest at Kansas City last night.
The St. Paul-Kansas City sluggest was tied at six-all at the end of nine innings.
Call K.U, 376 with your Want Ads
Official Bulletin
May 19,1948
Jay Janes tea and meeting, 7 to 9 tonight, Pine room, Union. Wear uniforms.
Phi Kappa Tau, 7:30 tonight, 131 Frank Strong.
Freshman week committee, 4 today, 217 Frank Strong, to complete plans for next fall. All organizations wishing to participate should be represented.
United World Federalists, 4 today, Pine room, Union, with visiting members of United Nations military staff committee.
K. U. Dames, 7:15 tonight. Meet at Community building to go to Sunflower K.U. Dames. Call 1322-J for reservations.
A.S.C.E., 7:30 tonight, 101 Snow
Election of officers, Movie "Pan
American Highway." Talk on registration by Professor Bradshaw.
Quill initiation and election, 8 p.m. tomorrow, East room, Union.
Everyone interested in learning square dancing, 7 tonight, recreation room. Union.
Le Cercle Francais, 5:30 p.m. to tomorrow, home of Mrs. J. C. Malin, 1641 University drive, for waffle supper. Notify French office, 115 Frank Strong, if planning to attend. Gifts for box to France either to meeting or office.
A. V.C. business meeting, 7:15 p.m. tomorrow, 206 Frank Strong. Final meeting.
Tau Beta Pi, final business meeting 7 p.m. tomorrow, hydraulics laboratory.
Sociology club, 4 p.m. tomorrow, projection room, Fraser, Two movies Election of officers.
Peters Expects Routine Meeting
Lincoln, Neb., May 19—(UP)—Reaves Peters, assistant to the secretary of the Big Seven, said today he expected the annual spring meeting of conference fathers to tend to "nothing but routine business" during their four-day session here.
Athletic directors, faculty representatives, business managers, and basketball coaches of the Big Seven convened here today. Peters statement indicated the conference would take no action at this meeting on the long standing bid of Oklahoma A. & M. to enter the Big Seven.
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A. I.E.E., 7:30 p.m. Thursday, 101 Snow. Election of officers. Dr. Max Dresden of physics department to speak on relationship of physics to engineering. All electrical engineers invited.
Christian Science organization, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Danforth chapel.
Westminster fellowship, 5:30 p.m.
Sunday, 1212 Oread. Important.
S. A.M. spring banquet, 6:30 p.m. tomorrow, Kansas room, Union. J. A. Trovillo, speaker.
"Alexander Nevsky," famous Russian movie, to be presented by University Forums board, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Fraser theater. Everyone welcome.
Episcopal College club Holy Communion, 7 a.m. tomorrow, Danforth chapel.
German club, 4:30 p.m. tomorrow,
402 Fraser.
Students wishing to apply for position of dance manager must submit qualifications in a letter to Elizabeth Sue Webster, 1625 Edgehill road, by Friday.
During 1947 the shipments by air express in the United States toalled 3,729,000, weighing over 70,000,000 pounds, an all-time high record, according to Railway Express.
Expert Watch Repair
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Quack Club Elects
Josephine Stuckey has been elected president of Quack club for 1948-49. Ila Ma Junod was elected secretary-treasurer. Virginia Harris, Margaret Wolfe, Kathleen McKelvey, Nanette Hyer and Barbara Burkholder were initiated into the club.
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Read the Daily Kansan daily.
"So then I told him that if he wanted anything better, he'd have to take his car to
MORGAN-MACK for servicing."
1
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Clearance SALE
Clean sweep of odds and ends
OAK FLOORING 17½¹/2 c per board foot
WINDOW GLASS Sale price from .09 and up per glass
Any size from 8” x 10” up to 48” x 60”
STEEL SASH PUTTY, Commercial 13c per lb.
WOOD SASH PUTTY 13c per lb.
LINSOYAL OIL—for mixing paints $3.00 per gallon
NEW REPLACEMENT SEATS FOR CLOSETS $4.99 each
Hardwood, painted white
NEW LAVATORY—white porcelin, cast iron ... $19.95
NEW BATHTUB—cast iron, 5½ foot
JIFFY LAWN MOWER—Regular price $149...On sale for $119.00
Electrically charged battery mower, no cords to bother
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ALSO ELECTRICAL WIRE AND SUPPLIES—BX cable, steel switch
ELECTRICAL WIRE AND SUPPLIES-BX cable, steel switch boxes, outlet boxes, box supports, switches, wall outlets, plate plates, safety switches, entrance switches, connectors and one 3 HP electric motor.
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1939 1 $ \frac{1}{2} $ TON CHEVROLET TRUCK
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 19, 1948
The Editorial Page
Give The Kids A Chance
Every parent whose child rides a bike will want to take a look at the statistics on bicycle accidents recently totaled up by traffic authorities. Unless something is done about it, during the coming year more than 25,000 bicyclists—most of them children—will be killed or injured in street and highway accidents.
Ever since the coming of automobiles, bicycles have been tolerated somewhat grudgingly as hybrids in the vehicle family—a sort of cross between a pedestrian and a motor vehicle—with neither willing to accept them. Pedestrians don't want them on the sidewalks; motorists call them a nuisance and a danger on the streets. Where there are no proper regulations for their operation, cyclists ride to the right, to the left, through red lights, in and out between moving cars, and sometimes even travel afloat beside their bikes in crowded traffic.
Such a state of affairs is hair-raisingly dangerous. It is unfair to cyclists, motorists and pedestrians alike; for accidents are often caused by cyclists even though the bicycle itself may not be hit in the crash. But perhaps the worst damage of all is to character. Young people are encouraged in habits of recklessness and lack of respect for traffic laws, and this is the worst possible preparation for them as future citizens and car-owners.
Cure for this situation would seem to lie not in outlawing bicycles, but in giving them a respectable place in the traffic family. Every community should welcome a constructive program providing for enforcement of such traffic regulations as apply to bicycles and for their registration, licensing, and inspection.
Let's give the kids a chance!
A recent survey shows that the average reader of Newsweek earns $8300 a year. Quite a few University students are contemplating giving up college and becoming average Newsweek readers.
DANGEROUS
RIDING BICYCLES ALL OVER
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SAFE
RIDING CLOSE AND PARALLEL
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A woman in Philadelphia bequeathed $75,000 to her nine feline friends. This makes them aristocats.
There is something noble about the whistling of the law students. The oldest group on the hill are still giving it the old college try.
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Dear Editor
Clear Thinking
Dear Editor:
While eating at the Union cafeteria May 13, my eye fell upon one of several mimeographed articles conveniently placed at each table. The article concerned the recent third party crusade to which are attached, strangely enough, the lovers of peace and freedom, the warmengers, the honest liberals, and the pinkos, depending of course, from which side of the fence you choose to scream. I suppose one of our greatest American rights is to be able to shout our wares, good or bad, in the streets. What a good market can be found in our American colleges, where radicalism is rarely discouraged and where young minds can be so easily urged to climb on the bandwagon. Clear thinking, we can certainly use, but these confused harangues against our "tottering" democracy disguised as clear thinking, we can well do without.
Name withheld by request
There are three sides to every question—your side, his side, and to heck with it.
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WEDNESDAY, MAY 19, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
University Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
Phone KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be sent by mail, and may not be received during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journalism daily kansan business office. m.d. the day before publication is desired.
Classified Advertising Rates
Classified words One day Three days Five days
25 words or less 35c 65c 90c
additional words 1c 2c 3c
For Sale
2.8 lens, Zeiss Tessar, 127 mm. German
Rollieffe; brand new. Write or call
Giorndao 132 Lane "P," Sunflower. 21
"TIME'S" special anniversary rate to new
subscribers; 40 weeks for only $3.42 at
Student Union Book Store. 28
MERCURY, 47 model, 4-door sedan. Radio,
heater, rubber cushions and cover $2.00.
Industrial Ist and Michigan Street. Hunkzer, Phone
2847-M. 20
MINIATURE Speed Graphic, Tessar-f4.5,
Speedgun Flash, Kalart Range-Finder,
pack, pack, pack, adapter and film-like new, $29. H. L. Shippman, 1140 Louisiana.
SUMMER formal with white coat. Size 18" x 24". 1940 BUCK coupe. New muffler, battery, seat covers, water pump. Good condenser. See # 62 Connecticut or call 323-474-5242.
HOLLYWOOD double bed, bookcase,
three-way floor lamp, end table, dining
table, kitchen desk new. Priced so-
sibly by lot or piece. Call 1160-W-24
or see at 1005 Indiana.
MOTO-SCOOT in excellent condition.
DOOM. Dan Ward, 1247 Ohio Chicago
2138 3338
SOLVE YOUR housing problem by seeing this 20 foot Ironwood trailer home, with a large set up, locally located 6 blocks from campus, R. W. Quinn, 2047 La. 20 1937 CHEVROLET tudor coach. Black 1946 Chevrolet, and good tires. Price $500. Phone 380.
VETERANS! We will buy, trade or sell for you any Army or Navy gear in Good condition that you may wish to purchase. of Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. Phone 669 HYFP
Business Service
AIRLINE RESERVATIONS, city ticket office. The First National Bank of Lawrence, Miss Rose Gieseman, Mgr, 8th and Mass. Phone 30. 21
THRESIS typing was by teacher-typist with fifteen years experience in K.U. typing. Will also do term reports. Work guaranteed. Phone 2908 or 547. 24
IDEAS for graduation gifts. Parker pen sets and leather brief cases. See them at the Student Union Book Store. 24
TWIPING: For better grades have your pens, pencils, rulers, markers and accurately typed. Phone 2193-M.
729 Missouri, Mrs. Earl Wright. Mor at near university, round
gold brooch only as use only be
sale, reward. Call 1761
DOES your pen need repairing? We have a complete pen repair department with a factory trained repairman at Student Union Book Store. 24
TYPING: Reasonable rates. Call 3250J
1930 Kentucky 26
FOR GRADUATION it's jewelery! Buy from K.C. Jewelry Manufacturers. They repair and service. Free pick up and delivery, contact John Basnett, 2084. 19 ATTENTION! Sorority and fraternity pins, rings, and special jewelry manufacturers. Contact John Basnett, 2084. Jewelry Manufacturers. Free pick up and delivery, contact John Basnett, 2084. 19 TYPING DONE! Prompt attention, accurate work and reasonable rates. Telephone 418 or bring to 1218 Conn. St. 20 TYPING done! Term papers, reports, thesis. Accurate work at reasonable prices. 1996-W. armest 2, 1101 Tennessee. Applies TAILOR-MADE suits, $36.50 to $45.00 alter restoration.
TAILOR-MADE suits $36.50 to $65.00. Expert riding and tailoring. George Eberhart & Son, Tailor Shop. 831½ Mass.
New vacuum cleaners for rent. Attachments included. $1.50 per day. Al Brooks Sweeper Co., 8311' Mass. Ph. 1104 between 9 and 12 a.m.
Wanted
WANT to contact woman or couple going to or near Washington, D.C., by car, bus, or rail, about May 28 or 30. Phone 2906-R. 24
A PERMANENT part-time typist. Phone 975.
21
VETERAN STUDENT and wife desire two or three room furnished apartment to fall. No children or pets. W be in school two more years. Bob Burwell, 2021.
Miscellaneous
*To Norma* 'gold, four-color pencil finder,
in tow with me. G. Scott, phone 831
with me. G. Scott, phone 831
DANCE every Saturday night at Odel Fee-
lman. Informal. Joe Langwain
orchestra.
TO TRADE—three-room furnished apartment with private bath for equivalent apartment in Topeka. Please contact Daily Kansan office. 21
For Rent
SUMMER session rooms for boys. 1234
Oread. Phone '2917-M.' 24
AIR COOLED rooms and apt. for boys, single beds, 2 blocks from campus. 25 HOUSE Trailer for summer term. See George Niglton. 1002 New Hampshire.
WE would exchange our two-room apt. in Lawrence near campus for apt. in Toseka. No pets or children. In June. Send letters to Kansan. 21
TWO double and one single room for summer and available for fall-double $12.50 each, single $15.00. Mrs. J. L. Kentucky, phone 1422. 120 MEN'S room from Union. Singles and doubles. See after 6:00 at 1228 Louisiana. 19
ROOMS for rent for summer—includes
two cool basement rooms. Two blocks
from campus, one block from bus. 1339
Dhio. W. P. Meek. 26
ARGE well-furnished rooms for men t 1218 Mississippi. one-half block from the building. Summer school and fall, 948. Cal. Jack Campbell, 750. for information.
ROOM FOR MEN for summer or fall
ROOM FOR WOMEN for porch. Call 1426M or
at 801 Indiana.
BOOMS FOR GIRLS: Summer school and
school. Mrs. Wilson, 128
Ohio. Phone, 3248W.
AOOMS for girl summer students. One per month or one per month, 1241 Louisiana phone, 1784-J.
PIANO—NEW and used. Piano-tuning
916 Illinois, Phone 815.
www.pianotuning.com
Transportation
LEAVING for New York City on June
would be interested in one or more
riders. 3305, ask for Neal. 21
LEAVING every Friday at 4:00 p.m. for
Wichita, retire Sunday, evening.
Please call only Wed. or thursday
7:00-9:30 p.m. Harry Schultz, 3170. 30
WANTED - A ride to Washington, DC.
after finals. If you are driving east
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expenses. Phone 2889-R.
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SPIRAL notebook with "Trans. Miss Return to Daily Kansan Office, Reward
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GOLF SHOES—Would fellows I rode in from Golf course Monday evening be kind enough to call 1387-M after 7 p.m. Ask for Hunter. 21
PAIR of horn-rimmed glasses. Reward.
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ONE blue loose-leaf notebook containing biology and chemistry notes and biology notes from the Reward. Phone 565. Jim Childers. 20 LOST: Large book of Spanish plays with value, both inside and inlaid to me, valueless but inside I found please en 2693-M or Spanish office.
Found
A PAIR of plastic-rimmed glasses on the Intramural field about May 10. Owner may have the same on identification and paying for this ad.
Student Counselors To Meet Tomorrow
The student counseling committee selected 150 juniors and seniors at a meeting May 15. Members of the committee are Otis Hill, chairman; Bruce Bathurst, Robert Chesky, Robert Franklin, R. Dale Judy, Robert Thayer, Darrell Wood, L. C. Woodruff, dean of men; Willis Tompkins, assistant dean of men, and D. Ned Linegar.
Meetings of student counselors for next fall will be held at 4 and 7 p.m. tomorrow in Frank Strong hall. The purpose of the meetings will be to explain the program and the duties of a counselor.
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PRESENTATION OF TROPHIES AND AWARDS
PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 19, 1948
ASC Condemns Racial Ban
The All Student Council Tuesday wound up the business of the year by adopting a resolution condemning racial discrimination in Big-7 athletics, appointing student court justices and a prosecutor, and hearing committee reports. The next meeting will be Sept. 14 before classes start.
The resolution regarding racial discrimination in athletics was passed after reading a letter from the All Student Council at Iowa State college. In a recent vote at that school, 92 per cent of the 5480 students voted favored such action.
The resolution against racial discrimination in athletics will be given to Dr. W. W. Davis, of the Big-7 rules committee which will meet University representatives Saturday.
The consideration of names for student court justice led to some rather heated debate.
They did, however, confirm the nominations of Robert K. Thayer and Stanley M. Englund as court justices and Joseph D. Lysaught as prosecutor.
The Council voted to allow the publication of the Bitter Bird for another year when Leland G. Norris, business manager of the publication this year appeared before the Council to report that the Bitter Bird had been a financial success this year and that there would be no request from the Student Council for funds the coming year.
Robert F. Bennett, finance committee, reported a total loss of $552.06 on the Varsity dances, and a deficit on freshman and sophomore dances of $140.83 and $187.68 respectively. He also announced that all campus organizations desiring appropriations for the coming year should submit their proposed budgets as soon as possible.
The auditing committee reported that an amount of $44.44 will be requested from the Eagle, a campus publication, since it will not put out an issue this year. The Council donated $75 for this venture and the $30.56 difference was used to pay off a debt incurred last year.
Thessen announced the appointment of Miss Scroggy and Thayer as University representatives to the National Students Association which will meet at Madison, Wis., in August. This is an organization of student governing bodies from schools throughout the United States.
'Architecture, Why Not?' Asks Glamorous Joann Ruese
Joann Ruese, senior in architecture, scoffs at the old idea that engineering is a man's realm.
She is one of those rare beings—a woman—occasionally found in the School of Engineering. In addition to being one of the 14 women enrolled in the whole school, she is the second engineering woman ever to be elected to Mortar Board, senior women's honor society. the last engineering student appointed to the society, which selects members on a basis of service, leadership and scholarship was in 1922.
Joann invaded another male realm in 1947 by teaching descriptive geometry on the University staff. She has been manager of the Kansas Engineer and treasurer of the Architectural society. She was recently elected treasurer of Associated Women Students.
Joann said that her father, grandfather, and uncle are responsible for her decision to study engineering. They are all engineers.
"When I was a child, blueprints always interested me as much as the comics," she said, "but because I played the violin for eight years, everyone thought I should be a fine arts major. A girl friend talked me into taking a mechanical drawing course in high school and that decided the issue."
Dark-haired Joann has other assets than brains. She was queen of the engineers' 1948 Hobnail Hop and was also the 1947 campus sweetheart of Sigma Chi.
After that Joann concentrated on slide-rules and drawing boards. Fiddle-playing became only a hobby.
Joann said that after male engineering students get over the novelty of having women in their classes, they are friendly and helpful. She remembers that V-12 students used to whistle and feels glad that as civilians they like to live up to a navy tradition.
French Fraternity Initiates Twelve
Pi Delta Phi, honorary French fraternity, initiated 12 members Tuesday.
The final meeting of the club will be a waffle supper tomorrow night.
be a while slower to come. Those initiated are Billie Kent, Sue Newcomer, and Marjorie Scott, College seniors; Ralph Herman, William Belt and J. Chalmers Herman, graduate students; Jean Delord, graduate student from France; and Mrs. Edith Kern, Miss Barbara Craig, Mrs. J. C. Malin, and Mrs. Collins Hall, honorary members.
I am a member of the Board of Trustees of the University of Houston. I have been involved in many important projects and initiatives that have positively impacted the university community. I am committed to continuing my role as a Board member and supporting the university's mission to provide high-quality education to students.
JOANN RUESE
Band Thrills Its Audience
BY CRYSTAL CHITTENDEN
BY CRYSTAL CHITTENDEN
It is evident after hearing the concert given by the, University band in Hoch auditorium Tuesday that its conductor, Russell L. Wiley, is a fine musician and showman, and has gathered a talented group of players for his 115-piece band. The scope of interpretation in the symphony movements of Shostakovich and Dvorsak, Enesco's "Roumanian Rhapsody" and Tschalkovsky's "Waltz" came close to equalling a symphony orchestra.
symphony of cheese It is also hard to believe that a cornet soloist with band accompaniment is capable of presenting Schubert's "Ave Maria" as it should be done. But James Sellars played it on the cornet with exceptional skill.
An interesting feature of the concert was the "Our Governor March" written for and dedicated to Gov. Frank Carlson, who sponsored the band's trip to the Orange Bowl. This was composed and directed by Oakley Pittman, assistant director of the band.
To band accompaniment, Bill Sears gave a champion exhibition in baton twirling which drew around of applause from the audience.
Barbara Cleaves Gets Girls' Rifle Club Marksmanship Trophy
Barbara Cleaves, College sophomore, received the Girls' Rifle team marksmanship trophy at the awards meeting Tuesday. Jane Keith, College sophomore, received the trophy for having done most for the team as a whole.
Miss Keith was elected president.
Othor officers are: Inez Hall, fine arts junior, vice-president; Lucille Murray, College junior, secretary-treasurer; Katherine Broers, College junior, public chairman.
Three men were initiated into Scabbard and Blade, honorary military science society, Tuesday. New members are John H. Stauffer, College junior; John K. Higdon, business senior; and John F. Rynerson, College junior.
Scabbard And Blade
Clubs On The Campus
Phi Alpha Theta, national honor history fraternity, will hold its annual picnic today at Lone Star lake. Members should meet by 4 p.m. in front of the history department office in Frank Strong hall.
History Fraternity Picnic
The Sunflower chapter of the K. U. Dames will entertain more than forty members of the Lawrence chapter at 8 p.m. today in the Sunflower grade school auditorium.
Sunflower K.U. Dames
Mrs. Betty Hallberg will give a resume of activities such as Red Cross and World Student Service Fund collections, a bazaar, several
parties, and a semi-formal dance which the Sunflower chapter has sponsored during the school year.
Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business fraternity, observed the 43rd birthday of the organization with a meeting at the Eldridge hotel Tuesday. John Ise, professor of economics, spoke to the members about the American political and economical systems.
Theta Sigma Phi, honorary women's journalism fraternity, gave a party Tuesday honoring graduating journalism seniors.
Alpha Kappa Psi
Journalism Fraternity
Top Students In Recital
Now the NEW FORD一一 it's to be a bigger change than from the old "T" to the Model "A"!
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The School of Fine Arts will present 18 students in the second advanced student recital at 7:30 p.m. today in Frank Strong auditorium.
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The students taking part are those either in the School of Fine Arts or other schools of the University who show promise in their particular field of music.
Tomorrow is the final day for seniors to pay their class dues, Harold Swartz, accountant in the business office, said. Senior announcements are expected to arrive next week.
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Marian Rippeteau, College sophomore, will open the program with a piano number.
Ten voice students appearing are Betty Joan Bennett, Martha Weed, Betty Hayward, Mary Lynn Lucas, Eva Joyce Rohrer, and Mildred Ann Hogue, fine arts sophomores; DuMont Reed and Elwanda Brewer, education seniors; and Marylee Masterson and Andrew Klapis, College seniors.
Violin numbers will be presented by Mary Evalyn Clough and Fred Falmer, fine arts freshmen; Charlotte Maxey, macphomore; Myron McNown, junior; and Betty Lou Wells, education senior.
Nancy Messenger, soprano, and Mary Carolyn Daugherty, contralto, will close the program.
Maj. Fournier is a member of the delegation of foreign military officers visiting the campus this week.
Maj. J. Fournier of the French army will be the guest of honor at a dinner given for him by French students and faculty members at 6 pm, today at the Hearth.
French Colonel To Be Guest
At Student-Faculty Dinner
UN Military Men Visit University
Members of the group are Col. Fu De I, Lt. C., Wen Wei Lin, and Capt. Chin Siao Tang, China; Maj. J. Fournier and Comdr. V. Marchal, France; Capt. H. Eeles, group captain; and Comdr. H. Firth, United Kingdom.
Seven military officers from the United Nations security council arrived at the University Tuesday on a trip to "see two typical universities of this country."
The officers are from China, France, and England, and are being escorted by Col. Brooke E. Allen, United States air force, who explained that the officers are "trying to gain an insight into this phase of American life." They have already visited Ohio university at Athens.
This morning the visitors inspected the military science building, and at noon lunched at the Union with the Chancellor and guests from the command and general staff school, Ft. Leavenworth.
Immediately after their arrival, the officers held a press conference and then toured the campus. They also attended a meeting of the student U.N.E.S.C.O. council. Colonel Allen said that armed forces for the U.N. are not an immediate possibility, and added that the military staff committee is set for immediate action should it be called for. It is composed of representatives from each of the five permanent members of the security council, and serves now as an advisory group.
Chancellor Deane W. Malott spoke at the commencement exercises at Halstead High school Tuesday. He will also give commencement speeches at Potwin High school May 19 and Independence High school May 20.
Malott Speaks At Schools
This afternoon the officers will meet with student chapters of the International Relations club, United World Federalists, and U.N.E.S.O. The delegation will fly back to Lake Placid on Thursday.
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University Daily Kansan
Thursday, May 20, 1943
Lawrence, Kansas
STUDENT NEWSPAPER
OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Dewey Denies Stassen Charges Of Ganging Up
Portland, Ore., May 20—(UP)—Harold E. Stassen charged today that an "eastern combination of Taft-Dewey forces" had spent $250,000 to host him in the Oregon primary.
Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York promptly denied the charge.
Both Mr. Dewey and Mr. Stassen were scheduled to return to Portland today for last minute speeches, before Oregon voters cast ballots tomorrow for the state's 12 delegates to the G.O.P. national convention.
Mr. Stassen, speaking in Astoria Wednesday night, charged that Mr. Dewey and Sen. Robert Taft had combined forces, in an all-out attempt to demonstrate that our more liberal policies, our program for the West, and our foreign policy do not have the support which the earlier primaries and the national polls showed that we have."
Governor Dewey replied in a statement:
"For 21% weeks I have had the privilege of waging a wholly constructive and clean campaign before the voters of Oregon. It is saddening that Mt. Stassen in the final days should degrade the campaign by such reckless and flagrantly untruthful statements.
"To set the record straight once and for all," our expenditures are not a tiny fraction and the ridiculous sum he mentions and he knows it.
"The frantic effort to associate me with the views or actions of any other Republican candidate for president is unfounded and false and Mr. Stassen knows it"
Both Governor and Mr. Stassen campaign funds and hopes for nomi-have staked a large segment of their nation on the outcome of the Oregon primary election.
2 Poets Win In Contest
Edgar Wolfe, graduate student, and James E. Nelson, College senior, tied for first prize in the annual William Herbert Carruth poetry contest. Wolfe's poem is entitled "Even One Thing," and Nelson's "Summer Mood."
Ray B. West, chairman of the committee, said that a single choice was impossible to make because the two poems were entirely different. The winners will divide first prize, $50, and second prize, $25.
Third prize went to James B. Chandler, graduate student, who wrote "The Wait."
Harry Levinson, graduate student, who wrote "The Depressed Ward," Nancy German, College sophomore whose poem was "Home Town," and Wilma M. Brooks, graduate student, who wrote "Prayer," won honorable mention.
With Mr. West on the committee were Clyde Hyder, professor of English, and Robert Stallman, assistant professor.
Judges were Weldon Kees, a New York poet; William Howie, instructor of English, and Mr. West.
Postlethwaite Quits Alumni Magazine
There will be no replacement for Kenneth Postlethwaite, former as associate editor of the Alumni magazine, Fred Ellsworth, editor, sa today. Mr. Postlethwaite resigner Tuesday to join the staff of the Daily Mail. Nevada. Mo.
"It is like losing your right arm, and I hate to face next year without him." Mr. Ellsworth said.
ASC To Select Dance Manager
The social committee of the All Student Council will select a new dance manager tomorrow.
The dance manager receives $5 for each dance he arranges. This includes finding a place for the dance, arranging for a band, and making the necessary arrangements with the business office.
Applications should be made today to Elizabeth Sue Webster, 1625 Edgehill road.
UN Delegates Visit Campus
"The situation in Palestine is going to improve." This was the opinion expressed Wednesday by Captain H. Eeles, group captain of the British Royal Air force.
In thorough the afternoon, the military men met with various organizations at the Union. They spoke in small informal groups, answering questions about the work of the military staff committee of the United Nations.
Captain Eeles explained that the military staff committee would be, in the instance a United Nations armed force was set up, the highest strategic body. Their work during the past two years has been to arrive at certain basic principles upon which such a force can be built.
In invariably the discussion turned to Palestine, and Captain Eeles freely told of his government's position. England, he said, has maintained order in the Holy Land since World War I with a terrific loss of British blood and a terrible burden on the British taxpayer. Now, he told the group, England wants to lay down this burden.
Capt. Chin Siao Tang, for thirty-six years in the Chinese navy, answered questions concerning the size and operation of the Chinese navy, the war in North China with the Communists, and the life of his people.
Free Smokes In Union
Nearly 2,000 packs had been given away Wednesday by representatives of the Reynolds Tobacco company. They said they planned to give out their quota of 9,000 packs by today.
Free packs of cigarettes, in plastic cases marked K.U., are being distributed to activity book holders in the Union today.
Some students were worried about the red mark put on their activity books to prevent "seconds." Raymond Nichols, executive secretary, said that the mark would not affect the use of the books.
Enrollment requirements are the same as for other R.O.T.C. units except that students must have been accepted by the School of Medicine. The maximum age limit is also higher, being 29 instead of 27.
A medical R.O.T.C. unit will be established at the University and will be in operation by next fall.
ROTC Medic Unit Will Be Activated
The course will require only one hour of military science a week and will include a six-week summer camp between the third and fourth years of medical school.
The first 18 months of the course will be taken on the campus, the remainder at the University Medical Center in Kansas City, Kan.
Japan And Missouri Helped When KU Changed Its Flag
A red, white and blue flag, now flies beside "Old Glory" on the north tower of Fraser hall as an emblem of K.U.—but it took a world war to put it there.
By ARTHUR COLLINS
The old flag, designed in 1928, was discarded because University officials thought it resembled too closely the ensign of our World War II armies, the Japanese. And worse
enemies, the Japanese. And worse
have been made by a Missourian!
So aroused we Kansans at this oversight that they not only accepted the present red, white and blue University flag, but adopted the pattern of a thorough-bred Kansan. It was nine years ago that Eleanor Grider, '43, a Lawrence student, entered her flag in a design department contest and won.
The story goes that one of Eleanor's greatest incentives to make a new and more suitable flag was the fact that the old one was designed by a KuKu president from the "Show-Me" state. Eleanor is married now and lives in Arizona, according to Mrs. Richard L. Grider, of 1400 Louisiana street.
Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, said that our University flag was accepted because of its simplicity. For this reason, it has been waving over Mount Oread since Dec. 6, 1939, and is visible as far as the outskirts of Lawrence.
In describing the former Jap-like flag, Mr. Nichols said it had the familiar Jayhawker in the center surrounded "on all sides by bright red sun-beam stripes running out to the border." Its complex structure was another one of its defects, he added
The discovery of the similarity of the flag to the Nipponese ensign came about unexpectedly and at an embarrassing time. Credit for the find goes to the alumni, according to Fred Ellsworth, secretary of the alumni association.
"We placed the flag behind the guest speaker's head," Mr. Ellsworth said, "and didn't pay any more attention to it.
"In the midst of the speech-making and merriment some patriotic alumnus noticed that the flag resembled the Jap ensign. It was hauled down immediately.
It seems the alumni were having their annual banquet in Topeka during the war years "and a symbol or something was needed of the University." A flag supposed to have been designed by a president of the KuKu club back in 1928 was quickly dug up.
Eight University women who were recently interviewed by Mrs. Ann Carnahan, of the Compton Advertising agency in New York, are now anxiously awaiting a telegram from New York.
Lucky Coed To See NY
One of them will receive a week's expense-paid trip to the big city, where she will stay at the Waldorf and "do the town" in company with women from nine other large universities.
She will also spend 15 hours modeling before a color camera at $10 an hour. If these color pictures come out right, she will then be featured in the national advertising of a well-known shampoo.
The women interviewed by Mrs. Carnuhan are: Sue Rose Mounce, education junior; Rosemary Robinson, College sophomore; Gloria Hill, and JoAnne Hudson, College juniors; and Corrine Carter, Karen York, Mary Lou Martin, and Norma Jean Guthrie, fine arts sophomores.
Mrs. Carnahan was seeking women who were both photogenic and interesting, from the standpoint of taking part in campus activities.
Traditions Committee To Choose Cheerleaders
Eight cheerleaders will be picked from 42 students who have tried out for the University cheering squad. They will be chosen by the traditions committee of the A.S.C. at 7:30 p.m. today in Robinson gym.
Two women, four men, and two alternates will be selected for the squad, according to Ernest Friesen, chairman of the committee. The applicants attended practice sessions this week.
The housing picture for next fall is bright for single men, a little dark for single women, and bleak for married students.
Rooms For Fall Will Be Scarce
Irvin Youngberg, director of dormitories, said that Sleepy Hollow will be a men's co-op next year. This will fill 35 less places formerly reserved for single women.
Private homes, dormitories, and fraternities will provide single men with all the housing needed, Mr. Youngberg said.
There will be a problem in finding homes for single women, he said. In the past Lawrence landlords have co-operated in offering rooms to them, and the housing office hopes that landlords will be helpful again.
Mr. Youngberg said that 600 married couples have applied for Sunflower apartments for summer and fall.
"There are about 1,500 units in Sunflower and we don't expect enough turnover to have places available for all applicants," he said.
"The situation for apartments in town is worse. There aren't enough places to go around. Sunnyside will be used to house full-time staff members, and possibly a limited number of graduate assistants with children."
Vignery To Head Summer Kansan
Gene Vignery, College senior, will be editor-in-chief of the Summer Session University Daily Kansan, Elmer F. Beth, acting director of the William Allen White School of Journalism announced today.
James Robinson, College senior will be assistant editor and David Clymer, College junior, will be business manager.
The staff appointments were made by the faculty of the School of Journalism.
The Summer Session Kansan is published every Tuesday and Friday afternoon The first issue will be distributed June 15.
WEATHER
Kansas—Fair east, partly cloudy west today and tonight with few scattered thunderstorms west tonight. Tomorrow partly cloudy. Slightly cooler northwest tonight and tomorrow. High today 82-90.
Bitter Bird Will Continue New Editor Says
The Bitter Bird will definitely be published again next year, Leland G. Norris, new editor, has announced.
"The magazine was a financial success this year, and there is no reason why we can't do it again," he said.
"We plan to put out seven or eight issues during the year which will contain jokes, pictures, and humorous stories. It is intended that each issue will be like th third issue this year, and will be for the entertainment and relaxation of those who read it." Norris added.
There have been complaints about subscribers not getting their copies but under the new management, subscriptions will either be mailed or delivered to the respective houses, Norris said.
"There will be a definite effort to keep out any and all independent and Greek controversies." he added.
On the staff will be Norris, editor; Myron W. Husband, managing editor; Helen E. Ward, assistant editor; Clarence Eyerly, business manager; and Carol Buhler, advertising manager.
Others will be Louis D. Duff, Jr., Edith Malott, Agnes Husband, Ann Lawrence, Louise Lambert, Hank Brown, Paul A. Coker, Jr., LuAnne Powell, Marilyn Sweet, Elger L. Talley, Ray E. Martin, and William D. Waters.
Art Exhibit Lasts 3 Days
Members of Delta Phi Delta, honorary art fraternity, will sponsor an art exhibit May 23, 24, and 25. The exhibit will be open to any member of the student body and will be displayed in front of Robinson gymnasium.
The exhibit will be divided into four sections: oil painting, sketch, water color and a miscellaneous group. Prizes will be given to the winner in each division. The judges will be members of the faculty.
Work submitted should be in the design department on the third floor of Frank Strong hall not later than soon today. All work will be returned immediately after the exhibit.
Tower Solicitors Renew Fund Effort
World War II memorial campaign chairmen have begun to intensify their efforts now that the needed $350,000 for starting construction is in sight.
The Douglas county campaign is only $4,500 short of its $50,000 goal, and two new bellringers, Mrs. Mabel Young and Valley Express company have been reported.
Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary, and Jack Taylor, campaign director, attended the kick-off meeting in Wichita May 18.
Officials are hoping that with many large cities unreported the goal can be reached in time for a ground-breaking ceremony at commencement June 7.
Seven organized houses have reported a total of $150 in the freshman drive. Hopkins hall, Alpha Omicron Pi, Kappa Alpha Theta, Delta Gamma, Chi Omega, Kappa Sigma, and Sigma Kappa have turned in their contributions and others houses are urged to do so immediately.
/
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1948
PAGE TWO
Nagle Elected President Of ASCE
Bernard Nagle, engineering senior was elected president of the American Society of Civil Engineers Wednesday.
Other officers are Robert Sears, sophomore, vice-president; Donald Gray, junior, corresponding secretary; and Henry Hobrock, sophomore, treasurer.
G. W. Bradshaw, professor of civil engineering, spoke on the advantages of professional registration.
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Former Student In Colorado Gives Mineral Specimens
A box of mineral specimens from mines in Cripple Creek and Aspen, Colo., was recently presented to the mining and metallurgical engineering department.
William O. Zaugg, '82, collected the specimens in the two camps where he has spent his life as a miner.
There are samples of silver, gold, lead, and zinc ores. They will be used for display purposes in the department.
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Joyce Randolph was elected president of the Kalium chapter of Iota Sigma Pi, national honorary chemistry sorority. Tuesday. Other officers elected are Frances Blair, vice-president; Marion Miller, correspondent secretary; Persis Snook, treasurer; and Cassandra Ritter, permanent historian.
Chemistry Sorority Elects
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---
THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Socially Speaking-
As The Days Grow Longer So Do Lists Of Social items
Sigma Nu fraternity entertained May 15 at the chapter house with the 41st annual White Rose dinner-dance honoring the group's graduating seniors. Music was by Dee Courtney and his orchestra. At intermission Peggy Ann Schnackenberg, a member of Alpha Delta Pi, was crowned "Sigma Nu White Rose Queen." She was selected from a group of entrants whose pictures were judged by Kay Kyser, radio star and an alumni of the fraternity.
The outdoor dinner was served to the guests who were seated at small tables situated in the area encircled by the driveway. Dancing was in the chapter house which was decorated with flowers. The dining room was decorated as a reproduction of the Monte Carlo casino, and guests were given paper money for use at the gaming tables which included roulette, horse - racing, and chuck-a-luck.
Sigma Nu Formal
Guests were Betty Bacon, Virginia Coppedge, Mary Bovaird, Joan Wales, Donna Rumsey, Betty Compton, Rayma Hotchick, Laurie Birmingham, Lois Fuller, Donnie Jones, Marcille Parker, Margaret Harness, Anne Ashley, Edith Malott, Shirley Sundeforst, Diane Smith, Joan Joseph, Joanna Tainer, Charlotte Pringle, Eleanor Pack, Diane Howell, Gloria Hill, Dorothy Stephenson, Norma Kennedy, Ruth Russell, Valerie Stagg, Patricia Horner, Kathryn Kubik, Ann Hogue, Jerry Horner, Jody Armacost, Patricia Zachman, Stella Gabrielson, Mary Flo Spilman, Edith Carey, Dorothy Smith, Sally Krehbiel, Joan Compton, Marilyn Franklin, Mary Powers, Nancee Bell, Mary Lou Martin, Carolyn Carter, Marybelle Pollock, Jo Ann Bynan, Mary Kay Paige, Sally Stepper, Charlene Farrell, Mr. and Mrs. Dwight Deay, Mr. and Mrs. John Miner, and Mr. and Mrs. Lee Seldon.
Louise Miller, Edvina Lack, Irene Murphy. Joan Hill, Joan Smith. Margaret Goodrich, Lee Hulen. Georgina Stayton, Louise Riss, Jove Hayes, Gibson Hart, Omer Muchmore, Robert Dougherty, Paul Klein. Charles Avey, William McPhee, Mr
University Daily Kansan
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays for examination periods. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
and Mrs. William Spicer, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Stewart, Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Kelsey, and Mr. and Mrs. Howard Shroryk, Kansas City; Mr. and Mrs. Howard Perry, Topeka; Elizabeth Thies and Betty Dodson, Wichita; Blyder Dixon, Coffeyville; Billie Schultz, Olathe; Jackie Lewis and Donald Burton, Russell; Patricia Wentworth and Virginia Kerneman, Manhattan; Ada Hattfield, Valley Falls; Helen Kersey, Baldwin; and Mary Dunn, Omaha, Neb.
Chaperons were Mrs. O. L. Horner, Mrs. R. H. Wilson, Mrs. J. A. Hooke, and Mrs. F. A. Benson.
Exchange Dinner
Lambda Chi Alpha and Gamma Phi Beta held an exchange dinner recently.
Phi Chi Initiates
Kappa Upsilon of Phi Chi initiated 15 men into the chapter as junior activities Sunday.
- *
Initiates were John Baeke, Arnold Peterson, Hugh Wood, Harlan Berthelsen, William Doane, Raymond Hanna, Donald Ray, Keith Wolfenbarger, Warren B. Matthew, George Newton, Paul L. Emrie, L Dean Hauser, Donald Zook, William Evans, and Harold Green
Miller Hall Guests
Ruby Olson, Garnett, was a weekend, gyst. at. Miller hall.
Dinner guests Sunday were Larry Hamilton, Jeanne Schauilis, G. V. Longhofer, Lois Edwards, and Miss Connie Herrera.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
K & E and DIETZGEN SLIDE RULES
New shipment just arrived.
98
Rowlands.
48
KEEP COOL
We have Crushed Ice or Cubes in
REDY-PAK SACKS
Ice dock at 616 Vermont.
for parties or picnics, cooling beverages keeping vegetables and salads fresher.
American Service Co.
Trovillo To Speak At SAM Banquet
Phone 48 for delivery.
J. Alden Trovillo, former head of the department of industrial management, will speak at the annual financial banquet for graduating Society for the Advancement of Management members. The banquet will be held at 6:30 p.m. today in the Kansas room of the Union.
Mr. Trovillo, former advisor to the S.A.M., is now industrial manager of the Wichita Chamber of Commerce.
German Hawkshaw Comedy Ends Showinas This Year
Tickets are $1.50 a person and are available at the School of Business office.
"Emil und die Detektive," a German film, will be shown in Fraser the theater a 4 p.m. today.
The comedy, sponsored by the department of German, is the last sponsored film this year. No admission will be charged.
Lawrence Marine Group Will Organize May 24
A Lawrence detachment of the Marine Corps league will be organized at 8 p.m. May 24 in the Community building. All ex-marines and marines now on duty are eligible to join.
College Students OPPORTUNITIES FOR YOUNG WOMEN
Artists
For designing or lettering HALLMARK Greeting Cards.
Verse Writers To compose and write Greeting Card Verse.
Eye
Office Positions For Stenographers, Typists, and Office Technicians.
Permanent Full-Time Positions in our Kansas City Office.
HALL BROTHERS, Inc.
Manufacturers of HALLMARK Cards
Eye
Kansas City, Missouri
WE FIT GLASSES and DUPLICATE BROKEN LENSES
2505 Grand Avenue
Large Selection of Distinctive Frames Lawrence Optical Co.
BEAUTIFUL WHITES With Platforms
$7.95
"JACQUELINES"
and
"CONNIES"
HAYNES and KEENE 819 Mass. Ph.524
as a
You ...
June Bride
and all of those cherished memories hopes and dreams recorded in your wedding portrait.
We specialize in bridal portraits. Include us in your wedding plans.
Hison's
721 Mass.
Phone 41
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE FOUR
THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1948
ATO Drops Phi Gam To Advance To Finals
Herb Weidensaul's line single scored Chet Laniewski in the last half of the tenth inning to give ATO a 10 to 9 vitory over Phi Gam in a fraternity semi-final contest. One of the largest crowds of the softball season witnessed the playoff of the game which had been twice protested earlier.
ATO meets Phi Delt to decide the fraternity championship at 4:15 this
KU Coaches Answer MU
The habitual weeper of Big Seven football, Don Fauror of Missouri, has turned his attention to the crime of "stealing" athletes from Missouri.
In a meeting of the M.U. Quarterback club in Kansas City, Faurot went into great detail in relating that Norman Cooper, line coach at Kansas, had invited some athletes from St. Louis to visit the Mt. Oread campus. He further added that the boys had had their expenses paid, but did not state who did the paying.
Norman Cooper, line coach receiving the blunt end of the criticism, said that two boys from St. Louis had visited the campus during the spring football session, but they were sent here by a K.U. alumnus living in St. Louis. He further added, "I don't think there's anything wrong if we try to get boys to come to Kansas."
In defense to the charge, a spokesman from the University of Kansas admitted that two athletes from St. Louis had visited here, but they had not been brought here by the University nor had they come on expenses furnished by K.U.
Coach J. V. Sikes declared in an interview, "We did have two boys visit Kansas from St. Louis. However, I feel they did not come at instigation of Cooper. Arnold Stricker, one of our halfbacks, is from St. Louis and he was a friend of the boys. The two boys visited their friend, and he brought them to the athletic office. Where they got the funds for the trip, I don't know."
In recent years, Kansas has lost several prospective athletes because of the successful lures and bait used by her friendly neighbors. Some of these athletes have been instrumental and key figures in defeating Kansas down through the years.
Commenting on Faurot's charge, Lyle Cascourne, engineering sophomore, shed some interest light on the subject when he remarked to a Dally Kansan reporter.
Lawrence Gore Elected President Of A.I.Ch.E.
Lawrence Gore was elected president of the American Institute of Chemical Engineers for the coming year at a recent meeting.
Oliver Edwards is the new vicepresident; Fred Hirsekorn, secretary; Edward Wolski, treasurer; and James Bowden, corresponding secretary.
RISLEY'S AUTO TRIM
10th and New Jersey Phone 939
Finer Body and Fender Repair
*eferntoon. Both teams have won two games in the playoffs and have season's records of five wins and one defeat.
Expert Convertible Top and Seat Repair
Phi Gam had a man on third with one out in the ninth and had two men on in the tenth with only one away but failed to score. ATO opened the last of the eighth with runners on second and third with one out but two pop flies ended the frame.
K-Club Will Pick Nominees
With one down in the fatal 10th Chet Laniewski walked. Jack Eskridge doubled him to third and then Weidensau punched out his game-winning single.
The K-club will meet at 7:30 p.m. today in 203 Robinson gym to nominate candidates for next year's officers.
Our Prices Are Right SEE US FIRST!!
Certificates of membership will be passed out.
Golf, Tennis Hopes High
Conceded a good chance to knockoff pre-tourney favorite Oklahoma, K.U. golf and tennis teams left today for Lincoln where they will play in the Big Seven championship meets tomorrow and Saturday.
Par-Shooting Bill Jones has rejoined the squad for the conference meet. Jones played only one match this season because he was playing in intramurals. The presence of Jones will offset the loss of Dick Ashley. Ashley has withdrawn because of illness in his family, coach
American League
Washington 4, Chicago 1
Detroit 4, Boston 1
New York 8, St. Louis 4
Cleveland 6, Philadelphia 1
Baseball Scores
Bill Winey said today. Fred Brinkman, Bob Meeker, Hal DeLongy, and Courtland Smith will also make the trip.
The tennis team, holding victories over every loop foe except the Sooners, hopes to arrive in Lincoln in time for practice on the unfamiliar clay courts. Dick Richards, Glenn Tongier, Hervey Macferran, Dick Gray, and Charlie Carson will carry Kansas' hopes in the tourney.
Hill View 2 Miles South on Hi-Way 59S Play
Weekdays —36c
GOLF
Sundays & Holidays 51c
Golfing Equipment
● Wilson
● Hagen
Kroyen
Interested in
A $4000-A-YEAR "FLYING EXECUTIVE" JOB?
If you can qualify, you begin training as an Aviation Cadet. You draw $75 a month pay, plus food, quarters,
HERE's your chance to find out about one of the best opportunities ever offered college upper-classmen. It's a job that qualifies you as a pilot and as an executive . . . that puts you in touch with the very latest developments in the field of aviation . . . that pays you up to $336 a month after one year of intensive training.
The U. S. Air Force interviewing team is coming back on the campus to tell you more about it. It is set up to answer all your questions, to interview applicants for the July 1 and October 15 Aviation Cadet Classes, and to give preliminary physical examinations and flying aptitude tests.
uniforms, medical and dental care. Upon successful completion of the 52-week training course, you're commissioned a 2nd Lieutenant, Air Force Reserve, and assigned to flying and administrative duties with the U.S.Air Force.
No other job offers such a broad background for a career in aviation. To those who meet the high standards, it's a real opportunity.
Stop in after class and get all the details. Check the date, time and place below.
CAREERS WITH A FUTURE U.S. Army and U.S.Air Force
INTERVIEWS WILL BE HELD
May 17 through 21, inclusive, Military Science Building
Shows: 2:30-7-9:20 Jayhawker NOW—Ends Tuesday
On All Time GREAT!
DYNAMIC--POWERFUL-TIMELY
SPENCER TRACY
Katherine HEPBURN
Van JOHNSON
Frank Capra's
STATE OF THE
UNION
from
Angela LANSBURY
Adolphe MENJOU
Leurs STONE
Green Grass of Wyoming
Green Grass of Wyoming
Peppy Cummins Charlet Colors
color by TECHNICOLOR
GRANADA
NOW—Ends Saturday WHY!WHY!WHY!
The most amazing plot in 3300 years of recorded intrigue was born!
Dana ANDREWS Gene TIERNEY
"THE IRON CURTAIN"
Added: WORLD NEWS & latest March of Time "BATTLE OF GREEE"
Owl Show Sat. 11:45 p.m.
SUNDAY—4 Days
Claudette COLBERT
Robert CUMMINGS
Don AMECHE
"SLEEP MY LOVE"
VARSITY
NOW—Ends Saturday Song and action the GENE AUTRY way in
CALL OF THE CANYON
Smiley Burnette
—2nd Hit —
THE ADRAMS COMPANY
William HALOP
Ann E. TODD
Scotty BECKETT
DANGEROUS
YEARS
Released by DODG Cartoon 1964
PATEE
TONITE—Ends Saturday Romance Adventure Gene TIERNEY George SANDERS "SUNDOWN"
2nd Hit
An epic of the boisterous, browling old west Richard DIX Jane WYATT "THE KANSAN"
THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIV
Official Bulletin
May 20.1948
Phi Chi Theta, 7 tonight, Pine room. Installation of officers.
Scarab, 7:15 tonight, 205 Marvin.
Alpha Phi Omega, 7 tonight, 203
Frank Strong.
K-Club, 7:30 tonight, 203 Robinson gym. Election of officers. Membership certificates to be given out.
University Forums board to present "Alexander Nevsky" historical movie, 7:30 tonight, Fraser theater. No admission charge.
Le Cercle Francais, 5:30 today,
home of Mrs. J. C. Malin, 1641 University drive, for waffle supper
Notify French office, 115 Frank Strong, if planning to attend. Gifts for box to France either to meeting or office.
Quill initiation and election, 8 tonight, East room, Union.
A. V.C. business meeting, 7:15 to night, 206 Frank Strong. Final meeting.
Tau Beta Pi final business meeting, 7 tonight, hydraulics lab.
Christian Science organization.
7:30 tonight, Danforth chapel.
A power shovel has been shoveling dirt at the Jayhawk Plunge swimming pool so new pipe lines and pumps can be installed to step up the rate of water flowing through the pool.
Plunge Remodeled For May 30 Opening
All of the piping has been replaced and five new water inlets have been put in. These improvements in the pool will allow a water "turn over" every eight hours. The pool has also been given a new paint job.
The pool is scheduled to open on Memorial day, May 30, but will open sooner if the temperature soars.
Call K.U. 376 with your Want Ads.
Sociology club, 4 today, projection room, Fraser. Two movies. Election of officers.
S. A.M. spring banquet, 6:30 to-night, Kansas room, Union. J. A. Trovillo, speaker.
A.I.E.E. 7-30 tonight, 101 Snow.
Election. Dr. Max Dresden to speak on relationship of physics to engineering. All electrical engineers invited.
German club, 4:30 today, 402 Fraser.
Students wishing to apply for position of dance manager submit qualifications in a letter to Elizabeth Sue Webster, 1625 Edgehill road, by tomorrow.
A. S.T.E. banquet tomorrow. Tickets at shop practice office.
I. S.A. council and members requested to report to 228 Frank Strong, 7 p.m. tomorrow, to help send out Kan-Do's.
Westminster Fellowship, 5:30 p.m.
Sunday, 1212 Oread. Important.
Baseball coach Russ Schon will see his freshmen under re for the first time when he sends the varsity against the yearlings in a practice session at 4 p.m. today on the Stadium diamond.
Frosh Nine Faces Varsity Today
Southpaw Loren Hepler will be on the mound for the freshmen with John Goodson as his battery mate. William Hinrichs, another southwily, will take the hill for the varsity with Keith Mead behind the bat.
The Jayhawkers will take on the Baker university Wildcats tomorrow night at the city park. K.U. play a previous game from Baker 5 to 3.
Kansas State will be here for a two game series May 24 and 25 to wind up the season for the Jayhawkers.
Attend the Topeka Drive-in Theater 25th and California First Show . 8 p.m.
ride on out to Uncle Ed's Ray's Cafe
[Illustration of two horseback riders in a rural setting].
No horsin' around-fast pleasant service for you.
THE SIGN
of FINE FOODS
Rose's Rancho
Pho. 3074
2 mi. North of Lawrence
ROSE'S
RANCHO
CHICKEN
STEAKS
OPEN
CHICKEN
OPEN
MONDAY, MAY 24
A representative of Long's COLLEGE BOOK CO., COLUMBUS, OHIO
will be at
Rowlands College Book Store 1401 Ohio Street
TO PAY CASH
for second hand college text books for which you have no further use whether used in your school or not.
Unload your old books Monday for cash.
98
Rowlands
1401 Ohio St.
48
Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
MAKE PLANS NOW TO ATTEND THE
A dancers in formal attire dancing a ballroom dance.
*
SECOND ANNUAL
ALL-STUDENT INTRAMURAL BALL
*
Saturday, May 22
Military Science Building
- DANNY BACHMANN and his Orchestra
THE NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP
BASKETBALL CLUB
9-12 p.m. Semi-formal $1.00 per couple
PRESENTATION OF TROPHIES AND AWARDS
PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1948
The Editorial Page
Trail's End?
A pilgrim travelling a lonely road one day encountered a tired little hunchback. Feeling sorry for the cripple, he gladly agreed to carry him. For many miles the little fellow's weight was as nothing on the pilgrim's broad back.
As they travelled along, however,
the pilgrim began to tire. Each succeeding step seemed to increase the weight on his back. Looking over
his shoulder, he was horrified at the apparition he saw; for the hunchback had changed into a hideous monster.
The pilgrim and his burden at this time had drawn up at a water crossing. The lost pilgrim struggled desperately to free himself but the frail arms of the hunchback were now cordons of steel around his neck. Goaded into the water, he sank like a stone.
In the beginning, the munitions maker seemed harmless enough and helpful at times. Frontiersman and pioneers bought his bullets and rifles to shoot game and protect themselves from savages. They like-wise purchased his powder to blast stumps from homesteaded areas.
The munitions maker, being human, decided we must improve the technique and efficiency of shooting game, killing savages, and blasting tree stumps. Primitive equipment was successively replaced by dynamite, nitroglucerin, heavy and long range artillery, automatic weapons, aerial bombs, and the atom bomb.
It is argued that the college graduate leaves the school without any knowledge of a practical trade. If he has been active in campus affairs, however, he is likely to have a fair working acquaintance with statue painting—Bill Vaughan, K.C. Star.
Recipe for social success in college: 1) Have a car; 2) Be a good conversationalist; 3) Have a car; 4) Be congenial; 5) Have a car; 6) Be a good listener; 7) Have a car (Note—if the car is a cream convertible, numbers two, four, and six may be left out.)
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
---
BILL'S GRILL
JUICY STEAKS
Delicious Dinners
Sandwiches—Malts
Open Daily 6 a.m. 1:30 p.m Across from Court House
Lawrence Sanitary Milk
DRINK
MORE
MILK
But be sure it's sanitary, properly handled. You can be sure by drinking
After the first few improvements, some of the more observing people decided that their weapons and munitions could be used for something more than shooting game, killing savages, and blasting tree stumps. Besides, the frontier had been settled.
LAWRENCE
SANITARY MILK
During the resulting wars, the munitions maker also saw the light. He expanded his plant, built others, and grew fat on the demand for his product, while others, observing his success, began a race into the field
The race has continued and the world has become an armed camp. And the munitions makers, too, have taken on a hideous aspect. They have grown fabulously rich and powerful by selling their goods to both sides. They operate jointly in many countries. National governments are dependent on them. Historians even claim they have manipulated government policies to prolong wars and have hired propagandists to undermine peace conferences.
The world has carried the burden on its shoulders a good way and is showing signs of tiring. When will it reach the water's edge?—James D. Head.
University
Daily Hansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., National Association, and the Associated College Press. Represented by the National Advisory Council. 420 Madison Ave., New York City.
Editor-In-Chief ... David H. Clymer
Managing Editor ... Cooper Rollow
Assst. Man. Editor ... Clarke M. Thomas
Assst. Man. Editor ... Gene Vigery
Assst. Man. Editor ... James Saunders
Assst. City Editor ... Beaty Chettle
Assst. City Editor ... Richard Barton
Telegraph Editor ... James Robinson
Mail New ... Jeff Wheeler
Assst. Tel. Editor ... Bill Mayer
Sports Editor ... Paul Zeh
Sports Editor ... James Jones
Women's Sports Ed ... Anna McMullen
Picture Editor ... Robert M. Newman
Picture Editor ... James Mason
Society Editor ... Patricia Bentley
Business Manager ... Bill Alderson
Adv. Manager ... Paul Warner
Clr. Manager ... Don Waldron
Asst. Clr. Mgr. ... Bill Binter
Asst. Clr. Mgr. ... Robert M. Newman
Picture Editor ... James Mason
Society Editor ... Patricia Bentley
Business Manager ... Bill Alderson
Adv. Manager ... Paul Warner
Clr. Manager ... Don Waldron
Asst. Clr. Mgr. ... Bill Binter
Asst. Class. Adv. Mgr. ... Elizabeth Berry
Asst. Class. Adv. Mgr. ... Carol Buhler
Nat. Adv. Mgr. ... Carol Sokoloff
Asst. Nat. Adv. Mgr. ... Eleanor Mason
Asst. Promotion Mgr. ... Roger James
The Kansas Press Association
19 MEMBER
48
National Editorial Association
SLACKS
AND LOTS OF THEM!
All wool gabardines and tropicals and Bur-Mill rayons in all colors. $7.50 up
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 100
TSHIRTS
Plain colors, stripes, and patterns. $1.65 up
Ober's HEAD TO FOOT OUT FITTERS
FIRST WITH WHAT MEN WANT MOST
bell music
Billy Eckstine
with
Earl Hines Orchestra
"Stormy Monday Blues"
RCA Victor Album P-212
$4.00
For the Finest in Music
Bell Music Co.
925 Mass. Pho: 375
Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan.
Kroger
Cherries $1
Pie, No. 2½ can 4
Kroger for
Apples $1
Pie, No. 2½ can 7
Comstock for
STRETCH YOUR DOLLAR . . . STOCK UP
Apricots $1
St'kton, No. 2½ can 4
Halves in syrup for
Peaches $1
Libby, No. 2½ can 4
Sliced or Halves for
$1
for
$1 $1
Apricots $1
St'kton, No. 2½ can 4
Halves in syrup for
Peaches $1
Libby, No. 2½ can 4
Sliced or Halves for
Tomatoes $1
Avondale, No. 2 can 7
Finest Quality
DURING OUR DOLLAR DAYS
IT'S KROGER FOR BETTER VALUE TO CUT THE COST OF LIVING
DOLLAR DAYS
Peas $1
Avondale, No. 2 can 9
Early June for
Green Beans $1
Standard 10
for
Hominy $1
Otoe, No. 2 can 11
Fine Quality for
Beans & Bacon $1
Otoe, No. 300 can 11
In tomato sauce for
Catsup $1
Fraziers, 14oz Bot. 7
Tomato for
Purple Plums $1
No. 2½ can 6
Fancy for
Apple Butter $1
Pallas, 29oz jar 6
Delicious for
Kraut $1
Franks, No. 2½ can 8
White threads for
Swan or Ivory $1
Soap, Reg. Bars 10
Pure white for
Fresh Corn .. 11c
Well filled ears
Lemons .. 33c
Large, juicy, 2 lb bag
Potatoes .. 65c
New Triumphs, 10 lb bag
Fruit Cocktail $1
Libbys, No. 2½ can 3
In syrup for
Corn $1
B. Kernel, No. 2 can 6
Golden whole grain for
Grapef't Juice $1
Kroger, 46oz can 6
Sweetened for
Orange Juice $1
Kroger, 46oz can 5
Natural for
Blended Juice $1
Kroger, 46oz can 5
Orange & grapefruit for
Veg. Soup $1
Campbell's, 10½ can 8
for
Baby Food $1
Strained 13
Gerber-Heinz for
Cran. Sauce $1
Ocean Spray, 14oz jar 7
Whole for
Dog Food $1
Strongheart, lb can 12
Your pet loves it for
Ham lb 49c Armour Star, shang portion
Steaks lb 83c Sirloin, Kroger cut
Fillets lb 43c Rose Fish, No bone, no waste
THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
University Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
Phone KU 376
Classified Advertising Rates
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be delivered during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journalism is available at 9 a.m. the day before publication is desired.
One Three Five
day days days
25 words or less 35c 65c 90c
additional words 1c 2c 3c
For Sale
FELLOWS! Earn harvest wages! Here is your opportunity to earn money this summer by hauling wheat. 1495 Chevrolet pickup, new claw-grain bed for sale. Low mileage and tires, perfect condition. Job references to buyer. See at 1405 N. Y. 24
MODEL "A" roadster cheap. Best offer
takes. See at 1717 Alabama. 24
SEVENTY-FOUR, 1938 Harvey Davidson motorcycle, good condition. Also, package truck, side c', Norb Drouhair, 1120 West 11th, phone 243. 20
2.8 lens, Zeiss Tessar, 137 mm, German
Gerhardt 1460, Zeiss Summar,
Giordano 132 Lane "P", Sunflower, 21
lens
"TIMES" special anniversary rate to new subscribers, 40 weeks for only $3.42 at TIME.com.
MERCURY, '47 model, 4-door sedan. Radio, heater, rubber cushions, and new wheels. A clean car. $2,000. Inquire Ist Michigan Street. Hunziekier, Phone 2847-M.
MINIATURE Speed Graphic, Tessar-14.5,
Speedgun Flash, Kalart Range-Finder,
Case, 14, fourers, seven holders, pack, adap-
ment, 114, fourers, $225. H L. Shift-
man, 114 Louisiana.
SUMMER form with white coat. Size 36. Ed Slay, 1541 Tenn. Phone 348. 20 1940 BUICK coupe. New muffier, battery, water cover, pump water. Good condition. Must sell; will sacrifice. See at 1329 Connecticut or call 2514- M. 24
HOLLYWOOD double bed, bookcase,
three-way floor lamp, end table, dining
table, or set up like new. Priced reason-
ably by lot or piece. Call 1180-W-24
at see 105 Indiana.
47 MOTO-SCOOT in excellent condition.
Doon. Dan Wan. 1247 Ohio. 21
call 3338
www.motoscooter.com
SOLVE YOUR housing problem by seeing this 20 foot ironwood trailer home, with nesting hings set up, ideally located. 6 blocks from campus, R. W. Quinn, 2047 La. 20
VETERANS! We will buy, trade or sell
for you any Army or Navy gear in good
condition that you may wish to.
Lawrence Surplus 911 Mast. Phone
669
HTFD
Wanted
VETERAN wants to rent two or three room, furnished or unfurnished apartment in September. No children. Be in Lawrence two years. Jim Young. 68. 25
A REASONABLE good swimmer age 19 or over, boy or girl, to take Red Cross Equate School for jumping 12 to 28 years old. Wisconsin Johnson County. Will qualify you for a swimming instructor job. Call or visit Russell MELrose 7908, 6029 Ink Winkle Way, Meriam, Kansas, after 6 oclock or Saturday or Sunday.
TO TRADE: Large three room unfinished apartment in Kansas City, private bath, for equivalent apartment in Topeka. Jack W. Robinson, phone 3410.
WANT to contact woman or couple going to or near Washington, D.C., by car, bus, or rail, about May 28 or 30. Phone 2906-R. 24
A PERMANENT part-time typist. Phone 975.
21
Business Service
ESQUIRIE 'Father's' Day subscription
Books $4.35. Student Units
Book Store
AIRLINE RESERVATIONS. city ticket office. The First National Bank of Lawrence, Miss Rose Gieseman, Mgr., 8th and Mass. Phone 30. 21
THESIS typing wanted by teacher-typist with fifteen years experience in K.U. typing. Will also do term reports. Work guaranteed. Phone 2908 or 547. 24
IDEAS for graduation gifts. Parker pen
and pencils available at the Student Union Book Store. 24
TYPING: For better grades have your term papers and other written work neatly and accurately typed. Phone 2193-M, 729 Missouri, Mrs. Earl Wright. 24
DOES your pen need repairing? We have a complete pen repair department with a factory trained repairman at Student Union Book Store. 24
TYPING: Reasonable rates. Call 3250J
1930 Kentucky 26
TYPING DONE: Prompt attention, access phone 418 or bring to 1212 Chn. St, 20
TYPING done: Tern papers, reports, special attention given thesis. Accurate work at reasonable prices. Call 1996-W. Apartment 2, 1101 Tennessee. rites
TAILOR-MADE suits, $36.50 to $65.00. *Perfer alteration and tailoring.* George Eberhart & Son, Tailor Shop, 831½ Mass.
NEW vacuum cleaners for rent. Attachments included. $1.50 per day. Al Brooks Sweeper Co., 831% Mass. Ph. 1104 between 9 and 12 a.m.
For Rent
FOR RENT: Two room furnished apt, with bath for summer; months only. Close to campus. See or write Derald Kahler, 1503 Tennessee. Ave., 103.²
DOUBLE ROOM for boys. Nicely furnished with single beds. Two blocks from the kitchen and telephone facilities. Inquire at 1116 Louisiana between 6:00 and 7:00 d.m.
ROOMS FOR graduate girl students,
cooking privileges if desired—refrigeration.
2 blocks from campus. Phone
2734 M. 1244 Ohio. 26
HAVE A swell basement room for three boys. Ideal for summer studying. For more than three blocks from KU—near bus. Call 254-8 and see at 1813 illinois in bus.
TO TRADE—three-room furnished apartment with private bath for equivalent apartment in Topeka. Please contact Daily Kansan office. 21
MR COOLED rooms*and apt. for boys
mind beds. 2 blocks from campus.
6 blocks from library.
HOUSE Trailer for summer term. See
reference. 1002 New Hampshire
4:00 p.m.
SUMMER session rooms for boys. 1234
Ored. Phone 2917-M. 24
WE would exchange our two-room apt. in Lawrence near campus for apt. in Topeka. No pets or children. In June. Send letters to Kansan. 21
TWO double and one single room for
summer and available for fall-double
$12.50 each. single $15.00. Mrs. J.
Gordon, 1131 Kentucky, phone 1423. 20
ROOMS for rent for summer—includes
two cool basement rooms. Two blocks
from campus, one block from bus. 1339
Ohio. W. P. Meek. 26
ROOM, FOR men for summer or fall
camp. Call 14236M or
at 801 Indiana.
LARGE well-furnished rooms for men at 1218 Mississippi. One-half block from the building. Summer school and fall, 1948. Cal. Jack Campbell, 750. for information, 21.
ROOFS FOR GIRLS: Summer school and
Mrs. Wilson, Mrs. 120,
Ohio Phone: 3248W.
ROOMS for girl summer students. One
room for boys per month 1241 LOUISville, phone 1784-9.
PIANO—NEW and used. Piano-tuning
1916 Illinois. Phone 815. Piano Company
1916 Illinois. Phone 815.
Transportation
HAVE transportation for one to California leaving about noon, May 31, Call Leaving at 6:45 p.m.
LEAVING for New York City on June 2. Would be interested in one or more riders. Call 3305, ask for Neal. ___ 21
LEAVING every Friday at 4:00 p.m. for Wichita, returning Sunday evening. please call only Wed or Thurs. between 7:15 a.m. and 9:45 a.m. Schultz, 3170. 20
WANTED - A ride to Idaho after finals. If you are driving east I can help you drive and will share expenses. Phone 2889-R. ___ 20
WANTED-Ride for two to New York City or vicinity. Leave June 3 or after, share expenses and help drive. Call Leonard Snyder, 1752.
WANTED - Ride to Chicago or Waukegan. Illinois. Can leave after 10 a.m. June 1. Will share driving and expenses. Call Jim Amend. 3355-W. 21
NOTICE to all students who owe for Kansan classified advertising. Pay your
Miscellaneous
GIFTS-FOR-ALL-OCCASIONS
To "Norma" gold, four-color pencil finder,
in touch in tour, in touch with me. G. Scott, phone 8513.
Gustafson
DANCE every Saturday night at Odd Fei-
lence, Informal. Jong Looeng for
orchestra.
bill this week before outstanding accounts are transferred to the office of the University Registrar to be placed against transcripts. 24
THE COLLEGE JEWELER
Lost
VALUABLE key chain lost in Hoch
Schoenberg Library. Please
please turn in at Fine Arts office, 20
167 St. Martin's Place, New York, NY 10035.
Serving K.U. Students For 44 Years.
GOLF SHOES—Would fellows I rode in from Golf course Monday evening be kind enough to call 1387-M after 7 p.m. Ask for Hunter.
809 MASS.
PAIR of horn-rolled glasses, Reward
Elvig, 1511 Straford Rd. Phone
2544
SPIRAL notebook with "Trans. Miss
Return to Dux
Kansas Office. Reward.
UNIVERSAL Geneva wrist watch On race
room. Req. JH-1390, House Rm.
246. Call JH Schmitz. 664.
MAY 11, at or near university, round
tower. Keep only as keep safe.
Reward Call 1761
ONE blue loose-leaf notebook containing biology and chemistry notes and biology
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Chronographs a Specialty
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laboratory manual. Needed to pass finals.
Reward. Phone 565. Jim Chiders. 20
LOST: Large book of Spanish plays with important notes inside. Invaluable to valuance to others. If found please call 2696-M or Spanish office. 20
Found
A PAIR of plastic-rimmed glasses on the Intramural field about May 10. Owner may have the same on identification and paying for this ad.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
THURSDAY, MAY 20, 1948
US General Closes Border To Red Traffic
Frankfurt, May 20-(UP)-The United States has closed the border between the American and Russian zones of Germany even to official Soviet missions.
Under an order issued by Maj.
Gen. George P. Hays, deputy U.S.
military governor for Germany, all
Russians henceforth must enter the
American zone through a U.S. check-
point at Helmstedt, in the British
zone.
zone.
General Hays telegrapher instructions to the military governors in the American zone that entry by Russians "who were formerly permitted to cross at any authorized point has been limited to a single outlet at Helmsted."
The order seals the border between Soviet-occupied Thuringia and Saxony and American-occupied Bavaria and Hesse to the Russians.
His telegrams gave no reason for this clamp-down on Russian movements. Only official Russian missions have been permitted to enter the American zone previously.
varna It adds from 50 to 100 miles to the distance the Russians will have to travel to enter the American zone.
UWF Hears Colonel Allen
"It is very enlightening to see the sincere interest students at the University are displaying in regard to the nature of the world," said Col. Brooke E. Allen, on behalf of the seven foreign officers visiting the campus at a meeting of the United World Federalists.
World Federation
The group were guests at an informal discussion panel of the U.W.F.
U.W.F.
Lee Reiff, chairman of the U.W.F,
explained that the purpose of the
organization is to try to establish a
world government through a revision
of the United Nations charter.
Colonel Allen explained that the purpose of the military committee was to observe the activities in the Midwest.
Lee Reiff, U.W.F. chairman, announced that the co-sponsors for the organization will be W.E. Sandelius, professor of political science and John R. Malone, instructor in journalism.
Bavarian Costume Now On Display
The native costume for Bavarian men is being displayed by the German department in Fraser hall this week.
The costume includes leathar knee-length trousers, leather suspenders and belt, knitted cuffs for hose, a short quilted jacket, and a black hat with a goat's beard for trimming.
A miniature maypole and some of the famous Edelweiss (star) flowers which grow in the Bavarian mountains are also shown.
Union Activities Remain Closed
No decision was made about reopening the Student Union Activities in a meeting of Dean L. C. Woodruff and the Union Activities executive board Wednesday.
The Union Activities office will continue to be closed until further notice, according to Dean Woodruff.
Dean Woodruff closed Union Activities for several violations of scholastic eligibility requirements by members of the cast of "College Daze." He has not yet received a complete list of those involved in the violation.
Members of the Union executive board and the administrative staff of "College Daze" refuse to comment on the matter at present.
Postpone Trial Of Accused Man
The trial of Edward C. Beal, engineering junior, charged with petty larceny, was postponed Wednesday until May 28.
Beal was arrested May 15 in Lindley hall where, according to police, he took $1.30 from a cash box. According to the arresting officers, marked money, was found on Beal.
He was released on a $100 cash bond.
Sigma Xi Elects 20 Members
One hundred and eighty members of Sigma Xi, science fraternity, attended its annual initiation banquet Tuesday to hear Dr. R. C. Moore, state geologist, discuss the geologic history of Kansas.
Members of the faculty initiated Grace M. Heider, assistant professor of psychology; Walter Kollmorgen, professor of geology; Thomas R. Smith, associate professor of geology; Wilmer W. Tanner, instructor of zoology.
Graduate students initiated are Samuel G. Kneale, Warren K. Moore, James D. Riley, Robert B. Finley, Charles V. Foster, Richard M. Hoover, Cluff E. Hopla, Allison L. Norbaker, Henry E. Hughes, Wayne L. Reeve, Charles F. Smith, Ray J. Stanclift, William D. Thompson, Austin B. Williams, and Elwood A. Sharp.
Norman G. Miller, engineering senior, was the only undergraduate student initiated.
Trailer Camp Open June15
A new trailer camp west of Lawrence on highway 40 is expected to be opened around June 15 for the families living in the trailer camp at 21st and Louisiana streets.
Dr. E. L. Novotny, superintendent of schools, said that the present site will be vacated as soon as facilities are available in the new camp. A. C. Goodrum, operator of an auto repair garage, has arranged to open a trailer camp south of El Navajo, one-half mile west on highway 40. Mr. Goodrum has his new camp will be completely modern with initial space for about 20 trailers. He said rentals for the G.I. students would be a "little less" than they pay at the present time.
The original decision by the Lawrence board of education was to vacate the new school property by July 1. At its last meeting the board agreed to let the 13 families stay at the 21st and Louisiana site for another year if they could not find other accommodations. Dr. Novotny said that this agreement is now canceled and the board will go back to its original plan.
According to Ben Shanklin, all selections presented in the Interfraternity Sing contest were recorded. These recordings were excellent and are available to anyone desiring them. For more detailed information Ben suggests that you contact him at 1515 W. Campus Rd. or call 2720R.
All families now living in trailers at the camp plan to move to the new site Irvin Youngberg, dicetor of dormitories, said.
Inter-Frat Sing Discs Are Available Now
Lewis Group Meets Today On Coal Issues
Washington, May 20—(UP)—John L. Lewis called his 200-man wage policy committee to a meeting today that may decide whether the nation is going to have another sudden coal strike.
The committee may formally accuse the soft coal operators of violating their contract with the United Mine Worker—a charge which in the past has often been the walkout signal for Mr. Lewis' 400,000 miners.
Mr. Lewis announced the meeting of the policy committee just before he stalked out of a bargaining session with the operators Wednesday. He broke off negotiations abruptly when the mine owners voted, over his objections, to give the Southern Coal Producers association a place at the conference table.
Two months ago when Mr. Lewis accused the operators of having "dishonored" their contract, the miners walked out and stayed out 29 days in a dispute over pensions.
The southern association, whose members produce about one-fourth of the nation's soft coal, has filed charges against Mr. Lewis with the National Labor Relations board. It asked the board to obtain a court order forcing the United Mine Workers' boss to resume bargaining.
Government sources said the wage policy committee's action today might determine how rapidly Robert N. Denham, general counsel of the labor board, would act on the charges against Mr. Lewis.
If a new strike appears imminent, the government may ask for another Taft-Hartley injunction to keep the miners on their job for at least 80 days. The union still is under a federal court order for bidding another walkout over the pension dispute. But justice department spokesmen said this injunction does not bar a strike over another issue.
Fine Arts Recital Today At 3
The School of Fine Arts will present 13 students in the regular weekly recital at 3 p.m. today in Frank Strong auditorium.
Strong Margaret Jean Hanna, education junior, will present "Etude, F minor, Op. 10 No. 9" (Chopin) and "Gavotte" (Prokofieff) John Eberhards will play "Toccata" (Paradisi) and "La Cathedrale Engloutie" (Debussv).
Joan Rodgers, fine arts senior, will sing "Oriental Chant" (Moussorgsky); Sidney Dawson, education senior; "Water-Boy" (Mari. Avery Robinson); and Loraine Mai, fine arts senior; "Voi lo sapete" from "Cavalleria Rusticana" (Mascagni)
Ruth Russell, '45, who sang in the "Messiah," will join Harriet Harlow and Harry Spencer, fine arts juniors, in singing "Aquila Altera" (Jacopo da Balogna).
The program will close with "Allelegro Largett" from the Clarinet Quintet (Mozart- played by Chester Vincent Bleeker, first violin; Betty Lou Wells, second violin; Dale Bryan, viola; John Ehrlich, cello; and Jack Mohlenkamp, clarinet.
Bacteriology Club Picnic
Ice Cream at its Best
It's delicious!
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A SPECIAL TREAT - RICH FLAVORS
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The Bacteriology club held a picnic recently at Potter lake for members of the bacteriology department. About 70 people attended. The club will not meet again until September.
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University Daily Kansan 45th Year No.154 Friday, May 21, 1948
Friday, May 21, 1948
Lawrence, Kansas
STUDENT NEWS PAPER
Noted Musicians To Be Guests At Music Camp
Highlighted by the appearances of Percy Grainger, conductor-composer, and Thor Johnson, conductor of the Cincinnati Symphony orchestra, the Mid-Western Music and Art camp is expected to meet at the University this summer. The camp opens June 21 and closes Aug.1.
The two musicians will be guest conductors at two of the six concerts given by the 85-piece symphony orchestra starting in Hoch auditorium June 27. Algo to be organized is a 150-piece band and an a capella choir with 150 voices. The band will give weekly Sunday night concerts. Only about half of the choir will be music camp members. Dean D. M. Swarthout will conduct the choir.
For the first time an art camp will be held in connection with the band camp. Miss Marjorie Whitney, director of the design department, will be in charge. This year art enrollment has been limited to 25 students. Courses in commercial art, design, pottery, metal and jewelry, and water colors will be offered.
This is the 11th season for the band camp. Students from 14 states attended the 1947 session. Russell L. Wiley is director of the music camp. He will be assisted by Gerald M. Carney, assistant professor of music education.
In addition to the three large music groups there will be a complete program of small ensembles in instrumental work. Members of the School of Fine Arts will instruct courses in elementary music theory. Private instrumental and voice lessons will be offered.
Other guest conductors for the summer include Gerhard Schroth from the University of Chicago; Burnet C. Tuthill, director of the Memphis College of Music; James P. Robertson, director of music at Springfield, Mo.; and C. J. McKee, Topeka.
Speak Before State Group
Dr. John C. Frye and W. H Schoewe, both of the state Geological Survey, and Ogden S. Jones of the state Board of Health, will speak at a meeting of the Kansas Well Drillers Association which is being held at Larned today and tomorrow.
Dr. Frye will speak on the relation of the state Geological Survey to the well drillers of Kansas. Dr Schoewe will discuss the geology of the state, and Mr. Jones will speak on the brine contamination of fresh water.
Others attending the meeting are Glenn Prescott, Howard O'Connor, A.R. Leonard, William Connor, and V.C. Fishel, of the state and federal Geological Surveys.
The purpose of the meeting is to adopt a constitution and to discuss the water problems of Kansas. The president of the organization, E. J. Jungman, has extended an open invitation to all interested persons.
Women's Party Elects Officers
Helen Heath, College junior.
Thursday was elected president of N.O.W., women's political party.
Other officers are Donna Munn.
College sophomore, vice-president;
Marybelle Shepherd, sophomore,
secretary; Marie Schumacher,
freshman, treasurer; Marilyn Steinert, junior, and Marjorie Darby,
sophomore, members of the executive council.
Observatory Open To View Planet
the planet Venus in its crescent form may be observed at the K.U. observatory on the roof of Lindley hall between 7 and 9:30 p.m. today.
Dr. N. W. Storer, associate professor of physics, explained that Venus is now 40 million miles from earth. It is bright enough to be seen just before 7 p.m., although it is too low to be observed later than 10 p.m.
Men Will Help New Students
More than 150 University men will be counselors for freshmen who will enter the University next fall.
The counselors will have two meetings with the new students during the week of registration and enrollment. They will also attend a dinner meeting Sept. 15, the day registration and enrollment begins.
Dale Judy, College senior, said the purpose of the counseling is to assist the new students with their problems and make them feel at home at the University.
The counselors will introduce themselves by writing to the freshmen during the summer, giving the time and places of the guidance meetings.
Bitter Bird Will Expand
"Shock appeal" is in store for the subscribers and the advertisers in next year's Bitter Bird, Leland Norris, recently appointed editor, said at the annual dinner Thursday.
Norris said he plans to expand the magazine next year to emphasize more jokes, pictures, and cartoons, and to put out seven or eight issues instead of four.
"It will be an enormous job and we'll need an enlarged staff, Norris added. "The list in Thursday's Kansas was by no means an indication of the entire staff."
Byron Shutz, retiring editor, thanked the staff for their co-operation and wished Norris "a successful year and no editorials."
ASC Committee Appoints Slate Of Cheerleaders
The traditions committee of All Student Council today announced the election of Leslie Roenigk, sophomore in education, as new male cheerleader, and re-election of five cheerleaders, and the election of three alternates.
Gair Sloan, College freshman; Norvell Osborn, Richard Wintermote, and Dorothy Scroggy, junior, and Bernadine Read, fine arts sophomore, will lead the Jayhawker yells again next year.
Patricia Perkins, fine arts freshman, Dorothy O'Connor, sophomore, and Paul Coker, Jr., freshman, were elected as alternates.
New cheerleaders are elected by the traditions committee every year. They were selected on basis of performance during tryouts which began Tuesday.
Elmer F. Beth, acting director of the William Allen White School of Journalism, has been succeeded as editor of Journalism Class and Lab by Keen Rafferty, director of the division of journalism at the University of New Mexico.
Beth Resigns Editor Post
The magazine is the quarterly publication of the American Association of Teachers of Journalism. Mr. Beth resigned as editor when he was elected secretary-treasurer of both A.A.T.J. and the American Association of Schools and Departments of Journalism, and director of the teacher placement bureau of A.A.T.J.
Journalism Class and Lab is a new name for the publication, called Journalism Bulletin since its founding at K.U. in 1942. The paper was established to replace the round-tables and shoftalks of the annual A.A.T.J. conventions, which were not held during the war years.
Kansas—Partly cloudy today and tonight. Not quite so warm northwest today. Tomorrow fair and warm. High today near 90, low tonight near 60.
WEATHER
Fraternity Finances May Be Controlled
Former Professor Tells SAM Members Of Plan For A University Consultant
"I am glad that the University is recognized as an institution that has given complete freedom of speech and ideas to its faculty and student body," Chancellor Deane W. Malott said today. The chancellor commented on a recent Henry Wallace column in the New Republic in which Mr. Wallace complimented the chancellor on his broad-mindedness.
Malott Answers Wallace Praise
Mr. Wallace said, "I honor Chancellor D. W. Malott, head of the University of Kansas, for apparently having given complete freedom to his faculty and student body. I am sure that Chancellor Malott disagrees with me on many things, but Kansas will never be completely reactionary as long as men like him are around to fight for freedom of expression."
Chancellor Malott said that, although he did not see Mr. Wallace during his Midwestern speaking tour, he knows him quite well and considers him a personal friend afteroking with him on the advice of the department of commerce when Mr. Wallace was secretary.
There is a danger that finances of Greek organizations on the campus will come under direct University control, J. Alden Trovillo, former Society for the Advancement of Management adviser and associate professor of industrial management, told members of S.A.M. at the annual senior banquet Thursday.
"I hope the University will always recognize its responsibility as an educational institution that must allow freedom and universality of ideas," Mr. Malott said.
To Install Officers
Officers of the Baptist Student fellowship, the Roger Williams foundation, and the college Sunday school class will be installed in a candlelight service at 5:30 p.m. Sunday in Danforth chapel. The Rev. Charles W. Thomas will be in charge.
Palm Room Designed For Comfort
Comfort with a touch of cafe society atmosphere describes the Palm room, new Union annex, which will be open from 4 to 6 p.m. Sunday.
The open house is being held so students leaving the University may see the room before the end of the semester. All students, faculty, and friends are invited. The Palm room will not be officially opened for meal service until the summer session be vins.
To the immediate left of the entrance is a large flower box filled with tropical plants, acquired for the Union by James Reiter, campus
The color scheme of the room and its indirect lighting is designed to give the room a restful atmosphere. The walls are green and deep yellow. The furniture is covered in red and buff leather with quartet tables which are linen-finished Formica. They are trimmed in stainless steel and have a chromium base.
The window draperies are green with yellow figures. Misses Mariorie Whitney and Dessa J. Bush, professor of design, and Miss Hernina Zipilla, director of the Union, selected the color scheme for the Palm room.
Seats along two sides of the room have pull-up tables. The floor is grey asphalt tile, matching the grey terrazzo steps leading into the room at both entrances.
People in gay '90s costumes are in proper character to the words below the paintings. "Father, Dear Father, Come Home With Me Now," "Casey Would, Waltz With The Strawberry Blond," "I Wonder Who's Kissing Her Now," and "Down By The Old Mill Stream," are some of
gardener. The plants are monsters, diefferanbachias, and pedeleanthuses.
To the right are steps leading into the fountain. Modern doors of red leather on the Palm room side and blue on the fountain side divide the two rooms.
Potted palms stand in front of the three pillars which are located on either side and in the middle of the fountain entrance. The room is named for these.
Several murals are painted on the walls. Dale E. Oliver, fine arts junior, who painted them, once worked for Walt Disney.
Next to the Palm room are two small rooms. Candy and fresh fruit will be sold in one. The other will be an office for Mrs. Mary Strain who will be in charge of the "Palm room."
The kitchen equipment is all stainless steel, and is custom built. It is small, compact, but complete. It consists of a toastmaster roll and food warmer, assembly table which is partly refrigerated, four waffle irons, a slex coffee table, a stainless steel enclosed fountain, electric dish and glass washer, a partly refrigerated cook's table, two grill top ranges with ovens, one hot top range and baking oven, electric french fryer, electric mixer, baker's table, two sinks, spice cabinet, and a utility table.
The class of 23 will have its reunion dinner there June 6. This will be the room's first activity.
them.
The fountain, Palm room, and main cafeteria will be air conditioned.
It is hoped that many University functions will be held in the Palm vivium. After the opening of the summer session, meals will be served daily.
Mr. Trovillo, now industrial adviser to the Wichita Chamber of Commerce, said that a "University administrator" told him Tuesday of a plan for establishing a financial adviser for campus sororities and fraternities. He refused to name the administrator.
“This,” said Mr. Troville, “could easily lead to collective purchasing by the fraternities and sororites, and hurt businesses considerably.”
Mr. Trovillo told a University Daily Kansan reporter that "the plan, I am told, is quietly being set up and will be put into effect before anyone really realizes it."
By such cooperatives, many persons would be put out of work, he continued, and in time these people would include graduates of the University who were in need of jobs.
The adviser would examine the financial records and advise the Greek societies about money matters. Mr. Trovillo said that the adviser could become "over-bearing" which would then place the Greek organizations under direct University controls, he added.
In statements this morning to the University Daily Kansan, four faculty members expressed various reactions to Mr. Troville's statements
Raymond Nichols, executive secretary to-Chancellor Deane W. Mault, this morning said, "according to the policy and tradition of the University, we wouldn't consider any rule that would disrupt and disorganize any organized group."
L. C. Woodruff, dean of men, said, "It's a good plan because a number of our organized houses need help in financial matters. The idea of the financial adviser becoming a collective buyer is no more valid than the idea of the United States going Communist."
Mr. Trovillo's main topic was opportunities in the midwest, and he told the 69 S.A.M. members and their guests that "there are plenty of openings for young men who are willing to seek employment.
Paul McCollum, S.A.M. adviser and economics instructor, can "see no harm in such a plan. It is the same principle that is used in industry where consolidation of groups sits down costs."
"That is the reason employers don't come to the University hunting men to work for them, even when they need them. They want their employees to show some initiative."
To Be Examined For Ph.D. Degree
Rollin H. Baker and Henry W. Setzer, graduate students, will be given final public examination for the degree of doctor of philosophy today and tomorrow. Both men will be examined in 113 Dyche hall.
Mr. Baker, an instructor in zoology, will be examined at 1:30 p.m. today. He received his B. A. from the University of Texas in 1937, and his M. S. from Texas A. & M. in 1938. His thesis is on the birds of Micronesia.
Setzer will be examined at 9 a.m. tomorrow, He received his B. A. in 1942 and his M. A. in 1945 from the University of Utah. His thesis is on sub-species of a particular species of kangaroo rat.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1948
Vital Facts On KU Queens: They Stack Up As 35,25,36
She is 5 feet 7 inches tall, weighs 126 pounds, and has blonde hair and blue eyes.
These are the statistics of the typical campus queen for 1947-48 bust measures 28 inches, hips 36 inches, and waist 25 inch.
e five women who were selected to be
Lassen from a recent poll of the queens of everything from the Hobbit-land to the real-world measurements of the typical queen are averages of the five queens.
Weights varied from 118 to 135 pounds; heights started at 5 feet 5 inches and climbed to 5 feet 9 inches; bust measurements varied from 32 inches to 36 inches; waists were 24 to 25 inches wide; and hips swelled to 34 to 37.
The Pi Beta Phi sorority takes queen honors for producing four or five of the campus queens this year. Therefore, the average University queen is a Pi Beta Phi.
She is probably a junior in the College, and she is probably from Kansas City, Mo. Her average age is not given for obvious reasons.
All of their majesties insist that it is "always a big thrill and surprise" to be selected queen. Four of them have been queens more than once.
Carolyn Campbell, College junior,
who was homecoming queen this
year, was queen of the relays in 1946
and an attendant to the Army-Navy
R.O.T.C. queen in 1946.
JoAnne Hudson, College jumor, carnival queen this fall, has never been queen of anything before, but says that she doesn't mind this business of royalty at all.
Joy Godbehere, College senior, who was Navy R.O.T.C. queen, was homecoming queen in 1945 and Pi Beta Phi representative to the Jayhawker queen contest in 1946.
Sue Rose Mounce, education junior, who was Army R.O.T.C. queen this spring, was Navy queen at a V-12 dance in Maryville, Mo., in 1943.
Joano Rusee, engineering senior, who was Hob-Nail Hop queen this winter, was "Sigma Chi Sweetheart" for 1947-48.
Call K.U. 376 with your Want Ads
Graduate Bosses General's Guard
Warren D. Hodges, who attended the University from 1940 to 1943, is an army captain with the position of commander of the honor guard company for Gen. Douglas MacArthur in Tokyo.
Captain Hodges recently was host at an honor guard party attended by Mrs. MacArthur and high-ranking officers. He entered the army in 1942. He is a member of the Scabbard and Blade, honorary R.O.T.C. fraternity.
Before being assigned to his present position in Tokyo, Captain Hodges fought with the 76th infantry division in the central European and Rhineland campaigns.
The Irving Berlin of Civil War days was George F. Root of Massachusetts. He wrote such patriotic pieces as "Tramp, Tramp, Tramp, the Boys are Marching." "Just Before the Battle, Mother," and "The Battle Cry of Freedom."
Student Cruises Will Cost $280
Students can go to France, England, Holland, and Oslo for $280 to $400 a round trip on student ships this summer. The trips are to give students a chance for formal study, conferences, or reconstruction work
Assignment of groups and individuals to the student ship will be handled by the executa committee of the Institute of Intelational Education. 2 West 45 street, New York 19, N.Y.
Laurance Duggan, director, has announced that two American ships will make four round trips each between June and October. Two Dutch ships will carry students from Quebec to Rotterdam on June 18 and July 1. Another ship will return the passengers in September. The fares depend on accommodations.
Ku Ku Election
Earl Dean Clark, Gene Innis and Robert Bell were re-elected to the positions of president, vice-president, and treasurer at the meeting of the Ku Ku club recently. Walter Hoffman was elected secretary.
University Daily Kansan
Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage), Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, Universities, and other schools. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
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Noon 'til Midnight
Short Orders
Official Bulletin
July 19 1988
Classical piano concert scheduled for this afternoon will not be held.
May 21. 1948
LSA. council and members report to 228 Frank Strong, 7 tonight, to help send out Kan-Do's.
Students wishing to apply for position of dance manager must submit qualifications in a letter to Elizabeth Sue Webster, 1625 Edgeball road, by tonight.
Episcopal College club dinner and evensong, 5:30 p.m. Sunday, Parish hall, 10th and Vermont.
Inter-Varsity Christian fellowship final meeting and annual banquet, 6:30 tonight, Castle Tea room.
Westminster fellowship, 5:30 p.m.
Sunday, 1212 Oread. Important.
All parking regulations will be strictly enforced during final week. University Parking committee.
I. S.A. meeting, 7:15 p.m. Monday, 228 Frank Strong. All council members, house representatives, and other members meet for picture.
Dames Have Music Program
Lawrence K.U. Dames were entertained by a musical program given by the Sunflower K.U. Dames at Sunflower Wednesday.
Mrs. Charles Hornbuckle was mistress of ceremonies. Mrs. Eleanor Aiken played two piano solos.
Hostesses for the evening were Mrs. James Rusk, Mrs. Robert Meiers, Mrs. Walter Lucas, and Mrs. Vernon Roberts.
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- PRESENTATION OF TROPHIES AND...AWARDS.
FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Mud Pies Baked At KU Help Clay Industries In Kansas
Think of making mud pies and getting paid for it! It may sound unbelievable, but it is being done every day in the state Geological Survey clay laboratory on the first floor of Lindley hall. You can look in almost any time and see people mixing "mud," someone else feeding the mixture into a machine that produces "mud bars," another stamping and weighing the bars, while still another may be putting the clay forms into an electric furnace for firing The process continues by boiling
This clay laboratory is the only one in the state where mud is scientifically studied and tested for commercial uses. Many of the bricks and pottery plants in Kansas were established on the basis of information furnished by this laboratory. These industries also depend upon it to find new uses for clay, new types of clay, and for locating new clay deposits.
Norman Plummer, ceramist in charge of the laboratory, and W. B. Hladik, assistant ceramist, do most of the collecting. When they go on field trips, they return loaded down with clay samples. The samples are ground in a crushing machine until the clay gets a fine, even texture. About 30 pounds of each sample is mixed with water and let set for eight or ten hours. Then the mixture is fed to a de-airing extrusion machine, which presses and cuts the clay into small test bars. One of the ceramists then stamps a sample and serial number on each bar.
Mrs. Carrie Thurber, Mrs. Ethel Owens, and W. P. Ames, laboratory technicians, take the bars, weigh them, and determine their volumes by immersion in kerosene. If they were put in water at this stage they would dissolve. The bricks are then put into an electric dryer. After the bricks are removed from the dryer, they are again weighed, measured, and the volumes determined.
They are now ready for firing and are put in an electric furnace at a low temperature from eight to 12 hours. When taken out of the furnace they are stamped with temperature numbers, weighed, measured, and placed into water to determine their volumes.
University Helps Foreign Students
University foreign students are as well taken care of as foreign students at any other university or college, James K. Hitt, registrar, said Monday.
Mr. Hitt returned recently from a conference on International Student Exchange held at the University of Michigan, Ann Arbor. He represented the University and the committee on foreign students at the conference.
The registrar said that after attending the meetings and talking with representatives from other colleges, he has decided that the University takes better than average care of foreign students.
Although the boomerang is generally associated with Australia, it did not originate there but in Egypt. Picture drawings of Egyptians hunting ducks with a boomerang have been discovered in ancient tombs.
The process continues by boiling the bars to see how much more water they will absorb. Again they are weighed and their volumes determined under water. If the water absorption is less than 10 per cent, the bricks are fired to a temperature about 100 degrees higher. The cycle is repeated until the water absorption is reduced to as near one per cent as possible.
"It itakes all of this and more to find out what we need to know about the commercial possibilities of clays," Mr. Plummer said. "Color and temperature are guides to testing for specific uses.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1948
Weddings And Engagements
Ruhlen-Grav
The Rev. and Mrs. Charles L. Ruhlen, Clay Center, announce the engagement of their daughter, Carole, to Glenn C. Gray, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Gray, Eureka. The announcement was made Sunday at Watkins hall by Miss Julia Ames Willard, housemother.
Mrs. Wayne Gugler, sister of Miss Ruhlen, sang "At Dawning," and Roselyn Skonberg passed chocolates. Miss Ruhlen wore white carnations, and Miss Skonberg received a corsage of yellow daisies.
M. Gray is an engineering junior,
and Miss Ruhlen is a College junior.
Connolly-Miller
Henley Co-op announces the engagement and approaching marriage of Margaret Connolly, Topeka, to Bertram Miller, Jr., Erie, Penn. Mrs. Erma Smith, housemother, made the announcement. The wedding will be at the Church of the Assumption in Topeka June 10.
Miss Connolly is an education sophomore. Mr. Miller is an engineer junior.
French-Eakin
The engagement of Shirley French, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Sharon French, Topeka, to Donald Eakin, son ofMr. and Mrs.W.F. Eakin, Greensburg, was announced Sunday at Watkins hall by Miss Julia Ames Willard, housemother. The wedding will take place in August.
Miss French wore a corsage of white carnations and tubor roses, and Miss Willard and Mrs. French wore pink carnations. Traditional chocolates, were passed by Eleanor McHarg and Jane Peterson.
Miss French is a College sophomore, and Mr. Eakin is a College senior.
Buehler-Debus
Gamma Phi Beta announces the engagement of Phyllis Buchler, daughter of Prof. E. C. Buchler, Lawrence, to William A. Debus, son of Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Debus, Kansas City, Kan.
Miss Buehler wore a corsage of gardenias. Carolyn Carter, her assistant, and Mrs. Ralph Baldwin, housemother, received corsages of pink carnations, the Gamma Phi Beta flower. Mrs. Baldwin read the
KU Choir To Sing In Kansas City
The University a cappella choir will present a concert program at the Linwood Presbyterian church, Kansas City, Mo., at 7:30 p.m. Sunday.
The choir of 106 will be directed by Dean D. M. Swarthout who also will speak to choir directors from the Kansas City area on general choir procedure.
Dean Swarthout and the choir will be honored with a reception and dinner following the meeting.
announcement. Mrs. J. H. Kreamer Phi Delta Theta housemother, received a corsage of white carnations, the Phi Delt flower.
Miss Buehler is a College sophomore. Mr. Debus, a member of Phi Delta Theta fraternity, is also a College sophomore.
Stout-Ensch
☆ ☆
Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Stout, Rothville, Mo., announce the coming marriage of their daughter, Annetta, to Paul C. Ensch at 9 a.m. June 5 in St. John's church, Lawrence.
The Rev. George Towle, pastor,
will perform the ceremony. Following
the ceremony, a reception will be
held at Watkins hall.
Miss Stout is an education senior.
Mr. Ensch is a business senior.
Prettyman-White
Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Prettyman, Plevna, announce the coming marriage of their daughter, Anna Melissa, to Ralph Owen White, son of Mr. and Mrs. Orval White, Sabetha. The marriage will be at 2 p.m. June 4 in Danforth chapel, The Rev. Edwin F. Price, student minister of the First Methodist church, will conduct the service. A reception will be held at Watkins hall immediately following the ceremony.
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Archery Club Gives Medals; Elects New Officers
William James Miller, engineering sophomore, and Robert Lemons, pharmacy junior, were awarded gold and silver medals for highest scores in the Archery clubmen's tournament recently.
Newly elected officers are Alice Myers, president; Marvin Kinsey, vice-president; Charity Fischer, secretary-treasurer; and Harold Shigley, publicity and tournament manager.
The wolf spider, only about an inch long, often carries its young on its back until they can fend for themselves. A brood sometimes will number as many as 125.
Jean Louise Guthrie and Rosemary Rospaw were appointed representatives to U.N.E.S.C.O. from Inter-dorm council. Members decided to keep the residue in the treasury for next fall in sponsoring activities for new women students.
Refreshments were served at the meeting, held in Miller hall.
Guthrie, Rospaw Appointed
A.S.T.E. Banquet
The American Society of Tool Engineers will hold their annual banquet at 7:30 p.m. today at the Hearth, Dr. R. M. Davis, former dean of the law school, will speak. The subject of his talk will be "The Importance of the Engineer."
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Intermezzo
Ingrid BERGMAN • Leslie HOWARD
Directed by BRADFORD RAYFIELD
FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Socially Speaking-
You Couldn't Tell By Looking That Final Week Is Near
Hopkins Elects
Officers elected by Hopkins hall for the fall semester are Rosemary Rospaw, president; and Freda Jones, vice-president.
Tea Dance
★ ★ ★
Lambda Chi Alpha entertained Delta Delta Delta with a tea dance May 15.
Phi Kappa's Entertain
Guests at the Phi Kappa Mother's Day held at Sunday were Mrs. L. J. Brooks, Wichita; Mr. and Mrs. D. V. Case, Atchison; Mr. and Mrs. L. T. Dieker and Mr. and Mrs. Anton Tachman, Tampa; Mr. and Mrs. Anton Hoffman and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Miller, Claflin; Mrs. Thomas Farrell, Marysville; Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Jarus, Wilson.
Mrs. Charlotte Collins' and Mr.
and Mrs. J. A. Fisher, St. Joseph,
Mo.; Joseph Calderara. Tay-
lorville, Ill.; Mr. and Mrs. T. J. Daly,
Mr. and Mrs. T. W. Bugler, Mr. and
Mrs. D. C. M. Hart, Mrs. Ira T. Wilkinson,
and Mrs. J. G. Yoder, Kansas
City, Mo.
The Rev. George Towle, Miss Mary Towle, M. and Mrs. O, H. Correa, Mrs. Leo J. Hill, Mrs. J. J. Seymour and Mrs. K. E. Butler, awrence
Phi Kappa Dance
Phi Kappa held its spring formal May 15. Guests were Sybil Klamm, Jo Raney, Ann Clifford, Jean Young, Kathy Showalter, Adrienne Hiscox, Patricia Jordan, Betty Leighton, Jean Coyne, Kay Collins, Rosemary, Daly, Dolores Collins, City Warthen Marjorie Burtscher, Jeannine Kahn, Carol Prochaska, Verna Edwards, Denise Owen, Ruth Hibbs, Ladsen Steinkirchner, Constance Koppers, Mary Zercher, Helen Wools.
Jean Sullivan, Mary Leahy, Leatha Sanford, Eileen Murphy, Ellen Hanes, Edris McCarty, Bette Cattell, J0 Ann Sweechen, Joan Smith, Arlene Hill, Jo Anw Weber, Dory Dotherby, Mary Lou Wilkinson, Marcia Hall, Camille Clark, Eilene O'Brien.
The Rev. George Towle, Miss Mary Towle, Dan Larson, John Montgomery, Robert Kilker, Mrs. Nick Schmidt, Mr. and Mrs. J.L. Shriner, Mr. and Mrs. Anton Hoffman, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Miller, and Mr. and Mrs. E.C. Jarus.
Chaperons were Prof. and Mrs. L.
T. Tupy, Prof. Don Dixon, and Mrs.
Wilma Hooper.
Templin Hall Formal
Templin hall held its annual spring formal May 14 at Templin hall.
Guests were Dan Clinger, Pete Jansen, Charles Braitha, William Madden, Tom Brown, Gerald Bales, Robert Checky, Charles Church, James Baskas, Charles Rossman, Gerald Renner, Eric Ericsson, Carl Kron, Jack Clogston, William Rives, Frank Lindbacher, James Stinson, William McCov. Clifford Holland.
Joe Simmons, Mel Dageforce, Roland Brooks, Verlin Dowd, Jimmie Grimes, Billy Deaver, Archie Bruce, Wichita; Victor Durr, Dodge City; Rogert Burgess, Sioux City, Iowa; E. C. Unrush, Scott City; Donna Shimer, Topeka; and Betty Myers and Ann Andrews, Kansas City, Mo.
Chaperons were Mrs. H. M. Miller. Mrs. Elizabeth Kite, Mr. and Myrs. Elmo Maiden, and Mrs. J. C. McDonald.
APO Picnic
Alpha Phi Omega, service fraternity, held its annual spring picnic at Robinson farm May 15.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. L. C. Woodruff, Mr. and Mrs. Elma Mohr, Mr. and Mrs. Oran Stanley, Mr. and Mrs. Glen Turner, Mr. and Mrs. Roland Baber, Betty Jane Anderson, Jo Anne Edwards, Winona Klotz, Della Hayden, Willoe Jean Palmer, Diane Johnson, Mrs. Helen Wilson, Marjorie Hampton, Maribah Barrett, Mrs. Mary Allred, Norma Sellera, Norma Deane Turner, Jessie Estrada, and Vera Johnson.
Sasnak Club Picnic
Sasnak Club, the physical education professional organization, had its annual farewell-to-seniors picnic Sunday.
Guests were Caroline Hamma, Billie Moore, Dorothy Oyer, John Reber, Harriet Connor, Dick Fletcher, Bill Brimer, Elaine Sawyer, Minnie Hackkathorn, Mary M. Walter, Mary Melen Shepard, Walter E. Diehli, Elizabeth Graves, Carl Lewton, Margaret Wilhelm, Russ Schon, Julia Fox, Marilyn Smith, Marge Kaff.
Bermolda Larson, Pat Lander, Joan Strowig, Keith Lagsrom, Pat Rutledge, Harold Kaufman, Katherine Smith, Dean Duke, Norman E. Hull, LaVaughn Hodgson, Robert Clark, Geraldine McGee, Robert Shenk, Stuart Smith, Malcolm Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Bill Cornwell, Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Hawver, Mr. and Mrs. Merl Spring.
Mr. and Mrs. Donnell Wright, Mr. and Mrs. Ropey, Mr. and Mrs. Harold May, Mr. and Mrs. John Fencyk and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. Bruce
Home Ec Seniors Confer
With Vocational Supervisor
About 15 home economics education seniors conferred recently with Hazel Thompson, Topeka supervisor of vocational homemaking on the state board of vocational education.
The women asked questions about teaching opportunities in Kansas. Miss Thompson talked informally at a tea given in her honor by the seniors.
Henoch, Mr. and Mrs. "Bud" French,
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Rosenfield, Mr.
and Mrs. W. R. Parsons and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. Dick Channell and son,
and Mr. and Mrs. Darrell Wright.
Chaperons were Mr. and Mrs.
Henry A. Shenk, Miss Ritch Hoover,
Mr. and Mrs. Reginald Strait, Dean
and Mrs. George B. Smith, Miss
Joie Staplon, Mr. and Mrs. Waite
J. Mikols, Miss Elaine Selcovitz,
and Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Henry.
Tri Chi Dinner
Tri Chi social fraternity will have its anniversary dinner at 7 p.m. tomorrow at the Hearth Tea room. It will be semi-formal.
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Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Political science department, pienic. Holcomb's Grove, 4 to 8 p.m.
Delta Delta Delta dance, Country club 506-237-1300
Up And Coming
club, 9 p.m. to midnight.
Tomorrow
Today
The Palace 843 Massachusetts
Alpha Delta Pi, spring formal chapter house, 9 p.m. to midnight Men's intramural department dance, Military Science building, 9 p.m. to midnight. Chi Omega, dance, chapter house, 9 p.m. to midnight. Alpha Omicron Pi, spring formal, Country club, 9 p.m. to midnight. Delta Tau Delta, dance, chapter house, 9 p.m. to midnight. Tai Chi dinner party, Heath Ta
Tri Chi, dinner party, Hearth Tea room, 7 to 8:30 p.m.
Alpha Kappa Lambda, picnic, Holcomb's Grove, 4 to 8 p.m.
The silver anniversary of the International Petroleum exposition, held bi-annually at Tulsa, Okla., will be celebrated this year on May 15 to 22, with more than 750 exhibitors from the oil industry.
Guests were Prof. and Mrs. J. Neale Carman, Prof. Mattie E. Crumrine, Prof. R. G. Mahieu, Prof. Roy Towne: Mrs. Marilin Padgett, Richard E. Strawn, and Miss Barbara Craig, instructors, all in the Romance language department.
French Department Entertains Officer
Emil L. Telfel, assistant professor of journalism, and Mrs. Telfel; Jack L. Kendall, second year law student; Billy J. Kent, College student; James D. Pappas, junior; Jeanne Smith, education senior; David Westfall, college sophomore.
Maj. J. Fournier of the French army and a member of the delegation of foreign military officers visiting the campus this week, was guest of honor at a dinner given by the French department of faculty and students Wednesday.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1948
Kansas Eyes 3rd Place At Big 7 Track Meet
By DARELL NORRIS
The Big Seven track meet tomorrow at Lincoln will be a strange meet. As far as six members of the conference are concerned, it will be a meet without a first place. Almost every coach in the conference has conceded the winner's circle to Coach Tom Bott's powerful Missouri Tigers.
The other six teams will be battling for second place, with the Nebraska Cornhuskers given the inside track, Kansas, Colorado, and Kansas State are expected to battle for third with the Oklahoma Sooners and Iowa State bringing up the rear.
The meet also will be a battle among individual performers for a place on the Big Seven conference team to battle the Southwest conference all-stars in a meet at Dallas June 4. The first three place-winners in each event will qualify for the interconference meet.
The Tigers are so well-balanced that they appear weak in only one event, the javelin. In most of the other events the Columbians have top-flight men three deep. They are expected to duplicate last year's performance which netted a margin of nearly 70 points over the second place Huskers.
Kansas will rely on its strong individual talent to pile up points toward the third position and a possible shot at the runner-up slot.
Bob Karnes, the untiming distance runner from Overbrook, will try for two firsts Saturday in his specialties, the mile and two-mile runs. He will have such worthies to beat in the mile race as Missouri's Bob Bosworth and Bill Chronister.
Karnes shaded both Bosworth and Chronister the only time he has been pushed in the mile, except in his two losses to teammate Hal Moore who will not make the trip. Karnes has run away from all competition in the two mile, winning 11 straight races at this distance.
Seven runners hung up double wins indoors, and Karnes missed this feat by five inches as he was edged by Moore in the indoor mite in record time. Both runners were clocked in 4:18.6.
Hanging up the double distance victory hasn't been easy in the 19 years of the conference. The only performer who ever accomplished it outdoors was the incomparable Glenn Cunningham, who swept them both in 1933 and 1934 and added half-mile victories both times. No one has ever approached his triple crown.
Tom Scofield should be good for points in the high jump, and if he returns to last year's form, he may walk off with the blue ribbon. If Bob Crowley can shake a knee injury he should be good for points in the broad jump.
The intramural ball Saturday is expected to attract a larger crowd this year than it did in 1947,丹 Powell, intramural director, said today. Trophies, sweaters for freshman managers, and the award for the senior manager will be presented, he said.
Dick Shea will be in a position to grab a first position out of the Tigers' claws in the half-mile if he can repeat Saturday's victory over Missouri's Charles Lancaster. Lancaster won the 880 title indoors while Shea finished second.
The K.U. javelin trio will pick up several points, and could sweep the top spots if Jack Todd's elbow injury keeps the powerful Coloradian out of action. John Sites, Bill Binter, Dick Wagstaff, and Shea will be out after a high relay place, as well as points in individual dash events. Dash man Lee Schloessler will not make the trip because of medical school studies.
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Large Crowd Seen For 1948 IM Ball
Danny Bachmann and his orchestra will play at the dance Saturday.
DiMaggio Blasts Chi Sox; Runs, Hits Flood Majors
New York, May 21—(UP)—Joe DiMaggio had his biggest day of the current season yesterday as he blasted out two home runs, a triple, and a single, driving in six runs in New York's 13 to 2 massacre of the Chicago White Sox. Vic Raschi of the Yanks went all the way to bring up his third victory of the season against one loss.
DiMaggio started hitting in the first inning when he slammed one into the left field stands with two on. His only unsuccessful trip was in the fifth when he drove the Sox fielder to the wall with a fly to left. He wound up the day's work with a double in the ninth.
Bean Ball Fires Cards
The "Gashouse spirit" of the St. Louis Cards boiled over when the Cards became incensed by what manager Eddie Dyer termed "an intentional beaming" of catcher Del Rice by Hugh Casey of the Brooklyn Dodgers.
Dyer protested that Casey should be ejected from the game, and he argued so long that he was thrown out himself—an unusual situation for the mild-mannered Texan. Dyer issued a warning to the Dodgers that "that stuff just won't go with us. You saw what happened in 1946 when they tried it."
Rice, before being ko.ed, drove in four runs to lead St. Louis to a 13 to 4 victory, the fourth of the year for southpaw Howie Pollet. The Cards are now $2^{1/2}$ games in front of the second-place Giants.
Indians Strength Leaf
The Cleveland Indians went a game and a half ahead of the American league by trimming the Boston Red Sox, 13 to 4, in a night game at Cleveland.
The Detroit Tigers won from the Philadelphia Athletics, 4 to 2 at Detroit on the five-hit pitching of Freddy Hutchinson and a 15-hit attack which Bob Swift led with a homer and two 'singles. Pat Mullin and George Vico each got three hits.
The Browns battered six Washington pitchers to beat the Nationals 17 to 7 in a night game at St. Louis. Al "Zeke" Zarilla, with three hits and five runs batted in, led the Browns in their 18-hit attack. Frank Biscan took the decision from Early Wynn.
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Six-hit pitching by Howard Fox gave the Cincinnati Reds a 3 to 1 victory over the Giants at New York with rookie Virgil Stallcup supply- ing the punch on three singles and a walk.
The Pittsburgh Pirates also put on a hitting show in Boston, blasting the Braves, 13 to 0. Ralph Kiner got his ninth home run of the season, included in 17 Pittsburgh hits.
The Cubs, backed by Bill Nicholson's triple and double and Roy Smalley's first major league home run, topped the Phillies at Philadelphia, 5 to 3.
Johnson Shipped To Cardinal Farm
Ken Johnson, Kansas University professional baseball star, was optioned by the St. Louis Cardinals to the Rochester Red Wings, St. Louis farm club in the AAA International League yesterday as the Cards reduced their roster to the major league limit of 25.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Attend the Topeka Drive-in Theater 25th and California First Show ... 8 p.m.
Students Can Play At Country Club
Fred Fry, manager of the Lawrence Country club, announced today that students are again being allowed to play golf at the club on a daily fee basis. This practice was halted early in the spring because the course was becoming too crowded.
Fry said, however, that daily fee players would not be allowed on the course on Saturdays, Sundays, or holidays and that only a limited number would be permitted to play on week days. He advised students to phone for reservations before planning a golf game.
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FRIDAY, MAY 21. 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Phi Delt Keeps Softball Title With 9-5 Victory Over ATO
18 ATO Errors Make The Difference In A Ragged Slugfest At South Park
Phi Delta Theta retained the fraternity intramural softball crown that it won last spring by defeating an erratic A.T.O. nine, 9 to 5, Thursday afternoon on the South Park diamond before a large crowd of students and local residents.
In contrast to last year's finals in which the slingshot hurling arm of
tory into a rout, this year's contest was featured by hard hitting, erratic fielding, and repeated controversy with the umpires. The difference in the final score can be traced directly to 18 A.T.O. errors, against four for the victors.
A. T.O. picked up two runs in the sixth on a walk, an error, and Tom Milligan's double, then worried the winners again in the last half of the seventh but were stopped at two runs.
Phi Delt scored in final tally in the seventh when Bill Debus singled, advanced to third on a pair of errors, and crossed the plate on Sam Harris' safety.
Phi Delt got off to a quick lead in the second, with a four-run outburst, after the teams had each picked up a run in the first.
American League New York (Shea 2-2) at Chicago
J. R. Perkins doubled to right,
and think, "Boy McMurray."
In the hitting department both squads banged out 10 safeties, several of the Phi Delt hits being of the bunt variety. Both pitchers were tagged hard, the Phi Delt defensive superiority showing uo often to nip potential rallies by the plucky A,T.O's.
J. A. Perkins doubled to right, moved to third on Don McLeathr's score, and scored on a wild pitch to give the Deli mother more power to third. They added two more runs in the fourth on a fielder's choice, a walk, Perkin's single to right, and Clay Hedrick's sacrifice fly to deep right.
Philadelphia (Coleman 3-1) at Detroit (Trout 3-3)
Boston (Dobson 2-3) at Cleveland
(Kennedy, 0-0)
Dick Cory opened with a two-bagger and scored on an error. Chet Laniewski then singled, went to second on a sacrifice, and came home on Herb Weidensaul's single. But a Milligan bounder was right at Harris, Phi Delt first sacker.
(Wight 1-2)
Philadelphia (Coleman 3-1) at De
IM Box Score
PHI. DELT AB R H
Marquis, 2b 4 1 0
Oliver, lf 4 1 0
Powell, ss 2 1 0
Perkins, 3b 4 1 2
Melrath, c 3 1 0
Hedrick, p 4 1 1
Cebus, rf 3 2 2
Rarris, 1b 3 1 2
Goehring, cf 4 0 0
31 9 10
A.T.O. AB R H
Cory, 1b 3 1 1
Lanewski, c 4 2 2
Eskridge, cf 3 1 2
Weidensaul, ss 4 1 3
Milligan, 3b 3 0 0
Johnson, rf 1 0 0
Case, if 3 0 0
Milligan, rf 3 0 1
Coffin, 2b 3 0 0
Nesser, p 2 0 1
29 5 10
Delt 141 200 1-9 10 4
100 002 2-5 10 15
Probable Pitchers
American League
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Seventy Big 7 Athletes In Golf, Tennis Tourney
Seventy of the mid-west's best collegiate golf and tennis players will go to the firing line today at Lincoln for the first round of the Big Seven championship meet.
Although the experts have Oklahoma as the favorite in both sports, Kansas is rated an excellent chance to upset the dope. The Jayhawker tennis record for the season is 11. $ \textcircled{*} $
tennis record for the season, is 11 victories and five defeats. The golfers won eight and lost six. However, they were not in conference play, while the linksmen bowed to Missouri, Iowa State, and Oklahoma.
tourney will be tomorrow afternoon with final doubles and singles matches.
Tennis team points will be awarded for each individual match won. Number one Jayahwaker Dick Richards will be bracketed with other number one players, Glenn Tonger against other number two players, ect. The champion in the number one bracket will be the Big Seven singles champion. First and second players will be seeded, and first seeded players will probably draw byes in first round matches.
Today first and second round doubles, and first round single matches will be played. Tomorrow morning semi-final singles matches will be played. The climax of the
The golf championship will be decided by 36-hole medal play. Five golfers will compete with each team, with the best four scores being used,
Chances for individual championships rest with Richards and Bill Jones. Richards lost only one conference match all year, to Oklahoma's Jim Draper in April. The Kansas ace has improved vastly since then. In Jones, Kansas has a linksmans who consistently shoots in the low 70's and who is a tough competitor when the chips are down
The manufacture of matches is a 25 million dollar-a-year business according to World Book encyclopedia, and the average person uses 16 matches a day.
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Permitting only four hits, Dale Clark, Alpha Chi Sigma hurler, showed the way as his mates trimmed N.R.O.T.C. 14 to 3. The winners clubbed out 13 safe blows, jumping off to a three-run lead in the first scoring in every innings but the fourth.
Alpha Chi Sigma and the Gushers blasted their way to the finals of the independent league playoffs Thursday afternoon. They will fight it out today on field 3, starting at 4:15 p.m. Dale Clark wil hurl for Alpha Chi Sigma, being opposed by Herk Harvey, Gusher mound stalwart.
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Andy Bertuzzi sparked the winning attack with two home runs and single in four appearances. He also scored four times. Rogers led the losers with a homer and a single.
The Navy men mixed two of their suits with a pair of walks in the second to score two runs. Dick Rogers slapped a homer in the sixth for the other run. Clark walked six and fanned eight.
The Gushers had to come from behind to wallop Alpha Kappa Psi, 11 to 6, behind the five-hit pitching of Herk Harvey.
The winners scored three in the third, on a pair of walks, a double and triple. A.K. Psi scored five runs in the following frame on three walks and two doubles.
The fifth inning saw the Gushers sew up the 'tilt with five runs. After Ivan Anderson and Eob Zalokar had walked, Dick Van Gundy slashed a single to center and rode home on Park Pennington's error. Gib Stramler walked and Green drove a home run to right field. The Gushers added three more in the sixth inning on three hits and a walk.
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There aren't enough technically trained college men, says H.N. Muller, Westinghouse educational department manager. He predicts the technical manpower shortage will continue into 1949 or 1950.
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1948
Treating Ailments Of 8,848 Keeps Hospital Hands Busy
Busy did you say? That's a slight understatement for the staff of Watkins Memorial hospital who receive more than 250 clinical calls daily.
The average student makes eight calls to the hospital yearly; some students make as many as 60 calls. With a University enrollment of 8,848 that counts up.
The largest number of students are treated for respiratory infections. Next in order are skin diseases, injuries, digestive disturbances, diseases of the body as a whole, and routine physical examinations.
The health service is supported by the $7.50 fee paid at registration by every student. This fee entitles him to a complete physical examination when entering and graduating from the University, attention to his medical needs during the semester, and special examinations such as pre-marital, veterans' disability, and job examinations. Special treatment and surgery is paid by the student with the use of the operating room free-of-charge.
An average of 25 students are regularly retained for treatment with a charge of one dollar a night. Medicine is sold at cost plus a 10 per cent handling charge. Laboratory tests are free to students.
Equipment valued at approximately $2,500 has been added this year. Included are an X-ray machine, Hubbard tank physical therapy treatment, a short-wave diathermy, an electrocardiograph, and kitchen equipment.
Watkins Memorial hospital is fully approved by the American College of Surgeons. It has a staff of eight physicians.
Student Authors Enter Second Novel In Dodd Mead Literary Contest
A letter that was a long shot began the co-authorship careers of two University women who have had one book published, and are beginning a second.
Biloine Whiting, College senior, wrote Josephine Skelton, College sophomore, in the fall of 1946, asking her i fshe would be interested in writing a book this summer. Jo, who had always wanted to be an author "jumped at the chance."
This was the beginning of the careers of the co-authors who wrote "North of Heaven." They wrote the book last summer at a small cabin on a lake in Minnesota owned by Billie's parents. It was bought the first of this year and will be out this summer.
Not satisfied with writing one book, the two women have now begun to write their second, called "Shadow of a Wood." They have entered the book in the Dodd-Mead Literary Fellowships contest.
Earlier this spring the co-authors sent in character sketches, maps, costumes, 40 pages of outline, and 50 pages of finished manuscript. If they win the contest they will be paid $100 a month for a year while the book is being completed, and the fellowships will buy the book and pay royalties.
"Shadow of a Wood" is the story of the Canadian war in 1812 when the Yankees invaded Canada. Jo, who is from London, Ontario, collected most of the historical data for the book from the library in London.
Even if the book doesn't win the contest after the semester is over,
the young authors are planning to go to Maine and spend part of the summer in an old sea captain's house at Vinal Haven. They want to finish the book there.
After finishing "Shadow of a Wood," they are going to move to another location and write a third book which is as yet untitled. The plot will be centered around a missionary.
Billie and Jo became acquainted with each other when they both attended Graceland College at Lamoni, Iowa. Billie was business manager and Jo was the feature writer for the school paper. Graceland Tower, from 1945 to 1946. Billie came to the University in the fall of '46, and is majoring in journalism. Jo came to the University this fall as an English major.
Call K. U. 251 With Your News
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MONDAY, MAY 24
A representative of Long's COLLEGE BOOK CO., COLUMBUS, OHIO
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Unload your old books Monday for cash.
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Hamilton Elected Sachem President
Robert Jerald Hamilton, fine arts senior, was elected president of Sachem, University chapter of Omicron Delta Kappa, national senior honor society for men. Other officers elected include Fred Gartung, engineering junior, vice-president; L.C. Woodruff, dean of men, secretary; and William Conboy, College junior, treasurer.
Men initiated into the society Wednesday include Richard Bertuzzi, William Conboy, Wilbur Noble, Charles O'Connor, Victor Reinking, and Patrick Thiessen, College juniors; Fred Gartung, John Irwin, Ralph Kiene, and Warren Shaw, engineering juniors; Robert Franklin, business junior; Billy Lakey, fine arts junior; Joseph Coskie, engineering senior; Ben Shanklin, fine arts senior, Newell Jenkins, '43, a former member of Sachem; and L. C. Woodruff, dean of men.
The University architectural department and members of the state architectural office are beginning initial work on the new addition to Corbin hall. Irvin Youngberg, director of dormitories, said today. The new hall will be ready for occupancy in the fall of 1949.
Blue prints of the new addition are being drawn. Test holes are being drilled to find out how far down bedrock is for the foundation, Youngberg said.
State Begins Work On Women's Dorm
Youngberg said that construction bids will be called for late this summer on the new annex which is to cost about $500,000.
AIRPLANE
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Corcoran, Calif.—(UP)—Elmo Weir underestimated the power of the press. He found that rats were overrunning his mill and issued a plea through San Joaquin valley reporters for cats. Soon he had more than 30 cats. Weir has now issued a second plea, "no more cats, please."
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FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE NINE
Power Room Of Lindley Is Astronomer's Hangout
Of the many hidden places on the campus, none is more intriguing than the tower room of Lindley hall. Here, far above the noise of terrestrial beings, is the office workshop of N. W. Storer. University astronomer.
Most classes meet during the day, and the work schedule of most professors ends with the final whistle at 5 p.m., but in this office and in the astronomical observatory on the roof. work is just beginning when night Sirius could falls.
What's so important about studying a star or planet? It was astronomy which verified that the earth is round. Astronomical studies have proved that the earth rotates and revolves, and that it is one of many planets. Many things have been learned about the earth through the study of other planets.
A 6-inch refractor telescope is the main equipment in the Lindley observatory. Another larger telescope, a 27-inch reflecting type, is stored in the basement of Hoch auditorium awaiting the erection of another observatory in which it will be used.
Other equipment for star gazing includes two ship's chronometers, a chronograph, a radio for receiving time signals, a large sidereal clock, a surveyor's transit, several marine and aircraft sextants, and several sky charts which the K.U. astron- mer has made.
Good-natured Professor Storer has, during his years as a teacher, learned to explain astronomy to those who are entirely ignorant of the subject and make them understand. Yet he keeps paces ahead of his advanced students, and he discusses involved, technical questions with other astronomical scholars.
When the University Daily Kansan reporter asked him about the telescope, he obligingly demonstrated its use. The Planet Venus and the star
5 Eligible To Take OT Exam June 25
Five University occupational therapy students are eligible to take the registration examination which will be given in Frank Strong hall June 25. It is a requirement which all occupational therapists must meet before they can obtain jobs. The examination is taken after the required practice work has been completed.
Dorothy June Bruce and Virginia Louise Caskey will take the examination here.
Margaret Eleanor O'Neal and Mrs Florence Hope Wilson will take it at the College of Puget Sound, Tacoma Wash., while Ruth Eleanor Puls will take it at Washington University, Louis, Mo.
The examination is given at several colleges throughout the country on the same day and graduates may take it at the most convenient place. Students from Michigan State Teachers College, Columbia University, and the University of Wisconsin are coming here for the examination.
Business Fraternity Elects, Initiates 13
Ivan M. Farmer, instructor in economics, was elected president of Beta Gamma Sigma, honorary business fraternity, at a banquet recently. Leland J. Pritchard, associate professor of finance, was elected vice-president and Wiley Mitchell, instructor in economics, was elected secretary-treasurer.
The following new members were initiated: Robert A. Pearson, Carroll E. McCue, Bettie Jean Swart, Don V. Plantz, Robert B. Docking, Charles W. Crowley, Paul R. Hedgdin, Francis C. Folkis, George W. Beck, William J. Hollis, and Charles W. Dillon.
Leslie Waters, associate professor of economics, told the group that the high birth rate means that more babies in this subject was "Fraud in Securities."
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Sirius could be seen through the telescope, although it was still forenoon.
Professor Storer came to the University in 1935. After completing work at the Lick Observatory at the University of California, he taught at Smith college in Massachusetts, Wesleyan university in Connecticut and Ohio Wesleyan university. He has taught at Columbia university for three summer sessions, and at Illinois university for one. As the only astronomer on the University staff, he teaches astronomy majors and supervises the work of candidates for Master's degrees.
Camien To Teach At N. Mex. A& M
Laiten L. Camien, instructor in sociology, has resigned to take a position as assistant professor in the department of history and social science at the New Mexico School of Agriculture and Mining. His resignation will be effective after this semester.
Mr. Camien came to the University in 1940 as an instructor in the School of Education. In 1942 he resigned and was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the army air force. He returned to the University in the fall of 1946.
Merrrell D. Clubb, Jr., instructor in English, will resign his position as an instructor this spring.
Mr. Clubb plans to go to Yale university next fall to work on his Ph.D. in English. Mr. Clubb has been at the University since fall of 1946.
Clubb To Leave University
Why Go To The Polls At All, Boys? The Mail Will Always Go Through
Phi Delta Kappa, national education fraternity, is holding its annual election of new officers this week. But the members won't go to the polls to vote. That's old-fashioned. They'll vote at home.
At a nominating meeting recently, a ballot was made up and sent to all members. They are to make their selections and mail the ballots in.
The ballot includes Ronald W. Strowig and Arthur R. Partridge, graduate students, for president; Darrell E. Wood and Merle O. Covell, graduate students, for vicepresident; Nicholas L. Gerren, graduate student, and Ralph W. Smith, education senior, for secretary; Glenn A. Cole and Marcus E. Hahn, graduate students, for the treasurer;
Dr. Henry P. Smith, associate professor of education, for faculty advisor.
Per capita consumption of most food items in 1948 is likely to exceed the 1935-39 average and will equal or surpass the quantities consumed during the war years.
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PAGE TEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
.
FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1948
The Editorial Page
Keep Your Car In Top Shape
One out of every six fatal accidents involves an automobile with some kind of a mechanical defect, according to late reports of the record-makers. Moreover, the proportion of defective cars has been steadily increasing since 1941, when it was only one in 12 or 13.
On the face of it, this kind of news is both discouraging and alarming.
While we are in the midst of an all-out offensive against the fearful economic waste and personal tragedy of street and highway accidents, millions of automobiles limping along the roads are menaces to life and limb, regardless of whether their drivers are competent or not. With all the driving skill in the world and every faithful observance of rules of the road, a motorist is helpless when his steering wheels, brakes, or some other vital part of his car fails him in an emergency. He is helpless, and so are the pedestrians and other drivers in his path.
The hopeful side of the picture is that here we have to deal with mechanical failure alone—something far less elusive than human failure. It becomes human failure, too, only when the responsibility for proper car maintenance is left up to individual motorists and then neglected by them. To be on the safe side, that responsibility should be made a part of law.
If high standards of motor vehicle performance were required by statute and enforced by periodic inspections in every state of the Union, 5-000 lives might be saved in a single year.
Motorists owe it to their futures, their families and their fellow-men to become safe drivers. They owe it to their cars to keep them fit. Even the safest driver is no safer than his car.
Weak Argument
The recent Eisenhower and Mac- Arthur booms for president have once more brought to the surface what has almost become an instinct for many Americans—an aversion to having military men hold the presidency.
A glance at the history of the executive branch of our government should show whether this is a prejudice based on fact or personalities. We have had nine presidents who have served with the rank of general in the army of the United States: George Washington, Andrew Jackson, William Henry Harrison, Zachary Taylor, Ulysses S. Grant Rutherford B. Hayes, James A. Garfield, Benjamin Harrison, and William McKinley. Although the popular appeal of most of these men was based on their military records, only two of them, Taylor and Grant, could be classified as professional soldiers. Thus the field is limited to begin with.
Basing any opinion on the presidential record of Zachary Taylor would be unaffair. He was chosen by the Whigs because he was the outstanding hero of the Mexican war; and since he was entirely new to politics, his opinions on the political questions of the day were unknown. However, he never had a chance to prove himself. He died about a year after taking office.
This leaves us with hapless Ulysses S. Grant. Grant, as president, was a very different person from the grim alert leader on the field of battle He appeared confused and unable to make sound judgments either on policy matters on in choosing his advisers. As a result, his administrations were characterized by a
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Benediction?
Dear Editor:
Come now, Dr. Brady, I'll gladly trade my idea-scarred ivory tower for the recent faculty majority report which discovered that the languages were 99-44-100 per cent pure. Since I heard no dissension from the language faculty ranks, one can only rejoice with you in the "realistic," if not "isolationist," belief that "languages are the best possible courses." What could be a more fitting benediction?
Marko L. Haggard
Graduate student
Political Science major
Mr. Haggard refers to a letter to the editor published in the May 18 issue of the Daily Kansas by Agnes M. Brady, assistant professor of Romance languages. —Editor.
Through the simple process of elimination, it would seem that most of the antipathy to military men holding the presidency must stem from the Grant debacle. That is a pretty weak argument to use as a condemnation of all military men who seek, or are sought for, this high office.
flood of political scandals and a generally low tone of public morality. He definitely is a wonderful example of a failure as president.
Could it be that the candidates, should be judged as individuals and not as mere products of their previous occupations? — Anna Mary Murphy.
At the downtown theaters to stop the disturbances during the advertisements, an open letter is shown which tells what the merchants do for the students. It would be interesting to point out what the students do for the merchants, too.
- Letters To The Editor -
The following letters refer to an editorial entitled "Wasted Time" written by John Stauffer which appeared in the May 17 issue of the Daily Kansan—Editor.
Alternative
Dear Editor:
Re:Monday's editorial of refutation.
"Wasted Time".
The A.S.C. does not expect its amendment on the blocking of polling lines to eradicate the trouble. Driving regulations haven't stopped speeding on the campus drives. It is hoped that the threat of legal action may minimize the dilatory tactics used by worried party members at election time. "No blocking" will be as difficult of enforcement as "no electioneering." a constitutional prohibition on the books for several semesters.
The bill was offered as a legal alternative to the physical ejection from line favored by political "realists" on the Hill. As for the term "childish" editorially assigned to the amendment, it may be better applied to the behavior that forced consideration of the bill. Such extended discussion of Council measures by the Daily Kansan is always appreciated. Some constructive suggestions on better ways to guarantee the student's right to vote will be especially welcome.
Things must be getting back to normal. Ely Culbertson is writing bridge books again.
Jim Petersen College junior Alice Wismer College senior
The Editor Fool-Proof?
Dear Editor:
So, "The A.S.C. is wasting its time with such a bill as this unless they have a fool-proof method for seeing that it can be carried out to the letter." Perhaps Mr. Stauffer would like the abolition of laws against murder merely because every culprit is not convicted. I ask him, what law is fool-proof?
I am quite sure that the draftsmen of the bill to prohibit loitering around the polls were totally aware that their bill would not stop voters from getting "confused" or marking their ballots wrong and having to get new ones. They did not propose it as a cure-all. However, I believe the purpose of the bill was to stop certain people, whose jewelry excludes them from the majority of students who frequent the Union building, from standing either in the polling lines or around the polling table after they have already voted. Certainly, there can be little question as to whether a voter's activity book has been punched.
Donald Griffin College freshman
One of the letters to the editor appearing in the Daily Kansan said "the only thing trite about 'College Daze' was the title." On the contrary, it seemed to us, that appearing as it did during the two weeks preceding finals the title was quite appropriate.
"Russia offers to talk," says a headline in the Kansas City Star. But there was nowhere any mention of being willing to listen.
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University Daily Hansan
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...David H. Clymer
Managing Editor...Coper Rollow
Asst. Man. Editor...Clark M. Clarson
City Editor...Gene Vignery
City Editor...John Stauffer
Asst. City Editor...James D.
Richard Barton
Telegraph Editor...James Rooonin
Asst. Tel. Editor...Hal Neison
Asst. Tel. Editor...Hill Mason
Sports Editor...Paul Zeh
Sports Editor...James Jones
Women's Sports Ed...Anna Mary Murphy
Robot Editor...Robert S.
Picture Editor...James Mason
Society Editor...Patricia Bentley
Adv. Manager...Paul Wainer
Clr. Manager...Don Tidwil
Bill Blinck...Bill Blinck
Class. Adv. Mgr...Ruth Clayton
Class. Class. Adv. Mgr...Elizabeth Berry
Asst. Class. Adv. Mgr...Carol Buhler
Nat. Adv. Mgr...Eleanor Bradford
Nat. Adv. Mgr.Eleanor Bradford
Promotion Mgr...Roger James
Ass. Promotion Mgr...Don Tennant
The Kansas Press Association
19 MEMBER
48
National Editorial Association
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Illinois
FRIDAY,MAY21,1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE ELEVEN
Daily Kansan Classified Ads
Phone KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be delivered during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office, Journalism and Public Affairs, 6 p.m. the day before publication is desired.
Classified Advertising Rates
For Sale
One Three Five
day days five
25 words or less 35c 65c 90c
additional words 1c 2c 3c
SOFIA BED, maroon cord upholstered practically new, and blond oak dinctet excellent condition. Best offer by Jun 14. Delivery for June 10. 30 Sunnyside.
MODEL T. 1927 two-toned convertible heater, sealed beam lights, wire wheels heavy duty tires. Needs someone with understanding of heart and tools, 1194
FELLOWS! Earn harvest wages! Here is your opportunity to earn money this summer by hauling wheat. 1945 Chevrolet 1 - 12 ton truck with new Giant engine, mileage, good tires, perfect condition, job references to buyer. See at 1405 N. Y.
MODEL "A" roadster cheap. Best offer
takes. See at 1717 Alabama. 24
18 lens, Zeiss Tessar, 127 mm, German
Gardena 132 Nane "L" , Sunflower,
Gigaroana 132 Lane "L" , Sunflower, 21
"TIME'S" special anniversary rate to new
student members only $34.25
Student Book Unit Store
BUICK coupe. New muffler, battery, seat covers. water pump. Good condition. Must sell; will sacrifice. See at 1329 Connecticut or call 2514- M. 24
*47 MOTO-SCOCT in excellent condition
*47舟 Dan Wand, 1247 Ohio, or
电话 3338
HOLLYWOOD double bed. bookcase,
three-way floor lamp, end table, dining
room table. Just like new. Priced real-
est. Call 1610-H 24-94
see at 1005 Indiana.
VETERAN! 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 HTFD
Wanted
$15 REWARD offered by student and
employed wife for information leading
to the construction of a private bath or small house furnished or
unfurnished. Call 2403 after 5:30, 25
9:30.
NICE FURNISHED apartment or house,
Winfield high school, Winfield, Kan. 25
Winfield high school, Winfield, Kan. 25
VETERAN wants to rent two or three room, furnished or unfurnished apartments. No children. No pets. Be in Lawrence two years. Call Jim Young. 86.
A REASONABLE good swimmer age 19 or over, boy or girl, to take Red Cross Equate School Joining June 12 to 12. West johnson county. will qualify you for a swimming instructor job. Call or write Russell Peterson, MELROSE 7908, Van Winkle Wake, Merriam, Kansas, after 6:00 o'clock or Saturday, or Sunday.
TO TRADE: Large three room unfurnished apartment in Kansas City, private bath, for equivalent apartment in Lawrence. Jack W. Robinson, Ph. 3410. 22
to or near Washington, DC by car,
trolley, about May 28 or 30. Phone
2906R - 714
A PERMANENT part-time typist. Phone
975.
?2
ESQUIRE Father's Day subscription
books $4.35. Student Union
Book Store
Business Service
AIRLINE RESERVATIONS. city ticket office. The First National Bank of Lawrence. Miss Rose Gieseman, Mgr., 8th and Mass. Phone 30. 21
THEISI typing wanted by teacher-typist with fifteen years experience in K.U typing. Will also do term reports. Work guaranteed. Phone 2908 or 547. 24
IDEAS for graduation gifts. Parker pen sets and are either brief, case. See them at www.ideas4grad.com.
TYPING: For better grades have your term papers and other written work neatly and accurately typed. Phone 2193- M729 Missouri, Mrs. Earl Wright. 24
DOES your pen need repairing? We have a complete pen repair department with a factory trained repairman at Student Union Book Store. 24
TYPING done: Term papers, reports, special attention given thesis. Accurate work at reasonable prices. Call 1996-W. Apartment 2, 1101 Tennessee. rtes
TAILOR-MADE suits $36.50 to $65.00. Expert alteration and tailoring. Expert Eberhart & Son, Tailor Shop, $31½; Mass. rres
NEW vacuum cleaners for rent. Attachments included. $1.50 per day. Al Brooks Sweeper Co., 8311$'s Mass. Ph. 1104 between 9 and 12 a.m.
For Rent
AWE I TO September 1. 5-room furnished house in exchange for room and board for elderly landlord. Call 2128W,
A BIG ROOM for two boys who like to feel free to make themselves at home, to reach each per week for summer and fall. Four weeks per information contact the Kasan office.
HAVE A swell basement room for three boys. Ideal for summer studying. For four boys, three blocks from KU—near bus. Call 2544-0 or see at 1818 minis in afternoons.
3-ROOM apartment for summer months
paid H. E. Wright, 12, 25
Rhode Island.
FOR SUMMER, large room for 3 or 4
room, water228,1801 Alabama.
water228,1901 Alabama.
FOR RENT: Two room furnished apt, with bath for summer months only. Close to campus. See or write Derald Kahler, 1530 Tennessee, Apt. 103. 244
DOUBLE 'ROOM' for boys. Nicely furnished with single beds. Two blocks from the lobby, telephone facilities. Inquire at 1116 Louisiana between 6:00 and 7:00 p.m.
OOMS FOR graduate girl students,
cooking privileges if desired—refrigeration.
2 blocks from campus. Phone
734M. 1224 Ohio. 26
TO TRADE-three-room furnished apartment with private bath for equivalent apartment in Topeka. Please contact Daily Kansan office. 21
AIR COOLED rooms and apt. for boys.
single beds. 2 blocks from campus, ppl
SUMMER session rooms for boys. 1234
Orend. Phone 2317-M. 24
WE would exchange our two-room apt in Lawrence near campus for apt. in Topeka. No pets or children. In June. Send letters to Kansan. 21
ROOMS for rent for summer—includes two cool basement rooms. Two blocks from campus, one block from bus. 1339 Ohio. W. P. Meek. . . 26
LARGE well-furnished rooms for men at 1218 Mississippi. One-half block from the building. Summer school and fall, 1948. Jack Campbell. 730, for information.
BOOMS for girl summer students. One
month payout. 1241 Louisiana, phone 1784-1.
26
Transportation
LEAVING FOR Tucson, Ariz., after June 1st. Want passenger to share expenses and help drive. See Jack Emerson, 1009 Maine, between 6-7 except Fridays, 25
LEAVING FOR Columbus, Georgia, June
passenger for two on passenger
phone 15801
HAVE transportation for one to California leaving about noon, May 31, Call 2166-J evenings. Share expenses. 22
New York City on June 2. Would be in New York or more riders. Call 3305. For Neal. 21
WANTED—Ride for two to New York City or vicinity. Leave June 3 or after, share expenses and help drive. Call Leon Snyder, 1752. 24
WANTED—Ride to Chicago or Waukee,
Illinois. Can leave after 10 a.m. June
1. Will share driving and expenses. Call
Jim Amend, 3355-W. 21
Miscellaneous
EFFECTIVE Sunday, May 23 (Sunday only) we will be open from 12:00 noon (noon) p.m. serving meals. Shaver's Cafe, one mile south of Lawrence or Hiway 59.
TO GRADUATES of 1948: Remember your commencement in call. Call 60M and make arrangements for place and time. Overnight service after last. J26
NOTICE to all students who owe for
bill this week before outstanding ac-
counts are transferred to the office of
registrar to be placed against transcripts. 24
T. "Norma" gold, four-color pencil finder.
B. "Norma" gold, four-color pencil finder in
with me. G. Scott, phone 8911.
DANCE every Saturday night at odd Felt
Early, Informal. Joe Langworthy
orchestra.
ries
YELLOW GOLD Waltham, cordovan
BURKLAND room in library. PZ
991. Burk. Warwick. TZ
25
Lost
BLACK COIN purse, containing two keys and little loss. Lost in the library or Balley lab. building. Need keys. Please leave at Daily Kansan office. 21
SPIRAL notebook with "Trans. Miss
Return to Daily
Kansan Owner, Reward
UNIVERSAL Geneva write on Ortega.
UNIVERSAL Geneva write on House.
R. Kroll warich. R. Schmitz.
Ward. C. Schmitz. 664.
PAIR of horn-irrified glasses. Reward.
Elvig, Elgiv. 1511 Stratford Rd. Phon-
2544
GOLF SHOES—Would fellows I rode in from Golf course Monday evening be kind enough to call 1387-M after 7 p.m. Ask for Hunter. 21
MAY 11, at or near university, round
up the value only as a keeep sake.
Reward. Call 1761
A PAIR of plastic-rimmed glasses on the Intramural field about May 10. Owner may have the same on identification and paying for this ad.
Found
Speech Therapy Seminar
Hears Readings In Dialect
A comparison of the Cockney dialect with the British-English was made at the speech therapy seminar meeting recently.
Veterans Need OK To Change Schools
Goeran Karlberg, instructor in German read in Cockney dialect to the group. The meeting was at the home of Miss Margaret Anderson, associate professor of speech.
Thirty-seven years before the Pilgrims landed at Plymouth rock, a white man named Antonio Espejo found silver ore in what is now Arizona, marking the first mineral discovery in the territory.
Veterans who plan to change schools for the summer or fall term must obtain a supplemental certificate immediately. If the veterans plan to return to the same school after a summer session at another institution, they must again obtain a certificate of eligibility.
Sunflower Statesmen Elect
The Sunflower Statesmen's cun elected officers and appointed chairmen for the outstanding committees recently.
Officers are Melvin H. Clingan, president; Lee H. Reiff, vice-president; Jack E. Tusher, secretary; Marvin E. Arth, corresponding secretary; Allyn C. Browne, treasurer
Chairmen appointed are Reiff, Boyd L. Burns, John L. Brockett, Joseph E. Balloum, James E. Childers, and Jackson R. Gossett.
Daily Kansan Sees Foreign Service In Germany, Austria And Far East
Eight sets of the University Daily Kansan are being sent overseas to United States Information Centers in the occupied areas, Elmer F. Beth, acting director of the William Allen White School of Journalism announced.
The centers are: Berlin, Frankfurt, Stuttgart, Munich, Bremen, Vienna and also the occupied areas in Japan and Korea. The papers are being mailed one a week. Professor Beth said.
the expense and difficulties involved in tracing
Lt. Col. D. R. Nugent, U.S.M.C. said the publication will be of special interest to Japanese university students who are attempting, in the face of almost insurmountable obstacles, to publish university newspapers.
Col. Nugent added that he hoped that it soon would be possible to exchange Japanese newspapers printed in English and the Daily Kansan. He said that because of a critical shortage of newsprint and
the expense and difficulties involved in transmittal it would make it almost impossible at the present time.
Jewish Union Elects
The Jewish Student union, in its last regular meeting of the present semester, elected officers for next fall. They are Ira Gissen, College junior, president; Donald Oppenheimer, education sophomore, vice-president; and Louis Lowenstein, business junior, was re-elected treasurer.
UNION
PACIFIC
SEE THIS Land of Magic
Yellowstone NATIONAL PARK
云山铁路
...where Nature performs thrilling feats of magic.
Union Pacific's smartly appointed, air conditioned trains take you in restful comfort to West Yellowstone Gateway, most popular rail entrance and nearest to famous Old Faithful Geyser.
Going Union Pacific, you can conveniently stop over at historic Salt Lake City.
PARK
UNION PACIFIC ALSO SERVES—
Sun Valley • Colorado Utah-Arizona National Parks California • Pacific Northwest Dude Ranches • Hoover Dam
UNION PACIFIC RAILROAD Road of the Daily Streamliners
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
FRIDAY, MAY 21, 1949
PAGE TWELVE
Stassen, Dewey Battle Today In Final Primary
Governor Dewey and Mr. Stassen both made final radio addresses in Portland to outline their foreign and domestic policies and stress their views on development of western resources.
Portland, Ore., May 21—(UP)—Oregon Republicans chose today between Gov. Thomas E. Dewey of New York and Harold E. Stassen of Minnesota as their choice for the邮电's presidential candidate.
Mr. Stassen and Governor Dewey were the only candidates entered in the Oregon primary.
They had fought the most bitter campaign in Oregon's history for the state's 12 convention delegates who also were being named in today's balloting.
Professional political guessers and bettors forecast an even race with Governor Dewey taking an edge in the large cities and Mr. Stassen running ahead in the rural areas. Odds were 6-5 on either.
The Oregon primary was the last contested G.O.P. presidential preference election before the convention at Philadelphia June 21.
Mr. Stassen soncluded his long campaign with an old fashioned torchlight parade through downtown Portland last night.
From the standpoint of numbers. Oregon's 12 delegates were comparatively unimportant. But it carried considerable prestige value. It will take 549 votes to win the nomination
Pianist To Give Senior Recital
Dorothy H. Shoup, pianist, will present her senior recital at 4 p.m.
Sunday in Frank Strong auditorium. She is from the studio of Alberta Stuhl, instructor of piano.
Miss Shoup attended Washburn university one semester, and came to the University of Kansas in 1942 as a piano major. After two years of study she took a position in the Lakin, Kan, public schools, returning to the University in 1947.
She was recently elected to Pi Kappa Lambda, national honorary music society.
Her program will include selections from Bach's "Italian Concerto" and Sonata, Op. 23 (Beethoven) and "Pastorale" (Corelli - Godowsky), "Gigue" (Lloeyli-Godowsky), "Intermezzo", Op. 116, No. 4 (Brahms), and "Rhapsody", Op. 116, No. 4" (Brahms).
By Bibler
Little Man On Campus
"What ya worried about, Eddie? After all, it ain't our plane."
Little Man On Campus
UNIVERSITY FLYING SCHOOL
Brake
Caesar And Teke House Got Paint Job
The TKE house received a new vari-colored paint job and Caesar, Beta mascot was soaked with green paint as vandals went wild round 1:30 this morning.
Robert Krueger, College sophomore, saw three unknown boys running off the Teke porch and down the street. Krueger did not recognize any of the culprits.
Most of the Tekes were still up after the Delta Gamma serenade. Several groups scoured the neighborhood looking for the culprits but were unsuccessful. Police were called.
Teke pledges were scrubbing the white house front when Caesar, doused with green paint, ambled up the steps.
Ralph Brock, TKE president, said that he had no idea who the vandals were, but that he believed they were not University students.
Medics To Discuss V.D. Therapy
Syphilis and streptostasin will be discussed at the Kansas University Academy of Medicine meeting at 8 p.m. Monday in 103 Haworth hall. Dr. Max P. Allen of the Kansas City branch of the University Medical Center will speak on "Studies of the Penicillin Therapy of Prenatal Syphilis."
Jay Janes Select 16 New Members
The Jay Janes have selected 16 new members to add pep and spirit to the club's activities next year, Hortense Bedell, Jay Janes secretary, said today.
They are Anne Hunter, Jolliffe; Ruth Wolf, Locksley; Adrea Hinkel, Miller; Nancy Van Bebber, Kappa Alpha Theta; A. Jane Peterson, Watkins; Ann Learned, Pi Beta Phi; Bernelda Larsen and Patricia McGovney, Corbin; Ricky Margegrer, Foster; Billie Lea Bowman, Phyllis Bice, Ina Lea Crabtree, Emily Stewart, Doris Wolf, and Joyce Shannon, 'independents-at- large'; and Donna Munn, Sigma Kappa.
The girls were selected following a rush tea Wednesday. Pledging ceremony will take place May 26 in the Union.
Clubs On Campus
Mary Medved Receives French Fraternity Sophomore Award
Mary Cecilia Medved, College sophomore, was awarded the prize as the outstanding student in sophomore French courses by Pi Delta Phi, national French honor society, at the meeting of Le Cercle Francis, Thursday. The prize was a volume of French poetry.
The meeting was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Malin.
Delta Sigma Pi, international business fraternity, will hold formal initiation exercises at 3 p.m. Sunday in the Union. After the initiation, the fraternity will elect officers for 1948-49.
Delta Sigma Pi
Robert Schnur, College junior, was elected president of the Sociology club Thursday. Other new officers are Frances Richert, vice-president; Adrea Hinkel, secretary; and James Haggard, treasurer.
Sociology Club Election
Two films were shown, "Wanderers of The Arabian Deserts," and "The Mongols of Central Asia."
Six women will be initiated into Tau Sigma, modern dance group, at a formal initiation banquet at 6:30 p.m. Sunday at the Castle Tea room.
They are Carolyn Coleman, Jeanne Hillier, Bette K. Krenner, Shirley A. Kyle, Mary Lowe Peckenschneider, and Eleanor Wells.
Dance Group Initiates
Kappa Phi will initiate 14 women at 7 p.m. today in the First Methodist church, 10th and Vermont streets. Pledges will be given the degree of the light by active members of Kappa Phi. Seniors will receive the degree of the rose from members of the Kansas City alumnae.
Kappa Phi Initiates
Scarab Initiates
Three engineering students will be initiated into Scarab, professional architectural fraternity, in a formal ceremony at 5 p.m. today in Marvin hall.
The College Episcopal club will have an appreciation dinner for the 20 adults who have helped the club at 5:30 p.m. Sunday in the parish house 10th and Vermont streets. The Rev. Donald O. Weatherbee will be the speaker. After the dinner, the club will attend the "Even" Song Service" at 8 p.m. in the church.
Students who have not signed up at the office of the registrar for the summer and fall semesters should do so at once.
They are John W. Cole, Harold E. Stewart, and Arthur T. Woodman.
The seniors of the Lutheran Student association will be guests at the semi-formal senior banquet to be held at the Trinity Lutheran church at 6:30 p.m. today. Anyone wishing to attend should call 624 for reservations.
Eniscопal Club Dinner
James K. Hitt, registrar, said Thursday that about 2,200 students have signed up for the summer session and approximately 5,000 for the fall semester. He urged students who are undecided about whether they are coming back or not to sign up.
Sign For School,
Registrar Urges
Lutheran Student Dinner
Writing Contest In Home Stretch
Jerry Kuehnle was elected president of the amateur Radio club Thursday. Other officers are Bill Barnett, vice-president, and Gary Robbins, secretary.
Competition for the $2,500 prize in the William Allen White contest in creative writing narrowed today when the University judging committee submitted its confidential report to Chancellor Deane W. Malott. Final selection of the winner will be made by three judges, and announcement of their decision may be made at commencement.
Radio Club Elects
Don Oppenheimer, club member, spoke to the group on "New Harmonic Crystals and Their Application in Oscillator Circuits."
The writing contest, open only to University students, was established by G. P. Putnam's Sons, publishers, who offer an annual prize of $1,000 in cash and $1,500 as advance against royalties when the book is published. Entries so far have included novels, plays, and books of short stories and verse.
The sifting of entries is done by the University committee consisting of Mrs. Natalie Calderwood, instructor of English; Prof. Elmer F. Beth, acting director of the School of Journalism; Clyde K. Hyder, professor of English; and Ray B. West, associate professor of English.
The final judging will be done by Chancellor Malott, Frederic Babcock of the Chicago Tribune, and Kennett L. Rawson, head of the editorial department of G. P. Putnam's Sons.
Get Your Y's Jayhawker Today In Union Office
The Y's Jayhawker, monthly publication of the University Y. M.C.A. will be distributed today. Copies of the four-page paper may be picked up in the Y.M.C.A. office in the Union.
Jewish Airforce Tries To Save Holy City Troops
Tel Aviv, May 21-(UP)-Iran threw its infant air force into the desperate battle for Jerusalem today.
"All our planes returned to their base," the Haganan report said.
Hagannah army sources here said that an unspecified number of Jewish planes went to the aid of Jewish army men who are taking a pounding from superior Arab Legion forces in the Holy City.
The United Nations truce commission in Jerusalem appealed to the United Nations security council today to dispatch a strong, neutral armed force to impose a cease-fire order on Arabs and Jews in the Holy City.
The commission, despairing of achieving a Jerusalem trust without force, warned that the only alternative was a fight to the finish.
The Jewish planes apparently sought to attack Arab reinforcements and supply lines. The Hagamah report said their principal attack was on Legion strong-points at Shaafat village, northwest of the battered Holy City.
Reports of ground fighting in Jerusalem were fragmentary, but they left no doubt that the Jewish defenders were in a desperate position.
The 100,000 Jews in the Holy City have been without food convovys for a full month. Arabs have blocked the life-line highway from Tel Aviv, Water and electric power were reported failing.
There was no confirmation of Arab reports that 4,000 Jews were almost encircled in the old walled city of Jerusalem, but there seemed no reason to doubt these reports.
All observers agreed that unless there is some drastic turn for the better in the next 48 hours, the Holy City will be torn by bloody house-to-house fighting, in which the Jews would be faced by greatly superior strength.
Reinking Has Appendectomy
Victor E. Reinking, College senior from Udall, underwent an emergency appendectomy at Watkins hospital Thursday.
His condition today is reported to be good.
ALWAYS
SERVICE STATION
GARAGE
"Just drop us off at Skillet's Tavern"
We could really go for:
- Spaghetti and Meat Balls
Ravioli
Short Orders
Serving hours 7:00 a.m. to midnight
1906 Mass.
1906 Mass.
University 45th Year No.155 Monday, May 24, 1948 Daily Kansan STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Big 7 Ruling Gyps Veterans--Davis
Eligibility Re-defined To Eliminate Frosh, Junior College Competition
World War II veterans who returned to college on the promise that they would be allowed four years of varsity athletic competition in the Big Seven conference were betrayed over the weekend by Big Seven faculty representatives, W. W. Davis, University faculty representative who opposed the new ruling, believes.
"It is a dirty gyp to the veterans. Although our rules allowed veterans four years of varsity competition, we now bring in these new interpretations of 'participation' which had never been counted before." Mr. Davis said.
Chancellor Deane W. Malott, in a statement released this morning, emphasized the remarks of Mr. Davis and added, "Because I feel so strongly the injustice of these actions, I am contacting the other presidents of the Big Seven institutions, asking them to give consideration to these decisions, and to inform me of their official positions in the matter.
The new ruling, introduced at the Spring meeting by Sam Shirky, faculty representative of the University of Missouri, re-defines participation in computing eligibility of men who entered school (any school) before May 1, 1947. It states that:
"The University of Kansas protests vigorously these retroactive and discriminatory decisions of the Big Seven faculty advisers against a group of our veteran athletes."
1. Participation on a freshman team that played other freshman teams counts as varsity competition.
2. All years of participation on any junior college team will now count as varsity competition (the old conference rule states that the first year of junior college competition shall NOT count as varsity competition by the Big Seven).
Regarding the status of athletes who entered college after May 1, 1947, the new rule limits them to three years of varsity competition.
"The new Fuling defining 'participation' is not in accordance with our practice down through the years,' Davis said.
The school hardest hit by the new ruling is Kansas, whose championship football team will probably lose Don Fambrough, Marvin Small, Bill Hogan, Tom Scott, and Gene Sherwood, and perhaps others.
Kansas State which also opposes the ruling, will lose their all-American basketball star, Howard Shannon. The other football team that is seriously affected by the ruling is Oklahoma, co-champion last year, according to Davis.
J. V. Sikes, new Jayhawker head football coach, shares the opinion expressed by Davis that the ruling is grossly unfair to veterans, breaking a promise to them.
While none of the University's basketball players will be affected by the ruling, Dr.F.C. "Phog" Allen, veteran cage coach, was critical of the action by the faculty representatives.
"I'm surprised at nothing after that nefarious decision of last winter (referring to the Brannum case). Nothing could top that. That's why I've always been for a czar, because you could then depend on impartial decisions. There would be no pressure groups/working then as they apparently are new," Allen commented.
E. C. Quigley, athletic director of the University, had no comment to make concerning the ruling, but added.
"I will have later,"
To Offer New Graduate Course
This summer the University will be the first in the country to offer graduate training in functional music, Cancellor Deane W. Malott announced today.
Two other schools offer such training on the undergraduate level only. They are Michigan State college and the College of the Pacific.
Functional music has a purpose other than pleasure. It is used in industry, schools, and hospitals.
It has been proved that functional music improves the mental outlook of physically handicapped children and adults. It is also used in treatment of mental illness.
Dr. E. Thayer Gaston, chairman of the department of music education, will direct the new course. It is the result of his work for the past four years that the course has been realized.
A bachelor's degree in music education or the equivalent will be a prerequisite. The graduate degree will be master of music education with a major in functional music.
Following two semesters of graduate study at the University the student will continue his work at the university. His thesis will be prepared there.
Dr. Gaston said musicians would be trained for work in hospitals and schools for exceptional children. At present more than 125 hospitals employ trained musicians or would if such personnel were available.
A new laboratory for the course is being prepared at the University. A "lie detector" is among the many new scientific instruments to be used.
The University Symphony orchestra will present the final concert in a series of four at 8 p.m. today in Hoch auditorium.
Orchestra To Give Final Concert
Other programs presented this season have been the all Brahms concert in December, the out-of-town concerts in Kansas City and Topeka, and the orchestra arrangements for "The Messiah."
The 85-piece orchestra will present "Symphony No. 4 in D minor" (Schumann) and "Russland and Ludmilla Overture" (Glinka).
The program will feature Jack Moehlenkamp, piano soloist, playing "Piano Concerto No. 4 in G major" (Beethoven).
Kansas—Partly cloudy today, tonight and tomorrow except mostly cloudy with occasional showers or thunderstorms west and south today and tonight and in western third of state tomorrow morning. Somewhat cooler today and tonight becoming slightly warmer west tomorrow afternoon. High today 75-85, low tonight in 50's.
WEATHER
Complete Plans For Graduation Class Reunions
The largest graduating class in the history of the University will gather in Frank Strong hall June 6 for final instructions for the walk down the Hill.
The class of 1,500 tops last year's class of 1,400 and outnumbers any previous group.
Dean W. Malott, chancellor of the University, will give the farewell address to the graduates. Gov. Frank Carlson, and Oscar Stauffer, member of the board of regents, will also speak. Because of the large graduating class only brief talks will be given. Most of the time will be devoted to awarding diplomas.
Six former graduating classes will hold reunions on the campus. The class of '98, as the 50-year group, will receive gold medals at the University luncheon June 7. The classes of '08, '13, '23, '38, and '43 will hold 40, 35, 25, 10, and 5 year reunions respectively.
The Rev. Albert E. Haydon, professor emeritus of comparative religion at the University of Chicago, will give the baccalaureate address June 6 in Memorial stadium.
Seniors must obtain their caps and gowns between 10 a.m. and 5 p.m.
June 5, or between 3 and 5 p.m.
June 6 at Frank Strong annex A. Receipt for senior dues must be presented.
Two tickets will be given to each senior to admit rests to Hoch auditorium where commencement activities will be held if it rains. Senior announcements may be picked up at the business office.
Senior breakfast will be held at 7:30 a.m. June 7 in the Union building. Senior class history and prophecy will be read.
Chancellor Malott will make his annual report on the condition of the University at the commencement luncheon in Hoch auditorium, 12:15 p.m. June 7. Alumni president J. Koehler Coy, no茶master. Citations for distinguished service to alumni will be presented at that time.
Tickets to the luncheon will be on sale when caps and gowns are issued in Frank Strong annex A. Each graduating senior is entitled to one ticket at 25 cents for his own use, three tickets for family and friends at 75 cents each. Deadline for obtaining tickets is 5 p.m. June 5.
Caps and gowns will be checked in immediately following commencement at Frank强 annex A and a receipt will be given. The receipt must be presented at the registrar's office to arrange for a diploma. A penalty of 50 cents a day, up to a maximum of $2.50, will be assessed if caps and gowns are not returned by noon. June 8.
D. LaVaughn Hodgson, education junior, was elected president of Tau Sigma, modern dance group, at an annual banquet Sunday.
Other new officers are Corrine E. Carter, vice-president; Jeanne Hillier, treasurer; Shirley Ann Kyle, secretary; Dorothea D. Fuller, corresponding secretary; and Mary Lou Peckenschneider, wardrobe mistresses.
Tau Sigma Dines, Elects Officers
Graduates should read their senior reminders carefully for additional instruction.
Court Fines Two Students For Speeding, Ignoring Signal
William W. Justus, third year law student, was fined $20 in police court May 21 for speeding 40 miles an hour in a 30-mile zone. Hobart M. Cockrehain, College freshman, was fined $2 for failing to obey a traffic officer's signal.
'Greeks Know Plan ToAppointAdvisor'
Woodruff Says Plan Not Secret; Trovillo's Prophecy 'Ridiculous'
Greek organizations have been informed of University plans for establishing a financial adviser for fraternities and sororities, Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of men, said Saturday.
Union Activities Remain Closed
Dean Woodruff's statement was a reply to a speech made by J. Alden Trovillo, associate professor of industrial management, at a banquet
The Twilight Twirl, which was to have officially opened the roof deck of the Union, was called off last week because of the closing of Union Activities. The organization was also scheduled to assist in the opening of the Palm room Sunday.
Discussion and interviews are still being held between the Union Activities executive board and L. C. Woodruff, dean of student affairs, regarding the status of Union Activities, which was closed by the dean last week.
Miss Hermina Zipple, director of the Union, has been handling the work formerly done by Union Activities.
Dean Woodruff told the University Daily Kansan that "nothing definite has been decided yet, and it is not known when an official decision will be reached."
Ex-Honor Man To Aid Dean
Donald K. Alderson, '45, of Topeka will become assistant dean of men at the University next September, Chancellor Deane W. Malott announced.
Mr. Alderson was named KU honor man for 1945, the year he received a bachelor of science degree in business. He has been employed in the production control office of the Goodyear Tire and Rubber plant in Topeka since then.
Kappa Phi Confers New Degrees On 25
He will succeed Willis L. Tompkins who is leaving to take a similar position at Ohio university, Athens, Ohio.
Alpha chapter of Kappa Phi Methodist women's club, announces the initiation of fourteen women who were given the Degree of Light.
They are Tolene Dudley, Georgia Ginther, Joan Harris, Norma Hawkins, Maxine Heller, Arena Reeta Mildred Lockade, Vinona Klotz, Alexandra Betty Clara Jane Lutz, Jane Lutz, Clarke Markeson, and Kathryn Mita.
While at K.U., Mr. Alderson was a member of Sachem, senior men's honor society, president of his senior class, and president of the Independent Student association. He held a residence hall scholarship for four years.
They are Esther Calvin, Mary Lou Davis, Martha Jo Easter, Wilma Geppelt, Elizabeth Graves, Helen Scamell, Virginia Shimer, Donna Snart, Bettie Swart, Shirley Wellborn, Frances Wolfskill, and Melba Young.
Following the initiation ceremony members of the Kansas City Kappa Alpha University association conference the Delegation the Rose upon eleven senior women.
May 20. Mr. Trovillo said that a plan was "quietly being set up" for a university financial adviser for危机charged that the plan could easily lead to collective buying and University control of Greek finances.
"The plan is purely a service, not a control." Dean Woodruff said. "Mr. Trovillo's prophecy concerning the possible development of the plan is ridiculous. The University's sole interest in the entire matter is to be of service to these organizations in the realm of finances."
"Some 35 or more organizations on the campus are involved. Each has an average monthly budget of $3,000, which means that fraternal organizations represent an annual million dollar venture on our campus. As a protection to the students, to their parents, and to alumni backers, we are interested in providing adequate advice in expenditure of funds."
Referring to Mr. Trovillo's statement about the plan's quiet set up, Dean Woodruff said that during the semester the presidents of all fraternities were consulted. He said they were asked to lay the plan before their chapters
Dean Woodruff said that Mr. Trovillo himself had supervised the formation of a plan for keeping fraternity records.
His plan was considered and rejected because we felt that as a control mechanism it was too compli- ceed. Then he learned of the plan while talking to a University administrator May 20, I don't know."
"He talked to me about the plan May 20," Dean Woodruff continued. "Why he should refuse to disclose my name I don't know the answer to that either."
"Formal announcement of the plan has not been made pending the selection of a financial adviser, who, incidentally, will work with the director of dormitories, but in cooperation with the offices of the dean of women and dean of men," he concluded.
Geeding Appointed Dance Manager
Wilbur D. Geeding, first year law student, has been appointed dance manager, Elizabeth Sue Webster, chairman of the A.S.C. social committee, announced today.
Miss Webster also said that all organizations on the campus desiring a schedule of their activities in the K-Book for next year should present such a schedule to the dean of women immediately.
Richard Cory Undergoes Emergency Appendectomy
Richard W. Cory, engineering sopnomore, underwent an emergency appendectomy at Watkins hospital Sunday. His condition is reported good.
'Beneath Her Awful Hand She Holds Dominion Over . . . '
The best comment on the Palm room opening Sunday came from a freshman woman, with an assist from Rudyard Kipling.
Impressed with the beauty of the room at the reception, she exclaimed, "Jeepers! Miss Zipple's dominion now extends over Palm and Pine!"
图2-13
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 24, 1948
Official Bulletin
May 24.1948
All pre-medics accepted for 1948 class who will enroll in medicine during summer session report to 104 Haworth immediately.
Last I.S.A. meeting, 7:15 tonight,
228 Frank Strong, Council members,
house representatives and other
members for picture.
All Tau Beta Pi members sign address roster in the office of the dean.
Joint meeting, old and new boards University Women's club, 9:30 tomorrow morning, home of Mrs. D. W. Mslott. Old members bring official material.
K. U. Dames bridge, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, 1st floor, Memorial Union. College faculty meeting in Frank Strong auditorium, 5 p.m. tomorrow.
All parking regulations will be strictly enforced during final week. Regulations will be enforced only on Jayhawk drive between the last day of finals, June 3, and the first day of the Summer Session, June 10. University parking committee.
Sigma Tau Election
Glenn C. Gray, engineering junior, was elected president of Sigma Tau, honorary engineering fraternity, at a meeting recently.
Other interns elected were Abbot Taly, engineering junior, vice-president; Robert V. Sellers, engineering senior, secretary; David J. Foley, engineering junior, treasurer; Edward B. Harry, engineering junior, corresponding secretary; Earl G. Delenbaugh, engineering junior, historian
University Daily Kansan
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year. (In Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays, Uni- holidays and examination periods. Entered in the Academic calendar 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence, Kans., under act of March 3, 1879.
Each Man Owns His 'Castle'
Florence, Ill.—(UP)—There never will be any trouble in Florence about OPA rent ceilings. A survey of the fishing town of 150, just 75 miles north of St. Louis, showed that every citizen owns his own home.
Porcupines have been known to nibble on dynamite for the small amount of salt it contains.
Hillsboro, Ohio -(UP)—The Hillsboro Press Gazette, issued twice weekly, has begun its 131st year of publication. Edited by H. E. Barnes, the newspaper was founded in 1818.
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Frogs and toads use their eyes to help them swallow. The eyeballs are pulled down, and the food is forced on down the throat.
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Leaders Set Hot I-M Pace
Phi Delt, runners-up in intramural standings, boasts a perfect record for spring sports competition but have picked up very little ground on the first-place Beta's who have lost only one match. Both have played 14 times.
Phi Delt has won four golf and four handball matches, and three horseshoe and tennis contests. Beta has collected four victories in golf and handball and has chalked up three tennis triumphs. The lone Beta defeat was in horseshoes.
Only one more round of regular play remains. Finals are slated to begin in each of the spring sports Monday. The division leaders:
Horseshoehs: division one, Phi Gam; division two, Phi Delt, and Oread hall; division three, Sigma Chi; and division four: Sigma Nu.
Golf: division one, Phi Delt; division two, Beta; and division three, Sigma Nu.
**Handball:** division one, Phi Gam; division two, Beta and Phi Psi; division three, Phi Delt and Sig Alph; and division four, Last Chance.
Tennis: division one, Beta and Phi Delt; division two, Sig Alph; division three, Sigma Chi and ATO; division four, Phi Gam; and division five, Silent Men.
Dozens of murders in Kansas every year are either undetected or detected so that prosecution is impossible, according to Dr. J. J. Lattimore, Topeka pathologist and a member of the state legislature, who conducts many autopsies in Kansas each year.
'Kansas Murders Often Undetected'
His statement appears in "The County Coroner in Kansas," an article in a recent bureau of government research bulletin. The article was written by Newell N. Jenkins, College senior.
The county coroner is a carryover from a medieval English practice, the article said. The Kansas county coroner law was written in the 1880's and has never been changed except for salary increases.
The inefficiency of some county coroners has allowed many murderers to go unpunished," the article states. "It is the general belief that many county coroners lack sufficient medical training to perform their duties efficiently. Also, since it is an elective political office, it is subject to pressure groups."
Jenkins suggests that "a medical examiner system be set up where there would be state control over technical personnel. This system would do away with political control and would require that an autopsy be performed if there is the slightest possibility of illegal or unnatural death."
He Missed Only By Two Doors
Bartlesville, Okla.—(UP)—A Bartlesville man awoke, walked into his front room en route to the doorstep for his morning paper and found a stranger on the floor in front of the fireplace, sound asleep.
The man obligingly took a blanket from his bed, laid it over the stranger, and read his paper.
When the man awoke, he rubbed his eyes and said:
"Ow-w-w! I feel awful! Where am I?"
"You're not at home," his host replied.
The dazed intruder found he lived two doors away.
"I'll never touch it again," he told his neighbor.
Want To Buy A Persian Rug?
Framingham, Mass.—(UP)—From a business man in far-off Bagdad, Iraq, the advertising department of the Framingham News received the following request; "I am interested in your paper and I would like to advertise in it. Please send me your full details, rate cards, sample copy, etc."
General Electric says its differential analyzer can accomplish 17 man-years of mathematical work in two week's time.
Withholding Tax Forms Ready For Profs Over 65
All faculty members 65 years old or over, who come under the new income tax law, should sign new with-holding exemption certificates in the business office at once. Karl Klooz, University bursar, said today.
Mission To Aid Tourists
The Institute of International Relations at Stanford university has outlined the establishment of a student survey mission in Europe for students who will travel abroad during the summer. The outline was contained in a letter to the All Student Council.
The letter suggests that students planning such trips should be briefed on conditions in the areas they plan to visit by professors or anyone who has the necessary information.
Since the time is limited, anyone interested may write Cliff Forster, president, Stanford University Institute of International Relations, Paolo Alto, Calif., to obtain location of field co-ordinates and the addresses of interested Europeans. Additional information may be obtained at the University from Ralph E. Kiene, engineering junior.
The idea of the mission is to coordinate the efforts of students in an attempt to learn European problems and the cause of misunderstandings between Americans and Europeans. The combined results of such action will be published in newspapers and books.
Forty-seven students will go on two geology field trips during the summer session.
Geologists Plan Two Field Trips
One group of 12 men, under the direction of Dr. Robert Dreyer chairman of the geology department will go to the mountainous part of Montana near Helena. They will camp on the trip and will also visit points of geologic interest to end from Montana.
Prof. Cecil G. Lallcker will be in charge of 35 students going to the University's permanent camp near Canon City, Colo. The camp is used every summer and is within easy travelling distance of many points of geologic interest.
Geology majors are required to take at least one summer field trip. Elementary field work must be done in mountainous areas where geologic strata are exposed.
O'Connor Lectures On Tax Service
With the aid of prepared slides, Mr. O'Connor, an all-American football player for Stanford in 1933, demonstrated the use of the 1948 Federal Tax Service which his company publishes.
An illustrated lecture on the mechanics of a tax reporter service was presented to a business school audience recently by R. C. O'Connor, district sales representative for Prentice-Hall Publishing company.
The former Green Bay Packer player holds a law degree from Stanford University. With headquarters in Dallas, he covers the area west of the Mississippi river, including Alaska.
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Tom Page, instructor of political science, is leaving the University to study for his doctor degree at the University of Minnesota.
He will start his work in the middle of June. He said it would take 15 months or longer. Mr. Page is uncertain where he will teach after getting his degree.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 24, 1948
Girls May Have To Wear Buttoned Shoes This Fall To Be In The Height Of Fashion
St. Louis—(UP)—Shoe designers in this footwear manufacturing center are out to put the ladies back into spats and buttoned shoes by fall.
The St. Louis Shoe Manufacturers association says it is turning back the fashion pages to fine beading, high button spats, scalloped pinking and jeweled net ornaments for the new fall lines of women's footwear.
The stylists won't go all the way back, though. Just enough to keep in step with present feminine fashions.
For instance, the new spat shoes won't be much like the ones grandma maw when she stepped out. They're scheduled to be light and appear as one Style, in particular they will have cutout all around the quarter.
And about buttons. Don't go digging in the attic truck where Aunt Mamie put away the old buttonhook. The pearl buttons on next fall's shoes will be mostly for decorative purposes, although they still might be a handy gadget to latch a shoe-string onto in an emergency.
The heels will be covered with a pearl-finished celluloid to match the buttons.
New York — (UP) — The bobby soxer is wearing stockings.
Bobby Soxers Adopt Neatness, 'Anklets'
Those sox she puts on to play tennis she'll thank you to call by their old-fashioned name—"anklets."
That's the word on teen-age fashion the New York fashion group got yesterday from 16-year-old Mary Burdell of New York's Friends seminary, who turned up wearing a leaf-green bolero suit.
Blue jeans are for mountain climbing. Mary said. Dad's shirts are back in his drawer. Don't call us bobby-soxers and picture us sloppy, she said.
"We're trying to forget," she added.
Here's what they are wearing in the high school set, according to Mary:
For school—wool dresses and suits in winter; cotton dresses, dirndls and blouses in spring, with ballet slippers—and stockings.
For big parties—bouffant formals, off the shoulder or strapless "for we love bare shoulders and arms."
For dates—dresses with full skirts and tight waists; petticoats; high or low heeled shoes "depending on the height of the boy."
Hair is worn shoulder length and simple, Mary said, despite the grown-up fad for short cuts. Sometimes it's put up for a gala evening.
And they've smucked off most of their jewelry with the sox.
Lipstick and powder are the only makeup of most girls, she said. Sometimes they play with the "new light-colored" nail polish.
Many teen-agers are doing their own sewing, Mary said, to supplement their allowances. When they go shopping they look for mixable classics.
“Most of us,” Mary said, “would be satisfied with a fraternity pin.”
Long Underwear Makes Last Stand
Evansville, Ind.—(UP)—Long. underwear is staging a flickering last stand on the threshold of the atomic age.
John Strouse, whose family has operated a men's clothing store here for 80 years, said "longies" or union dresses classed with spats as a novelty item.
"We used to sell them by the case," he said. "But now only a few outdoor workers, hunters and old people buy them."
Longies began fading from the wasthad scene with the development of central heating in buildings and efficient car heaters, Strouse said.
In 1947, 850 Americans were killed and 87,000 injured in accidents involving automobiles which were turning left at the time of the accident. Know your hand signals—and use them!
Socially Speaking
Campus House Formal
Campus house held its annual spring formal May 14 in the Kansas room of the Union.
Guests were Lergy Ellsworth, Hal Mahuron, Myrll Powell, James Marshall, O'Brien, Dernold Wiley, LeRoy Cox, George Brazier, Jack Bushno, Davis Crawford, Calvin Remmers, Werrner Zimmerman, Kem Nevitt, Virgil Bruning, Galen Wampler, Boyd Bainter, Robert Clark, John Egelston, Birch Browning, Louis Lowenstein, Bernard McDermott, Delton Gaede, Ted Hanske, Dale Fields, Robert Harris, Elneta Richmond, Dorothy Swim, Joan Harris, Pearl Leigh, Anne Marks, Ruth Dillon, Kathryn Van Dyke, Geraldine McGee, Clara G. Wilson, Jean Sullivan, Elaine Selicovitz, Florein Babb, Lyle Martin, Mr. and Mrs. James Taylor.
Mr. and Mrs. Ed Kinkaid, Olathe; Dorothy Hanske, Lucy Farnes, Pat Curry, Twyla Laeman, Frances Fridell, Harry Giankok, Vick Bolton, and Earl D. Corriell, Kansas City; Donald F. Brown, Manhattan; Paul Connor, Atchison; and Joan Baur and Wilford Teves, Eudora.
Chaperones were Mr. and Mrs.
Carlyle Smith, Mr. and Mrs. Warren
Alexander, and Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Goode.
Tri Delts Entertain
Delta Delta Delta held its spring formal May 21 at the Lawrence Country club.
Guests were Paul DeCora, George Wilson, Don Wilson, John Hoyt, Joe Moddrell, Robert Moore, Hugh Donahoe, Jim Roberts, Charles Keilhack, Jack Faerber, Lowell Elliott, Robert Thompson, Don Jones, William Cavanaugh, Frank Wendland, Myron Enns, Robert Brock, Raymond King, James Shondel, Paul Hill, Bernard Domann, Edward Daly, Burris Jones, Gene Rumsey, Randolph Moore, Bruce Fitts, James Barr, Murray Davis, Charles Thomas, Robert Leonard, Don Patton, William Webb, Hoyt Baker, Martin Duncan, Don Schaake, Glenn Stallard, Edward Rolfs, Bill Brewster, and Robert Wood.
Chaperones were Mrs. Grace Wentworth, Mrs. B. A. Weber, Mrs. Arthur Little, Mrs. A. G. McKay, and Mrs. W. S. Shaw.
Tri-Chi Elects
The fraternity has recently obtained a house at 1121 Ohio street. Tri-Chi was organized at the University a year ago and has been without a house the past year.
Other officers are Claire Resco,
vice-president; Irvin Scherer, secre-
retary; Don Croll, treasurer; and
Dan Leander, historian.
Richard Reed has been re-elected president of Tri-Chi fraternity.
With police in pursuit, he gigzagged on a busy street, running red lights and stop signs, once going through a filling station drive to cut a corner.
Wichita—(UP)—A Wichita traffic violator went to extremes to try to avoid a fine recently.
Ever Try To Hide A Car?
Wichita Police Frown On It
Officers found the car but no driver. They learned he had slid down one "firehouse pole" garage employees use to the sixth floor, then down a second to the ground floor.
Finally he drove into a garage, going up the winding ramps to the 10th and top floor and leaving his car on a grease rack.
But all to no avail. Traced to his home by his auto license tag, the man was arrested, taken to court and fined.
Nebraska City-(UP) The books of the 1947 horse show here were closed. They showed receipts of $10,435.73, and expenditures of $10,-435.35, leaving a profit of 38 cents.
Books Aren't Red Anyway
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MONDAY, MAY 24, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Socially Speaking-
Finals Take A Back Seat Now But Wait A Few Days More
AD Pi Founder's Dav
Tau chapter of Alpha Delta Pi held its annual Founder's Day dinner Sunday at the chapter house. Approximately 150 persons attended the 9th anniversary of the founding of the sorority. One of the charter members of Tau chapter, Mrs. Anne Malott Humphrey, Junction City, was an honored guest.
Mary Lou Lane was presented an award for having the highest scholastic average in the pledge class. Jeanne Cooper, a member of Mortar Board, and Mary Lois Rice, a member of Phi Beta Kappa, were also honored.
\* \* \*
Templin Dinner
Seniors at Templin hall were entertained with the annual senior dinner Tuesday, at Templin hall.
Corbin Hall Formal
Guests at the Corbin hall spring formal dance May 14 were John S. Domoney, Marion M. Harter, Kerrel E. Butler, Jr., E. Eugene Pope, Donald L. Blachly, Roy E. Smoots, Lyle G. Nelson, Kenneth Kirkendall, Lawrence E. Hyde, Charles R. Ridginger, Lawrence C. Merere, John D. Matyas, Charles W. Crowley,
M. Matyas, Charles W. Crowley,
Beryl Hefley.
Allan Burns, Stewart F. Lambers,
Bob Roberts, John S. Brown, Delmer
F. Harris, Gerald A. Pauls, Kenneth W. Philo, Joe F. Gregory, Bolivar Marquez, Fred R. Helm, Daniel G. Senkavik, John F. Lukert Donald A. Harris, Armond D. Wullschleger,
A. Donald Blakeslee, Floyd T. Beery,
Paul W. Hodges, William E. Ruth,
Eddie J. Beins, Bob Eastham, Elman C. Rinehart
Donald K. Spangler, Mike Rake,
Paul R. Garey, G. Warren Beck,
Donald E. Kramer, Ben Simpson,
Herbert H. Weindenshaul, G. Robert
Goddfrey, H. Morgan Wright,
Kenneth Henning, Paul Scheueller,
William D. Nelligan, Robert V. Bowersock, James L. Parmele, Marvin W. Kimsy, Charles B. Replogle, Charles M. Wardin, Fritz Alfreyr, Richard Butler, Gordon L. Walters, Jr., Norman Radke, Dave LoVette, Clarence O. Jenkins, Robert H. Brown.
Sonny Howard, Roy Riegle, Harold Hakerson, John D. Brown, Robert B. Kline, Everett N. Devault, John W. Dickerson, Robert E. Hardin, Athol Bullock, Charles R. Wilderson, James Rich, Bud Jones, Calvin E. Cooley, Robert L. Van Clitters, James E. Faris, George E. Wootten, Fred I. Goodenow, Walter D. Diehli, Gerald C. Taylor, Duane Wilderson, Kenneth Bottenberg, Kenneth Peck, Richard Leighty, Robert C. Hamilton, Marvin S. Liggett, Burt A. Robson, Raymond Sander, Charles G. Howe, Robert M. Munert, Allan Jarvis, Robert L. Eberweiner, Roger L. Davis, Norman G. Royer, Alan B. Kidd, Kenneth E. Peery, Leeman C. Joslin, Leonard R. Hersh, Robert D. Snair.
Raymond E. Cooper, Albert A.
Heckes, James E. Keller, Robert D.
Howard, Robert Lindenbaum, Harold
M. Benitz, D. Spencer Yoho, Dewsey
G. Nemec, Richard M. Bryce, Kenneth B. Tyson, Charles B. Peek
Darlow Goertzen, Charles N. Howard, Arnold H. Greenhouse, Warren A. Rugan, Gerald L. Canfield, Harry Dollar Rise, Van D. Bernard Harrison, Jr., Robert L. Marshall, Robert J. Kille, P. Raymond Jones, Arthur Tech, H. Epifena Dittemore, Robert M. Randell, Gerald E. Stuzi, Hobart M. Cookhraam, Arthur C. Oatman, Jr., Gilbert R. Holle, and Robert F. Bennett.
Chaperons were Mrs. Mildred Scott, Mrs. Vivian Christian, and Miss Carlotta Nellis.
Lambda Chi Formal
Lambda Chi Alpha held its spring formal May 14 at the chapter house. Guests were Barbara Lamoreaux, Marie Schumacher, Billie Jo Kent, Mary Flo Spilman, Marilyn Lundy, Shirley Lundy, Peggy Miller, Claire Grothusen, Georgia Ginther, Grace Vaniman, Mary Ann Sawyer, Arlene Johnson, Elnita Richmond, Joan Raney, Barbara Karges, Norma
Mendenhall, Joan Young, Pat Rutledge, Pa McCluthey, Midge Anderson, Joan Bushey, Jerry Osmer, Lois Ann Carinder, Donna Scott, Marion Mills, Mary Lou Lane, Ruth Murphy, Jeanne Coxe, Jeanene Trego, Ruth Feverly, Marcella Cousins, Phyllis Mowery.
Out-of-town guests were Shirley Sparling, Helen Granstrom, Joan Daggett, Shirley Lindquist, and Mary McCaul, Kansas City, Mo., Miriam Brownell, Wichita; Jeanne Harvey, Salina, Virginia Selby, Hays; Phyllis Moske, Junction City; Vii Chuldow, Columbia, Mo.; Venita Cox and Ramona Sprinkle, Hutchinson; Glennia Rose Folkerts, Larned; and Leta Wray Douglas, Dento.
Chaperons were Mr. and Mrs. Philip Dergence, Mrs. T. H. Stuart, Mrs. R. H. Wilson, Mrs. F. A. Benson, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Mize.
Kappa Eta Kappa
\* \*
Kappa Eta Kappa, professional electrical engineering fraternity, announces the initiation of Glenn Wayne Fordham, Donald H. Gordon, Robert D. Lindsay, Donald D. McMurray, John W. Roberts, and Elmer Weigel.
* *
AK Psi Spring Formal
Alpha Kappa Psi, professional business fraternity, recently held its annual spring formal dance in the Crystal room of the Hotel Eldridge.
Guests were Ann Stout, Winifred Wilson, Adale Bernero, Fernes Mee, Patricia Torrey, Anne Scott, Rachel Cooper, Bettie Booth, Virginia Jensen, Shirley Lindauer, Jane Archibald, Lair Jane, Joyce Magigonian, Betty Ketchum, Lois Metzger, Marjorie Clark, Margaret Philblad, Delia Reed, Jeane Chenoweth, and Ruth McMahon.
Mesdames Dick Yaple, Marvin Zimmerman, Robert Hilton, John Taylor, Bill Brackman, Harold Marquard, Edward Klewer, Edgar Narrant, John Dixon, Paul Briley, Louis Huber, Carol Campbell, Edwin Kirchhoff, Maurice Mosher, Raymond Norburg, and Richard Kroeseing.
Dean and Mrs. Paul Malone, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Jones, Mr. and Mrs. Wiley Mitchell, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Nielson, Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Warger, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Weltmer.
* *
Phi Gamma Delta held its annual spring party May 15 at the chapter house. The Jinx room, porches, and terrace were decorated with lattice work, spring flowers and greenery, lanterns, and fountains.
Guests were Edith Elam, Helen Piller, Elaine Elvig, Mary Doulas, Harriet Waddell, Marty Waddell, Letitia Laming, Eileen Maloney, Patricia Glover, Nancy Goering, Jeanne Chambers, Diane Stryker, Margaret Meeks, Carolyn Coleman, Barbara Pack, Rosemary Robinson, Barbara Nash, Veda Spohn, Iva Belle Flora, Mary Jane Merriman, Mary Katherine, Adelaide Schutz, Walt Rangers, Susan Boyle, Doris Wolf, Jean Bowers, Jane Clark, Anne Heider, Joan Puckett, Martha Duncan, Mary Ann McClure, Martha Yingling, Dorothy Feldkamp, Margaret Granger.
Patricia Riggs, Katherine Pearson,
Nancy Lindenmuth, Patricia Cook
Billie Powell, Mary Lynn Hegarty,
Patricia Watkins, Carolyn Carmean,
Virginia Joseph, Betty Jo Laired,
Amy Guinotte, Vina Lou Godding,
Kakie Larson, Gloria Wasson, Karen
York, Alice Appleton, Carolyn Weigand,
Nancy Moore, Joyce Rock,
Joan Gardner, Springer, Nancy
Welker, Ann Warner, Cary Campbell,
Mary Lewis, Janet Lee Downs,
Shirley Neff, Katharine Hoag, Carol
Harris, Isabel Faurot, Constance
Schreiber, Martha Miller, Jeanne
Rankin, Mary Margaret Morris, and
Barbara Richards.
Acacia Pledges Five
***
Acacia fraternity announces the pledging of William Eves, Lakin; William Love, Kansas City, Kan.; Luster Main, Kansas City, Kan.; Ralph McClung, Hugoton; and Willard Dean, Kildare, Okla.
Weddings And Engagements
Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Bedell, Augusta, announce the engagement of their daughter, Anita, to William Gordon Chappuie, son of Dr. and Mrs. Gordon Chappuie, Independence, Kan.
Bedell-Chappuie
The announcement was made by Hortense Bedell at dinner at Locksley hall. Chocolates were passed by Hortense Bedell and Wanda Baker.
Miss Bedell is an education junior. Mr. Chappuie is a College senior, and a freshman in the School of Medicine. He is a member of Phi Chi, professional fraternity.
Krehbiel-Wilson
☆ ☆
Mrs. Vivian Christian, housemother of Locksley hall, announced the pinning of Valera Krehbiel to Walter Arthur Wilson.
Chocolates were passed by Joan Holzapfel and Marion Greenlee. Loraine Mai sang "I Love You Truly."
Miss Krebbiel is an education freshman. Mr. Wilson is a graduate student in the physical education department and is a member of Sigma Chi.
Pinkney-Wilderson
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Pinkney, Ford, announce the engagement of their daughter, Mary, to Charles Wilderson, son of Mr. and Mrs. F. Leo Wilderson. El Reno, Okla.
☆ ☆
Miss Pinkney is a College sophomore. Mr. Wilderson is an engineering junior.
Skirts Invade Male Stronghold
Lafayette, Ind.—(UP) — Purdue university, long a stronghold of rugged masculinity in Indiana, has succumbed to an invasion by feminine students.
Even the pool room of the Memorial Union has become a handout for coeds.
The feminine enrollment has risen from 649 to 2,097 in the last 15 years. The co-eds are enrolled in almost every division—from civil and mechanical to chemical and aeronautical engineering.
The purple finch is not at all purple. The male is of an old-rose color and the female has a general sparrow-like appearance.
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PAGE SIX
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 24, 1948
Kansas Captures Big 7 Tennis Title
Richards And Tongier Lead Jayhawkers By Annexing Singles Championships
By FRED BROOKS
With Glenn Tongier and Dick Richards playing inspired tennis, Kansas upset favored Oklahoma to capture the Big Seven championship Saturday on the sun-baked courts of the Lincoln tennis club.
With the Jayhawkers and Sooners tied at 12 points each, Richards supplied the clincher for the Jayhawkers, chopping down Oklahoma's mighty Stanley Draper in straight sets. 6-1. 7-5, to win the conference singles championship
Kansas totaled 14 points and the Sooners were a close second with 12. Missouri and Colorado tied for third with seven points, and Iowa State was fourth with six. Kansas State and Nebraska brought up the rear. The Huskers failed to win a match, scoring their lone point on a first round bye.
Tongier and Richards accounted for nine of the Kansas points. Tongier, probably the most improved player in the conference, didn't lose a set in winning the number two singles crown. He trounced Oklahoma's Ross in the finals, 8-6, 6-1. He also teamed with Richards to annex the number one doubles title, eliminating Oklahoma's favored Jerry Badgett and Draper in the first round.
Richards, who may represent Kansas in the N.C.A.A. championships at Los Angeles June 21, staged a masterful exhibition in winning over Draper, conceded to be the class of the Big Seven.
A sentimental favorite with the gallery, Richards forced Draper to take the defensive and was in compliance without except briefly in the second set.
Richards won the first two games to make it seven games in a row, but Draper settled down and pulled up even at 4-4. The tow-headed Sooner went to the net and won the next game to gain a brief 5-4 lead, the only time in the match he held the advantage over his Kansas rival.
In the tenth game Draper had Richards at set point three times, but Richards rallied magnificently to win the game and went on to take the match, 7-5.
In the semi-finals Richards ran up against rough opposition in Rip Manning, Missouri's 28-year-old star. Richards was holding a slight advantage over Manning in the third set when Manning suffered a cramp in the calf of his right leg. After first aid, Manning was able to leave the court under his own power, but could not resume play. Richards was awarded the match by default, 7-5, 2-6, 3-2.
Sharp-shooting Dick Cray, blond Kansas lefthander, went to the finals in the four singles bracket before he was eliminated by Oklahoma's Bill Ewton, 6-4, 3-6, 6-3. Hervey Macferran and Charlie Carson failed to win in singles, but contributed an important doubles victory, trouncing Oklahoma's West and Ross in the semifinals of the second doubles division, 4-6, 6-1, 7-5.
Harmon Picked To Win PGA
St. Louis, May 24—(UP)—Claude Harmon, the princely putter from White Plains, took off in his semi-final match with Mike Turnesa today the most dangerous man remaining in the P.G.A. golf tournament. Joshing Jimmy Demaret met Ben Hogan in the other 36-hole match play semi final.
All the survivors were well under regulation figures for their time so far on the 6,467-yard course, and there was little doubt that the first to slip over par would be eliminated. It was that tough a tournev.
Harmon, who won the Masters' championship in his only other start this year, had by far the roughest path of any contest up until today. He climaxed the drive yesterday with a 1-up, 42-hole victory over Slammin' Sam Snead of White Sulphur Springs, W. Va.
It was nearly dark before Harmon came in from the endurance struggle
Sooner tennis coach Walter Mead summed up the situation very well after watching his number one player Stanley Draper bow to Dick Richards in the first set with the championship hinging on the outcome of the match. "I guess about all we can do now is to pray for rain," the popular Sooner coach equipped. Five minutes later it sprinkled slightly, then stopped. . . Draper, who is fast on his feet, went halfway into an adjoining court to return a Richards' lob in the first set. . . When Draper had Richards at set point in the second set, the Kansas star turned to Coach Jim Seaver and said, "you aren't nervous are you?" More than one rival player has been heard to remark about Richards' coolness in action. "That guy has got icewater in his veins" . . . "He was just too good," was Draper's world - shattering statement after he lost the championship to Richards. . . The official top temperature at Lincoln over the weekend was 83, but it must have been 10 degrees hotter out on the courts. . . Richards demonstrated the sportsmanship that has made him one of the best-liked players in the Big Seven during his match with Draper. The referee called a shot by Draper outside, but Richards, who was right on top of the ball, said it was good and the referee was forced to reverse his call. . . When Rip Manning suffered a muscle cramp against Richards in the semifinals, it looked at first as if the Missouri star had slipped. The calf of his leg swelled to twice normal size.
Golf Gossip
Paul Merchant, Oklahoma's basketball star is also an accomplished golfer. Merchant turned in a creditable 74-80—154 over the 36-hole route. Several of the players complained about the rough conditions of the greens. The greens had been colled with a spike-roller leaving them poek-marked and tough on the putting. Apparently they didn't bother Coe. Bill Jones and Charlie Coe are almost exact opposites physically. Jones is a 210-pounder built long the lines of a football tackle, while Coe is a sim 150-pounder. Coe stands feet 3 inches. Next year's Big Seven golf championship may be played on a neutral course, possibly Kansas City. Rumor has it that a driving contest will be added and that the match will be over a 72-hole route instead of the present 36. Kansas coach Bill Wine in explaining the high scores of some of his boys said they were trying to shoot over their heads. They saw Coe out there cracking birdie after birdie and they tried to shoot 70 instead of their usual 75". Doug Russell, Nebraska golf coach is also backfield coach for the Huskers. Wayne Speegle and Owen Panner are the Oklahoma squad flew to Lincoln after taking final exams Thursday evening. The ages of the members of the Jayhawk golf tournament range from 19 to 27. Fred Brinkman is the baby at 19 and Bob Meeker is eldest at 27.
to join Hogan, 1946 P.G.A. champion, Demaret, one of the 1947's leading money winners, and Turnesa for today's torrid scraps.
Harmon has had to go 113 holes in match play to get this far, and he turned back his opponents by being 22 under par over that stretch. Purnesa has been 15 under par for 104 holes, Hogan 12 under par for 107, and Demaret, a significant 27 under for 103.
OU Golfers Win Easily
Led by Trans-Mississippi champion Charlie Coe, favored Oklahoma surprised nobody by winning the Big Seven golf championship Saturday at the fashionable Lincoln country club. Kansas placed fifth.
Despite two bogeys, the slender Sooner star set a new course record with a brilliant second-day eight-under par round of 64. His mark shattered the previous record of 65 set by Bud Williamson, Lincoln club professional. Coe's first-day round of 72 gave him a 136 total for the 36 holes and the individual Big Seven championship.
Oklahoma's team score was 584.
Nebraska, playing on its home course, mildly surprised by taking second place with a 597 score. Colorado placed third with 603; Iowa State fourth with 619; Kansas fifth with 625; Missouri sixth with 627; and Kansas State last with 634.
Kansas, which went into the tournament conceded a chance to knock off Oklahoma, failed to exhibit the power which carried it to conference victories over Nebraska, Colorado, and Kansas State earlier this year.
Bill Jones, who matched Coe stroke-for-stroke last summer in the Trans-Mississippi tournament before losing to the Sooner in 26 holes, tied Colorado's Les Fowler for third individual honors. The 210-pound Jayhawker posted twin 73's for a 146 total. Jones might have broken par had he not three-putted four times on the first 18 holes.
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Philadelphia—(UP)—It cost Mr. and Mrs. David B. Richardson $3,400 to take their dog for a walk. The couple told police that during the stroll thieves broke into their home and stole three diamond rings valued at $3,000 and two watches worth $400.
Dog-Walking Cost $3,400
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MONDAY, MAY 24, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Big Seven Track Title To Tigers In A Breeze
Bv DARELL NORRIS
The annual Big Seven track and field meet held in Lincoln, Nebr., Saturday was a colorful affair. The only trouble was the color was too much the Black and Gold of the Missouri Tigers.
The Tigers, led by record-breakers in the high and low hurdles, won the meet with a total of 143 points. Nebraska finished runner-up with 93 $ \frac{3}{4} $ points, and Kansas took thirde with 67 $ \frac{3}{4} $ points.
Bud Gartiser skimmed the 120-
yard high hurdles in 14.2 to better
the 18-year old record of 14.5 set by
Bob Hager of Iowa State in 1930.
Gardiser's teammate, Dick Ault,
beat him on the final hurdle in the
220-yard low hurdles to top the previous record. Ault raced over the barriers in 23.3.
Big Rollin Prather, Kansas State weight man, was the only other record-breaker of the meet. Prather threw the shot 53 feet 2 7/8 inches to successfully defend his shot put title of 1947, and break the old record of 52 feet 7 1/8 inches, set in 1945 by Missouri's Bill Bangert.
High jumper Tom Sofofield defended his title by winning from Sonny Howard of Missouri. Tall Tom
Team Scores
Missouri 143
Nebraska $93\frac{3}{4}$
Kansas $67\frac{3}{4}$
Kansas State 59
Colorado $48\frac{3}{4}$
Oklahoma $40\frac{3}{4}$
Iowa State 12
leaped 6 feet $4 \frac{1}{8}$ inches as he hung up his third championship in the high jump in as many years. Scofield has never been beaten at Lincoln.
Nebraska showed why it was able to grab runner-up honors when its dash trio of Meginnis, Hutton, and Thompson swept the 220-yard dash. These same speedsters also ran first, second, and fourth in the 100-yard dash.
Bill Easton's Jayhawkers were able to take third place on the strength of their individual stars. Bob Karnes was one of the three double winners of the final spree at Missouri's Bob Bosworth to win the mile, then came back to whip a large field of two-mile plodders.
Other double winners in the meet were Prather who won the shot put and discus, and Nebraska's Harry Meginnis who sped to the 100 and 220-vard dash titles.
Dick Shea also brought the Jaya- hawkers a first place worth 10 points when he literally ran the 880-yard boys into the ground. After finishing second in his preliminary heat on Friday, Shea came back Saturday to win the half in 1:55.5.
The Henry Schulte Memorial trophy, which is awarded annually to the outstanding competitor in the meet, went to Prather on the basis of his record breaking shot put heave and his first place in the discus. Scottfield of Kansas received the trophy last year.
Two From Corbin On All-Star Team
Women's softball champs, Corbin hall, was the only team to place more than one player on the honorary softball varsity, it was announced today by the women's athletic office.
Mary Helen Shepard, Corbin pitcher, who was undefeated in tournament play, and Joan Kirkham, Corbin right fielder, were selected for the mythical team.
Other players honored are: Joan Anderson, catcher; Perry Wright. first base; Ruth Wolf, second base; Geraldine McGee, third base; Marjorie Kaff, shortstop; Betty van der Smissen, leftfield; and Marilyn Smith, centerfield.
Big 7 Track Meet
Don't Speculate!
IT'LL BE HERE
JUNE 18th!
120-yard high burdles: Gartiser, (M); Blakley, (M); Earl Elliott, (K-S); Berkshite, (N); Self, (M); Magsamen, (N). Time, 14.2 seconds (breaks record of 14.5 set by Bob Hafer of Iowa State in 1930).
Shot put: Prather, (K-S); Quirk,
(M); Federit, (N); Allen, (C);
Sheenhan, (M); McConnell, (N)
53 feet $2\frac{1}{8}$ inches (breaks record of
52 feet $7\frac{1}{8}$ inches set by Bangert of
Missouri in 1945).
880-yard run: Shea, (K); Lancaster,
(M); Wolfe, (M); Cary, (O);
Stuart, (K-S); Hildenbrand, (K-S).
Time, 1:55.5 seconds.
Javelin throw: Todd. (C); Henoch,
(K); Magsmen, (N); Drumm, (K);
Williams, (K-S); Pederit, (N); Distance,
198 feet 7% inches.
220-yard dash: Meginnis, (N);
Hutton, (N); Thompson, (N); Phillips,
(M); Klein, (M); Griffith, (I-S).
Time, 21.5 seconds.
Discus; Prather, (K-S); Sheenhan, (M); tie between Ses, (N); and Robison, (K); Briggs, (C); Payne, (K-S). Distance, 157 feet, $8\frac{1}{4} \mathrm{inches}$.
440-yard dash: Klein, (M); Ault,
(M); Hurbert, (N); Schmidt, (M);
Binter, (K); Westbrook, (O). Time,
48.7.
High jump: Scofield, (K); Howard, (M); 2-tie between Freekan, (I-S) and Shannon, (K-S); 5-tie between Norris, (K); Kinder, (N); Edwards, (C); and Carroll, (O). Height, 6 feet $^{43}$ inches.
100-yard dash: Meginnis, (N);
Hutton, (N); McClay, (K);
Thompson, (N); Narseisan, (C);
Griffith, (I-S). Time. 10 seconds.
Broad jump: Teel, (M); Shannon (K-S); Growley, (K); McEwan (C); Danielson, (K-S); Meginnius (N). Distance, 24 feet, 5 inches.
Mile run: Karnes, (K); Bosworth,
(M); Chronister, (M); Leasure,
(K-S); Smith, (O); Madden, (M).
Time. 4:22.3.
Two-mile run: Karnes (K); Fitz-
morris, (C); Slocum, (0); Burns,
(O); Vanhakebke, (K-S); Canaris,
(O); Time. 9:42.
Pole vault: Bateman, (C); 2-tie between Cooper, (N); Carroll, (O); Gregg, (C); 5-tie between Knapp, (M); McKee, (C); and Van Dyne, (M). Height 13 feet 7 inches.
202-yard low hurdles: Ault, (M);
Gartiser, (M); Gilstrap, (O). Finley,
(
KANSAS
BOB KARNES, star distance runner for the Jayhawker track squad, booted home another "daily double" in the mile and two-mile runs to give Kansas third place in the Big Seven outdoor meet Saturday at Lincoln.
(O); Thompson, (N); Steinbach,
(I-S). Time. 23.3 (breaks record of
23.4 set by Heye Lambertus, Nebraska, in 1932).
TennisFinalistsAre Corbin, Locksley
Mile relay; Missouri; (Gilbert, Phillips, Schmidt; Klein); Nebraska, Oklahoma, Iowa State, Kansas, Colorado. Time: 3:13.
Corbin hall and Locksley hall doubles tennis teams will meet today in the finals of the women's tournament. Each advanced to the finals last week with hard fought victories over sorority teams.
Shepard and Mitchell carried the Corbin colors into the finals by downing a stubborn Alpha Delta Piwosome, Anderson and Cleaves, by a score of 12-10 and 6-4.
Hoffman and Williams, Locksley, were forced to go three sets before subduing Hiscox and Scott, Pi Beta Phi. 6-3. 3-6. 6-2.
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 24, 1948
Alpha Chi Sigs Bag Independent Title
Summer Champs Defeat Gushers, 6-3. As Dale Clark Pitches A Four-Hitter
Alpha Chi Sigma, 1947 summer champion, bagged the independent softball title Friday as two explosive innings gave it a 6 to 3 verdict over the Gushers.
Dale Clark, fast-firing righthander, set the Gushers down on four hits while his mates experienced a difficult time in collecting seven safeties. Laser Herk Harvey.
Only once did either twirler show extreme wildness, that being in the fifth when Clark walked four straight men. A small crowd was on hand to watch the two teams battle it out for the championship.
The Chi Sig's got off to a three-run lead in the opening frame by bunching three hits and an error. Al Lindentrush led off with a perfect bunt and moved around on Oliver Edward's single over second. Ward Graham laced a double into left to bring in the first two markers and later scored on an infield error.
The Gushrs broke the ice in the third as an error, a passed ball, and Bob Zalakar's single netted a tally. Dayle Greene's screaming homer in the fourth accounted for another run. The final Gusher tally came in the fifth when Clark put on his wild display, walking four men in a row. He forced Gib Stramel to roll out, to halt the uprising.
Alpha Chi Sigma wound up scoring in the sixth,扑uging across three more runs. Singles by Andy Bertuzu, Carl Johnson, and Lindenstruth, combined with two fielders choices, did the damage. The box
GUSHERS
| | AB | R | H | I |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| McGregor, 2b | 2 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
| Armstrong, c | 3 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Zalokar, 3b | 3 | 0 | 1 | 0 |
| Van Gundy, ss | 2 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Stramel, 1b | 3 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Greeme, cf | 2 | 1 | 1 | 1 |
| King, lf | 3 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| Harvey, p | 3 | 0 | 0 | 1 |
| Wibur, rf | 3 | 1 | 0 | 1 |
*Anderson | 1 | 0 | 1 | 1 |
| | 25 | 3 | 4 | |
*batted for McGregor in the seventh ALPHA, GHLSCMA
ALPHA CHI SIGMA
Lindenstreet, cf 4 1 2 0
Edwards, 3b 4 1 1 0
Graham, if 3 1 1 1
Brownsburger, c 3 0 0 0
Dertuzzi, 2b 3 1 1 0
Johnston, ss 3 1 1 0
Clark, p 3 1 0 0
Patton, rf 2 0 1 0
Kirkland, 1b 3 0 0 1
28 6 7 2
ors 001 110 0-3 4 5
001 110
300 003
Gushers A.C.S.
Meet Aggies In Two Games
Still smarting from three losses to the Missouri Tigers during the past week, the third place Kansas State Wildcats move into town tonight for a two-game series with the Jav-hawkers under the lights at Municipal park. The games mark the end of the season for both teams.
The Jayhawkers dropped two titts to coach Lud Fiser's squad by scores of 5 to 4 and 4 to 2 on the Wildcat diamond earlier this season. Kansas State took the second game on a questionable decision when Damn Atkin's long hit over the right field fence was ruled fair with three-aboard.
Atkins, is one of the leading hitters in the league. He suffered a leg injury early in the season and has been moved to right field from his regular second base position. Atkins is backed by such power hitters as Ted Grimes, speedy left fielder, and Gabby Chew, first string catcher.
Jayhawkers Lou Hammer, Lee Etheridge and Merle Spring will end their college baseball career Tuesday night. Lefty Lou Hammer has been a starting pitcher for the past three seasons. After a pre-season appendectomy the portsider came back fast although losing all but one.
WAA Honors Two Seniors
Maxine Gunsolly and Joan Anderson received the Women's Athletic association senior honor award at a W.A.A. picnic May 20 in Clinton park. Other awards were also made and officers for next year were installed.
To receive the honor award, a girl must be a senior, must have earned 2000 points during her college career, and be recommended by a selection committee. Cups were presented to the winners.
Jeanne Cooper was installed as president, succeeding Maxine Gunsolly. Other new officers are: Donna Mueller, vice-president; Josephine Stuckey, secretary; Garaldine McGee, treasurer; Alberta Schnitzer, business manager; Pearl Leigh, point system manager; Marilyn Smith, hockey manager; Barbara Connell, basketball manager; Beverly Pepper, softball manager; Peggy Baker, volleyball manager; Betty Armstrong, minor sports manager; Patricia Tomlinson, swimming manager.
Blazers were presented to Marjorie
Ebel Hurls Four-Hitter
Big Karl Ebel hurried a four-nit masterpiece as the Jayhawks routed the Baker University Wildcats 8 to 1 at Municipal park Friday night. The teams met once before this season, the Kansans taking the first contest 5 to 3.
Ebel walked eleven men but set nine down swinging over the distance. The fire-ball right-hander kept himself in hot water with free passes but he bore down in the clutches to hang up his first win.
Kansas banged out fourteen hits, off pitcher Steve Ward, including a double by Bud French and a line drive triple off Hal May's bat.
The Jayhawkers broke the scoring ice in the second with two runs on four hits. After Paul Gilkison had hit safely, May advanced him to third with a single. Charlie Medlock followed with the third successive safety to drive in Gilkison, but May was out at home on a perfect peg from Rod Enos, Wildcat right fielder. Neal Shaw then plated Medlock with a clean single.
Ebel handcuffed the visitors until the seventh when they converted a free ticket, a passed ball, an error, and a fielder's choice into a marker. Rog Adams walked and took second on a passed ball.
Baker 000 000 100-1 4 2
KU 021 203 00×8 14 3
On Or Off Court
also Richards' roommate at Oread hall, was ruled ineligible about a month ago.
Fourteen girls received letter awards. They are: Alberta Schnitzler, Josephine Stuckey, Patricia Bentley, Joan Strowig, Jeanette Bolas, Geraldine McGee, Kathleen McClanahan, Pearl Leigh, Lavahug Hodgson, Mary Hele Shepard, Martha Keplinger, Virginia Coppedge, Peggy Baker, and Mary Alice White.
Kaff, Donna Mueller, and Betty van der Spannen.
You might say they came to Kansas through the back door. As Richards tells the story, both he and Miller returned to Drury in 1946
Champ Dick Takes It Easy
DICK RICHARDS
Dick Richards, Kansas' great court artist, lowered curtain on a brilliant collegiate tennis career this weekend at Lincoln when he bested the cream of Big Seven talent to win the coveted conference singles championship.
old senior from Milwaukee is regarded as perhaps the coolest player in the conference. He has been Kansas's top-ranking performer for the past two years.
Easy-going and mild-mannered both on and off the court, the 25-year old from Milwaukee is re-¶
He came to the University in the spring of 1947 from Drury Junior College, Springfield, Mo., along with his bosom pal and former doubles partner, Hal Miller, Miller, who is
After some debate they chose Wyoming university, shipped their belongings and made arrangements to enroll. Enroute they stopped at Lawrence, out of curiosity and inquired about the Jayhawkers' tennis program. They never got to Wyoming.
Although he spent three years in the Army Air Corps ground forces, Dick managed to keep his game from getting rusty. He served 20 months overseas in India and was the third ranking player in the China - Burma - India theater. He competed against several members of the Indian Davis Cup team.
after the war, but were dissatisfied with the tennis setup there and began scouting around for a larger school.
"I got my first chance to play on grass courts while I was in Calcutta. There's a lot of difference between grass courts and concrete courts. The balls don't wear out so easily on grass and you have more time to stroke the ball because it doesn't have the hop on it that it does on concrete or wood."
"But this shot is probably the most effective," he added. "Even if you are able to return it, you are hopefully out of position for your opponent's return."
Richards said that the hardest shot to develop in tennis is the drop shot-a soft shot delivered just over the net when the opponent is back at the base line.
Richards, according to coach Jim Seaver, is casting covetous eyes in the direction of Los Angeles where the national intercollegiate championship tournament will be held June 21.
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Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan.
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---
MONDAY, MAY 24, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN. LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE NINE
You Are Our Mother Chapter PEP Tells Ku Ku Klub
This was learned when Bud Clark, president, wrote to the headquarters of Pi Epsilon Pi, men's pep fraternity, to locate the mother chapter. He was surprised when they told him he was its president.
The Ku Ku club is a mother.
The name of the K.U. organization was inspired by the Ku Klux Klan.
The Ku Ku Klub was activated in 1919 as the Ku Ku Klan to organize a cheering section for athletic events.
The name of the K.U. organization However, the Ku Ku's make it clear that they have never had any connection with the Klan, nor any sympathy for it. They just liked the sound of the combination of letters.
1919 as the Ku Ku Klan to organize a cheering section for athletic events. Conditions in 1919 were similar to those on the campus immediately following World War 2. School spirit was at low ebb. One student pledged himself to break all traditions. When he was caught without his freshman cap he was threatened with a dunking in Potter lake. He evaded students for a while by climbing to the top of Fraser. The students brought him down and threw him into the lake.
According to the records, C. C. Carl, "Bugs" Bradburg, and Bob Rowland founded Pi Epsilon Pi in 1922. They met with other pep clubs to draw up a national organization. It survived and spread outward from the Missouri valley.
This sparked a "Put K.U. First" movement. It developed into the World War I memorial drive to build the stadium.
When the Ku Klux Klan became notorious in 1922, the K.U. organization changed its name to Ku Ku Klub upon the request of Governor Allen.
The Ku Ku's received nation wide attention with their series of stunts at the football games. They helped to make Homecoming day a success and started the First Nightshirt parade in the country.
One time they got into trouble for trying to stimulate pep. They accompanied the football team to Nebraska and slept in their quarters. The sports editor of the University Daily Kansan accused them of ruining the teams rest and causing the loss of the game the next day. A fist fight between the editor and the president of the Klub resulted.
White-clad Ku Ku's familiar to today's students would have been strangers to an early Ku Ku Klan, whose uniform consisted of a turban, sash and white shirt. When they changed names, they switched to white sweaters and light pants, white shirts and bow ties.
In 1955, the Klub reorganized and formed a larger club. They tried to organize the freshman class into a cheering section in 1939. This was their super员 of the Frost-hawks, freshman's pep club, which was organized in the fall of 1947.
Membership of the Ku Ku Klub now totals 80 persons. Their plans for the coming year include the sales of freshman caps, circulation of free stickers such as "Massacre Mizzou" and a wider circulation of printed sheets of songs and yells at athletic events.
Illinois' southern tip is far enough south to have a satisfactory climate for growing cotton, yet is far enough north to be beyond the boll weevil's northern limit.
Green Wins ASME Prize
Charles H. Green, engineering senior, was awarded second prize of $25 at a recent student branch meeting of American Society of Mechanical Engineers in Tulsa. Mr. Green presented his paper on "Stress Analysis of Steam Piping." Six schools had two representatives each at the meeting. The other K.U. representative was J. T. McKinney engineering senior.
Harry L. Daasch, professor of mechanical engineering, and ten students made the trip recently They attended three student sessions and made inspection trips.
All students attending the meeting were given complimentary admittance to the international petroleum exposition.
The A.V.C. will work to get all qualified voters registered and to inform them of election issues, he said.
AVC To Campaign In Fall Elections
Voting records of Kansas candidates will be published next fall as part of the American Veterans committee's campaign to get out the vote, Edwin Kirchhoff, president, said.
Plans for conducting the drive were discussed by A.V.C. members recently, but no specific measures were adopted. The organization will not meet again this semester.
Don't Sip Soup,
Slurp It Noisily
Chicago—(UP)—Soup should be slurped not sipped, an authority said today.
Making noise when you drink soup is a sign of pure bliss," said Robert Green of Chicago.
Green said it is wrong to condemn slurping, because the silent method always destroys much of the pleasure. There is nothing as satisfying as making a racket, he said.
Green qualifies as an expert as an official of a group representing mixers of dry soups. It is known as the National Soup Mix association.
The game and fish commission of Florida reports that the average fisherman spends $2 for every pound of fresh water fish he catches.
Attend the Topeka Drive-in Theater 25th and California First Show . . . . 8 p.m
Color Changes Bring Behavior Changes
"There are cases on record in which changing the color of the package or wrapper of a product has increased the sales 1000 per cent," Mr. Quinton said.
Color is a sensation which affects behavior, according to Johnny Quinton, assistant instructor of psychology.
In another experiment 18 per cent of the readers replied to a sales letter where white paper and envelopes were used. Forty-eight per cent replied when pink paper and blue envelopes were used, he added.
The reason for this behavior is not known, but it is probably related to the color preference list of age groups, the instructor said.
In a psychological experiment conducted in 1932 it was found that blue is preferred above all other colors by adults. Red and green come next, and yellow is least preferred. At a very early age, from
This change in preference is partly influenced by a difference in social approval from one age group to the next, Mr. Quinton explained. Persons who have not had any art training have the same color preferences as college students who have had training in art, he added.
3 to 14 months, red is preferred far above any other color. It continues in first place until grade school age.
Color also influences the appearances of objects of the same size, darker objects appearing smaller than lighter ones, he said.
Kiene Places With Sketch
William Kiene won third mention in the annual traveling sketch exhibit sponsored by Scarab, professional architecture fraternity, for his water color painting. "Allev Scene."
The paintings and sketches are sent in to the national convention of Scarab and are then sent to each chapter for display.
Water color paintings by William Yost, Ralph Kiene, R. V. Baltis, John Monroe, and Donald Palmer are on display on the third floor of Marvin hall. These men are students in the department of architecture.
First mention was won by W.H. Painter of the University of Southern California. Second mention was awarded to Ray O'Day of the State College of Washington.
KC Philharmonic Won't Play Here
The Kansas City Philharmonic orchestra will not appear on the concert series next year as previously announced, Dean D. M. Swarthout, director, said.
Dean Swarthout explained that because of the difficulty the orchestra has had in finding a director to replace Efrem Kurtz, he has decided to postpone the appearance. The Cincinnati Symphony orchestra will return on March 16, 1949, instead of the Kansas City group.
The 1949 series will include the Monte Carlo ballet group, a complete performance of the "Barber of Seville" and Miss Gladys Swarthout, of the Metropolitan opera company.
Geologists Will Investigate Water
A study of the shallow ground water resources will be begun this week by Glenn C. Prescott and C. K. Bayne of the state and federal Geological surveys.
The study will be made in Cherokee, Crawford, Labette, and Neosho counties, according to V. C. Fisher, engineer in charge of the ground water division of the surveys.
The state board of health requested the study and is co-operating with the surveys and the board of agriculture in carrying it out, Mr. Fishel said. He also mentioned that the investigation is being made to determine how much ground water is available for stock and domestic uses, especially in connection with the dairy industry in that part of the state.
Jayhawk Swimming Pool 2 To 5 Every Afternoon
The Jayhawk plunge swimming pool will be open from 2 to 5 p.m. every afternoon for about there weeks. After that the pool will be open from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. every day.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Rubbing Elbows No Fun Here
Memphis-(UP)-When the Roy O. Nash family are at the table to eat, Mrs. Nash makes sure that her children are seated so that they don't bump elbows. Mrs. Nash and four of her five children are south-paws. The father and one daughter are righthanders.
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PAGE TEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
MONDAY, MAY 24, 1948
Freedom Train To Bring Valuable Cargo To Lawrence
When the "Spirit of 1770" diesel-electric engine pulls the Freedom train into the Lawrence station June 2 it will have the most valuable cargo ever carried on rails since the Baltimore and Ohio first opened public railroads in 1827.
Lawrence will be the 201st stop for the streamliner on its scheduled
200 exhibitions of documents. The Freedom train started from the Philadelphia yards September 17, 1947 to begin the longest tour in railroad history. When it completes its journey it will have covered 33,000 miles.
Among the documents are the Bill of Rights, the Declaration of Independence, the final draft of Lincoln's Gettysburg address, and Francis Scott Key's manuscript of "Star Spangled Banner."
To protect the priceless early American papers the cars are made of a welded steel panel construction. The documents are enclosed in panels with shatter-proof glass windows. The parchments are wrapped in plastic sheets and secured to the panel with bronze bolts. The fire extinguishing system is automatic, and there is a guard of 27 United States Marines.
It would take over three months of research to see the priceless documents if one were to go to the library collections for them. Fox Case, regional director of the American Heritage foundation said. Here they can be seen in a few minutes and within the space of about 250 feet.
This is the first time that most of the papers have been taken from their permanent places. They belong to the Library of Congress, the National archives, the war, navy, and treasury departments, and to private collections.
The exhibition is paid for by contributions, quotas being set for each community. Lawrence's quota is $2,-425.
The idea of the streamliner began with Attorney General Clark and was endorsed by President Truman. The train began its 33,000 mile tour in Philadelphia in the fall of 1947.
A split-second timing and a special priority make possible the routing of the red and blue striped streamliner. The train consists of the engine and seven cars. Only three cars are used for the exhibition. The rest are for housing the 41 man crew and the power equipment for lights and ir-conditioning.
Dear Editor:
Subtlety Wasted
Subtlety she is wasted!
I should have stooped to the obvious in my earlier letter and said, "If the Romance language department cannot lend dignity to the advertisement of a great film, it should not lend its endorsement."
It is my belief that the movie industry would try to wring the last dime from the marginal moron in advertising an exhibition of "Whistler's Mother" by adding ". . . and how she got that way."
Tom Page Instructor Political Science
Quill Club Elects
The Quill club initiated 13 persons and elected officers for 1948-49 Thursday in the East room of the Union.
New members are Bilinee Whiting, Josephine Shelton, R. W. Taylor, Craig Hampton, Marilyn Sweet, Connie Kendall, Howard Hill, Scott Ninginger, Harriet Graves, David Fanger, Norma Rehberg, Nehemia Kronenberg, and Marian Rippetone.
Officers elected are Carolyn Campbell, chancellor; Lois Lauer, keeper of the parchment; James Bowman warden of the purse; and Joan Gregory, scribe.
Movie Shown To German Club German club members, at their last meeting of the semester Thursday, attended a movie, "Emil and die Detekteive," in Fraser theater. The movie was sponsored by the German department.
Dear Editor
Dear Editor Crystal Ball
Dear Editor:
I predict with sincerity of thought that the statute, dealing with the importation and selling of intoxicating liquors in Kansas, will be repealed by the voters come next November.
One reason why the state will go "wet" is because the Kansas City Star has withdrawn its support from our most honorable and life-time serving senator, who has been one of the most ardent and staunchest "drys" in the state.
Another reason is the fact that the state legislature is looking for a new source of taxation revenue to balance the increasing burden of running the state government at postwar inflationary prices.
Furthermore, the geographers are prophesying that dust storms are due to return. When the Republican farmers of western Kansas leave their households some morning for the fields to engaged in "dry farming," a big black dust storm will appear over the horizon and absorb all the water in the streams. The farmer's throats will become dry. They will start wandering far and wide for anything that will quench their thirst. Bootleggers will come into view. The farmer will look up to the bootleger as his eternal savior. The bootleger, human as he is, will offer the "dry" farmer a drink. Due to his intense thirst, the farmer will drink well nigh into November. Whence some the general election, and knowing who had saved his life, he will stagger to the polls and vote "wet."
Warren W. Gress College sophomore
Honest Appraisal
The phrase "clear thinking" used in the letter to the editor in the May 19 issue of the Daily Kansan was not defined; however, it seems obvious that the letter itself was meant as an example of clear thinking. It is seldom that such an honest appraisal of radicalism can be found.
Dear Editor:
Mr. Name-withheld-by-request is right: A person who tries to think for himself about democracy can be easily confused. A patriotic citizen should not question the clear thoughts of the powers that be.
It was implied, and rightly so, that much confusion exists concerning our democracy. The molders of public opinion in this country are beginning to realize that democracy must be taught in order for it to be maintained. They know that if democracy is not instilled in the minds of the American people, some pernicious ideology might replace it. Only by constant subjection to democratic propaganda will the average American citizen realize that he wants a government which grants him freedom.
Daniel M. Kirkhuff College junior.
UHS Ceremonies To Be June 2
Twenty-four seniors at University High school will be graduated June 2.
The commencement exercises will be held in the Kansas room of the Union at 8 p.m. Dr. Robert G. Foster, professor of sociology, will be the commencement speaker. His topic will be "Today is the Future."
The Baccalaurate services for the class will be held at 4 p.m. May 20. The Rev. Harold G. Barr, dean of the School of Religion, will officiate.
Those being graduated are Claudia Anderson, James Leroy Asby, Mary Ann Bates, Carolene Callehan, Charles Donale Christian, Don Richard Cochran, Fred L. Cooper, Caroline Ferner Crosier, Wayne Deay, George Denny, Patricia Ann Dixon, John Herman Evers III, Donald Lawrence Fletchle, Betty Hall Criffin, Donald Keith Ehrig, Doris Jeffries, Donna Rae Kirby, Myrle S. Lassen, Charles D. Murphy, Myrid Powell, Robert L. Powers, Wayne Puckett, Carol Ann Tupy, and Lois Wustefle.
Recreation Heads To Meet Today
Recreational directors of Kansas cities will hold their statewide meeting at the University May 24 to 26.
Guest speakers will be Mrs. Verna Rensvold, superintendent of recreation, Kansas City, Mo., and Arthur Todd, representative of the National Recreation association, Parkville, Mo.
Eight city recreation directors will conduct a panel discussion of successful summer programs May 26. Ed Ash, Kansas City; Orilis Cox, Ottawa; Larry Heeb, Lawrence; Charles Kmenakem, Hutchinson; Virigl Knowles, Atchison; William Okerberg, Newton; Carl Soden, Coffeeville; and Dave Zook, Salina, will participate.
The University physical education and fine arts departments will demonstrate equipment and group activities, and a preview of a marionette show will be presented by students of Maud Ellsworth, associate professor of education.
The conference is sponsored by the University Extension and the Lawrence recreation commission.
The voters of Kansas City seem to be willing to provide funds for only a seven or eight month term in the public schools. Sounds as if the kids did the voting.
University
Daily Hansan
Member of the Kansas Press Assn. Na-
tional Assn., and the Associated Collegiate
Press. Represented by the National Ad-
mission Press. 420 Madison Ave.
New York City.
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Editor-in-Chief ... David H. Clymer
Managing Editor ... Cooper Rollow
Asst. Man. Editor ... Clarke M. Thomas
Asst. Man. Editor ... Geoff Vignery
Asst. Man. Editor ... John Shilford
Asst. City Editor ... James Beatty
Asst. City Editor ... Richard Barton
Telegraph Editor ... James Robinson
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Neal Hewitt
Asst. Tel. Editor ... Bill Mayer
Sports Editor ... Paul Zeh
Sports Editor ... James Jones
Sports Editor ... Anna Mary Murphy
Female Manager ... Robert Walterson
Picture Manager ... Jasper Mason
Society Editor .. Patricia Bentley
Business Manager ... Bill Alderson
Adv. Manager ... Paul Warner
Cir. Manager ... Don Walden
Dr. Blunt ... Ian Bunting
Class. Adv.Mgr ... Ruth Clayton
Asst. Class. Adv. Mgr ... Elizabeth Berry
Asst. Class. Adv. Mgr ... Carol Buhler
Nat. Adv. Mgr ... Paul Sololecher
Promotion Mgr ... Eleanor Pomerantz
Promotion Mgr ... Roger James
Asst. Promotion Mgr ... Don Tennant
The Kansas Press Association
19 MEMBER
48
National Editorial Association
FREE PRESS - YOUR RIGHT TO KNOW
Couple Gives $370 To Down-&-Outers
Los Angeles—(UP)—A man and his wife walked up and down skid row recently and gave away their savings.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert Lynch explained that they wanted to help people get back on their feet.
"We came down here with $370 and it's almost gone," Mr. Lynch said. "We feel pretty good about it."
Mr. Lynch said they walked for several hours, handing out dimes and nickels to down-and-outers.
"What these people need is a helping hand," he said. "They need physical rehabilitation first."
The husband, who said he was a former member of the Washington state legislature and once a student at Oxford university, said it took him and his wife three years to save the money they gave away.
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---
MONDAY, MAY 24, 1948
PAGE ELEVEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
The University Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
Phone KU 376
Classified Advertising Rates
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid by the bank on arrival during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University office. Journalism bldg, not later than 8 a.m. the day before publication is desired.
One Three Five
day days five
25 words or less 35c 65c 90c
additional words 1c 2c 3c
For Sale
LIVING ROOM couch and chair. Cheap! Good condition. Best offer takes. Must See between 5:00 and 7:00, Apr 15E, Entrance, Mr. Emerson, or 4247SW.
IDEAL for moving, storage, or traveling,
good as new wardrobe trunk. Four lock-
ers, clothing section, removable
hangers, and removable reduc-
considerably. Kohler, 1530 Tenn.
26 UTILITY TRAILER: Also lightweight
motor bicycle. 16-A Sunseys. Ph.
2348W.
SOFA BED, maroon cord upholstery,
practically new, and blond oak dineette,
excellent condition. Best offer by June
14. Delivery for June 10. 30
Sunnyside.
MODEL T. 1927 two-tone convertible, heater, sealed beam lights, wire wheels, heavy duty tires. Needs someone with heart and tools. 110 Tennessee. 194R.
MODEL "A" roadster cheap Best offer
takes. See at 1717 Alabama. 24
FELLOWS! Earn harvest wages! Here is your opportunity to earn money this summer by hauling wheat. 1945 Chevrolet truck with new Giant grain bed for new mileage, good tires, perfect condition job reference to buyer. See at 1405 N. Y., 8th Flr.
Special anniversary rate to new subscribers! only $3.42 for subscribers.
Student Book Store.
1940 BUIK coupe. New muffler, battery, seat covers, water pump, Good condition. Must sell; will sacrifice. See at 1329 Connecticut or call 2514-M. 24
HOLLYWOOD double bed, bookcase,
three-way floor amp, end table, dining
table, like new. Price reasonably
by lot or piece. Call 1160-W or
see at 1005 Indiana.
VETERANS! We will buy, trade or sell for you any Army or Navy gear in good condition that you may wish to. Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. Phone 669 HTFD
Wanted
VETERAN wants to rent two or three room furnished or unfurnished apartment for next summer. No children or pregnant women. Two years, call Bruce Laumihi. 3101W
CAR, model 1937-1939 (Chevrolet or Ford preferred), with new or recently overpaid car, for large trip. Please call KU-460, every evening from 9:00-12:00.
$15 REWARD offered by student and employed wife for information leading to rental of 2-room apartment or furnished or unfurnished. Call 2403 after 5:39. 25
ICE FURNISHED apartment or house
to August 7. Write Bill Stearckel
Winnfield
August 7. Write Bill Staerkel.
Winfield high school, Winfield, Kan. 25
VETERAN will rent to two or three room, furnished and finished apartment for next September. No callin' pets. Be in Lawrence two years. Call Jim Young. 86. 26
A REASONABLE good swimmer age 19 or over, boy or girl, to take Red Cross Expedition School training June 12 to 23. Expedition School training will west Johnson county. Will qualify you for a swimming instructor job. Call or visit Russell Peterson, MELRose 7908, 6209, after 8:00 oclock or Saturday or Sunday. 26
TO TRADE: Large three room unfinished apartment in Kansas City, private bath. for equivalent apartment in Lawrence. Jack W. Robinson, Ph. 3410. 22 WANT to contact woman or couple going to or near Washington, D.C., by car, bus, or rail. about May 28 or 30. Phone 2906-R. 24
Business Service
TO GRADUATES of 1948: Remember your commencement in pictures. Call 1860M to make arrangements for place and time. Overnight service after 1 June.
ESQUIRIE Father's Day subscription
券 $4.33. Student Union
Bolt Stock
THEIS typing wanted by teacher-typist with fifteen years experience in K.U. typing. Will also do term reports. Work guaranteed. Phone 2008 or 547.
agents and or graduation gifts. Parker pen
sale and the Student University Book Store.
24 at the Student University Book Store.
term papers and other written work next
year 219-356 Missouri, M. Earl Wright,
295 Missouri, M. Earl Wright.
DOES your pen need repairing? We have a complete pen repair department with a factory trained repairman at Student Union Book Store. 24
TYPING done: Term papers, reports, special attention given thesis. Accurate work at reasonable prices. Call 1996-W. Apartment 2. 1101 Tennessee. rtes
LOR-MADE suits. $6.20 to $85.00. Ex-
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Mexico.
NEW vacuum cleaners for rent. Attachments included. $1.50 per day. Al Brooks Sweeper Co., 831$\frac{1}{2}$ Mass. Ph. 1104 between 9 and 12 a.m.
For Rent
LARGE COOL room(s) close to campus for men, available for summer and (or) fall, double or single. 1031 Miss. Phone 3251W. 26
SINGLE ROOMS for men, quiet, com-
fortable. All suitable for summer and fa-
ces 15 (3 h).
EXCELLENT three room furnished apartment with private bath. For summer months only. Close to campus. Call Briney, 753. 26
TWO DOUBLE 100ms, with sleeping porch, for three boys during summer session. Mrs. Earl Dobson, 1222 Miss. Phone 459. 26
ROOFS for rent: twin beds. Can accommodate 14 boys. One and a half dorm rooms. Summer school mid fall. Call 3106J. 28 JUNE 1 TO September 1, 5-room furnished house in exchange for room and board for elderly landlord. Call 2128W.
A BIG ROOM for two boys who like feel free to make themselves at home; per week for summer and fall. For more information contact the Kasan office.
HAVE A swell basement room for three
have Ideal for summer study. For
students new home three blocks from
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Illinois in afternoons.
3-ROOM apartment for summer months
125 Rhode Island paid. H. E. Wright, 125
Rhode Island
FOR SUMMER, large room for 3 or 4
room, water, 2281, 1301 Albano.
FOR RENT: Two room furnished apt,
with bath for summer, months only.
Close to campus. See or write Derald
Kahler, 1530 Tennessee, Apt. 103, 244
DOUBLE ROOM for boys. Nicely furnished with single beds. Two blocks from campus. Equip at bst, Louisville and telephone 812-647-3000. Acquire at bst, Louisville between 6:00 and 7:00 p.m.
ROOMS FOR graduate girl students,
cooking privileges if desired—refrigeration.
2 blocks from campus. Phone
2734M, 1224 Ohio.
20
AIR COOLED rooms and apt. for boys
beds 2 blocks from campus. 28
29
SUMMER session rooms for boys. 1234
Oread. Phone 2191-7. 24
ROOMS for rent for summer-includes
two cool basement rooms. Two blocks
from campus. one block from bus. 1339
Ohio. W. P. Meek. 26
BOOMS for girl summer students. One
per month, two per month.
1241 Louisiana, phone 784-18.
Transportation
COMMUTING daily from Kansas City to Lawrence for the summer. Would like be attending summer school. Call Buzzy Muckenthaler, H1356, Kansas City, Mo.
COMMUTING DAY to KU. summer school from KC. Mo. Riders wanted 2017
DRIVING to Buffalo, New York. Leaving
Crawford, Phone 378,
Call Crawford, Phone 378,
LEAVING FOR Tucson, Ariz. after June 1st. Want passenger to share expenses with the driver. See Jack Emerson, 1009 Maine, between 7 except Fridays. 25.
LEAVING FOR Cincinnati,
Columbus, Georgia. June 5th. Have room for two passengers. Phone 1580J.
HAVE transportation for one to California.
Purchase tickets at 31. Claremont 2616-JE. Share expenses.
WANTED -Ride to two to New York City or vicinity. Leave June 3 or after, share expenses and help drive. Call Leonard Snyder, 1752. 24
Miscellaneous
EFFECTIVE Sunday, May 23 (Sunday only) we will be open from 12:00 (noon) a.m. serving meals. Shaver's Cafe, mile south of Lawrence on Hiway 59.
TO GRADUATES of 1948: Remember your commencement in Call.
1980M and make arrangements for place and time. Overnight service after jungle excursion.
NOTICE to all students who owe for Kansan classified advertising. Pay your bill this week before outstanding accounts are transferred to the office of the University Registrar to be placed against transcripts. 24
DANCE every Saturday night at Odd Fel-
man. Informal. Joe Langwort
orchestra.
Lost
WOMAN'S sweater, salmon-pink, pink cardigan. Tuesday evening, May 18. Fell out of car near auditorium or Sunside. Reward. Call 289. 26
MAY 11, at or near university, round
up, to the value only as keep sale.
Reward. Call 1761.
BROWN motorcycle riding belt, decontensions and "Bob" on it, near Potter lake on Wednesday, May 19. Finder please call 2050. 26
YELLOW GOLD Waltham, cordovan
Golden Room in library. Tz
8911. Bunk, Reward. Tz
8916.
Several cats of proved efficiency as rat and mice catchers are kept on the payroll of British Railways with salaries, expended for food, of one shilling a week per cat.
1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000 1000
You can take the high road
.
Have you made up your mind on what you'll do when you graduate this June? If not, consider the opportunity available to you in the Aviation Cadets.
Few jobs anywhere can match this offer. When you win your wings and a Second Lieutenant's commission, you're paid as high as $336 per month to start. The training you get before and after you're commissioned is recognized as the world's finest—and it equips you for a well-paid lifetime career in military or commercial aviation.
You're eligible for appointment to the Cadets if you're single, between 20 and $26\frac{1}{2}$ years old, and have completed at least one-half the requirements for a degree from an accredited college or university (or pass an equivalent examination).
Talk the program over with men in your class who have been Aviation Cadets. And for full details, ask at your nearest U. S. Army and U. S. Air Force Recruiting Station. Why not drop in today and discuss it?
U. S. Army and U. S. Air Force Recruiting Service
WIN YOUR WINGS
Eagle
WITH THE AVIATION CADETS
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE TWELVE
MONDAY, MAY 24, 1948
Regents Approve 1948-49 Budget Of $4,659,119
The state board of regents Saturday approved a budget of $4,659,119 for operating expenses and salaries for the University for 1948-49. This is an increase of $543,667 over last year.
The total budget allowed for Kansas colleges and schools is $15,144,047 This represents an increase of 8.2 per cent.
The University medical department was allowed $2,135,711. This is an increase of $161,696. New equipment, an expanded research program, plus rising salaries will take care of most of this increase.
Most of this increase will be used to meet salary boosts and the cost of hiring additional teachers. At the University, the salary increases average 3 per cent.
The largest salary increase will amount to an 8 per cent rise for the faculty members of Kansas State. Regents said that this increase would bring salaries there to a level with those over the state.
Truman Makes Cabinet Change
Washington, May 24—(UP)—Pres. ident Truman today nominated Charles F. Branman, assistant secretary of agriculture, to succeed Clinton P. Anderson as secretary.
Mr. Anderson left the cabinet early this month to seek the Democratic U.S. senatorial nomination from New Mexico.
Mr. Brannan, 44, has been assistant secretary since June, 1944. He is a native of Denver.
Others who had figured in speculation as to Mr. Anderson's successor included undersecretary Norris E Dodd and Rep. John W. Flannagan Jr. (D-Va). A congressional delegation recently had urged that Mr. Truman nominate Mr. Flannagan.
Rimalah Ismail
Mr. Dodd has been named to the World Food organization and will take over that job next fall.
This Door Stops All Fires, See
Washington-(UP)-You install this door, see.
Then maybe a bolt of lightning hits your house. Or mice get into the matches.
Anyway, a fire gets started. You're sound asleep, but everything's all right—you've got this door.
It has a cable hitched to it in a certain way. Hanging from the cable are some weights.
The fire burns through the cable. The weights fall. In so doing they release a plunger.
release a plunger.
The plunger opens the door. Simultaneously, it shoots off some blank cartridges. You wake up.
The fire-alarm door is the invention of Eugene Elsworth of Union Church, Miss.
The government gave him a patent on it.
Prices Go Up As Strike Ends
Chicago, May 24- (UP) - Partial settlement of the prolonged meat packing strike sent hog prices booming upward today.
CLO. packinghouse workers returned to their jobs this morning at three of the meat industry's big four packing firms after 67 days on strike.
Opening hag prices at Chicago were $1 a hundred pounds higher. At St. Louis they were up $1.50 to $3.
The big packers were buying more animals for slaughter in plants which previously had been struck.
Farmers sent the heaviest cattle shipment to market since March 8 eight days before the strike began.
eight days before the strike Hog ships today totaled 76,-600, compared with 77,000 last Monday. Favorable weather kept many farmers in the fields and prevented them from shipping hogs.
About 70,000 employees of the Swift, Armour, and Cudahy packing companies and 10,000 workers at independent firms were set to resume work in plants they struck March 16th.
Pickets continued to parade before Wilson and company plants, however. The union continued the strike against Wilson because the firm refused to arbitrate cases where strikers were fired for illegal acts.
14 Out Of 20 Want The 'Bird' But Louder And Funnier
The Bitter Bird should be continued next year according to 14 out of 20 students interviewed by the University Daily Kansan. Five students were opposed to its publication and one student was indifferent.
Darrel R. Worf, College freshman, suggested that the editors have more personality sketches on students features on styles, and a column about interesting alumni.
students who favored the Bitter Bird publication did not think with the Jayhawker. Several students offered suggestions the humor magazine.
Robert Lee Clore, business junior, said, "Make it crude. Everyone enjoys crude humor whether they like to admit it or not. Why don't the publishers dig up some jokes on
Ralph O. Winter, engineering junior,
James M. Handley, freshman,
Shirley Lindey, College junior,
Leo J. Tolle, business senior,
all favor publishing the Bitter Bird next
year in its present form.
Margerie Lee Hampton, College sophomore, admitted that she enjoyed reading the magazine. She suggested that the management try using Bibler's cartoons next year in the magazine.
Eugene Cooper, college freshman, and Lew V. Coats, sophomore, said, "As long as the management keeps the humor objective in mind the magazine will be successful."
Thomas Alexander, College senior,
said, "Why don't they make the Jay-
hawker a one-issue magazine and
modify the Bitter Bird?"
J. Philip Singer, and George Johnson, engineering seniors, and Robert Meacham, College freshman, believed that the jokes should be "toned down," but that the general ideal of the magazine was all right.
Beatrice Kasha, College senior, said, "It seems like our morals here at the University have fallen down if we have to print dirty jokes in our humor magazine in order to sell it Reform the Bitter Bird. There are lots of good clean jokes, that are funny."
faculty members?"
Joan Jay, graduate student, said, "It doesn't make any difference to me whether or not they publish the magazine again next year. I think the students could very well live without it."
Leon Lee, College freshman, thinks that the Jayhawker takes the place of a humor magazine and so the campus does not need the Bitter Bird.
Dale "Red" Beuthien, College junior, said that he thought the magazine ought to be "cleaned up" or banned from the campus.
US May Accuse Arab States Of Aggression
Christine Jean Mann, College junior, and Neal Bird, engineering junior, agreed that the magazine should not be published next year because there seemed to be no particular purpose for it on the campus.
Lake Success, N.Y., May 25—(UP) The United States was prepared today to press for branding the Arabs as international aggressors if the 11 a.m. deadline set by the United Nations security council passes without a ceasefire order from Arab leaders.
The United Nations, encouraged by the new state of Israel's acceptance of the security council true appeal in the Palestine conflict, waited anxiously for the Arabs' answer.
zThe Israeli government ordered a provisional ceasefire in the Palestine war for 10 a.m. today but Cairo dispatches indicated the Arabs were demanding complete Jewish surrender as their price to end the shooting.
suffoding. The Israeli government ordered on the provision that the Arabs do the same, was issued in response to Saturday's appeal by the United Nations security council for both sides to stop the fighting within 36 hours from midnight Saturday.
Reliable sources said today the seven nations of the Arab league would seek an extension of the deadline.
Arab forces continued to make important gains in the 12-day-old battle for Jerusalem while the ceasefire negotiations went on. The Arab high command in Amman said that Egyptian and Arab Legion troops, which linked up at Bethlehem last week, stormed and captured Ramat Rachel in the southern suburbs of Jerusalem.
Ramat Rachel, the site of Rachel's tomb, is about three miles south of Jerusalem on the road to Bethlehem. Jewish sources admitted there was heavy fighting there but claimed the Arabs had been repulsed.
The Jerusalem Jewish community of 100,000 was reported in serious plight, short of water, short of food, battered by shellfire and raked by snipers' bullets.
University Players Present 2 Plays
The University Players presented two one-act Saroyan plays in Fraser theater May 21.
The plot of "The Hungerers" centered on starvation. Each member of the cast represented a person who was very hungry and unable to secure food. Each tried to get food but failed and died of hunger.
"Comin' Through the Rye" involved metaphysical ramblings taking place in a waiting room where people were waiting to be born. Although unborn, each character was in the form he would be on the day he died. The dialogue was between people of different ages, discussing whether they wanted to be born.
The cast was Milton Commons, Gwendolyn Jones, Loren Orr, Mary K. Booth, and Dan Palmquist. The play was directed by Tom Rea.
The cast was Tom Shay; Harry Patterson, a student from Oread High school; Mary K. Booth, Milton Commons, and Tom Rea. The director was Dan Palmquist.
Both plays were presented with a minimum of scenery and lighting.
Davis Predicts World Government
A world government will someday rule this "little planet," Robert M. Davis, professor of law, told the American Society of Tool Engineers Friday.
"Technology has changed the whole world economically, culturally, socially, and politically. Engineering made it possible for peoples to become neighbors. We have no other choice."
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Ward Osburn, chairman of the Kansas City A.S.T.E.; Prof. and Mrs. Frank Brown, Mrs. Davis, Prof. and Mrs. Kenneth Rose, Prof. Arthur Paul, and Mr. and Mrs. Willis Wheeler.
The senior announcements will not be ready until Thursday Harold Swartz, auditor of student affairs, said this morning.
Senior Announcements Delayed by Labor Trouble
Originally scheduled to be delivered tomorrow, the announcement have been delayed by labor trouble, he said.
Delta Sigma Rho Elects Friesen
Hal M. Friesen, business junior,
was elected president and five men
were initiated at the annual Delta Sigma Rho banquet Saturday in green hall. Delta Sigma Rho is an honorary debate fraternity.
Other officers elected were Edward L. Stollenwerck, vice-president, and Keith E. Wilson, secretary-treasurer.
The new initiates are Stollwerck, Ernest C. Friesen, Ralph Peacock, Aldo G. Aliotti, and Richard L. Schiefelbusch, instructor in speech. Prof. E. C. Buehler, national president of the fraternity, said the new members were selected from the debate squad. Mr. Schiefelbusch is a member-at-large.
Professor Buehler said the freshman debate squad this year has won 44 debates and lost only one. The record for the 18-man University debate team, which has taken part in 11 tournaments, is 103 won and 21 lost.
Professor Buehler added that taking part in speech contests helps students develop
Father Asks For Information In Son's Death
An advertisement appears in today's University Daily Kansan offering a reward for information concerning the death of Clifford O. Kaarbo, University student, who lost his life in the Kaw river Jan. 19, 1947.
O. O. Kaarbo, 137 North Courtland street, Topeka, father of the student, is offering the reward for information that will put his mind at ease about his son's death.
Dr. R. A. Clark, county coroner, found no evidence of external injury or violence, and placed the cause of death as accidental. Clark said that Kaarbo evidently jumped off the bridge to commit suicide, but changed his mind.
There is a missing link between the time Kaarbo left the fraternity house and the time he was discovered in the river.
Early on the morning of Jan. 19, 1947, Kaarbo told his fraternity brothers at Triangle house that he was going downstairs to close the front door. He was not heard of again until he was found crying for help in the river near the Massachusetts street bridge.
Many of Kaarbo's friends cannot believe that his death was a suicide. Fraternity brothers had noticed no signs of despondency, and described Kaarbo as a "very good student."
The Spirit Of The 1800's Lives Again As The Square Dance Reigns Supreme
Long skirts, buttoned shoes, the square dance—they've all come back to plague or enchant us, depending upon personal tastes.
The University campus has been conscious of long skirts for some time. Button shoes should be appearing shortly. And a Square Dance club is reviving interest in the square dance.
From the Mall in New York's Central park or a village square in New England to the Rockies and western plains, Saturday night is once again becoming the time to swing your partner. Many a young man—who is likely to spurn the waltz and rumba—finds the lively boisterousness of a square dance right up his alley.
The square dance is whirling round the country, fast becoming one of the favorite teen-age pastimes.
The Square Dance club, which meets in the recreation room of the Union from 7 to 8 p.m. on Wednesdays, has given instruction in fourleaf clover, grapine twist, birdie in cage, seven hands around, the Texas star, divide the ring, and cut away four. Instruction in the schottische and varsouvianna and the rye waltz, a round dance, has also been given, said William H. Love, Jr., chairman of the club.
Little Man On Campus
By Bibler
Austland
I am a
I tap, swizzle
2 i mills
"Our instructor says this uniform is part of the course."
University Daily Kansan
Topeka Alumnus Accuses Faurot Of Getting Even
BY UNITED PRESS
A prominent K,U. alumnus charged today that the new interpretation of Big Seven eligibility rules is a result of "Don Faurot's animosity."
Henry Bubb of Topeka, member of the K U. athletic council, selected Mr. Faurot as his target. He said the University of Missouri athletic director and head football coach "wants to take advantage of Big Seven veterans simply to get even with Kansas for the Lee's Summit incident."
He was referring to the incident two years ago in which Kansas obtained the football services of Forrest Griffith of Lee's Summit, Mo.
There was rumor around the hill that some Kansans would prefer to play men who would be ineligible under the new ruling and let the conference do what it pleased.
Chancellor Deane W. Malot, who started the ball rolling Monday with an indignant letter to other school heads asking for their reaction to the new interpretation, limited his remarks today to three paragraphs:
"I recognize the right of the faculty representatives to change the laws of the conference, but I am opposed to this retroactive action against a group with whom we had an understanding on eligibility.
"I have no interest or concern where this started. I'm concerned only with the relationship of this University in living up to its commitments to the students.
"I have taken up this matter with the other institutions of the conference. Now I am awaiting replies to that communication. Future action will depend on the information contained in the replies to my letters."
The move to interpret the old rule as limiting collegiate competition to four years above the high school level was started, it was reported, with the Missouri faculty representative.
Graduates Offered Flight Training
June graduates have the opportunity of entering the air force as aviation cadets, Lt. Col. John Alfrey, professor of military science said today. The top 5 per cent after one year of training are offered a regular air force commission as second lieutenants.
To qualify for training, a man must be single and between the ages of 20 and $26\frac{1}{2}$. He must have had two years of college or be able to pass an equivalent examination
The air force needs about 400 aviation cadet candidates for the class which begins training at three Texas air bases at that time. Larger classes are scheduled for the latter part of 1948 and for 1949.
Top single-engine students will get first priority in jet training probably P-80s, as part of the year's training.
Further details are available by writing to Chief of Staff, U.S.A.F. Washington D.C., aviation cadet section.
Malott To Speak At Exercises
Chancellor Deane W. Malott will speak at three commencement exercises this week. He will speak today at Minneapolis High school, Thursday Ursuline college, and Friday at Coffeyville high school.
Last Daily Kansan To Be Tomorrow
The last University Daily Kansan of the current school year will be published tomorrow. The first issue of the 1948-49 school year will appear Sept. 16.
The Summer Session Kansan, published semi-weekly, will appear beginning June 15.
Union Building To Be Enlarged
Plans are underway for another annex to the Union building, Miss Hermina Zipple, director of the Union, said today.
An extension will be made on the north side, and the south side will be extended on each floor. Construction will begin as soon as blue prints are drawn and conditions permit.
The ballroom and bookstore will be enlarged and new offices for Union Activities and other student organizations will be built.
A larger women's lounge, other lounges on the upper floors, storage space, a reservations room for reserving rooms at the Union, a browsing room, a larger music appreciation room, a room for permanent records of the Union, more check room space, a repair and storage room, and a room to house air conditioning machinery will be added.
A room for art exhibits and pictures of current interest, and a hobby work shop are also being considered.
All plans at present are tentative and are being used as a basis for considering space that will be needed.
'The Silver Cord At Little Theater
"The Silver Cord," a three-act play by Sidney Howard, will be presented in a shortened version by members of the drama department at 8 p.m. tonight in the Little Theater of Green hall.
It is being directed by Margaret Gosney, graduate student, as an experimental seminar class project in which the script will be read.
Members of the cast are Darlene Van Biber, Mary K. Booth, Herk Harvey, Milton D. Commons, and Marjorie M. Shryock. B. Gene Courtney, College senior, will be narrator.
Robinson Heads Kansan Staff For Next Fall
James Robinson, College senior will be editor-in-chief of the University Daily Kansan for the first eight weeks of the fall semester of 1948. The staff is elected by the Kansan Board.
Wallace Abbey, College junior, will be managing editor, and the two assistant managing editors will be John Stauffer and Harold Nelson, College juniors.
Paul Warner, College junior, will be business manager.
The last issue of the 1947-48 University Daily Kansan will appear tomorrow. The Summer Session Kansan will be published Tuesdays and Fridays starting June 15. The first issue for the fall semester of 1943 will appear Sept. 20.
200 Protest 4th Wedding
Two hundred students of the Westminster foundation sent a telegram to the 160th general assembly of the Presbyterian church Sunday protesting against the Presbyterian minister who performed the marriage of Lana Turner and Robert Topping.
William F. Perkins, moderator for the University Westminster foundation, drafted the request for discipline of the minister and sent it to the general assembly which begins Thursday in Seattle, Wash.
The students condemned the minister for performing the fourth marriage of two divorced people three days after the groom received his divorce decree. They also criticized the Hollywood movie lot setting in which the vows were taken.
The telegram requested the general assembly "to reprimand the ministers who disavow Presbyterian law and custom in performing marriage ceremonies; remind the church of its social responsibility in regard to the family and the home! and affirm its full Christian convictions concerning the sanctity of marriage vows and the stability of the home."
KU Girl Selected Queen Of Weekend Olathe Rodeo
Nanette Hyer, fine arts freshman, has been selected as one of the two queens who will reign over the Olathe rodeo Friday, Saturday, and Sunday.
Gov. and Mrs. Frank Carlson will be guests at Saturday's show.
KU Supplies Boys' Counselors
Appointees, as counselors to the annual Boys' State for 1948, include seven University men. The men appointed are former participants in the Boys' State, and are members of the Sunflower Statesmen's club.
They are L. Edward Stollenwerck,
Ernest C. Friesen, Robert F. Bennett,
College sophomores, and Lee H.
Reiff, Alivn C. Browne, James R.
Selig, and Robert D. Thompson,
freshmen.
The University men will assist in directing the activities of about 425 high school juniors, who will come from all parts of the state to Wichita North High School June 6 to 13 to take part in this year's Boys' State.
The high school 'boys are chosen by members of the American Legion posts of the state for their citizenship and scholastic abilities. The purpose of Boys' State is to acquaint young men of high school age with the various aspects of state government.
Kansas Geologist Will Go To London
Raymond C. Moore, professor of geology and research director of the state Geological Survey, will attend the International Geological congress in London, England, in august.
Dr. Moore will leave on July 23. While abroad for a month, he will visit Scotland, Sweden, Denmark Belgium, France, and Italy.
At the congress he will be the official representative of the University of Economic Paleontologists city, the Geological Society of America, the Paleological society, the Soand Mineralogists and the American Association of State Geologists.
Dr. Moore has been state geologist of the nation's leading geologists and on the faculty since 1916. He is in the field of fundamental research.
More Money And New Profs At KU Next Year
Nineteen promotions to assistant, associate, and full professorships and two appointments to the faculty were announced today by Chancellor Deane W. Malott.
The University's pocketbook will be a million dollars richer, the faculty will wear new laurels, and new faculty members will brighten the 1948-49 school year.
8 Houses Want Financial Advice
A budget of $5,319,228, approved by the state board of regents May 22 increased allowances $1,103,776. This includes appropriations for the University and auxiliary services such as health and dormitories, but does not include the Union and the athletic association.
Four faculty members received the rank of full professor. They are Robert M. Dreyer, associate professor of geology; Leland J. Pritchard, associate professor of economics; William Young, associate professor of anatomy and Philip O. Bell, associate professor of mathematics.
In a poll conducted by the University Daily Kansan Monday, 29 out of 35 fraternities and sororites interviewed said they had never heard of the plan for a financial adviser until they read about it May 21.
Eight assistant professors were promoted to associate professors. They are J. Sheldon Carey, design; Max Dresden, physics; Fred Kurata, chemical engineering; Helen Lohr, home economics; Russell C. Mills, biochemistry; Arthur N. Paul, mechanical engineering; and M. Carl Slough, law.
Eleven of the Greek organizations did not know enough about the plan to comment on it. Sixteen others were not in favor of the plan. Eight of them are University plans for a financial adviser for the fraternities and sororites.
Promoted to assistant professor from instructor were Gerald Davis, architecture; Milton Horowitz, psychology; Wiley Mitchell, economics; Ivan Nomecek, mechanical engineering; Loda Newcomb, secretarial training; David Robb, electrical engineering; and Keith Weltmer, economics.
Mr. Trevillo said that in a conversation with a University administrator May 20, the administrator told him a plan was quietly being set up for a financial adviser to the fraternities and sororites. He also stated that the plan might lead to collective buying and University control of Greek finances.
Laurence C. Woodruff, dean of men, stated May 22 that the presidents of the Greek organizations had been consulted about the plan and that it was purely voluntary whether or not the organizations participate. The statement was issued in reply to a speech made May 20 by J. Alden Trovillo, industrial adviser to the Wichita Chamber of Commerce, to the members of the Society for the Advancement of Management.
Alpha. sororities.
The eight organizations who favored the idea would go along with the university if the "advice" remained "innocent," and did not become mandatory.
The two appointments were both to the geology department. Dr. H.A. Ireland, director of geologic research for the Standard Oil company of Texas will become a professor of geology. A. G. Fischer will become an instructor. He is now at the University of Rochester. Both appointments will be effective in September.
Several of the organizations believed the plan might be all right for other organizations but not for themselves. The majority of the organizations who were opposed alienated them. Other organizations such as an alumni organization or Fraternity Management incorporated.
Reasons varied for not approving of the plan for a financial adviser.
Members of the Alpha Chi Omega sorority said that the majority of the women in their house were not in favor of the plan.
Other fraternities and sororites who stated that either they or their president are not in favor of the plan are: Triangle, Alpha KappaLambda, Alpha Phi Alpha, PhiGamma Delta, Kappa Alpha Psi,Delta Tau Delta, Delta Upsilon,Phi Beta Pi, Lambda Chi Alpha, andPhi Chi,Alpha Chi Omega,Alpha Omicron Pi, Chi Omega,ThetaPi
Jack Frink, president of Sigma Phi Epsilon, said that they were "neutral" but did not plan to participate. He also stated that any attempt to make the advice compulsory would be fought by his fraternity.
Charles Lindbergh, treasurer of the Pi Kappa Alpha said, "I have never heard of the plan and to the best of my knowledge no one else in the fraternity has either. As we are working under Fraternity Management incorporated don't think the University could for myself." Speaking for myself, I think the University might get control of Greeks through this plan."
The eight fraternities and sororites who stated that they were in favor of the plan are: Alpha Tau Omega, Phi Kappa, Sigma Alpha Epsilon, Kappa Sigma, and Pi Kappa fraternities; Alpha Delta Pi, Sigma Kappa, and Kappa Kappa Gamma sororites.
Alice Hobson, president of Sigma Kappa sorority, said, "The plan might be a good one. It might serve to equalize the different financial arrangements of the houses."
Edward Dallay, president of the Phi Kappa Psi fraternity said that a plan for university like Fraternity Management incorporated would be a good idea.
Dr. Ireland will teach courses in petrography and sedimentation. He has worked with the United States Geological survey and the soil conservation service. He has taught at the University of Oklahoma and received his doctor of philosophy degree from the University of Chicago.
Mr. Fischer will teach courses in stratigraphy and elementary paleontology. Previously he has been employed by the Stanolind Oil and Gas company and the Florida Geological survey.
Other appointments are pending approval. Raymond Nichols, executive secretary of the University, said that there would be a general reduction in number of instructors in departments of lower class levels. Any possible decrease will be counteracted by an increase in higher class levels, he said. This is because the majority of the veterans are enrolled in junior-senior classes.
Sigma Delta Chi Initiates
Sigma Delta Chi, honorary journalism fraternity, initiated nine members May 20.
The men initiated Billy F. Mayer, Otto W. Meyer, Frederick T. Brooks, Maurice C. Lungren, Larty L. Funk, Carl E. Welch, Osmero L, Bartelli, James H. Raglin, and James O. Jones.
WEATHER
Kansas--Fair cast, partly cloudy west today, tonight, and tomorrow with few light showers southwest quarter today. A little warmer tomorrow west. High today in 70's, low tonight 45 to 55.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1948
Leprosy On The Increase In America, But It Can Be Fought With New Drugs
Chicago—(UP)—A medical specialist says leprosy sufferers are increasing in the United States, but that leprosy can be fought effectively with new drugs.
The specialist, Dr. Robert G. Cochrane, head of the London office of The American Mission to Leperis, said service men who were in the tropics during the war accounted for most of the new cases of the disease.
But he said public understanding of leacrasy and its problems is vital.
"If there were an adequate understanding of the disease, people would become less hysterical," he said. "When a man suffering from leprosy was cured, his neighbors would take him back into the community as they should."
He said that victims of the disease usually are hounded from their homes by frightened neighbors.
"Yet a leper might walk down the streets or sit next to anyone in a movie without infecting him," Cochrane said.
Official Bulletin
May 25.1948
College Faculty meeting in Frank Strong auditorium. 5 p.m. today.
All pre-medics accepted for 1943 class who will enroll in medicine during summer session report to 104 Haworth immediately.
All Tau Beta Pi members sign address roster in office of the dean.
Formal pledging of new Jay James, 5 p.m. tomorrow, Pine room, Union. Old members wear uniforms.
K.U. Dames bridge, 7:30 pm, to-
morrow, first floor, Memorial Union
All parking regulations will be strictly enforced during final week. After finals and before beginning of summer session, regulations will be in effect on Jayhawk Drive only.
University Parking Committee
New drugs, he said, have brought "a tremendous possibility for better research in fighting the disease," and in India, some 50 per cent of the less serious cases of leprosy are cured.
In South Dakota, the state cannot foreclose a lien against the homestead of an old age assistance recipient.
Phi Beta
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TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Socially Speaking-
Social Pace Keeps Up Speed With More And More Parties
Locksley Hall Dinner
Locksley hall held its formal senior dinner May 17 in honor of Ruth Hibbs, Lorraine Mai, Ardys Rabb, Lucille Ralston, Lorraine Rumsey, Leah Uehling, Shirley Welborn, and Charlene Williams.
Joanne Cockreham gave a farewell speech and Miss Ralston gave the senior's speech. Donna Rumsey sang for the group.
Phi Gam Guests
Phi Gamma Delta entertained the seven United Nations military officers May 20 at a typical American breakfast, Col. Brooke E. Allen, United States Air Force and the party escort, is a Phi Gam from Davidson. After the breakfast of pancakes, bacon, and eggs, the delegation left the University to fly back to Lake Placid.
Members of the group were Colonel Allen; Col. Fu De I, Lt. Col. Wen Wei Lin, and Capt. Chin Siao Tang, China; Maj. J. Fournier and Comdr. V. Marchal, France; Capt. H. Eeles, group captain; and Comdr. H. Firth, United Kingdom.
Koena Sigma Formal
Kappa Sigma entertained with its annual spring formal at the chapter house May 21. Harlan Livingood and his orchestra played.
Guests were Mary Alice Martin, Patricia Kelly, Martha Cragg, Lila Hyten, Susan Woodward, Billie Am Carter, Patricia Watson, Virginia Osborne, Georgia Ginther, Am Davis, Kay O'Connor, Marian Minor, Mary Helen Keller, Annalou Pope, Reta Hartwell, Georgette Spears, Barbara Richard, Peggy Wolfe, Martlyn Jones, Norma Mendenhall, Cleta Van Marther, Janice Mouteith, Eleanor Howell, Belle Hardisty, Judy Carothers, Elaine Elvig, Barbara Nash, Audrey Wheatley.
Ethel Pearson, Mary Genet Covey,
Marie Schumacher, Jean Gillie,
Billie Powell, Mary Jean Stewart,
Mrs. T. A. Scott, Nancy Lee Sewell,
Happy Patton, Ruthe Marsh, Joan
Happy, Mary Lynn Hegarty, Grace
Gwinner, Margaret Dickinson, Lucile
Murray, Barbara O'Neal, Barbara
Cleaves, Mery Pringle, Darlene
Lyrgeisse, Ruth Baker, Nancy Haffner,
Betty Ann Rolfs, Rayma Hotchkiss,
Barbara Meyer
Chaperons were Mrs. Nelle Hopkins, Mrs. P. H. Klinkenborg, Mrs. R. H. Wilson, and Mrs. F. A. Benson. * * *
Margaret Harness, Betty Compton
Inez Hall, Martha Weed, Patricia
Farrell, Shirley Holloway, Dodie
Miller, Mary Kay Kottman, Georgia
Hamman, Barbara Howard, Betty
Black, Sammy Peete, Mary Lind,
Rothy Hudson, Mr. and Mrs. W. J.
Lount, Marilyn Miller, Mary Ellen
Sawyer, Virginia Stout, Marjorie
Crane, Marilyn Smith, Wilea Gra-
ham, Susan Wilson, Nancy Lou Wat-
son, Betty Jane Hamman, Martha
Homan, Mary Jean Oliver, Jodi Busi-
mer, Mercedes Muir, Mary Louis
Perkenschneider, Betty DeArmond,
and Mr. and Mrs. Dave Ballard.
Phi Kappa Pledges
Phi Kappa announces the pledging of Jerome Stomp, Claflin; and Clifford Malone, Chase.
AD Pi Spring Formal
Alpha Delta Pi held its annual spring formal May 22 at the chapter house. A spring garden theme was used, with flowers decorating archways and trellises inside the house. Guests were Charles Kopper, Tom Rea, Stan Fanestil, John Wassmer, Wade Stinson, Richard Alman, Bruce Etherington, Marion Sumner, Robert W. Cook, George Polk, Ralph Moberly, Dave Burns, Logan Holgrewe, Fred Apt, Richard Raidt, Robert Kroesch, Don Kimbrough; Bud Hinkle, Clark Duncan, John Wiedeman, Bogue Harrison, Heri Gronemeyer, Charles Ball, Jim Timing, William Fisher, Jack Ar-
Philip Fec, Robert Meyers, Calvin Briney, Jack Scott, Ray Fleming, Loyd Lee Russing, Charles Apt, John Hall, Frank Sloan Pete Stubbs, Emerson Shields, Jack Comstock, Bill Jones, William Hauser, Bill Pringle, Ray Cune, Reg Cook, Mary Jean Pett, Rodney Armstrong, and Mr and Mrs. Robert Boltho.
Chaperons were Mrs. Mildee Scott, Mrs. Harry W. Potts, Mrs. Clark Mandigo, Mrs. C. H. Ashton, and Mrs. O. L. Horner.
Delts Honor Dads
Members of Delta Tau Delta entertained their fathers with a "Dad's Day" luncheon and dinner May 15. The following day Delt mothers were present for dinner. Wayne Landis, Gene Pope, Monte Cason, and Donald Diefendorf provided entertainment after dinner.
Guests were Mr. Earl E. Roberton,
Mr. F, B. Siegrist, Mr. J. W. Frisbie,
Mr. R. C. Harris, Mr. and Mrs.
F. C. Young, Sally Young, and Mr.
and Mrs. C. E. Weaver, Kansas City,
Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. G. O. Ericson,
Mr. Justin W. Hillyer, and Dr. and
Mrs. H. H. Woods, Topeka; Mr. and
Mrs. C. V. Maloney, Mr. J. J. McCarthy, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Moddrell,
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Bradley, Mr. and
Mrs. L. G. Stubbs, and Mr. T. F.
McCoy, Wichita; M. O. R. McNeil,
Mr. Paul E. Baker, and Mr. Charles
Moffett, Peabody; Mr. and Mrs. O. A.
Harris and Mr. and Mrs. C. S. Schafer,
Blue Rapids.
Mr. and Mrs. F. R. Wendland,
Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Michler, and Mr.
G. R. Ninneman, Herrington, Mr.
and Mrs. R. D. McDaniel, Neodesha;
Mr. E. E. Blincoe and Mr. J. T. Crain,
Ft. Scott; Mr. and Mrs. I. O. Weddle,
Paola; Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Layman,
Kingman; Mr. George W. Reinders,
Marysville; Dr. and Mrs. D. M. Diefford,
Waterville; Mr. and Mrs.
H. M. Arrowsmith, Belleville; Mr.
and Mrs. E. Thayer Gaston, Lawrence; Mr. and Mrs. Ed W. Rolfs,
Junction City; Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Grosse, Salina; Mr. and Mrs. H. W. Nesch, Clinton, Mo.; and Mr. and Mrs. F. D. Carburn and Mr. and Mrs. Ward I. Neel, Kansas City, Kan.
ATO Parent's Day
Apna Tau Omega held Parent's Day Sunday.
Guests were Mr. and Mrs. Allan R Shaw and son, John, Bartlesville Okla.; Mr. and Mrs. Oren W. Breidenthal, Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Sime, Mr. and Mrs. H. E. Hucke, and Mr. and Mrs. Clyde V. McCoskrie, Kansas City, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. T. V Teare and Mr. Harry E. Rose and son St. Joseph; Mr. and Mrs. Guy Brown, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Harding, Mr. and Mrs. S. R. Helm, Mr. Robert E. Pringle, Mr. and Mrs. R. A Pringle, Mrs. Helen C. Roederig, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Laird, Mr. and Mrs. George Nesser, Mr. and Mrs. R. V Millikan, and Mr. and Mrs. Paul J Gibbs, Kansas City, Kan.
Mrs. Treva Brown, Mr. and Mrs. C. H. Schaake, and Mrs. Charles S. Arthur, Lawrence; Mr. and Mrs. Blair D. Adam, Junction City; Mr. and Mrs. Harvey LePage, Leavenworth; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Peden, Danville; Mrs. Carmel Johnson, Harper; Mrs. J. R. Wonder and Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Arthur, Jr. Manhattan; Dr. and Mrs. R. J. Mullanburg, Stanberry, Mo.; Mr. Edgar Hinde and Mr. and Mrs. Layle Childers, Independence, Mo.; and Mr. H. R. Mason and Mr. and Mrs. H. L. Parker and son, Virgil, Wichita.
DU Pledges
Delta Upson announces the pledging of Charles Pittman, Wichita, and Richard Sutton, Kansas City, Mo.
Dinner guests at Delta Upson Sunday were Capt. and Mrs. J. V Peterson, Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Simmons, Moberly, Mo.; Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Speuhler, Martha and David, Merriam; Mignon Morton, Jacquelyn Simpson, Mignon Virginia Douglass.
Jay James Add Four Names
To List Of Pledes
DU Dinner Guests
** **
Four new names were added to the list of pledges for the Jay James at a rush tea May 18. They are Eleanor Marie Howell, Alpha Chi Omega; Betty J Boomer, Alpha Micron Pi; Hardyll Lu Clark, Delta Gamma; and Margaret Jean Sullivan, Theta Phi Alpha. The pledging ceremony will be held tomorrow in the Union.
Weddings And Engagements
Maloney-Olander
Kappa Kappa Gamma announces the engagement of Eileen Maloney and Carl E. Olander. Miss Maloney's assistants were Corinne Temple. Kathleen McKelvy, and Nina Green.
Miss Maloney is a College sophomore. Mr. Olander, a member of Phi Gamma Delta, is an engineering sophomore.
Jordan-Conroy
The pinning of Patricia Jordan, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph C. Jordan, Kansas City, Kan., and William J. Conroy, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas E. Conroy, Beloit, was announced Sunday at the Phi Kappa house.
The announcement was made by Geraldine Koelzer, president of Theta Phi Alpha. Miss Jordan's attendants were Jean Sullivan and Ladeen Steinkirchner.
Miss Jordan, a member of Theta Phi Alpha sorority, is a College sophomore. Mr. Conroy, a member of Phi Kappa fraternity, is a College junior.
Givin-Hall
Alpha Delta Pi announces the pinning of Barbara Givin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George W. Givin, Manhattan, to John W. Hall, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence F. Hall, Manhattan.
☆ ☆
Miss Givin wore an orchid corsage Mrs. O. L. Horner, housemother, and the attendants, Betty Bacon and Darlene Van Biber, received cor- sages of red roses.
Miss Givin is a College sophomore. Mr.Hall, a member of Kappa Sigma fraternity, is a sophomore at Kansas State college.
Wells-Oliver
☆ ☆
The announcement was made May 22 of the engagement of Anna Maxine Wells, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Max B. Wells, Paola, and John Rarig Oliver, son of Mr. and Mrs. George M. Oliver, Culver. The announcement was made at a dinner given by Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ellsworth.
Mrs. H. M. Miller, Carruth hall housemother, made another announcement later that night at the dormitory. Joan Wilson passed chocolates, and Ellie Lou Wycoff and Melba Young presented each girl with a rosebud. "I Love You Truly" and "Carruth Hall Girl" were sung.
Miss Wells is a College senior, and Mr. Oliver is a College junior.
Koelzer-Smith
Theta Phi Alpha announces the recent engagement of Geraldine Koelzer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Urban Koelzer, Seneca, to Stanley N. Smith, son of Mr. Paul Smith, McPherson.
muss Koelzer, president of Theta Phi Alpha, is a fine arts sophomore. Mr. Smith is an engineering sophomore.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
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Spiegel Is Champion KU Chess Player
Dale A. Spiegel, College sophomore, captured the K.U. chess championship with his win over Gerald Oglevie, College freshman, in Sunday's play-off. Richard Minuet, engineering freshman, took second place, and Oglevie third.
Sponsored by the Union Activities committee, competition owed with more than 30 players. After a month of playing, all but three of the contestants had been defeated. Then, in this three-way tie, Spiegel beat Ogliev in two games, and defeated Minuet in one, with one game a draw. The prize was a loving cup.
Under the Hungarian three-year-plan, 161 war-damaged schools have been repaired so far. Of them, 101 are state schools, 40 are Roman Catholic, 17 Reformed and three Evangelical schools.
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PAGE FOUR
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1948
Beta Keeps Sweepstakes As I-M's Draw To Close
Leading Phi Delt by 39 points, Beta Theta Pi has been declared winner of this year's intramural sweepstakes trophy. Although the Phi Delt's won the Fraternity league softball title, they were unable to overcome the lead built up by the Beta's in other sports.
Here are the standings of the top eight teams:
Frosh Raise Track Hopes
Signs of things to come are shown in the times posted this spring by coach Bill Easton's freshman track squad. Many of the times are better than the times recorded by the varsity men this season, and a couple would have won Big Seven track championships.
Pat Bowers, a transfer student from Drake university, is probably the outstanding freshman on the squad. Pat has posted a 1:55 half mile, which would have taken first place in the 880 at Lincoln last week. He has also run a 4:23.6 mile this spring and he can measure the 440-yard dash in 50 seconds flat.
Pat has a running buddy who is also from Drake, named Herb Semper. Herb is a red-headed distance runner who can travel the mile in 4.24. A week ago he posted a 9:48.8 two-mile, which almost tops the best in Big Seven this year.
Easton's varsity squad is badly in need of a hurdler, and it looks like coach Bill Easton will unveil a good one by the name of Jack Greenwood. Greenwood has run the high hurdles this season. This season, Besides hurding Greenwood high jumps six feet, runs the 100 yard dash in 10.4, and the 220 in 22.9.
Emil Schutzel, a Kansas City boy,
will also aid coach Easton's bid for
the next year. Emil is a spinner
who could hold theaddle for
every taking run, the 440 in 655 ser.
Mile: Pat Bowers, 4.23.6; Herb Semper, 4:24.5; Keith Morrow, 4:29; Cliff Abel, 4:40.
100-yard dash: Schutzel, 10.2; Jack Greenwood, 10.4; Art Hamilton, 10.5
440-yard dash: Emil Schutzel,
50.5; Bowers, 51; Tom White, 52.9;
Stan Margrove, 53.1; Clarence
Hughes, 53.3.
Two mile run. Semper: 9:48.8, Mor-
row, 10:03.4; Malen: 10:27.0
129-yard high hurdles: Green-
wood, 14;6. Carl Brown, 16.0; Jim
Zaic, 16.3; Earl Kopke, 16.5.
849-yard run: Bowers, 1:55; White
and Black, 2:06; Dempster,
8:28; 8:35; Faggett, 2:07.
220-yard low hurles: Greenwood
2.3; Zajic, 2.8; Kopke, 29.3.
229-yard dash: Schutzel, 22.5
Greenwood, 22.9; Hamilton, 22.4
Whitewood, 22.8
High jump: Greenwood, 6 feet.
Javelin: Warren Fienand, 170 feet; Jay Mallas, 152 feet; Thomas, 150 feet; Champion, 140 feet.
High jump: Greenwood, 6 feet.
Broad jump: Hamilton, 22 feet 11 inches;
Schutzel, 20 feet, 4 inches;
Dee Roy, 20 feet 4 inches.
Discus: Mallas, 131 feet 10 inches; Fleandt, 115 feet; McKincley, 103 feet.
Mile relay: (Bowers. Margrove,
White, Schutzel). Time 3:27.5.
Robertson To Leave For Tennessee Post
Ross Robertson, instructor in economics, has resigned to become an assistant professor of finance at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Mr. Robertson taught here from his graduation in 1937 until 1940. He then took a position with the Georgia Military academy, and was a naval officer during the war. He was organizer and first director of the Modern choir as an undergraduate.
Mr. Robertson will remain here this summer to complete his thesis for a Ph. D. degree in economics from the University.
Beta, 1456; Phi Delt, 1417; Phi Gam, 1340; Phi Psi, 1178; SIGChi, 1163; Sig Alph, 1158; Sig Ep, 1123; ATO, 1090.
The huge sweepstakes trophy was presented to the Beta chapter at the Intramural ball May 22. Also receiving awards were winners of 44 division and all-intramural championships. Several trophies did not arrive for the formal presentation but will be given later.
University Daily Kansan
In addition to the sweepstakes award, the Beta's received the largest number of cups given. They received division trophies in football, basketball, softball, B team volleyball, tennis, and handball and all-intramural awards for track, basketball and spring tennis.
Mail subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year, (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University year except Saturdays and Sundays. University offers a full-time position. Entered as second class matter Sept. 17, 1910, at the Post Office at Lawrence. Kan., under act of March 3, 1879.
In commenting on the intramural program, director Don Powell said more than 3000 students had taken part in this year's games. This figure represents an increase of more than a 1000 over 1946-47.
However, he said criticism of the I-M program may cause elimination of the sweepstakes trophy next year. The intensive competition created by the race for the highest all-over point total is the feature attacked by critics.
"We may follow the example set by many larger schools in abolishing an award for the highest number of total points," the I-M director said. The inter-fraternity council recently voted to recommend the competition toward the sweepstakes trophy to cut to a smaller number of sports.
Powell gave special thanks to eight members of intramural staff who helped him during the year. They are Bill Daugherty, senior manager; Frank Prosser and Charles Wagstaff, junior managers; and Charles Hall, Frank Ross, Wayne and Bogue Harrison, and Fred Six, freshman managers.
Special praise also went to Jack Greer, assistant director of intramurals and officials Joe Ryan, Dick Lamb, Sweed Olson, Greer and Daugherty.
Police Report Two Weekend Accidents
Earl W. Bellinger, College sophomore, suffered a shattered left arm and possible internal injuries when his '40 Ford collided with a transport truck on highway 10, east of Desota. The accident occurred about 1:30 am. May 22, Schmedemann said.
Two accidents involving students were reported over the weekend by Harvey Schmedemann, state highway patrolman for this area.
Hoyt S. Taylor, engineering junior, escaped injury when his 1941 Mercury struck the rear of a tractor on highway 59 near Pleasant Grove, about 12:15 am. Sunday. Both the car and tractor were damaged.
K-S Joins In Rule Protest
Manhattan, Kan., May 25- (UP) Kansas State college today joined with Kansas in protesting a recent interpretation of Big Seven eligibility laws that threatens to bar some of the schools' most virile athletic talent from conference play.
Both schools hit hard at an eligibility decision which would limit conference eligibility to four years beyond high school level, and which by-passed the practice of counting two years junior college play as one year in the conference.
Milton Eisenhower, president of Kansas State, issued a strong statement which outlined his school's position. He said the conference "had let down" GI athletes who had placed their faith in the Big Seven.
"It has been the understanding here that junior college competition counted as one year in the Big Seven," said Eisenhower. "I am shocked at the new interpretation."
Chancellor Deane W. Malott of the University yesterday dispatched letters to each of the presidents of the six other schools in the conference. The letters charged that faculty advisors with making "an ex post facto decision not in accord with previously accepted interpretations."
The ruling apparently will affect Howard Shannon, basketball cornerstone at K-State; Don Fambrough, all-conference football lineman at Kansas; Marvin Small, veteran Kansas end. Unofficial sources claimed it would also hit Clarence Brannum, big All Seven cager at K-State; Jack Mitchell, Oklahoma's star quarterback, and Les Metzger, Colorado football star.
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Karnes Will Lead 1949 Track Team
Bob Karnes, Jayhawker distance star, was elected captain of the 1948-1949 Kansas track team by track lettermen in a meeting Monday. Karnes was one of the three double winners in the Big Seven meet held in Lincoln May 22.
He finished first in both the mile and two mile events to lead Kansas in its third place finish at the conference meet. The K.U. star is a sophomore from Overbrook.
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TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Chemists Slaughter Phi Delt To Rule Intramural Softball
Alpha Chi Sigma Gains 19-1 Victory As Dale Clark Hurls Six No-Hit Innings
Dale Clark hurled no-hit ball until the seventh as the Alpha Chi Sigma's squashed the Phi Delt's 19 to 1 to win the intramural championship Monday. The independent champions scored in every inning except the second and the fifth as they pounded out 21 safeties.
Clark faced only 28 men in the se the fraternity representatives from their pedestal. It ended the season for the winners with a perfect record after having been undefeated in five division tilts and sweeping through rough contests for the independent title.
It is the third title which the AXE's have amuessed in softball play. They are the 1947 defending summer champs as well as the new independent and intramural titlists.
The Chi Sig's displayed perfect fielding until the last of the seventh when they made two bobbles while the Phi Delt's were being credited with 14 miscues. The Phi Delt's found difficulty in trying to push fouls and fair balls past Oliver Edwards, A.X.E. third sacker, who is considered one of the best infielders in intramural softball competition. The Phi Delt's also showed some expert fielding until the fourth when the whole team seemed to go to pieces.
Every man on the chemists' battling nine slugged out at least one safety as Edwards walked off with the individual honors with a homer, triple and three singles. Andy Beruzzi came through with his share of the burden as he rapped out two doubles and a single in five trips. Ed Marquis, Dale Oliver, and Lou Goehring who slapped out a two-bagger, were the only Phi Delt's who were able to garner safeties off the perfect control of Clark.
Al Lindenstruth started the ball game with a single, and Oliver Edwards quickly followed suit with his homer that sailed far over the right fielder's head. It was then three straight outs for the AXE's but they had already shown their potential power.
In the fall of 1946 he was transferred to the Navy unit at KU. When Dick was released from the Navy he decided to stay on Mt. Oread.
Dick almost enrolled at Missouri when the Navy sent him to Washburn university in V-12. During that time he participated in track and played left halfback on the football team.
A.X.E. AB R H E
Lindenstruth, cf 6 3 3 0
Edwards, 3b 5 3 5 1
Grahma, lf 5 2 1 0
Brownsburger, c 5 2 2 0
Bentuzzi, 2b 5 2 3 0
Johnston, ss 5 3 1 1
Lewen, lb 5 1 2 1
Patton, rf 5 1 3 0
Clark, p 5 2 1 0
Shea surprised everyone when he finished second to Lancaster in the half mile at the Big Seven indoor
The Phi Delt's were stopped completely until the bottom of the last stanza when Marquis laid out the first Delt hit of the ball game. Marquis scored on the hits of Oliver and Goehring to ruin Clarks shut out.
Dick Shea Finds
In the fourth the Phi Delt's began playing erratic ball as the winners combined three hits and five Delt errors to tally four runs. In the upper half of the sixth, the chems went wild to chalk up seven more tallies on a barrage of six safeties and six errors. In the seventh they slammed out five more singles for five runs. The box score:
Championship Road Is Rough
It's a long, hard road to a first place championship in any of the four individual events in the Big Seven outdoor meet. Dick Shea, Kansas' outstanding 880-yard runner, found it so when he latched on to the 880 yard crown last week-end at Lincoln.
The dark-haired runner began his track career back in high school when he was at吴 Cotton High school in Sedalia, Mo. There Dick ran the dashes and the high and low hurdles. He placed in the 100-yard dash and the high hurdles in the state meet his senior year.
46 19 21 3
PHI DELT
Marquis, 3b 4 1 1 1
Oliver, if 3 0 1 2
Powell, ss 3 0 0 1
Coehring, cf 3 0 1 2
Harris, ib 3 0 2 2
Furus, 3b 2 0 0 3
Hedrick, p 3 0 0 1
Debus, rf 1 0 0 2
Williams, c 2 0 0 0
Engel, rf 2 0 0 0
In back stretch with about 220 yards to go Shea passed Studt, and sprinted the remaining distance. Missouri's Lancaster made a determined effort to catch the Kansas half-miler, but Shea never let up and finished five yards ahead of the field. His time was 155.5.
A.X.E. 201 407 5—19 3 1
Phi Delt 000 001 01 1 34
***
Dick placed second in the preliminaries Friday, and such competition as Charlie Lancaster of Missouri and Andy Cary of Oklahoma looked meet last February at Kansas City tough.
The starters gun cracked loudly in Nebraska's big stadium and Winten Studt, the other Kansas finalist jumped into the lead after the first curve. Studt, who usually runs the 440, ran the first lap of the 880 in about 54 seconds. This was just what Shea needed.
meet last February at Kansas City. It was then that Dick decided to shoot for the outdoor title at Lincoln. Months of hard work followed, and when Tom Botts brought his Tigers to Lawrence for a dual meet Shea whipped Lancaster by a wide margin.
Shea's teammates and roommates, Winton Studd, Dick Wagstaff, and Bill Binter decided that the name "Shea" wasn't Irish enough, so they started calling him "Shawney O'Shea." During the 880-yard run Saturday you could hear his mates shouting, "come on Shawney," and he did.
Dick has one year of eligibility remaining, but he will graduate from engineering school this spring and will not return next year.
Batting Averages
| | AB | R | H | E | Pct |
| :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- | :--- |
| Fletcher | 1 | 0 | 1 | 0 | 1000 |
| May | 39 | 2 | 14 | 11 | .350 |
| Gilkison | 41 | 4 | 11 | 1 | .268 |
| Ebel | 4 | 1 | 1 | 2 | .250 |
| Shaw | 30 | 3 | 7 | 0 | .233 |
| Fencyk | 22 | 1 | 5 | 3 | .227 |
| Medlock | 18 | 3 | 4 | 1 | .222 |
| Hogan | 33 | 6 | 7 | 3 | .212 |
| DeLuna | 52 | 5 | 10 | 5 | .192 |
| Ercuztai | 49 | 3 | 9 | 5 | .183 |
| Kelly | 28 | 3 | 5 | 7 | .178 |
| French | 57 | 7 | 10 | 17 | .175 |
| Stewart | 6 | 1 | 1 | 1 | .166 |
| Fink | 26 | 1 | 4 | 1 | .154 |
| Spring | 7 | 0 | 1 | 0 | .143 |
| Gilman | 19 | 2 | 2 | 0 | .105 |
| Mabry | 12 | 0 | 1 | 0 | .083 |
| Hammer | 5 | 1 | 0 | 0 | .000 |
Wet grounds forced cancellation of the Kansas-Kansas State baseball game Monday night at Municipal park. The two teams will play to tonight, with the game scheduled for 8 p.m.
KU,KS Will Play Tonight
The probable starting line-ups:
KANSAS
Lou Hammer, Jayhawker *so* portsider, or Guy Mabry who, recently set the Iowa State Cyclones down on five hits, will start for Russ Sehon's crew. Duane Holder, with a previous win over the Jayhawkers, will probably get the starting nod from Wildcat coach Lud Fiser.
KANSAS
Medlock, 2b
Bertuzzi, lf
French, ss
DeLuna, 1b
Gilkison, rf
May, 3b
Shaw, cf
Fencyk, c
Hammer, p or
Mabry, p
KANSAS STATE
Bartley, cf
Grimes, lf
Atkins, rf
Chew, c
Bremmer, 1b
Carr, ss
Sheriff, 3b
Nielson, 2b
Holder, p
Sports Promoter
Sues Bobby Feller
Davenport, In., May 25-(UP)—Bob Feller, defendant in a $42,500 breach of contract suit, could not be guilty because of an Iowa statute. his attorneys said today.
Feller, Cleveland Indians star hurler, is being sued by Ray Doan, Davenport sports promoter. Charged that letters from Feller in 1945 constituted a contract for him to handle a post-season exhibition tour the following year.
Feller's counsel told federal judge Charles A. Dewey that his defense was based on an Iowa statute which bans action on informal contracts of more than one year.
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Hal Wins For Tigers
New York, May 25—(UP)--Don't tell the American league hitters that Hal Newhouse's fast ball is gone—they just won't believe it.
The report about Hal's fast one went around the league this spring and for a time it looked as if there was some truth in it. Newhouser, after winning his first start, dropped four straight games for the Tigers and was batted out of the box in two others.
But today the lean lefty is runner-up in the league strike out competition with 33 whiffs, three behind his teammate, Vihgil Trucks. And his control is excellent. In 54 innings pitched he has walked only 21 batters.
Yesterday, winning his second straight game, he struck out six batters and walked two as the Tigers topped Washington, 5 to 2, at Detroit. He started out slowly, yielding three of seven hits the Nats got in the first innning. Al Kozar's single, Coan's triple, and Mackey's singletime hit Washington both of its runs. Washington got only three singles, all by Tommy McBride, and a double by Kozar, the rest of the way.
At last, just about when even their most faithful followers had given up hope, the Dodgers ended an eight-game losing streak with a well-earned 9 to 4 triumph over the Reds at Brooklyn. The victory pulled the Dodgers out of eight place and ended the longest home losing streak in the managerial regime of Leo Durocher.
The Phillies ended their losing streak at four games with a 6 to 2 victory over the Cardinals at Philadelphia at night. That cut the Card National lead to two and a half games over the Giants as they moved into the Polo Grounds tonight.
Walt Dubiel pitched the Phils to victory. He had a perfect game until the seventh when Al Schoendienst singled and then came home on Stan Musial's seventh homer of the season.
Probable Pitchers
American League
Boston (Kinder 1-4) at St. Louis (Zoldak 1-2) night
New York (Raschell 3-1) at Detroit (Hutchinson 3-2)
Washington. (Haefer 1-4) a t Cleveland (Lemon 4-2), night
Cleveland (Lemon 4-2), night National League
Cincinnati (Webmeier 1-0) at Bcston (Barrett 2-2), night
Chicago (Schmitz 3-4) at Brooklyn (Barney 1-3)
St. Louis (Pollet 4-0) at New York (Koslo 2-2), night
Pittsburgh (Riddle 4-1) at Philadelphia (Erickson 0-0), night.
Turnesa, Hogan Vie For Top PGA Prize
St. Louis, May 25—(UP)—Mike Turnera and Ben Hogan slammed their way into the finals of the 30th annual P.G.A. tourney at Norwood Hills Monday. Turnera took a one-up, 37-hole semi-final victory from Claud Harmon while Hagon downed Jimmy Demaret, 2 and 1.
Mike, the third of seven golfing Turnesas, will thus make his bid today for the crown denied two other members of this family, Joe and Jim. But, Mike's chances against Hogan looked little better than those of his brothers.
His brother, Jee, wasn't in the same league with the great Walter Hagen in 1826, and the "Haig" set back Turnesa for his fifth and last P.G.A. title, Jim went down before Sam Snead in the finals of the 1943 tourney for slammin' Sam's only P.G.A. crown.
Mike has been 17 under par for his 141 holes of match play, and Hogan 20 under for 142. But Hogan has been more erratic, and whether he would be able to play his best game against Mike's determined, tight-lipped assault was questionable.
Today's winner will earn the $3,500 first prize, while the loser gets $1,500.
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TUES. June 1
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SIX
TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1948
Track Takes Spotlight As Olympic Games Near
It is not often that track can step into the limelight of sports as a major attraction such as baseball or football. But for many recent weeks track has been in the newspaper headlines and be subject of tall tales.
The cause for track's sudden splurge of notoriety is, of course, the 1940 Olympics, which will be held in London this summer. Not since 1936 when the last Olympic games were held in Berlin, have athletes from countries throughout the world gathered to test their track and field skills.
Inch and Dillard ran the high hurdles in 13.6, both world's records. Dillard, Lloyd La Bohm, Patton, Charlie Bakers
This year's Olympic games promises to be a real contest for a number of reasons. First, we have had a good long time to prepare for them. Men who served in the war had time to return to their prewar form. Also, the 1936 Olympics was held in air of tenseness because of the war that followed over Berlin. This year the Olympics should be a good place for international feelings to blow off a little steam.
Every time they run the Olympic games, just about every track and field record in the book gets a shaking up. Of the 19 events on schedule for the games in London this summer, there were set in the 1936 games at Berlin. The other records were set at Los Angeles in the 1932 games.
With all those records being shattered in the two previous Olympics, it seems reasonable that at least half of the existing marks will take a tumble in London. The performances of Harrison Dillard and Charlie Fonville in the Kansas Relays bear this out.
Fonville tossed the shot 58 feet 1/4
13 To Visit Missions
Thirteen persons connected with the University will participate in a student tour of the Southwest to visit the national missionary centers of the Presbyterian church.
They will leave Lawrence June 5 and return June 17. The tour is being sponsored by the Presbyterian Westminster foundation.
Members of the tour are Marian Osmond, College junior; Elizabeth Stephenson, College freshman; William Richmond, business junior; Luther Hall, graduate student; Jarnel Belt, college senior; Robert Boeckle, College sophomore; Mrs. R. L. Williams, and son, Theodore; and the Rev, and Mrs. John H. Fatten, sponsors of Westminster foundation.
They will visit missionary centers in Liberal, Toos, Chimayo, Trucha Embudo, Santa Fe, and Albuquerque, New Mexico, Ganado, Ariz. Mesa Verde National park, Dulango, and Colorado Springs, Cols.
University High Has Banquet, Prom
The University High school's junior-senior banquet and prom was held May 21 in the Kansas room of the Union. The theme was a "spring garden."
Karl D. Edwards, principal of the University High school, spoke at a short program during the banquet on "Advice from the Old Gardner." He likened the garden to the Uni- dern high school and the students to the plants who were now mature and ready to be transplanted.
Carl Sneegas, president of the junior class, was toastmaster at the banquet. Patricia Daniel, presented the junior class toast. Charles Murphy, president of the senior class, presented the senior response, "Moonlight and Roses," was sung by a vocal trio, Margaret Latimer, and Carol and Nadine Blackwood, accompanied by Miss Daniel.
Lee Barlow was the master of ceremonies at the prom. Roger Beth's band, of the Liberty Memorial High school, provided dance music.
Ought To Name It Podunk
Holland, Mich.—(UP)—Postmaster Harry Kramer is getting more than his share of mail. Many letters and packages addressed to the old country come regularly into the Holland post office here.
inch and Dillard ran the high hurdles in 13.6, both unofficial world's records. Dillard, Lloyd La Beach, Mel Patton, and Charlie Parker will all be around to shoot for a new 100-yard dash record. Only the past Saturday, Patton breezed to a new unofficial mark of 9.3 in the century.
All in all it looks like the record books will get a thorough dusting off and maybe some very rough handling before this year's crop of Olympians hang up their spikes.
Just for your own future reference you might clip these Olympic records, because you'll probably be making a lot about them in a month or so.
100-meter, 10.3--Eddie Tolan, U.S.—1932. 200-meter, 20.7--Jessie Owen,
U.S.—1936. 400-meter, 46.2--William
Carr, U.S.—1932. 800-meter, 1:49.8-
Tom Hampson, Great Britain—
1932. 1,500 - meter, 3:47.8 -- Jack
Lovelock, New Zealand—1936. 5,000-
meter, 14:22.2 -- Gunner Lockert,
Finland—1936.
10,000-meter, 30:11.4—Janusz Kuszocsiński, Poland—1932. Marathon, 2 hours 29:19.2—Kitelei Son, Japan—1936. 100-meter hurdles, 141—Forrest Towns, U.S.—1936. 400-meter hurdles, S2.—Glen Hardin, U.S.—1936 High jump, 6 feet 7 5-16 inches—Cornelius Johnson, U.S.—1936 Broad jump, 26 feet, 5 5-16 inches—Owen, 1936.
Hop-step-jump, 52 feet $ 5 \frac{1}{2} $ inches
—Notta Taima, Japan —1363. Pole vault, 14 feet $ 3 / 4 $ inches —Earl Meadows, U.S. —1336. Discus, 165 feet $ 7 \frac{1}{4} $ inches —Ken Carpenter, U.S. —1336.
Javelin, 238 feet 7 inches—Matti Järvinen. Finland—1622. Shot put, 34 feet 1¼ inches—Hank Woellke, Germany—1936.
Hammer throw, 185 feet 4 3-16 in-
ches—Karl Hein, Germany—1936
Decathlon, Glenn Morris, U.S.—1936
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Women Graduates To Live In Ricker
Ricker hall will house graduate women students next fall, Miss Margaret Habein, dean of women, announced today,
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Women who will be graduate students next fall and who would like to attend the office ball should see Miss Habein at the office of women immediately.
Dean Gilley Is Elected To Head Men's Glee Club
Dean Gilley, College sophomore, was elected president of the men's glee club at a dinner-business meeting Monday.
Other officers elected were: Charles Roth, engineering sophomore, vice-president; Clarence Hooper, education junior, secretary-treasurer; Donald Finley, engineering junior, and Samuel Peacock, College sophomore, librarians; and Duncan Roger Butts, fine arts freshman, accompanist.
Stop in on these warm days for a cool fountain drink.
Eldridge Pharmacy
Chancellor Deane W. Malott contributed the information for an article on Western Civilization in the May issue of Higher Education, a magazine published by the United States Office of Education.
The article, written by Dr. William Sanders of the office of education explains the method of study, the objectives, and the types of material used in the course.
Cambridge, Mass.—(UP) -George and Daisy, two Irish setters didn't want to be given away, traveled 65 miles from their new home at Derry, N. H., and were reunited with their old master, John S. R. James of Cambridge.
Were Their Dogs Tired
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TUESDAY, MAY 25. 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
Where Old Friends Meet Class Reunions, June 6
Spring! Now it means love and June, but in 10 or 20 or 30 years it will mean class reunions. On June 6, six classes will hold special reunion meetings. The class of '88 has passed the half-century mark and will be awarded the traditional gold medals.
Mrs. George O. Foster, Miss Elise Neuen Schwander, and Mrs. Stella
C. C. Cull of Lawrence, are $^{\textcircled{2}}$
Some alumni of this class who will be here include Charles N. Belcher Detroit, Mich.; William L. Cheatam Bristol, Okla.; George Crissman Kansas City; W. C. Dickey, Leoti; Albert Foulks, Ness, City; Frank L. Gilmore, Mexico City; Dale Gale, Topka, former baseball player with the Kansas City Blues and present county commissioner of Shawnee county, and William Hoad, Ann Arbor, Mich., who organized the Kansas state department of sanitation and health and planned the engineering project for Potter lake.
Mrs. George O. Foster, Miss Elis Gallup Cady, all of Lawrence, are the planning committee. The fifty-year class will have a dinner at 12:30 on June 6 and will receive their gold medals at the University luncheon June 7.
Dr. Charles H. Loomis, Merriam; Chauncey B. Little, former congressman from Olathe; Alfred M. Myers, Kansas City, engineer for the bridge across the Grand Canyon; Celia Pennington, Altamont; A. L. H. Street, Minnesota, Minn.; and Fred M. Harris, Ottawa, former alumni president and member of the board of regents.
The class of '08 reunion committee is headed by Frank A. Cordell, Lawrence. The class of that year will also have a reunion with plans in the hands of Harry Randall, Fairview, Okla., and E. W. Grant, El Dorado, Kan. Alfred M. Landon, former governor, is expected to attend.
This forty-year class boasts some well-known names which include Guy R. Duer, Marinette, Wis. Roy Roberts, president of the Kansas City Star, and John Ise, professor of economics.
The class of 1913 is planning its 35th reunion. Mrs. Lelita Troup Kansas City, says they will have their initial meeting at 4 p.m. June 6
their initial meeting at 4 p.m. June 6.
The class of '23 which is holding its 25th anniversary reunion definitely has an athletic background. Its president, Joe Bloomer, who batted for the K.U. nine and Paul Endacott, All-American guard head the list, C. Gerald Hesse, Lawrence, is general chairman. George Beal, professor of architecture, has arranged for a display of memories in the Pine room. They will be the first organized group to be served in the Palm room new addition to the Union.
Dr. Leona Baumgardner, director of child health in New York, N. Y., is a member of the class who is planning to attend. Elmer Kemper, and J. Lloyd Barron, also of New York, and Mrs. Henry Wiley of Washington, D. C. will also be present at the reunion.
Paul Endacott, now vice-president of Phillips Petroleum company, will give a dinner for the basketball team of 1923. Special guests will be Adolf Rupp, basketball coach at the University of Kentucky, Robert Mosby, Detroit, and Charley Black, Toledo.
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The class of '43 is the youngest class having a reunion. They will mark their fifth year with a special meeting at 4 p.m. June 6. Willis Tompkins, assistant dean of men, is heading the committees. This class meeting will be a little different. They will have their reunion at the outdoor dance pavilion and picnic grounds by Potter lake, their gift to the University.
Each class has planned its own program with the aid of Fred Ellsworth, alumni secretary. Meeting rooms will be assigned as soon as the number of members coming can be determined and University dormitories will furnish housing for out-of-town visitors. Men will be quartered in Watkins hall and women in Miller hall.
AIEE Election
Billy Harold Hamilton, engineering junior, May 20, was elected chairman of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers for 1948-49.
Other officers are Robert L. Lindsay, vice-chairman; Laurence L. Allred, secretary; John G. Roberts, treasurer; Charles A. Grimnett, senior representative; Lyle E. Gorz楚wiez, junior representative; Robert Foster and Norman L. Bell, sophomore representatives.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
MINIATURE GOLF
SKYLINE
TIME OUT FOR FUN
A woman bending backward to pick up a golf club.
RELAX
- When you need a turn from learning, try miniature golf. It's an outdoor game that'll pick you up and put you back in shape.
1:00 p.m.—midnight
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Some Days A Guy Can't Even Make An Honest Buck
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3 blocks from Haskell bus line—Hiway 10 East of Lawrence
Indianapolis —(UP)—Indianapolis police say no matter how smart a man thinks he is, he is bound to make a mistake when he commits a crime.
3
They cite the case of William Walden. Walden was held up by a gunman who took $90.
But the victim asked for his wallet back, after the robber got through rifling it. The bandit obliged and the men departed. Then Walden looked at the wallet, to discover that the robber had given him his own by mistake.
The wallet was turned over to police and the thief, whose name and picture were in it, was arrested.
The dairy industry realized three billion 500 million dollars on its investment in 1946.
Kind Of Like Abraham
Haviland, Kan.—(UP)—Folks in this small Kansas town aren't kidding when they call Mrs. Anna Swafford "Grandma." She has 218 living descendants.
Bet She Said 'Yammit'
Ravenna, Ohio—(UP)—Mrs. Alfred Swauger adds the yam to the perils of being a housewife. A yam exploded in her kitchen oven and struck her in the face, causing burns.
BIG REWARD
offered for information loading to the solution of the river death of Clifford O. Kaarbo, Kansas University student, Jan. 19, 1947 in Kaw river at Lawrence, Kansas.
WRITE: O. O. Kaarbo
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PAGE EIGHT
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1948
Preaching And Carrying 18 Hours Not At All Unusual, Says Basnett
"Of course you have to give up some activities," was the only statement John Basnett, College junior, made about his work of being minister of a Pleasant Grove church. Basnett also carries 18 hours as a speech major and takes an active part in music activities as member of Phi Mu Alpha.
Basnett became a licensed Baptist minister March 4,1948. Shortly af-
Basnett became a licensed Bapterwards he received his assignment to the church at Pleasant Grove. An attack of pneumonia shortly before Easter sent him to the hospital in Kansas City, Mo., forcing him to give up his assignment.
Basnett doesn't feel it is so unusual to carry on activities as a minister while attending the University. "I wanted to be sure this was the right field for me and actual practice was the only way to find out," he explained.
Calm and pleasant voiced, the ex-Navy man plans to wait until the end of this semester for another appointment. After graduation in the spring of 49 he will enter a seminary to work for his bachelor of divinity degree.
Call K.U. 376 with your Want Ads
Bowling Green, Ohio—(UP)— Parents should help build standards to replace "chaos" in dating, a Bowling Green State University dating expert believes.
Parents Afraid To Talk Sex,
Ohio Sociologist Believes
"Too many parents are afraid to talk sex with their children," Dr Lowrie says. "When they do talk often they don't know what to say."
Young people, the sociologist adds, need to be encouraged to date, for those who do date learn to get along with other people, develop richer and more wholesome personalities, gain poise and balance, become less emotional, judge the opposite sex better, and have a wider choice in the selection of a mate.
10-Year-Old Buys Old Fire Engine
Napa, Calif.—(UP)--David Hotelling, 10, believes he may be the youngest owner in the United States of a genuine fire engine.
He submitted the only bid when the Napa city council offered to sell two pieces of antiquated fire equipment—a 1926 model rescue car and a 1914 pumper. David bid $25 for the rescue car. The council delayed briefly to check legality of the transaction, then awarded him the vehicle.
David earned the $25 selling Christmas cards and doing odd jobs in the neighborhood. He's too young to drive, but still thinks he's got the biggest bargain on earth.
He sits in the truck and plays he's a fireman.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Parker 51 Fountain Pens Super Chrome Ink Stowit's Rexall Store
TELEPHONE NUMBERS
Some telephone numbers you ought to know
SAM AND HENRY
516,500—It takes this number of men and women to operate the twenty-two Bell Telephone Companies. Each operating company is responsible for furnishing telephone service within its own territory.
---
26,000-The number of people who are employed in the Long Lines Department of the American Telephone and Telegraph Company. It is their function to provide Long Distance and Overseas service.
MICHAEL TURNER
131,400-This numbers the employees of the Western Electric Company who manufacture, purchase and distribute equipment and supplies for the entire Bell System.
[Image of a person reaching up to interact with a large screen displaying complex mechanical or architectural designs.]
中華民國 73 年 6 月 20 日
2,100-That's the number of people in the American Telephone and Telegraph Company. Through advice and assistance, they coordinate the activities of the entire Bell System.
6,000—That's the number of people in Bell Telephone Laboratories. Through research and development they constantly improve this country's telephone service—already the finest in the world.
BELL TELEPHONE SYSTEM
In all, there are some 682,000 men and women in the Bell System. As this country's communications service is expanded and improved, opportunities will grow still greater. There's a future in telephony.
AMERICAN MILITARY AFFAIRS
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Red Chick Left On Student's Door Step Will Get It In The Neck After Finals
Some Rhode Island Red mother picked the wrong doorstep in her attempt to place her chick where it would receive a good upbringing. Carlon W. Pryor, graduate student, finder of the door-step baby, has named the chick "Elsie" and announced that he will give it a good home. But only until after finals. Then Elsie is to be served along with French fried potatoes and salad to his friends.
Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan.
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TUESDAY, MAY 25.1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE NINE
Seniors' Gifts Grow As KU Wealth Increases
The rise and fall of the economic fortunes of this country can be observed in the senior class gifts to the University.
In 1350, although a depression was on the way, the class gave a $3,000 service elevator to the Union, and an $800 insurance policy on the life of the president which in 1955 will provide almost $2,500.
During the depression years the classes of 1932, 1933, and 1934 gave $2,200 in scholarships.
As the European war increased production in the United States and money was more free, class gifts increased in value. The class of 1938 gave $1,450 for the English room, and the class of 1939 gave $1,800 for the Kansas room. After the United States became involved in the second World War, war bonds became the best investment and the class of 1942 donated $1,054.50. In 1967 this will provide $1,425 for a gift. The gift will be chosen by the 10-year reunion group in 1952.
The class of 1894 started the student loan fund which through the years with additional gifts has grown to more than $5,200.
Constant improvement of the campus and the student's welfare have been the purpose of most of the gifts. Some of these gifts are the sun dial given by the class of 1899, the bulletin board in front of Robinson gymnasium given by the class of 1915, and the Seth Thomas clock for the library given by the 1918 graduating class
The class gifts have grown with the University. In 1873 the university was small and so was the gift, an engraving of "The Temple of Karnak." Classes of 1874 and 1875 also gave engravings. In 1890 several rare books were added to the collection of the University.
Furniture for the memorial union was the gift of both the classes of 1927 and 1928. The piano for the ballroom was given by the class of 1929. Classes from 1935 to 1939 also contributed to the completion of the Union. In 1935, $950 was given to the building fund of the Union. The class of 1936 completed the Pine room. The stage in the ballroom was given by
Kansas Recognized As World Center
Osborne,—(UP)—Kansas, long recognized as the center of the nation is to have the added honor of being listed as the geographical center of the world.
The U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey says that a vast project to measure the size and shape of the earth will start from the small marker on the Meade ranch near Osborne.
For years the marker has been the starting point of all surveys in the nation.
From the White House to the most unpretentious barn, all buildings which have been surveyed are listed on charts as being a certain distance from the Meade ranch marker.
Now government experts have a much broader plan in view, to tie together astronomical observations and gravity checks, and by triangulation to reach a new determinations of the size and shape of the earth as a whole.
the 1937 class and the classes of 1938 and 1939 contributed to the English room and the Kansas room. In 1941 the class gave $1,500 for the new wing in the Union which is being finished now.
Recent senior class gifts include the dance floor for the Potter lake recreational area by the class of 1943; the flagstone walk t the dance pavilion, 1944; crabapple trees for the campus, 1945; a gateway for the memorial campanile, 1946; landscaping of grounds in front of Lindley hall, 1947; and this year, new curtains for Fraser theater and steps to the memorial campanile.
Besides the geodetic center, Kansas also has the geographic center of the United States within its borders. The latter spot, also marked, is near Lebanon.
Lloyd's, the English marine insurance firm, is an outgrowth of an association of marine underwriters who originally met in Lloyd's coffee house, London.
All of your questions about the NEW FORD will be answered June 18th!
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.
We're Making A Speech, Too...
Gibbs Clothing Company
It's a short speech—but it's sincere and from our hearts. To every graduate, we wish a full share of luck, happiness and a future bright with achievement and success.
Prominence In Campus Society Puts Cankerworms In Envious Position
By BOB HILGARDNER
Momma and poppa cankerworm are now on display. Their prominence in campus society has awarded them a position of envy in a glass show case on the first floor of Dychc museum.
Typical of life, poppa cankerworm has a set of gray wings with which he can flit and flirt with some seductive light bulb. Instead of being called an adult, he is called a moth as is his wife. Poor momma cankerworm or moth has no wings and has to be content with attending to her duties of climbing trees and laying eggs in the bark. After this she dies.
Now we come to the member of the family of whom momma, and poppa cankerworm are most proud. He is junior, 14 days old and every one inch a worm. Junior is hatched from an egg and is not born alive and hungry.
drop with it while the wind is blowing him around. Junior's sole purpose in life is to take a good sized elm tree and strip it bare of leaves. When junior has done this, he has reached the peak of his career. It is his crowning glory.
He then enters adolescence and sucks for a while as a pupa. He snaps out of being a pupa a short time later, and he too becomes a moth, ready to fly around any lone-some light bulb.
Junior is a weaver and an acrobat. He can spin the strongest and most invisible webs of sticky fibers a human ever walked into. From 300 inches up, junior can line a line and
Several examples of junior's handiwork are in the show case in Dyche. An elm twig practically eaten up is there with two or three young worms on it. But don't be fooled by the pretty green leaves with the holes in them though; they are made of plastic. Even junior is not real and is only wax.
Junior's motto for keeping his temper is, "When nobody wants me and everybody hates me, I'll go out in the garden and eat people."
Muskrats prefer swimming to walking.
Slow That Hoss, Podner
Waltham, Mass.—(UP)—This modern city, center of New England's watch industry, has horse troubles. The city council is considering an ordinance which would make it illegal to ride horses at a gallop through the business district.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
RISLEY'S AUTO TRIM
10th and New Jersey,
Phone 939
SEAT COVERS tailor-made to YOUR CAR!
At new LOW prices.
- NYLON
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• PLASTIC
• STRAW and FIBER
See Us First ! !
A JOB...an Education..and a FUTURE for the 35 RIGHT YOUNG MEN
First, let us tell you who we are. Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Beane are brokers in securities and commodities, as well as underwriters and distributors of security issues.
We think it's pretty important what people do with the money they save so important that the job of helping them with their investments should be handled only by men who are equipped for that work by character, intelligence, and thorough training. The same holds true for men who help move our great commodity crops to market. For qualified young men, we think there's a real opportunity in the investment and commodity business.
Three years ago, we organized the first class in the Merrill Lynch Training School for approximately 30 carefully selected young men. We hired them to go to school under top-flight teachers for six months. Then they took jobs in various of our 97 branch offices, most of them in or near their old home towns.
The Training School was a success. Six classes have now graduated, and a seventh is in session. Almost 200 men (and two women) have completed the course, and almost uniformly they have rolled up excellent selling records. Some of them have already advanced in the home or field offices.
Because they have made good, we are organizing an Eighth Training School Class.
In this class, beginning August 2 in New York City, we will give the course to the 35 best men (or women) we can find.
These people will be paid while they learn. The rates of pay are varied on the basis of marital status and working (or military) experience. (Average for current class: $270 per month).
On successful completion of the course, each of these people will have a good job and, we hope, a good future.
If you would like to be considered for admission to this course, we obviously have to know a good deal about you. For instance, as a starter, we want the following information:
1. Name, address, age, marital status
2. Experience, working and military
3. Educational record (degrees, courses of major interest, grades)
4. Extracurricular activities and interests
5. Why do you think you would be interested in a career in the securities business?
6. What do you consider would represent success when you have reached the halfway mark in your business career?
If you would like to apply formally for admission to the Eighth Merrill Lynch Training School Class, write down the answers to these questions, plus anything else you'd like to tell us about yourself, and bring them to me or mail them to me before July 9th.
T. Bates Huffaker, Manager
1003 Walnut Street Kansas City,6
MERRILL LYNCH, PIERCE, FENNER & BEANE
PAGE TEN
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1948
The Editorial Page
Let The Athletes Make Hay
The eternal bickering which transpires between rival coaches when one enters the other's territory to "steal" players has once again been aimed at Kansas University.
In this case, Coach Don Faurot pointed the accusing finger at Kansas for "paying the way of two St. Louis athletes to look over the setup"
The reply, of course, was that the boys had visited here but were not brought by their University nor did they have their expenses paid.
Of course, dear reader, you and I are expected to read of this petty jealousy with a grain of salt. Both schools, Kansas and Missouri, would welcome the cream of the athletic crop and are not too disturbed about the best method of getting it.
Kansas has been slower in waking up to the fact that powerful athletic machines come much more easily when ready cash is available. It can not be denied that substantial sums of money were made available this year to numerous athletes which made it possible for them to stay at K.U.
With such financial backing and state-wide interest in its athletic program, why should Kansas hesitate to offer the best it has to the best athletes wherever they might be? If all the schemes and skull-duggergy could be uncovered that have taken place in other Big Seven schools down through the years, it would not make a pretty picture.
College athletics hereabouts is nearing the "big-time". Attendance has reached an all-time peak. The University stadium is completely debt free. This is a high period for college sports and other schools are not hesitating to take the gravy.
Coach Faurot probably realizes this and at the same time would not hesitate to entertain any Kansas athlete who happens to drop in at the invitation of an "old alum."
So, why not leave the field wide open? Let the athletes have a choice in the matter. College athletics are more commercialized every year so why shouldn't the player be the one who cashes in? The day of giving your all for "old Siwash" is nearly gone. Students realize that money can replace school spirit when it comes to having good teams. Of course, the money isn't too hard to find these days but when the flow of cash dwindles and the lure of money fades, college sports will return to their own virgin level, unblemished by the sins of professionalism.
Instead of making accusations, boys, let's look at the situation as it exists and will continue to exist and then take off from there in whichever direction the athletic treasure will allow. Other Big Seven schools have had such an undercover policy—so why not recognize it?
-Dave Clvmer
The views expressed in the above editorial are personal views of the writer and do not necessarily represent the opinion of this newspaper--Editor
University Daily Kansan
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn, Nati-
tional Advertising Assn, and the Associated Collegiate
Press. Represented by the National Ad-
vertising Service, 420 Madison Ave,
Boston, MA.
Editor-in-Chief... David H. Clymer
Managing Editor... Cooper Rollow
Assist Man. Editor... Clarice M. Thomas
Manager... Margaret McKinnon
City Editor... John Stauffer
Business Manager Bill Alderson
Adv. Manager Paul Vastier
Paul Walters
Not So Solid
When President Truman announced his civil rights' legislation, giving Negroes protection against lynching, poll tax, and job discrimination, 11 Southern states declared they would not support him for reelection.
In October, 1947, President Truman's popularity rating in the South declined 59 per cent. Today the decline amounts to 30 per cent according to Gallup polls.
In electoral votes this means he will lose 37 of the 127 he could have lost had the 11 states banded together. But today only four states (Alabama, Mississippi, Arkansas, and South Carolina) plan revolt against President Truman.
These 37 plan electoral votes could have been lost to Henry Wallace had President Truman by-passed the civil rights' legislation.
President Truman has a chance to gain enough electoral votes in states such as Pennsylvania, Ohio, New York, and Illinois where the heavy Negro populations could affect the outcome. Pennsylvania alone has 35 electoral votes. The decrease in his popularity in the South has been offset by his gain in popularity among Northern Negroes.
Right To Strike?
The picture isn't as bad for President Truman as it has been.—Doris Stainaker.
Two strike threats at the Oak Ridge atomic laboratories have failed to materialize. The plants are operated by the Union Carbide corporation under contracts with the government.
Coller's magazine editorializes that atomic workers are entitled to fair pay and good working conditions, but "to admit they have the right to strike would be like granting soldiers, sailors, and warplane pilots a right to strike. We do not believe this country is ready as yet for any such suicidal gesture as that."
The fallacy in Collier's argument is obvious. Soldiers, sailors, and warplane pilots are employed by the government. When they entered the armed services they forfeited certain of their civil rights, including the right to strike. Their rights are set forth and protected by the articles of war under which they have agreed to serve.
Atomic workers are civilians employed by a private company working under government contract. When they went to work at Oak Ridge they did not forfeit their civil rights. Constitutional provisions against involuntary servitude give them the right to refuse to work at any time and for any reason. As private citizens atomic workers have the same rights as other civilians, including the right to strike.Jim Robinson.
Money may burn a hole in many persons' pockets, but most of them still like the heat.
If the packing house strikes keep up too long, the pickets will be the only ones who have any "beef."
- Letters To The Editor -
British Spokesman
Dear Editor:
In your issue of May 20, Captain Eeles of the U. N. military staff is quoted as saying, "England has maintained order in the Holy Land since World War I with a terrific loss of British blood and a terrible burden on the British taxpayer. Now England wants to lay down this burden." We feel that we cannot allow this statement to pass the press without pointing out the obvious hypocrisy and falseness contained in it.
It has been made clear in the American and British press that British officers are now commanding the Arab forces. These men are not deserters but are even new members of the British army. In Abdullah's army alone, Britain admits it has 200 officers. Though some Arabs have high ranks in this army, they have no responsibilities. The British are using the entire army as Britain sees fit to use it. More than this, Abdullah's army (as well as perhaps the Egyptian and other Arab armies) is completely equipped by the British. The Arab soldier in this army is not a "volunteer" in our sense but an unprincipled soldier of fortune whose peacetime pursuits earn them less than enough for clothing and food. Thus Israel is now standing against a British officered and equipped army of (British paid?) hirelings.
Furthermore, though the British government refuses to recognize Israel until the U.N. recognizes that state, she has effectively blocked all attempts of the U.N. to recognize it.
In short, England is not "laying down this burden" but merely carrying out her imperialist policies in a cheaper and less obvious way. Finally, it is insulting to Arab and Jew alike to say that "England has maintained order in the Holy Land since World War I." These two peoples always got along until the British came. Large numbers of
Arabs still can't understand why they should fight the Jews. The statement of Captain Eeles should rather read "England has continually created disorder in the Holy Land since World War I."
We met Captain Eeles and regard him as a likeable and worthwhile individual. It is unfortunate that though the British people are among the finest, the British government is often hypocritical and false. Unfortunately, Captain Eeles spoke for his government.
Mel Lieberstein Graduate student
What A Laugh-
Reading the May 20th issue of Daily Kansan, I noticed the article in which our esteemed police force
have apprehended and will bring to trial a student charged with making off with the colossal sum of $1.30. Here I say—what a laugh, in this day and age, the idea of putting a black mark on a man's name for such a trivial amount!
Dear Editor:
According to the paper, Mr. Beal did have some money, but I contend it was just as much the fault of the people who left it "on the filing cabinet."
If any department in the school is in such dire need of $1.39 so as to retain it at the cost of a man's name, I shall gladly donate the sum to them for the sake of a fellow student. I believe it is degrading to the school for pressing the charge.
Though I doubt if this letter will ever appear, I would like to see it printed in bold face type like the original story and the "follow up" as it appeared in the Daily Kansan.
Stephen Relph
Engineering sophomore
A Portable Radio the perfect gift for Graduation
JEWELL TRIXIE . . . that handy "carry-on-your-arm" style. Comes in green, red, brown or black, without batteries ___ $19.95 and $29.95
- MOTOROLA . . . tiny and beautiful to look at . . . with amazing power and tone. without batteries $19.95 +d$29.95
without batteries ___ $19.95 and $29.95
BEAMAN'S RADIO
1200 N. Y.
Ph.140
AUGUST 17, 1950
Congratulations CLASS OF "48"
We wish you one and all lots of good luck and success in your future endeavors
Whatever your destination we're rooting for you to make the top grade. We sincerely hope we have provided you with satisfactory service during your stay at K.U.
Weaver
TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE ELEVEN
The University Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
Phone KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be presented to you during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University office. Journalism bldg not later than 4 p.m. the day before publication is desired.
Classified Advertising Rates
One Three Five
day days five
25 words or less 35c 65c 90c
additional words 1c 2c 3c
For Sale
BUCK 37, 5-passage coupe. **42 motor**
McCook Misc. McCook Dorm. Section
2, evenings.
WHITE PALM beach double breasted
Been cleaned once.
Erwin Grant, 2796
25
1947 Norge Refrigerator, 7 cu. ft., automatic defroster and clock, $285. Holly-Lyme Sundown springs, $140. Summons springs, $153. Air conditioner, $40. Tarpaulin, 12x16, $8. High chair, $8. Basketball hoop, $4. Chest, 5 drawers, $10. Table lamps, $1 each. Apartment 6, Drive A, Sunflower
LIVING ROOM and kitchen furniture,
kitchen furniture, bedding,
Phone 705-W or see at 2D Summisde
26 USED VASE piano in good condition
for sale. 1338 Ohio. L. L. Allred.
IDEAL for moving, storage, or traveling,
drawing drawers, clothing section, removable
hangers, shoe compartment. Reduced
considerably. Kohler, 1530 Tenn. 26
UTILITY TRAILER: Also lightweight
bicycle 16-A Sunnyside. Fax
242848
SOFIA BED, maroon cord upholstery,
practically new, and blond oak dineette,
condition. Best offer by June 1st accepted, delivery for June 10. 30E Sunsideys
MODEL T. 1927 two-toned convertible, heater, sealed beam lights, wheel wheels, heavy duty tires. Needs someone with car and art tools, HI Tennessee, 1994R.
VETERANS!` We will buy, trade or sell for you any Armv or Navy gear in good condition that you may wish to dispose of. Lawrence Surplus 911 Mass. **HTFD**
669
"TIME'S" special anniversary rate to new
students for only $3.42
Student Book Seats
Wanted
TWO-WHEEL, utility trailer around 800
capacity. Utility Sheehy. Phon
800-746-9120.
CAR, model 1987-1989 (Chevrolet or Ford preferred), with new or recently overloaded motor, for large trip. Please plaque U. 409, every evening from 9:00-12:00.
VETERAN wants to rent two or three room furnished or unfurnished apartment or patio. Be Lawrence for children or patio. Be Lawrence for two years. Call Bruce Laughlin, 3101W 26
$15 REWARD offered by student and employed wife for information leading to rental of 2-4 room apartment with private bath or small house furnished or unfurnished. Call 2463 after 5:30. 25 FURNISHED apartment or house. June 12th. Lake Creek, Winfield high school, Winfield, Keenel. VETERAN wants to rent two times a month.
three room, furnished or .unfurnished apartment for next September. No children, pets. Be in Lawrence two years. Call Jim Young. 86. 26
A REASONABLE good swimmer age 19 or over, boy or girl, to take Red Cross training June 12 to 22. Expenses paid for a swim lesson west Johnson county. Will qualify you for a swimming instructor job. Call or visit a Russell Peterson, MELROSE 7908, 6209 6341 Blue Way, Mariam Kansas, after 6:00 or Saturday or Sunday. 26
Business Service
FANS! FANS fans! Prepare now for summer; get a Stewart Warner refrigerator room cooler. Robbins and Meyers see them at Bellering Electric Co. 614 Madison TO GRADUATES of 1948. Remember your commencement in pictures. Call 1960M to make arrangements for place and time. Overnight service after 1 June
ESQUIRRE 'Father's' Day subscription
Book Sites, $4.33. Student Units,
25 Book Store
TAILOR-MADE suits, $36.50 to $55.00. Expert alteration and tailoring. George Eberhart & Son, Tailor Shop, 831½ Mass.
TYPING done: Term papers, reports, special attention given thesis. Accurate work at reasonable prices. Call 1996-W. Apartment 2. 1101 Tennessee. . . rites
NEW vacuum cleaners for rent. Attachments included. $1.60 per day. Al Brooks Sweeper Co., 8311$^2$ Mass. Ph. 1104 between 9 and 12 a.m.
For Rent
NICE COOL rooms for men close to the
compus and on the bus line. Both summer and fall sessions. 1536 Tennessee.
2281-R 26
LARGE COOL basement room for two or three boys. Single beds, private bath and entrance. Near bus, on bus line. 1820 Indiana, phone 2436-R. 26
TWO ROOM apartment, private bath
house work. 1799 Indian.
AN APARTMENT to serve with giz
between 20-30 years of age from June
5 until August 15. For details call Mrs. Bud
French, 1580-W between 12:30 p.m. 1:30
p.m. or between 6:00 p.m.-9:00 p.m. 25
COOL attractive room for five or six
bags for summer session. Will hold for
a semester. Have privilege of sharing
a finished apartment on same floor,
on bus line. Walking distance to town
and K.U.
LARGE ventilated room. Walnut suite, next to bath. 747 Rhode Island. 26
FOR SUMMER session, room and board.
Three blocks off campus. Meals served
every week for a per month. Just a
new places left. Contact Carbett or Geyen.
Phone 366 evenings.
MEN'S ROOMS for summer through fall.
See www.men'sroom.com. See us at 6:00 at 1228 Louisiana.
WHY WALK? Rent a room i-2 block from Union Building for summer school, large, well-furnished and air-cooled. Call Jack Campbell, 730 for information.
MOVING
LARGE COOL room(s) close to camp for men, available for summer and (or) fall, double or single. 1031 Miss. Phone 3251W. 26
SINGLE ROOMS for men, quiet, com-
fortable and for summer and for
semester. 1131 Ohio
EXCELLENT three room furnished apartment with private bath. For summer months only. Close to campus. Call Briney, 753.
TWO DOUBLE 100ms, with sleeping porch, for three boys during summer session. Mrs. Earl Dobson, 1222 Miss. Phone 459. 26
Local and Long Distance Movers
ROOMS for rent: twin beds. Can accommodate 14 boys. One and a half
Taste It!
CHEESE
Ice cream at its sensational best. Comes in delicious flavors with nourishing goodness.
★ Expert packing and crating
742 Mass.
VELVET FREEZE ICE CREAM
★ Trunks delivered
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PHONE 46 FOR FREE ESTIMATE
ETHAN A. SMITH MOVING & TRANSFER CO.
Reasonable rates
11 East 9th St.
block from Union building on Miss Summer school and fall. Call 31106J. 26 I TO September 1, 5-room furnished board for elderly landlord. Call 21828W.
HAVE A swell basement room for three boys. Ideal for summer studying. For three blocks from KU→near bus. Call 254-8 or see at 181 in illinois. In afternoons.
$-ROOM apartment for summer months
$125 paid. H. E. Wright, 124
Rhode Island
FOR SUMMER, large room for 3 or 4
room, continuous water. 2258, 1801 AMBI
water. 2258, 1801 AMBI
DOUBLE ROOM for boys. Nicely furnished with single beds. Two blocks from the kitchen and telephone facilities. Inquire at 1116 Louisiana between 6:00 and 7:00 p.m.
KOOMS FOR graduate girl students,
cooking privileges if designed - refriger-
tion, 2 blocks from campus. Phone
2734M, 1224 Ohio.
AIR COOLED rooms and apt. for boys.
beds. 2 blocks from campus. ph
3331.
ROOMS for rent for summer—includes
two cool basement rooms. Two blocks
from campus, one block from bus. 1339
Ohio. W. P. Meek. 26
ROOMS for girl summer students. One
room for boys per month.
1241 Louisiana, phone 1784-7.
Transportation
WANTED-ride daily during summer
womens from Plaza, K.C. to KU. Call
Womens
DRIVING TO Philadelphia -want three drivers to help with expenses and drive-
ing. Can leave anytime after June 4th, if necessary. Call Jack Franken, 2041.
WANTED - Two riders going to western Kansas. Passing through Phillipsburg, Kansas. Moving to Burling City. Leaving afternoon, March 3 or morning of June 26. Phone 1469-J.
LEAVING FOR Pittsburgh, Kansas June 3,
soon after 10:00 a.m. can take four.
See Robert P. Meiers at reserve desk at
library between 8:00 and 12:00 June 1. 26
COMMUTING daily from Kansas City to Lawrence for the summer. Would like to attend the attending summer school. Call Buzz Muckenhaler, H15350, Kansas City, Mo.
COMMUTING daily to KU summer
K.C., Mo. Riders wanti
Call Li-0890
DRIVING to Buffalo. New York. Leaving
Crawford. Can take two passengers.
Call Crawford. Phone 317-685-2688
LEAVING for Tucson, Ariz., after 26
LEAST. Want passenger to share expenses
See Jack Emerson, 1009
Maine, between Fridays 24.
LEAVING for Columbus, Georgia Jun
5th. Have room for two passengers.
Phone 1580J. 26
Miscellaneous
EFFECTIVE Sunday, May 23 (Sunday only) we will be open from 12:00 (noon) morning, serving meals. Shaver's Cafe, one mile south of Lawrence on Hiawney 59.
TO GRADUATES of 1948: Remember your commencement in pictures. Call 1960M. and make arrangements for place last time. Overnight service after June lst.
DANCE every Saturday night at Odd Kellows hall. Informal. Joe Langworthy's orchestra. rites
Lost
REWARD to finder of Alpha P Phil Omega fraternity pin with name R. B. Stucky stamped on back. Call 1711-M . . . 26
NWO abnormal psychology spinal notebook. Bedtime night last week. Needed lady for finals. Stalpers, phone 2825, 705 Jennesse or Fraser Hall 304 . . . 26
A tennis coat with my name on it. Phone 2323, Allegra D. McElroy . . . 26
WOMAN's swater, salmon dress, knit cardigan. Tuesday evening, May 19. call out of car near auditorium or Saloon. Reward. Call 289 .
BROWN motorcycle riding belt, decorations and "Bob" jacket on Wednesday, May 19. Wander please call 2050 . . . 26
YELLOW GOLD Waltham, cordovan
YELLOW GOLD Waltham, cordovan
Y9LL room in library.
1991. Burk. Work 72.
35
In 1947 one-sixth of all the carload freight in the United States originated in Pennsylvania.
Eye
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UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE TWELVE
TUESDAY, MAY 25, 1948
General Motors Sets Pattern With Wage Hike
Detroit, May 25—(UP)—General Motors corporation broke big industry's line against a third round of wage increases for labor today with an 11-cent hike for its 225,000 auto workers under a precedent-setting cost-of-living formula.
G. M. and officials of the C.I.O. United Auto Workers reached an agreement at dawn after 20 hours of bargaining. The company immediately offered a similar plan to its C.I.O. United Electrical Workers and set a meeting for 3 p.m. today.
The agreement, described by G.M. Vice-President Harry W. Anderson as an "entirely new approach to the living cost problem," averted a strike by G.M.'s production workers set for Friday.
It also is expected to set a pattern for settlement of the strike of 73,000 Chrysler corporation workers and for wage pacts in other industries.
Under the pact, G.M. production workers get an 8-cent hourly cost of living increase and a 3-cent hike based on annual industrial efficiency improvement.
Terms of the agreement, subject to ratification by union members, provide that wages be adjusted up or down each three months to conform with fluctuations in the consumer price index of the federal bureau of labor statistics.
However, the company and union agreed that only 5 of the 8 cents in cost-of-living raise will be lost by reductions if the consumer price index goes down sharply.
Main provisions of the cost-of living wage formula included:
1. An 8-cent hourly raise now, based on a rise in the consumer price index from 100.2 in 1940 to 169.3 for April, 1948.
2. A 3-cement raise now and another on May 29, 1949, as an annual improvement factor to increase the standard of living.
3. Quarterly adjustments in the cost of living factor, up or down, with 1-cent an hour added or subtracted for each rise or drop of 1.4 lpoints in the consumer price index. The drop is limited to 5 cents.
4. Wages under the formula and contract provisions cannot be changed until May 29,1950,a two-year period. There is no retroactive feature to the contract.
Marionette Show Given Today
Nineteen students in the marianette class of Miss Maud Ellsworth associate professor of education, will present a marianette show at 4 p.m. today in Fraser theater. The public is invited.
The theme is built around holiday seasons. The students are majors in art education or occupational therapy.
The season or day for which each student made his marionette are:
Charles H. Shafer, New Year, Jam M. Archibald and Janis M. Rutherford, St. Valentine's day; Mary Virginia Douglass, Martha J. Gragg and Lily Stoll, St. Patrick's day; Norm Jean Doctor, Malaryn Spake Peck and Arlene Williams, Easter.
Betty Jo Brewer, Billie Jean Burt-scher, and Shirley J. Sandurd, circus season; Bette E. Davis, Phyllis E. Debus, and Margaret P. John, first day of school; Martha Pennock and Marvel A. Senti, Halloween; Helen M. Miller, Christmas and Mary H. Schreck, old year.
Must Apply By Tomorrow
For Forum Board Chairman
Applications for chairman of the Forums board of the All Student Council should be submitted to James D. Petersen. 1240 Tennessee, before 3 p.m. tomorrow.
The duties of the Forum board chairman include the arrangement and management of student forums and co-operation with the department of visual education in presenting movies.
By Bibler
Little Man On Campus
40MM INCHES HIGH
12MM APPROX. WEIGHT
TIME
TRUCK HEIGHT
X=WEIGHT
Z=TRUCK SIZE
FIND $\frac{X}{Z}$
PLAN X
TIMES BOOK
Fitzger
KU Geologist In California As Witness, Witnesses HCL
"If you'd ask me, I'd say those engineers were up to something."
The high cost of living in California made a great impression on Earl Nixon of the state Geological survey during his recent stay in San Francisco.
Mr. Nixon was an expert witness for a mining company which sued the government for damage done by the backing up of water behind Shasta, second largest concrete dam in the world.
San Francisco prices cited by Mr. Nixon were hotel rooms from $6 to $7.50, breakfast as high as $1.50, dinner $2.50 to $3, haircuts costing 75 cents in Lawrence, $1.25, and shoe-strings costing 10 cents in Kansas City, 25 cents.
Not only is California experiencing high prices, but also a building boom he added. He lived in Pado Alto, near San Francisco, previous to 1945. When he visited his old home during this trip he found that entire areas, vacant then, had been built up with new homes in the past three years and building is booming even now.
One hundred dollars is being offered by the Nebraska Masquers chapter of the National Collegiate Players for the best original play-writing script submitted before Nov. 1.
In explaining the condemnation suit, Mr. Nixon said that he had been called as a witness by the mining company because he was familiar with the area and had examined the property now under the waters of Shasta dam. The dam is 602 feet high and has backed up a lake behind it for 35 miles. He said the mining company sued the government because when the lake filled th valley behind the dam, it cut off the company's road and messed up its transportation.
Manuscripts must be original. If the play has been previously produced, a statement of the time and place of presentation must accompany the script. The name and address of the author should be on a separate page. All scripts must be typed on one side of the paper only and must be securely bound. Any number of plays, each accompanied by a $1 registration fee, may be submitted.
Nebraska Actors Open Play Contest
Entries must be sent to the play contest committee, University of Nebraska Masquers, Temple theater, 12 and R street, Lincoln, Neb.
Send Letters To Law Grads
Almost 1700 letters were recently sent to alumni of the University School of Law in an appeal for money for the William L. Burdick library addition to Green hall.
Those who spoke on the need for the memorial library at the alumni meeting were S. S. Alexander, King-man; Howard D. Elegman, Salina; Judge Harry Fischer, Fort Scott; Robert Helsel, Wichita; Judge Karl N. Miller, Dodge City; Judge Wallace Anderson, Iola; and Dean Morleau. Eugene Coombs, Wichita, presided.
The letters were sent previous to a meeting of University alumni who attended the Kansas State Bar association meeting May 21 in Wichita.
"The meeting was expected to give impetus to the project," said Dean F. J. Moreau of the School of Law.
The first move for the new building was made in December following a decision made by the University administration and the faculty and alumni of the School of Law. The memorial will honor the late William L. Burdick, former dean of the School of Law and at one time vice-chancellor.
The Rev. Harold G. Barr, dean of the School of Religion, gave the baccalaureate address to 174 seniors at Liberty Memorial High school Sunday.
The proposed fire-proof addition will be large enough for almost three times as many books as are in the present law library.
LMHS Seniors Hear H. G. Barr
His topic was "Tomorrow, Tomorrow, and Today." He suggested that people should learn how to live today rather than wish for yesterday or dream about tomorrow.
The second issue of Trend magazine, published by the Quill club, is being sold on the campus today and tomorrow. Conies may be bought in Frank Strong hall, the Union building, and Fraser hall.
Trend Magazine On Sale Today
The magazine contains a short story by R. W. Taylor, graduate student, and two poems by Mary Jane Dean, graduate student, who won the Quill club spring creative writing contest. Short stories and poems by members of the club are also included in the magazine.
W. J. Prieb Wins Essay Contest
Wesley J. Prieb, graduate student, has been awarded first prize of $100 in the Hattie Elizabeth Lewis essay contest and George J. Niedermann, College sophomore, the third prize of $50, Prof. Mattie Crumrine, chairman of the judging committee, announced today.
Elmer F. Beth, acting director of the school of journalism, and member of the committee, said that a second prize was not awarded because the committee felt that none of the six other papers entered merited it.
The Hattie Elizabeth Lewis Memorial was established in 1911 by Prof. George D. Patrick of Washington, D.C. A portion of the fund which constitutes the memorial is awarded each year in prizes for essays on applied Christianity.
Prieb's winning essay was antitled, "The Teachings of Jesus and Race Relations." Niedermann wrote on "Christian Unity and World Peace."
the faculty committee which judged the essays was composed of Miss Crumrine, professor of Romance languages; J. R. Ashton, assistant professor of Romance languages; George Anderson, associate professor of history; and Professor Beth.
2 Will Attend NSA Meeting
Dorothy J. Scroggy, College junior, and Robert K. Thayer, education sophomore, will represent the University at the National Student association convention, to be hel. Aug. 23 to 28 at the University of Wisconsin.
This will be the second convention of this type for the association. The first was held in August, 1947, when representatives of 351 colleges attended.
The association intends to set up a lobby in Washington, D. C. to watch over actions effecting the American student.
The association has 137 member colleges and universities. The University of Kansas has not yet joined Miss Scroggy and Thayer are going to the convention to participate in the work shops, meetings, and general activities, and will report to officials who will consider the advisability of the University joining. They are being sent by the All Student Council.
Dan Palmquist Is Elected
Dan A. Palmquist, education senior, was elected president of the University Players Monday.
Other new officers are Mary K
Booth, vice - president; Marilyn
Elaine Magner, secretary; and Milton
D. Commons, treasurer.
Newman Coffee Club Sunday
The last Newman coffee club o the year will be held Sunday, immediately after the 10 o'clock Mass, Charles Svoboda, Newman club president, said today. Coffee and rolls will be served in the basement of the church.
KU Orchestra Plays Well In Final Concert
By CRYSTAL CHITTENDEN
The University Symphony orchestra, in a superb performance Monday night, brought to a close the series of spring concerts sponsored by the School of Fine Arts. The 85 musicians played as one, following Mr. Wiley's baton and interpreting the numbers of Glinka. Beethoven, and Schumann. Although the audience was small, it was ardent in its applause of the orchestra's performance.
The orchestra projected sensuous richness to the modern, Slavic "Overture" from Glinka's "Russian and Ludmilla". This overt posture portrays the impetus national music of Russia and proved to be a good opening number because it is lively and energetic.
Jack Moehlenkamp, pianist, was the only featured soloist of the evening, playing Beethoven's difficult "Concerto No. 4 in G Major." Although the symphony had only five rehearsals on this number they played an inspired accompaniment to Mr. Moehlenkamp's brilliant piano playing. Fine balance existed between the orchestra and piano.
A change in mood from the major to the minor was made when Schumann's "Symphony No. 4 in D Minor" was played by the orchestra in the final number. This symphony is full of flowing yet tricky and fast melodic themes, and although there seemed to be a few rough spots in the scherzo movement, on the whole a distinctive interpretation was given.
Those playing piano selections are Frank White, Duncan Roger Butts, Twila Wagner, and Catherine Spailing.
Eighteen students from the School of Fine Arts will present the last of the advanced student recitals at 7:30 p.m. today in Frank Strong auditorium.
Three faculty members, J. M. Keeglog, professor of architecture, Karl Mattern, professor of drawing and painting, and Ray Ottinger, interior design instructor, judged the exhibit. Winners were selected on the basis of originality, color scheme, and form. Members of Delta Phi Delta were ineligible to win ribbons in the contest.
Pearl Campbell, Kathryn Walter, Theresa Colton, Mildred Garrison, Gregory Simms, Calvin Curtis Glover, and Dorothy Pennington will present vocal solos.
Violin solos will be played by Dale Bryan, Betty Tharp, and Sally Trembly.
Maurice Pollom will present a cello selection.
Other winners in the exhibit are William Kiene, engineering junior, and Joan Gardner, fine arts senior, who placed second and third respectively, in the water color division, and O. J. Buyan and Thespa Stapaures, second and third in the miscellaneous division.
An oil painting by Irene Marshall, fine arts junior, a water color by Richard Anderson, fine arts senior, and a pencil sketch by Nancy Page, fine arts sophomore, have been named blue ribbon winners in the Delta Phi Delta all-student art exhibit displayed for three days in front of Robinson gymnasium.
Win Ribbons In Art Show
The program will close with a string ensemble number played by Fred Palmer, violin; Lyle Wolfroe cello; and Edith Maxine Dunkleberg, piano.
Student Recital At 7:30 Today
Sikes To Talk In Kansas City
J. V. Sikes, head football coach,
will speak tonight in Kansas City,
Mo., at the annual Men's club father
and son dinner.
The dinner will be at the Country Club Congregational church.
O C
University Daily Kansan STUDENT NEWSPAPER OF THE UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Faculty Discuss Substitute Plan For Languages
A substitute for language requirements was discussed and forwarded to the executive committee of the College faculty for further study at a meeting Tuesday. A request from the department of physics for revision of their pre-requisite requirements was also tabled for more detailed investigation.
Requests were made by the journalism and psychology departments for additional courses. The journalism department asked that a two hour junior-senior course in public communications promotion be added to the curriculum and the psychology department asked for a five hour junior-senior course in physiological psychology. These requests were passed on to the administrative committee for further study.
The faculty proposed that courses in the culture of France, Spain, Latin America, Germany and other countries be given as an alternative to students who do not desire to study foreign languages. If the new request is passed students in the College would be required to take hours in one of the two fields.
The committee did not specify the number of hours required in the new course to fill University rules. Also the request is as yet so general that it wasn't specified whether the student could divide total hours required between the "civilization" courses, and languages.
Honor Kansan Ad Promotion
The promotional advertising of the University Daily Kansan is praised in the current issue of the Editor and Publisher.
T. S. Irvin in an article called, "Big-Time Promotion Begins On Campus," tells about Kansas promotional efforts. He names and describes advertising stunts such as the Bibler cartoon books, the float in the Kansas Relays parade, and the post cards which are sent to Lawrence merchants.
The purpose of the article is to show that promotional advertising for publications can be taught in the class room. There is no organized plan in this country for teaching promotion. This fact has worried publishers for some time.
The William Allen White School of Journalism and Public Information has been teaching promotion through practical experience on the University Daily Kansan. This fall, according to John Malone, instructor of journalism and promotional advisor to the Kansan, a new course in promotional advertising will be offered.
"Incidentally," Mr. Malone added, "this article in the Editor and Publisher is a good advertisement for the Kansas. We will probably get letters inquiring about our methods of promotion and we might get some more national advertising as a result of the article."
William Dill, Roger James, James B. Morris, Wister Shreve, and Don Tennant, student promotional workers during the year, and Lee S. Cole, instructor in journalism and business advisor to the Kansas, also contributed to the promotion campaign.
Foster Awarded Fellowship
Charles Vernon Foster, assistant instructor in chemical engineering, has been awarded a research fellowship at the University of Delaware. Foster, a graduate, will complete work for his master's degree this summer before going East.
Last Jayhawker To Be Out June 3
The final issue of the Jayhawk magazine will be distributed at the Union book store June 3, Keith Wilson, editor, has announced.
Students leaving before June 3 may leave their name and address at the Jayhawker office in the Union. A copy will be mailed them. Philip Wylie, a nationally-known fiction writer, has written a guest editorial on education for this issue, Wilson said.
Senior Artists To Show Work
The design, and drawing and painting departments of the School of Fine Arts will present their senior exhibit June, July and August. Seniors in both departments will exhibit examples of their work
The design department exhibit will be in the south gallery of Spooner-Thayer museum of art, and will include abstract design, fashion illustration, travel posters, advertising layouts, silk screen, magazine covers, and illustrations.
Students who will be represented are Richard Anderson, Paul Benson Jeanne Gorbutt Bowman, Austin Harmon, Lorita Higginbottom, Alison Jones, Donald Kane, Jacquelyn Logan, Irene Marshall, Barbara Meyer, Eileen O'Connor, Dale Oliver, Virginia Parry, Evangeline Pratt Billy Schafer, Pat Dye Shahanam Mary Catherine Shatzel, Mary Katherine Sins, Dorothy Stoeltzing, George Stone, and Mary Yost.
An exhibit of about 40 water colors and drawings will be displayed by the drawing and painting department in the north gallery of the museum. Seniors exhibiting are Esther Black, Dora Ann Brown, Helen M. Dietzel, Joan Gardner, and Donald Humphrey.
Additional exhibits of more than 50 examples of life drawing, sketching, composition, still life, and portrait painting will be in the east wing of the third floor of Frank Strong ball and in 315 Frank Strong. This exhibit includes two winning murals in the Clay mural project by Billy Lakey, fine arts junior, and Arthur D. Moore, fine arts sophomore.
Mrs. Nelson Heads Women's Club
Mrs. Carl Nelson was elected president of the board of the University Women's club at a meeting held Tuesday at the home of Mrs. Deane W. Malott, the retiring president.
Other new board members are Mrs. Karl Klooz, vice-president; Mrs. Kenneth Jochim, recording secretary; Mrs. Paul Roofe, corresponding secretary; Mrs. George Anderson, treasurer; and Mrs. Clayton Crosier, finance chairman.
Members of the new board were introduced to their duties and received the books and materials pertaining to their offices at the meeting. The retiring board members were also present.
Mrs. Ethan Allen, social chairman; Mrs. J. W. Twente, program chairman; Mrs. Elmer F. Beth, publicity chairman; Mrs. Gerald Carney, newcomer's chairman; Mrs. Ralph Clark, assistant to the newcomer's chairman; Miss Helen Lohr, Mrs. M. D. Chubb, and Mrs. C. A. Thomas, members at large.
Sue Rose Mounce, education junior, was notified today that she is the winner of a "Week at the Waldorf" contest.
KU Junior Wins Free Trip,
A Week At The Waldorf.
She will receive an expense-paid trip to New York June 13 to 19. Miss Mounce was selected by the art staff of a New York advertising agency.
Didn't Do It Faurot Claims On Rule Change
Columbia, Mo., May 26-(UP)—Missouri university athletic director Don Faurot today denied charges that he was responsible for the change in the Big Seven conference eligibility rule.
"By making such accusations, those protesting the eligibility rule certainly are belittling the integrity of the Big Seven faculty representatives by inferring I could control their vote." Mr. Faurot said.
Mr. Faurot answered the charges made by Henry Bubb, president of the Kansas university alumni association, in Toneka.
The exchange of statements was the result of a decision reached by faculty advisors to the conference which limited eligibility to four years beyond the high school level. The conference had formerly counted as only junior college completion as only one year in the conference.
Mr. Faurot would not comment on the interpretation. Missouri President Frederick Middlebush also refused to comment.
The Kansas alumni president had stated "it is regrettable that Big Seven athletes will feel the axe of Don Faurot's animosity over the Lee's Summit incident."
Missouri and Kansas were in a heated argument several years ago when all-around athlete Forrest Griffith allegedly was recruited to attend Kansas University from Lee's Summit, Mo.
Appeal Filed In Ellis Case
The disputed ownership of the Ellis bird library, stored at the Uaiiversity and valued at an estimated $100,000, will be decided by the state supreme court. The appeal was filed Monday by the state of Kansas, representing the University's claim to the library. Irene Ellis, widow of the deceased owner, filed a cross appeal.
The district court had previously decided that the University and the widow each held a half interest in the library that was compiled by Ralph Ellis, an ornithologist. Mr. devotee, Ellis entire life to the study of birds, the collection of specimens, and writing on the subject.
At the time of his death, Mr. Ellis was experiencing financial difficulty and, according to the declarations in the case, gave the library to the University on condition that the school would furnish the necessary housing. The district court held that the agreement between the University and Mr. Ellis was not a will but a contract, and that the widow was entitled to half ownership.
Friesen Chosen Head Cheerleader
Ernest Friesen, College sophomore, will be the head cheerleader next year, it has been announced by the traditions committee of the All Student Council.
Dorothy Scroggy, College junior,
will be the assistant to Friesen.
Treasurer Donates $100
In Name Of Pat Thiessen
Charles B. Hoimes, Lawrence treasurer of the Memorial association, has donated $100 to the memorial fund in the name of Patrick H. Thiessen. College junior.
Thiessen is chairman of the student memorial committee and the donation was made in recognition of his work with that committee.
Fraternity Advisor To Give Continuity'
Woodruff Says University Official May Act 'In Other Capacities'
The best argument for the proposed fraternity advising plan is shown by the fact that current presidents of Greek organizations know nothing of the plan, L. C. Woodruff, dean of men, said this morning.
Installation of Alpha Rho chapter of Phi Lambda Upsilon, national honorary chemical society, will be held at the University June 3.
Chemical Society Organized Here
Twenty-nine faculty members and graduate students, who have been organized as the University of Kansas Honor society in Chemistry, will be initiated. Dr. L. D. Audrieth national vice-president from the University of Illinois, will be presided to by A. A. Cappion from Alpha Epsilon chapter at Kansas State college will also be present.
Faculty members to be initiated are Ray Q. Brewster, William J. Grewinger, Paul Gilles, Elenes Gorenggo, George W. Stratton, and Henry Werner.
Graduate students are Herbert H Barber, Thomas C. Bean, H. Leon Bradlow, Donald De Ford, Hugh B Donahoe, Richard L. Ferm, Jumon F. Goodrich, Arthur Helin, Sam H Seen, Vance Kirkland, Warren K. Lowen, John T. Minor, Leo Patton, John A. Joie, Paul-W. Renick, Robert R. Russell, William Schechter
Edgar Seyb, Stephen E. Stephanou, Raymond W. Stoenney, Richard H. Wallace, Thomas P. Whaley, and Zingaro.
Fa. members who have been initiated at other schools are Arthur W. Davidson, Kappa; Jacob Klein-pha, Phila; William McEwen, Kappa; Chappie Revolds, Iota; Calvin Vander Worf, Epsilon; and Harry Christoffers, Epsilon.
Alpha Rho will be the 40th chapter of Phi Lambda Upsilon, which was established at the University of Illinois in 1899.
Choir To Present Bach's Cantata
The Trinity Lutheran church chair directed by Ben Shanklin, fine arts senior, will present the cantata, "Ein Feste Burg," (Bach), at 4 p.m. Sunday at the Trinity Lutheran church, 1245 New Hampshire, The cantata is on the theme of Martin Luther's "A Mighty Fortress is Our God."
A poll conducted Tuesday by the University Daily Kansan indicated that 29 out of 35 fraternities and sororites knew nothing of the proposed
Solists with the choir will be Charity Fischer, and Robert A. MacKinnon, fine arts juniors, and Mr. and Mrs. John Maurer, Lawrence. The organist accompanying the choir will be James Strub, College freshman. Piano accompaniment will be played by Miss Grace Endacott, Lawrence.
Shanklin will also play on the organ "Prelude and Fugue in D Major," (Bach). Robert Jerald Hamilton, fine arts senior, will play "Organ Fugue on Ein Feste Burg" (Bach).
The church junior choir, directed by Shanklin, will sing two Bach numbers.
WEATHER
Kansas—Fair east, partly cloudy and a little warmer west today and tonight. Thursday partly cloudy and a little warmer.
Dean Woodruff was commenting on the plan which was discussed in a speech by J. Alden Trovillo, former professor of industrial management, given before the Society for the Advancement of Management May 20.
"The lack of knowledge of the very existence of the plan on the part of the presidents for the present semester shows that there is need of continuity for sororites and fraternities between officers during the semester," Dean Woodruff said.
"As I stated previously, the president of every fraternity on the campus last fall was interviewed concerning the plan. I have, on file in my office, a record of the men who participated in the 19 fraternities then interviewed, 10 were definitely in favor, 3 disapproved, and 6 had no opinion."
He explained that the existence of an advisor would provide continuity between groups of officers, and, in effect, be a force "tending to give coherency through the years." Each new chapter president would then know the details of the preceeding officer's term. The details would carry over from semester to semester.
The plan would be similar to those used by commercial firms. The matter of financial advising would be handled by one man with an office on the campus. He would keep an accurate record on all receipts and expenditures, and give books to show the financial standing of the group at any time.
Since the adviser would be a member of the University staff, minor emergency repairs, odd jobs, and "fixit" service could be provided by the repair staff of the University dormitories.
It is also probable that the adviser would act in other capacities than financial advice. Various problems which might arise during the course of a year would be brought before the advisor by the fraternities and sororites. The adviser could then work at the work station for conjunction with University authorities and thus provide continuity through the year.
"For the first year, the plan will probably be limited to a very few organizations; probably not more or five or six," Dean Woodruff added.
When interviewed, Ray Roberts, local manager of Fraternity Management, Inc., said "In addition to the 14 groups now using our service, we have advised, at various times during the past 19 years, eight other fraternal organizations. We have advised the chapters and their house superintendent of finances. Our financial policies are stilled in all the groups that we now have and in all the groups that we have had. In addition, our policies are necessarily a part of the other groups on the campus."
Dean Woodruff said that the financial adviser plan cannot be put into operation until such time as a competent man can be found. He does not expect the plan to go into operation until sometime next fall, if then.
In a statement issued this morning, Paul Hill, treasurer of the Kappa Sigma fraternity, said certain remarks of his past grand master, Arthur Partridge, had been misunderstood in the poll of the fraternities and soveriors. "The consensus of the house is that we as a fraternity are not in favor of a University financial advisor," he added.
PAGE TWO
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
JAVA EE
WEDNESDAY, MAY 28. 1948
An Open Letter -
morgan — mack motor company
609 MASSACHUSETTS LAWRENCE,
TELEPHONE 277
KANSAS
University of Kansas FORD'S OUT FRONT
May 26,1948
To the Class of 1948:
With this, the closing of the most successful in seventy-six years of University of Kansas history, I should like to take the opportunity to congratulate you upon your approaching graduation, in behalf of our entire organization, The Morgan-Mack Motor Company.
It has indeed been a pleasure to support you as students, and to serve you as our customers. We sincerely hope that we shall soon have another opportunity to serve you when you return to Lawrence, and to the University, as alumni.
We extend to you our best wishes for success in your chosen fields; may your accomplishments continue to grow as they have in your years here, at the University of Kansas.
Your achievement is a noble one.
Very sincerely yours,
L. E. Morgan, president
Morgan - Mack Motor Co,
YOUR FRIENDLY Ford DEALER
WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE THREE
Official Bulletin
May 26,1948
All pre-medics accepted for 1948 classes who will enroll in medicine during summer session report to 164 Haworth hall immediately.
All Tau Beta Pi members sign address roster in the office of the dean.
Formal pledging of new Jay Janes. 5 p.m. today, Pine room, Union. Old members wear uniforms.
K.U. Dames bridge, 7:30 tonight,
1st floor, Union.
Christian Science organization meeting, 7:30 p.m. tomorrow, Danforth chapel.
All parking regulations will be strictly enforced during final week. After finals and before beginning of summer session, regulations will be in effect on Jayhawk drive only.
Two Win Archery Medals
—University Parking Comm.tee
Alice G. Myers, College freshman, and Dorothea L. Hodgson, education junior, won the gold and bronze medal in the Archery club tournaments.
Miss Myers had a score of 313 and Miss Hodgson had 295 points. This tournament was the final meeting of the Archery club for this school year.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
University Daily Kansan
Mall subscription: $3 a semester, $4.50 a year. (in Lawrence add $1.00 a semester postage). Published in Lawrence, Kans., every afternoon during the University of Kansas summer 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.
Gabardine Flannel Tropical Mohara Palm Beach
SLACKS
Smartly cut slacks in Solid Colors, Checks and Plaids.
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Keep an assortment of our flavorful cookies on hand. They're tops for those midnight snacks. From 20c doz.
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DRAKE'S
Our Congratulations Class of 1948
We have enjoyed serving you, and offer our best wishes for your future.
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1305 W. 7th
Parking Space Sunday
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Paired for Center-Aisling
Choose this engagement and wedding ring ensemble for the perfection of its seven diamonds . . . for the way the ingenious setting enhances the gems. Classic styling for enduring loveliness.
ROBERTS
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833 Mass. Ph. 827
Complete Line Men's and Ladies Toiletries Stowits REXALL Store
Attend the Topeka Drive-in Theater 25th and California First Show . 8 p.m.
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DRAKE'S
PAGE FOUR
W3M W2VM W4MR W5MM
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1948
Congratulations and Best Wishes
GRADUATION
to the Class of '48
Duck's Tavern 824 Vt. Ph. 2098
Swope's Dress Shop
943 Mass. Ph. 603
Rapid Transit Co.
620 Mass. Ph. 388
Hillside Pharmacy No.1 9th and Ind. Ph.1487
Lawrence Surplus
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Skillet's Tavern 1906 Mass. Ph.3304
Mettner's Hillside Fountain 1847 Mass. Ph.3369
Miller's Furniture
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Motor-In One Stop Station 827 Vr. Ph.607
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Barteldes Seed Co.
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Lawrence National Bank
647 Mass. Ph. 70
Dixie's Carmel Corn Co.
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Lescher's Shoe Shop
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Sowder-Kay Drug Co.
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Roy Lawrence Market 906 Mass. Ph.272
Dot and Ed's Service Lunch 7301/2 Mass. Ph. 2003
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Litwin's
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Corn's Studio of Beauty
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Rowlands Book Stores
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Winter Chevrolet Co.
729 N. H. Ph. 77
738 N. H. Ph. 7
Ray's Cafe
4 miles N.E. on U.S. 40
Bucheim Service Station 1901 Mass. 3063
Ernie's Jayhawk Grill 13 E.9th
WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE FIVE
Socially Speaking-
Only Final Week Could Bring KU's Social Life To A Close
Mu Phi Initiates
Mu Phi Epsilon, national honorary music society, held initiation services May 22 at the Castle Tea room for 14 new members.
New initiates were Shirley Brown, Sally Trembly, Anne Ellis, Iva Belle Flora, Nancy Ruthoff, Mary Elizabeth Kerr, Margaret Jean Hanna, Marian Downing, Jeanne Peck, Maxine McVicker, Mary Van Houten, Betty Hayward, Margaret Jane Lutz, and Jacquelyn Stoops.
During the luncheon which followed the initiation services, a skirt was presented by the initiates. Eve-Jyn Swarthout Hayes was the guest speaker.
AKL Pledges
Alpha KappaLambda fraternity announces the recent pledging of Brownell W. Landes, Jackson, Mo.; and Richard D. Fletcher, Washington-
- *
AKL Spring Picnic
Alpha Kappa Lambda held its annual picnic at Holcomb's grove May 23.
Guests were Grace Vaniman, Lorna Rink, Marie Bardwell, Phyllis Wilson, Marian Mills, Mary Alice Lobaugh, Harriet Easter, Mary Anna Vard, Rosemary Stafford, Elizabeth Sawenson, Roselyn Skonberg, Barbara Lux, Sybil Klimam, Ernestine Pallium, Dorothy Hogan, Harriet Conner, Gloria Canfield, Vivian Kyle and Georgianna Kyle, Wellsville; Lois House, Joan Glasscock, Nina Wagonish, and Barbara Huggins, Kansas City, Mo.
Chaperons were Mr. and Mrs.
Warren Alexander and Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Kanehl.
Tri Chi Guests
Tril Guesses
Guests at Tri Chi fraternity's anniversary dinner May 22 were Jeanne Smith, Gloria Holton, Nora Lea Temple, Helen Manka, Joan Bennett, Marian Cox, Clara Children, Marilyn Lindberg, Laura Iguchi, and Peggy Townsend.
Chaperons were Prof. and Mrs William McEwen and Mr. and Mrs George Yeckel.
Delta Tau Delta held its annual spring formal at the chapter house May 22. An oriental theme was used for the party.
Delt Spring Formal
Guests were Jean Sullivan, Eunice Carlson, Sally Stepper, Retta Jo Landis, Mary Kauffman, Betty Martin, Mary Belle Sheepard, Ann Guyer, Barbara Fletcher, Barbara Bara, Marilyn Glover, Patricia Brubaker, Kathryn O'Leary, Glenda Luehring, Shirley Rice, Rosalie Bishop, Ann Kerman, Barbara Lamoreaux, Marie Touhey, Bonnie Cunningham, Helen Dietzel, Mary Margaret Moore, Rozanne Croff, Margaret Logan, Patricia Perkins, Georgia Hann, Jane Belt, Elizabeth McCune.
Patti Link, Jean Clarkson, Ruth Ruton, Mary Brown, Carol Prochaska, Nanette Hyer, Barbara Wuerth, Patricia Cook, Rebecca Davidson, Emily Tricket, Jeanette Maldoon, Joan Manuel, Helen Slaybaugh, Lucille Murray, Marilyn Jones, Louise Warner, Shirley Griggsby, Lola Branty, Marilyn Swensen, Carol Helmers, Carol Weigand, Marilyn Gibson,
Martha Lou Dunean, Bonnie Holden, Marjorie Funk, Norma Lea Jones, Lucy Reardon, Kathleen McClanahan, Barbara Ackerman, Mary Kinsvater.
Khushsa
Marcille Parker, Louise Pfum, Patricia Pfum, Alix Neville, Donn Kapp, Glenna Wallace, Perko Stubbs Barbara Groody, Connie Meyer, AmRoehl, Nancy Cristopher, Beverly Coldsnow, Marjorie Multlaup, Marilyn Seymour, Barbara Youngmeyer, Beverly Coulter, Charlotte Laig Gladyn Hunnakeh, atricia Doughman, Betty Hodap, Margaret Hazard, Mary Alice Passmann, Jon Culver, Betty Schenke, Janet Coulter, Mary Swinch, Jingle McClary Shirley Sieklin, Betty Eustice, Barbara Nesc, Patricia Hinshaw, Robert Crain, Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Numele, Mr. and Mrs. Dorwin Lampkin, James Maloney, and Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Rice.
Chaperons were Mrs. Nelle Hopkins, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Biery, Mrs. James W. Hooke, and Mrs. F. A. Benson.
Election Of Officers
Phi Kappa Tau announces the election of Alan Pickering, president; Gene Talbot, vice-president; Clarence Eyerly, secretary; and Austin Pickering, treasurer.
Phi Kappa Tau
Nine members of Phi Kappa Tau, new social fraternity organizing at the University, were initiated May 23 in ceremonies at Upsilon chapter at Nebraska Wesleyan university, Lincoln. George Wilson, national field secretary, and Paul DeCora, faculty advisor, accompanied the initiates.
Initiates were Edward Norris, Alan Pickering, Austin Pickering, William Oliver, Jack McFadden, Harry Lacy, Gordon Campbell, Gene Talbot, and Clarence Eyerly.
Kappa Sig's Pledge
Kappa Sigma announces the pledging of Richard Bibler, Eklhart.
Sigma Kappa announces the pinning May 20 of Barbara Burnham daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Burnham, Scotia, N.Y., to Paul Barker, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Barker, Edwardsville.
Miss Burnham wore a white orchid corsage. Dorothy Baldwin, who made the announcement, and Barbara Hanley, who wore the chocolates, each wore a corsage of white maroon - tipped carnations. Mrs. Mary Younkman, Sigma Kappa housemother, also wore a corsage of the carnations.
Burnham-Baker
KODACHROME IS SCARCE all over the world.
Weddings And Engagements
Miss Burnham is a College sophomore. Mr. Barker, a member of Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity, is employed by TWA in Kansas City, Mo.
Young-Geoffroy
Melba Jean Young, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. T. E. Young, Wichita, will become the bride of Kenneth
If you're going traveling this summer, better take a few rolls with you. We have 8 mm. Kodachromeboth magazines and rolls,16 mm.magazines and rolls,35 mm.cartridges.
P. S. we have a few flash bulbs too.
Mosser - Wolf, Cameras
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Caesar Feeling Better After Paint Removal
Caesar, the Beta mascot, who was given a coat of green paint by unknown persons early Friday morning, has returned from hospital. No lead-poisoning developed but it is reported that he is not up to par as yet.
W. Geoffroy, Solomon, at the First Baptist church in Wichita at 8 a.m. June 10. Dr. George D. McClelland will officiate at the single ring ceremony.
Miss Young is an education senior. Mr. Geoffry, an education senior, is a member of Phi Mu Alpha fraternity.
Hessel-Chambers
Mrs. H. M. Miller, Carruth hall housemother, announces the engagement of Nance Hessel, daughter of Mrs. Ted Hessel, Liberty, Mo., to Paul Chambers, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Chambers, Chanute. The wedding will be in August.
Miss Hessel wore an orchid corsage. Jane Tippin and Charlyne Oliver, who passed chocolates, received corsages of talsman rose buds. Mrs. Miller wore an orchid. Nancy Kastman sang "Tell Me Why."
Miss Hessel is a College junior, Mr. Chambers is an engineering senior
Brantley-Frazer
Mr. and Mrs. Frederick H. Brantley, Kansas City, Mo, announce the coming marriage of their daughter, Orpha, to Robert A. Frazer, son of Mr. and Mrs. R. A. Frazer, Kansas City, Mo. The announcement was made to members of Triangle fraternity by Lawrence Hyde.
Masner-Luman
☆ ☆
Mr. and Mrs. W. C. Magner, Parsons, announce the engagement of their daughter, Elaine, to Merrill J. Luman, son of Mr. and Mrs. M. F. Luman, Parsons.
Miss Magner is an education junior. Mr. Luman is a sophomore at Parsons Junior college.
Swart-Smoots
The pinning of Ethel Swart, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George M. Swart, Oakley, to Roy Edward Smooths, Kansas City, Mo., was announced at Corbin hall Sunday.
Miss Swart wore an orchid corsage. She was attended by Wilana Geppelt, and chocolates were passed by Dorothy Hoover. They both wore corsages of red roses. Mrs. Treva Brown, Corbin housemother who made the announcement, wore a corsage of gardenias.
Our Capitalist Society
Memphis, Tenn. —(UP)—Bonds Stocks was listed in the Memphis Press-Scimitar's church section. He came here from Jackson, Mich., to preach.
Another Leaning Tower
Hammond. Ind.—(UP)—Hammond is a rival of Pisa. Italy. The city has a leaning clock tower. It slipped out of line during a heavy wind-storm.
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Graduation Gifts
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New Portable Typewriters
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---
10
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANS AN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1948
PAGE SIX
Jayhawker Nine Runs Wild To Close Season With Win
Coach Russ Sehon's squad ran wild with an eight-run sixth inning to rout Kansas State Wildcats 10 to 2 in the season's finale Tuesday at Municipal park. The victory give the Jayhawkers four wins against 11 losses in league play, with a 3-4 standing in inter-conference competition.
Kansas scored first in the third when Medlock drew a pass, stole second,
Kansas scored first in the third advanced to third on a grounder and crossed the plate on Neal Shaw's single. K.U. tallied again in the fifth without the aid of a hit before breaking loose in the sixth. Hal May was safe on an error. After he had advanced to third on Charlie Medlock's bunt and a fielder's choice, Wildcat shortstop Dale Carr muffed Hammer's grounder allowing May to score.
In the sixth the Jayhawkers batted around, scoring eight runs on two safties as the Kansas State defense crumbled. Coach Lud Fiser's men committed six field miscues in this inning to help the Jayhawkers along.
The Wildcats got all their runs in the eighth with an assist from third baseman May. With two out and men on third and second, Shumaker hit to May. Instead of stepping on the bag for a force-out, he threw wild to first letting in two runs.
Although Duane Holder, Wildeat starting pitcher, had allowed only three safties, he was removed for Jack Bell in the sixth after four men had scored. Bell finished the game, giving up two runs on one hit.
Neal Shaw garnered two of the Javahawks three hits to lead KU hitting. He also got credit with three runs batted in. Belt got one for one to lead Kansas State hitters.
Guy Mabry got credit for the win his second, while Holder received his only loss of the season.
Mitchell, Shepard Team To Win Tennis Title
In a match played at 5:30 this morning, Mary Helen Shepard and Ruth Mitchell teamed up for Corbin to blast out a 6-2, 6-3, win over Shirley Hoffman and Charlyne Williams. Locksley, to take the womens doubles tennis title.
It was a matter of too much power and consistency as the Corbin pair continually took the net behind vicious serves to put the point away.
Read the Daily Kansan daily.
Greeks May Drop Award
Managers of fraternity intramural teams will be asked to decide whether the sweepstakes will be retained next year, whether it should be eliminated from the intramural program, or whether the trophy should be given only for the four major sports.
Don Powell, intramural director, decided to leave the choice largely up to the fraternities after a meeting of Greek representatives Tuesday. He explained that there has been a lot of controversy over the present system, and competition has become "poor sportsmanship" in many cases.
The Inter-fraternity council recently passed on a plan to count points in the four major sports—football, basketball, volleyball, and softball—toward the sweepstakes award.
Call K.U. 376 with your Want Ads
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Congratulations to June Graduates
IN THE GOOD OLE SUMMERTIME...
That's where they belong with their chirps and squeaks NOT in your car. If your car has "birdie squeaks" let FRITZ CO. remove them with an EXPERT LUBRICATION.
Shine up your car for summer! Simonize Kleener and Wax Johnson CARNU with Polish Cloth, $1.08 value, Both 69c
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It's Kroger for Better Values to cut the cost of Holiday Foods!
Get all your favorite foods at low prices. Kroger Stores will be closed on Monday.
Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers
Minute 8 oz
TAPIOCA box 16c
Embassy
OLIVES _ 9½ oz jar _ 29c
Shoulder
PORK ROAST __ lb __ 43c
Duff's 16 oz box
WHITE CAKE MIX ___ 34c
Frying CHICKENS lb 79c
Rainbo, 12 oz jar CRISPY-PIX PICKLES 31c
Rodeo Skinless
WEINERS ___ lb ___ 53c
So-li-cious 8 or jar Maraschino CHERRIES 29c
Kroger
Kroger CATSUP _ 14 oz bottle 19c
Crosse & Blackwell's
MUSHROOM SAUCE
Armour Star
HAM Shank Portion, lb 49c
Libbys, 12 oz can
CORNED BEEF ___ 49c
CLEUROX BLEACH
Cleans and Bleaches
qt bottle ___ 18¢
Krogers, qt jar
SALAD DRESSING ___ 63c
CLOROX BLEACH
6 oz bottle ___ 43c
Durkree Shredded 4 oz COCOANUT ---- can 19c
Kroger in tomato sauce
PORK AND BEANS
2 tall cans ___ 25c
Bliss Pure
GRAPE JAM 2 lb jar 29c
Crosse & Blackwell tall Fruit-Nut-Bread, can 23c
WATER MELONS
Florida Extra Sweet
whole ___ 5c lb
POTATOES
Calif. Long White
10 lb 59c
LEMONS
Large Juice
2 lb bag ___ 33c
TOMATOES
Fancy Ripe
Lb ctn. ___ 29c
GRAPEFRUIT
Texas Seedless
4 lb ___ 25c
Lean Streaked
SLICED BACON __ lb _63c
SIRLOIN STEAK . lb . 83c
Swifts Boneless
VEAL ROAST -- lb -- 63c
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THURSDAY, 3 Days
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YOU only HANG ONCE!
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Out of the Past
NICK SCOULS - RUDRA FLEMING - RICHARD WEIN
VARSITY
NOW thru THURSDAY
The Mystery of the Missing Phantom Ship
Bulldog DRUMMOND'S GREATEST CASE!
THE Challenge
TOM CONWAY rs Bulldog Drummond
TOM CONWAY as Bulldog Drummond
2nd Hit
Sunset CARSON
"DEADLINE"
Chap. 5
"CANADIAN MOUNTED"
PATEE TONITE ends SATURDAY
NEW...
ROMANTIC ADVENTURES
of RODIN HOOD!
Mr. Mason's Theatre
The Prince
Thieves
Joe Hall
Cinecolor
Jon Hall • Patricia Morrison • Adde Jensen
WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANS AN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE SEVEN
A CAREFULLY GIVEN permanent wave is the foundation you need to achieve the casual, easily managed hair styles that are so desirable for wear with the "new look".
Let us give you one now to carry you through all summer.
PHONE 430
BAND BOX
Beauty Shop
444 IND.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK 1920
Reservations
Reservations
Trip Time To Total Fare
Sioux Falls, S. Dakota 2 hr. 50 min. $ 23.40
Seattle, Washington 10 hr. 45 min. 104.08
Indianapolis, Indiana 3 hr. 05 min. 29.61
Miami, Florida 13 hr. 30 min. 82.52
Oklahoma City, Okla. 2 hr. 20 min. 21.79
Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan.
Reservations
Trip Time To Total Fare
Sioux Falls, S. Dakota 2 hr. 50 min. $ 23.40
Seattle, Washington 10 hr. 45 min. 104.08
Indianapolis, Indiana 3 hr. 05 min. 29.61
Miami, Florida 13 hr. 30 min. 82.52
Oklahoma City, Okla. 2 hr. 20 min. 21.79
CITY TICKET OFFICE
THE FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAWRENCE
MISS ROSE GIESEMAN, Mgr.
8th and Mass. Phone 30
Let US Picture YOU as a BRIDE...
Hilton's
721 Mass. Phone 41
Hixon's
721 Mass. Phone
Hizon's
SUMMER SESSION STUDENTS
The new system of obtaining books and supplies during registration and enrolment will again be applicable during the coming Summer Session.
YOU PROFIT
When you make this Store your Headquarters for Books and Supplies
STUDENT Union Book Store.
1984/05/26
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1948
PAGE EIGHT
WSSF Collecting Used Textbooks
A book drive, which will end June 3. is being conducted by the World Student Service Fund.
"The books will be sent to Europe to fill a great need for them," said Edward J. Chesky, College junior in charge of the drive. "Most European university libraries need books and in many places, textbooks for individual students.
Those students who have books to donate, can leave them in a box in the lobby of the Union or in the Union book store. Organized houses are asked to canvass their individual members and books collected may be turned in at the Y.M.C.O. office in the Union.
"The need for textbooks is greatest." Cheskey said. "However, students may bring in any books they have, regardless of their nature."
Delta Phi Delta Elects
Members of Delta Phi Delta, honory art fraternity, recently elected the following officers: Barbara Riverd, president; Ruth Balka, corresponding secretary; Joan Stephenson, historian; Guenivere Coerz, Pallett Editor.
Sail on out to Ray's Cafe Uncle Ed extends
congratulations to seniors and good luck to all.
SUNSHINE
Patronize the Advertisers in the University Daily Kansan.
'98-'48
The 4th "R"
'98-'48 The 4th "R"
'Reading
'Riting
'Rithmetic
Rowlands.
Together at K. U.for 50 Years
Read the University Daily Kansan—Patronize Its Advertisers.
DON'T FORGET!
Highest cash price paid for your used textbooks. Books used here at K.U. will be purchased by us. Your old and obsolete books will be purchased by a representative from Wilcox and Follett.
MON. TUES. WED.
May 31 June 1 June 2
STUDENT
Union Book Store
In Gifts For The
GRADUATE-
MAKE YOUR GIFT A PRACTICAL ONE.
Choose from our selection of
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On your Wedding Day the most beautiful flowers in all the world should be yours...
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ALLISON
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Flower Shop
941 Mass.
Phone 353
"Flowers by wire anywhere"
WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1948
---
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE NINE
Well Drillers Group Honors Five Men
Five local men were elected to honorary membership in the Kansas Water Well Drillers association at their special regional meeting in Larned May 21 and 22.
The chosen ones were Drs. R. C. Moore and J. C. Frye of the Geological Survey, Ogden S. Jones of the state board of health, George Knapp of the board of agriculture, and Dwight Metzler.
The organization will hold a regional meeting in Salina July 17. October 23 was the tentative date set for the annual meeting.
THE NEW FORD
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For Graduation, Weddings, Birthdays. Come in and see our fine selection.
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Congratulation CLASS OF "48" GOOD LUCK
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Ice Cream at its Best It's delicious!
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Last Day for UNUSUAL Camera Bargains
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It has four wheels, and a new engine but that's about all we'll know about the NEW FORD,'til June 18th
CAR HOME MOTOR SERVICE
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Take a break between finals!
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CONGRATULATIONS
CLASS OF 1948
"It's The Walker Shop for beautiful shoes"
Congratulations
and Sincere Good Wishes to K. U. Graduates and Faculty on completing another successful year.
THE Walker SHOP
813 Massachusetts
I will try to provide as much information as possible without guessing or relying on my understanding of the text.
If you need further assistance, please let me know what specific details you are referring to.
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
PAGE TEN
WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1943
The Editorial Page
Successor
It's time for the staff of the Daily Kansan to change again. After a nine week stint, the jobs are passed on to a new crew.
The skipper next fall will be Jim Robinson, College junior, from Columbus. Jim will fit neatly into the job of editor-in-chief as he has been quite active on the news side of this paper. He'll be doing a writing job that will cover local, national, and international affairs in giving you an insight into the happenings of the day.
Jim will get a start this summer on the editorial job as he handles this page twice a week on the Summer Session Kansan.
If you have something that you want to get off your chest, don't hesitate to drop Jim a letter and let him know what you think. The Letters to the Editor column should be the most active column in this paper.
Here's wishing Jim the most interesting and valuable nine weeks of his college career.
'Snob Hill'?
Dear Editor:
I wonder why Kansas State's enrollment has gone up a higher percentage than K.U.'s. Also, why have they beat us in basketball, football, and many other things in the last year or so for the first time in years? You don't suppose that it's because the friendly mid-western people (at least that is what many people call them) and many of our better athletes in the last few years have decided it would be a lot more socially educational to go elsewhere? After all this is "snob hill" where only Greek people can live a decent, well-rounded life. Of course, the filthy rich can rate some also.
Donald Herrman College sophomore
The Registrar, Mr. Hitt, reports that K.U.'s enrollment has increased 112 per cent, one of the two schools in this part of the country which has accomplished this feat. Kansas State has jumped from a pre-war level of approximately 3500 to a present figure of 7000 which would fall short of K.U.'s increase.
Is it possible that the writer of the above letter missed the Kansas State football debacle last fall?—Editor.
Approaching exams and the diminutive Daily Kansan notice notwithstanding, it's not quite heartening to see a University community, which supposedly spends a large part of its time getting at "the fine things of life," turns out hardly as many persons to witness the hard work and skill of the University symphony as would normally show up at an intramural softball game.
Little Applause
Dear Editor:
It must not be heartening, either, for the members of the orchestra, who have been greeted with praise and gratitude by various cities throughout this district to come back home and be greeted with scattered applause rattling forth from a near-empty auditorium.
Here is one warm thank-you to the University symphony orchestra, Jack Moeklenkamp, and Director Wiley for an excellent evening of music.
Scott Nininger College sophomore
Time To Withdraw
Dear Editor:
It is said that the new interpretation placed on an old eligibility requirement at the recent Big Seven meeting will terminate the football careers of several K.U. players.
The resolution was introduced by Sam Shirkey, representative from Missouri. How many Missouri players does this effect? None, as far as anyone knows, and if it does you may be sure that they aren't first string men. The vote was five to two with Kansas and Kansas State dissenting. It obviously doesn't effect too many men from the five schools voting for the resolution. It looks as if Don Faurot has given up trying to beat us on the gridiron and is now trying his hand over the conference table.
If K.U. loses the services of these players, we will be back where we were in the '30's—at the bottom of the conference. When we say the bottom, we not only mean the bottom in conference standings but also the bottom in gate receipts. This move will cost the University thousands of dollars in paid admissions.
It is reported that ten days prior to this conference several long distance telephone calls were placed to the University of Delaware to check on Red Hogan's participation in football at that University. Where they were made from no one is quite sure but some place in Missouri would be a good guess.
What can Kansas do? One thing! Withdraw from the Big Seven! We're big enough to do it. We're strong enough to do it. When any five schools out of a seven school conference gang up on one, with the sole purpose of weakening that school's athletic teams, then that conference is weak, and its time for a strong school to withdraw.
Harry A. McClure, Ben E. White Robert W. Merrick, Clark Churchill C. D. Williams, Harold Warwick Gordon Sondker, Robert Hollibaugh Clay Hedrick, Jr., R. H Piper, J. M. Hirschler, Renz Edwards, Jr., Morton Newell, Stan Staats, Rey Irwin, Don Owen, Bob Hughes, Matt Zimmermann, Bob Lindsay, Oliver Samuel, Walt Quiring, Richard Porter, Kenneth Ramsey, Dean M. Johnson, Richard C. Houseworth, Bob Danneberg, Michael L. Alt, Jim Sanders, John W. Hawley, Dale E. Oliver, Merle D. McCoy, William M. Regier, Bob Fountain, Rusty Baltis, John E. Hedrick, H. R. Maricle, D. L. Smart, K. F. Beck, H. E. Zoller, H. L. Sherwood, Jack M. Kendree, Hal England, Bruce B. Fitts, Louis A. Goering, Edward B. Marquis, Leonard C. Menzie, Robert W. Hess, James R. Porter, and Robert A. Franklin.
Since K.U. and K-State have joined forces in opposing the football eligibility, looks like Uncle Jimmy Green will get a rest at long last. Maybe the boys can take a jaunt over to Columbia—and paint Don Faurot.
Daily Hansan
University
Student Newspaper of the UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS
Member of the Kansas Press Assn., Natl.
Assn., and the Associated Collegiate
Press. Represented by the National Ad-
vertising Service, 420 Madison Ave,
Yorktown, NY.
Editor-in-Chief
Managing Editor
John Rowlie
Kevin H. Clymer
EDITOR'S NOTE
- Letters To The Editor -
The Daily Kansan this morning received several telephone calls from readers who protested the "unethical defense of stealing" which was expressed in the letter from Stephen Relph, published yesterday. The callers insisted that the sentiments expressed in Relph's letter are NOT the principles of University students and faculty.
The Editor.
Cross Of Ridicule
Dear Editor:
To "lend dignity to advertisement" would be to dress a jay in a tailed coat. Tom Page, therefore, asks in substance that we should not endorse films. I would not have us brazen before disapproval, but I still think that we should bear the cross of ridicule unwhimperingly if we must in order to recommend a great work of art and a means of entertainment showing one of our languages at work. I hope that our department should join the movie industry in approving a picture well done in Italian, just as a person should add his amen to a hymn sung by a choir of harlots and bootleggers. I hope Mr. Page will not have time to publish an answer kidding us about being parsons.
J. Neale Carman Department of Romance Languages
Optimistic People
Dear Editor:
We know that Kansas has the most optimistic people in the world, but our roses go to the University building and grounds department. These
The Editor - Plenty Of Time
Dear Editor:
Dean Ebert
Yes, I can spare the time—but who's talking about parsons?
We should yield gracefully to the prospect that the Muse will be boot-legged to our students with her bosom rent, as a fair flower disheveled in the tempest of Life. We will all come running, our mouths watering and our pulses quickening like Pavlov's dogs, when the lusty Latins beat on their big, base drum. Of course, the marginal morons will come, anyway, but the rest of us can be assured of a look at a great work of cinema art.
The political science department may be well advised to have one of its staff indicted for receiving bribes and buying votes, as an instructive example to its students of life as she (hier!) is lived.
No longer in envy,
Tom Page
Instructor, Political
Science
GRADUATION
The contestants seem to have withdrawn from the field with honor, but with their trivia blunted.-Editor.
people reach the utmost height of optimism Do they really expect to make grass grow on the sidewalks which they seem to persist in watering?
Gene Gates
Pharmacy freshman
Don Louthian
Fine Arts freshman
If any more cases of shooting at teachers occur, such as happened in Brooklyn last week, "frisking the students" may become standard procedure for instructors.
Jewelry Gifts
L. G. BALFOUR CO.
"Expert Watch Repairing"
for GRADUATION
411 W.14th
Phone 307
Runnels, Reed To Visit At Illinois State In June
Russell Runnels, chemist for the State Geological Survey, and Albert C. Reed, assistant chemist, will visit the Illinois State Geological Survey at Illinois State university during the early part of June.
the early part. The purpose of their visit is to get ideas for the chemical studies which they are making of Kansas coal.
An ammonia - liberating dentifrice generally will cut down on tooth decay, dental experts say.
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GROWTH FUTURE
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STUDEBAKER
622 Mass.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1948
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE. KANSAS
PAGE ELEVEN
Daily Kansan Classified Advertising
Phone KU 376
Terms: Cash. Phone orders are accepted with the understanding that the bill will be paid on time during the hours 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (except Saturday) or brought to the University Daily Kansan Business office. Journalism 4 p.m. the day before publication is desired.
Classified Advertising Rates
Classic English
One day Three days Five days
25 words or less 35c 65c 90c
additional words 1c 2c 3c
For Sale
BUCK-37, 5-passive coupe. 42 motor.
2. evenings. McCook Dorm. Section
3. evenings.
TYPEWRITER: Remington standard, noiseless, good condition, $40; Room 102, Oread hall. 26
REMINGTON: Model "A" typewriter, Almost new, A. C. Spreng, Room 303, Lindley hall. 26
MODEL "A" 'A' Ford sedan. Good condi-
tion. Office stoneburner, Geoploi-
ce office, Lindley hall.
'41 OLDS sedenette, '46 motor, new battery, generator, distributor, transmission, $1,150. David Harner, 3427J, 1238 Miss. 26
ONE PING PONG table and set; one
map divan. See after 5 p.m. at
H2F 16:30
LIVING ROOM and kitchen furniture,
one year old. 1-3 to 1-2 price reduction.
phone number: 516-789-4000, amnesia.sys.
VOSE piece in good condition.
for sale. 1338 Ohio, L. Al, Lired.
IDEAL for moving, storage, or traveling,
good as new wardrobe trunk. Four locking,
sweeping, clothing section, removable
considerably. Kohler, 1530 Tenn.
28 UTILITY TRAILER: Also lightweight
Schwinn bicycle. 16-A Sunyside Ph.
PHOTO:
"TIME'S" special anniversary rate to new
student members only $3.42
Student Union Book Store.
SOFA BED, maroon cord upholstery,
practically new, and blond oak dineette,
excellent condition. Best offer by June
30th, delivery for June 10. 30
Summyside.
Wanted
VETERANSI! We will vill 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
VETERAN wants to rent two or three room furnished or unfurnished apartment for next fall. No children on vacation. Call Bruce Laughlin 3101W. two years
WILL EXCHANGE 4-room apartment in Manhattan for one in Lawrence by August 1. R. M. King, 121½ No. 17, Manhattan
CAR, model 1937-1939 (Chevrolet or Ford preferred), with new or recently overhaulied motor, for large trip. Please call KL, 409, every evening from 8:00-12:00. 2F
VETERAN wants to rent or three or
room, furnished or unfurnished apartment
for next September. No children.
Jin Yung, 86.
A REASONABLE good swimmer age 19 or over, boy or girl, to take Red Cross Aquatic School training June 12 to 22. A local high school in west johnson county. Will qualify you for a swimming instructor job. Call or write Russell Peterson, MELrose 7908, 6209 Rip Van Winkle Way, Merriam, after 6:00 o'clock on Saturday or Sunday.
Business Service
FURNITURE vans loading for western Kansas and Kansas City. Will have room for more furniture in case I van from the house. Moving and Transfer Co. Phone 46. 26 FANS! FANS fans! Prepare now for summer; get a Stewart Warner refrigerator room cooler. Robbins and Meyers electric fans, $2.25 and up. See them at Dellinger Electric Co., 614 Mass. 26 Your company will remember your commencement in pictures. Call 1960M to make arrangements for place and time. Overnight service after J June.
ESQUIRRE 'Father's' day subscription issues. $4.33. Student Uni. 29 Book Store
TYPING done: Term papers, reports, special attention given thesis. Accurate work at reasonable prices. Call 1996-W. Apartment 2. 1101 Tennessee. rtes
TAILOR-MADE suits, $6.50 to $6.50. Expert alteration and tailoring, George Eberhart & Son, Tailor Shop, 831½ Mass.
NEW vacuum cleaners for rent. Attachments included. $1.50 per day. Al Brooks Sweeper Co., 8311'$ Mass. Ph. 1104 between 9 and 12 a.m.
For Rent
AN APARTMENT to share with a girl between 20-30 years of age from June 5 until August 15. For details call Mrs. Bud French, 1850-W between 12:30 p.m. 1:30 p.m. or between 6:00 p.m. - 9:00 p.m. 26 p.m. in room 4. Bus stop, bus stop, campus and bus line. Both summer and fall sessions. 1536 Tennessee. 2281-R 26
LARGE COOL basement room for two or three boys. Single beds, private bath and entrance. Near campus, on bus line. 1820 Indiana, phone 2436-R. 26
TWO ROOM apartment, private bath exchange and line station assistant who will help you with your booking. 1700
LARGE ventilated room. Walnut suite.
next to bath. 747 Rhode Island. 26
COOL, attractive room for five or six
people. Located in the fall semester. Have privilege of sharing large furnished apartment on same floor,
on a fine line. Walking distance to town
and KU.
FOR SUMMER session, room and board.
Three blocks off campus. Meals served
on a weekly per month. Just a
new pieces left. Contact Carbett or Geyen.
Phone 366 evenings.
MEN'S ROOMS for summer through fall.
Room 600 at 1228 Louisiana. See
fer 6:00 at 1228 Louisiana.
LARGE COOL room(s) close to campus for men, available for summer and (or) fall, double or single. 1031 Miss. Phone 2251W. 26
SINGLE ROOMS for men, quiet, comp. room for summer and 28 semester. 1411 Ohio
EXCELLENT three room furnished apartment with private bath. For summer months only. Close to campus. Call Briney, 753. 26
TWO DOUBLE 10oms, with sleeping porch, for three boys during summer session. Mrs. Earl Dobson, 1222 Miss. Phone 459. 26
ROOFS for rent: twin beds. Can accommodate 14 boys. One and a half block from Union building on Miss. Hill. Room furnished by JUNE 1 TO September 1, 5-room furnished in exchange for room and board for elderly landlord. Call 2128W.
HAVE A swell basement room for three boys. Ideal for summer study. For students new here, three blocks from the college 2564-R or see at 183 Illinois in afternoons.
FOR SUMMER, large room for 3 or 4
room. Water: 2,289,101 Alabama.
water. 2,289,101 Alabama.
DOUBLE ROOM for boys. Nicely furnished with single beds. Two blocks from campus. Excellent bath and telephone. Room 6. Louisiana at 8:00, 9:00, 7:00 p.m. 25
ROOMS FOR GIRL girl student
cooking privileges if desired - refrigeration. 2 blocks from campus. Phone 2734M. 1242 Qbio. 26
AIR COOLED rooms and apt. for boys
beds 2 blocks from campus. 9p
3331
ROOMS for rent for summer-includes two cool basement rooms. Two blocks from campus, one block from bus. 1339 Ohio. W. P. Meek. 2f
ROOMS for girl summer students. One
room with a balcony per person.
1241 Lollinghome, phone 178-031
Transportation
CAN TAKE two riders to Madison, Wisc.
June 3. Call K.U. 400 and leave name. 26
LEAVING FOR Los Angeles, June 6th.
Bachelor's Degree. 26
Delmar 219, Kansas City, Mo.
DRIVING to Canton, Ohio. June 4th or 6th. Can take 2 passengers who are travelling relatively light. If interested contact Bob Simons, 1203 Oread, Apt. 13.
LEAVING FOR California about June
Room for one, possibly two. 28
Cars.
WANTED: Transportation for 2 college men to Northern California or vicinity, anytime after June 11. Will drive and share expenses. Phone 3065. 26
RIDERS WANTED: Commuting daily from Kansas City, Kansas to KU, summer session. Call David McGuire, 2383W Lawrence or Drexel 7515 in Kansas City. 28
WANTED - Two riders going to western Kansas. Passing through Phillipsburg, Bird City. Leaving afternoon of June 3 or morning of June 26. Phone 1499-781
WANTED ride for two to New York City or general vicinity. Leave after June 3 and return for summer school. Call Buck, 7500R, after 6. 26
WANTED: Ride to New York City about June 6. Please call Mrs. M. Solovitschik, Lo4988, Kansas City, Mo. Will pay for call. 26
DRIVING TO Philadelphia—want three riders to help with expenses and drive in. Will until graduation. Jump. Will until after graduation if necessary. Call Jack Franklin, 2041.
LEAVING FOR Pittsburgh, Kansas, June 3, soon after 10:00 a.m. Can take four. See Robert P. Meters at reserve desk at library between 8:00 and 12:00 June 1. 26 COMMUTING daily from Kansas City to the summer. Would like riders will be attending summer school Call Buzz Muckenthaler, HI5350, Kansas City, Mo.
COMMUTING daily to K.U. summer school for K.C., M.C. Riders wanted wan-
ders 0980-6900.
LEAVING FOR Columbus, Georgia, June
Phone 15801
Phone for two passengers.
DRIVING to Buffalo, New York. Leaving
Call Crawford, Phone 375.
Lost
TAKEN by mistake my trench coat. I
lost it in a snowstorm. Practice, May 1. Please call 1894R.
REWARD to finder of Alpha Phi Omega
fraternity pin with name R. B. Stucky
stamped on back. Call 1711-M. spike
notebooks on east steps of Frasher Hall
Wednesday night last week. Needed bad-
for finals. Stalpers, phone 2825, 705
Tennessee Auditorium. A TAN raincoat with my name on it.
Phone 2393, Albert D. McElroy.
WOMAN'S sweater, salmon-pink, hand
kit cardigan. Tuesday evening, May 18.
BROWN motorcycle riding belt, decora-
tions and "Bob" on it, near Potter lake
on Wednesday, May 19. Finder please
Miscellaneous
ATTENTION: Sunflower hitchhikers:
Will one of the three men who acquired a ride to Sunflower, Friday, May 21, ask for your help? Let Bill Evans know whether or not you picked up a notebook. It is badly needed; semester notes, you know, also a Physics textbook. Wear a Wed. Leave work either at the Sigma One and Phi Chi house. Thank you.
TO GRADUATES of 1948: Remember your commencement in pictures. Call 1960M and make arrangements for place last. Overnight service after Jun 26st.
Welders Hold Cash Contest
Undergraduates can win cash prizes for papers on welding. In addition to prizes to students, the American Welding society will give $200 to the publication in which the best paper appears.
The contest will continue to April 1,
1949. Announcements of awards will be made May 15, 1949 and cash prizes will be awarded at the end of the school year. Certificates of award will also be given.
Money was donated for the contest from the A. F. Davis undergraduate welding award program. A first prize of $200 will go to the author of the best paper. Second prize will be $150 to the author, and $150 to the publication in which the best paper appears. The paper must be published in an undergraduate publication.
The subject may be any phase of welding or its application to design and construction. Students in both Canada and the U.S. are competing. Further information can be obtained in the office of the dean of the School of Engineering, 113 Marvin hall.
Elaine Teresa Elvig Wins
Hanna Oliver Latin Prize
230022
Elaine Terese Elvig, College freshman, has been awarded the Hannah Oliver Latin prize for 1947-48. L. R. Lind, chairman of the department of Latin and Greek, announced today.
The prize consists of the annual interest on a sum of $600 collected in 1982 by friends and students of the late Hannah Oliver as a memorial of her long service in the department of Latin and Greek.
Call K.U. 376 with your Want Ads
THANKS! We appreciate the business you've given us this year . . . and hope we'll see you again next fall.
Franz Conoco Service 9th & N. H. Ph. 867
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Congratulations June Graduates!
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PAGE TWELVE
UNIVERSITY DAILY KANSAN, LAWRENCE, KANSAS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 26, 1948
KU Receives Grant To Train City Managers
Fifty thousand dollars has been granted the University by the Carnegie corporation, New York, to finance a five-year apprentice training program in city management. The grant was announced today by Chancellor Deane W. Malott.
The grant will be administered at the rate of $10,000 a year through the bureau of government researah. Dr. E. O. Stene, associate professor of political science, will direct the project.
Six graduate students will be selected each year for 18 months training. The first two semesters will be spent at the University in courses in city government and technical phases of local administration.
The second half of the training will be an internship, in which the students will assist a city manager or act as an assistant in a major department on a large city administration.
A unique feature of the training is that the University will retain close contact with the trainees while they are in the field. Students will return to the University every six weeks for consultations and an exchange of ideas and re-appraisal of the course with faculty members. University staff members will visit cities periodically where trainees are working.
Two Will Be Radio Interns
Two faculty members of the William Allen White School of Journalism will be radio interns this summer.
They are Emil L. Telfel, assistant professor of journalism, and Harold E. Addington, instructor, who have been selected by the Council on Radio Journalism.
Mr. Telfel has been assigned to station WHAM in Rochester, N.Y. and Mr. Addington to station KMBC in Kansas City, Mo. Both men will work in the news department, but Mr. Addington said that he plans to work also in the promotion, management, and sales departments.
The internship program is sponsored by the National Association of Broadcasters and the American Association of Schools and Departments of Journalism, and was started in 1945. The program is based in the idea that journalism teachers are best qualified for teaching radio news courses if they have practical experience in radio stations.
This is the first time that the council has chosen two men from the same university for internships. Elmer F. Beth, acting director of the Journalism school, was an intern at station KMBC in 1945.
Miller And Goertz Win Chemistry Award
Norman G. Miller and Richard J. Goertz will receive the Alpha Chi Sigma award as outstanding graduates in chemistry and chemical engineering, the chemistry faculty announced today.
The award is usually made every year to one outstanding member of the graduating class, but the chemistry faculty decided that two should receive it this year. The award is based on scholarship, personality, and integrity.
Miller is a chemical engineering major and Goertz is majoring in chemistry.
Eighty Attend Ad Dinner
Approximately 80 persons attended a dinner held for advertising majors Tuesday in the Union ballroom.
The dinner was sponsored by Alpha Delta Sigma, professional advertising fraternity; Lee S. Cole, instructor of journalism, and Mrs. Cole. Awards were made to members of advertising staff of the University Daily Kansan.
Closing Hours 11 During Finals
Closing hours during final week will be 11 p.m. every night but Saturday, which will be 1 a.m., Miss Martha Peterson, assistant dean of women, announced today.
Closing hours will be midnight including weekends from June 3 to the beginning of summer school, June 13. Beginning June 14 the regular closing hour schedule will go into effect.
Regular closing hours are 10:30 p.m. Monday thru Thursday, 12:30 a.m. Friday, 1 a.m. Saturday, and 11 p.m. Sunday.
Money Needed For Train Fund
The Freedom Train contribution campaign was $1307 short at 10 a.m. today.
Riley Burcham, chairman of the Freedom Train finance committee urged people to make their contributions by May 26. The total quota for Lawrence is $1826 and the amount must be sent to the American Heritage foundation by noon May 26.
Lawrence is one of the six cities in Kansas that the train will visit. It was not scheduled through Lawrence until citizens requested that the train should stop here June 2. They promised to pay the quota.
"We cannot raise the money by taxes." Mr. Burcham explained. Members of the finance committee explained to Fox Case, regional director of the American Heritage program, that Lawrence is caught between the cancer drive and the Freedom Train fund raising campaign. Committee members thought this might be the reason for the delay in contributions.
Delta Sigma Pi Elects, Initiates
Delta Sigma Pi, international business fraternity, elected officers and initiated 10 new members last Sunday.
The new officers are Walter C. Emery, head master; Stewart F. Lambers, senior warden; James A. Seelbinder, junior warden; Thomas R. Dunn, scribe; Charles M. Wardin, treasurer; Richard W. Wahl, chancellor; Robert E. Nichols, senior guide; Edman L. Chapman, junior guide; and William R. Johnson, historian.
The initiates are Victor C. Gradert, George W. Holden, Gerald R. Friedeman, James A. Seelbinder, Thomas R. Dunn, Everett N. Devault, Stephen R. Ellsworth, Raymond J. Shaw, James E. Jolliff, and Edman L. Chapman.
Dean Stockton discussed the activities of the Extension bureau and its importance after graduation.
Five To Leave NROTC Staff This Summer
Five naval and marine officers will be detached from the University N.R.O.T.C. this summer for duty elsewhere.
Capt. J. V. Peterson, professor of naval science, will leave June 5 to become commander of midshipmen aboard the U.S.S. Princeton during the junior R.O.T.C. cruise.
Lt. Comdr. R. A. Bradley will be detached about June 15 for duty in the bureau of supplies and accounts in the navy department in Washington, D.C.
Lt. Comdr. J. W. Johnson will also go on the junior cruise, but will return to the University.
Lt. Robert Ricks, instructor in naval science, will leave June 15 to attend the navy's general line school at Newport, R. I.
Captain Peterson will report to San Diego after the cruise for assignment, probably as commanding officer of a large aircraft carrier. His place will be taken during the summer by Condr. J. C. McGouhram, executive officer of the N.R.O.T.C. unit.
Maj. R. W. Anderson, U.S.M.C. will leave about July 12 to report to the advanced officer artillery school at Ft. Sill, Okla.
Detached officers will be replaced by others yet to be named by the navy department. They will arrive in August, after completing a course for N.R.O.T.C. instructors at Northwestern university. A navy captain will arrive to become a professor of naval science.
4 To Study In Montreal
Prof. R. G. Mahieu of the romance language department will teach and three University students will study French at McGill university, Montreal, this summer.
Professor Mahieu will teach courses in elementary, intermediate, and advanced French. He previously taught at McGill in the summer of 1945.
Mrs. Emil L. Telfel, College junior, and Marjorie Scott, College senior, will enroll in advanced studies in French. Virginia Joseph, junior, will study elementary French.
Professor Mahieu said the School of French at McGill is a separate institution from the rest of the university.
The 24th annual K.U. Relays will be held April 22 and 23 of next year E. C. Quigley, director of athletics, announced today.
1949 Relays April 22, 23
"These dates will again fit in between the Texas Relays, April 1 and 2, and the Drake Relays, April 29 and 30," he said.
Will Confer On Union Activities
Freeburg Wins Art Exhibit
Whether or not the organization will again become active will probably be decided tonight when the Union Operating board meets, but "it is not known if anything definite will be decided," L. C. Woodruff, dean of student affairs, said today.
The Union Activities office has been opened in the Union, but still there is no comment from anyone as to the status of the organization.
Charles R. Freeburg, engineering junior, received first place in the Delta Phi Delta art exhibition when a popular vote was taken Tuesday.
If the organization is not reactivated soon, other arrangements will have to be made for summer activities. The "Jayhawk Nibble," an entertainment for new students, was the first scheduled event for the summer session.
Second and third places went to William R. Kiene, engineering junior, and Albert Petrik, fine arts sophomore.
Freebring received 145 votes for his pencil drawing of a young boy. His entry was number 78. Kiene's entry, number 86, received 128 votes. It was a water color of a dilapidated old house. Petrik's oil painting entitled "Escape" received 44 votes. His entry was number 12.
James R. Page, engineering sophomore, received first in the pencil sketch division when the exhibition was judged by faculty members Monday.
"The outdoor exhibition held the past three days in front of Robinson gymnasium was to promote public thinking in art." Donald I. Kane, treasurer of Delta Phi Delta, said
One hundred-forty entries divided into four classes were exhibited They were oils, water colors, pencil sketches, and miscellaneous.
During Final Exams:
Campanile Ritual To Be Held June 7
The ground-breaking ceremony announcing the start of actual construction on the World War II memorial will be held June 7 in connection with the all-University Commencement luncheon in Hoch auditorium.
A model of the campanile, made by Bernard "Poco" Frazier, '29, director of the Philbrook Art center in Tulsa, will be displayed. The ceremony will mark the attainment of a fund large enough to provide the "skeleton" of the memorial campanile. The fund-raising campaign will be continued.
2 Have Emergency Operations
2. Hare Emergency Operations Marilyn Smart Stockton, College senior, and Ralph Allen Smith, graduate student, underwent emergency appendectomies at Watkins hospital Monday.
Some Will Study, Some Will Play
"Fame is the spur that the clear spirit doth raise.
To scorn delights, and live laborious days."
A certain percentage of the almost 9,000 students at the University will get "the spur" this afternoon for the next seven days of final exams. The percentage is not known.
Ralph Bowman, College sophomore, said. "When I get out of class at 4, I'll start studying to hit the high spots until next Thursday noon. Everything will be out of the way except studying, eating, and sleeping."
However, some facts about student study intentions have been discovered by an informal device called a University Daily Kansan poll.
Almost all students have good intentions about studying.
Another point of view is expressed by William Brown, College senior, "I would like to spend all my time at a local cocktail lounge. It isn't the grade points but the cash that stops me."
Bennie Dautherty, Jr., College freshman, plans to spend lots of
time studying.
"I'm going to review my notes and pick out the most important chapters to study. I'll spend about two days on each subject," he said.
One person, questioned as to whether he would study for final exams or not, replied, "Hell, no. I'm an instructor."
Fred R. McCracken, College junior, when asked what he would study, replied, "Bridge, pinball machines, and beer."
Norman Miller, engineering senior,
said, "I guess I'll keep the old
coffee pot boiling until about 3 a.m. and stay up with it. I'll catch up on my sleep later." This method must have some merit because Norman is an honor student.
William D. Miller, College sophomore, had a word about cramming
"Cramming is impossible except in subjects like history and languages. I plan to hit the notes and get eight house sleep and be fresh in the mornings. Definitely no shows."
And then there was the student who was looking to the future and said, "I haven't time to study. I'm busy packing and planning my vacation."
Anyway, on June 3 the finals will all be over for the studious and the non-studious alike.
Another student said, "Study? Why should I. I can't learn four months work in a week. Besides I'm tired."
Five Will Take Faculty Posts Malott States
The announcement of five new appointments to the University faculty was made today by Chancellor Deane W. Malott.
Martin D. Scheerer has been appointed a full professor in the psychology department next fall. In the School of Business, R. F. Wallace, was appointed associate professor of industrial management, and Max E. Fessler, associate professor of statistics. Maribelle Hines will be assistant professor of secretarial training and James Barron instructor in business law.
Dr. Scheerer, a native of New York, received his Ph.D. degree from the University of Tamburg, Germany, in 1927, and taught there until 1933. In the United States he has taught at the University of Louisville, Wells college, Brooklyn college, and City college of New York. He is now an associate professor on the graduate faculty of the New School, New York.
Wallace was graduated from the University of Texas in 1941 and received his master of business administration degree in 1945. He has done additional graduate work at Northwestern university and has been teaching there this year.
Fessler received his B.S. degree from the University of Kansas in 1936 and his M.B.A. degree in 1941. He taught in the School of Business from 1938 to 1942. He is now completing work for his Ph.D. degree from Columbia university.
Miss Hines received her M.A. degree in commerce from the University of Iowa and B.S. in education from Southwest Missouri State college, Cape Girardeau. She has taught secretarial subjects for eight years in high schools and one year at the University of Kansas. For the past three years she has been at Queens' college. Charlotte, N.C.
Barron received his A.B. and M.A.
degrees from the University of Iowa
in 1941-42. He will receive a law
degree from Iowa next month. He is
a member of Phi Beta Kappa and
Order of the Coif, honorary legal
prerity.
To Present Recital At 8 P.M. Today
Joseph Langworthy, fine arts senior, will present a trumpet recital at 8 p.m. today in Frank Strong auditorium. This will be the last senior recital of the semester.
His program includes selections from "Suite of Turmmusik (1639-1694)" (Johann Pezel), the trumpet solo from the Bach-Langworthy "Concerto," selections from Haydn's "Concerto," and Fitzgerald's "Modern Suite." His conclusion numbers will be "Romantetta" (E. Napravnik) and "Etude No. 1" (V. Shelukov).
Robert Glotzbach, graduate student, will accompany.
Speeding Student Crashes Tractor
Hoyt S. Taylor, engineering junior, was fined $10 and costs of $3.25 in county court Monday when he pleaded guilty to a charge of speeding.
Taylor hit a tractor on highway 59 near Pleasant Grove early Sunday morning. The speeding charge resulted from this accident.
Elmer Fuller, Baldwin, driver of the tractor, was taken to Lawrence Memorial hospital following the accident. His condition has been reported "good" by hospital authorities.
Capron Is President Of Metallurical Institute
Wayne C. Capron, junior petroleum engineering student, was elected president of the local chapter of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers Tuesday.
K. O. Austin was elected vicepresident and Edward Harry, Jr., was elected secretary. J. C. Henderson was elected treasurer.